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Best podcasts about fowlers

Latest podcast episodes about fowlers

Coastal News: A Home and Away Podcast

Si and Sophie present Coastal News:A Home and Away Podcast. Your episode companion podcast for Home and Away on Channel 5 and 5star in the UK. This Week, Bree faces upto her issues, Tane and Harper decide to keep the sex of their baby a secret, The Fowlers embark on family therapy, Justin and Leah get caught with their pants down and Cash accepts a transfer to the country.        Donate/Tip: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/coastalnewspod       X/Instagram/BlueSky: @coastalnewspod Email:coastalnewspod@gmail.com     Join our online discussion as episodes air #HomeandAwayUK

Labrador Morning from CBC Radio Nfld. and Labrador (Highlights)
L'anse au Loup family concerned about doctor availability in Forteau

Labrador Morning from CBC Radio Nfld. and Labrador (Highlights)

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2024 8:15


On Thursday's show, we heard Silone and Dorman Fowler's concerns about an experience at the St. Anthony hospital this summer. We bring you part 2 of that conversation, and hear the Fowlers' fears about doctor availability in Forteau.

The Pacific War - week by week
- 144 - Pacific War Podcast - Battle of the Driniumor River - August 26, 1944

The Pacific War - week by week

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 20, 2024 46:02


Last time we spoke about the fall of Myitkyina. By late July 1944, the Japanese at Myitkyina in northern Burma were facing severe challenges. Despite holding out through a long siege, they were cut off from supplies and suffering heavy casualties. A leadership conflict between Colonel Maruyama and General Minakami further complicated things. Maruyama defended the city intensely, while Minakami aimed to deny Allied access to strategic roads. With depleted forces, including wounded troops trying to escape via the Irrawaddy River, the Japanese defense weakened. Allied forces, reinforced and ready, made significant gains, shrinking Japanese-held areas. On August 1, Minakami agreed to withdraw, and the remaining Japanese began escaping across the river. The Allies launched a final attack, securing Myitkyina on August 3. The 10 week siege resulted in substantial casualties on both sides. This victory allowed the Allies to improve logistical routes and marked a critical point in the Burma campaign. This episode is the Battle of the Driniumor River Welcome to the Pacific War Podcast Week by Week, I am your dutiful host Craig Watson. But, before we start I want to also remind you this podcast is only made possible through the efforts of Kings and Generals over at Youtube. Perhaps you want to learn more about world war two? Kings and Generals have an assortment of episodes on world war two and much more  so go give them a look over on Youtube. So please subscribe to Kings and Generals over at Youtube and to continue helping us produce this content please check out www.patreon.com/kingsandgenerals. If you are still hungry for some more history related content, over on my channel, the Pacific War Channel you can find a few videos all the way from the Opium Wars of the 1800's until the end of the Pacific War in 1945.  Last time we were seeing action kick up at the Driniumor River. While the Japanese offensive had initially been successful, General Hall's forces managed to halt the enemy advance and reform their river line by July 15, despite a 1500-yard gap in the center. The Japanese were aware of this weakness in the American lines and exploited it, especially during the night. However, Colonel Starr's 3rd Battalion patrolled this area and occasionally engaged the enemy, killing 135 Japanese on the night of July 14. Despite this, General Cunningham claimed that his South Force had extended its lines nearly 1000 yards beyond its assigned sector without encountering any elements of the 124th Regiment. Consequently, on July 15, Starr concluded that his regiment had not advanced as far south as previously reported and ordered his units to adjust their lines southward and extend their defenses up the Driniumor towards Cunningham's Troop E. The following morning, Starr's 3rd Battalion began moving south to close the gap. As they reached the area by nightfall, Troop E was attacked by two companies of the 1st Battalion, 239th Regiment. While the cavalrymen sought cover, Starr's 3rd Battalion was also attacked by Colonel Nara's 3rd Battalion, which had turned south after its defeat at the Paup villages. This split the American forces in two, with Companies L and M pushing south through increasing opposition to reach South Force lines, while Companies I and K dug in for the night in their current positions. Despite the intense fighting, several Japanese were killed, and the gap was reduced to 500 yards.   In the course of the day's fighting the Coastal Attack Force had lost all its artillery and had suffered heavy casualties. Additional losses were sustained on succeeding days, but Major Hoshino and his men were not completely removed as an irritant until the night of 16-17 July. During that night remnants of the Coastal Attack Force, about thirty-five men strong, attacked North Force and 124th Infantry command post installations at Anamo. At 23:00 the group charged out of the jungle southwest of the Anamo perimeter. Repulsed by machine gun fire, the enemy temporarily disappeared, only to reappear at 03:00 on 17 July moving west against Anamo along the beach. Machine gun fire from the American positions broke up this second attack, but about ten minutes later the Japanese tried again, this time moving on Anamo from the north by wading in from the sea. Once ashore, Major Hoshino's men broke up into small groups, attempting to destroy mechanized equipment, automatic weapons positions, and communications installations. The Coastal Attack Force remnants had apparently scouted well, for they were reported to have moved purposefully toward the most important installations and they easily found their way about in terrain they had vacated only four days previously. Whatever Major Hoshino's plans were, they were not realized. About forty of his men were killed and the rest dispersed. Behind them, Hall dispatched Colonel Howe's 1st and 2nd Battalions to clear the remaining enemy units west of the Driniumor River. Over two days of complex and sometimes uncoordinated company actions, the Americans successfully overran Nara's stragglers in the area. Further south, as Japanese troops were seen crossing the Driniumor at a fording point about 2,500 yards south of Afua, Cunningham sent Troop A south to high ground behind the Driniumor to halt the Japanese movements westwards. There, the 78th and 80th Regiments, under Major-General Miyake Sadahiko, were assembling for a renewed offensive. Adachi's new plan involved Miyake striking Afua from the south while the 239th Regiment prepared to move against the Kawanaka Shima area. Additionally, the retreating 237th Regiment and the reserve 66th Regiment were ordered south to join future attacks by the 20th Division, though they wouldn't arrive until July 25. As the Miyake Force maneuvered into position to the right and rear of Cunningham's 1st Squadron, Starr struggled to close the gap in the center, which was eventually sealed on the morning of July 18. That night, Miyake launched an attack with two battalions on the 1st Squadron's command post and the adjacent perimeter held by Troop A, successfully pushing them 250 yards to the northeast. Early in the afternoon of 19 July fresh Japanese units began to surround the Troop A position, moving in from the north, northwest, west, and southwest. The 1st Squadron commander called for artillery fire to break up this enemy maneuver. Upon cessation of the fire, Troop A attacked to the south and west for a second time. Driving at least a company of Japanese before it, the troop pushed 600 yards southwest of its original positions astride the Afua-Palauru trail and temporarily disrupted enemy plans to seize the position. About 140 Japanese had been killed during the two days' operation around Troop A. South Force, at the same time, lost 8 men killed and 29 wounded, all from the 1st Squadron, 112th Cavalry. There were strong indications that more attacks might occur in the 1st Squadron area, but Troop A was not destined to take part in any of these actions. It was replaced on the 21st by Troop C. Following this victory on July 21, Troop C relieved the battered Troop A, Howe's battalions successfully set up a patrol base on the East Branch of Koronal Creek, and Starr's 2nd Battalion moved to Palauru to provide additional outer security southwest of the airfield. On July 19, the first elements of General Wing's 43rd Division began landing at Aitape, with the 2nd Battalion, 169th Regiment subsequently taking over about 1,000 yards of the river line on the right of the 124th Regiment by July 22. Meanwhile, Adachi ordered the still-reorganizing Miyake Force to attack Afua from the north and west while General Nakai's 79th Regiment crossed the Driniumor and attacked from the south. On the evening of July 21, Miyake launched his attack on Troop C's position, successfully cutting it off from the rest of South Force. While the cavalrymen resisted heavy Japanese attacks, Miyake's units also repelled Cunningham's attempts to relieve the beleaguered troop over the next few days. Not knowing what other plans the Japanese might have in mind, General Cunningham was unwilling to pull any more troops away from the river defenses. Moreover, he now considered the position of his right flank untenable. He therefore withdrew Troop B north of Afua about 1,000 yards and used the unit to form a new defense line which ran westward about 500 yards from Troop A's right flank, anchored on the Driniumor. South Force's right flank was now refused and additional protection had been secured for medical, supply, and command post installations at the dropping ground banana patch. Troop C was left isolated behind Japanese lines, and Afua was again released to the enemy. It was not until the night of 21-22 July that the Japanese forward units were able to organize for any sort of attack. During that night, elements of the 124th Infantry received considerable mortar, machine gun, and rifle fire from east of the Driniumor. This fire increased the next morning, and about noon the 3d Battalion, 124th Infantry, was attacked from the west by elements of the 237th Infantry. The first Japanese attack was ". . . finally broken up by a bayonet charge . . ." conducted by elements of the 3d Battalion, 124th Infantry, but other attacks followed as troops of the 1st Battalion, 239th Infantry, tried to move across the Driniumor from the east, striking both the 124th Infantry's unit and part of the 2d Battalion, 169th Infantry. Before dark on the 22d, the 3d Battalion, 124th Infantry, counted 155 new Japanese dead in its area. That unit and the 2d Battalion, 169th Infantry, reported their own losses as five killed and twenty-five wounded. The 1st Battalion, 239th Regiment made further unsuccessful attempts to reopen the river crossing. By July 25, Adachi decided to send the 41st Division south to assist in the southern effort. After the fall of Afua, Hall ordered Howe's battalions to leave their East Branch base and reinforce Cunningham's South Force, arriving at the new line by July 23. With these reinforcements, Cunningham decided early in the afternoon to send Troops A and B to attack west toward Troop C while Howe's 2nd Battalion pushed southeast toward the isolated troop. Despite being uncoordinated, the infantry successfully moved into Troop C's perimeter from the northwest and helped repel a heavy Japanese attack from the southwest, while the cavalry troops reoccupied Afua and established new defensive positions. However, American attempts to break out on July 24 were unsuccessful due to the Japanese defending all tracks, trails, and ridgelines in the heavily jungled ground northeast of the perimeter. On July 25, Howe's Companies E and B unexpectedly established contact about 500 yards north of the besieged forces against light resistance, allowing the battered Troop C to withdraw. With Troop C relieved, Howe's units continued to attack south and west towards the Afua-Palauru trail, successfully pushing the Japanese into the Torricelli Mountains. Many Japanese troops remained positioned in a triangular area bounded by the dropping ground, Afua, and Company G's ridgeline position, where they continued to harass Cunningham's forces. Rifle fire, intensifying as darkness approached, harassed the rear and right flank of the two battalions, and the Japanese began intermittently to drop light artillery or mortar shells into the banana patch area, where the command posts of South Force, the 112th Cavalry, and the 127th Infantry were now located. Finally, Japanese patrols, coming in from the west, had scouted the banana patch area during the day, action which seemed to presage an enemy attack during the night. To get out of range of the enemy fire and danger of enemy attack, General Cunningham moved the command post installations 500 yards to the north before dark. Additionally, 127th Infantry patrols had found a Japanese map which indicated that the 66th Infantry, 51st Division, was concentrating in the Kwamagnirk area. Indeed, the 66th Infantry, which, with attached units, was at least 1,000 men strong, had crossed the Driniumor on or about 24 July. Bypassing the right flank of South Force, the regiment had moved into the heavily jungled high ground west of the banana patch and dropping ground. In addition, the remnants of the 237th Infantry, probably about 300 men strong, had finally arrived in the Afua area on 25 July and had passed to the control of the Miyake Force. Rear elements of the 20th Division, including additional men from the 26th Field Artillery and engineer units, had also crossed the Driniumor south of Afua. The number of Japanese troops in the South Force area by nightfall on the 26th of July was at least 2,500 and may have been over 3,000. On July 27, the battalion launched a successful southward attack, but ongoing Japanese movements to the west eventually necessitated an American withdrawal, despite other units under Cunningham managing to repel enemy advances. The following day, Cunningham consolidated his positions to bolster defenses in anticipation of potential large-scale Japanese assaults. However, on July 29, efforts by the 1st Squadron and the 2nd Battalion to attack south and west into the Triangle were thwarted by determined Japanese defenders led by Adachi. As a result, only localized patrol actions were conducted on July 30 and 31, as Cunningham devised plans for another offensive into the Triangle.  Major combat activity revolved around the withdrawal of Company G, 127th Infantry, from its exposed outpost west of Afua. On the afternoon of the 29th the unit had been driven more than 400 yards east of its original position by Japanese attacks and had established new defenses on high ground about 300 yards west of Afua. On the 30th the company was surrounded and spent all day fighting off a series of small-scale attacks. The next morning it fought its way north to the dropping ground, where it arrived about 1330. Thence, it moved on to the Driniumor and joined the rest of the 2d Battalion, 127th Infantry, which had switched positions with the 3d Battalion. During the period from 13 to 31 July, South Force had suffered almost 1,000 casualties, of which 260 had been incurred by the 112th Cavalry. For the understrength cavalry regiment, this was a casualty rate of over 17 percent. The 2d Battalion, 127th Infantry, had also lost heavily and was in need of rest, reorganization, and re-equipment--needs which had prompted General Cunningham to change the places of the 2d and 3d Battalions, 127th Infantry. South Force casualties were as follows: 106 killed, 386 wounded, 18 missing, and 426 evacuated as a result of disease and sickness. South Force estimated that it had killed over 700 Japanese. By the end of July, with the arrival of most of the 41st Division, Adachi believed he had amassed enough reinforcements near Afua to launch a final offensive. The 238th Regiment, the 41st Mountain Artillery, and the 8th Independent Engineers were across the river in time by the 30th but the 2nd and 3rd Battalions, 239th Regiment, had missed the crossing point on the Driniumor and were lost. Fortunately for the 18th Army, the South Force withdrawals on July 29 and 30 gave the 20th and 41st Divisions time to complete their organization. New orders were issued for the attack to start on August 1, with the 20th Division on the west and the 41st Division on the east. The strength that the 20th Division could muster for the attack was a little over 2000 men. Most of these troops had been without food for some time. They were suffering from starvation, malaria, and skin diseases, and morale was cracking. They were short of both ammunition and weapons. The 41st Division and its attached units, totaling nearly 1750 men by the morning of August 1, were in equally bad shape. Nevertheless, General Adachi was determined to make one last attack with the nearly 4000 troops now available to him in the Afua area. Despite sensing minimal Japanese resistance to the north, Hall was eager to mount a robust counteroffensive against the 18th Army. The 2d Battalion, 124th Infantry, which had been patrolling in the Palauru-Chinapelli area, was relieved from that duty by the 1st Battalion, 169th Infantry, and on the 30th joined its regiment at the Driniumor. The 2d Battalion, 169th Infantry, was already at the river. Tactical control of the counteroffensive was vested in Col. Edward M. Starr, commanding officer of the 124th Infantry, whose counterattack organization was to be known as TED Force. The 1st Battalion, 124th Infantry, was commanded by Maj. Ralph D. Burns; the 2d Battalion by Lt. Col. Robert M. Fowler; the 3d Battalion by Lt. Col. George D. Williams; and the 2d Battalion, 169th Infantry, by Maj. William F. Lewis. To avoid confusion, the four battalions were referred to by the last names of their commanders rather than by their number designations. Fowler's battalion, attacking along the coast, was to be supplied by ration trains moving along the coastal trail from Anamo. The rest of TED Force, pushing through trackless, dense jungle, was to be supplied by airdrop. The 149th Field Artillery Battalion, augmented by the Cannon Company, 124th Infantry, was responsible for artillery support, but when necessary the 129th Field Artillery was to add its fire to that of the 149th. All the artillery units were emplaced on the beach west of the Driniumor's mouth. The positions which the 124th Infantry and the 2d Battalion, 169th Infantry, left vacant on the Driniumor were to be occupied by the 2d and 3d Battalions, 128th Infantry. Colonel Starr had succeeded General Stark as commander of North Force on 18 July when the arrival of elements of the 43d Division at Aitape made it necessary for General Stark, the assistant division commander, to move back to BLUE Beach for administrative duties. General Stark apparently also reassumed command of the Western Sector, in place of General Hutchinson, Assistant Division Commander, 31st Division, who had rejoined his division when it, less the 124th Infantry, moved to a new operational area in western New Guinea. When TED Force was organized, North Force as such apparently ceased to exist, and the 128th Infantry took over the defensive functions previously assigned to North Force on the Driniumor. The name TED Force originated from the diminutive for Colonel Starr's first name. There were always so many units from different divisions and regiments operating along the Driniumor that the task force usually found it more convenient to use names rather than numbers for unit designations. The names, usually derived from the commanding officers, served not only to lessen confusion but also did double duty as code names.  The attack was to be carried out with three battalions abreast along a front of 3,000 yards, and the fourth in reserve and in position to protect the right flank of the advancing force. The four battalions were to move east to the line of Niumen Creek, destroying all enemy found between that stream and the Driniumor within the 3,000-yard-wide zone of responsibility. Upon their arrival on the Niumen the battalions were to reorganize and prepare for further advances either east or south upon orders from General Hall. All three battalions of the 124th Infantry began crossing the Driniumor on schedule at 0800, 31 July, moving into terrain concerning which only incomplete and sometimes inaccurate information was available. The 1st Battalion faced delays from enemy delaying actions but eventually reached the creek by August 1, while the remaining battalions advanced inland, also reaching Niumen successfully.  The 1st Battalion's advance company had been held up about 800 yards east of the Driniumor by elements of the 1st Battalion, 239th Infantry, which had been left along the river when the rest of that Japanese regiment had moved south to Afua on 26 July. Burns' men continued to encounter strong opposition from 239th Infantry elements throughout the day and did not break off contact until 1730, when the battalion bivouacked for the night still 800 yards west of Niumen Creek. Company A had become separated during the day and remained some 550 yards northwest of the main body for the night. Both sections of the battalion were out of touch with the rest of TED Force. The 3d Battalion, 124th Infantry (Williams), crossed the Driniumor at a point about 3,000 yards inland and reached the Niumen about 1400, having encountered only scattered rifle fire. Lewis' 2d Battalion, 169th Infantry, which followed Williams' command, made no contact with the enemy and bivouacked for the night about 500 yards west of Williams. All battalions spent the next day, 1 August, consolidating and patrolling along Neumen Creek, and Burns' unit moved up into line with the others. Meanwhile, Cunningham planned his own offensive aimed at dismantling the Triangle position following a reconnaissance mission along the Afua-Palauru trail. However, preliminary actions were disrupted when two companies launched a surprise attack from the southwest against Troop C's lines at 06:20 on August 1. General Cunningham immediately canceled the planned reconnaissance in force into the triangle area and turned his attention to this new threat. The first Japanese assault units were quickly reinforced, and the enemy moved forward against Troop C in massed waves along a narrow front. A bloody battle ensued as the enemy, apparently determined to commit suicide, continued his mass attacks. South Force called for artillery support, which was quickly forthcoming and which greatly helped Troop C to throw back the enemy assaults. By 0800 the Japanese had withdrawn and the battle area had become strangely quiet. Patrols were sent out from the cavalry perimeter to reconnoiter. These parties counted 180 dead Japanese in front of Troop C's lines, and it was considered probable that the enemy had carried off many more dead and wounded. Troop C, on the other hand, had lost but 5 men killed and 6 wounded. Examination of the enemy dead disclosed that elements of both the 80th and 238th Infantry Regiments had participated in the attacks. Thirty minutes later, Cunningham proceeded with his reconnaissance mission, encountering minimal resistance before returning in the afternoon. Despite capturing documents indicating an impending major assault, Cunningham deployed the 2nd Squadron as a mobile reserve at his command post. Although the movement of the 2d Squadron had apparently been well advised, the Japanese did not attack the command post area. Instead, at 1900, elements of the 41st Division struck the 1st Battalion, 127th Infantry, at its lines south of the dropping ground. This attack was preceded by fire from a 70-mm. or 75-mm. artillery piece which the Japanese had managed to sneak into the area within 150 yards of Company B, 127th Infantry. Following a few rounds from this weapon, Japanese infantry charged forward in four separate waves, employing perhaps 300 men on a very narrow front. Few of the enemy got near Company B's positions, for the attack was thrown back with artillery, mortar, and machine gun fire, which caused heavy losses among the enemy forces. By 2030, action in the dropping ground area stopped for the night. During the early hours of the next morning, 3 August, the 1st Battalion, 127th Infantry, again heard enemy activity to its front, and about 0730 a small Japanese party struck between Companies A and C. This attack was quickly repulsed, principally by mortar fire from 1st Battalion units. By noon all activity in the 1st Battalion area had ceased, and the Japanese had withdrawn to the southwest.  Concurrently, Cunningham's 1st Squadron faced attacks from Nakai's 20th Division, but their suicidal charges were also turned back by resilient defenders. The 1st Squadron, 112th Cavalry, on the left rear of the 1st Battalion, was attacked by another group of Japanese at 1945. This action was probably meant to have been coordinated with the attack on Company B, but, if this were the enemy's intention, something had gone wrong. Apparently there had also been some mix-up in unit dispositions, for both enemy efforts had entailed the use of elements of the 78th, 80th, and 238th Infantry Regiments. After the day's action was finished, the combined effective strength of the first two units was probably not more than 250 men, and the 2d Battalion, 238th Infantry, was practically wiped out. The desperate attacks during the day had been carried out with a complete disregard for self-preservation, and had probably cost the Japanese 300 men killed and at least twice that number wounded. TED Force was subsequently directed to advance south along Niumen Creek toward the Torricelli Mountains foothills to disrupt Adachi's supply lines and flank the 18th Army. Supply challenges and dense jungle terrain initially delayed Starr's southern movement, with his northern battalions only linking up with the southern ones by day's end. The next morning, Starr launched a southward offensive, immediately encountering fierce resistance from the 1st Battalion, 239th Regiment, which held a stubborn defense throughout the day. In response, Starr ordered his 1st Battalion to bypass the engagement and move southwest, advancing unopposed for up to 1000 yards. August 3rd proved relatively calm for Cunningham, as the 1st Battalion, 169th Regiment arrived to bolster the South Force perimeter. However, vigilance remained high in anticipation of Mano's impending final assault.  On 1 August General Adachi learned that American forces were active in the Yakamul area. It was erroneously reported to him that this was an amphibious operation, a maneuver which the 18th Army commander had feared for some time (actually, the report referred to patrolling by the 2d Battalion, 124th Infantry, along the coast from the mouth of Niumen Creek). He therefore ordered the remaining elements of the 237th Infantry to extricate themselves from the operations in the Afua area and hurry back to Yakamul to reinforce service units in that vicinity. Events moved so rapidly that the remnants of the 237th Infantry never got to Yakamul. Instead, the advance of TED Force made it necessary for General Adachi to change his plans and accelerate a general withdrawal. Communications within forward units of the 18th Army had so broken down that it was not until 3 August that General Adachi learned of the TED Force movement across the Driniumor, although the 1st Battalion, 239th Infantry, had been in contact with TED Force since 31 July. When General Adachi did hear of the American movement, he grossly underestimated the strength of TED Force. Thinking that the American operation was being carried out by only 400 troops, General Adachi merely changed the orders of the 237th Infantry and instructed that regiment to hold the 18th Army's crossing point on the upper Niumen Creek. On the same day, 3 August, General Adachi issued detailed plans for the withdrawal of all 18th Army units to the east side of the Driniumor, a withdrawal which was to begin on 4 or 5 August. The 66th Infantry, 51st Division, was to protect the 20th and 41st Division units as they crossed the Driniumor. The continued advance of TED Force on 3 August prompted General Adachi to change his plans and early on the 4th he ordered the 20th Division to start retreating at noon that day and the 41st Division to break contact on the 5th. The following morning, elements of the 238th and 239th Regiments emerged from the jungle southwest of the 1st Squadron in a final, desperate charge. Violent action continued in front of the 1st Squadron for about two hours, during which time nearly 200 Japanese were killed at the very edge of the squadron perimeter, principally by machine gun and rifle fire. How many more of the enemy were killed by artillery and mortar fire during the period cannot be estimated, but the banzai tactics undoubtedly cost the Japanese more than the 200 dead counted in front of the 1st Squadron which, in the same two hours, lost only 3 men killed and 4 wounded. By 0900 the last enemy attacks had ceased and the remaining Japanese had withdrawn generally to the south.  Following the enemy withdrawal, Troop E pursued the retreating Japanese southward, encountering sporadic rifle fire as they eliminated remaining stragglers. The terrain encountered on August 4 and subsequent days during the operations of the TED Force east of the Driniumor proved next to impassable. Dense jungle undergrowth covered the ground; the area was thick with heavy rain forest; low but knifelike ridges, separated from each other by deep gullies, were encountered; and swampy spots were plentiful. To add to the difficulties, rain fell during the day--a downpour which turned much of the ground into a quagmire and flooded many dry stream beds. A few new, rough trails, recently cut by the Japanese, were found, but mud made them nearly useless as routes of advance. Low clouds coming in from the Torricelli Mountains to the south prevented ration and ammunition drops and increased communication difficulties. Battalions ran low on drinking water, for weather conditions prevented resupply of water purification tablets and the assault companies had neither time nor equipment to clean water by other means. Radio communication between battalions, from battalions to TED Force headquarters, and from the latter to higher echelons was nearly nonexistent, for the heavy jungle and the damp weather cut down the efficiency of all radio equipment. It had been hoped that the advance on the 4th would carry TED Force south to the main Japanese supply route, but the trail reached by Burns', Lewis', and Williams' battalions was another route which had not been used by military traffic for some time. Possibly, it was a section of the native trail to Afua and, as such, purposely avoided by the Japanese inasmuch as parts of it could be seen from the air. In any case, the track cut on the 4th lay about 1,200 yards north of the east-west trail which most of the Japanese forces moving to and from the Afua area had been using. Colonel Starr, realizing that the main Japanese supply route had not yet been severed, ordered his units to continue southward on the 5th, on which day the advance was resumed about 0800 hours with Williams leading and Lewis' battalion about 400 yards to the rear. Pushing south along now precipitous and mountainous banks of the upper Niumen, Williams' unit was opposed by only scattered rifle fire until 1100, when it was decisively halted by a strong Japanese force conducting a stubborn defense. On August 5, learning that TED Force was approaching the point at which the 18th Army's main line of communications crossed the upper reaches of Niumen Creek, General Adachi had also ordered the 8th Independent Engineers to aid the remnants of the 237th Infantry in holding the crossing point. It was this combined 237th Infantry-8th Engineers force that Williams' 3d Battalion, 124th Infantry, had encountered about 1100 on 5 August. The composite Japanese unit was dug in along a 1,000-foot high ridge across Williams' line of advance and threatened to outflank the battalion by occupying other high ground nearby. Despite artillery and mortar support, Williams' men were unable to advance. Colonel Starr ordered Lewis' unit to bypass the fight and continue south to locate and cut the Japanese main supply route. Fighting at Williams' front continued through most of the afternoon, and Colonel Starr realized that the Japanese force could not be dislodged that day. Fowlers' battalion was brought up to the rear of Williams' and late in the afternoon set up a new perimeter with the regimental command post. Before dark, Williams' men withdrew slightly from their most forward positions so that artillery concentrations could be placed along the front. Lewis' unit, which had moved off to the southeast to bypass Williams' fight, made little progress in very rough terrain and was cut off from the rest of TED Force before it could swing westward. Meanwhile, another battalion to the west encountered minimal resistance as it intercepted the main enemy trail east of the Driniumor, linking up with patrols from Cunningham's 2nd Squadron. Action on the 6th started earlier than TED Force expected. About 0300 approximately 400 Japanese attacked Williams' perimeter. This enemy force comprised elements of the 41st Division, supported by men of the 26th Field Artillery of the 20th Division and some remnants of the 8th Independent Engineers. Attacking under cover of fire from machine guns, mortars, and 75-mm. mountain guns, the Japanese force was attempting to secure fords over the upper reaches of Niumen Creek and protect the withdrawal of other elements of 18th Army units from Afua. Though surprised, Williams' men held back the initial onslaught. Reportedly, Japanese riflemen then climbed trees surrounding Williams' perimeter to pin down the American troops while other Japanese continued to attack on the ground. Fowler's unit, under orders to bypass Williams' fight and move around the enemy left, started moving about 0800 hours but soon found the terrain made it impossible to avoid contact with the Japanese opposing Williams. The Japanese, having control of most commanding ground in the area, stopped Fowler's leading company. Action was not rapid. The terrain made all movements slow and laborious, and much time had to be taken to co-ordinate artillery support fire properly. Under cover of artillery fire, another company of Fowler's battalion, creeping slowly through ravines and up an almost vertical cliff, worked around to unoccupied high ground on the Japanese left. The rest of the battalion was successfully disengaged to secure more commanding terrain in the same area. The Japanese, finding themselves outflanked and subjected to increasingly heavy artillery and mortar fire, began to withdraw southward in midafternoon, relieving the pressure on Williams' front. Fowler's battalion, in enveloping the Japanese left, had moved north and then westward and the maneuver had carried the unit by dark to a point just north of the main trail about 750 yards east of Burns' battalion. Williams' men withdrew to reorganize, after disengaging from the enemy forces late in the afternoon; at dark, having resumed the march westward, they secured high ground north of the trail. The ground covered during the day by Williams' battalion was little more than 500 yards west of the position it had occupied the previous night. The unit probably could have moved farther, but Colonel Starr halted it so as not to increase the distance from Lewis' battalion which was, in effect, lost. The unit had laboriously struggled over extremely rough and trackless ground during the day, fighting in the afternoon against a number of Japanese who had withdrawn from Williams' front. For the night, Lewis' men set up a perimeter about 800 yards south-southeast of the scene of Williams' fighting. With Adachi's escape route blocked, Starr's battalions advanced southwestward, achieving notable success by killing around 500 Japanese soldiers between August 6 and 7. In the interim, Cunningham's South Force completed operations in their sector, achieving a successful attack led by Howe that ousted the remaining disorganized Japanese presence from Afua on August 6. Two days later, the 124th Regiment advanced to the Driniumor, claiming to have eliminated approximately 1800 Japanese soldiers since the start of their counteroffensive, at the cost of 50 men killed and 80 wounded. With the rest of Adachi's 18th Army retreating towards Wewak, General Gill declared Afua secure by the evening of August 9. Following the conclusion of the Battle of the Driniumor River, the fatigued units of the 32nd Division, including the 124th Regiment and 112th Cavalry Regiment, were relieved by units from Wing's 43rd Division. From August 16 to 25, Wing's regiments conducted final combat missions in the Aitape region, encountering minimal Japanese resistance east of the Driniumor, except for delaying actions near the mouth of the Dandriwad River by patrols of the 103rd Regiment. Consequently, General Krueger declared the Aitape operation concluded on August 25, confident that the 18th Army posed no further threat to the Tadji airstrips. Adachi's forces had indeed suffered a decisive and costly defeat, rendering them incapable of posing a significant threat to Allied forces anywhere in New Guinea. The campaign to secure the Aitape area and defeat the 18th Army resulted in approximately 440 Allied soldiers killed, 2550 wounded, and 10 missing, while inflicting losses of around 8821 Japanese killed and 98 captured, including 2669 killed and 34 taken prisoner from August 2 to 9 alone. Adachi himself reported losing 9000 men and virtually annihilating seven regiments. I would like to take this time to remind you all that this podcast is only made possible through the efforts of Kings and Generals over at Youtube. Please go subscribe to Kings and Generals over at Youtube and to continue helping us produce this content please check out www.patreon.com/kingsandgenerals. If you are still hungry after that, give my personal channel a look over at The Pacific War Channel at Youtube, it would mean a lot to me. The American forces under Hall and Cunningham repelled multiple fierce Japanese offensives, inflicting heavy casualties. Despite a lot of setbacks and logistical challenges, TED Force advanced southward, disrupting Japanese supply lines and forcing their withdrawal by early August. Casualties were significant on both sides, underscoring the fierce nature of fighting on Green Hell.

1 Pastor's Point of View
The Ultimate ‘Fowlers Snare' is the N.T. Including Death, Followed by Resurrection Life.

1 Pastor's Point of View

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2024 32:13


Greetings, if you would like to support Free Gospel Church and our ministries, you can make a donation at FreeGospelAssembly.com.  Thank you for listening. If this message has blessed you please share it, that others may hear! God bless you.Main ScripturesPsalm 91; 1 Corinthians 15: 25-26; 15:54-58Part of the panoply of evil, the most feared item is death. It's “the Testimony to bedestroyed,” 1 Corinthians 15:26. So that the ultimate components of the Fowler's snare include sin, mortality and death. This human snare has oppressed humanity, believers and unbelievers, since the fall (Genesis 2-3). Does the oracle-psalm found in Psalm 91 rectify or reverse such a human quandary, especially after the death and Resurrection of Christ as Savior and Lord. He did say “It is finished.” in John 19:30, and part of John 3:16, says he/she who believes is the Risen Christ will not perish but have eternal life.And it seems on some level Psalm 91 concurs with the elimination of all element ofvaried, “fowler's snares”, deadly pestilences”, “night terrors”, “arrows and “plagues”, in fact verse 10 cries out “no harm of any hand will overtake you, nor “disaster” etc. Does the “It is finished” and the literal reading of Psalm 91 promise a totally new existence now, especially to those “born from above”(John 3:16)? It sounds like it, but what has been human reality from creation and the sacrifice of Jesus: life and death!

Carolina Crimes
EPISODE 177: "Manipulation to Murder": The Murder of Richard Fowler

Carolina Crimes

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2024 59:05


All relationships have there up's and downs. The Fowlers in Boiling Springs were no exception. The high school sweethearts turned married parents had their issues but always seemed to work things out. That was until an evil plan fueled by greed and infidelity reared its ugly head.

Gypsy Tales
CHAPTER 302 Ft. Clinton Fowler - Fowlers Facts

Gypsy Tales

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2024 181:53


My guest today is Clinton Fowler, the man behind the fantastic statistics that you hear each and every weekend on the Supercross broadcast as well as the fantastic online resource wewentfast.com and his own instagram @fowlerfacts. Clinton gave up his high-paying job at Microsoft developing the XBox to work in the action sports world with Red Bull and wound up developing the sports first detailed database almost on accident. I am a big storylines guy in the sport and no matter what story you throw Clintons way, he has a stat to either back it up or shoot you down. This was a highly enjoyable episode of the podcast with an extremely interesting and knowledgeable guy!If you enjoyed the stats side of this show, you can sign up to wewentfast.com to get access to Fowlers great database and a ton of unique stories that I doubt you have ever heard!SPONSORS:DRINK AG1: http://www.drinkag1.com/gypsytalesMake sure you use the code to get your years free supply of Vitamin D and 5 FREE travel packs!Motosport: http://www.motosport.comYamaha Motors USA:This episode is brought to you by the 50th Anniversary Edition YZ250 2-Stroke - Click the link below to find out more.https://yamahamotorsports.com/models/yz250-50th-anniversary-edition?&utm_source=gypsytales&utm_medium=youtube&utm_content=mcy-dirt-motocross-findyours-yz25050th-2024&utm_campaign=brandMANSCAPED: http://www.manscaped.comGet 20% Off + Free Shipping, with the code GYPSYGANGKRUSH OZ: https://krushoz.comDriTimes: http://www.dritimes.comFIST HANDWEAR: http://www.fisthandwear.comCODE: GYPSYGANG 15%DIXXON: http://www.dixxonquality.com.auTROPICAL AUTO GROUP: http://www.tropicalauto.com.auSUBSCRIBE TO THE PODCAST ►https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCsBG...ADD GYPSY TALES ON INSTAGRAM ►https://www.instagram.com/gypsytalespSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Lincoln City official podcast
Harvey Jabara on his mentor Ron Fowler investing into the Imps

Lincoln City official podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2024 30:33


Ron and Andrew Fowler have joined the investment group at Lincoln City through Liquid Investments, Inc.   The Fowlers are long-time friends and associates of City board member Harvey Jabara, with Ron previously leading the ownership group at MLB outfit San Diego Padres. They've been over to Lincolnshire to meet staff at the Imps, and will attend their first game on Saturday when champions Portsmouth visit the LNER Stadium. Hear from Harvey as well as City chairman Clive Nates about why they are convinced Ron and Andrew Fowler are a perfect fit with Lincoln City.

WBEN Extras
Ted Marks of Fowlers on rising chocolate prices

WBEN Extras

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2024 3:04


Ted Marks of Fowlers on rising chocolate prices 

Avant Gardeners
Kirsten Bradley - Milkwood Permaculture

Avant Gardeners

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2023 51:00


To wrap up a season of dreamy guests, we spoke to Kirsten Bradley, co-founder of Milkwood Permaculture. Kirsten and her partner Nick Ritar founded Milkwood, kind of by accident, back in 2007 when they moved to Nick's family farm with the intention to build a tiny home, grow veggies and lead a simple life. And it turns out they weren't the only ones looking for this type of life.  Soon they were hosting events and workshops as teachers and students descended on their farm. That interest and momentum spawned this way-of-living, education hub which has become Milkwood Permaculture. Milkwood was the name of that first farm in country NSW. While their location has changed once or twice, their ethos has only grown stronger and bolder. Kirsten and Nick now call lutruwita / Tasmania home, and they continue to share their knowledge on everything from permaculture design, to how to grow mushrooms, and building resilient and abundant communities. Milkwood was a bit of a gateway drug for Maddie's entry into gardening, and Em and her husband have recently embarked on their Organic Vegetable Gardening Course. Where we live there's barely a home that we go to that doesn't have a copy of Kirsten's first book Milkwood: Real Skills for Down-To-Earth Living. Kirsten's latest book is called The Milkwood Permaculture Living Handbook, Habits for Hope in a Changing World, released in late 2023. The book explores the 12 Principles of Permaculture, and covers everything from ‘compost everything', to ‘using your privilege for purpose' and ‘cook a meal outdoors'. Find Milkwood on Instagram here.  We're drinking a rosemary gimlet - following a recipe from Cocktail Botanica by Elouise Anders We're recommending the Bronchial Buster tea, recipe from Plants for the People by Erin Lovell Verinder We're drooling over everything at The Agrarian Kitchen - check out their cooking classes here.  We're flicking through a decades old Fowlers book We're loving Bokashi and Compostable Kate's tips. Visit us at @avantgardeners.podcast and www.avant-gardeners.com

Anchored by the Classic Learning Test
Jef and Starrla Fowler on Founding Veritas Academy

Anchored by the Classic Learning Test

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2023 37:37 Transcription Available


On this episode of Anchored, Soren is joined by Jef and Starrla Fowler, cofounders of Veritas Academy in Austin, Texas. The three discuss how the Fowlers' failures led to their pioneering of a collaborative educational model while learning the importance of business savvy in the process. The Fowlers explain how Veritas holds a unique position as a resource school, equipping parents to steward their roles as teachers of their children and other classical academies to follow their example. The couple also provides wisdom to those who feel called to start a classical school.

The Face-Off with Fleming & Fowler
The Little Mermaid Ep. 128

The Face-Off with Fleming & Fowler

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2023 88:34


On this weeks episode, it's officially Fowlers' Week as we celebrate the last of Fowlers 20's. The Little Mermaid is set to release this week as graduation season is among us. We discuss all things prom and how celerities have been going through it recently.  Don't forget to follow us on all social media platforms including IG, Twitter and YouTube @thefaceoffpod. On FB, follow us @thisisthefaceoffpodcast Please Like, Comment, Share, Download and Subscribe! For sponsor information, please email us @thefaceoffpod@gmail.com

While We're Waiting - Hope After Child Loss
Preaching to Myself (Part One) - Chuck and Lou-Ann Fowler

While We're Waiting - Hope After Child Loss

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2023 32:44


Chuck and Lou-Ann Fowler describe their son Aaron as "unflappable, methodical, and competent" and someone who loved a challenge ... exactly the character traits needed to work in explosive ordnance disposal with the Navy!  Aaron was also a young man of strong faith, which became sight when he died in a training accident on Easter Sunday in 2022. They join me today to share the story of his remarkable life. The Fowlers reference their friends Don and Patsy Akin, who have lost all three of their sons.  I interviewed them in Episode #42 of this podcast on April 28, 2021 and you can listen to that episode at the following link:  https://www.buzzsprout.com/1230350/8415488All statements and opinions shared by guests on this podcast are theirs alone, and may not represent the Statement of Faith and Statement of Belief of the While We're Waiting ministry. We'd love for you to connect with us here at While We're Waiting! Click HERE to visit our website and learn about our free While We're Waiting Weekends for bereaved parentsClick HERE to learn more about our network of While We're Waiting support groups all across the country. Click HERE to follow our public Facebook pageClick HERE to follow us on Instagram Click HERE to follow us on Twitter Click HERE to make a tax-deductible donation to the While We're Waiting ministryContact Jill by email at: jill@whilewerewaiting.org

Dynamic Marriage Uncovered Podcast
21. The Fowlers Lead With Love

Dynamic Marriage Uncovered Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2023 32:50


This extraordinary couple, Shannan and Xavier Fowler, have quickly learned the way to lead in everything they do, and that is with extreme, exceptional love.  Shannan is a classically trained opera singer who has had the immense pleasure of singing at Carnegie Hall, England, Scotland, Japan and all over the USA. She is described by most people who meet her as "Sunshine." Additionally, she is a stay at home mom of three who has the joy of welcoming her children home each day with love. Xavier is an entrepreneur originally from Birmingham, AL who attended the University of Alabama and currently runs a boutique IT Consulting company. In his spare time he enjoys cycling, hiking and working out. Xavier is a dedicated father and loves spending time with his family. The Fowlers attend church at Believer's Faith Fellowship in Christiana, TN and lead the marriage ministry there. They are passionate about giving couples tools they can use to excel, invest and restore their marriage, while igniting intimacy with effective communication. The Dynamic Marriage Uncovered Podcast is proud to have Shannan and Xavier as guests. www.marriagedynamics.com

The Burgundy Zone
Fowlers Findings featuring Ryan Fowler & Steve Lim!!

The Burgundy Zone

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2023 55:39


The boys are joined by Ryan Fowler of The Draft Network to get his recap of the Senior Bowl. Such as, most impressive prospect, Depth at CBs, and much more! Then they're joined by Steve Lim of the Command This! Podcast to answer fan questions and discuss League News!Support the show

Hunting Day with Stephen Robbins
Waterfowl Hunting Stories with Chuck Tousey & Sean Wainwright (Part 1)

Hunting Day with Stephen Robbins

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2023 65:48


In this episode, Stephen talks about waterfowl hunting stories with Chuck Tousey and Sean Wainwright.  What techniques do they recommend, and why do they enjoy waterfowl hunting?You can support the Ducks Unlimited Pennsylvania Southwestern Top Golf Event on Sunday, March 19, 2023.  More information at: https://ducksunlimited.myeventscenter.com/event/Southwestern-Topgolf-Event-56156You can follow Stephen on Facebook by searching for stephenrobbinshd or on Instagram at StephenHuntDay.You can also email Stephen at stephen.huntingday@gmail.com or info.huntingday@gmail.com.And until next time, keep hunting and doing what God calls you to do.

SMX Insider
Episode 2 – Rider/Team Switches and NBC Contract

SMX Insider

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2022 28:56


On Episode 2 of SMX Insider learn about the new 5-year deal with Peacock and NBC where fans can find all thirty-one rounds of the SuperMotocross season.  Jason and Daniel have an update on riders who switched teams in 2023, and you will hear from Roczen, Nichols and Craig, plus the big interview with Triumph's Jeremy Appleton, and Fowlers facts breaks down Jett Lawrence and how he stacks up among the greats.

Lexman Artificial
Dava Newman on Resolvedness, Pendulums, Demireps, and Fowlers

Lexman Artificial

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2022 4:05


Dava Newman, author of 'Resolved: A Field Guide to Quitting Anger, Stress, and Resentment' discusses how to find peace and resolve in difficult times. She also shares her tips for working with pendulums and demireps.

The Face-Off with Fleming & Fowler
Hold My Mouse-Ka-Tool Ep.93

The Face-Off with Fleming & Fowler

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 23, 2022 89:48


Y'all, we are all over the place in this episode but it is sure to make you laugh. On this weeks episode, College students and students all over the US are returning back to the classroom and College dorm decor has us in a state of both nostalgia and jealousy. This episode is filled with Apple security breaches, Capri Sun contamination and new safety tactics that women need to be aware of. Gen Z is officially going to save the world by teaching us how to quietly quit our jobs and we discuss the latest in social media news. In The Rehab Corner, we discuss Fowlers interesting encounter with a patient and we also discuss how we navigate awkward patient conversations and when we met with malingering patients. Don't forget to follow us on all social media platforms including IG, Twitter and YouTube @thefaceoffpod. On FB, follow us @thisisthefaceoffpodcast NEW EPISODES DROP EVERY TUESDAY! Please Like, Comment, Share, Download and Subscribe! Visit www.myapothecary.com for all of your CBD needs to help you “Curate a Well-thy Lifestyle”! For sponsor information, please email us @thefaceoffpod@gmail.com

GodisOpen
EP329 Fowlers Manifesto

GodisOpen

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2022 40:29


EP329 Fowlers Manifesto by Christopher Fisher

manifesto fowlers christopher fisher
Open Trailer Podcast
Dick Fowler - Stage 2

Open Trailer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2022 44:30


Wrapping up season 2 with another Maine Motorsports Hall of Famer.   - Fowlers invade Funkmaster Flex - Dream season with Mike Rowe - Team sells, but stays in the family's - Dick's side of the BRMS story.   Share, screenshot, rate, review, and tell a friend! Thank you for the support!

The Writer's Almanac
The Writer's Almanac for Thursday, March 10, 2022

The Writer's Almanac

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2022 5:00


It's the birthday of the author of the style guide known as "Fowler's Modern English Usage"--Henry Watson Fowler, born in Tonbridge, England (1858).

Mama Drama Pod
EP 78 - ”It's not your D*CK” - Fowlers & Endometriosis Awareness ft Kez

Mama Drama Pod

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2022 48:48


What is Fowler's Syndrome? What is Endometriosis? How do they impact women? Can they impact fertility?   We are joined by Kez who shares her personal experiences of such important health issues for women.   If you notice any of these symptoms please do not hesitate to get them checked out with your GP. Be persistent!    Watch the full video on Youtube: https://youtu.be/HUfcZh1wLVY   Listen on streaming platforms such as Apple Podcasts, Spotify and Amazon   Rate us 5* where possible, subscribe and share     Head over to @mamadramapod and let us know your thoughts      About us: Mama Drama Pod is a community feel podcast where we share our motherhood journey through engaging, informative, and controversial content. Mama Drama Pod spans parenting, lifestyle, relationships. We are unique by offering you the opportunity to grow simultaneously with us as we share experiences on breastfeeding, post-partum, mental health, sex pre / post pregnancy and much more. The pod keeps it fresh by delivering the latest food for thought and trending Tik Tok / Reels.   To follow a day in our lives and engage in our weekly polls, join our community on   Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mamadramapod/     Twitter: https://twitter.com/mamadramapod?lang=en     Tik Tok: https://vm.tiktok.com/ZM8CejkS2/     You can follow your hosts: https://www.instagram.com/shellsssssssss/     https://www.youtube.com/c/IAMSHELLS   https://www.instagram.com/racqsreal/ https://www.youtube.com/racqsreal     #fowlerssyndrome #endometriosis #womenshealth #sexualhealth

The Face-Off with Fleming & Fowler
Bing Bong F*** Ya Job Ep. 61

The Face-Off with Fleming & Fowler

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2021 84:08


On this weeks episode, Joint Commission visits Fowlers job and she comes to the harsh reality that she is her mothers twin via her actions. Do you have conversations with yourself or out loud? Fall Graduation season is upon us and Megan the Stallion graduated from TSU with the “Hot Girls” support all over the nation. Jussie Smollet is found guilty of staging his own attack and Tristan Thompson continues to make headlines. Instagram goes back to the original chronological timeline and a CEO is in the hottest for laying off 900 employees via a zoom call. Women have yet another thing to look out for now as people are using Apple Air Tags for carjacking and trafficking purposes. Fleming and Fowler share their sketch dangerous stories that could've altered their life. Don't forget to follow us on all social media platforms including IG, Twitter and YouTube @thefaceoffpod. On FB, follow us @thisisthefaceoffpodcast Please Like, Comment, Share, Download and Subscribe! For sponsor information, please email us @thefaceoffpod@gmail.com

The Face-Off with Fleming & Fowler
Blue's Clues Ep. 48

The Face-Off with Fleming & Fowler

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2021 73:26


On this weeks episode, Fleming and Fowler gives their week-at-a glance. Fowlers shoulder is hurt and Fleming survived her 2nd vaccine dose side effect. Healthcare workers continue to be burnt-out and are refusing to treat unvaccinated patients in some areas and how detrimental that can be for patient safety. Britney Spears has a major victory in her independence and Blue's Clues host comes back to warm the hearts of Millennials everywhere. In the Rehab Corner, Fowler takes Fleming down the path of a former patient that almost broke her back. Listen in on our thoughts as well as our views on the latest and greatest in new tv shows and movies along with the most current social media news and current events. Don't forget to follow us on all social media platforms including IG, Twitter and YouTube @thefaceoffpod. On FB, follow us @thisisthefaceoffpodcast Please Like, Comment, Share, Download and Subscribe! For sponsor information, please email us @thefaceoffpod@gmail.com

T for Texas
The Fowler Farm Gusher

T for Texas

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2021 2:01


Howdy y'all! Listen in on how The Fowlers struck gold on their farm. T for Texas is a short weekly History show, where Dr. T Lindsey Baker takes you on a journey throughout all of Texas' history one local story at a time.Tfortexas.org

Tarleton Radio
The Fowler Farm Gusher

Tarleton Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2021 2:01


Howdy y'all! Listen in on how The Fowlers struck gold on their farm. T for Texas is a short weekly History show, where Dr. T Lindsey Baker takes you on a journey throughout all of Texas' history one local story at a time.Tfortexas.org

Art Wank
Episode 70 - Artist, Alan Jones

Art Wank

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2021 48:20


Alan Jones, artist, sculptor, and maker, is a Sydney-based artist, represented by Olsen Gallery. We spoke to Alan from his studio in Alexandria surrounded by his amazing and diverse artworks. We had a great chat with Alan about his approach to his art works, the diversity in his projects,  his amazing experience on the Fowlers gap residency and much more. Thanks Alan for your time, we had a great time.'Alan Jones' work explores ideas that surround notions of identity. Jones works across a broad spectrum of mediums and takes a personal approach to the subject matter. Through this process, Jones aims to communicate the intricacies of human connections and how his roots subsequently influence his work.Jones gained his Advanced Diploma of Fine Arts in 1997 from the National Art School in Sydney before furthered his education abroad on the Inaugural Pat Corrigan Travelling Scholarship for Painting. In 1998 he returned to Australia, where he completed his Bachelor of Fine Arts in 2000 at the National Art School. In 2004 Jones' portfolio of 10 paintings and drawings, inspired by his time in France and Germany, won the prestigious Brett Whiteley Travelling Art Scholarship. The BWTAS saw mom Jones return to Europe where he undertook a residency at the Cité Internationale des Arts in Paris before working in Berlin and New York.'

Tim & Sam
Tim & Sam: Year End Special (2020)

Tim & Sam

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2021 65:11


Tim & Sam // Year End Special (2020) Hosts: Tim Gillespie, Sam Leonor We've come to the end of what we would say an extremely unprecedented year. In the final episode for 2020, Tim and Sam talk about how they spent their year end holidays during the pandemic, resolutions for the upcoming year, and a recap of what they've learned in 2020. If you have any comments or questions for Tim and Sam, please email podcast@crosswalkvillage.com.  New Years Resolutions (11:37) Giving (14:00) How was 2020 changed you? (16:55) Tim says "scurvy" in an Irish accent (36:49) Habakkuk: "Even though..." (40:00) Final Highlight (51:30) Check out Unapologetics Podcast with Dr. Tim Gillespie and Dr. Alex Bryant! You can get your own bag of delicious Covert Coffee by The Fowlers by going to www.covertcoffee.com. This podcast is powered through Megaphone.

Tim & Sam
Tim & Sam: Best Moments of The One Project

Tim & Sam

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2020 79:32


Tim & Sam // Best Moments of The One Project  Hosts: Tim Gillespie, Sam Leonor We've reached our 50th episode! Tim and Sam talk where we're at with the current COVID-19 pandemic and conclude our series on The One Project on what they've learned, what's changed and it's best moments. Tim and Sam still If you have any comments or questions for Tim and Sam, please email podcast@crosswalkvillage.com.  Tim and Sam still can't figure out when to click the recording button (8:00) Wanna donate to the podcasts? Click HERE. (11:00) What has changed? (13:30) Story Time with Sam (28:35) "The gospel leads you to more love, grace, compassion..." (1:11:10) Check out Unapologetics Podcast with Tim Gillespie and Alex Bryant! You can get your own bag of delicious Covert Coffee by The Fowlers by going to www.covertcoffee.com. This podcast is powered through Megaphone.

Tim & Sam
Tim & Sam: The One Project 6 ft. Alex Bryan

Tim & Sam

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2020 31:14


Tim & Sam // The One Project 6 ft. Alex Bryan Hosts: Tim Gillespie, Sam Leonor In this episode Tim and Sam continue their conversation of The One Project with guest Alex Bryan, Lead Chief Officer at Adventist Health and cofounder of the One Project. If you have any comments or questions for Tim and Sam, please email podcast@crosswalkvillage.com.  An investigation (3:25) "Do you believe in the 'Adventist' Jesus or do you believe in just a 'random' Jesus?" (9:40) Theres room for renovation and structure (19:30) "The gospel is both constructive and reconstructive..." (23:09) "... a connection to the divine..." (28:40) You can get your own bag of delicious Covert Coffee by The Fowlers by going to www.covertcoffee.com. This podcast is powered through Megaphone.

Tim & Sam
Tim & Sam: The One Project 5 ft. Alex Bryan

Tim & Sam

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2020 48:34


Tim & Sam // The One Project 5 ft. Alex Bryan Hosts: Tim Gillespie, Sam Leonor In this episode Tim and Sam continue their conversation of The One Project with guest Alex Bryan, Lead Chief Officer at Adventist Health and cofounder of the One Project. If you have any comments or questions for Tim and Sam, please email podcast@crosswalkvillage.com.  Alex Bryan (3:20) "We've worried about the church." (8:00) "The gospel is never standing water..." (15:50) "We're not gonna just play defense..." (31:50) "Is there hope for us to be united?" (38:20) You can get your own bag of delicious Covert Coffee by The Fowlers by going to www.covertcoffee.com. This podcast is powered through Megaphone.

Tim & Sam
Tim & Sam: The One Project 4 ft. Japhet De Oliveira

Tim & Sam

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 3, 2020 53:34


Tim & Sam // The One Project 4 ft. Japhet De Oliveira Hosts: Tim Gillespie, Sam Leonor In this episode Tim and Sam continue their conversation of The One Project with guest Japhet De Oliveira and the criticism The One Project received. If you have any comments or questions for Tim and Sam, please email podcast@crosswalkvillage.com.  the1project.org (7:00) Pushback (9:00) The knife and the cheese (29:00) Highlights (37:00) A watershed moment (45:00) You can get your own bag of delicious Covert Coffee by The Fowlers by going to www.covertcoffee.com. This podcast is powered through Megaphone.

Tim & Sam
Tim & Sam: The One Project 3 ft. Japhet De Oliveira

Tim & Sam

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2020 45:53


Tim & Sam // The One Project 3 ft. Japhet De Oliveira Hosts: Tim Gillespie, Sam Leonor In this episode Tim and Sam continue their conversation of The One Project with guest, brother and cofounder Japhet De Oliveira. Also Sam is drinking three different beverages this morning. If you have any comments or questions for Tim and Sam, please email podcast@crosswalkvillage.com.  Who is Japhet De Oliveira? (5:00) Summer 2010 (16:30) A catalyst for wanting something different (22:15) "People wanted a fresh renewal with God." (23:45) the1project.org (43:00) You can get your own bag of delicious Covert Coffee by The Fowlers by going to www.covertcoffee.com. This podcast is powered through Megaphone.

Tim & Sam
Tim & Sam: The One Project 2

Tim & Sam

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2020 34:18


Tim & Sam // The One Project Pt. 2 Hosts: Tim Gillespie, Sam Leonor In this episode Tim and Sam continue their conversation on the upbringing of The One Project, their conversation in Denver, CO and its purpose. If you have any comments or questions for Tim and Sam, please email podcast@crosswalkvillage.com.  Tim and Sam are fasting (8:00) Who was there? (10:00) Why we got into ministry in the first place? (17:00) "Where Jesus is the most focused on, the Holy Spirit is the most present." (20:54) "Once you understand what the source of everything is, everything gets reconfigured." (31:15) You can get your own bag of delicious Covert Coffee by The Fowlers by going to www.covertcoffee.com. This podcast is powered through Megaphone.

Tim & Sam
Tim & Sam: The One Project 1

Tim & Sam

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2020 42:48


Tim & Sam // The One Project Pt. 1 Hosts: Tim Gillespie, Sam Leonor In this episode Tim and Sam begin to talk about what has been mentioned in many other episodes, The One Project. Here we explore the origins of this brotherhood that came about and why it formed. If you have any comments or questions for Tim and Sam, please email podcast@crosswalkvillage.com.  Tim and Sam have an outline for this episode (3:50) Straight Up "Whackadoodleness" (8:53) The One Project (9:45) 2010 (12:00) A dead end (33:00) You can get your own bag of delicious Covert Coffee by The Fowlers by going to www.covertcoffee.com. This podcast is powered through Megaphone.

Tim & Sam
Tim & Sam: Mistakes

Tim & Sam

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2020 61:57


Tim & Sam // Mistakes Hosts: Tim Gillespie, Sam Leonor In this episode Tim and Sam talk mistakes made in their career of ministry. If you have any comments or questions for Tim and Sam, please email podcast@crosswalkvillage.com.   Rooming with Tim and Sam (8:00) What does it look like when you make a mistake in ministry? (14:00) Tripping over words (19:00) Have you ever made a mistake that might have put people in danger? (33:15) Take heart (55:00) You can get your own bag of delicious Covert Coffee by The Fowlers by going to www.covertcoffee.com. This podcast is powered through Megaphone.

Tim & Sam
Tim & Sam: Jerome Fontamillas 2

Tim & Sam

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2020 44:46


Tim & Sam // Jerome Fontamillas 2 Hosts: Tim Gillespie, Sam Leonor In this episode Tim and Sam are joined by Grammy award winning Switchfoot's Jerome Fontamillas once again, also known to produce Big Face Grace. If you have any comments or questions for Tim and Sam, please email podcast@crosswalkvillage.com.   Tour with Bon Jovi (7:00) Best show memories (10:30) Hello Hurricane (23:00) Cancer has no bias (28:20) "It's the human part of what we do." (35:00) You can get your own bag of delicious Covert Coffee by The Fowlers by going to www.covertcoffee.com. This podcast is powered through Megaphone.

Tim & Sam
Tim & Sam: Jerome Fontamillas 1

Tim & Sam

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2020 53:36


Tim & Sam // Jerome Fontamillas 1 Hosts: Tim Gillespie, Sam Leonor In this episode Tim and Sam are joined by Grammy award winning Switchfoot's Jerome Fontamillas. If you have any comments or questions for Tim and Sam, please email podcast@crosswalkvillage.com.  Tim was in a play. (6:40) Jerome Fontamillas: Mortal, Fold Zandura, Switchfoot (10:00) Touring (37:00) Fading West (45:00) A Nugget of Wisdom (49:12)   You can get your own bag of delicious Covert Coffee by The Fowlers by going to www.covertcoffee.com. This podcast is powered through Megaphone.

Tim & Sam
Tim & Sam: Old Age

Tim & Sam

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2020 63:10


Tim & Sam // Old Age Hosts: Tim Gillespie, Sam Leonor In this episode Tim and Sam talk about growing into the "old age" and changes that come with it whether it be health or shifts in career paths. If you have any comments or questions for Tim and Sam, please email podcast@crosswalkvillage.com.  "Tell Her" by Micah Leonor (5:00) Sam's fall (9:00) "How do you know when it's time?" (31:20) "I don't know that a call to ministry is always life long" *(33:49) "Often times we allow our religious leaders to do our believing for us... and that is a problem." (47:29) Burn The Haystack Podcast   You can get your own bag of delicious Covert Coffee by The Fowlers by going to www.covertcoffee.com. This podcast is powered through Megaphone.

Fresh Faith Podcast
32. Interview with the Fowlers

Fresh Faith Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2019 73:27


Fresh Faith Podcast
32. Interview with the Fowlers

Fresh Faith Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2019


Interview with Jon and Bianca Fowler.

Bump and Run Sports
BumpAndRunSports-MayaKUCHAR-NFL, College

Bump and Run Sports

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2019 54:27


The guys are back after a week off.  They tackle the golf topics of the Presidents Cup teams, Fowlers infection, and Eddie Pepperells interesting 1 day tourney.  Then they go over all the NFL and College stories including the Browns being Brownsy, the Ravens dominating, and of course.. The THREE TEAM SUCK OFF!!!  Then they go over their favorite NFL and College bets of the year.  Then the close out with the worst veggie sandwich ever.  And the 2020 Fantasy Golf Season is released!!! Twitter:@bumpsports BumpAndRunSports.com

Catch my Killer
Episode 4: The unsolved hit-and-run murder of Joshua David Breman

Catch my Killer

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2019 46:26


On Feb 27, 2016, Joshua Breman was walking along Highway 412 near the Cleveland exit in Pawnee County, Oklahoma. Joshua was hit by a vehicle believed to have either been a semi or a truck. His body had Yellow paint on it. The driver then left Joshua’s body on the highway without calling 911 or offering aid. It’s been over 3 years since David and Robin Fowler lost their son. They know that someone killed their son. They also know this person will be enjoying a nice Thanksgiving and Christmas holiday. But do you know who won’t be celebrating the holidays this year? Joshua Bremen won’t be. Instead of spending the holidays with his family, he is dead and buried.Whoever killed Joshua knew they hit something. This person probably also had damage to his vehicle and lied about it. He must have washed his vehicle and taken it in for service somewhere. I believe it had human remains or some kind of damage from striking a person. Someone out there knows who did this. Perhaps it was a suspicious relative, friend or someone who worked on the vehicle and didn’t realize it was used to kill an innocent man. Do you know something? Can you help the Fowlers get justice? If you know anything, please contact contact the Oklahoma Highway Patrol Troop K at 580-336-9880. Please also be sure to visit and join the Justice for Joshua FB page. https://www.facebook.com/JoshuaDavidBremanAlso, if you are someone in law enforcement or the friend or loved one of someone who needs justice for a cold case, please contact me through my website or email me at catchmykiller@gmail.com. Your case could be profiled on an upcoming podcast episode. Please be sure to visit my website for more information about my true crime and paranormal newspaper columns at www.themarcabe.com. You can also help support my podcast by subscribing to my true crime Patreon page. You will receive an extra podcast episode per month (true crime, paranormal or a combination of both.) To subscribe, please visit my Patreon page at: https://www.patreon.com/catchmykiller. If you would like to contact me about this podcast, please email me at catchmykiller@gmail.com.

Dinosaur George Podcast - A Podcast Devoted to Paleontology and Natural Science
Interview with Dr. Elizabeth Freedman Fowler and Dr. Denver Fowler – Podcast #148

Dinosaur George Podcast - A Podcast Devoted to Paleontology and Natural Science

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2019 52:02


In this episode we talk with husband and wife team paleontologists, the Fowlers, about their upcoming symposium at the Badlands Dinosaur Museum in Dickinson, North Dakota. Along with their interview, Dinosaur George answers some questions submitted by friends on our social media pages.

Brent Presents
The Roundtable: Working with Your Spouse

Brent Presents

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2019 57:18


Working with your spouse isn't so bad... or is it? Find out on this week's episode of Brent Presents. Brent and Laura Lancaster, owners of Bob Brooks School, have been working in the same office together, for just over two years. The Lancasters sit down with newly-working-together couple, Blake and Lauren Fowler of EXIT Realty Group in Baton Rouge; the Fowlers are in their first month of working together. The two couples talk about the many benefits and challenges of working with their spouse, as well as the common ground they share as married couples in the world owning a Small Business.

A Thoughtful Faith - Mormon / LDS
285: Fowler's Stage 6: A Universalizing Faith: Sara Hughes-Zabawa

A Thoughtful Faith - Mormon / LDS

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2019 111:16


Sara Hughes-Zabawa joins me for the final episode of the Fowler's Stages of Faith series.    In this episode we discuss the failings of Fowler's stages. We also talk about how we can notice or engage  stage 6 without falling into the trap of imagining that a universalizing faith is the terrain of the political and religious luminaries alone..

Double Love
35: THE FOWLERS OF SWEET VALLEY

Double Love

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2018 62:56


It's finally here - the story of the many flat-faced bitches who made Lila Fowler the glorious diva we know and love! History experts look away now, as we head back to the French Revolution to meet Lila's aristocratic French ancestors and wonder why the hell she isn't constantly boasting about all these poshos. This book has it all - rural guillotines, cross-dressing bohemians, multiple secret marriages, and family feuds. And we loved it! Hop into your lime-green triumph and enjoy... You can follow us on Twitter at @svhpodcast and follow the Headstuff Podcast Network on @HSPodnetwork and @ThisHeadstuff

Maximum Health:
The Seed Vault on Saving the Future of Agriculture Diversity

Maximum Health: "Quality Living" Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2018 27:03


Dr. Cary Fowler former Head of the United Nations (UN) Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), Founder of the Seed Vault and Author of Seeds on Ice talks saving the future of agriculture diversity. The importance of saving agricultural DNA for the future of our planet and beyond has been a priority of Dr. Fowlers for … Continue reading The Seed Vault on Saving the Future of Agriculture Diversity →

Boiling Point
In conversation with Dr Keith Leggett, Director of UNSW’s Fowlers Gap Research Station

Boiling Point

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2018


On Boiling Point tonight, Cat and Nick are joined by Dr Keith Leggett. What do we actually know about the critters of the outback like echidna and co? Surprisingly little! Our special guest, Dr Keith Leggett, is Director of the arid zone research station of the University of New South Wales and runs several research […]

A Thoughtful Faith - Mormon / LDS
266a: Fowlers Stages of Faith: Developing a Healthy Individuative-Reflective Faith: Sara Hughes-Zabawa

A Thoughtful Faith - Mormon / LDS

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2018 108:43


Sara Hughes-Zabawa returns to discuss one of the most emotionally and spiritually challenging stages in Fowler's Stages of Faith;  the development of an Individuative-Reflective Faith.   In high demand or fundamentalist faith traditions Stage Four is poorly understood and often poorly responded to by families,  hurch friends and leadership. Sarah calls for the celebration and normalisation of the individuative-reflective stage of faith and for more openness and acceptance of its necessity in everyone's spiritual becoming.

Locked On Jaguars - Daily Podcast On The Jacksonville Jaguars
Ramsey, Fowler Suspended- What This Means Going Forward + Fowlers' Future With the Jaguars

Locked On Jaguars - Daily Podcast On The Jacksonville Jaguars

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 13, 2018 22:44


In the wake of CB Jalen Ramsey and DE Dante Fowler Jr. being suspended for the week for violating team rules, we discuss what this means not only moving forward this week, but specifically the future of DE Dante Fowler Jr. with the Jacksonville Jaguars. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Team of Rivals Podcast
Season 2, Episode 29 - Let's Be Better

Team of Rivals Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2018 74:47


The evening's results are just too depressing to go in depth, so Ron, Elliott, and Pete wander around MLB searching for focus. Eventually, the conversation comes around to the Fowlers being run off of Twitter and the depths of the conversations that happen online, leading to the guys issuing a challenge to their listeners and to all of social media.

Bump and Run Sports
The Golf Betting Guys-2018 The Players

Bump and Run Sports

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2018 64:16


Andy and KJ go over Tiger, Phil and Rickie in the same group, and Phil challenging Tiger to a head to head matchup.  They go over goats on the golf course, DWI's on lawnmowers, Fowlers new terrible idea, Trivia, and Tommy Fleetwood and Brice Garnett's tough weekend.  Bets, draftkings, and more.  LOVE THE BETS THIS WEEK EVERYONE. TheSportsBettingGuys.com Join bookmaker at Bookmaker.eu/thegolfbettingguys for your bonus.

Bump and Run Sports
The Golf Betting Guys-2018 Arnold Palmer

Bump and Run Sports

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2018 62:43


Andy is back from Vegas (he left his voice though), KJ is back in rare form and makes one of the most offensive jokes in the podcasts history.  They guys go over all the news including Fowlers new shoes, new golf rules, new technology that brings golf holes into your living room, and of course...Tiger Woods stuff.  Paul Casey gets off the schnide, Trivia, Stats, Draftkings and More!!! Head to Head matchups are not out yet (probably because of the NCAA Tournament) so check in with the website and on twitter and we'll let you know when our picks are up. Bookmaker.eu/thegolfbettingguys Please support our sponsor!!! TheSportsBettingGuys.com Twitter: @golfbettingguys Email: TheGolfBettingGuys@gmail.com

NC F&B Podcast
Episode 82 - From Ski Bum to Chef... A Chef's Story

NC F&B Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2018 70:33


How does one fuse creative drive with practicality? How about be a ski bum for a few years then decide to go to culinary school?  Growing up, Sean’s father made  a successful national restaurant chain, but that didn’t push Sean into restaurants. Sean worked restaurant jobs to support his skiing habit and after a few years realized he needed a steady job. He decided to go to the in Hyde Park, NY and hone his culinary skills there. While in New York City he worked at some notable establishments, most impressively, was the time he spent learning from Chef at . After working at Le Bernadin and sharpening his technique, the call of home, North Carolina began to ring. Eventually, Sean used both practical and creative parts of his brain to run his own business. In order to learn how to become a business owner in North Carolina, Chef Sean worked his butt off at the for seven years; eventually he became the Catering Chef. During his time, Fowler met his wife Lizzie by wooing her with his culinary delights. Lizzie and he were ready to strike out on his own when the Fowlers created . The location for their new project serendipitously happened to be Sean’s childhood stomping ground. Since 2011, Mandolin has been a staple of the Raleigh farm to table culinary world. The Fowlers planted a farm in order to supply the restaurant with all sorts of produce. Mandolin is in elite company in the Triangle of North Carolina as one of the few restaurants to be awarded 4.5 stars from the . Enjoy Chef Sean Fowler's song on his Mandolin...    

Golf Talk Radio with Mike & Billy Podcasts
Golf Talk Radio with Mike & Billy 1.9.16 - Clubbing with Dave, Rickie Fowlers NEW shoes & pants - Part 4

Golf Talk Radio with Mike & Billy Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2016 23:56


Golf Talk Radio with Mike & Billy  1.9.16 - Clubbing with Dave, Rickie Fowler's NEW shoes & pants - Part 4 Golf Talk Radio with Mike & Billy is brought to you by ForeThePatrons.NET, Vegas Golf, The Game, Slickstix.com, Premier Irish Golf Tours, Adams Golf, Sundale Country Club , McPhees Grill, and Paso Robles Golf Club. Visit Golftalkradio.com for the latest show information, contests, videos, iPhone and Android Apps and more! If you are interested in advertising with Golf Talk Radio with Mike & Billy email us at info@golftalkradio.com.

Mayor of Storyville® Channel
Mayor of Storyville® - The Fowlers of Flora

Mayor of Storyville® Channel

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2013 3:33


Flowers have powers, especially in the town of Flora. A King so proud of their hospitality had his wizard place a charm on a rose bush in town, and left this poem: "Each day bathe in the flowers treat, a day without is not complete, for those who partake in natures gift, shall never shed their years too swift, as those who’ve made the choice and chose not to stop and smell the rose." Please smell the roses, Love Your Mayor

The Last Podcaster Standing
Lions, Alpacas, and 261 Penises Oh My!

The Last Podcaster Standing

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2011 66:43


In this the 8th episode of The Last Podcaster Standing, After surviving last weeks train trip to Russia, in spite of Grant's over emotional decree of episode 7 being "the last episode of The Last Podcaster Standing EVER!", the guys gather once again behind the mics to share their idiocy with the world.  First off, the guys discuss a listener/fan who recently had a child in the hospital, and before Mr. Know It All knows it all, he cracks a joke. Nice Tom. Nice. Luckily she has survived her ordeal and is doing well. And you're still an a$$ Tom. This leads the group to ponder the high price of band aids and Mrs. Fowlers ability to cut hair. Ginger shares experiences from the previous nights job with a drunk and his crank and a man and his crack. Tom provides helpful information to Ginger by showing him a self protection device that will surely get him killed. The guys attempt to solicit information from Ginger regarding his families bounty hunting duties, but apparently until further notice, needs to be shrouded in secrecy. Dog will be so disappointed. In headlines, a chef in New York discovers the "other white cheese" with the help of his wife. Rest assured this is better than maggot cheese! But still may make you hurl just the same. Also discussed, a taco that costs 10 dollars may be worth the trip, men who need Kleenex for more than just their spunky moments, the best museum for lovers of the penis, a cat and his civil duties, and finally, things kids today will never know tomorrow. Except for the fact that they will. Unless they live in a cave... ***Special Thanks to Erin Trim for sending in the story "The Other White Cheese". Links: Gun Comb Boobalicious Cheese Tacos:The Mane Dish Sick Of Orgasms Iceland:Now Accepting Penis Donations Furry Juror Things Kids Will Never Know Have a quiz, survey, or test for us to take?  Send it to us, we'll make a show out of it!  Have a story that needs to be told?  Have questions you want answered?  Need advice?  (Ann Landers was never as honest as we are)  Send us an email, drop us a line on Facebook, or post a comment right here in this blog post.  Wanna be a guest podcaster?  Do you live in the Grand Rapids area, or are you willing to drive to Grand Rapids?  Send us an email, drop us a line on Facebook, or post a comment right here in this blog post. There is no such thing as stupid news, only stupid people. Thanks for listening.thelastpodcaster@gmail.comThe Last Podcaster Standing @ Facebook Right Click the link below and select Save Target As to save a copy of the podcast to your computer.

Riverbed & Distort
Yer Mom Likes to Party: April 28, 2010

Riverbed & Distort

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2010


Redbird Hermit Thrushes Ben Fowler April 28, 2010 The Bishop Bloomington, IN Recorded by Ben Myers Stream/Download Keep This Boat Afloat: Learn about the situation with which the Fowlers are... Music you'll either try voraciously to pin down or wish you'd never heard it in the first place...perhaps as a result of the former.