Commune in Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France
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durée : 00:03:44 - Garlin n'a bientôt plus de médecin - À partir d'août, il n'y aura plus de médecin à Garlin. Les quatre généralistes de la maison de santé pluridisciplinaire démissionnent en cascade. Une réunion s'est tenue, mardi 10 juin, entre l'ARS, l'hôpital de Pau, la municipalité et le département pour trouver des solutions d'urgence.
Podcast for a deep examination into the career and life choices of Eddie Murphy & Jim Carrey. Laurence Hewitt returns to the cast to share his memories from day care. Joe is inspired by this week's movie to open up his own day care center. Will he let Patrick teach Latin at his new business venture? Find out on this week's episode of 'What the Hell Happened to Them?' Email the cast at whathappenedtothem@gmail.com Disclaimer: This episode was recorded in May 2025. References may feel confusing and/or dated unusually quickly. 'Daddy Day Care' is available on DVD (and that seems to be it?): https://www.amazon.com/Daddy-Care-Special-Steve-Zahn/dp/B00005JM4W/ Music from "Who's Your Daddy" by Lordi Artwork from BJ West quixotic, united, skeyhill, vekeman, murphy, carrey, versus, vs, daddy, day, care, hewitt, garlin, zahn, fanning, latin, huston, stiller, godzilla
Hal Sparks and Johnny Million are joined by former WCPT host Michael Garlin and Richard Chew, host of WCPT's "Chew's Views" (weekdays from 6:00 to 8:00 a.m. Central), at WCPT's 20th anniversary live broadcast from Max and Benny's Restaurant in Northbrook, Illinois.
durée : 00:03:32 - Coup d'envoi de la saison des novilladas à Garlin
durée : 00:17:41 - Callejon -
KIKUS ist ein Sprachförderkonzept für Kinder im Alter von 3 bis 10 Jahren. Es wird vom gemeinnützigen Verein Zentrum für kindliche Mehrsprachigkeit e.V. getragen. KIKUS gibt es seit mehr als 25 Jahren. Das Programm vermittelt den Kindern auf systematische, spielerische und herzliche Weise die mündliche Standardsprache eines Landes. Dabei wird besonderer Wert auf Wertschätzung, Einbeziehung und Erhalt der Familiensprachen der Kinder gelegt. Wir stellen dieses Programm für Kitas vor.
The following political analysis is from Business-Industry Political Action Committee (BIPAC) Senior Political Analyst Jim Ellis. BIPAC is an independent, bipartisan organization. It is provided solely as a membership benefit to the organization's 200-plus member companies and trade associations. The views and opinions expressed do not necessarily represent those of any particular member or organization.
durée : 00:26:49 - Cuisine traditionnelle et du terroir au Restaurant du Parc à Garlin - Après 10 ans de fermeture, ce lieu mythique de Garlin a rouvert ses portes avec de nouveaux gérants. L'équipe familiale propose un bar brasserie et un restaurant bistronomique avec des produits locaux.
In this insightful interview on Backstage Sonoma, musician Rachel Garlin joins host Steve Roby to discuss her musical journey and latest project, "The Ballad of Madeline and Therese." Rachel shares her experiences growing up with a passion for storytelling and music, leading to her current role as a singer-songwriter based in San Francisco. She delves into her latest album's inspiration and creation process, explaining how it began as a song cycle and evolved into a historical fiction narrative about forbidden love in 1940s America. Rachel also discusses the challenges and rewards of transforming the album into a one-woman show and her approach to live performances. She further shares a unique songwriting exercise inspired by a random book paragraph and discusses the deeper meanings behind her songs. Further, Rachel touches on her diverse endeavors, including her appearances on NBC's "American Ninja Warrior," her work as a songwriting instructor at Berkeley Rep and ACT, and her upcoming performances at the Sweetwater Music Hall. Throughout the conversation, she emphasizes the importance of connecting with listeners and students through music and shared stories, showcasing her talents and passions beyond just performing.
durée : 00:18:01 - Garlin,la journée Pedraza de Yeltes, Mimizan, une nouvelle amition taurine
On this episode, San Francisco's Rachel Garlin dives deep into her latest LP "The Ballad of Madelyn and Therese" and talks about its theme of gay repression in the 1940's and its metaphorical relevance to our societal "repression" during COVID. Plus, 2 hours of fresh music from the Bay and beyond.
More than a quarter century after The Full Monty unexpectedly charmed movie audiences, the boys are back for a limited-series TV sequel -- and not everyone on the panel is as charmed by Round 2. Mo Ryan returns to the guest chair to talk about unmitigated in "dramedies," whether TFM: The TV Show started as a feature-length sequel, and the correct amount of onscreen nudity. We went Around The Dial with Never Have I Ever, I, Tina, The Real Housewives of New Jersey, and Star Trek: Strange New Worlds before Tara hoped a second-season episode of Reservation Dogs would get adopted into the Canon. Bill Hader won, The Crowded Room lost, and Game Time had us scouring the index of Mo's book. Grab a bag of chips and run: it's an all-new Extra Hot Great! GUESTS
Born in Sangre Grande and raised in the Royal Chartered Borough of Arima, Trinidad, Ian Anthony Alvarez better known as Bunji Garlin, is a Trinidadian artist and international soca royalty. He is affectionately known as “de girls dem darlin” (although now married to Faye-Ann Lyons, a fellow performer) and also “fireman” for his famous chant of “Fire!” during his performances. Garlin says he got his stage name from the bungee cord, which is flexible and Garlin is a type of gun with powerful shots. In his own words: “…no matter what they send at me, I will always bounce back.” Source : https://www.vprecords.com/bunji-garlin/
Things start to really heat up in the continued battle at the docks of Garlin. See what happens when our rogue without a cause' leaps to action in this action packed episode of The Natural Ones! Check out our links! https://wavve.link/TheNaturalOnes Check out our friends! https://www.twitch.tv/amateurishproductions https://ataleofd20s.com/
This episode, Frankie talks with Lieutenant Governor Garlin Gilchrist about the 2022 general elections, the great work that's been done serving this past term with Governor Gretchen Whitmer, economic opportunities in Michigan, the importance of young voters & the importance of service.Lieutenant Governor Garlin Gilchrist has dedicated his career to solving problems. An engineer by training, he uses thoughtful innovation, progressive reform, and efficient modernization of policies and programs to make the work better for hardworking families. From spearheading campaigns for equality and justice to harnessing technology to solve real problems, his focus has consistently remained on serving the public and getting things done.Known for her authentic, credible and trusting voice, veteran award-winning broadcast journalist Frankie Darcell is known for elevating every platform she graces. With a rich background in radio, Frankie's responsibilities in music and radio include iHeartMedia and the iHeartMedia Radio Network. Frankie can be heard in 22 markets including Miami, New Orleans, Chicago, Memphis, and Norfolk Virginia.Headquartered in Detroit, RTM is the parent company to five of the country's most respected Black-owned local news organizations, the Atlanta Daily World, Atlanta Tribune: The Magazine, the Chicago Defender, the Michigan Chronicle, and the New Pittsburgh Courier, which enables it to maintain the heartbeat of the Black experience.
Johnny Depp bags the wrong lawyer...Jeff Garlin wants your sympathy...The horror of Bryce Dallas Howard asked to lose weight...The "Wizard of Oz" remake will be very gay...Observations from The Queen's funeral.
durée : 00:39:29 - Côté saveurs en Béarn Bigorre - Samedi 17 septembre place Marcadieu à Garlin place à la gourmandise, aux produits locaux et au partage. Faire son marché et déjeuner ensemble voilà ce que nous propose l'association des artisans commerçants et services de la région de Garlin. Un marché de producteurs avec France Bleu !
Everything You Never Needed to Know About Movies, Music & Theater
Mindy Pierce returns to talk to Matt and a special guest star of Travis Bryam to talk about Youthmin and Devil's in the Details, two musicals about to have their first public readings. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/matt-garlin/support
Intro: Amtrak, you can't afford to live anywhere, where am I trying to go?, being of service, Legacy, Fresh and FancyLet Me Run This By You: We get feedback from Dave, talk about Jeff Garlin, NO ONE IS HIDING ANYTHINGCOMPLETE TRANSCRIPT (unedited):1 (10s):And I'm Gina Pulice. We went to theater school2 (12s):Together. We survived it.1 (14s):You didn't quite understand it. 20 years later, we're digging deep talking to our guests about their experiences and trying to make sense of it all2 (21s):Survived theater school. And you will too. Are we famous yet?1 (31s):Hello survivors. It is Gina. Just wanted to let you know that today, boss and I are guest lists. We are without a guest and we instead had a conversation, just the two of us, chickens about a ton of things, including the fact that nothing is a secret. Even the things that we think are and talking about legacy. This is a topic that boss has been really interested in recently. And I guess I'm starting to get interested in it too. At some point in one's life, one starts to think, Hmm, did it matter that I was here? What did I do? What, what proof or evidence of is there? What I did, or maybe you don't think that way, maybe your legacy is just that you lived a contented and happy life and, and it doesn't matter if it is written in the stars in any way, either way.1 (1m 22s):It's fine with me. Just interesting to learn about what people's philosophies or the thoughts are about legacy. And as we come to this end of the year and we're reflecting on, wow, we're reflecting on, I guess these last two crazy years, hopefully everybody is entering this time of reflection with a lot more clarity. Maybe I think the pandemic has been clarifying among many other things. And so hopefully you're feeling, I don't know, clear, and hopefully you are enjoying this podcast.1 (2m 4s):And if you are enjoying it, you are hopefully subscribed. And if you're subscribed, hopefully you have left us a review. Honestly, I don't even care what the review says. I think just having reviews is the thing that helps us with the king algorithm. And that's important only because we want to be able to keep doing this podcast. We enjoy doing it. We, we get a lot out of it. And we've heard from people that people are getting a lot out of it in return. So it's a mutually great thing that we'll be able to continue. If you are able to put your love for our podcast, not just in your heart, but in the world, tell the public, shout it from the rooftops.1 (2m 47s):I'm not going to stop you from shouting it from the rooftops. I'll tell you that much right now. Anyway, that's all for that. Please enjoy.3 (3m 10s):I'm going to take it to all those places. Cause those are like some of my favorite places in Southern California. And I didn't know that. So I'm learning a lot. And so I took it to San Francisco to Oakland and my cousin picked me up. But what is fantastic and sad about Amtrak for people that don't know? Like nobody knows shit about Amtrak, but Amtrak is a government funded. So rail is government funded. It was supposed to be like the thing of the future. It was supposed to be just rail. We weren't like flying and, and, and, and train travel was supposed to be comparable like it was going to be, but it just like, it has a lot to do. Someone was telling me like w who I met on the Amtrak.3 (3m 51s):Cause you eat in community eating. So these two amazing women that I met told me that like something with world war two and trains, the trains all had to be used for, for like ammunition, like the war Fs. And so then it became less of a, a passenger situation. And then when flying really anyway. So, but it's gorgeous. So w and what you can do is, so I bought a coach ticket, which is literally like, you know, I don't know, 50 bucks, a hundred bucks round trip from, but then you can bid to upgrade your seat because Amtrak has no money.3 (4m 32s):So what you can do is say, okay, well, like I'm willing to pay. They give you a range I'm willing to pay. And I did the lowest $20 more to go to business class, which is like super much nicer. Right. So I bid, and then they said, of course they accepted my bid because it's not a full train. Nobody trained travels by train. And so business classes dope. And it is like, you get two seats. It, they reclined almost all the way. There's, it's just, it's quiet. Like coaches, coaches, loud as hell, where people are eating, like, you know, Funyuns and like Takis chips the whole time. And like, you know, a lot of people like down on their luck and stuff like that.3 (5m 15s):Okay. So, you know, I did business class on the way there and lovely. I mean, there's wifi. I mean, it's like dope. And the bathrooms were relative are clean. I don't in business class anyway. All right. So it literally goes up the coast. And so you, you, you're on the ocean. It's the weirdest thing you're like, this is I'm, I'm traveling right next to the ocean. It's a long time. The whole time. Almost long as hell though. Okay. So like, you know, the flight is 45 minutes from Burbank to, to, to San Francisco. And the train ride is 10 hours. Like, that's just how it is. Like, that's, if you are in a hurry, you do not take the Amtrak.3 (5m 57s):You know what I mean? So there is like, I do have some shame, like, people think I'm ridiculous a little bit. They're like, I'm like, where am I going? I, it's not like I have pressing meetings. I am not. Yeah.1 (6m 9s):And for, for the life, so many of us are living right now, which is working from home or working remotely or making your own schedule. Why shouldn't you it's much better for the environment to take the train. Yeah.3 (6m 23s):It is it, you take the airplane. Yes. So, so it was amazing. And then I had a wonderful, wonderful time in San Francisco. Like I never really liked San Francisco. I don't know what my problem was. Like, I never really got into San Francisco even though like people cause1 (6m 41s):Your mom left you a spree for, oh3 (6m 43s):My God. Yeah. If you listen to this podcast, you know that like, you know, my mom was having an affair and, and, and we went to San Francisco and she literally left my sister and I at the esprit outlet, which thank God, had a restaurant in the outlet for like what felt like forever. But it, it was a work day. It was a full work day at a spree. It was like eight hours. So I just really, in the last couple years have really grown to love the shit out of the bay area. Like I know the tech bros have taken over. I know that you can't afford to live there. Okay. All those things are true. I still, because maybe I'm not from there.3 (7m 23s):I know I'm not so butt hurt about that. Like I, you know, and my aunt and uncle this beautiful, beautiful condo in north beach and my cousin lives in the inner inner Richmond, I don't know. Anyway. So she's on Clement street and it's gorgeous. And I walked everywhere and we went hiking in Moran and we drove to Marin. So I would live there. I would live. I mean, I, you know, who can afford to live there, but here's the thing that I think a lot of us too are, are, are really looking at. Most of us in my circle are like, we, we really literally can't afford to live anywhere. Like the, the world is becoming unaffordable on a, so many ways. And so many levels that the thing of like, oh, it's so expensive in blank.3 (8m 6s):City becomes less sort of exciting or like less sensational because it's like, look around what, what are you talking about? You can't live anywhere. It's all, it's all terrible. So, so all this to say, like, it was, it was a great trip. And then on the way back, I got smart and I was like, okay, well, let me see if I can upgrade to a room. You can bid on rooms on the train, right. Cause it's 10 hours or whatever. And I was like, okay, let me, and they took my bid of, you know, $40 or something to upgrade to a room. And that has all the amazing meals included. So two meals, which lunches, if you just paid for it is 25.3 (8m 49s):Dinner is 45. So I got lunch and dinner free. And I just tipped to the, and it was delicious salmon. I mean like this, and I got my own room and I wrote, and I, I like lived, lived my best life on the train1 (9m 5s):Girl. I need to do this, but I don't live in California. I mean, maybe I'll just pick a, maybe I'll pick it east coast version of that.3 (9m 16s):It doesn't matter. Like you could, you can also take it like they have specials. Like there's apparently a really beautiful ride between DC and New York. So1 (9m 29s):Yeah, no. So I also love or have loved the idea of train travel. And I always really wanted to take, there's a, there's a train that goes somehow through the Rockies. That's the one I really want to go on. But the first time I treated myself to a train trip. Oh, that's right. The worst possible3 (9m 53s):You were pregnant. Right.1 (9m 55s):I was the worst possible route to, we went from Chicago to Texas. So there's nothing to look at. The train was disgusting. It was so dirty and I was pregnant. So my, you know, my sense of smell, which is already very heightened was even, was just off the chain. And as a result of being on that train, I developed3 (10m 24s):Vertigo. I'm like, God, I mean,1 (10m 26s):It was coincidental. I never, we never did figure out what the deal was. But I developed a kind of vertigo when I was pregnant, where I had to crawl on the floor because I couldn't, you know, cause I couldn't walk and thankfully knock on wood that has not returned to me. And it also didn't return to my next two pregnancies, but yet it soured me and us on trains. But I think it's just the route we picked. We need to pick3 (10m 57s):It's the route and yeah, definitely don't have, don't be pregnant, but that's not going to happen for you again. So you don't have to worry about that. But like I'm all done with that. And so I had a great trip and I actually had like these huge realizations while I was there about, about working about money, about the entertainment industry, it was really, it was I, and I went with the intention of really looking at what is it that I'm going for in life? I mean, that's such a huge question, but like what, where am I trying to go? And, and the idea of service, right? So I always thought being of service was about other people, but really what it is for me is being of service in the way that I want to be of service is actually for me, like I didn't realize that I feel is good for my mental, physical, and emotional health when I'm being of service in a way that feels not to pleading, but all, but like really energizing and also like a, like thinking about legacy, I've also been thinking about legacy, like what is my, what is going to be my legacy?3 (12m 12s):And it tied into like, I was really, you know, I spend because the holidays are coming up way too much. It will not wait too much, but a lot of money on my nieces and nephew for Christmas gifts, right? Like thousands of dollars, right. Dish, I love giving gifts. It's my jam. But then I realized that like, and you probably, you know, I'd be so interested to hear what you have to say, but having children, but like a lot of this stuff, I got them, they outgrow, they don't care about very soon is cheaply made and is garbagey. And it has a very, very little lasting effect on their lives. And that's just the truth and I'm not judging it.3 (12m 52s):I'm just saying that seemed, that was the data I was picking up. And I'm like, that's literally like just throwing money away after a while year after year. So there's a, let me get smart about this. So we started a trust for each kid where we put that and I said to that shutter dude, I wish someone had done that for my ass. So I said to them, you can choose, we can keep going the way we're doing with gifts for Christmas and blah, blah, blah. Or you can, we can put donate every year and you could literally get very, very, very few gifts. But your huge gift is that each year we put a certain amount of money. And then basically by the time you're 30, you'll be millionaires.3 (13m 36s):I mean, just because of the way money grows, not even because we're putting that much in. And they were like, what? And so miles really educated me and them on the power of, of the investing money in a way that is with the interest and all that shit. And so that's what we're doing. And I, I got to say like, it tied into this idea of legacy and like, I would watch rather have those kiddos like be able to use it. And it's not like one of these things where they have to use it for college because fuck it, man, not everyone goes to goddamn college right away or ever, but they can't touch it until they're a certain age or they can choose to keep it in there and roll it over to another kind of account or whatever.3 (14m 17s):So, but I'm thinking about this shit differently in terms of legacy based on like, what do I want to leave this earth? Like, do I want to, you know, have, have my legacy be that I gave my, my niece to like a fake Dior ring that turned her finger green or right, right. It's fine. But it's so that's how we started it this Christmas. Cause I was like enough, enough, enough. Yeah. Yeah. Well, what you've just given us here in this conversation is like the center of a1 (14m 51s):Bicycle wheel by the goal wheel. And we have a, there's a bunch of spokes there. There's like talking about what's your purpose in life and where are you going? And there's talking about your legacy and then there's talking about consumption. And then there's talking about instant gratification that we give to kids in the form of gifts. And there's talking about that a lot, the pressures that we put on ourselves on Christmas, I mean just suffice it to say, I have been on the sometimes what feels like the circular journey of, you know, from, I mean, you know, when, when I first had kids, when we first had kids, it was really exciting to give the gifts.1 (15m 33s):It was exciting to create a Christmas that I remember from my childhood, the excitement of coming downstairs3 (15m 40s):And magic magic1 (15m 43s):1000%. And, and that sustained me for the period of time that the kids are literally happy to get whatever the minute it turned. And it turned when the oldest one was not that old. Yeah. I'm going to say like seven. Yeah. Yeah. And he, they had a bunch of presents and they opened everything up. And then he said, is that it? Yeah. And I went, oh damn, we're doing this wrong. We're doing it completely wrong. And so we've had a few Christmases and this is one of them where we're not doing gifts, which is to say, there will be stockings, you know, and maybe one little thing, but we're not doing the multiple presents under the trees.1 (16m 31s):We didn't do multiple Eddy presents for Hanukkah because of exactly what you said, toys is five to 15 minutes of joy for a lifetime, literally a lifetime of trash that I then, then it becomes my job to get rid of organized, find a space for a blood body block. And now the kids are pretty much almost all of them at an age where they don't want any of those things anymore. They want money, they want electronics. They want, so we have the way that we save money for them is not in the, for like Christmas, but that's actually a really good idea.1 (17m 12s):And something going to bring up with my husband and says,3 (17m 15s):Yeah, I mean, for those of us, I think it's a great idea. And also it's so much easier, not easy. Well, I don't know for miles and I don't have kids, so it's not in our face all the time. And we moved away from them. It's a different story when you're in under the same roof with being with children, with beings, small beings that, you know, are you so I, I am very aware that we have like the we're the aunt and uncle to different, it's a different deal. But like we just thought, wait a minute.1 (17m 44s):Yeah. And the thing that you're really after when you give a gift or at least I think is the joy that it brings to the person and, and that's great, but like you're saying most of the time, it's a, it's a very fleeting. And also like you don't want to teach kids that this is the way to direct your joy, right? Like from getting things, right. I'm not saying that that's, that's what you're definitely doing. If you give Christmas present, I'm not saying that. But you know, we just live in this very like consumer oriented culture,3 (18m 17s):The kid's fault. It's nobody's fault. It's a system, it's a systemic situation, but it hit me last. When I really, when I really was like, okay, I want to do this differently. It was last Christmas. My youngest niece wanted and got it is not knocking anyone involved, but it was very clear to me that we, it was really stark about what was going on. She wanted a claw machine, a mini Kalama machine from an arcade that literally just had candy in it, candy bars. And you made this loudest noise you've ever heard, took 10 batteries, 10 big ass batteries.3 (19m 7s):And literally there's candy in it. That's killing us all the sugar and look, you know, whatever. That was the least of my worries. But I was like, this is wait, what?1 (19m 16s):That's interesting. That has me3 (19m 20s):Wait. And it was a, probably a really expensive machine. It's not cheap, but that's what she wanted. My sister got it. And look, I'm not knocking anyone involved, but for me, I was like, it was so, so striking about what was going on. Cause it was so loud and obnoxious.1 (19m 39s):Let me ask you this. What do you remember getting for Christmas? Okay.3 (19m 42s):My favorite thing I ever got, this is so crazy in my life when I was a kid kid was okay. Two things I can tell the first gift that I like went Gaga, Google over was something, it was a makeup kit called fresh and fancy. And it had, it had perfumes. It had, and it was probably, you know, 9 99, 99 at Kmart. But like my sister and I each got one and it, what, what it was, was super fun, super adult, super smelled. So good. And I, there is a picture of me opening it up and in, in my I'm saying fresh and fancy.3 (20m 27s):And then I take the picture.1 (20m 30s):Do you have that picture accessible?3 (20m 33s):Yeah, I think so. I can send it, send it, send1 (20m 36s):It. Yeah.3 (20m 38s):I will send that and to fresh and fancy. Okay. That was number one. And then the second gift I remember as an adult getting that was really moving to was my mother who traveled all the time and who I really sort of labeled as a selfish, kind of a human at times gave my sister and I each a ticket, a plane ticket to go anywhere in the world because she had so many miles. But like the fact that she, she thought about us and the fact that her travel, which as a child brought so much grief to me because she was gone all the time that she was then turning it around and giving my sister and I each a plane ticket to anywhere was really moving to me and also was really abundant and felt like that's awesome.3 (21m 25s):You know, is that when you went to Columbia, that's when I went to Prague by myself for a week and a half, which was insane or two weeks, it was crazy, but1 (21m 34s):Oh yeah,3 (21m 37s):It was in, when I lived in LA, it was a long time ago. So, and I, I, I, it just, so I wish I had gone with somebody else. It was the most lonely, it was beautiful and Prague is crazy and, and fun, but I went alone, but that's like really just indicative of where I was at in my LA life. So it doesn't, that's not shocking to me. What about you? Like, what do you remember being like, oh my God,1 (22m 0s):I got to speak and spell. I, I really, I really coveted speak and spell. And for those of you who don't know a speak and spell is just, would be an app now. And it wouldn't be nearly as fun. This was a self-contained. It was like a really thick version, like a three inch thick version, maybe note or two of an iPad. And it was orange and it had a handle built into the top and it would say a word in a computerized voice, like structure, and then you'd have to spell it. And if you got it right, this is the, so this tells you a lot about my psychology, the high, I got that little sound telling me I spelled something, right.1 (22m 43s):I just felt like I could, I was vanquishing Rome. It was, I felt so powerful that I got a bike one year. That was amazing. And I kind of lip gloss that smelled like root beer.3 (22m 57s):Oh, I know that those1 (22m 59s):Are the things that just like off the top of my head. I remember just falling in love with, and, and being, you know, unequivocally joyful, happy with moments. And that's the thing that you're always after, like for yourself or the people that you love, you want to impart this joy. That's what I was going to get you. Like, you want to impart this joy and then there's this tacit thing about like, you better feel joy from this. At least that's what I find myself, you know, evaluate whether or not this person is feeling joy from it, because that's what I want. I want to give them joy of this present. And then I feel sad if it doesn't work out.3 (23m 38s):Yeah. And, and, and, and, and it, it usually doesn't work out like that only because people aren't mind readers people don't, everyone's different. And Joy's so, so personal. And so, so specific to that person. And it's like, it's just such a setup, but it's also, we keep trying and I'm going to still, I still love giving presents, but I now am like, oh, okay. Can't be for me, like the mass quantity of just, yeah. Crap. Like, it really hit me too. Like I bought one year, my niece was really into Shopkins.3 (24m 19s):Remember, oh yeah. I bought like $200 worth of Shopkins for her.1 (24m 23s): lasted for that year. And then she makes, never picked up shots.3 (24m 29s):Not even the whole year, maybe a month.1 (24m 32s):That's the thing, man. They get, and they get, and I, I, I was going to say, this is especially true for girls, but I'm, I'm going to re revise that because the boys did it too. When they love that thing, it's all they care about. It's their whole world. You know, my daughter said to me all, I, the only thing I want you to get me is just tons and tons of puppets. What's a3 (24m 58s):Pocket.1 (24m 59s):A pocket is a PLA silicone flat toy that has these half hemisphere, a half a hemisphere that you put, like you, it's a satisfying sensation to push it in. And then you flip it over and push it the other way. Shit.3 (25m 24s):What's in that what's in the pocket, like a little creatures,1 (25m 28s):Zero, nothing. It's in the shape of whatever you want it to be in the shape of it's a fidget choice. Essentially. I3 (25m 36s):Understand. It's like an ASMR founding,1 (25m 39s):Totally tile. It doesn't make a sound. It's all about it being tactile. Yeah. And, and, you know, go to the stores and they're everywhere. Puppets. You'll see if you start looking for now, you'll see that they're everywhere. And so that's what she wants. And a half of me completely wants to indulge that wish. And the other half of me says, I'll be throwing these all away in six months. And then I'll feel like an asshole because I spent a bunch of money on something that I knew was a fool's errand.3 (26m 10s):Yeah, I'm right. It's like so hard because they believe they really want it.1 (26m 18s):They really, it's3 (26m 18s):Not, it's not a joke. It's not a, it's not a joke. Like that's their jam.1 (26m 24s):Yeah. So this year we're going skiing for Christmas. That's3 (26m 27s):Our part of New Hampshire.1 (26m 29s):We're going to Vermont. And I think I've told everybody on the podcast I do. That's right.3 (26m 35s):You'd like the ski lodge into, right?1 (26m 38s):Yes ma'am. So I go and I get everybody off in the morning to their little activities and it's as, you know, a huge amount of work, then the gear and the schlepping. So I help everybody get to that. And I get back to my little cozy spot and read and write and just hang out that sound. So I'm really looking forward to it. Yeah. And honestly, that's the thing that people I I'm banking on. Cause this will be the third time we've done a trip instead of presence. And, and these are trips that we still talk about. So I think it is a good investment experiences are a better investment than3 (27m 14s):I absolutely agree. And I feel like that's the trust starting for these kids. It's like, we're gifting them with the experience of maybe like a down payment on a fricking home, a car to get them from here to there a education, like a real thing, like a thing that you need to like live your life versus a fricking fake Cuban Linx chain. I didn't even know what Cuban links were. I didn't know what was happening.1 (27m 42s):I don't know what that3 (27m 42s):Is. What is Cuban links? I oh, those1 (27m 45s):Big, Easy.3 (27m 51s):And it's just ugly. And it's also $6,006,000. What did Jackie about? Oh anyway,1 (27m 59s):I, you, you just did yourself, such a favor. I mean, you did them mostly a favor, but you did yourself such a favor because also the other thing is, you know, I have experienced, I go out shopping and I'm immediately overwhelmed and I'm trying, okay, now this one, I got this,3 (28m 14s):I asked who gets one and did, is it equal? And like,1 (28m 18s):Oh my God, it's just, it's like a, it's a hell3 (28m 33s):I thought we might start out with, I got some feedback on the, okay. So my, on the podcast from, so my, my parents' best friends, Nancy and Dave, they like helped raise me and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And they've really become like second parents. And, you know, they, they hadn't heard the podcast. So they were like, send us an episode. And I said, okay. And you know, it's always tricky because they really know me. They really know my parents. They really know my life in some ways in my childhood. So I was like, well, so I sent them an episode. I sent them the does small ocean Hooga knocker episode because Dave is a therapist and he works with people with addictions.3 (29m 13s):And I thought, oh, that might be interesting. And so the feedback is so interesting. The feedback I got was I'll read it on air because it's good. It's a podcast. Podcasts was good. Felt like a reunion. Sounds like David was deep into self-destruction before he recovered a talented guy was hoping to hear more from you. But that's for selfish reasons. I like how you identified the macro themes in your Roundup at the end. And then I wrote, thank you so much. We're we Gina and I are always aware that like, like, you know, we don't want it just to be us and we don't want to just to be guests.3 (29m 54s):So we're trying to find a mix. So his feedback it's so funny. He liked, he likes to give feedback. You know, if you and Gina are willing to talk about what life experiences brought you to embrace the arts and try and make a decent living, I liked the way you have reconstructed your family life so that you don't have to be an emotional casualty. There's a lot to talk about how you both learn to think from, from psychodynamic and systems orientation. I don't even know what that means. I'm not smart enough. The best stories are the stuff of good soap operas, good screenwriting can teach people how to better understand and navigate within their interpersonal worlds.3 (30m 36s):I'd like to hear another one, if you don't mind the feedback. So Loves our inter you know, he's, he's a therapist, obviously. So he loves that. But it was interesting. I mean, I seriously don't know what half of that means, but like,1 (30m 54s):No, he just means no, he just means like the thing, I mean here, here's this big secret that we've never told anybody, this podcast is not really about theaters. Right. And so what you saying is the, the, the psychodynamic for, you know, background that we have influences and informs our conversation so that we, we think about things dynamic and that's it. And that would be interesting to a therapist. Therapist thinks about things dynamically too. And yeah, I mean, honestly, it there's so much it's, so there's always so much to talk about. There's so much to talk about. Like, and I, well, the thing I, this ties into the thing that I kind of wanted to talk to you about, which is that when we first started recording a podcast, it was not, I survived theater school.1 (31m 44s):We were calling undeniable, right.3 (31m 46s):That's right.1 (31m 47s):And we had about eight, you know, hour long conversations that were about this concept of being undeniable. So I kind of wanted to clarify for people who may not know why is our company called undeniable? Why is not the website? Because when you told the great story about it, we didn't never air that till we did. So, no, because it was, it was for,3 (32m 20s):We never found and they tried to send to you and then it got1 (32m 23s):No, no, no, no, no. I'm just saying like, we recorded those and then we changed our mind about what the3 (32m 29s):Right. Yes. Okay. Yes. That makes sense. Oh, should we tell the story? Yeah. So it's so funny because I wonder if he ever heard this, if he would even remember, you know, it's so funny, like who remembers telling people what? All right. So the story is this. So I, well, first to say that, like you and I were talking about like, what, what is the thing of life? Like, what is again, where I'm at now, which is what are we going after, right. Like, what is the quality of life that I'm going after that you're going after that we're going after as a team. Okay. So it reminded me of this story of I did a solo show and it was called why not me love cancer and Jack White and the woman who was, and it was a solo show basically about cancer and about working for Nick cage and all kinds of things.3 (33m 19s):Just like I surprised theater school is not about theater. School is not really about Jack White, my show, you know, it's whatever. So, okay. So I'm doing this show. And my, the director of my show is this woman named Alison lion. And she happens to be good friends with the comedian and storyteller and actor, Jeff Garlin who I, I didn't know from Adam, like I wasn't a curb, your enthusiasm fan. So I didn't know, but I knew he of him. And I knew he's like a famous guy. Right. So she said, you know, how would you feel about Jeff? Garlin coming to see a dress rehearsal and giving notes. And I was like, oh, sure. Literally being like, oh, a famous person wants to come see my show.3 (34m 0s):That's cool. You know, not like, what can I glean from this artist? You know, just cause that's, that's where my mind went. I would've have been the same. I mean, I just am not mature enough for whatever, so, okay. So I do the, it was, it, it was real nerve and it was an empty house, but him, he and Alison were sitting up there at stage 7 73 on Belmont in Chicago. And so I did the show and whatever, and it was an okay show. I mean, I look, I don't know, but afterwards, if such an interesting story afterwards, he was giving notes to Alison, but not me. And I thought, well, that's weird, but he was really there for her.3 (34m 42s):That was her mentor kind of, you know, her comedy mentor. But then I came out of the house into the house and met and met Jeff and he was lovely. And he said, well, do you want notes? Or somehow it came up like, do I want actor notes? And I was like, of course, which is shocking to me because I never want notes. Right. And I always say, I would love feedback. And by feedback, I mean, compliments, like, that's my . I did say of course, because that's what you say when a fancy person wants to give you notes. And he gave me some great notes, which was stopped swearing so much. And he compared me to Robin Williams, which was amazing.3 (35m 22s):He said, because I could tell he called him by his first name. I do believe he was like, when Robin would swear a lot, I would know that he was, he was, was dying on stage, was off. Yeah. And I was like, that's fascinating or pushing, like I push when I'm swearing. Okay. Great note. I've I've kept that note and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. All right. So then, then I have to tell us, because it's so interesting because I would have done the same thing. So then after he gave notes, which I kind of blacked out some of them, cause it was a lot, but then he, Alison, we're going to go out to eat at clerks on Belmont, but they didn't invite me. Right. And I was like, oh, and then I was in the bathroom and Alison called and she's like, I'm an idiot.3 (36m 5s):I didn't invite you. Do you want to come? And I was like, oh, of course. Yeah. She, and I think what happens is when you're around famous people, you forget, you1 (36m 13s):Lose your census. It's3 (36m 15s):Very weird. It's a weird thing. I think that's what happened for, so we went to Clark's on Belmont and he, we taught he's so what is he? He's he's a generous. No, he's, he's a big personality. So he takes over rooms. Right? So at clerks, he's the center of the show and it is not anything he's doing. It's just, that's how some people are like,1 (36m 42s):He's not trying to lay low. Right. He's3 (36m 45s):Not trying to lay low. And he also loves people I think, and loves human interaction. I mean, from what I know, as we got into this conversation and somehow, and he said, and he said to me, we were talking about acting and we were talking and he said, I'm going to make a movie and you're going to be in it one day. And I said, that's fantastic. I love that. That's great. That sounds great. And then we talked about other stuff and then he said, you know what you are? And I said, what? And he said, you are undeniable. And I was like, what is even happening? And I was like, okay, thanks. Great. He's like, no, no, no. You're undeniable. Like that show is undeniable.3 (37m 26s):And I was like, what does that mean? And he said, well, it just means that like eat exists in its truest form unapologetically. And I'm totally paraphrasing here, of course. But it was like, it exists in its truest form. It's just is you don't have to like it. You don't have to like, you, you don't have to like what you're saying, but there is a quality that cannot be taken away about the show. It's more than unique. It's more than that. It's undeniable. You don't have to like it. You don't have to dislike it, but it, it exists on its own. And it cannot be basically cannot be fucked with in, in, in that way, you know? And I was like, whoa, that is awesome. And that I feel like is what I'm going for in my life.1 (38m 10s):Yeah. And, and when you told the story before you also said that, that he said, you know, be undeniable continue to be undeniable because that, that is ultimately the only thing that lasts in terms of, you know, the industry or whatever. And as long as you're holding true to, you know, your own undeniable truth or whatever, you can, you know, you can't go wrong. It may not mean that you, whatever, get fame and fortune, but, but you'll be doing, you'll be on the right track.3 (38m 40s):You won't be led astray by your undeniable city. Like you, you won't be, it won't be, you won't go in the wrong direction for too long. If you use an deniability as your north star kind of a thing. And it really, and he, he later told Alison, you know, she's, you know, he kept reiterating like she's undeniable, she's undeniable. And he, and Alison had told me, and I, of course, because, you know, I just figure people say that about everybody analysis and no, he does not do that. And also he stands by his word. So you will one day be in a movie with Jeff Garlin and I was like, cool, great. That's fine. But I it's interesting looking back on the story, it's like, I wish everyone is so scared.3 (39m 24s):Like I wish that I would have used those quotes in my press, but Alison didn't want to use them because she felt she was already asking too. We're all, we always feel like we're asking too much. So she felt that she, she was asking too much just having him come to the show and having him give notes was enough and having him. And I remember at the time I had a musician as part of the show, you know, his name is Philip Michael scales. He's amazing. And he was like, we should totally use Garland's quotes to get more people to come to the show and both Alison and I, it's interesting, both Alex and I were like, oh no, no, no, no, like he's done enough.3 (40m 4s):You know, it's just so1 (40m 5s):Like, yeah. Like, and all I'll do to Alison I would've made probably the same choice, but you know, it's like, what are we so afraid of? What skin is it off of his nose? If you say that he said something that he said, you know what I mean? It's not like his reputation is living or dying on your show. It's just,3 (40m 25s):I mean, yeah. I would have done the same thing too. And I1 (40m 30s):That's the mentality that we've talked about so much on here, and it's definitely true for Hollywood entertainment, whatever, but it may also just be true for life that we kind of inherently have this idea that there's a finite pie. Sure. And you know, it's kind of like the people who think that only whatever 7,000 people are going to heaven, you know, what kind of cockamamie thing is that like you believe in heaven, you believe that all of this is God's plan and that people have been alive for millions of years and yet only 7,000 feet. Right. That to me is like a perfect evidence of the way in which we make ourselves and our, and the possibility so much smaller than they need to be.1 (41m 15s):Yes. So you think there's a finite amount of pie and you say, well, I can't take my one, one thousandths of a sliver, you know, that's Jeff Garlin because then there won't be any Jeff Garlin left. Like that's just simply not how it works. It's just simply, you know, anyway, the reason I said generous is because, I mean, you know, whatever, he has a friendship with her, but, but offering the feedback to you and then offering this truth about identifying your and deniability, which I'm guessing was one is one of the things that you carry with you. Okay.3 (41m 53s):Yeah. I mean, I do think, I do think that he's, that that was very generous of him. Like, and, and I do think that he and I do carry it with me and, and it obviously had an effect on me because I tell the story and because, you know, we, that you and I started a whole company around the idea of being undeniable, but like, and yeah, it, it really was like an affirmation, right. To just fucking pick a side already, like, like take a stand, like do something like th th th the gold boldly in one direction, because this sort of, this sort of, wishy-washy trying to please everybody, it, it, it not only does it not, it's not, it's a totally unpleasant, it actually doesn't work for the thing that you think you want.3 (42m 45s):Like, if you want notoriety power, fame, fortune, you have to pick a side at some point. Okay. But if you also want to feel good and be led, like we're saying by your north star, you could, you could use your, and deniability as a north star to eventually mean that sometimes quickly, sometimes slowly to get to a place where you really feel like you're doing right by yourself. If you follow your undeniable, whatever that means to you. So, yeah, he changed my life. Like that changed my life. I mean, the show did the sh you know, looking back on the show, I spent so much money. I would say, like, to be, if I'm completely honest, it was like a $25,000 investment I made over from 2012 to 2015 or whatever.3 (43m 31s):And, and I didn't bring in one dime, you know, I didn't make, make a dime, but it was, I would've done things differently, but I still I'm glad I did it. And, and that's one of the reasons stories. And one of the reasons I'm glad I did it was because I learned that lesson about being undeniable from Jeff Garlin. And yeah,1 (43m 55s):I don't think he went to theater school, but he needs to come on the podcast, you know, tell him that and, and, and hear more about his, his thoughts about, and deniability. So, so that you have shared that story with me, which really even moved me. I mean, it's, it's affected me. And then we linked it to this crooked, let's say path that we made, where we were pursuing this creative, creative career. And then we couldn't pursue it because we needed to make money. And we thought it would be okay to do else. And ultimately wasn't. And so the creative urge or whatever is undeniable in us.1 (44m 39s):And we're basically having to listen to it instead of, you know, pushing it away. And, and we also have a belief that many, many, many people are in that exact same position at this age in life, they were pursuing something. It wasn't financially viable. They had to do something else. And that when, what we're talking to a lot of people about these days is I think a lot of people who come on the podcast are reckoning with that question. Whether it be when we ask them to come on or while we're having the conversation or in the time after.1 (45m 21s):And we hear a variety of things from, from, you know, genuine like bridge equipment is a good example of somebody who went and did something else. And I think she found her thing. Yeah. I feel like therapy. She found the right thing for her. Yeah.3 (45m 37s):And she's now taking classes again, though. Acting classes, remember? Cause she wrote us.1 (45m 43s):Oh, that's right. Okay. Well, all right. So maybe, so maybe so maybe everybody, but what, we also talked to, a lot of people who I feel are trying to convince themselves, us, that they have moved on and you know, what, if that's true for you, I don't want to take that away from anybody, but it's hard for me to believe that's true for as many people as say it is true because if you, right, if you just, if you have, if you're born with this desire to express, and then you don't exp and you don't do it, it doesn't go away. And,3 (46m 19s):And here's the kicker too, is like the secret Willie, we can let everybody in a secret that you and I, because of our childhoods. And then on top of the childhood, the training that we received as actors, and then on top of that, the training we received as clinicians, we are able, here's the secret. We can see things in you that you may not be able to see in yourself or that you think you're hiding. Like that is just the secret.1 (46m 45s):And, and I'll say as a person who is fully does this all the time, nobody's hiding anything. I'm sorry to inform you. Nobody, you whoever's walking around. They're saying nobody knows that I, blah, blah, blah. Right? Yes, they do. I mean, they may not say it to you. They may not even have that thought in the front of their mind to everybody does truly know everything. And you're only kidding yourself, right? To, to hide behind, you know, dishonesty,3 (47m 20s):You're kidding yourself that you were hiding it and you're kidding yourself that other people can't see it. And you're kidding yourself that it's working for to hide it. But it's easier said than done to not hide it. I'm not saying coming out, coming clean about your truth is easy at all. But I just want to say like, cause people always ask like, and I, I run up against this a lot in Hollywood of like, how could you tell that? Like, so-and-so really, didn't like this script. I'm like, dude, body language. Blahbity blah, blah. And they're like, I didn't get that.3 (48m 0s):I'm like, dude, you just have to like, I have training. But also you just have to really, I always say this, but like you have to be sort of a neglected child that then decided that people pleasing was the way to freedom. Then learn that that is actually not true. But then use those skills to actually be like an emotional detective for other people. It's a whole process, but you could do it if you spent enough time, but I can tell like I can, I even at coworking, like I'm going to soundproof booth. So no one could hear me. But like I, I spent five minutes with somebody and I'm like, oh my God, they hate themselves. They hate themselves a passion they're pretending not to, but they hate themselves.3 (48m 42s):And that is unfortunate because I know they have redeeming qualities. I haven't talked to them for more than five minutes. So I don't know what that is. And I don't want to talk to them for more than five minutes because I'm not their therapist or friend, but I get it. I get it. It is a super power that I think people who really have trauma and then have chosen to work through the trauma. It's a super power that we have that we can, and it's also can be a burden, like any superpower to really see what the fuck is going on with people and call it out if need be. But we don't always call it out because it's not our job.3 (49m 23s):And you know, that is something we run into on this podcast too. It's like, there are times on the podcast where I want to be like, you know, this is just full transparency where I want to be like, you're full of shit. You're full of shit. Totally terrible. You, you, you hate blahbity blah, but you don't want to tell us you hate blabbity, blah. And I understand that because I've been in the same boat and I still am in the same boat, but just know that if you come on this podcast that it kind of behooves you to just tell the truth because what? Yeah. We all see it anyway. Right, right. We just do. We all see it anyway. Yeah. In your voice, we don't even have to look at your face.3 (50m 3s):Here's the other thing about human experience? So people think, I think because it's a podcast and it's not, we don't air the video that like, they can also hide shit. Well, your voice and the, and the PA I mean, I'm giving away all the secrets here, but there are no real secrets. Like the pauses in between watching the next person we have come on is gonna be like, okay, anyway. So I feel really bad about everything in my life. And I put the pauses, the pauses in between questions and answers. It's all part of the deal. And so I just encourage people. Like, I want you to come on this podcast and feel like you can, that you you're able to be undeniable and FYI on deniability does not mean everything is great about you.3 (50m 48s):Right? Like it doesn't mean, it just means that you're telling the truth about who you are. Good, bad, ugly, weird.1 (50m 56s):Yeah. You, you could be an undeniable asshole. There's no, it's a, it doesn't have a necessarily positive connotation, but you know, if you are an asshole and you're, well, that's not a good example. If you are, if you hate yourself, let's say that's a good example. If you hate yourself, you know, you're never going to get to a place where you don't hate yourself by pretending that you don't hate yourself. You have to start with the idea that, okay, here's what I'm up against right now. Hearn's out. I really hate myself. And you know, and I'm going to have to get real about that before I can, because how could you begin to interrogate a problem that you haven't named at all? That's like, that's like, you know, getting, I don't know that to the end of a math problem without having like what the3 (51m 43s):She's learning a new language without studying one minute of the language in your life. It doesn't, it's not possible. I mean, you might get one word. Right. But by luck. But1 (51m 55s):Yeah. And my thing, and I think this is your thing too in life is just encouraging people and the reason, and I understand why people want to lie to themselves about it because it's painful or because you don't want to be a person who hates yourself. You don't want to be a person who feels unfulfilled by career traces. I get that. But, but it's like that, that you are unfulfilled or you are that you just haven't done the work of accepting.3 (52m 23s):Right. And I, and I, I definitely feel like for me, the turning point, literally in my life had to, had to do with, when I had a physical problem with my heart, where I was like, oh, this is what is happening. I haven't taken care of my body for whatever reason. Not because I'm a bad person, but because I've always shit going on and all these issues and hereditary, but I haven't done the work to, to look at this. And so now it's coming, it's now it's, it's, it's a problem. And, and, and when you're laying in the hospitals hooked up to machines and you and people are telling you, it's a problem that are trained specifically in this problem.3 (53m 7s):And you finally are faced with, oh, either I'm going to believe this or not, and acknowledge it or not. And I just was like, okay, I acknowledge it. I need to lose weight. I need to move my body and I need to eat less shitty foods and okay. That's it. It's in my face. It's in my face. It's in my face. I'm the1 (53m 25s):Hospital. Yeah. My, my wish for it to be something other than it isn't has, it helped me to have it be something other than it isn't. But my, my courage, if, if you can summon the courage to face it, then it might actually be different. So the other thing that you were talking about before was legacy, and that is, that has been a theme in my life recently too, because, you know, I realized after my sister died, like it's all over for her. I, you know how a lot of times when people die, then people will go on their Facebook account and like, write these messages to them.1 (54m 16s):You know, I miss you, blah, blah, blah. No, nobody did that on my sister's Facebook page. Nobody and no, nobody and her kids, you know, who are too young, really to use Facebook there that's because it's an old person's thing, but they have Facebook accounts and they had each written something about their mom when she died. And periodically, I checked back in to see like, what the comments are at for first of all, I don't know, 95% of the people who were making the comments, cause I haven't been in their lives, but it really ended like a few, you know, a few days after she died, it ended.1 (54m 58s):And I just thought, wow, man, there's just no trace of this first. God, I don't like that. There's yeah. It's it's really unsettling. And so recently we came in to possession of unpublished manuscript that Aaron's grandfather wrote on which sirens grandfather, his dad's dad. Okay. Aaron's grandfather was a, you know, hardcore Chicago in, he was a tool and die maker. He worked in one of these factories where whenever there was factories in Chicago and he retired when he was 70, 70 or 75 and went back and went to college and he was the oldest graduate from Roosevelt university where I teach by the way weird.1 (55m 58s):Yeah. And he was a writer and a poet and he wrote a book. Now, dear listeners, I regret to inform you. It's not a great book. You know, he could have used an editor. I'm sure. And, but it doesn't matter. The point is we receive this cream and a half of paper that's wrapped up in like a grocery bag and bound with string and it hasn't been touched3 (56m 34s):How'd you get it? How'd you get it?1 (56m 37s):His mom had it. And she sent him a bunch of stuff in that, and that was in there. So we opened it up and, and I thought to myself, okay, this is fascinating because one of the things that I think compels people to write is a desire to leave some kind of an imprint. And I'm curious how other people think or don't think or feel, or don't feel about their legacy. I mean, I guess people do it in other ways you get really rich and you name a building after yourself or by the way, they took the Sackler name off the mat. Finally they took the Sackler name off the met. Yes. And oh God.1 (57m 18s):Yes. That's a whole other thing. Watch dope. Sick with John who can aprons really good. Yeah. Anyway, people do use philanthropy. I mean, it kind of seems like, unless you're in the arts or rich, how do you have a legacy? What's your, what is,3 (57m 33s):This is a great freaking question. Like this is the question that I really been thinking about in my brain. And I, I think I have the answer for me, but I'm not exactly sure. So, all right. So I love to teach, but I love to teach a very specific population. It's a population that is underrepresented in colleges. So I I'm trying to narrow down like what I want to do with my life basically. And I think I want, I know I want to be a writer, but I was like, okay. But my realtor says I have to make 80 to a hundred thousand dollars if I want a house in California.3 (58m 17s):Okay. And I'm tired of sitting around, waiting for Hollywood to discover me. Okay. Fine. And us. So what do I do? Okay, fine. So then I've been teaching right at Roosevelt and other places and I love it. I love the 1819 year olds. Okay. Fine. I love teaching acting. I don't know. I feel like I don't really know shit about acting, but I know I do when it's mixed with psychology. Does that make sense? Okay.1 (58m 44s):A hundred percent then the other3 (58m 45s):Day I was like, and then I was like, okay, but I don't want to teach at a fancy conservatory. Like I don't, that's just, I just don't. So I was like, all right. All right. All right. So then someone sent me a listing to teach a community college, making a $90,000 a year. Community colleges paid better than a lot of colleges. And so I'm applying to teach first year actors at a community college in Glendale. And I don't know, and I don't know, and I actually think it's going to make my writing. And I think it's going to make me hustle in a different way. I don't know if I'll get the job, but I gotta say my legacy might be, cause I thought, okay.3 (59m 30s):At first I thought my legacy was going to be, and we could track it with the podcast. Right. Like I thought my legacy was going to be famous actor even though like, I don't know if that's, that is a legacy like Brando and you know, that's a legacy. That's what I thought. I thought, oh, that'll be my legacy. I'll be fancy, famous lady. Okay, fine. That did not happen. Then I thought, okay, my legacy is going to be that I'm a very sort of famous PR prolific addictions counselor, like at a social service agency. Yeah. That's going to be my legacy, but that's what I thought, like, that's my mark. That's where I'm going to leave my mark. That did not happen. Then I thought, okay, I'm going to be again, a famous actor, but maybe a solo artist. Right.3 (1h 0m 10s):And, and then, and then a screenwriter and I'll get really famous as a television writer, which still could happen. But I was like, I'm not sure that is the flavor of legacy that we're talking. I'm talking about here in terms of service, right. Service. What I want is to teach, I could teach 18, 19 year olds tangible skills that they can use then and move on in their lives and then teach their kids. Like, like that seems more in alignment with what I'm talking about in terms of legacy than just fancy screenwriter.3 (1h 0m 50s):That makes a lot of money. So, yeah.1 (1h 0m 53s):Yeah, because actually I was just having this thought yesterday, if I was ever given an award that was related in any way to theater, the first person I would think is my junior high acting teacher and teachers truly do leave some of the biggest, like good and bad. Some of the biggest legacies. I remember every single teacher I've ever had. Yeah. And w I mean, I mostly remember the ones who were really good or really bad, but they, I can think of five people off the top of my head who should be canonized as saints, because really Mrs. McDaniels, you were a prima ballerina who ended up teaching math in junior high.1 (1h 1m 37s):And you know what she did, she knew that I had just a, I was having a really hard time in junior high. And she invited me to eat lunch in her classroom every day, because I think she was at a Mexican, she didn't eat. And so she could go over the math with me cause I was having a hard time getting it. And I was just having a hard time. Sure. In general, this is seventh grade. And she provided all under the guise of teaching me math. Of course she gave me mentorship. She gave me attention. She showed me love.1 (1h 2m 19s):Right. Like what's3 (1h 2m 20s):What more could you ask for legacy I'm looking for? I'm not, I decided like, especially during COVID times, I've really been thinking, I think a lot of us have about like, what is obviously important, but also what is lasting and what is, and I thought, yeah. Okay. So, so I don't have a desire to like go into the classroom and teach, you know, I don't wanna teach psychology. I don't want to teach, but I was like maybe. And the thing that like the community colleges in California in Southern California, like I believe Pasadena city college and Glendale community college are two of the best community colleges in the country. So I'm like, okay.3 (1h 3m 0s):And it's cheap to go there. And it's a bunch of different kinds of learners and it's not just white kids that are like, I'm fucking going to be the next, I don't know whoever it's like kids that actually want to learn. And I, I mean, look, there's going to be some real assholes in there. I know it. But like I thought, oh, okay. Like also I really, really need a house with a yard. And I don't know how, I don't want to do it by, by getting an office job that I'm gonna die at. And I, and I, and then try to write on top of that.3 (1h 3m 45s):So like, I really need more space. And we were looking at houses and this all really was, was sparked by talking to a realtor, a really great realtor who also was like a very therapeutic and his approach. And he was like, listen, do you want a house in California? Yes. Okay. Do you want a two bedroom, two bath? Yes. This is how much money you each need to bring in a year. And this is how much your down payment is going to be act accordingly. He just told me that like, it's not,1 (1h 4m 16s):It's not a mystery. It's not an unknowable path. It's just like, no, no, no.3 (1h 4m 22s):It's very clear. And he was very loving, but he was also like, you, you piecemealing the piecemealing, your salary together is not going to work for this. And I was like, and I, I needed him to say that too, to know that like, it's time for me to bring in a decent amount of money. Now, if it comes, if it, if, if, if somehow it comes from your mind getting a television show or our documentary taking off. Great. But like, in the meantime, I need to feel like I am, I am not just piecemealing my shit together.1 (1h 5m 8s):Right. Because in addition to all the other things we've mentioned, you have a lot other needs that are undeniable and it is much your responsibility to meet those needs your, your need to have, you know, your own space. You need to have address, you know, that's as important to listen to as anything else.3 (1h 5m 27s):I had no idea. Like I just thought it's interesting. I, I thought that I did not have those needs. Like I thought, who cares where you live literally. I mean, I've moved 15 times. So it's like, who cares if you live in a one bedroom with two people and a dog, I care. I care a lot now I really care. And it's really, really important to me to be out. So having an outside space,1 (1h 5m 55s):And what I hear in this for you is a shift from what does it look like to other people to, what does it feel like inside of me? And it was always more important,3 (1h 6m 8s):More important. And it's also super interesting. And I think we run up against this all the time. People think that they're like, oh, you're not going to be an actor anymore. Like you're not going to audition anymore. And I'm like, I don't think so. It's not like it's like I had the other night. I had the experience. So I get off the train right at eight o'clock the day before I got an audition from my agent for self-tape for a show in Chicago, that's a procedural show, you know, and that everyone auditions for in Chicago. And I got a self-tape quick turnaround. I had to get off and I chose to, I got off the train, dropped my stuff, picked up.3 (1h 6m 50s):My friend came to coworking and was up til midnight filming this scene. It's not a good scene. I'm not good. I'm not good in the scene because I don't, I'm, I'm not, I was having trouble memorizing because it's late at night. And then, and then I turned to my friend and I just said, you know, and, and I'm not paid, obviously we're not paid for the audition. If I book it, I have to go to Chicago on my own dime, stay in a hotel on my own, or place my own plane fare. I hate to fly to do this thing. That's going to terrorize me on set for a day to make $900.3 (1h 7m 32s):What the fuck am I doing? So I turned to my friend and I just said, who was nice enough to stay up with me till midnight, taping this in the fucking coworking space. I turned to her and I said, I don't want to do this anymore. And she said, okay. And she said, okay. I mean, she doesn't give a shit. She's a writer. She's not an actor. She doesn't, but she's like, okay. And I was like, yeah, this is no, no, no, it's not. That is not my legacy.1 (1h 8m 0s):Right.3 (1h 8m 1s):So it's very clear. So now I'm going to, I'm just, I'm not, I'm having calling my agents1 (1h 8m 8s):And you can't know until, you know, I mean, like that reality couldn't hit you until it did. I'm like, no, so yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, good for you. I mean, part of life is figuring out what it's not, and as much as it is figuring out what it is. Yeah. So4 (1h 8m 34s):If you liked what you heard today, please give us a positive five star review and subscribe and tell your friends. I survived. Theater school is an undeniable in production. Jen Bosworth, Ramirez and Gina plegia are the co-hosts. This episode was produced, edited, and sound mixed by Gina Culichi for more information about this podcast or other goings on of undeniable, Inc. Please visit our website@undeniablewriters.com. You can also follow us on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter. Thank you.
durée : 00:02:32 - Affaires classées par Thierry Sagardoytho - France Bleu - Le 2 novembre 1949, une ferme de Burosse-Mendousse part en fumée. Anéantis, ses jeunes propriétaires partent s'installer dans les Hautes-Pyrénées. Deux ans plus tard, les gendarmes de Garlin se rappellent à leur bon souvenir. Jean, le maître de maison, est interpellé et placé en garde à vue.
durée : 00:02:19 - Affaires classées par Thierry Sagardoytho - France Bleu - Novembre 1949, un couple d'agriculteurs habitant le village de Burosse-Mendousse apprend que leur exploitation est partie en fumée alors qu'ils se trouvaient au marché forain de Garlin. La mauvaise nouvelle tombe comme un couperet.
With the return of Curb Your Enthusiasm, Jeff Garlin is back on the show! Our talk with the Chicago-born comedian opens with a song (4:16) and a spirited exchange over cancel culture (8:10). Then, Garlin shares his excitement around returning to comedy clubs (19:53), his philosophy on dreams (24:30), the night he lost his virginity to a heckler (29:16), how he found love in the pandemic (32:10), and why he's seeing his work on “Curb” in a new light (35:40). Before we go, Jeff walks us through the weekend that changed his life (38:54), a piece of wisdom from Kurt Vonnegut (45:22), and the importance of being kind to yourself, however old or young (47:20). Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Episode 361 of the "Sports Illustrated Media Podcast" hosted by Jimmy Traina features a pair of interviews. First up is Steve Levy from ESPN. Levy talks about how his second season calling "Monday Night Football" is going, how he feels about the Peyton and Eli Manning alternate "Monday Night Football" telecast, the challenges of a three-person booth, the impact that fans in the stands have on a broadcast and much more. Levy also discusses ESPN getting back in the NHL game and his role on hockey coverage this season. Levy also reminisces about his famous "SportsCenter" slip up, his favorite "SportsCenter moments and his days working at WFAN. Following Levy, Jeff Carlin from "Curb Your Enthusiasm" joins the podcast. Garlin talks about the new season of the HBO comedy, which actor breaks the most when filming, whether "Curb" could work anywhere but HBO, why the show isn't going to do much on Covid, how much of a scene is on the outline the actors get, his favorite "Curb" season and much more. The podcast closes with the weekly Traina Thoughts segment. This week, Jimmy and Sal Licata from WFAN and SNY talk about why this is the best time of year for a sports fan, the Yankees retaining Aaron Boone, whether "Curb" should do shows about Covid and more. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com
Jeff Garlin competes on '10 Questions With Kyle Brandt.' Garlin shares updates on the upcoming season of ‘Curb Your Enthusiasm,' discusses the brilliance of Eddie Murphy and Jim Carrey in his experiences working with them, the time he wrestled “Macho Man” Randy Savage, and much more. Host: Kyle Brandt Guest: Jeff Garlin Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
On this weeks episode Mims tells the story of the survival and heroic story of the Young Garlin Boy, and the murder of Tammie Garlin. At approximately 18:35 there is a trigger warning, this ends at approximately 36:50. https://www.webmd.com/diet/what-is-too-much-water-intake#1 https://www.wiscnews.com/portagedailyregister/news/local/far-from-broken-the-once-emaciated-severely-burned-and-abused-boy-of-oneida-street-speaks/article_b581c0a6-acee-5fff-abd2-54decb8a00ee.html www.wiscnewa.com https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garlin_case https://wislawjournal.com/2011/09/29/appeals-court-upholds-conviction-in-torture-case/ https://www.milwaukeemag.com/HouseofHorrors/ https://www.foxnews.com/story/girlfriend-blames-others-in-wisconsin-house-of-horrors-case Got Murder? The Shocking Story of Wisconsin Notorious Killers by Martin Hintz Falon tells the story of the murder of Traci Hammerberg. Sources: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder_of_Traci_Hammerberg https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0UEp4d7TBHM --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/falon86/support
Everything You Never Needed to Know About Movies, Music & Theater
Mindy Pierce interviews Matthew Garlin concerning Curtain Call and Woods. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/matt-garlin/support
Am Schützensonntag, den 18. Juli 2021, um 14 Uhr findet eine ganz besondere Stadtführung in Biberach für die ganze Familie statt. Leider fallen die Umzüge ja aus – dafür gibt es aber eine ganz tolle Schützenfest-Stadtführung. Treffpunkt ist im Innenhof des Museums Biberach. Karten gibt es direkt bei der Stadtführerin. In Innenräumen herrscht Maskenpflicht. Viel Freude! Es wird eine besondere Stadtführung von einer besonderen Frau: Edeltraud Garlin hat nicht nur die Landesehrennadel für ihr Engagement erhalten, sie gehört auch zu den absoluten Schützenfest-Urgesteinen. DONAU 3 FM Schützenreporter Paolo Percoco hat die Dame zum Gespräch getroffen.
We welcome Michigan's 64th Lt. Governor, Garlin Gilchrest, III. LG Gilchrest talks the importance of EMS Week and how everyone's job has changed during the pandemic.
Quarantine Players, A New Play Podcast.| We'll Keep the Ghostlight on For You!
This is the story of a couple that has broken up who gets caught at a resort during a storm and now has no choice but to face the ghosts of the past relationship. Both come clean in a hilarious, high-stakes autopsy of their failed relationship. Original Concept by Matthew Garlin & Samantha Davekos Writing Supervision by Rebecca Greene Director Monica Cross Producer A. J. Campbell, Quarantine Players CAST David - Ricardo Padilla Jessica - Tammy Peters Melissa: David’s Wife - Elizabeth Rossen Malcolm: Jessica’s Husband - Bryan Matthew Stage directions - Zach Hanna Matthew Garlin Author This is his first time working with Quarantine Players. His acting credit includes working with theaters: Quannapowitt Players in Reading, MA Theatre to Go in Melrose, MA New England School of Performing Arts The Bard Brigade in Saugus, MA Revolutionary Theatre in Danvers, MA Still Small theatre’s repertory company in Beverly, MA. His directing credits include Enchanted April for Theatre to Go Inc., Almost Maine and It’s a Wonderful Life for Theater Company of Saugus, Godspell for Sherwood Entertainment, Side by Side by Sondheim for Colonial Chorus Players, Twelfth Night for The Bard Brigade, and a short film Project Invisible. His playwright credits include Online Dating (one-act play) and Curtain Call (Full-length play) at Acting Out Company in Lawrence, How Do You Know (one-act play) at River’s Edge Arts Alliance, Woods (full-length play) at Theater@First, and A Christmas Gift (one-act play) & A Christmas Carol: A Radio Play (full-length adaptation) at Theater company of Saugus and Love in the Snow: Stories for Christmas at Walpole Footlighters. Author credits: Woods, Curtain Call, And the Oscar Goes To, and Just Get Over it (self-published) available also on Amazon.com in Kindle, Paperback, and Large Print. He currently hosts his own podcast Everything You Never Needed to Know about Movies, Music, and Theater and is the creator, writer, and plays “Jim Henry” of The Movie Critics: A Web series, you can find both on Anchor, Spotify, and every place else you get your podcasts. About the Quarantine Players Website https://quarantineplayers.org/ Podcast: https://anchor.fm/qplayers Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/QuarantinePlayers Twitter: https://twitter.com/q_players Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/quarantineplayers Amazon Fire TV APP: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08VJHBT8W/ We can all sit around and list off the problems with modern theater so I won’t bore you with a recitation of facts we all largely agree upon. The Quarantine Players are a scrappy theater start-up that is in a position to break all the rules. We were told we can’t put out new work all the time. Yes, we can you just have to treat playwrights like they matter, make them part of the process, and value our input. We are your source for new plays from amazing playwrights. Each week we choose a new play to read for you. We are different because we involve the playwright in every step of the process. Most of our writers will attend all the rehearsals and provide feedback along the way. We don't just honor playwrights by waiting till their work goes into the Public domain so we don't have to pay them. We prefer our playwrights to still have their pulse. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/qplayers/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/qplayers/support
Over coming cancer is always truly a difficult journey. This is Tim's story...
Everything You Never Needed to Know About Movies, Music & Theater
For a change of pace, Jackie interviews Matt Garlin about his career so far... --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/matt-garlin/support
There are very few individuals who demonstrate the valor, the bravery, the courage, and the action necessary to be awarded the highest honor that our military can bestow upon them. That award is the Congressional Medal of Honor. Today we salute one such Honoree, 1st Lieutenant Garlin Murl Connor of the United States Army. Receiving the Congressional Medal of Honor officially makes Lieutenant Connor the 2nd most decorated combat veteran of WWII. Standing just 5 foot 6 inches tall and weighing only around 120 lbs. Lt. Connor was not the most physically imposing soldier on the battlefield, but on January 24, 1945, he was an obstacle that wave after wave of German troops could not pass. Lt. Connor took part in 10 campaigns with the Army's 3rd infantry division during his 28 months of combat time. He was wounded 7 different times, but kept on fighting. On that January day in 1945 he actually slipped away from an Army hospital to join his unit. He volunteered to be an artillery spotter for the mission, since he wasn't cleared to fight. He took a field telephone, and a machine gun and ran forward toward the enemy. Lt. Connor hunkered down in a drainage ditch for hours reporting on troop movements and calling in artillery strikes. The German forces numbered around 600, including an SS contingent and German tanks. At one point the Germans got within 10 meters of his position. It was then when Connor called in the artillery strike on his own position, and told them to "Just keep firing for effect." His selfless act, and courage in the face of certain death is exactly why his commanding officer recommended him for the CMH after this engagement. Garlin Connor survived the battle that day and returned home a hero. His wife Pauline said he never directly told her what happened on that day. 1st Lieutenant Garlin Connor died on November 5th, 1998 at home. Two years ago, President Trump presented his widow Pauline with his posthumous Congressional Medal of Honor. Today we all salute 1st Lieutenant Garlin Murl Connor of the United States Army, Congressional Medal of Honor.
SOCA VIBES FOR LABOR DAY MONDAY
SOUND QUALITY ALERT: THERE WAS AN UNFORTUNATE HUMAN ERROR IN THE RECORDING OF EPISODE 111. WE'D FIRE THE SOUND TECHNICIAN BUT HE'S ALSO YOUR CO-HOST. SINCEREST APOLOGIES. HOPE THE SOUND ISSUE DOESN'T DETRACT TOO MUCH FROM YOUR ENJOYMENT OF HOT DATE 111. Dan 2013's indie comedy Dealin' With Idiots was a passion project for actor Jeff Garlin (Curb Your Enthusiasm). Directed, co-written and produced by Garlin, the film employs the talents of comedic all-stars Fed Willard, Bob Odenkirk, Jami Gertz and Kerri Kenney among others to tell the mostly improvised story of a successful comic Dad trying to relate to the eccentric parents at his son's little league games. Dan and Vicky discuss the film along with lots of recently seen including TNT's Snowpiercer and The Alienist and movies like 1968's Boston Strangler, 1957's Pal Joey, Hulu's recent Palm Springs, the teen horror film Countdown and epic Shudder doc In Search of Darkness: A Journey Into Iconic 80's Horror. Have a listen to Hot Date 111: Dealin' With Idiots and leave us feedback. Check out our website at hotdatepod.com
Hey, what is up to everybody! So today I'm getting personal my daughter contracted and infected of coronavirus, luckily she is better now but now my husband has it. I want to talk to you today about how to manage or so far to escape from getting it. What our home treatment plan has been and how we set up our apartment to keep six feet apart. I'm Risa Morimoto your host and you're watching modern aging where we chat about innovative and holistic ways to optimize our health and well-being. Okay so let's be real this all feels like a ridiculous bad joke or something and I wouldn't it be great to just wake up from this nightmare of a movie that has become. Our lives well no such luck not in my family, my family's been hit by this coronavirus so we've been forced to face this pandemic head-on. I want to share our experience with you so that perhaps you can find something useful and what we did if you find yourself in the same predicament at the time it really and when it happened. It felt like an uncontrollable crisis but it did become manageable once we put systems in place first off. I just want to say there's a lot of anxiety about there whether or not people think they have symptoms the anxiety and fear are real but we also have to take a step back and not freak out because of the anxiety may be actually making things appear worse than they actually are, so take a deep breath and if you're incessantly watching the news you have to stop because it's not helping so here's what happened and what we did so my teenage daughter. She came over in school not feeling well a couple of weeks ago and this is when the hysteria was beginning and we were starting to see that this pandemic was real and coming to our towns and coming very soon I have to be honest, at the time I completely freaked out and I lost it but then I got into my producer mode, you know for all those producers out there you know exactly what I'm talking about because when that hits the fan you have to solve problems and so that's what I did, so she had the classic symptoms of fever and dry cough, but luckily nothing else we gave her Tylenol for the fever but really the COFF nothing, except for maybe some cough drops. From time to time the real question was this Kovac 19? I called around to try to get her tested but it was impossible and apparently they're just not enough tests to go around and the ones that they do, they're using on severe cases only so we were left to our own. Well, honestly we'll never know for sure if she had coronavirus unless she can get an antibody test but at the time we were told to treat it as though. She did so that's what we did and luckily she's a teenager or so and not a toddler so she could take care of herself, for the most part, we quarantined her in her bedroom and we designated one of the two bathrooms for her to use only. She stayed in her room for about fourdays which is about how long her illness lasted for her. I did not go into her room and anything that she needed I put by her door. Her meals were brought to her in her room I was the only person to touch the tray. I washed or cleanup my hands from the virus, like crazy and I wore a mask and so did chief. Wehad to interact at all it was honestly very tough for her to stay in a room of course, but then she got to set up her computer so she could watch Netflix which normally we would not allow, but because we did life became a little bit more bearable for her. Once we started feeling better she was allowed to come out of her room and as long as she was careful. What she touched, she washed her hands a lot and she disinfected from the virus, and whatever she touched she wore face masks outside of her bedroom. As did I when we would interact we washed all her bedding and clothes the CDC.Now says for those who have had symptoms and not tested for Kovan 19 and now feeling better, there are three markers you should lookoutto determine if they are still contagious numbers and one they've had no fever for 72 hours that is without the use of any medicine. Number two, their symptoms have improved as if they had a cough or sore throat and number three, seven days have passed since their symptoms first appeared and if you check off all three then the person is probably no longer contagious like my husband's case, unfortunately, he has been a little bit different, his virus started with a cough and then a few days he developed a fever with aches and pain. He's been taking Tylenol but after a few days his fever is still up and hasn't yet broken, he doesn't have much of an appetite so I'm trying to get him to continue to drink liquids which are super important to flush out the fever. Also, a neighbor she just bought us some organic elderberry juice so I started to give that to him and I started to drink it. Elderberries are known to have anti-inflammatory and antiviral properties so it's really good for colds flu and allergies. I'll put a link in the description below if you want to check it out luckily neither my daughter nor husband have had a sore throat but it is something that I suffer from time to time so I just wanted to suggest Garlin with warm water and warm salt water actually and then alsotaking zinc. You don't want to take on an empty stomach because it can get upset, but a tea fresh slices of ginger lemon honey is awesome and it helps to soothe your throat. My husband is quarantined in his office and he has a little small bed in there and he's been there for almost a week and now I don't go into his room unless there it's to bring him something and if I do go in, I put on my mask and he puts on his. I don't hang out there for more than five minutes and I've marked flatware and plates bowls that are strictly for him. We don't share towels, bedding or anything, the big challenge has been our dog, Mimi loves my husband and wants to be near him all that time, so I put up a baby gate so she doesn't go into his room, but of course, it's hard to do 100% of the time because I'll forget or I'm in there talking to him and she won't sneak up a high and jump on his bed. They say that the virus can live on your pet's fur and whether or not that's a hundred percent or not I'm not sure it does make sense since this virus tends to like to live on surfaces.The other alternative, of course, is that healthy people don't touch the pets but that's crazy too. I mean I put light blankets on our sleeping spots now just in a case, so that way I can wash the blanket and not the entire couch. I've also been giving Mimi baths not happy about that at all, so I know that I need to get better at keeping that baby gate up. For now, we're taking a day by day we definitely do not want to go into the hospital is a breeding ground for the virus and we are super lucky because of the virus is not bad enough where we need hospital intervention and we are doing our best to create a system within our household to keep healthy people and bring the sick people back to health and I think this is going to be very common. I can't stress enough how important it is to be eating healthy and right now whether you are sick or not whole real foods lots of fruits and vegetables. Stay away from processed foods and if you can, if you don't cook there are meal kits and you can order as well as tons of simple recipes online to try. Just try and we've partnered with a splendid spoon which is a meal kit. The delivery company they have some amazing plant-based smoothies bowls and soups it's perfect because it's nutritious and it's also easy to eat.
In COVID times, spontaneous music has become a salve for our despair. One artist determined to bring that to us is folk singer Rachel Garlin, who on a warm day in May, opened her Noe Valley garage door to perform ad hoc for her San Francisco sheltering in place neighborhood. She bantered with passer bys, she made up songs on the spot. She brought healing. Today we have her with us. She is launching new music with the album Mondegreens, and we will be playing its first release, her cover of "Boys of Summer". The album plays like a love a letter to today's precarious times, each song evoking a blend of heartache and hope, social reflection and self-discovery. At the center of the work are Garlin's nuanced lyrics—image-rich and literary, subtle and surprising—making each song its own snow-globe story that stirs and settles anew with every listen. Today we talk... and we listen! With co-host Brody Levesque.
In COVID times, spontaneous music has become a salve for our despair. One artist determined to bring that to us is folk singer Rachel Garlin, who on a warm day in May, opened her Noe Valley garage door to perform ad hoc for her San Francisco sheltering in place neighborhood. She bantered with passer bys, she made up songs on the spot. She brought healing. Today we have her with us. She is launching new music with the album Mondegreens, and we will be playing its first release, her cover of "Boys of Summer". The album plays like a love a letter to today’s precarious times, each song evoking a blend of heartache and hope, social reflection and self-discovery. At the center of the work are Garlin’s nuanced lyrics—image-rich and literary, subtle and surprising—making each song its own snow-globe story that stirs and settles anew with every listen. Today we talk... and we listen! With co-host Brody Levesque.
WWJ's Tom Jordan and Roberta Jasina talk with Michigan Lt. Governor Garlin Gilcrest on the latest in COVID-19, including mask mandates and getting kids back to school. See omnystudio.com/policies/listener for privacy information.
In My Head With Michael Garlin 07.05.20 by WCPT 820 AM
Featuring Marcus Newman and Nikos Michals
June 4th: Tammie Garlin Killed (2007) Sometimes, an arrest can be more than it seems. In June of 2007 Wisconsin police made an arrest in what they thought was simply a child-protection case. But, after talking to a young girl living within the home, police would soon discover all of the sick things that happened inside on June 4th 2007. Become a supporter of this podcast on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/morningcupofmurder Follow Morning Cup of Murder on Twitter: https://twitter.com/cupofmurder @cupofmurder Follow MCOM on Instagram: @morningcupofmurder Have a Murder or strange true crime story you want to share, email the show here: morningcupofmurder@gmail.com Morning Cup of Murder is researched, written and performed by Korina Biemesderfer. Follow Korina on Instagram: @kbiemesderfer Information for this episode collected from: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garlin_case --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/morning-cup-of-murder/message
Today we welcome a special guest to the B&H Photography Podcast: actor and comedian Jeff Garlin. We also are launching the B&H Photography Podcast Leica Photo Challenge, so please click the link to find out how to enter to win a Leica Q2 Digital Camera. Jeff Garlin is well-known as a stand-up comedian and, of course, as a star of the hit television shows, The Goldbergs and Curb Your Enthusiam. About fifteen years ago, he turned a love for photography, for the work of the masters—Alfred Eisenstadt, Jim Marshall, Mary Ellen Mark, to name a few—into his own photographic practice, and we are all the beneficiaries of his engaged eye. In March, Garlin debuted his series, “A Big Bowl of Wonderful,” at the Leica Gallery Los Angeles, and we talk to him about how this series of portraits of his co-stars and friends in the television community—many taken on set or backstage—developed over a long curve, one founded in respect for the medium and applied with a simple stratagem: see something interesting and frame it in the most creative way possible. With that in mind, we talk about trusting your gut, not overthinking a shot, being comfortable with your subjects, but also about gaining the confidence to take photos, especially of those you know and respect. Garlin also talks about his affinity for Leica, especially the M system, about the difference between actors and comedians, and talking photography with Jeff Bridges. We also ask him about his role as executive producer on the film, Finding Vivian Maier. This really is a photography lover’s conversation, summed up best by one of Garlin’s comments: “I’m taking a picture because it brings me joy.” About bringing joy. If you are interested in winning a Leica Q2 Digital Camera, be sure to enter the B&H Photography Podcast Leica Challenge, which launches May 28, 2020 and runs until June 21, 2020. Click the link, follow the instructions, submit a photo you have taken recently that reflects “life during shutdown,” and you could be the winner of this spectacular 47MP full-frame Leica camera. Join us for a great episode. Guest: Jeff Garlin Photograph © Jeff Garlin
Some really cool things have happened in the last few weeks! For me, personally, I got an article published in No Depression’s quarterly journal! You can buy your copy here! This episode is a big boi because I also talk to Chris Prunckle. He’s the author and cartoonist behind Wannabe the Comic -- a music review comic strip. You can follow him at www.wannabethecomic.com or on Instagram at @wannabethecomic Rachel Garlin -- “Capture Me” (Mondegreens) Jason Isbell -- “It Gets Easier” (Reunions) Shameless James -- “Cigarettes and Amphetamines” (Single) Caitlin Cannon -- “Going For the Bronze” (The TrashCannon Album) Zach Aaron -- “Potato Salad” (Fill Dirt Wanted) The Federales -- “Dead Gulch Dan” (Honkytonks & Hangovers) The Roseline -- “Quartz or Digital” (G O O D / G R I E F) Audrey & Hugh -- “Young, Loved, and Free” (Sisterman) The Promised -- “I Ride” (Single) Rosalie -- “Fool’s Gold” (Single) Andrew Word -- ‘Heather’s Song” (Walk These Hills) Mike Thomas -- “Sure Feels Right” (Single) Qwiet Type -- “Little Ol’ Me” (Single) Interview w/ Chris Pruckle featuring… Gaslight Anthem -- “Miles Davis and the Cool” (The 59 Sound) Horrible Crowes -- “Crush” (Elsie) Brian Fallon -- “When You’re Ready” (Local Honey) Send me music via SubmitHub! Send me money via Ko-fi or Patreon. Find Rachel and her comic via https://linktr.ee/rachel.cholst
Jeff Garlin jokes about ice cream in his Netflix Special, "Our Man in Chicago".
In this pre-recorded Age of Corona episode of West of Twin Peaks Radio, MJ chats with venue booking manager Michele Kappel of The Lost Church SF, and artists/activists Victoria Boyington and Maayan of California Women in Music about the forced cancellation of shows and events and the financial impacts on the local music scene. PLUS SF singer/songwriter Rachel Garlin joins MJ via FaceTime to talk about her new LP "Mondegreens" and how its songs seems even more relevant now. PLUS loads of new music.
In My Head with Michael Garlin 03.22.20 by WCPT 820 AM
In My Head with Michael Garlin 03.08.20 by WCPT 820 AM
Follow/Subscribe to "The Undacover Mixtapes" Podcast on Spotify, Apple Podcast, GooglePlayMusic & DeezerIG/FB/TW @DjUndacoverBookings/Email: djundacover@gmail.comTracklist:1. Stink Behaviour - Teddy Rhymes x Machel Montano2. Jumbie Head - Swappi x Ultimate Rejects3. Disorder - Ultimate Rejects4. Something Happen - Ultimate Rejects5. Feeling It - Swappi x Ultimate Rejects6. More Sokah - Nailah Blackman7. The Struggle - Bunji Garlin8. Best Side - DJ Addo X TBoss9. Yuh Bad - Preedy10. Take Jam - Imani Ray11. Stink Face - Kerwin Du Bois12. FATTT - Nadia Batson13. Up & Up - Skinny Fabulous14. Do Like That - Lyrikal15. So Bad - Ricky T16. Drinking All Day - Hollywood HP17. Bottle Over Head - Triniboi Joocie18. Oh Lorde - Problem Child19. Good WiFi - Machel Montano20. Soak Me Good - Patrice Roberts21. Ah Love It - King Bubba22. West Indian - Alison Hinds23. When Last Best Friend - Showtime 24. After Hours - Farmer Nappy25. Celebrate Life - Blaxx26. Reason To Love - KES27. Dear Promoter - KES X Private Ryan28. Dey Wah Soca - KES29. Party Capital - M130. RIP - Ricardo Drue31. Magical - Neval Trinidad32. Hot Like You - Revelation33. We Out Deh - Shal Marshall x Busy Signal34. Flavah - Problem Child35. Different Person - Skinny Fabulous36. Bend - Umpa & Totti37. Bum Bum - Kelly B38. RealBadman - Crocadile39. Back Seat Ride - Problem Child40. Show Me - Fadda Fox41. Two Knee - Shal Marshall42. Bend Yuh Back - Skinny Fabulous43. Splash - Patrice Roberts x Nessa Preppy44. Hot Gyal - Jus D45. Creme De La Creme - Teddyson John46. Siddung Pon - Dymez x daPixel (DXdP)47. Eldest Sister - Blackboy48. Ding Dang - Subance49. Fair Sa (Feh Sa) - Hypasounds50. OTW - Shemmy J ft. Freezy51. Advantage - Mr Killa52. Batty Bad - Paulie53. Ripe Mango - Umpa54. Big Ride - Motto ft. Blackboy & Ezra55. Touch Pon Di Floor - Blackboy56. Gih Dem - Machel Montano57. I Have A Problem - Mr. Legz58. Ochro - Dev59. Big Fish - Trinidad Ghost60. Pull Up - Nessa Preppy61. Boss Wine - Machel Montano x Salty62. Oil Drum - Nailah Blackman63. Bad Gyal Section - Konshens64. So Real - Destra65. Banga - James P66. Lookin for China - Bunji Garlin67. Bounce It - Nessa Preppy68. Facts - Dev69. Fete Masters - Dawg-E-Slaughter70. Working Gyal - Tallpree71. Real Woman - Patrice Roberts72. Birthday - Michael Teja73. Waste Man - Sekon Sta74. Outside - Viking Ding Dong75. Woi Ya - Olatunji x Nailah Blackman 76. Kité Sa - Teddyson John77. Cantankerous - StickyWow78. Home Wrecker - Dale Ryan79. Feeling Ah Feeling - Ricochae80. Shots - Motto81. Boss Lady - KES82. Soca Take Over - KES83. Come To Play - Turner84. Walk Out - Wendi85. Champion Gyal - Erphaan Alves86. Honest Dollar - Voice87. I Love You - Machel Montano88. Rock This Place - Skinny Fabulous89. Super Soca - Vybz Kartel x Machel Montano90. Back It Up - Patrice Roberts & Popeye Caution91. Woman & Party - Turner92. Party Cyah Done - Olatunji93. Canboulay - Blaxx
In My Head With Michael Garlin 02.02.20 by WCPT 820 AM
Jeff Garlin is one of the most generous performers and wisest men I've ever had the pleasure of getting to know. He is so present in life and on stage - You know him from HBO's "Curb Your Enthusiasm," "The Goldbergs" on ABC, and his prolific career in improv and stand up comedy. On this episode we dig in to the lessons he's learned on his journey to self-love, the importance of being kind to yourself in life and work, and doing the best you can with the information you've been given. "People always want to know the secret of success. The secret of success is keep going. don't let adversity beat you. Just keep going." It's a great listen. Don't miss his Netflix special out Nov. 12th - "Our Man in Chicago." www.patreon.com/erindarling IG @ahotpizzaass
Rachel Garlin/Philip Roth Song/Hello AgainRachel Garlin/Hey Garrett/Hello AgainRachel Garlin/Broke Down House/Hello AgainRachel Garlin/I Have, I Will/Hello AgainRachel Garlin/The Days Are Long/Hello AgainRachel Garlin/Accordion Song/Wink At July See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Your Soundtrack of the Summer!! Features New POP/Tropical, Dancehall, Soca, Afrobeat & Reggaeton hits with featured releases from Casely, Braveboy & System32 Music called "ACTION" Tune in EVERY Saturday at 11PM ET (10PM CT) on Pitbull's Globalization SiriusXM Channel 13 with DJ ANARCHY IG: @DJAnarchyRMX Twitter: @DJAnarchyRMX
The Pace Of Change Speedgolf Podcast: Broadcasting The Evolution of Speedgolf In The 21st Century
It's going to happen: Speedgolf is destined to scale. Are we there yet? No. But the Master Plan has been put into action, and at its foundation is the grassroots methodology Garlin has employed over the years running Speedgolf SoCal. It hasn't been easy, but what Smith and so many other ambassadors around the country and world have discovered...it's so worth it! Enjoy the back half of our conversation with the 2017 SGUSA Ambassador of the Year, Garlin Smith. ***** Podcast Host Scott Dawley Instagram: @scottdawleygolf Podcast Guest Garlin Smith on FB: @garlin.smith Speedgolf SoCal on FB/Insta: @SpeedgolfSoCal Thank you for listening, thank you for sharing, thank you for liking and subscribing and leaving a review. We enjoy creating content the Speedgolf community enjoys and appreciates. If that's true for you, please take the time to let us know! You can support our efforts by following us on Facebook /paceofchange. Visit our website paceofchange.com and sign up for our newsletter to stay up to speed on the latest POC podcast news announcements and updates. If you're listening on iTunes, you can support us by subscribing and leaving a review. Now Available on Spotify! Listen and Follow the POC on Spotify. Thanks to our sponsors and affiliates: PlaySpeedgolf.com Strikingly.com RivalAndRevel.com LinksRun.com SterlingIrons.com LaserLinkGolf.com HOW CAN I SUPPORT THE PODCAST? Like, Subscribe, Tell your friends & Share online Subscribe & Review: iTunes|Spotify|Stitcher Radio|PlayerFM
Your Soundtrack of the Summer!! Features New POP/Tropical, Soca, Dancehall & Afrobeat hits to keep your party vibe alive!! Tune in EVERY Saturday at 11PM ET (10PM CT) on Pitbull's Globalization SiriusXM Channel 13 with DJ ANARCHY IG: @DJAnarchyRMX Twitter: @DJAnarchyRMX
The Pace Of Change Speedgolf Podcast: Broadcasting The Evolution of Speedgolf In The 21st Century
For this historic episode we brought in one of the great ambassadors of Speedgolf since he discovered it in 2013. As a successful brand marketing and advertising executive, Garlin Smith knows what it will take for Speedgolf to reach the masses. It what he's doing with that knowledge that runs counter to many people's ideas about how this slow-to-develop, faster version of the traditional game will reach its tipping point. Enjoy Part II with the Founder and Director of Speedgolf Southern California. Next up, Part I. *The POC is headed to Kentucky this week for the 3rd annual Kentucky Speedgolf Championships. Stay tuned for some great player interviews when we return. Until then pick up the pace, play from your heart! ***** Podcast Host Scott Dawley Instagram: @scottdawleygolf Podcast Guest Garlin Smith on FB: @garlin.smith Speedgolf SoCal on FB/Insta: @SpeedgolfSoCal Thank you for listening, thank you for sharing, thank you for liking and subscribing and leaving a review. We have enjoyed creating content the Speedgolf community enjoys and appreciates. If that's true for you, please take the time to let us know! You can support our efforts by following us on Facebook /paceofchange. Visit our website paceofchange.com and sign up for our newsletter to stay up to speed on the latest POC podcast news announcements and updates. If you're listening on iTunes, you can support us by subscribing and leaving a review. Now Available on Spotify! Listen and Follow the POC on Spotify. Thanks to our sponsors and affiliates: PlaySpeedgolf.com Strikingly.com RivalAndRevel.com LinksRun.com SterlingIrons.com LaserLinkGolf.com HOW CAN I SUPPORT THE PODCAST? Like, Subscribe, Tell your friends & Share online Subscribe & Review: iTunes|Spotify|Stitcher Radio|PlayerFM
On episode two hundred and nine, the story of Garlin M Conner is told. All stories in June will be from various conflicts with recent recipients. Be sure to visit our website for more information as the show goes on at: www.talesofhonorpodcast.com. Thanks for listening and be sure to share with friends and family!
Murray Goldberg, Larry David's manager Jeff...you know Garlin from his numerous TV and film roles as well as his standup. He's the same guy in real life (only younger, thinner and better-looking!) Find out what it takes to make it in comedy, especially when you discover your destiny while watching Jimmy Durante. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com
1. Famalay - Skinny Fabulous x Machel Montano x Bunji Garlin 2. Release - Machel Montano 3. Pandemonium - Voice x Lil Natty & Thunda 4. Judgement Stage - Patrice Roberts 5. The Road - Machel Montano x Ashanti 6. Going The Distance - Ultimate Rejects 7. Run Wid It - Mr. Killa 8. Savannah Grass - Kes The Band 9. Trouble In the Morning (DJ Rusty G Dubplate)- V’ghn 10. Day One - Machel Montano x Farmer Nappy 11. Gyal Owner - Blaxx 12. Ride Out - Orlando Octave 13. Funky Business - Fimba 14. Tombstone - Mandella Linkz 15. Dr. Mash Up - Machel Montano 16. Dr. Mash Up 2 - Machel Montano 17. Sugar Lump - Lil Rick 18. Trending - Shal Marshall 19. De Road - Problem Child 20. Lost & Found - Preedy 21. Madness - Voice & David Rudder 22. Party Start - Swappi x Ultimate Rejects 23. Games - Nailah Blackman 24. My Faults - Kerwin Du Bois 25. Come for It - Machel Montano 26. Alive & Well - Voice 27. Right for Somebody - Kerwin Du Bois 28. Start It - LFS Music 29. Warm Up - Preedy 30. Personal - 5 Star Akil 31. Vent (DJ Rusty G Dubplate)- Teddyson John 32. Issa Snack (Remix) - Nessa Preppy Ft. Machel Montano & Hood Celebrity 33. Work - Salty 34. Gym Exercise - Blackboy 35. Party We Love - Shal Marshall 36. Like it Hot - Patrice Roberts 37. Good Up Good Up - Problem Child 38. Make Sense - Problem Child 39. Strangers - Nadia Batson 40. One Wine - Shal Marshall 41. Hookin Meh - Farmer Nappy 42. So Long - Nadia Batson 43. Blaze in Love - Erphaan Alves 44. Iron Love - Nailah Blackman 45. Soca Demon - Kerwin Du Bois 46. Brace Up - Machel Montano 47. Seek & Find - MX Prime 48. Dance - Machel Montano & Kassav 49. Happy - Skinny Fabulous 50. One Woman - Motto 51. Smile - Voice 52. Greatness - Viking Ding Dong 53. Love It - Kes the Band 54. Thank Mama - Olatunji 55. I Swear - Sekon Sta 56. We Now Start to Party - Super Blue x Machel Montano 57. Rag Storm - Super Blue 58. Water Blessings - Iwer George 59. What a Mess - Motto 60. Wet It Up - Zeek 61. Brave - Nailah Blackman x Erphaan Alves x Sekon Sta 62. Ground Pound - Bunji Garlin 63. Get in Yuh Section - Lil Natty & Thunda 64. Practice - GBM Nutron 65. Toco Loco - Machel Montano 66. Nah Let Go - Kes The Band 67. Touch Me - Patrice Roberts 68. Whole Heart - Problem Child 69. Too Sweet - Holla Bak 70. Falling - Machel Montano 71. Close to Me - Kes The Band x Shenseea 72. Compromise - Erphaan Alves 73. Speechless - Kerwin Du Bois x Voice x Teddyson John x Lyrikal
Jeff Garlin is a comedian, actor, producer, director, and writer.
Actual Anarchy Podcast - AnCap Movie Reviews from a Rothbardian Perspective
We hang on to the last vestiges of my youth as I turn 40 and talk about a children's movie with my friend since childhood, and co-host, Robert. WALL-E is a charming story of a lonely robot who gains sentience and becomes lonely; but there's also some ridiculous economic fallacies and a few strong propagandistic messages being pushed. We hope you enjoy this one! Show notes and more at: http://www.actualanarchy.com/59 Presented by www.ActualAnarchy.com Robert and I analyze popular movies from a Rothbardian/AnarchoCapitalist perspective. We use movies as a starting point for people who may not be familiar with this way of thinking. Discussion of the plot and decisions that characters make in relation to morality and violations of the non-aggression principle are our bread and butter. We also will highlight and discuss any themes or lessons from Austrian Economics that we can glean from the film. The point is to show what anarchy actually is with instances that are presented in film. We publish at least once per week; and occasionally will do specials surrounding holidays or events (elections/olympics) and have guests. SUBSCRIBE, RATE AND REVIEW ON APPLE PODCASTS (or iTUNES)
This episode features some of your favorite Afrobeat, Dancehall, Pop/Top 40, Soca & Reggeton Hits Tune in every Sunday at 7PM ET (6PM CT) on Pitbull's Globalization SiriusXM Channel 13 with DJ ANARCHY IG: @DJAnarchyRMX Twitter: @DJAnarchyRMX
This episode features New Caribbean Music (Soca, Dancehall), Pop & Afrobeat. Highlights new releases from Peter Jericho "Follow Me" produced by Dj Kimo of Vanguards Music, Dj Teffler's "Good Love" & "Let me Love You" plus many more Tune in every Sunday at 7PM ET (6PM CT) on Pitbull's Globalization SiriusXM Channel 13 with DJ ANARCHY IG: @DJAnarchyRMX Twitter: @DJAnarchyRMX
We Follow up With Jeff Garlin eating bolognese at the Chateau Marmont with "Taxi Driver" on mute for inspiration! Talkin' shit about "IT!" Go gaga over "Atomic Blonde," We get "The Big Sick" & diagnose our "Valerian" inter dimension diarrhea!! Kinison vs. Belushi! We do a Gramma's Balls remix! More SPOILERS than a Cadillac!
Today's Guest: Jeff Garlin, comedian, actor, "Curb Your Enthusiasm," "The Goldbergs" Order 'I Want Someone to Eat Cheese With" from Amazon.com by clicking on the DVD cover above! Today is a great day to be Jeff Garlin. And for him, tomorrow will probably be an even better day. The sixth season of the hugely popular and hysterically funny HBO series “Curb Your Enthusiasm,” starring Larry David and co-starring Garlin, is now underway. But even better, I suspect, for Garlin is that his first movie as writer, director, and star, I Want Someone to Eat Cheese With, opened on September 5. The New York Times greeted Garlin’s Cheese this way: laid back and affectionate, Cheese is the movie version of a dear friend you could spend all day with. Not bad for a guy from Chicago. Jeff Garlin Website • Twitter • Facebook • Tumblr • By the Way, Jeff Garlin's Podcast • Order Curb Your Enthusiasm, Season 1, from Amazon.com • Order I Want Someone to Eat Cheese With from Amazon.com • Order Curbing It by Jeff Garlin from Amazon.com More Mr. Media Interviews from Curb Your Enthusiasm: Cheryl Hines (Oct. 21, 2007) • Larry David's video editor Roger Nygard (2011) Kicking Through the Ashes: My Life As A Stand-up in the 1980s Comedy Boom by Ritch Shydner. Order your copy today by clicking on the book cover above! The Party Authority in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware and Maryland!
Jeff Garlin is using his own life to shape the character he plays in the new Netflix mystery movie "Handsome." Garlin is starring as an LA detective who is great at his job, but horrible at life. "I don't find making films or television or doing standup stressful," Garlin told Peter Travers. "I find life can be stressful." Garlin said he hopes movie watchers will enjoy the film because "it's the best thing I've ever done." "Handsome," is just one of many projects keeping the "Curb Your Enthusiasm" star busy these days. He's just wrapped a new season of 'Curb' after a five year break. The new shows are coming this fall. He's starring in the hit primetime series, "The Goldbergs," just renewed for a 5th season. And he's hosting a podcast in addition to his standup shows. Garlin talks to Peter Travers about his drive to keep busy and offers a sneak peak at what 'Curb' fans can look forward to later this year. Like what we're doing? Leave a review! ----> http://bit.ly/2kIbsjV Check out our other podcasts: http://bit.ly/2eBJMNa * ABOUT PETER TRAVERS: Peter Travers an American film critic, author and journalist. For some 25 years, Travers has written for Rolling Stone. He personally screens nearly 400 movies per year and releases weekly reviews. Travers is the nation's most blurbed film critic, according to eFilmCritic.com. Travers is also host of ABC's "Popcorn With Peter Travers," where he interviews actors, directors and Broadway performers about their roles and their lives. Popcorn on Twitter: http://abcn.ws/2gGYRiD Popcorn on Facebook: http://abcn.ws/2f3iHDw Popcorn on YouTube: http://abcn.ws/2gyswtx Popcorn on Instagram: http://abcn.ws/2fC0Ak2
1. Full Extreme (Madd Yute MegaCut) – Ultimate Rejects Ft. MX Prime 2. Full Extreme – Ultimate Rejects Ft. MX Prime 3. Full Extreme (Bad Company Mawd Roadmix) - Ultimate Rejects Ft. MX Prime 4. Full Extreme (Skorch Bun It Remix) - Ultimate Rejects Ft. MX Prime 5. Freaky Girls (Dj Tate Roadmix) – Ricky T & Eempey Slicker 6. Freaky Girls - Ricky T & Eempey Slicker 7. Single (B.R Roadmix) – Orlando Octave 8. Drink King (DJ Rusty G Dubplate) – Kerry John 9. Jammin Sake(Ryan Sayeed’s Critically Acclaimed Intro) – Lyrikal 10. Life Good – Ultimate Rejects Ft. Kerwin Du Bois 11. Workout – Kes & Nailah Blackman 12. Waves (DJ Puffy Remix) – Machel Montano 13. Wake Up – Machel Montano 14. We Dey – Skinny Fabulous 15. Trouble – Skinny Fabulous 16. Feteing Vicitim – Lyrikal 17. Party Every Weeknd – Sekon Sta 18. Heat in De Place – Preedy 19. Big Girl Now – Patrice Roberts 20. Destra Vs Lucy – Destra Garcia 21. Diz Iz D Band – Kerwin Du Bois 22. Stage Gawd – Ultimate Rejects Ft. MX Prime 23. Incredible – Kes the Band 24. Bacchanal – GBM Nutron 25. Free Up Yuhself – Salty & Travis World 26. Waistline Killer – Destra Garcia 27. Good Oye – Twist 28. Dutty Behavior – One Voice 29. Picture Perfect – Lyrikal 30. Buss Head – Machel Montano & Bunj Garlin 31. Calypso – GBM Nutron 32. Tipsy – Rupee 33. When the Lights Go Down – Skinny Fabulous 34. Get Away – Voice Ft. Royale 35. Addiction – Ultimate Rejects Ft. Flipo 36. Wine Up (Doc & Jes Remix) – Kes The Band 37. Jiggle It – Bunji Garlin, Kardinal Offishall & Verse Simmonds 38. Rock and Come In – Linky First 39. Wine Up Yuh Body – Bunji Garlin 40. Fast Wine – Machel Montano 41. Lip Service – Machel Montano 42. Rock You Out – GBM Nutron 43. On The Low – Preedy 44. I Will Be Here – Kreesha Turner 45. Far From Finished – Voice 46. Abatina – Calypso Rose 47. Leave Me Alone (Kubiyashi Remix) – Calypso Rose Ft. Manu Chao & Machel Montano 48. Welcome to the Carnival – Kimba Sorzano 49. Midnight Cruise – Olatunji x System32 50. Shake – Kes The Band & Kernal Roberts 51. Iron – Ricardo Drue 52. Only Good Vibes – GBM Nutron 53. Famous – Shal Marshall 54. Big Bad Soca – Bunji Garlin 55. Closer – Destra 56. Geelay – Nadia Batson & Olatunji 57. Technically – Farmer Nappy & Destra Garcia 58. X Man – Farmer Nappy 59. Long Time – Wildfire 60. Bend Back – Salty & Preedy 61. Dip (Travis World Official Roadmix) – Shal Marshall 62. Tic Toc – Marzville & Problem Child 63. Bend Over – Mr. Legz 64. Bend Dong – Motto 65. Your Time Now (Skorch Bun It Remix) – Machel Montano 66. I Doh Mind (SMJ Roadmix) – Uncle Ellis 67. Take a Bathe – Iwer George 68. Bruck Out – Bunji Garlin 69. Beat It (Travis World Roadmix) – Machel Montano 55. Closer – Destra 56. Geelay – Nadia Batson & Olatunji 57. Technically – Farmer Nappy & Destra Garcia 58. X Man – Farmer Nappy 59. Long Time – Wildfire 60. Bend Back – Salty & Preedy 61. Dip (Travis World Official Roadmix) – Shal Marshall 62. Tic Toc – Marzville & Problem Child 63. Bend Over – Mr. Legz 64. Bend Dong – Motto 65. Your Time Now (Skorch Bun It Remix) – Machel Montano 66. I Doh Mind (SMJ Roadmix) – Uncle Ellis 67. Take a Bathe – Iwer George 68. Bruck Out – Bunji Garlin 69. Beat It (Travis World Roadmix) – Machel Montano
To get live links to the music we play and resources we offer, visit This show includes the following songs: Jaspar Lepak - Send Me Home Rita Hosking & Sean Feder - Where The Grassroots Grow Nathan & Jessie - Ghosts of Mine March to May - Georgia Mollie O'Brien & Rich Moore - Sunday Street Claudia Russell & Bruce Kaplan - So You'll Believe Rachel Garlin - The Sea You See Melanie Devaney - Sink or Swim For Music Biz Resources Visit Visit our Sponsor: Get music by Shantell Ogden at: Visit our Sponsor: Get music by Far West Folk Alliance at:
To get live links to the music we play and resources we offer, visit This show includes the following songs: Jaspar Lepak - Send Me Home Rita Hosking & Sean Feder - Where The Grassroots Grow Nathan & Jessie - Ghosts of Mine March to May - Georgia Mollie O'Brien & Rich Moore - Sunday Street Claudia Russell & Bruce Kaplan - So You'll Believe Rachel Garlin - The Sea You See Melanie Devaney - Sink or Swim For Music Biz Resources Visit Visit our Sponsor: Get music by Shantell Ogden at: Visit our Sponsor: Get music by Far West Folk Alliance at:
To get live links to the music we play and resources we offer, visit This show includes the following songs: Jaspar Lepak - Send Me Home Rita Hosking & Sean Feder - Where The Grassroots Grow Nathan & Jessie - Ghosts of Mine March to May - Georgia Mollie O'Brien & Rich Moore - Sunday Street Claudia Russell & Bruce Kaplan - So You'll Believe Rachel Garlin - The Sea You See Melanie Devaney - Sink or Swim For Music Biz Resources Visit Visit our Sponsor: Get music by Shantell Ogden at: Visit our Sponsor: Get music by Far West Folk Alliance at:
1. Voice – Cheers To Life (Precision Roadmix) 2. Kerwin Du Bois Ft. Patrice Roberts – Unforgettable 3. Kerwin Du Bois Ft. Patrice Roberts – Unforgettable (Precision Roadmix) 4. GBM Nutron – Scene 5. Fay Ann Lyons – Scene (Remix) 6. Machel Montano – Need It 7. Bunji Garlin – Take Over Town 8. Shurwayne Winchester – Truck Driver (Madd Yute Mixup) 9. King Bubba – Mash up (DJ Rusty G Dubplate) 10. Cloud 5 – No Behavior (DJ Rusty G Dubplate) 11. Cloud 5 – No Behavior (Travis World Roadmix) 12. Skinny Fabulous – Full Hundred (All De Way) 13. Olatunji – With Meh 14. Destra Garcia – Soca Virus 15. Erphaan Alves – Intentions (Wine & Touch) 16. Machel Montano x Tarrus Riley – Memory 17. Preedy – Drums 18. Lyrikal – Freedom (Mastermind Prod. Roadmix) 19. Kes The Band – People (Razorshop & Ultimate Rejects Roadmix) 20. Machel Montano – Temperature (SMJ Remix) 21. Patrice Roberts Old & Grey 22. Peter Ram – All Ah We (Travis World Roadmix) 23. Ricardo Drue – Professional (Scratch Master x DJ Puffy Roadmix) 24. Skinny Fabulous – Born For This 25. Machel Montano – Carnival Groupie 26. Bunji Garlin – Carnival Today 27. Kes the Band – Carnival is Here 28. Ricardo Drue – Bet (Jester Remix) 29. Hypa Sounds – How She Like It (DJ Rusty G Dubplate) 30. Angela Hunte Ft. Machel Montano – Like So 31. Kerwin Du Bois – All Kinda Kind 32. Teddyson John – Allez (DJ Warlock Maddang Edit) 33. Teddyson John – Allez (DJ Rusty G Dubplate) 34. Olatunji – Oh Yay 35. Lyrikal – Dip & Roll (SMJ Roadmix) 36. Kerwin Du Bois – Carnival A Holic 37. Nadia Batson – Party Capital 38. Preedy – Veteran 39. Flipo – Oh Gosh 40. Lil Rick – All Is Rum 41. King Bubba – Rum King Just Start 42. Skinny Fabulous – It’s The Weekend 43. Skinny Fabulous – Plenty 44. Lil Rick – Boom Boom Jump 45. Stiffy – Garden (Roadmix) 46. King Bubba – Whole Night (Dubplate) 47. Hypa Sounds – Sugar Rush 48. Third Bass – Bum Bum (If Yuh Stush go in D Bush) 49. Farmer Nappy – BamBilamBamBilamBilamBam 50. Aaron Duncan – Can You Feel It? 51. Orlando Octave – Road (Doc & Jes Roadmix) 52. Blaxx – Master of Mas 53. Bunji Garlin – Generals 54. Salty Ft. Fay Ann Lyons – Gyal Meets Brass (Wassy Remix) 55. Sekon Sta – Night Shift 56. Preedy – Walk Out 57. Destra Garcia – Dip N Ride 58. Tian Winter – Ms. Set Good (Doc & Jes Remix) 59. Kimba Sorzano – Sorry (No Second Chances) 60. Pternsky – Non Stop 61. Machel Montano ft. Badjohn Republic - Waiting On The Stage
Booking Clubs: dasylvadj@gmail.com Website: www.dasylva.fr Facebook: www.dasylva.com iTunes: www.dasylva-itunes.com Mixcloud: www.dasylva-mixcloud.com Vimeo: www.vimeo.com/dasylva
Booking Clubs: dasylvadj@gmail.comWebsite: www.dasylva.frFacebook: www.dasylva.comiTunes: www.dasylva-itunes.comMixcloud: www.dasylva-mixcloud.comVimeo: www.vimeo.com/dasylva
Recorded in front of live audience for the LA Podfest, SWB welcomes Jeff Garlin (Goldbergs/Curb) and Trish Suhr (Clean House)! Foley's Rockford Peaches Fantasy Baseball team make the finals with some "help" from Garlin, MLB season highlights, Garlin's love of Chicago sports, WNBA playoffs, NFL week 3 picks and more! Enjoy!
1. Benjai – Phenominal (SMJ Roadmix) 2. Olatunji – Ola (Travis World Roadmix) 3. Machel Montano – Remedy (DJ Maestro Roadmix) 4. Vagabond – Ricardo Drue (Crown Prince Intro) 5. Machel Montano x Angela Hunte – Party Done (Kubiyashi Roadmix) 6. Kerwin Du Bois – Circles (Rocky Wellstack & Jillionaire Remix) 7. Farmer Nappy – My House (Travis World Acoustic Intro) 8. Lyrikal – Cloud 9 (SMJ Roadmix) 9. Fadda Fox – Ducking (Percussions Roadmix) 10. Leadpipe & Saddis - Ah Feelin (Jester Version) 11. Destra – Lucy (I.M. Roadmix) 12. Machel Mantano – Pop A Bottle (Kubiyashi Roadmix) 13. King Bubba FM x Ravi B & Karma – Who Drinking Rum (Remix) 14. Lil Rick – Great Day 15. Skinny Fabulous – Anywhere We Step (Dubplate) 16. Kerwin Du Bois – Ridiculous 17. Kes The Band – Million (DJ LovaBoi Roadmix) 18. Lyrikal – Loner (DJ Gomez Roadmix) 19. Bunji Garlin – Our Time (Sheriff Mix) 20. Erphann Alves – Come From 21. Kes The Band – Look Fuh Dat 22. Machel Montano – Get on Bad 23. Kerwin Du Bois – Use It 24. Destra – Throw Back 25. Kes the Band – Born Ready 26. Machel Montano – Play A Mas 27. Kerwin Du Bois – No Apology 28. Machel Montano – Endless Wuk (Travis World Roadmix) 29. Skinny Fabulous – Going Off (Roadmix) 30. Kes the Band – Fallin’ 31. Machel Montano – Like a Boss (Marcus Williams Roadmix) 32. Porgie & Murda – Ben Up (DJ Puffy Edit) 33. Bunji Garlin – Climb (Remix) 34. Fay Ann Lyons – Raze 35. Major Lazer x Ariana Grande x Machel Mantano – All My Love (Remix) 36. Shurwayne Winchester x Chris Martin – Sugar Wine 37. KI – Take Me Away 38. Ricardo Drue – Speeding 39. Fay Ann Lyons – Don’t Tempt Me 40. Bunji Garlin – Cheers
1. Kerwin Du Bois - Press A Button 2. Fya Empress - Cool Scene 3. Shurwayne Winchester - My Team 4. Machel Montano – Epic 5. Kerwin Du Bois & Lil Rick – Monster Winer 6. Lil Rick – Twerking Time 7. Erphaan Alves – Bumper Bounce 8. Indrani – Street Life 9. Skinny Fabulous – Defense 10. Lil Rick – Wild Out 11. Lil Rick – Kotch De Bumper 12. Machel Montano – Bruck Out 13. Bunji Garlin – It’s A Carnival 14. Bunji Garlin – Gi Dem Dey 15. Swappi – Take Wine 16. Kes – Bad Habits 17. K.Rich – Last Lap 18. Destra – Just A Little Bit 19. Lyrikal – Conquer Me 20. Blaxx – Ten to One 21. Devon Matthews – Busy 22. Kerwin Du Bois – Fight D Feeling 23. Lil Rick – Shut Yuh Mouth 24. Blaxx – Drunk in De Road 25. Fadda Moses - Wine for Moses 26. Blaxx & Skinny Fabulous – Extra Bad Pon D Road 27. Machel Montano – Haunted 28. Fay Ann Lyons – Catch Me 29. Destra – We Control D Road 30. Blaxx – Bacchanal Bumper 31. Kes & Swappi – Gyal Song 32. Rupee – Nothing Sweeter 33. Destra – Trailer Load 34. Fireball – Another Big Song 35. Farmer Nappy – Big People Party 36. Kerwin Du Bois – Too Real 37. 5Star Akil – To Meh Heart 38. Machel Montano – Shameless 39. Blaxx & Erphaan Alves – Contagious 40. Patrice Roberts – Pong It 41. Bunji Garlin Ft. Tarrus Riley – Carnival Tabanca (Remix) 42. Machel Montano – HMA (Happiest Man Alive) 43. Skinny Fabulous – BTW (Behaving the Worst) 44. Issac Blackman – Soca (Soul of Calypso) 45. Farmer Nappy - Family 46. Patrice Roberts – Doh Rough Meh 47. Akeem Preedy Chance – Wining Champion 48. GBM Nutron & Jaiga – Gyal Season 49. Machel Montano – Drop it Down 50. Kes – Never See Come See 51. Patrice Roberts – Bomb Drop 52. Ricardo Drue – Socaholic 53. Kerwin Du Bois – Spoil Mehself 54. Destra – State of Mind 55. Machel Montano – She Coming 56. Kes – True Masquerader 57. Bunji Garlin – Truck on D Road 58. Peter Ram – Crankment Soca 59. Ian Webster – Looking Good 60. Coopa Don – Question of De Year 61. Alison Hinds – Born Wit It 62. Porgie & Murda – Condense 63. Lil Rick – Behave Pon It 64. Peter Ram – Stop Halfway 65. Salt – Headboard
In this episode, after 8 years on the air: Static Radio Podcast with Miles Tidal and Bob LeMent, Corey Feldman, celebrity deaths (Lou Reed, David Frost, Tom Clancy, and Hal Needham), Cannonball Run, another celebrity death (Lou Scheimer, founder of Filmation animation studio), Jaleel White appearing at the June 2014 Philadelphia Wizard World convention, Rob and Greg had the same pair of Fayva black Olympian sneakers in the 3rd grade, using 'a' or 'an' before h-words, review of World War Z (2013) starring Brad Pitt, review of After Earth (2013) starring Will and Jaden Smith, The Karate Kid (2010) remake thoughts, draconian Blu-ray disc DRM security resulting in more piracy, The Goldbergs- new ABC sitcom about the 1980s starring Jeff Garlin, Facebook jumping the shark, Rob's invention idea for home security against burglars, our review of Searching for Sugar Man (2012), and Detroit folk singer Sixto Rodriguez. 84 minutes - http://www.paunchstevenson.com
For a chance Win a Galaxy S4 Smart Phone courtesy of Digicel and.. 2 All Inclusive VIP Tickets to Soca vs Reggae Digicel Customers Simply text “who you think will be one of the artiste to perform at Soca vs reggae this year.” Text your answer NOW to: 2451, each text costs $1. Digicel Package also includes 6 months free service!! Soca v Reggae VIP Tickets include: Open Bar Catered Food Photo Ops with artistes VIP Parking Text now: 2451 Must be a Digicel customer to enter
Hello! The internet weighs about the same as a strawberry but does it taste as delicious!? Find out in this Fri-Internet Day episode as I discuss: V-Sauce: Space Straw & Big People, TED: Yo-Yo & Brain Stimulation, Felicia's Ark, Serious Jibber Jabber with Conan O'Brien: Simpsons Writer's Reunion, and By the Way with Jeff Garlin and guest Conan O'Brien.
Caution! Carnival TAO 2012 is likely to cause overwhelming Mas and Fete memories and induce a Tabanca of epic proportions. Proceed to download ONLY if you are prepared to push back and wine any and everywhere. Presented and created by the entire Precision Productions family this is a mix to soothe every Soca loving soul around the world. Dedicated to the memory our beloved friend Vashesht “Wings” Singh, who has left us too soon and will never be forgotten, this medley of gyration tunes was only made possible through a fellowship of music that will forever be stronger than any other force in TnT.
Sketchy reviews "ParaNorman," the creepy, new feature that resembles what it was like growing up for Matt and Richard in Waltham. Later, everyone plays the Name Game with a healthy dose of tangents. Enjoy! Follow Sketchy: SketchyPodcast.com facebook.com/SketchyPodcast twitter.com/SketchyPodcast SketchyPodcast@gmail.com
From the green room of The Comedy Showcase in Houston, I talk with comedian Paul Hooper. Paul has been featured at the HBO Comedy Fest, the Boston Comedy Fest, Michael Moore and Jeff Garlin's Traverse City Comedy Arts Festival, the Vancouver Comedy Fest, and was a finalist in the 30th Annual Seattle International Comedy Competition. We discuss his move to and living in NYC, working the road, and I interrupt him a lot.
This week Jonathan and Matt share their reactions to Larry's adventures in New York City. They talk the big name guest stars, Ricky Gervais and Michael J. Fox. Also which character did Matt miss this season (hint Ted Danson). Concludes with a rank of all 8 seasons which divides Jonathan and Matt like never before.
Ring The Alarm - Cherine Anderson My Walk - Bunji Garlin Bunji Garlin Segment Badmind Credit Card Guide I No Gunman Bunji Garlin Interview 1 Only Girls - Bunji Garlin Dance Must Have Plenty Gyal Bunji Garlin Interview 2 Party Cyan Done - Bunji Garlin & Problem Child