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¡Hola! ¿Cómo estás? Esperamos que muy bien. Llegamos al décimo episodio de la quinta temporada de Glass Onion y viene con muchas cosas encima.Hay sección noticias:- El video de Be Here Now de George- Paul edita unos CD's japoneses- El estreno de Midas Man, la película sobre Brian Epstein- El anuncio del documental Beatles '64 con producción de Martin Scorsese- Ringo sacó el primer adelanto de su nuevos disco con aires Country- Paul sigue girando por LATAM y hablamos un poco de los shows en Chile, Córdoba, Perú y Brasil.Y por si todo esto no fuera un montón, tenemos un debate centrado en la figura de John como líder de la banda. Los comienzos, la Beatlemanía, la disputa del cetro con Paul, el rol de George y Ringo, las relaciones dentro de la banda y muchas cosas más...*ruido de mate*
In this conversation at the Review of Democracy, George Paul Meiu clarifies his concept of ethno-erotic economy and the commodification of ethnic sexuality; reflects on the role of objects in shaping political representations; discusses belonging and citizenship as well as mobility, memory, and materiality – and shares his insights concerning possible interpretations of the Greek God Dionysus episode at the Opening Ceremony of the Paris Olympic Games. Adrian Matus: You have done extensive research on East Africa, particularly Kenya. As a result, you published “Ethno-erotic Economies: Sexuality, Money, and Belonging in Kenya”[i], where you propose the concept of ethno-erotic economies to grasp what is going on in the tourist resorts of the country. Could you tell me a bit about your main findings concerning the Samburu ethnic sexuality and what they may tell us about belonging in today's postcolonial world more generally? George Paul Meiu: My project in ethno-erotic economy started in a very specific place in Kenya. Since the 1980s, young Samburu men from Northern Kenya have begun migrating seasonally to the coast of the Indian Ocean, where they sold souvenirs and danced for tourists, but also increasingly started developing relationships with women from Western Europe. By the time I started doing research in 2005, in Northern Kenya–where these men come from–some of the richest men in the area were in relationships with white women. For me, this raised all kinds of questions. How do you commodify ethnicity and sexuality in order to produce a certain kind of future at home? What does it mean for an indigenous population like the Samburu, who have been marginalized and peripheralized by both the colonial and independent states, to now seek a certain kind of economic emancipation by commodifying colonial stereotypes of themselves and of their sexuality? Increasingly, what I started seeing is that this is actually very little about sexuality, as such. This is not about what people do sexually. This is about all kinds of imaginaries that one brings in terms of tourist commodification, consumption and so on. What was really interesting for me was how these things reverberate beyond tourism. I ended up going back to some of these men's villages where I did the heavy part of my research and saw how the money that they brought home gave rise to all kinds of gossip and debates over what it means to make money through sex and feed your children and parents with it. All of these moral dilemmas raise questions about what it means to belong, to belong to that area and to an ethnic group. A lot of what these young men were also doing was trying to use the capital they acquired through sexuality to gain respectability. In many parts of the world today, people use sex economies to try to move to the West or other more affluent parts of the world. What was interesting for me here is that these young men did not. Most of them wanted to go back to their home village, where the value of the money was higher, where they had the comfort of being at home and where the ability to negotiate respectability was very different. This created all kinds of puzzles. What does it mean to be a young man in your early 20s, to already have so much money and to gain access to becoming an elder, a respected elder, through your sexuality? All these conundrums raise the issues over what it means to belong. This is a story about East Africa, about Samburu indigenous people and the colonial discourses of their sexuality. In many ways, it is closely related to the global phenomenon of intensified migration. We see the commodification of ethnic sexuality everywhere. What I mean by ethnic sexuality is the very modernist idea that we carry within our bodies something that we can call sexuality. On the one hand, we see across the world now a growing commodification of migrants. I am currently doing research in Romania. A lot of Romanian migrants in Western Europe– men and women–commodify their sexualities and sexual economies, as Eastern Europeans and Romanians. This fantasy has very strong repercussions. On the other hand, we see growing ethno-nationalism everywhere that plays out in the name of sexuality and ethno-sexuality. Sexuality becomes quite key in both consumption and governance in the contemporary world. AM: In your book Queer Objects to the Rescue[ii], you shifted and narrowed the focus of your investigation by pointing to objects that play a surprising role in shaping political imageries that represent queerness as a societal threat and the resulting practices to exclude queer people. Your claim is that, if we want to understand and critique homophobia, we need to understand the role of such objects. One of your central points is that plastic plays an important role in this type of representation, as Chapter 4 of this book argues. What are the main reasons behind associating plastic with queerness? GPM: The deployment of political homophobia has played a central role in morally legitimizing the sovereignty of the state. In many contexts, the state actually works to monopolize capital and claim monopoly on various forms of extraction and exploitation. In this very moment, it seems to me that when we talk about these things, such as moral policing and moral panics, our ability to imagine has become quite bankrupt. When we talk about homophobia, for example, we end up demonizing homophobes versus positioning ourselves as scholarly critics; activists on a position of superiority to those irrational Others who hate. While not condoning any form of hate or relativizing it, I do think that as social scientists we have a responsibility–ethical and political–to try to understand the conditions in which hate is reproduced, also. Thus, working on objects was not necessarily an attempt to narrow the focus, but to escape this discursive realm that keeps us trapped in a kind of liberal, emancipatory discourse versus irrational, backward, demonic hate dichotomy. We need to understand things differently. We need to step a bit outside. Objects, in a way, did that for me. The paradox of homophobia, xenophobia, racism, misogyny and hate towards migrants creates a globalized grammar of hate. If these things indeed are global, then that still does not explain how people and populations–vast populations across the world with very different contexts of life, work and governance– pick them up. These discourses have to be made to resonate. I was trying to look at those poetics. How does a leader come in front of the masses and say: “your children are in danger immigrants, are in danger of the homosexuals?” For people to pick up, I do not believe these discourses that just assume masses are these irrational, malleable things. In reality, we have to pay close attention to the sentiments and desires that they are expressing. Therefore, for me, objects became an interesting coincidental way to tap into the production of collective sentiments. While doing previous research on my first book in Kenya, I started seeing a lot of concern and panics over various kinds of objects, and then I thought, how might panic over various kinds of objects tell us something about the panics over homosexuals or immigrants? Just to give a quick example, early on in my research I came across a Facebook post by somebody in Northern Kenya who made a homophobic statement. The way it was formulated was quite intriguing for me as an anthropologist. It said that “homosexuality is a foreign plastic import that doesn't fit African chemistry”. There's a lot of cultural and historical baggage that goes into formulating and understanding what is being said here. For me, this resonated because I had already started working in northern Kenya on questions of plastic and panics over them. The fact that there is a whole category of young men in the area called plastic boys, children of refugees who do not claim any belonging to clans or lineages in the area, and therefore–like plastic–seem to come from elsewhere and never attach themselves to any particular place, is significant. Plastic became a very evocative medium, object, or set of objects, that gave a certain kind of material expression to anxieties over belonging, autochthony, bodily well-being, and integrity, as well as to concerns over reproduction, whether biological or social. In that regard, objects give us the certainty of a definitive cause for all our troubles it's because of plastic, it's because of the plastic boys, it's because of this that we cannot live our lives fully as an ethnic group, as a nation, and so on. Something very similar, in fact, happens with the homosexual body. These objects, I argue in this book, enable a certain kind of displacement of meanings, but also of sentiments, anxieties, and desires, from a very diverse set of contexts, where they often have very legitimate reason to exist, particularly where opportunities of work and social reproduction have shrunk. Yet while these anxieties are very legitimate, their projection upon objects, whether it's plastic or the homosexual or the immigrant, can be very problematic. This is, in a way, how I think contemporary politics works, and therefore we do need to pay attention to these forms of displacement. When you have a sexuality politics that only looks at what it names; when we say we're studying sexuality or we're activists of sexuality and all we care about is sexual identification and sexual expression; we miss out on how sexuality ends up taking on anxieties, concerns and desires that have nothing to do with sex or sexual identity at all. Rather, they belong to other domains like work, reproduction and consumption sovereignty. AM: Could you tell us about your fieldwork and how you try to make sense of the objects you encounter? What methodologies do you prefer when trying to account for the role of commodification in the routes of violence and displacement? GPM: I think that my methodologies over the years have become messier and messier. I am doing things that I would never advise my graduate students to do because it is, in a way, messy. I do find myself more and more in need to embrace messiness in order to decentre certain discourses. A proper methodology about sexuality would be to do some participant observation such as interviews – to talk to people about sexuality. What I'm doing is a bit different in the sense that, in order to understand what sexuality politics is about or what the commodification of sexuality is all about, you need to look elsewhere. You need to leave sexuality aside and look at the places in which its effects or, or conditions of possibility emerge. I am studying homophobia, but I am putting homophobia on hold, and I'm going and looking at what plastic signifies before I can connect it back. I call these ethnographic detours with other anthropologists who have written them in a similar vein. These kinds of methodologies pursue ethnographic detours. In other words, rather than look straight on at the subject that we claim to observe, and only engage with the literatures pertaining to that subject or take that subject very literally, I am trying to walk in circles around that subject in order to see how its effects or conditions of possibility emerge or register beyond it. To be a scholar or an anthropologist of sexuality, I have to actually pay attention to labor and economic value. I have to pay attention to questions of ethnicity and autochthony. I have to pay attention to questions of commodity production and consumption. In other words, you have to be everywhere and nowhere. AM: Your most recent publication On Hate, its Objects, and the Poetics of Sexuality juxtaposes the Romanian and the Kenyan cases of highly mediatization panics over sexuality. You argue that one of the reasons of defending the “family values from the foreign plight” is determined by “a late capitalist political economy when sexuality—its politics and poetics—plays out in uncannily similar ways across the world” and creates “an interplay between globally circulating grammars of identity” that are able to resonate with inherited historical anxieties. What creates the objects of hate in these cases? Could you expand on such patterns of panic? GMP: I think I can try to distil two patterns, maybe through an example or two, to help. Because one of the key issues of this modularity of objects of hate, whether we talk about the immigrant, whether we talk about the sexual other, whether we talk about various forms of sexualized indigenous people or racialized others and so on, there is something quite similar happening across the globe. For instance, the fact that Russia has anti-LGBTQ politics and the fact that previously Bolsonaro's Brazil had similar politics, those things resonate with one another. You cannot say that these are separate places, separate cultures –we live in a global world. We recognize the enemy, as it were, by virtue of its appearance everywhere. But what I am arguing as an anthropologist is that we cannot stop there. The work that this does in every place is really important to pay attention to. One interesting example was a few years ago when radical right protesters in Brazil, for example, protesting for family values, anti-LGBTQ policies, or against what they call “gender ideology”. Any discourse or film or culture production associated with gender and sexual diversity was depicted as somehow threatening to the fabric of a nation or a culture. When these protesters gathered in Rio in front of a venue where queer and feminist theorist Judith Butler was to give a talk, they produced an effigy of Judith Butler dressed as a witch and set it on fire as though to cleanse, as it were, the nation state of the plight of “gender ideology”. To me, what happened there of course is scary, but if you take a deep breath and try to analyse ethnographically what is going on there, it gives you a sense of the quite complex grammars through which this sort of sexuality politics and ethno-nationalism plays out. There is a growing sense of ambiguity and uncertainty around the center. I argue in my book Queer Objects to the Rescue: Intimacy and Citizenship in Kenya that you do not need to be queer for elements of your life to already have been deeply non-normativ
AVAILABLE ON YOUTUBE!!! Lets dig into the real reason why Clippers didnt want to resign Paul George
The Captain is back in studio with Tommy George, Paul Wait talks Delta Waterfowl, and Chris Granrud talks guiding at Rainy Lake.
The Captain is back in studio with Tommy George, Paul Wait talks Delta Waterfowl, and Chris Granrud talks guiding at Rainy Lake.
Cody and Jimbo traveled to the Prairie Circuit Finals in Duncan, Oklahoma, to visit with one of this year's Living Legends inductees, Ronnie Bowman. Ronnie was a 4-time NFR qualifier in the bull riding, and would have made a lot more had he wanted to travel as much as some of the others. Ronnie tells some great rodeo stories, and about his time traveling with his good friend Freckles Brown. As a testament to the man, Ronnie won the 1970 George Paul "Great Guy" Memorial Award, given by his peers for character in and out of the arena. You'll love our podcast with this nice and humble cowboy.
Welcome to Regnfang's co-publication of the Anthropology on Air podcast. A podcast created and published in collaboration with the Department of Social Anthropology at the University of Bergen. Each episode features interviews with social sciences researchers on topics related to the ways in which our human mind and life is entangled with the communities of ideas and beings with whom we live.This episode's guest, George Paul Meiu, is professor of anthropology and chair of the institute of social anthropology at the University of Basel and associate in the departments of anthropology and African and African American studies at Harvard University.George's research and teaching focus on sexuality, gender, and kinship; ethnicity, belonging and citizenship; mobility, memory, and materiality; and the political economy of East Africa and Eastern Europe. He is the author of the prize-winning book Ethno-erotic Economies: Sexuality, Money, and Belonging in Kenya (University of Chicago Press, 2017), and his new book, currently in press, is titled Queer Objects to the Rescue: Intimacy and Citizenship in Kenya (University of Chicago Press, 2023). In addition, George is our companion in the attempt of getting anthropology on air, he is the host and producer of the combined video-podcast platform, Ethnographic Imagination Basel, which we really recommend checking out!In this podcast, we talk with George about ways to understand the contemporary homophobic violence and sentiment in Kenya. Instead of imposing perspectives from queer liberalism, George suggests situating the phenomenon in its own social, material, and historical context in order to grasp its local grammar and conditions of reproduction. George then offers an analytical strategy to do this through a focus on what he calls ‘queer objects'. We talk about how objects such as plastic and diapers can be used to grasp the moral panic over homosexuality in Kenya and how this relates to notions of intimate citizenship. Finally, George describes how the queer potentiality of objects has been used in artivism and activism and how we might use it for thinking critically, imagining, and creating new worlds.The podcast was recorded in early June 2023 when George was in Bergen to give a presentation at the Bergen Social Anthropology Seminar (BSAS).Resources:- If you want to learn more about George's work, we recommend listening to this New Books Network podcast episode, where he talks about his prize-winning book Ethno-erotic Economies: Sexuality, Money, and Belonging in KenyaHost and production: Sidsel MarieMusic: Victor Lange
The Captain is back at the cabin with Bob in studio, Tommy George recounts fishing stories, Paul Wait talk about water fowl, and Joe Henry talks about Lake of the Woods and fishing on the lake.
The Captain is back at the cabin with Bob in studio, Tommy George recounts fishing stories, Paul Wait talk about water fowl, and Joe Henry talks about Lake of the Woods and fishing on the lake.
Summary: Sara takes (kind of sort of) a break from talking fanfic and bandfic to talk about a different form of storytelling– music, and writing about music! shineswithyou is a familiar face around Oasis and U2 tumblr, but what you might NOT know is that she has recently embarked on a writing journey of her own, with a substack blog about music and its place as the soundtrack of her own life. Sara and shines talk about her blog, and the difficulty of “writing words about sounds”; how music is a language in and of itself capable of telling its own (and our own) stories. Of COURSE we loop it back around to fanfiction and RPF (or, ‘real person fanfiction'), and how bandfic is, at its core, a pure form of love for the musical artist. Other talking points include: how awesome Bono is, and how we wish we could have been at Slane Castle in 2001; the perennial dysfunction of the Gallagher brothers; and the dichotomy of the U2 and Oasis fandoms. Contact and Credits: Theme Music: Kyle Laurin "Oasis Supersonic Theme" (Twitter: @cobrakylemusic) Clips from "Pop Muzik" by M (℗ 1979 Robin Scott Limited) and "Marquee Moon" by Television (℗ 1977 Elektra/Asylum) Tumblr: talkinfanfic.tumblr.com Instagram: @talkinfanfic Email: talkinfanfic@gmail.com Time caps: 00:00 - Introduction 14:52 - Interview start 23:07 - Music memories and growing up 30:40 - Tumblr and bandom 34:27 - the pf+hb blog! 39:32 - Blog entry 1 44:40 - Tom Verlaine and Television 46:50 - Excerpt of blog entry 4 48:56 - shines' music writing style and influences, and the difficulties of writing about music 57:15 - Art in the time of Covid and intentional listening 01:10:56 - More on Television's style and ‘Marquee Moon' 01:22:22 - CBGB's and ‘the scene' 01:28:29 - Music mags! 01:32:05 - Speaking of U2… 01:36:55 - The dichotomy of the U2 fandom vs Oasis fandom 01:43:01 - Rapid Fire Questions! Episode References “Pf+Hb” shineswithyou's substack blog Shineswithyou on Tumblr Music vid for The Stone Roses' “She Bangs the Drums” (title inspiration for the blog) M - Pop Muzik (Official Video) (Youtube) Book - "Heartbeat" by Sharon Creech (Goodreads) - a children's coming-of-age story told in free verse Music writing rec - Words by Liz Barker - Website of professional music writer and blogger Liz Barker Music writing rec - "Strawberry Fields Whatever" - Music blog by Liz Barker and Laura Jane Faulds and illustrated by Jen May Music writing rec - Liz Barker's tinyletter and an excerpt from her novel Blog rec - Hanif Kureishi's substack and a piece he wrote which shines recommends Album - Nirvana MTV Unplugged (Spotify) Album - The Velvet Underground & Nico (Spotify) Trouser Press - “The biblio of alternative rock” "The Too-Muchness of Bono" by David Brooks for the Atlantic Achtoon Baby - U2 music blog project by Kelly and PJ Fic mentioned - "The Passing of Peggy Gallagher" by Jeevey Fic mentioned - “Stop the Clocks” by savageandwise Youtube Clip from “My Beautiful Laundrette” (1985, starring Gordon Warnecke and Daniel-Day Lewis, screenplay by Hanif Kureshi. You can stream it on HBOMax) Film Trailer for “CBGB” (2013) starring Alan Rickman Book - Meet Me in the Bathroom: Rebirth and Rock and Roll in New York City 2001-2011 (Goodreads) Documentary - Meet Me In The Bathroom (2022) - Youtube trailer stream on Paramount+ or rent on Amazon Prime Video Documentary - "Gimme Shelter" (1970) - “A harrowing documentary of the Stones' 1969 tour, with much of the focus on the tragic concert at Altamont.” Music Video - “Dark Sunglasses” a single off of Chrissie Hynde's 2014 album ‘Stockholm'. The album doesn't appear to be on streaming platforms. Youtube - Where The Streets Have No Name (Live From Slane Castle, Ireland (2001) (you can see the heart-shaped stage that shines mentions really well at about 58 seconds!) Shines' Desert Island Discs: “Achtung Baby” by U2 (but on another day it might be “Viva La Vida or Death and All His Friends” by Coldplay Shines is listening to: “Lucifer On the Sofa” by Spoon (album, 2022) Shines is listening to: “Wet Leg” (self-title debut album, 2022) Music Discovery - Paul Gallagher's MixCloud channel (Sara rec, Paul does a weekly playlist with tons of great and lesser known artists. You can listen for free and there's no ads, but to get the tracklist you have to be a paid subscriber) Justin Hawkins Rides Again (Youtube channel, and he has a new podcast) Music Discovery - Shines recommends finding your local independent radio station with real human DJs! You can google, and most colleges have student run stations, and TuneIn is a site that has a “find a local station” feature you can try out! Fic Rec - “cheaper than a dime” by harmonising (Beatles RPF, George & Paul gen) - Shines says it's a “beautiful, angsty study of Paul and George's relationship, written in a choppy, time-jump style” Fic Rec - “Dare, Disturb the Universe” by Trapelo_Road475 (ao3, Bruce/Steve) Fic Rec - “Wharf Rats on the Stage” by Trapelo_Road475 (ao3, Bruce/Steve) Fic Rec - “Fictitious Characters” and “You Wanted Me Alone” by likeamadonna. Shines says: “gorgeously written and very meta - an alternative history of U2's early days framed by Bono & Edge's relationship, & written by them.”
The captain is on remote with Bob St Pierre in studio, Eric Meyer talks about the Minnesota Deer and Turkey Show, Tommy George tells more fishing stories, and Paul Hartman talks about the Muskie Expo.
Join us this week with George Paul Knapp ( @georgepaulknapp )! George is a Filmmaker, Documentarian, and Award Nominated Actor, Best known for his portrayal of Kick-Ass in The @sleepwalk_studios Film “Kick-Ass: The Reboot”
Mank! Een film waar niet genoeg over wordt gesproken. Dus klimmen we lekker lang in de podcastmicrofoon, om dit epos over scenarioscrijver Herman J. Mankiewicz onder de loep te nemen. Regisseur David Fincher verfilmde het script van zijn eigen pa, Jack, over de roemruchte totstandkoming van oerklassieker Citizen Kane (1941). Gary Oldman speelt in Mank de titelrol, en Amanda Seyfried doet met haar acteerprestatie een #justiceformariondavies. Aanleiding voor het gesprek is het uitkomen van En het woord werd beeld, van schrijvers Bart Juttmann en Marc Veerkamp. Een boek vol verhalen over de totstandkoming van filmklassiekers en tv-series, maar dan door de ogen van de scenaristen. Zo ook Citizen Kane, waarvan filmcriticus Pauline Kael in de jaren zeventig betwistte dat regisseur Orson Welles zijn schrijfcredit – én Oscar – wel verdiende. En ja, als je het over Mank hebt, kún je Kane simpelweg niet onbesproken laten... We hebben het ook over het Kuifje-probleem in moderne films, hoe het maken van een film teamwerk is en de vraag of er wel goed en slecht bestaat, als je cinema beoordeelt. Steun Duimpjeworstelen op Patreon! En ontvang leuke extraatjes ^_^ Links: Bart Juttmann: https://www.deliterairagent.nl/auteurs/i-j-k-l/bart-juttmann Marc Veerkamp: https://www.kinderboeken.nl/auteur/marc-veerkamp/ En het woord werd beeld: https://www.bol.com/nl/nl/p/en-het-woord-werd-beeld/9300000119170525/ Bart Juttmann op IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm2294077/ Marc Veerkamp op IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm2085288/ George & Paul: https://schooltv.nl/programma/george-paul/ Extra links: Mank: https://www.netflix.com/title/81117189 The Dot and the Line – A Romance in Lower Mathematics: https://vimeo.com/4929038 The Royal Ocean Film Society – The Controversy behind Daid Fincher's MANK: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tnB8DscXraw The Discarded Image – Welles After Kane: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0umuuFys-sc Geeky Dingen: https://geekydingen.nl/blog/ Inglorious Rankers, 1976 deel 1: https://www.cinimma.nl/post/inglorious-rankers-53-1
All Presidencies come to an end. Some Presidencies end with war. A few end with illness and a death. Even fewer than that end with the President in question getting on all four lists. Guess what? Our final episode on Franklin Delano Roosevelt DOES ALL FOUR! With one more assist from Dr. Margie Rung of Roosevelt University, we bring you the final episode of FDR!!This episode's sketches were Written, Produced, and Performed by:Gina BuccolaSandy BykowskiJoseph FedorkoSylvia MannPaul MoultonPatrick J. ReillyAnd Tommy SpearsThis Episode's Historians: Dr. Chelsea Denault, James McRaeSpecial Guest Historian: Dr. Margaret Rung, Roosevelt UniversityOriginal Music written and performed by Throop McClergAudio production by Joseph FedorkoSound effects procured at Freesound.orgDB Comedy Logo Designed by Adam L. HarlettELECTABLES logo and Presidential Caricatures by Dan PolitoTHE ELECTABLES concept was created by Patrick J. ReillyCAST AND CREDITS COLD OPEN – Written by Paul Moulton Dr. Nair: Tommy Sandy - SandySAY GOODNIGHT, WILLKIE – Written by Paul Moulton Announcer - Joe George - Paul Gracie – Sandy Wendell – TommyBUCYRUS RATIONS – Written by Joseph Fedorko Edgefield – Patrick Sir or Madam - SylviaPROOF OF PATRIOTISM – Written by Paul Moulton Franklin – Patrick Ford – Tommy Disney – Joe Lindberg - Paul THREE STOOGES IN YALTA – Written by Sandy Bykowski Churchill/Curly – Tommy Roosevelt/Larry – Patrick Stalin/Moe – PaulTHE BIG THREE – Lyrics by Paul Moulton, Vocals and Production by Tommy SpearsContributions to DB Comedy are graciously accepted by going to the DB COMEDY donation page at https://fundraising.fracturedatlas.org/db-comedy, the nonprofit fiscal sponsor of DB COMEDY. Donations are tax-deductible to the fullest extent allowed by law.For more information on DB Comedy and THE ELECTABLES, visit DB Comedy's web site, dbcomedy.com, or DB Comedy's host page on Simplecast.com. Follow us on Facebook at DB Comedy. Join us on The Trident Network, and listen to us on World Perspectives Radio Chicago, on Live365.com and Hard Lens Media!Thanks for listening! Thanks for downloading! Don't forget to subscribe! And don't forget to like!!
George K Paul writes about the genesis of international law. Read Online : https://eng.kairos.global/?p=11732 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Subscribe at : http://www.jykairosmedia.org Read Kairos Global Online : http://eng.kairos.global Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/ReadKairosglobal Twitter : twitter.com/readkairos Instagram : www.instagram.com/jy_kairos YouTube : https://www.youtube.com/c/KairosStudio1 Apple Podcasts : https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/kairos-global-audio-magazine/id1501126301 Spotify : https://open.spotify.com/show/4IbehFD4Zfa0ZpS6o0Bjk3 Google Podcasts : https://tinyurl.com/c94688mu
BusinessWest & Healthcare News: Business & Health Talk Podcast
George K Paul lists reasons why converts to Catholicism are drawn to the Catholic Church. Read Online : https://eng.kairos.global/?p=11150 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Subscribe at : http://www.jykairosmedia.org Read Kairos Global Online : http://eng.kairos.global Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/ReadKairosglobal Twitter : twitter.com/readkairos Instagram : www.instagram.com/jy_kairos YouTube : https://www.youtube.com/c/KairosStudio1 Apple Podcasts : https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/kairos-global-audio-magazine/id1501126301 Spotify : https://open.spotify.com/show/4IbehFD4Zfa0ZpS6o0Bjk3 Google Podcasts : https://tinyurl.com/c94688mu For more info, please contact : circulations@jykairosmedia.org or contact +91 62382 79115
AKOM on GET BACK: Brothers, Friends, Bandmates Episode 2 is all about George, Paul and George & Paul; we take a look into their dynamic as bandmates, friends and surrogate brothers. We also examine George as a Producer for insight into the creative conflicts between Paul and George. Other topics include: The Beatles' Rooftop Performance, Eric Clapton and Scenes that Surprised Us. SOURCES/REFERENCES Get Back, dir. Peter Jackson (2021) "Why the Beatles Broke Up" by Mikael Gilmore for Rolling Stone (2000) "Paul McCartney: the Musical Genius with Staying Power" The Times UK, Caitlin Moran (Dec 25, 2021) George Harrison, NME: This Song. (December 11th, 1976) “The Banality of Genius: Notes on Peter Jackson's Get Back” Ian Leslie (Jan 26 2022) George Harrison, Guitar World: When We Was Fab. (1992) Paul McCartney on Egypt Station, NME interview w/ Dan Stubbs (2018) "Beatlesongs," William J Dowlding (1989) "Get Back Halftime Report" on Hey Dullblog Geoff Emerick interview w/ Alan Light for Blender.com (2009) George Martin interviewed by Richard Buskin (March 3,1987) "Behind the Locked Door," Graeme Thomson (2013) Michael Lindsay Hogg, Interview for Radio New Zealand (Dec 4, 2021) Paul McCartney interview with Parkinson (1997)
This week on Unreserved, we invite you to sit and learn with us in the Elders Circle. Six elders from Mi'kmaq, Wolastoqey and Passamaquoddy communities in New Brunswick share their stories – about their life, the work they do and the change they're bringing for their people. Cecelia Brooks is from St. Mary's First Nation and is Wolastoqey, Mi'kmaq, Mohawk and Korean. She specializes in native plants and foods and leads medicine walks with her son, Anthony, in Fredericton's Odell Park. Imelda Perley is a Wolastoqey language speaker and has conducted traditional naming ceremonies for decades, bestowing Wolastoqey names to more than 200 children. George Paul, from Metepenagiag, created the Mi'kmaw Honour Song. It's become an anthem for his people and is popular at powwows for grand entries. Donald Soctomah is the tribal historic preservation officer for the Passamaquoddy tribe. He works with both the U.S. and Canadian governments to protect culturally significant sites, artifacts and knowledge. Noel Milliea has devoted his life to helping people heal from alcoholism, trauma and systemic racism. Part of this work included helping get an addiction treatment centre in Elsipogtog First Nation. Donna Augustine's life work is to bring the remains of Wabanaki ancestors home to rest. The elder from Elsipogtog First Nation says she has protected the burial sites of thousands of ancestors and reburied hundreds from many different tribes. Special thanks to CBC New Brunswick for these stories.
George K Paul writes about the ‘great cloud of witnesses', how prayer brings us closer to them and a practical way of praying to them. Read Online : https://eng.kairos.global/?p=10842 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Subscribe at : http://www.jykairosmedia.org Read Kairos Global Online : http://eng.kairos.global Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/ReadKairosglobal Twitter : twitter.com/readkairos Instagram : www.instagram.com/jy_kairos YouTube : https://www.youtube.com/c/KairosStudio1 Apple Podcasts : https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/kairos-global-audio-magazine/id1501126301 Spotify : https://open.spotify.com/show/4IbehFD4Zfa0ZpS6o0Bjk3 Google Podcasts : https://tinyurl.com/c94688mu
Before They Were Beatles Episode 03: George, Paul, & Richie Our journey continues as we meet the teenage George Harrison, James Paul McCartney, and Richard Starkey, plus take a side trip to discuss the impact on British rock of guitar virtuoso Bert Whedon. The music heard in this episode included: The Quarrymen - In Spite of All The Danger (Harrison & McCartney) Burt Weedon - Guitar Boogie Shuffle The Beatles - extract from A Day in the Life (Lennon & McCartney) Louis Armstrong - When The Saints Go Marching In (trad.) Gerry & The Pacemakers - Ferry Across the Mersey (Gerry Marsden) You can find full versions of the music heard in this episode in the dedicated Before They Were Beatles Podcast YouTube channel at: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLP0CDQdLe-G141LlqyBu8rC8ap6voBhZe If you would like to make a comment or ask a question you can follow the podcast Twitter account at @BeforeBeatles, or email me at alan@beforetheywerebeatles.com You can also find copies of the original Before They Were Beatles book on Amazon in hardcover, paperback, and Kindle editions #BeforeTheyWereBeatles Let us know what you think! Email the show at contact@longboxcrusade.com This podcast is a member of the LONGBOX CRUSADE NETWORK: Visit the WEBSITE: http://www.longboxcrusade.com/ Follow on TWITTER: https://twitter.com/BeforeBeatles https://twitter.com/LongboxCrusade Follow on INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/longboxcrusade Like the FACEBOOK page: https://www.facebook.com/LongboxCrusade Subscribe to the YouTube Channel: https://goo.gl/4Lkhov Subscribe to the main LBC network podcast feed on iTunes at: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/the-longboxcrusade/id1118783510?mt=2 Or the single podcast feed for When They Were Beatles at: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/before-they-were-beatles/id1561234606 Thank you for listening and we hope you have enjoyed this episode of Before They Were Beatles. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/longbox-crusade/message
George Paul shares succinctly and beautifully ten reasons for his love of the Catholic Church. Read Online : https://eng.kairos.global/?p=10424 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Subscribe at : http://www.jykairosmedia.org Read Kairos Global Online : http://eng.kairos.global Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/ReadKairosglobal Twitter : twitter.com/readkairos Instagram : www.instagram.com/jy_kairos YouTube : https://www.youtube.com/c/KairosStudio1 Apple Podcasts : https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/kairos-global-audio-magazine/id1501126301 Spotify : https://open.spotify.com/show/4IbehFD4Zfa0ZpS6o0Bjk3 Google Podcasts : https://tinyurl.com/c94688mu
Recorded & Edited : Fr Lijesh MST, Santhome Impact | Voice : Philip Thomas & Teena Mary Abraham George Paul compiles answers to a list of questions on the sacrament of confession. Through a Q&A format, Nycil Romis brings together wisdom from the saints on questions regarding the Sacrament of Confession. Read Online : http://eng.kairos.global/?p=9844 ----Subscribe, Read, Watch, Listen, Like and Share--- Kairos Global Social Media Platforms Subscribe : Subscribe at : www.jykairosmedia.org Read Kairos Global Online : http://eng.kairos.global/ Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/ReadKairosglobal Twitter : twitter.com/readkairos Instagram : www.instagram.com/jy_kairos/ YouTube : https://www.youtube.com/c/KairosStudio1 Apple Podcasts : Kairos Global Audio Magazine Spotify : Kairos Global Audio Magazine Google Podcasts : Kairos Global Audio Magazine For more details : circulations@kairos.global +91 6238 279 115(WhatsApp)
Information Morning Fredericton from CBC Radio New Brunswick (Highlights)
We hear the story about how a spiritual awakening led George Paul to create The Honour Song.
Information Morning Saint John from CBC Radio New Brunswick (Highlights)
Elder , George Paul from Metapenagiag First Nation on his creation of the Honour song.
Hosts Jo Firestone & Manolo Moreno play listener-created games with callers via Zoom!Games played: Dr. Lyrics Show, Shrekomendations, and Shrimp In The Bath Callers: Ana from Idaho Falls, Idaho; Payton from Brooklyn, New York; Laura from Hamilton, Ontario, Canada; George & Paul (and Kiki the bird) from Edwardsville, Illinois; Allison & Gallagher from Chicago, Illinois; Melissa from Montreal, Quebec, Canada; David from Wilmington, Delaware; Malakai & Hannah from St. Paul, Minnesota; Malaika & Aliyah from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Zack from New Haven, Connecticut; Judy & Eric from Niantic, Connecticut; Jimmie from Meriden, Connecticut; Moss from Athens, OhioOutro theme (created using samples from Ep 59) edited by Charles Hower from Kansas City, KansasThis episode sponsored by: Green Chef - Go to GreenChef.com/gameshow90 and use code gameshow90 to get $90 off including free shipping!Magic Spoon - Go to magicspoon.com/GAMESHOW and use the code GAMESHOW to save $5 off in US or Canada.
Our journey continues as we meet the teenage George Harrison, James Paul McCartney, and Richard Starkey, plus take a side trip to discuss the impact on British rock of guitar virtuoso Bert Whedon. This is the story of how one of thousands of amateur British schoolboy skiffle bands in the mid-1950s evolved into the beginnings of the greatest band in popular history. It's a story of hope, creativity, and exploring musical boundaries. It's also a story of tragedy, coincidence, and at times just sheer luck. It is a story of beginnings, the story of John, Paul, George, and Ringo - Before They Were Beatles. The music heard in this episode included: The Quarrymen - In Spite of All The Danger (Harrison & McCartney) Burt Weedon - Guitar Boogie Shuffle The Beatles - extract from A Day in the Life (Lennon & McCartney) Louis Armstrong - When The Saints Go Marching In (trad.) Gerry & The Pacemakers - Ferry Across the Mersey (Gerry Marsden) You can find full versions of the music heard in this episode in the dedicated Before They Were Beatles Podcast YouTube channel If you would like to make a comment or ask a question you can follow the podcast Twitter account at @BeforeBeatles, or email me at alan@beforetheywerebeatles.com You can also find copies of the original Before They Were Beatles book on Amazon in hardcover, paperback, and Kindle editions
MARCH 2021(ISSUE 36) | Recorded & Edited : Fr Lijesh MST, Santhome Impact | Voice : Philip Thomas & Teena Mary Abraham George Paul speaks of his unique personal encounter with the Lord, important choices in life, his second conversion and life's mission. ----Subscribe, Read, Watch, Listen, Like and Share--- Kairos Global Social Media Platforms Subscribe : Subscribe at : www.kairos.global Read Kairos Global Online : eng.kairos.global Facebook : www.facebook.com/ReadKairosglobal Twitter : twitter.com/readkairos Instagram : www.instagram.com/jy_kairos/ YouTube : Kairos Global Apple Podcasts : Kairos Global Audio Magazine Spotify : Kairos Global Audio Magazine Google Podcasts : Kairos Global Audio Magazine For more details : circulations@kairos.global +91 6238 279 115(WhatsApp)
We bet you didn't know that James K. Polk was the President that acquired most of the land that these United States sits on, did you? Or that he consumed so much it was rumored - mostly by us - that he could very well have been a cannibal? You didn't?! Well, then, you HAVE to listen to the latest episode and find out about the ravenous appetite of our 11th President! (And when you tell people about Polk's taste for consumption, tell them "DB Comedy said so!"CAST AND CREDITSThis episode’s sketches were Written and Produced by:Gina BuccolaSandy BykowskiJoseph FedorkoSylvia MannPaul MoultonPatrick J. ReillyAnd Tommy SpearsThis episode’s sketches were Performed by:Sandy BykowskiJoseph FedorkoRamona KywePaul MoultonSylvia MannPatrick J. ReillyAnd Tommy Spears This Episode’s Historians: Chelsea Denault and James McRaeOriginal Music written and performed by Throop McClergAudio production by Joseph FedorkoSound effects procured at Freesound.orgDB Comedy Logo Designed by Adam L. HarlettELECTABLES logo and Presidential Caricatures by Dan PolitoTHE ELECTABLES concept was created by Patrick J. Reilly.COLD OPEN – Written by Paul Moulton Doctor – Tommy Sal – PaulANNEXIA IMPERIALISTICA – Written by Paul Moulton Sarah – Sylvia Polk – Patrick Doctor – JoeAPPETITE FOR DESTINY – Written by Paul Moulton George - Paul Tamsen – SandyA BOWL OF BURGOO – Written by Joseph Fedorko Polk – Patrick Lily Mae – Ramona Josephat - PaulContributions to DB Comedy are graciously accepted by going to the DB COMEDY donation page at https://fundraising.fracturedatlas.org/db-comedy, who is the nonprofit fiscal sponsor of DB COMEDY. Donations are tax-deductible to the fullest extent allowed by law.For more information on DB Comedy and THE ELECTABLES, visit DB Comedy’s web site, dbcomedy.com, and follow us on Facebook (at DB Comedy) and Twitter (@dbcomedychicago).Thanks for listening! Thanks for downloading! Don’t forget to like!!
We got a great insight into how COVID 19 progressed & how we reacted to it in our previous episode.In Part 2 of A Retrospection into how COVID affected us & contemplation about vaccination Dr. George Paul of Salem speaks about VaccinationLong term effects of vaccinationWould he personally take the vaccination?Why Extreme caution is to be maintained even today for diabetic / immunocompromised patientsMUCORMYCOSIS - a silent killer spun off this pandemic and has been reported extensively in IndiaJust in October Dr Paul saw 8 of Mucormycosis casesRapid fire round to know our speaker better :) where sir speaks about his favorite books, pastimes, preferred cosigned and more…Leave a comment or review for our podcast here
I was with Dr. Jaibin in Cochi when he spoke about his teacher in college. He had very high regards for him. Later I learnt that he is one of the most well known surgeons of India and also a lawyer. Woah!! That's when I decided, I had to have him on my podcast!! I requested Dr. Jaibin to ask Dr. George Paul if he was ready to record a podcast with me.Dr George Paul is a consultant Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeon in Salem, Tamil Nadu with practice limited to his speciality. He is also an ethicist with LLB and a PG Diploma in ethics.Dr Paul is a former professor of OMFS and is currently a member of the Faculty of Dentistry ,Kerala University of Health Sciences. He has to his credit numerous peer reviewed publications in National and International Journals. He has made numerous presentations in national and international conferences and workshops. Dr Paul has delivered four orations at the national level. He has authored three books or chapters in books and also writes in the lay press on various issues.Dr Paul has been the national secretary and president of the Maxillofacial Surgery Association ( AOMSI) and is the recipient of several citations and awards for his humanitarian contribution to society.In this episode sir speaks about how the pandemic changed our way of practice, A few things that went wrong, Loads of misconceptions, A few eye opening facts that I never knew about How the perception of COVID 19 changed with timeHow the pandemic lead to profits for a few industries And contemplation about vaccinationThe most interesting part however, is when he speaks about how he as a surgeon, had to perform surgeries on COVID positive cases that required emergency care. Getting RT PCR done 6 times is not a joke and nor is getting quarantined so often a great experience.The thing that I will always remember the most is that he has a dental clinic in Salem which has an OPD more than some of the private dental institutes of India. The clinic is huge but despite his achievements he is very humble. Another funny thing that I wont forget is that he had actually denied to record this podcast first because he believed that his voice is not that good for a listening audience. I totally disagree with that. Finally after a bit of pursuing he agreed and I am so thankful to Dr. Jaibin for this. I think I enjoyed listing to Dr. Paul because he speaks with amazing articulation and patience. The kind of in-depth knowledge he has about his forte is admirable.Do check out this special episode. If you have any questions for sir or me, please put them in the comments.
In this week's episode we discuss Paul George (or George Paul), NBA Opening Week, Dwayne Haskins being dropped from WFT, NFC East, and during our Off Topic segment we discuss our top 3 favorite albums of 2020. We also get off topic and discuss video games... lol --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
In this episode, Ryan and Riley go back and forth about the Clippers’ meltdown, Nikola Jokic’s greatness, Paul George, NBA players’ comment sections, media dorks exposing themselves, LeBron’s ability to close, the Heat’s chances vs. the Lakers, ESPN “experts”, the MVP award, Steve Nash getting hired by the Nets, and NBA divas (2:15). The boys close out the episode by talking about the time they met Russell Westbrooks’ parents at dinner and reflecting on their youth (43:50).Follow us on social!https://www.instagram.com/belowtherimpod/https://www.instagram.com/rileyaschaefer/https://www.instagram.com/ryanaschaefer/https://twitter.com/belowtherim_https://twitter.com/rileyaschaeferhttps://twitter.com/ryanaschaeferhttps://www.tiktok.com/@belowtherim?lang=enYouTube Channel:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCAhoWUTGVGU_GYjpL5X4Y6gDM us on Instagram/Twitter or send emails to belowtherimguys@gmail.com to be featured on the show!
Ep. 51: "So what had happened was..." Our resident Clippers diehard/super fan Leo C joins BVL to give his most RAW and EMOTIONAL reaction and take on the epic meltdown and choke job of his beloved Los Angeles Clippers' team as they squandered a 3-1 series lead to the Denver Nuggets in the Western Conference Semifinals. Tune in to hear who we think is to blame and what needs to happen for this squad next season. The battle for LA, dubbed the HALLWAY series, and the showdown between Jack and Leo, friends turned to foes (Lakers VS Clippers), is NOT happening, Did the Lakers dodge a huge bullet?Intro Music by @lakeyinspiredPlease follow our socials if you want more BVL content and it would be much appreciated if you can take the time to rate, subscribe and review our podcast. It would mean the world to us for you to spread the word and help grow this podcast. LET'S GO!Follow our Ball VS Life social: Instagram - @ballvslifeofficial Follow JC: Instagram - @kuyaoftheworld Follow Jack: Instagram - @jackchenwashere
In absolute shock still !! Can't believe the Clippers lost like that. Now we look forward to the Lakers vs Nuggets. Miami is up 2-0 !! I make my predictions for the remainder of the playoffs. Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/fwinc)
Kawhi and George Paul had epic choke in Game 7 Jokic and Murray are for real The bubble show who are true ballers and who show up for a check and fame.
wow.... just wow. The LA Clippers - a team who was heavily, and I mean HEAVILY favored by fans, media, etc... officially blew their 3-1 lead last night after their 'superstar' duo of Kawhi Leonard and George Paul combined for 24 points on 10/38 FG.Doc Rivers blew a third playoff series in which his team was leading 3-1. (2003, 2015)Miami comes together to take down Boston in game 1 of the ECF behind BAM's amazing blocked dunk attempt by Jayson TatumLakers vs Nuggets WCF tips off FRIDAY 9/18! The two teams meeting in the conference finals for the first time since 2009 (LA won 4-2, Kobe vs Carmelo)& just how bad is Bradley Beal being disrespected? Brad did not off ANY of the three ALL-NBA teams, and was also snubbed from the All Star game this year; is Washington being ASS a justifiable reason to leave off? (Averages of 30ppg, 6rpg, 4apg...)Thx for the continued support. Love y'allSupport the show (https://www.bigbucketspod.com)
George interviews Paul Kozub, founder of V-One Vodka and one of the five finalists of the BusinessWest's 40 Under Forty Alumni Achievement Award. Launched in 2015, and known then as the Continued Excellence honor, BusinessWest's Alumni Achievement Award recognizes a previous 40 Under Forty honoree who has continued to build on his or resume as a rising star in this region and leader both in business and within the community. This is the first installment of Alumni Achievement Award podcast installments. Hea what Paul has been up to since his 40 Under Forty honor!
BusinessWest & Healthcare News: Business & Health Talk Podcast
Episode 23: Aug. 31, 2020 George Interviews Paul Kozub, founder of V-One Vodka George interviews Paul Kozub, founder of V-One Vodka and one of the five finalists of the BusinessWest's 40 Under Forty Alumni Achievement Award. Launched in 2015, and known then as the Continued Excellence honor, BusinessWest's Alumni Achievement Award recognizes a previous 40 Under Forty honoree who has continued to build on his or resume as a rising star in this region and leader both in business and within the community. This is the first installment of Alumni Achievement Award podcast installments. Hea what Paul has been up to since his 40 Under Forty honor! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
We address Jacob Blake's unfortunate situation and are grateful that it didn't end in death (but it's sad we are at that point). The Dallas Mavericks and LA Clippers had one heck of a game over the weekend, but the hype around Luka is what everyone is speaking of. We shout out the Lakers for playing up to their potential finally, and give thanks to Kobe Bryant Day (8/24). Lyft and Uber have issues in California. Lawyer who once represented players in College, has flipped the script and joined the big bad wolf. Thom Brennaman's apology, was it genuine, and what should be made of it but why it shouldn't happen. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/bottomlinesportstalk/message
In the latest episode, Wilson discusses Luka Doncic's nascent, Paul George's nadir, and the void left behind by Kobe Bryant's death on what would've been his 42nd birthday. Enjoy. Follow us on social media: twitter.com/tcp_pod twitter.com/antwonomous twitter.com/bigdave0311 twitter.com/jasoncwolfe instagram.com/tcp_pod Instagram.com/antwonomous instagram.com/dgalvez0311 Follow on social media: twitter.com/tcp_pod twitter.com/antwonomous instagram.com/tcp_pod Instagram.com/antwonomous --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Topics covered in this episode 1. Pandemic P, Playoff P, George Paul, you can call him whatever you want 2. Kawhi Leonard is the Sandy Koufax of the NBA 3. Dame Time running out Music by Kozypop - youtube.com/kozypop Outro : Flarrmy - Mask Girl
Bill burns out on distrohopping after providing multiple release reviews. Our listeners provide feedback on new user recommendations, hard drive mounting, encryption, trying Linux via USB, and the Linux Spotlight interview. We answer questions on security audit results. Episode 389 Time Stamps 00:00 Going Linux #389 · Listener Feedback 01:43 Bill burns out on distro hopping 02:24 but he has some feedback on a few releases 02:46 Linux Mint 19.3 03:24 Linux Mint Debian Edition 4 04:38 Endevour OS 07:13 ArcoLinux 10:19 Open Suse 12:16 Ubuntu MATE 14:49 Zorin 17:55 New user recommendations 24:22 Gregory: Hard drive mounting 27:28 Gregory: Great interview 30:09 John: Security audit recommendations 34:19 George: Paul's encryption problem 37:57 David: Linux via USB 44:09 goinglinux.com, goinglinux@gmail.com, +1-904-468-7889, @goinglinux, feedback, listen, subscribe 45:17 End
Bill burns out on distrohopping after providing multiple release reviews. Our listeners provide feedback on new user recommendations, hard drive mounting, encryption, trying Linux via USB, and the Linux Spotlight interview. We answer questions on security audit results. Episode 389 Time Stamps 00:00 Going Linux #389 · Listener Feedback 01:43 Bill burns out on distro hopping 02:24 but he has some feedback on a few releases 02:46 Linux Mint 19.3 03:24 Linux Mint Debian Edition 4 04:38 Endevour OS 07:13 ArcoLinux 10:19 Open Suse 12:16 Ubuntu MATE 14:49 Zorin 17:55 New user recommendations 24:22 Gregory: Hard drive mounting 27:28 Gregory: Great interview 30:09 John: Security audit recommendations 34:19 George: Paul's encryption problem 37:57 David: Linux via USB 44:09 goinglinux.com, goinglinux@gmail.com, +1-904-468-7889, @goinglinux, feedback, listen, subscribe 45:17 End
Join us while we discuss houses older than the Civil War and the Weeping Lady in white. Boo Y'all! Welcome to Ghosts Raised in the South Podcast. We are three friends who love hearing true ghost stories and learning about the paranormal. Each episode we will feature one main story, one story from a friend or listener, and an "Honorably Mentioned" ghost or haunt.
'The Gospel According to George, Paul, John, and Ringo' is the seventh message (07/15/2018) in the 'God In My iPod' series from the Alto area United Methodist Churches (A. Frank Smith UMC and Cold Springs UMC).afsumc.orgJohn R. Black2 Corinthians 5:14-21#afsumc #christianity #god-in-my-ipod #george-paul-john-ringo #2-corinthians-5
'The Gospel According to George, Paul, John, and Ringo' is the seventh message (07/15/2018) in the 'God In My iPod' series from the Alto area United Methodist Churches (A. Frank Smith UMC and Cold Springs UMC).afsumc.orgJohn R. Black2 Corinthians 5:14-21#afsumc #christianity #god-in-my-ipod #george-paul-john-ringo #2-corinthians-5
Professor George Paul Meiu‘s debut anthropological book, Ethno-erotic Economies: Sexuality, Money, and Belonging in Kenya (University of Chicago Press, 2017), dives into the commodification of culture and sex on the beachfronts of coastal Kenya, as well as the ramifications and shifting economic power dynamics in rural Samburu villages that result from this new economy. Utilizing over a decade of community engagement and research, Meiu expertly engages in intense anthropological study without exploitation and judgment. Rather he succeeds in humanizing his subjects as he explores the creation and development of a new economy, that of engaging with white, largely Western European women, in romantic relationships in exchange for money, goods and, eventually, higher economic and social status in their home rural communities. But with this new economy comes challenges to traditional social structures, as sexuality and wealth intersect with traditional land tenure and power. Meiu, with his deep understanding of the Samburu people, rituals and culture, explores how power dynamics change, and how new money is challenged and reconciled. This book is highly readable, without skimping on academic literature and theoretical context, resulting in a book that will engage everyone from first year anthropology students through seasoned academics. Erin Freas-Smith, Ph.D can be reached at efreassmith@gmail.com.
Professor George Paul Meiu‘s debut anthropological book, Ethno-erotic Economies: Sexuality, Money, and Belonging in Kenya (University of Chicago Press, 2017), dives into the commodification of culture and sex on the beachfronts of coastal Kenya, as well as the ramifications and shifting economic power dynamics in rural Samburu villages that result from this new economy. Utilizing over a decade of community engagement and research, Meiu expertly engages in intense anthropological study without exploitation and judgment. Rather he succeeds in humanizing his subjects as he explores the creation and development of a new economy, that of engaging with white, largely Western European women, in romantic relationships in exchange for money, goods and, eventually, higher economic and social status in their home rural communities. But with this new economy comes challenges to traditional social structures, as sexuality and wealth intersect with traditional land tenure and power. Meiu, with his deep understanding of the Samburu people, rituals and culture, explores how power dynamics change, and how new money is challenged and reconciled. This book is highly readable, without skimping on academic literature and theoretical context, resulting in a book that will engage everyone from first year anthropology students through seasoned academics. Erin Freas-Smith, Ph.D can be reached at efreassmith@gmail.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Professor George Paul Meiu‘s debut anthropological book, Ethno-erotic Economies: Sexuality, Money, and Belonging in Kenya (University of Chicago Press, 2017), dives into the commodification of culture and sex on the beachfronts of coastal Kenya, as well as the ramifications and shifting economic power dynamics in rural Samburu villages that result from this new economy. Utilizing over a decade of community engagement and research, Meiu expertly engages in intense anthropological study without exploitation and judgment. Rather he succeeds in humanizing his subjects as he explores the creation and development of a new economy, that of engaging with white, largely Western European women, in romantic relationships in exchange for money, goods and, eventually, higher economic and social status in their home rural communities. But with this new economy comes challenges to traditional social structures, as sexuality and wealth intersect with traditional land tenure and power. Meiu, with his deep understanding of the Samburu people, rituals and culture, explores how power dynamics change, and how new money is challenged and reconciled. This book is highly readable, without skimping on academic literature and theoretical context, resulting in a book that will engage everyone from first year anthropology students through seasoned academics. Erin Freas-Smith, Ph.D can be reached at efreassmith@gmail.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Professor George Paul Meiu‘s debut anthropological book, Ethno-erotic Economies: Sexuality, Money, and Belonging in Kenya (University of Chicago Press, 2017), dives into the commodification of culture and sex on the beachfronts of coastal Kenya, as well as the ramifications and shifting economic power dynamics in rural Samburu villages that result from this new economy. Utilizing over a decade of community engagement and research, Meiu expertly engages in intense anthropological study without exploitation and judgment. Rather he succeeds in humanizing his subjects as he explores the creation and development of a new economy, that of engaging with white, largely Western European women, in romantic relationships in exchange for money, goods and, eventually, higher economic and social status in their home rural communities. But with this new economy comes challenges to traditional social structures, as sexuality and wealth intersect with traditional land tenure and power. Meiu, with his deep understanding of the Samburu people, rituals and culture, explores how power dynamics change, and how new money is challenged and reconciled. This book is highly readable, without skimping on academic literature and theoretical context, resulting in a book that will engage everyone from first year anthropology students through seasoned academics. Erin Freas-Smith, Ph.D can be reached at efreassmith@gmail.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Professor George Paul Meiu‘s debut anthropological book, Ethno-erotic Economies: Sexuality, Money, and Belonging in Kenya (University of Chicago Press, 2017), dives into the commodification of culture and sex on the beachfronts of coastal Kenya, as well as the ramifications and shifting economic power dynamics in rural Samburu villages that result from this new economy. Utilizing over a decade of community engagement and research, Meiu expertly engages in intense anthropological study without exploitation and judgment. Rather he succeeds in humanizing his subjects as he explores the creation and development of a new economy, that of engaging with white, largely Western European women, in romantic relationships in exchange for money, goods and, eventually, higher economic and social status in their home rural communities. But with this new economy comes challenges to traditional social structures, as sexuality and wealth intersect with traditional land tenure and power. Meiu, with his deep understanding of the Samburu people, rituals and culture, explores how power dynamics change, and how new money is challenged and reconciled. This book is highly readable, without skimping on academic literature and theoretical context, resulting in a book that will engage everyone from first year anthropology students through seasoned academics. Erin Freas-Smith, Ph.D can be reached at efreassmith@gmail.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Professor George Paul Meiu‘s debut anthropological book, Ethno-erotic Economies: Sexuality, Money, and Belonging in Kenya (University of Chicago Press, 2017), dives into the commodification of culture and sex on the beachfronts of coastal Kenya, as well as the ramifications and shifting economic power dynamics in rural Samburu villages that result from this new economy. Utilizing over a decade of community engagement and research, Meiu expertly engages in intense anthropological study without exploitation and judgment. Rather he succeeds in humanizing his subjects as he explores the creation and development of a new economy, that of engaging with white, largely Western European women, in romantic relationships in exchange for money, goods and, eventually, higher economic and social status in their home rural communities. But with this new economy comes challenges to traditional social structures, as sexuality and wealth intersect with traditional land tenure and power. Meiu, with his deep understanding of the Samburu people, rituals and culture, explores how power dynamics change, and how new money is challenged and reconciled. This book is highly readable, without skimping on academic literature and theoretical context, resulting in a book that will engage everyone from first year anthropology students through seasoned academics. Erin Freas-Smith, Ph.D can be reached at efreassmith@gmail.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Professor George Paul Meiu‘s debut anthropological book, Ethno-erotic Economies: Sexuality, Money, and Belonging in Kenya (University of Chicago Press, 2017), dives into the commodification of culture and sex on the beachfronts of coastal Kenya, as well as the ramifications and shifting economic power dynamics in rural Samburu villages that result from this new economy. Utilizing over a decade of community engagement and research, Meiu expertly engages in intense anthropological study without exploitation and judgment. Rather he succeeds in humanizing his subjects as he explores the creation and development of a new economy, that of engaging with white, largely Western European women, in romantic relationships in exchange for money, goods and, eventually, higher economic and social status in their home rural communities. But with this new economy comes challenges to traditional social structures, as sexuality and wealth intersect with traditional land tenure and power. Meiu, with his deep understanding of the Samburu people, rituals and culture, explores how power dynamics change, and how new money is challenged and reconciled. This book is highly readable, without skimping on academic literature and theoretical context, resulting in a book that will engage everyone from first year anthropology students through seasoned academics. Erin Freas-Smith, Ph.D can be reached at efreassmith@gmail.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
"We are all Treaty people". It's a phrase we're hearing more often these days. But what does it really mean, here in Mi'kma'ki? And what does it have to do with environmental justice? Most settlers don't think about the Treaties much. Even here in unceded Mi'kmaq territory, many of us imagine them as one-time transactions in the deep past. However, as we'll hear in this episodes of Shades of Green, many Mi'kmaq rights holders understand the Peace and Friendship Treaties as sacred, living agreements. As Sipekne’katik District Warrior Chief Jim Maloney puts it: “I agree that we are a treaty people, and I have heard the Premier say that. His Treaty is on paper. My Treaty is on land. My tracks on my ground: that’s my signature, not on a piece of paper.” In this episode of Shades of Green, we spend time with frontline Water Protectors resisting the Alton Gas project at the Truckhouse and Treaty Camp along the banks of the Sipekne'katik River. Alton Gas is proposing to dump massive quantities of mined salt waste into the river, which would pose serious risks to the river ecosystem along with the health, livelihoods and rights of Mi’kmaw communities. Water Protector and Treaty Scholar Michelle Paul sums up what has brought folks to the front lines: "There is no recipe for water. It is that simple. When water is gone that's it. From water is life, and without water there is no life." This Mi'kmaw-led resistance has asserted the Peace and Friendship Treaties in ways that are at once spiritual, political, and deeply practical. As Kukuwes Wowkis describes, "Last year when we built the Truckhouse seven of us from seven different districts threw our eel traps in the water. So right there, Alton Gas had to stop what they were doing with the brine because in our treaties, it’s our right to hunt and fish wherever we feel we can do that on Mi’kmaw territory.” We hope you’ll tune into episode three of our Shades of Green podcast series, “Peace, Friendship and Environmental Justice." Join us at the treaty camp to get a taste of what it's like on the front lines of a movement that is so much bigger than stopping a single project. Let's listen and reflect on what what stopping a natural gas storage project has to do with Indigenous self-determination, how the Peace and Friendship Treaties might help us understand how to build just relationships with the land and each other, and what it means to be a Treaty person. Note: explicit language Featured Voices: Michelle Paul Kukuwes Wowkis (Madonna Bernard) Giju Muin (Paula Isaac) Catherine Martin Jim Maloney Quotes have been condensed here for clarity and brevity. Huge thanks to every one of the ears and voices that made this episode possible, and particularly the Water Protectors holding down the Truckhouse and Treaty Camp against Alton Gas. You can support this Mi'kmaw-led resistance here. Further thanks to Erica Butler and Peter Lane. Our theme was composed by the incredible Nick Durado. We are also grateful to Jeremy Dutcher for his rendition of the Honour Song. Kepmite'tmnej, the Mi'kmaw Honour Song, was received in a sweatlodge by singer-songwriter George Paul in the 1980s. This project has been supported by Ecology Action Centre and the Community Conservation Research Network Subscribe on iTunes, SoundCloud, Stitcher, or Feedburner. And follow us on Twitter! Further resources available at: https://shadesofgreenweb.wordpress.com/2018/02/15/peace-friendship-and-environmental-justice/
Japanese Metal Head Show - Jpn & Eng Bilingual Show / Beer / Music / Guitar Talk / ビール / メタル / 英会話
サウスダコタ州のライブに持って行く携帯録音機材のテスト中の雑談。ジョージが日本へ持ってくるギターは、Haji, Tiger, George Paul, Harris Charvel, and ESP Jaguar 12 String. Featured Track: Will The Sun Rise (UnderLock and Key – 1985) Purchase your RTIC Products Here Amazon purchase go The post ジョージ・リンチが日本に持ってくるギター話 – Japanese Metal Head Show 073 appeared first on Metal Moment.
The 7th message in the series "God In My iPod" (8/23/2015) from Angleton First United Methodist Church. angletonfumc.org
The 7th message in the series "God In My iPod" (8/23/2015) from Angleton First United Methodist Church. angletonfumc.org