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There's a tension that runs through the heart of every believer—the weight of God's unchanging law and the wonder of His limitless grace. In this powerful and revealing message, Pastor Rod Parsley calls us back to the cross, where truth and mercy met, where law bowed to love, and where grace gleamed its brightest. Romans 6:16 – "Grace frees you to choose your master... choose carefully." Galatians 2:20 – "I have been crucified with Christ… the life I now live, I live by faith in the Son of God." This message confronts both extremes: legalism that condemns and cheap grace that excuses. The cross remains the balance point—the place where God's justice and compassion collide. It's not a call to earn grace but to respond to it with holiness, gratitude, and surrender. It's time to step out of spiritual slavery and into sonship. It's time to stop trying to see how little we can offer—and start asking how close to heaven we can get while still on earth. If you've ever wondered what it means to live fully free and fully faithful, this is the Word you've been waiting for.
Throughout his career, Ian Smile has been a graphic designer, creative director, community builder, and is currently a principal UX designer building digital products for media management and distribution for pro sports & entertainment industries. Ian and I discuss Pump Up the Volume, starring Christian Slater as a high schooler who moonlights as an underground radio personality, he's a voice for the students and somebody they relate to, even look up to. We also talk about Generation X, the punk ethos, and old school media.-After over 15 years building his career in the New York City design community, Ian Smile chased his dreams of designing skateboards, following the sunset west for the skateparks and beaches of Southern California. He was welcomed into the skate world by some of his childhood heroes and has since proudly held the position of Creative Director for both the Skateboarding Hall of Fame and CSEF College Skateboarding. https://www.threads.com/@endasheshttps://www.instagram.com/endashes/-Pump Up the Volume (1990)https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0100436/ https://www.theringer.com/2020/08/21/movies/making-of-pump-up-the-volume-30th-anniversary-christian-slater https://www.rogerebert.com/features/the-needle-drop-sessions-pump-up-the-volume-and-untamed-heart https://www.saturdayeveningpost.com/2020/08/pump-up-the-volume-still-reverberates-30-years-later/ https://variety.com/2020/tv/news/christian-slater-dirty-john-mr-robot-pump-up-the-volume-1234707369/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soupy_Sales -Other movies and shows discussed, alphabetical listClerks (1994)The Crow (1994)Dazed and Confused (1993)Do the Right Thing (1989)Dune (1984, 2021, 2024)The Fisher King (1991)Gleaming the Cube (1989)The Legend of Billie Jean (1985)Network (1976)One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1975)Singles (1992)Slacker (1990)Sneakers (1992)Stand by Me (1986)Talk Radio (1988)Turk 182 (1985)Vanishing Point (1971)WarGames (1983)
Welcome back to A Podcask of Amontillado, where we delve into the dark, dreadful, and terrifying parts of the world. Belial, Behemoth, Beelzebub, Asmodeus, Satanas, Lucifer. No mater which of their many names you use, they all refer to the King of Hell, the being hidden in the details, it is The Devil! Erin & Gary are joined by Kevin Cafferty from Gleaming the Tube and The Best Stuff in the World podcasts to discuss their favorite portrayals of the Devil in film, TV & music! Listen in as they discuss typecasting actors as Satan, chewing scenery vs quiet menace, power dynamics & the nature of evil, trying to shock people deliberately, Tim Curry's abbs, living deliciously, the beauty of practical effects, casting women as The Devil, temptation & consequences, and who doesn't want a gold fiddle? Viggo in The Prophecy Stormare in Constantine John Carpenter's Prince of Darknes trailer Black Phillip is the best beast Martha Stewart in charge of Hell Bedazzled ('67) - Lucifer explains why he rebeled against God "Why Should The Devil Have All The Good Music?" by Larry Norman Willem Dafoe's DaDevil tempting with a Luxury Automobile Jon Lovitz's SNL Devil Opening and closing music is "Softly Shall You Sleep," by Valentine Wolfe. Please follow us on TikTok, Discord, Instagram, Bluesky, and on Facebook! If you like us, please share us, and leave a review! Or support us on Patreon! Contact us at apodcaskofamontillado@gmail.com! A Vino, Atrocitas.
On this episode we talk about our favorite video games ever which could be an episode on it's own. Then, we review the cult classic Christian Slater movie Gleaming the Cube. For the album choice, we review Count's 77's Soul Transfusion as requested by our pal Brian Knappenberger.
We've gleamed the cube. Have you gleamed the cube? We watch a pre-superstar Christian Slater (aka Christian Skater) flick called...Gleaming the Cube. It's a skating movie? It's a private detective movie? It's a multi-national anti-communisim, anti-Vietnam, but the bad guys are the anti-communists, but they're really bad, movie. Bad it was made in the 80s so we loved it!Next movie: 12 Mighty Orphans12 Mighty Orphans isn't streaming for free anywhere so you might find it at your local library.
Bex Scott introduces us to an article from ClickAmericana.com all about gadgets and kitchen appliances from the 60s. She opens with a story about her finds from a recent Value Village thrifting trip that got her thinking about the sorts of small appliances she often finds there. What kind of futuristic ideas in kitchen gadgetry did the 1960s produce? And how did they advertise these new products? Join Bex to find out. From wall and under counter mounted can openers to bun warmers and toaster ovens, it's all here. The article features stunning images of the retro ads complete with color photos. Follow along with Bex as she learns which meat grinder can also grind hard almonds, the five good reasons for owning a General Electric rotisserie oven, and how 60s visionaries combined a portable mixer with a knife sharpener for the sake of convenience. Do you remember Presto coffee makers in white? Did you have a Redi-Oven? This episode will either make you scratch your head over the idea of owning an avocado colored blender or take you down memory lane with a Salton bun warmer.Resources discussed in this episode:Mid Century Show and Sale in Calgary, AB - April 12, 2025“1960s gadgets & small kitchen appliances made life a little easier” on ClickAmericana.com—Contact Rebecca Scott | Pyrex With Bex: Website: PyrexWithBex.comInstagram: @pyrexwithbex— TranscriptBex Scott: [00:00:02] Hey everybody, it's Bex Scott and welcome to the Pyrex with Bex podcast, where you guessed it, I talk about vintage Pyrex, but also all things vintage housewares. I'll take you on my latest thrifting adventures, talk about reselling, chat with other enthusiasts about their collections, and learn about a bunch of really awesome items from the past. Subscribe now on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you love listening to podcasts so you don't miss a beat. Everybody, this is Bex Scott and you are listening to the Pyrex with Bex podcast. I wanted to start off this episode with a little Value Village thrift store adventure. So I went into town with my husband and our daughter. Of course, she fell asleep on the way in. We were running some errands and we had some time to kill, so I asked Rob, my husband, if we could stop at Value Village and he said sure. So I let him stay in the car with our daughter, and I ran in to do a quick little ten minute run around the store, see if anything good was there. And lately Value Village hasn't been that great. There's been a lot of just broken things or missing pieces to things that I found. Today was a decent day, so there were some pretty beat up Pyrex. There was a Woodland Cinderella set, only three of the dishes, and it was priced at $35. It had some damage on the largest bowl, and I did consider it for a second, but I just couldn't justify paying $35 for that and the condition that it was in. Bex Scott: [00:01:47] I also found a Homestead 403 mixing bowl that had been through years of dishwasher use, and they wanted $15 for it. And another primary set, blue 401. They wanted $6 for it and it was missing a lot of its color. So that was a bit of what I found today. That was a disappointment. I did, however, find six mugs from the Spring Blossom Tabletopware coordinates set. These are the nine ounce mugs that were sold in sets of four, and I found six in this pattern. So I picked them up and they were a great price. I was a bit sad though because I found them, I grabbed them and then I walked down to the other aisle and this little girl looked at me and I gave her a smile. I thought she was just being friendly, but then I heard her say, hey mom, I just saw somebody take those green flower mugs. And the mom said, don't worry, we left them there for a reason. And I felt so bad because this little girl obviously wanted to take these mugs home, but the mom was set on her not having them for some reason, probably because they didn't need six vintage mugs in their house for their kids to use. But I hope she knows that they're going to a good home. Bex Scott: [00:03:13] I also found this amazing enamel fondue set in like a mustardy color with little flowers all over it, and it came with, I think it was six melamine divided plates and four forks with different colored plastic handles. That whole set is going to be in an upcoming mid-century modern show that I have a booth at in Calgary. It is my very first show that I'm ever doing. I have a ten by ten booth, three tables, so I'm excited to be thrifting to find some pieces that I can put in that show. If any of you are in Calgary and you hear this episode before I go to the show, it's April 12th, 2025, so you can catch me there and come and see some of the awesome pieces of Pyrex that I'm going to have there, and just other, other things that I have found over the last year or so. Going to Value Village today kind of brings me to my episode, where I always go down the appliance section, and I never expect to find anything in this section. It's usually a bunch of really beat up, lately it's been donut makers, those little instant donut makers or cake pop makers, so nothing really great in vintage, but it got me thinking about kind of the small kitchen appliances that people used in their home in the 1960s. Bex Scott: [00:04:47] So I was doing some research and I came across this really great article in, the websites called Click Americana.Com. So go to my show notes and navigate to this article. It's called 1960s Gadgets and Small Kitchen Appliances Made Life a Little Easier, and this episode is going to be a bit of a read through the article and take you through it, but I want you to make sure that you see these photos, because a lot of them are clips taken from old catalogs and magazines, and it'll give you a really great idea of the pieces and the appliances that they had in their kitchens. And a lot of these I have seen at Value Village before, and other thrift stores, and some of them I even have in my basement right now waiting to be sold. So it's kind of a bit of an educational episode and a fun little show and tell as well. Bex Scott: [00:05:40] So the first one we have is the retro wall-mounted manual can opener by Can-O-Mat. And this is from the 1960s, and the ad shows a little lady in the reflection of the can opener opening her can and it says most beautiful can opener made. Its clean, uncluttered beauty tells you Can-O-Mat is a masterpiece of mechanical simplicity. No levers, gadgets, wires or motors, just the easy turn of a single handle opens any can, any size, any shape. Leaves a smooth, safe drinking cup edge. That's why you'll find Can-O-Mat in most kitchens, where quiet, good taste and smooth efficiency are happily wedded. Any wonder its first choice of millions of style conscious homemakers? I struggle with can openers, all of the modern ones. I think they're terrible. I have trouble figuring out how to use them, and half the time they don't even cut properly. So it kind of has me thinking that I should be looking for one of these in the stores when I'm out and about. Bex Scott: [00:06:42] Next up we have the Oster electric meat grinder. It's called the Electric Power Unit. It sits on your countertop and it says versatile and powerful, Oster electric meat grinder slices through foods without tearing, bruising, or mashing. That sounds kind of gross. Speedily and effortlessly grinds all foods from toughest meats to the most delicate vegetables. Even grinds hard almonds. New economies, better meals, and far more pleasure in food preparation are yours every day from the very first day you own the Oster electric meat grinder. I don't know about you guys, but I find a lot of meat grinder parts when I'm shopping or when I've bought a lot at an estate sale or in an auction. They are never complete. I would love to be able to test out one of these meat grinders, but so far I haven't come across one that's a full unit. Bex Scott: [00:07:39] Next up we have the vintage General Electric rotisserie oven. This is really cute, it's a little countertop rotisserie oven and it says five good reasons for owning a General Electric rotisserie oven, in brackets, even if you have a good range oven. Number one is the rotisserie infrared broiler precision oven does so much more than an ordinary rotisserie. Does as many things, in fact, as an expensive range oven, and has range oven accuracy. Number two infrared broiling seals in the natural juices for best ever steaks and seafood. Brown and crusty outside. Delectable inside. Number three bake without heating up the kitchen. Separate baking element on bottom. Thermostatic heat control assure perfect cakes, breads, fancy desserts. Tilt top lid closes completely for baking. Glass window lets you peek in. This is like a fancy Easy-Bake oven. And then there's a picture. It kind of looks like a cat litter box with a lid on the top. Number four it has automatic push button controls. And number five, it's portable. You can cook anywhere with the General Electric rotisserie oven. That's pretty handy. You can take it to your friends houses. You could even cook in the parking lot if you have an outlet. Imagine taking this to a tailgate party. You just pull up your vintage rotisserie oven and put it on your tailgate. I would do that. Bex Scott: [00:09:07] Next up we have a waffle maker and it says makes four big waffles at a time. General Electric Sandwich Grill and Waffle Iron has reversible grids that make delicious pancakes too. Grills sandwiches, bacon, and eggs. This is one that we have a ton of modern equivalents of this, so it looks pretty similar to what we have now. I have a waffle maker, but it's a tiny one, but I can see how this would be awesome. It is massive. Next up is something that I see a lot of in the thrift stores. We have the vintage GE Stainless Steel automatic coffee maker, and this one is from 1961 and it has a cute little Christmas background. But I find that these vintage coffee makers make amazing coffee, and I've had many of them over the years where we've brewed our coffee in them, and it just tastes so much better than drinking from a Keurig or a Nespresso pod. Next, we have the front loading Toast-R-Oven toaster oven. So it's spelled toast with an R in the middle, and it has a pretty funny description. It says, hands the toast to you, no digging. Toasts all breads, any shape, top browns muffins, grilled cheese sandwiches. Bakes too, frozen desserts, meat pies, even meatloaf. And it is essentially just a countertop toaster oven. That's what it is. I always wanted a toaster oven as a kid because I remember my grandparents having one, and the toast comes out so nice in these toaster ovens. This might be a bad episode for me, because now I'm thinking of all the different things that I should be buying and my family will love me for having no kitchen counter space after I go out and hunt for all these pieces. Bex Scott: [00:11:05] Okay, next we have beats, whips, mixes, drinks, sharpens knives too. This is from 1961 and this is the General Electric portable mixer. Though it's only two and three quarter pounds, it's extra thorough with batters, extra gentle with sauces, extra marvelous with meringues. A free drink mixer fixes drinks in a whirl. This is a tongue twister. Remove beaters and plug in an optional accessory that sharpens knives. I've never seen one of these. Easily and safely. See the portable mixer in white, yellow, pink, and turquoise. Oh, those are some good colors. I would pick pink. At your General Electric dealers. It's very interesting actually. So you take off the beaters and then you can use it as the knife sharpener, or you can whip things up if you put the beaters back in. Okay, next we have the Salton Hotray appliance. I have sold so many of these hotrays. I've gifted them to my mother in law. And I have a few still in my basement. These ones are from 1962, and I find them almost every time I go to Value Village. And it's always fun to see which kind, because the top of them is always a different pattern. There's some pretty ones with flowers, there's some with just funky abstract designs. But it says here that it protects your dinner after you've cooked it. It can do this because the temperature of its radiant heat glass panel is thermostatically controlled to a point right under the cooking point. Thus, the food on it neither continues to cook nor to stand around growing cold. This means that those late coming husbands and extra drink guests will no longer pay the price of an overcooked and dried out dinner. And when dinner is finally served, hotray will put an end to your jumping up and down from the table. You just put the entire dinner on hotray, put hotray on the dining table, and serve from there. First will taste like firsts and seconds will taste as good as first. Of course, there's much more to Salton Hotray. Find me on Instagram and let me know, Did you guys use hotrays growing up? Do you still use hotrays? Do you like them? What are your thoughts? Bex Scott: [00:13:19] Next up we have the automatic can opener kitchen gadget from 1961, and I'm pretty sure this is one that my grandparents had, and they mounted it to the underside of their kitchen cabinet. I remember this growing up vividly. It says it removes or hinges the lid quickly, cleanly, with no jagged edges. Magnet holds lid away from food, mounts on wall or optional counter stand. Next, we have a whole variety of vintage toasters from 1963. So we've got the GE Toast-R-Oven. We have the Two Slice that gives you nine shades of toast. We have the Dominion Four Slicer, ideal for big families, toasts 1 to 4 slices at a time, pops them up high, gives perfect results automatically. And it's chrome. We have the GE High Lift. Pops bread extra high, has easy to read control for light, dark or nine shades between. We have your Flip-Door toaster. It has a tray attached. Just flip doors, toast turns automatically, in a walnut trim. And then last we have the Toastmaster Sovereign. Has new controls up front. New concave design. Silent timer assures perfect shade of toast every single time. Bex Scott: [00:14:36] Next up we have kitchen cooking and heating small appliances from 1963. We've got the Hand Mixer. Hangs on wall, has giant beaters and three speeds. The Toastmaster Portable Mixer has three speeds removable, cord. The Salton Gourmet Hotray. We have the Rotisserie Broiler, the 2-Burner Hotplate, the 1-Burner Hotplate, the Sunbeam Electric Frypan. It's completely immersible. Jumbo 12" Electric Skillet is automatic and washable. The Electric Buffet Server gives low heat, holds two quarts, and the Corning 10" Electric Skillet goes under broiler, yet on matching base, it bakes, stews and fries. And they have a little Corning blue cornflower on top of that guy. Bex Scott: [00:15:28] The low silhouette blender. This one my grandparents also had, and it has the super dangerous looking like machete knife little blade in the bottom of it that I always got scared of when I was washing it. It doesn't have anything to say about it. It's pretty self-explanatory. Low, off, or high, that's about it. Vintage Presto coffee pots in white and black. These are really cool looking, they're actually, they look kind of atomic, kind of space age. And it says, does anyone on your street have the white one yet? Pardon us, but we do make a perfectly wonderful coffee maker. It's the one on the left in stainless steel with rich, glossy black trim, fully automatic. It brews a cup a minute of marvelous coffee and keeps it hot. The open spout means easy pouring, easy cleaning too, because it won't trap bitter oils in residues, and you can dunk the entire coffee maker without a worry. Families who live with it every day just love it. Still, we've had a mild but steady clamor, it wasn't a complaint, but a question. People kept asking why not make it white? Most people like the black one, we said. We might not have the volume and weight for mass production, we said. We might have to price it higher and then nobody would buy it. This is all in a magazine ad, just so you guys know. So we made the white one anyway, it's the one on the right. It makes wonderful coffee the same as the black one. It does cost a few pennies more, but now you have a choice. This is a crazy ad. We don't think you'll have trouble finding a black Presto on your street, but if you hurry, you still might be first with the white one. And that might be quite a kick. Wowzas. Bex Scott: [00:17:13] Okay, Salton Bun Warmer, I have this, I've used it, it's amazing. It's so hard to find with the original cloth cover that closes and shuts, but I actually found one and it's great. So if you come across a Salton Bun Warmer, you'd better get it. It says it actually makes ordinary buns taste good, good ones taste great, and great ones taste like heaven on earth. The Salton Electric Bun Warmer won't perform miracles. It won't make our American mass produced buns and rolls taste like the kind grandma supposedly made 50 years ago. But what the Salton Bun Warmer will do is make rolls and buns taste a good deal better. It does this by keeping buns and rolls warm and fresh and crisp. And this ad, this is the exact one that I have. You can get the bun warmer for 9.95 or the French bread warmer for 11.95. Next up we have our Redi-Oven appliance tableside cooker from 1965. New, fast, easy, versatile, large capacity, compact electric oven that holds even a 3 pound roast or an 8 inch pie. Gleaming chrome finish with porcelain enamel interior. Automatic timer and controlled heat up to 500 degrees, perfect for preparing frozen foods, biscuits, baked potatoes right at the table. I want one of these. I've never seen this, but I want it. Double bonus $7.50 value international Silver Party Tray, plus free coupons for these famous frozen foods. Oh, so they were giving away this leaf shaped serving tray with a spoon as well. Bex Scott: [00:18:55] Vintage 1960s Ronson Foodmatic in-counter appliance. Ronson Foodmatic slices, shreds, grinds meat and coffee, juices oranges, crushes ice, it even cooks. That is a versatile piece of equipment. It's very interesting looking as well. It sits on top of your counter. You can put beaters in there for baking. What else does it say? Automatic timer, solid state speed, beater clutch and arm release, speed selector guide. It's quite the 1969 invention. Okay, next up we have vintage small kitchen appliances and decorator colors from 1969. General Electric gives you a festival of color, flame, avocado, and harvest. Appliances include a can opener slash knife sharpener, portable mixers and stand mixers, Dutch skillet, buffet skillet, and a blender. I love these colors. These are awesome. Not so much the avocado, but I could see myself with the harvest yellow one or the flame. The flame is a really nice red. And that is it for our 1960s gadgets and small kitchen appliances. I hope you guys go to the show notes to get a great visual of the items that I talked about, and find me on Instagram at Pyrex with Bex, and let me know if you remember growing up with any of these appliances, what you loved, what you didn't, and if you have any in your kitchen now. Thanks everybody.
We're just diving into the bizarre world of Rhode Island cable access television of the 80s and 90s. And our special returning guest is Kevin Cafferty! Kevin was there, and remembers it all. If you were anywhere near the Ocean State back in the day, you never knew what you'd find on local cable TV, but you knew it would freak you out. Including: awkward talk shows, befuddling children's shows, ultra-low-budget sketch comedy, backyard wrestling, high school dances, karaoke direct from Woonsocket, the intense legal drama of Providence traffic court, the Star Trek fan show we loved more than Star Trek, the Kiss fan show that was parodied on Family Guy... and the legend of Daphne's Madhouse. Why would you ever look at mainstream TV again? On cable access, your own neighbors were making the weirdest shows in the world. Kevin's podcasts: Gleaming the Tube and The Best Stuff in the World! And our regular links... The Flopcast website! The ESO Network! The Flopcast on Facebook! The Flopcast on Instagram! The Flopcast on Bluesky! The Flopcast on Mastadon! Please rate and review The Flopcast on Apple Podcasts! Email: info@flopcast.net Our music is by The Sponge Awareness Foundation! This week's promo: The Watch-A-Thon of Rassilon!
A nation that straddles the South China Sea with peninsular territory shouldering Thailand and island provinces on Borneo, Malaysia is a country of profound contrasts. Gleaming skyscrapers pierce tropical skies above street-food hawkers, while pristine beaches give way to ancient rainforests. This is a land where multiple cultures – Malay, Chinese, and Indian – have created something entirely unique, especially evident in its extraordinary cuisine.Love the pod? Get the guide! Out with each new podcast, we publish a guide to the country. Buy the TrodPod guide to Malaysia for just $3: https://www.patreon.com/TrodPod/shop/trodpod-33-guide-to-malaysia-1188831. Better yet, become a TrodPod member for just $5 a month and access TrodPod guides to every country in the world, released weekly with each new podcast episode! Sign up now: https://www.patreon.com/trodpod/membershipThanks for all your support!TrodPod is Murray Garrard and Elle Keymer. Sound editing by Leo Audio Productions. Design and marketing by GPS: Garrard Powell Solutions. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Fair is fair! And there's nothing fairer than Matt and Eric leaping into THE LEGEND OF BILLIE JEAN for their final 1985 movie (for now). Plus, some bonkers SCREAM 7 casting news and a few updates on '90s movies sequels/reboots!
GBBV turns to the extreme side of things thanks to the Pateron Patrons with Gleaming the Cube, a 1989 skateboarding action/revenge flick. Will Max, James, and Ryan, figure out what Gleaming the Cube actually means, or will the anti-communist arms smuggling continue to line the pockets of the privileged? It's the 80s so who can say for sure.Skate away your feelings at 1:40:21 for the post movie wrap up on all things skateboarding, NA canned beverages, the plot structure of 1980s films.Like what we're doing? Want to choose future episodes? Want to fund our next outing to Pizza Hut? Check out our Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/goodbrewsbadviewsOpening theme: Tha Silent Partner – Prohibition Brew and Pork Chops
Gleaming stainless steel nets installed 20 feet below the sidewalk have cut Golden Gate Bridge suicides by 80 percent since they were installed over a year ago. Could similar nets stop future deaths in Fort Bragg?
Podcast Episode Description: Exploring Gleaming the Cube (1989)
"This is pre-Civil War-like, I think the nation is changed forever." As 2024 draws to a close, we stand at the precipice of what could prove to be one of the most consequential periods in human history. On the hunt to make some sense out of it all, Ed and Sean have a final word on the election campaign and Biden's stewardship, as well as the battle over reproductive rights, gun control, and the unending conflicts in Gaza and Ukraine. We'll see you in 2025, have a Merry Christmas, a happy holidays, and enjoy the fireworks on New Year's Eve because there could be many more to come...See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The planned celebrations for a 50th episode haven't quite panned out, as one of our hosts is unwell! Suliore takes the reigns for the main topic today, which is a huge update to Fallout 76! Thanks for listening. Join us on social media Tapes Twitter: https://twitter.com/TFTWpod KDB on threads: @kd_buck Suliore Twitter: https://twitter.com/engold08 You can also find us on youtube for video versions of some shows, plus streams and lets plays!: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCxBPL-np7GojetoZfds9W2Q Check out our other shows! Gears Intel (Gears of War) - https://twitter.com/Gears_Intel The Gaming Aroma Podcast (general gaming talk) Starfield Sandwich - A Starfield fan podcast https://twitter.com/StarSandPod Tamrielic Adventures - an Elder Scrolls https://twitter.com/TamrielicP Super Nintenfo (Nintendo Podcast) https://twitter.com/NintenfoP First Aid Spray (Resident Evil) https://twitter.com/FASprayPod
Our heroes take their last steps of preparation. Kim imbues a powerful being with magic. Megan engages in a battle of riddles. TJ sets up a fail-safe. Tass gets information on how to bait Nash. Jake theorizes on how to summon their enemy. While TJ, Tass and Jake set the stage for their final encounter, Kim and Megan face off against the Baba Yaga of another world. ------ Content Warning: Language, Body Horror ------ You can support The Critshow through our Patreon to get more weekly TTRPG Actual Play content, access to our discord community, and much more! Follow The Critshow on twitter, join our subreddit, and follow us on Instagram. Get two free MotW mysteries and some Keeper tips from Rev by signing up on our website! Check out what's coming up on our monthly publication calendar. And don't forget to check out our wonderful sponsors! This episode of The Critshow featured Jake as The Divine, Kim as The Seer, Megan as The Spooky, Tass as The Chosen, TJ as the Weird Scientist, and Rev as The Keeper. This episode was edited and produced by Brandon (Rev) Wentz with music by Jake Pierle. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The pair you are about to hear are not professionals. Their opinions and beliefs are not fact. They are just two idiots that are Spitting Nonsense. Hi, We are Jasmine and Zach here to present you with some nerdy news! We upload our news podcast on Wednesdays and our bonus episode on Saturdays! Support us by following us on Discord at: discord.gg/yjxsKww Give us feedback and let us know how you feel in our #questions-and-suggestions channel on the Discord listed above.
Send us a textThis is not your 2005 Fever Pitch. We watch the 1997 Fever Pitch with Colin Firth so you don't have to. But if you're a fan of Mr. Darcy, maybe you still want to. If your a fan of Arsenal FC, maybe you still want to. We talk Firth Fros, how dumb it is to be a sports fan, even though we still are, and the differences between UK versions of things and their US counterparts. Meaning we talk about this movie and the 2005 version and the UK Office and the US Office. And we get in to hot water with some hot takes about soccer/football. Come for the banter and stay to get really mad at us, or agree with us. Either way, as long as you stay.Next episode: Gleaming the Cube (and yes, we make jokes about that title too)Gleaming the Cube is on Amazon Prime or you can borrow it from your local library.Support the showTwitter: @slowpitchcastInstagram: @slowpitchpodcastEmail: slowpitchthepodcast@gmail.comFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/slowpitchpodcastPatreon: https://www.patreon.com/slowpitch
On this episode of this the podcast, Ross and Phil talk their favourite horror films... found footage , Slasher, Creature feature, Zombie and more! Oh and we take a dive into the remake/update of The Crow and ask the hell is 'What Is A FKA Twigs'. #shocktober #horrorfilms Hosted by Award winning filmmaker Ross Boyask and blogger/writer/former filmmaker Phil Hobden. Discussed: The Blair Witch Project, Host, Halloween, A Nightmare On Elm Street 3, Friday 13th The Part 6, The Shining, Paranormal Activity, The Thing, Jaws, 28 Days later, Dawn of the Dead, Day Of The Dead, The Fly, The Lost Boys, Blade 2, Evil Dead 2, Shaun Of The Dead, Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978), Terrifier, The 4:30 Movie, The Life and Deaths of Christopher Lee, The Crow (2024), The Empire Strikes Back, Gleaming the Cube, Cloverfield, REC 2, You're Next, Scream, Ghostbusters, A Nightmare On Elm Street 4, The Frighteners, Tremors, Godzilla Minus One, Braindead, The Terminator, Near Dark, Tucker & Dale vs. Evil, An American Werewolf In London, Body Snatchers (1993), The Silence Of The Lambs For more on Ross Boyask search @RossBoyask on all the socials. Also check out @EvoFilmsUK online and follow Ross on Letterboxd. For more on Phil Hobden check out www.philsquickreview.co.uk or you can follow me on Letterboxd. Podcast available on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music, TuneIn, Anchor and here at www.rossandphiltalkmovies.co.uk. #RossAndPhil #RossAndPhilTalkMovies #MoviePodcasts #Podcasts #wittertainment #2024films #TheCrow #HorrorFilms #Terrifier
Join us today once again on A La Carte as Keithie talks to his great friends, John, Bobby & Ethan from Technical Skate Shop / Inclusion Records in Norwell, MA. This time around, its story time and we have some amazing ones to tell. John & Bobby entertain us with their campfire chats and we try to pull something out of Ethan. Next time kiddo, I'll get you next time. Make sure you check them out for either records or skateboard and supplies. These guys are amazing and I love them so much, I might even get my chubby butt on a board.
Chillin with Noah. Scoping the the lobe. Chewing the fat. Gleaming the cube. Part 2 is on Patreon where you can access our discord community, bonus podcasts, documentaries, Boys Club and our music show Church of Chill. https://www.patreon.com/churchofchill **NEW**Church of Chill hoodies, shirts, and stickers available on Etsy. https://www.churchofchill.etsy.com
Introduction: When my good friend and fellow podcaster and radio host Kenzo Shibata hit me up and told me that he felt 1989 was the greatest year in film history, I thought that was a bold claim. Sure, I knew the original Michael Keaton *Batman* hit theaters that year, but beyond that, the details were a bit fuzzy. For many of us, especially those who came of age during the rise of home video, the lines between what was in theaters, what went straight to video, and what aired on cable often blur together. 1989 was a pivotal year—a moment when the cinematic landscape was rapidly changing, and the home video market was beginning to dominate how we consumed movies. The year 1989 revitalized the superhero genre with Batman, saw Patrick Swayze transition from Dirty Dancing to playing the zen-like badass Dalton in Roadhouse, and introduced us to A-list actor Brad Pitt in the indie slasher Cutting Class. Christian Slater stepped into the spotlight as a teenage skateboarding detective in Gleaming the Cube, while Wes Craven tried to franchise another horror icon with Shocker. Horror and comedy were in full swing that year, with Weekend at Bernie's giving us everyone's favorite dead uncle, and Disney making waves with The Little Mermaid. Robin Williams showcased his dramatic range in Dead Poets Society, while Denzel Washington delivered one of his most iconic scenes in Glory. Many believe that Spike Lee made a powerful statement with Do the Right Thing (I'm still trying to figure out what that “statement” is?), and James Spader broke away from his typical high school villain roles in Sex, Lies, and Videotape. Not to mention, George Lucas and Steven Spielberg brought us the third installment of the Indiana Jones franchise. And that's just scratching the surface! So, grab your popcorn, sit back, relax, and enjoy the show! We'll be diving deep into the films of 1989, exploring every genre, every standout performance, and every iconic scene. And don't forget—we'll be opening up the phone lines in the Champagne Room for you to chime in with your thoughts. What films did we miss? What's your favorite from this era? Thank you guys again for taking the time to check this out. We appreciate each and everyone of you. If you have the means, and you feel so inclined, BECOME A PATRON! We're creating patron only programing, you'll get bonus content from many of the episodes, and you get MERCH! Become a patron now https://www.patreon.com/join/BitterLakePresents? Please also like, subscribe, and follow us on these platforms as well, (specially YouTube!) THANKS Y'ALL YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCG9WtLyoP9QU8sxuIfxk3eg Twitch: www.twitch.tv/thisisrevolutionpodcast Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Thisisrevolutionpodcast/ Twitter: @TIRShowOakland Instagram: @thisisrevolutionoakland Read Jason Myles in Sublation Magazine https://www.sublationmag.com/writers/jason-myles Read Jason Myles in Damage Magazine https://damagemag.com/2023/11/07/the-man-who-sold-the-world/ Pascal Robert's Black Agenda Report: https://www.blackagendareport.com/author/Pascal%20Robert
Do you know to recognize and deal with spiritual attack? This episode introduces the reality of spiritual warfare with a reminder to be aware and on the offense for Jesus!Take the survey here! to influence the podcast going forward!!If the link doesn't work, copy/paste this url into your browser: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfpQey5_Oq11_yNdvVMiwloaUz4ZN_9mmc3tsVv-2bfm_AvJg/viewform?usp=sf_linkQuestions or Feedback: UnderstandingHymns@outlook.comSubscribe on Your Preferred PlatformSupport: Pray, Review, Share!My Faith-Building ResourcesSong LyricsVerse 1:Sound the battle cry! See! the foe is nigh; Raise the standard high For the Lord; Gird your armour on, Stand firm every one; Rest your cause upon His holy word.Verse 2:Strong to meet the foe, Marching on we go, While our cause we know Must prevail; Shield and banner bright Gleaming in the light; Battling for the right We ne'er can fail.Verse 3:Oh! thou God of all, Hear us when we call, Help us one and all By thy grace; When the battle's done, And the vict'ry won, May we wear the crown Before thy face.Refrain:Rouse then, soldiers! rally round the banner! Ready, steady, pass the word along; Onward, forward, shout aloud Hosanna! Christ is captain of the mighty throng.Scripture References1 Peter 5:8-11 Be sober, be vigilant; because your adversary the devil, as a roaring lion, walketh about, seeking whom he may devour: 9 Whom resist stedfast in the faith, knowing that the same afflictions are accomplished in your brethren that are in the world. 10 But the God of all grace, who hath called us unto his eternal glory by Christ Jesus, after that ye have suffered a while, make you perfect, stablish, strengthen, settle you. 11 To him be glory and dominion for ever and ever. Amen.Matthew 8:28-34; 9:32-34; 12:22-23; 17:14-21Ephesians 6:10-20 Finally, my brethren, be strong in the Lord, and in the power of his might. 11 Put on the whole armour of God, that ye may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil. 12 For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places. 13 Wherefore take unto you the whole armour of God, that ye may be able to withstand in the evil day, and having done all, to stand. 14 Stand therefore, having your loins girt about with truth, and having on the breastplate of righteousness; 15 And your feet shod with the preparation of the gospel of peace; 16 Above all, taking the shield of faith, wherewith ye shall be able to quench all the fiery darts of the wicked. 17 And take the helmet of salvation, and the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God: 18 Praying always with all prayer and supplication in the Spirit, and watching thereunto with all...
In Christian Collier's debut poetry collection, Greater Ghost (Four Way Books, 2024), this extraordinary Black Southern poet precisely stitches the sutures of grief and gratitude together over our wounds. These pages move between elegies for private hauntings and public ones, the visceral bereavement of a miscarriage alongside the murder of a family member, and the specter of police brutality. With a profound awareness of literary tradition, Collier enters into the American canon and dialogues with Black Southern noir--a poem like "Beloved," whose title expresses not only a genuine tenderness in its term of endearment but invokes Morrison, contextualizes this book within the legacy of racial injustice in the U.S., presenting again the prolific losses and disproportionate Black mortality across time, and yet remembers the resilience of love and transformative possibility of self-actualization from inside tragedy. Christian J. Collier is a Black, Southern writer, arts organizer, and teaching artist who resides in Chattanooga, TN. He is the author of Greater Ghost (Four Way Books, 2024), and the chapbook The Gleaming of the Blade, the 2021 Editors' Selection from Bull City Press. His work has appeared or is forthcoming in The Atlantic, Poetry, December, and elsewhere. A 2015 Loft Spoken Word Immersion Fellow, he is also the winner of the 2022 Porch Prize in Poetry and the 2020 ProForma Contest from Grist Journal. Instagram: @ichristian3030 Twitter: @ichristian3030 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
In Christian Collier's debut poetry collection, Greater Ghost (Four Way Books, 2024), this extraordinary Black Southern poet precisely stitches the sutures of grief and gratitude together over our wounds. These pages move between elegies for private hauntings and public ones, the visceral bereavement of a miscarriage alongside the murder of a family member, and the specter of police brutality. With a profound awareness of literary tradition, Collier enters into the American canon and dialogues with Black Southern noir--a poem like "Beloved," whose title expresses not only a genuine tenderness in its term of endearment but invokes Morrison, contextualizes this book within the legacy of racial injustice in the U.S., presenting again the prolific losses and disproportionate Black mortality across time, and yet remembers the resilience of love and transformative possibility of self-actualization from inside tragedy. Christian J. Collier is a Black, Southern writer, arts organizer, and teaching artist who resides in Chattanooga, TN. He is the author of Greater Ghost (Four Way Books, 2024), and the chapbook The Gleaming of the Blade, the 2021 Editors' Selection from Bull City Press. His work has appeared or is forthcoming in The Atlantic, Poetry, December, and elsewhere. A 2015 Loft Spoken Word Immersion Fellow, he is also the winner of the 2022 Porch Prize in Poetry and the 2020 ProForma Contest from Grist Journal. Instagram: @ichristian3030 Twitter: @ichristian3030 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/poetry
Mays Monoliths Massow Mandela EffectsThe Ochelli Effect 6-20-2024 News AgainStranger dangers on the Internet of things they call news as you Bruise for a cruise.ENTERTAINMENT NEWSDonald Sutherland, veteran actor and father of Kiefer Sutherland, dead at 88His films include "Ordinary People," "The Hunger Games," "M*A*S*H" and more.https://abcnews.go.com/GMA/Culture/donald-sutherland-veteran-actor-father-kiefer-sutherland-dead/story?id=111284071Moment of silence held at all ballparks for Willie Mayshttps://www.mlb.com/news/mlb-holds-moment-of-silence-for-willie-mays?utm_source=join1440&utm_medium=email&utm_placement=newsletterWe Sent Alex Jones' Infowars Supplements To A Lab. Here's What's In Them.https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/charliewarzel/we-sent-alex-jones-infowars-supplements-to-a-lab-heres stream.2024-06-20.200301.1.mp3RIP Donald Sutherland, JFK Truth Tellerhttps://jfkfacts.substack.com/p/rip-donald-sutherland-jfk-truth-teller?utm_source=post-email-title&publication_id=315632&post_id=145848687&utm_campaign=email-post-title&isFreemail=true&r=68fjc&triedRedirect=true&utm_medium=emailWHAT PASSES FOR AMERICAN CULTURERachel Maddow Presents: Ultra★★★★★★★★★★ 4.8 via 30,708 ratings in Apple Podcasts, Podchaser, and Podcast Addictvia RephonicA history podcast from Rachel Maddow, MSNBCWebsite: https://www.nbcnews.comHow Ouija boards work. (Hint: It's not ghosts.)No, demons will not possess you if you use one.by Aja RomanoJun 18, 2024, 4:50 PM EDThttps://www.vox.com/2016/10/29/13301590/how-ouija-boards-work-debunked-ideomotor-effectLouisiana becomes 1st state requiring Ten Commandments to be posted in classroomshttps://www.axios.com/local/new-orleans/2024/06/19/louisiana-ten-commandments-in-classroomsMcDonald's sees future for AI drive-throughs despite rocky trialhttps://www.thecaterer.com/news/mcdonalds-sees-future-for-ai-drive-throughs-despite-rocky-trialWhite Castle makes a change McDonald's just abandonedhttps://www.thestreet.com/restaurants/white-castle-makes-a-change-mcdonalds-just-abandonedPeople be Mandela Effecting to be sureLouisiana becomes the first state to require that the Ten Commandments be displayed in public classroomshttps://www.cbsnews.com/news/louisiana-ten-commandments-required-displayed-public-school-classrooms/IS THIS THE NEW GEORGIA GUIDESTONES?Gleaming monolith pops up in Nevada desert, the latest in a series of quickly vanishing structureshttps://apnews.com/article/mirrored-monolith-nevada-utah-086adae79f3ea76770ad832da215e8f1The Weird Monoliths Are Backhttps://www.activistpost.com/2024/06/the-weird-monoliths-are-back.htmlRepublicans unveil measure eliminating taxes on tips after Trump proposalhttps://thehill.com/business/4728084-republicans-measure-eliminating-taxes-tips-trump-proposal/Russia stole the election for Trump in 16, China stole it for Biden in 20. Who'll steal it for who in 24?How collective memories can sometimes be inaccurate: Investigating the Mandela Effecthttps://www.clearerthinking.org/post/how-collective-memories-can-sometimes-be-inaccurate-investigating-the-mandela-effect?utm_source=join1440&utm_medium=emailYT STUFFhttps://youtu.be/q38d4rD7cKM?si=iFjm-2vcYdDb3UZ2https://youtube.com/shorts/E1ANR7qhg6I?si=JginO94s5QNN9ewphttps://youtu.be/tDA5IVCLyQk?si=Qsj19uMsYHEFZcdshttps://youtu.be/hFoCyRfUrog?si=HrCrkckQB3Ow1lZLListen/Chat on the Sitehttps://ochelli.com/listen-live/TuneInhttp://tun.in/sfxkxAPPLEhttps://music.apple.com/us/station/ochelli-com/ra.1461174708Friday Night, Are You awake yet?Ochelli Link Treehttps://linktr.ee/chuckochelli
A man devoid of faith is warmly welcomed to the picture-perfect Italian countryside where he is offered a new role at an illustrious restaurant. But it becomes clear to him that his new job requires dark and horrifying sacrifices in order to craft the ultimate ragu. On Episode 614 of Trick or Treat Radio we discuss the religious horror flick Immaculate from director Michael Mohan! We also talk about our favorite concert-going experiences, the resurgence of nunsploitation films, and the only reason to skip your confirmation! So tightly clutch your favorite religious symbol, try to retain your bodily autonomy, and strap on for the world's most dangerous podcast!Stuff we talk about: Panos Cosmatos, Kristen Stewart, Flesh of the Gods, hedonistic violence, hitting the gym, arms like pipe cleaners, eating ants and tampons, cold turkey, smoking hannukah candles, Bear Dances, Wonka Shades, Gene Wilder, Johnny Depp, Timothy Chalamet, Mario Cipollina, Huey Lewis and the News, 2nd concerts, Queensryche, Metallica, Poison, Guns and Roses, Soundgarden, MC Hammer, Vanilla Ice, Clarence Thomas Clearwater Revival, Billy Joel, Elton John, The Aquabats, Flatbread Truck, Christian Jacobs, Gloria, Archie Bunker's Place, Meatballs 2, snuff organizer, Septic, Razor Ramon, Great White, Immaculate, Michael Mohan, Sydney Sweeney, Madame Web, RIP Quibi, Spider-Man, symbiote, nunsploitation, Killer Nun, Italian horror, skipping confirmation for G.I. Joe, halfsharkalligatorhalfItalian, M3gan, immaculate conception, Rosemary's Baby, Suspiria, Mother!, POS Bible, The Exorcist, televangelists, Jimmy Swaggart, Jim Baker, The Cult of the Clarksuckers, Orgazmo, stirrups, hospice, Chehkov's Catacombs, trapped under ice, The Invisible Fight, Barbara Magnolfi, body autonomy, women's right, abortion, feminism, Taylor Swift, Ruggero Deodato, Female Trouble, Jungle Holocaust, The Red Queen Kills Seven Times, Jena Malone, Love Lies Bleeding, Rose Glass, Kristen Stewart, Katy O'Brian, Mean Keith Jardine, Steve James, American Ninja, Michael Dudikoff, Judie Aronson, Salem Horror Fest, Cobra Kai, Wonkavision, Gleaming the Grimace, and Nun of the Month.Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/trickortreatradioJoin our Discord Community: discord.trickortreatradio.comSend Email/Voicemail: mailto:podcast@trickortreatradio.comVisit our website: http://trickortreatradio.comStart your own podcast: https://www.buzzsprout.com/?referrer_id=386Use our Amazon link: http://amzn.to/2CTdZzKFB Group: http://www.facebook.com/groups/trickortreatradioTwitter: http://twitter.com/TrickTreatRadioFacebook: http://facebook.com/TrickOrTreatRadioYouTube: http://youtube.com/TrickOrTreatRadioInstagram: http://instagram.com/TrickorTreatRadioSupport the Show.
Fluent Fiction - Hungarian: Bathing in Budapest: A Tale of Thermal Waters and Timeless Secrets Find the full episode transcript, vocabulary words, and more:fluentfiction.org/bathing-in-budapest-a-tale-of-thermal-waters-and-timeless-secrets Story Transcript:Hu: István a Margit Híd lábánál állt. A Duna vize előtte csillogott, a hegyek a hátterében. Dorombolt a város. Sercegtek a hidak. Csörögtek a villamosok. István kissé zavart volt. Budapest egy örvénybe húzta. Most ért rá erre rájönni.En: István stood at the foot of Margit Bridge. The Danube water shimmered before him, with the mountains in the background. The city hummed. The bridges creaked. The trams rattled. István was slightly puzzled. Budapest was pulling him into a vortex. It was just now dawning on him.Hu: István szerette a meleget. Szerette a gőzt. A fürdőt. De Budapest, ó Budapest, a fürdő városa, túl sokat adott neki. Fénylő termálfürdő. Lilás és párnás. A rózsaszínes Király. A furmányos Rudas. Istanbuli emlékek. Két világ, egy Fürdő. Megzavart Istvánt.En: István loved the warmth. He loved the steam. The baths. But Budapest, oh Budapest, the city of baths, had given him too much. Gleaming thermal baths. Purple and pillowy. The rose-colored Király. The ornate Rudas. Memories of Istanbul. Two worlds, one Bath. It unsettled István.Hu: A Gellért felé vette az irányt. Kék kupolái olyan magasra nyúltak. Fel a napba. Halkan csak, de büszkén sütöttek. István a töltő állomás előtt megállt egy kicsit. Az utcán az a varázslatos budapesti hangyaforgalom. Emeletes buszok, mintha valami óriási mókuskerekben forogtak volna körbe-körbe, hiába. Hová menjen most? - töprengett István.En: He headed towards Gellért. Its blue domes reached so high. Towards the sun. Quietly but proudly they shone. István stopped for a moment in front of the charging station. In the street, the magical Budapest traffic buzzed. Double-decker buses circled around as if in a giant merry-go-round, to no avail. Where should he go now? István pondered.Hu: Beugrott egy taxi. Az ablakából egy öreg sofőr integetett neki. "Hová viszem?" - kérdezte. "A fürdőbe" - válaszolt István, és úgy érezte, túl általános volt. Az öreg taxista kuncogott egy sort. "Melyiket önt érdekli? A termált, vagy a törököt?", kérdezte vén hangon.En: A taxi pulled up. An elderly driver waved at him from the window. "Where to?" he asked. "To the baths," István replied, feeling it was too vague. The old taxi driver chuckled. "Which one interests you? The thermal, or the Turkish one?" he asked in a weathered voice.Hu: István erre nem tudott válaszolni. Azt sem tudja most, melyiket akarja. Vonzzák a buborékok. A gőz. Az illat. De Budapest valamit rejteget, amitől nehéz szabadulni. A török fürdők csábító világa. Titkainak melegében gyökereznek gyógyforrásai. Az évszázadok pora játszik a sötét kertekben. Ahol az idő megszűnik.En: István couldn't answer that. He didn't even know which one he wanted now. Bubbles attracted him. Steam. The scent. But Budapest held something that was hard to shake off. The enticing world of Turkish baths. Its healing springs rooted in the warmth of its secrets. The centuries' dust played in the dark gardens. Where time stood still.Hu: Az öreg taxista ránézett a hátsó tükörben, és huncut mosollyal kérdezte: "Azt kérdem, István, melyik világot akarod érezni?" A kérdés furcsa, de valahogy jó volt. István ránézett a taxira, aztán az öreg sofőrre. Aztán Budapestre. Nagyot húzott a levegőből. "Mindkettőt akarom" - felelte végül, és elmosolyodott. "Akkor jöjj, van egy hely, ahol mindkettőhöz elvezethetlek" – felelte az öreg.En: The old taxi driver looked at him through the rearview mirror and asked with a mischievous smile, "I ask you, István, which world do you want to experience?" The question was strange, but somehow good. István looked at the taxi, then at the old driver. Then at Budapest. He took a deep breath. "I want both," he finally answered, and smiled. "Then come, I have a place where I can take you to both," replied the old man.Hu: István követte az öreg taxista tanácsát. Nem tudta, hogy pontosan melyik fürdőt választja, de tudta, hogy Budapest kebelében minden választás egy kaland. Az öregségétől ravaszságot, az ifjúságától bátorságot kölcsönzött, és belépett a fürdőszalonba.En: István followed the advice of the old taxi driver. He didn't know exactly which bath to choose, but he knew that in the heart of Budapest, every choice was an adventure. He borrowed shrewdness from old age, bravery from youth, and entered the bathhouse.Hu: Ahogy a gőzbe lett angyalelvetés: tudta, hogy jól döntött. Belenyugodott. Hogy az öreg taxista igazat mondott: Budapest fürdői nem választhatók szét. Megtapasztalva a termálvizek gyógyító erejét és a török fürdők időtlen békéjét, tudta, hogy ez a fürdők városa.En: As the steam enveloped him, it was like an epiphany: he knew he had made the right choice. He resigned himself to it. That the old taxi driver was right: Budapest's baths couldn't be separated. Experiencing the healing power of thermal waters and the timeless peace of Turkish baths, he knew that this was the city of baths.Hu: És így zárult le az a varázslatos nap, amikor István, összezavarva, de boldogan felfedezte Budapestet és a fürdők titkát. Aznap este István békésen aludt, álmai Budapest fürdőit járták. Nevetett. Aludt. Megértette. Őrizte Budapestet. Együtt a városával. A fürdőivel. Minden a helyén volt. Closet a sztori középpontjában. Minden kielégítő volt. Eső volt. Eső volt.En: And so ended that magical day when István, bewildered but happily explored Budapest and the secret of the baths. That evening, István slept peacefully, his dreams filled with Budapest's baths. He laughed. Slept. Understood. He cherished Budapest. Together with his city. Its baths. Everything was in its place. The story came to a satisfying close. It was raining. It was raining. Vocabulary Words:water: vízmountains: hegyekcity: városbridges: hidaktrams: villamosokvortex: örvénywarmth: melegsteam: gőzbaths: fürdőthermal: termálpurple: lilásrose-colored: rózsaszínesornate: furmányosmemories: emlékekworlds: világokblue: kékdomes: kupoláksun: napcharging station: töltő állomástraffic: forgalomtaxi: taxielderly: öregdriver: sofőrhealing: gyógyítósecrets: titkokcenturies: évszázadokdust: porgardens: kertektime: időpeace: békesség
With its distinctive 16-notes-to-the-bar bassline and unashamedly honky sax solo (played on two saxes at once), Ian Dury and the Blockheads' signature hit was certainly one of the more idiosyncratic No 1s of the 1970s. The same could be said of their inimitable frontman, who exemplified the post-punk era's particular ability to allow unlikely and extraordinary characters to infiltrate the mainstream.Just three years prior to reaching the top spot in January 1979, the edgy, twitchy singer-narrator-wordsmith dubbed “the Count Dracula of vernacular” had been the thirtysomething, struggling frontman of Kilburn and the High Roads, a seemingly washed-up, chaotic, bedraggled bunch of misfits and miscreants. Left with a severely withered arm and leg following a childhood bout of polio, Dury had already overcome disability, taunts and school days he described as “heavy-duty sadism” and “unmitigated hell” to become an unconventional but riveting live performer.
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Fluent Fiction - Japanese: The Quest for the Hidden Oasis: A Tokyo Adventure Find the full episode transcript, vocabulary words, and more:fluentfiction.org/the-quest-for-the-hidden-oasis-a-tokyo-adventure Story Transcript:Ja: 東京の喧騒があたりを包み込むなか、ハルトとユイ、二人の若者は旅の途中でちょっとした問題に直面していた。ユイの小さな顔は不安で見るからに青ざめており、ハルトの口元には困った笑みが浮かんでいた。彼らの目的は、あの大都市東京にあふれるかわいらしい小さな店、コンビニエンスストアにあった。しかし、そこではなく、その奥、誰もが一度は利用するであろう場所、トイレを探さなければならなかった。En: Amidst the hustle and bustle of Tokyo, two young individuals, Haruto and Yui, found themselves facing a small problem on their journey. Yui's petite face was noticeably pale with worry, while a troubled smile adorned Haruto's lips. Their goal was to find a charming little shop overflowing in the bustling city of Tokyo - a convenience store. However, instead of there, they had to search for a place that everyone would need to use at some point: the restroom.Ja: 透明なガラス越しに、明るく照らされた店内が見え、ハルトはここだと確信した。「Seeing is believing」、彼は息を吹き返し、ユイの肩を軽く叩いた。「大丈夫、ここにあるよ。」ハルトの確信に満ちた声に、ユイの緊張が少し和らいだ。En: Peering through the transparent glass, they could see the brightly lit interior of the store, and Haruto was certain that it was the place. "Seeing is believing," he reassured himself and lightly tapped Yui's shoulder. "It's here." Haruto's confident voice eased Yui's tension slightly.Ja: しかし、コンビニの中は見た目以上に複雑だった。商品がきっちりと並べられた棚、光り輝くクーラーケース、そして子供でもわかるような看板があるにもかかわらず、トイレの場所だけは一向に見つけることができなかった。ハルトは困り果てて店員に尋ねることにした。En: However, inside the convenience store was more complicated than it appeared. Despite the neatly arranged shelves of products, the gleaming cooler cases, and signs that even children could understand, they could not find the location of the restroom anywhere. Haruto, at a loss, decided to ask a staff member.Ja: 「すみません、トイレはどこでしょうか?」ハルトが尋ねると、店員は店の奥を指し示した。En: "Excuse me, where is the restroom?" When Haruto asked, the staff member pointed to the back of the store.Ja: ついに、トイレを目の前にすると、ユイの顔がほっとした表情に変わった。それは旅の中で出会った小さな困難を二人で解決したことによる達成感だった。微笑みながら、ハルトは思わず口にした。「次回からは、最初から店員に聞こう。」En: Finally, when they reached the restroom, relief washed over Yui's face. It was the sense of accomplishment from overcoming a small challenge together on their journey. Smiling, Haruto couldn't help but say, "Next time, let's just ask the staff from the beginning."Ja: この日以降、ハルトとユイは、迷ったときは恥ずかしがらずに聞くことの大切さを学んだのであった。次の旅では、二人が同じ問題に直面したとき、彼らはすぐにそれを解決できるようになるだろう。それが、若者たちが東京の都市に学んだ一つの教訓だった。En: From that day on, Haruto and Yui learned the importance of not being afraid to ask when lost. In their next journey, when they faced a similar problem, they would be able to resolve it quickly. This was a lesson the young travelers learned in the city of Tokyo. Vocabulary Words:Amidst: "包み込むなか"hustle and bustle: "喧騒"Young individuals: "若者"Haruto: "ハルト"Yui: "ユイ"Facing a small problem: "ちょっとした問題に直面していた"Worry: "不安"Troubled smile: "困った笑み"Charming: "かわいらしい"Overflowing: "あふれる"Bustling city: "大都市"Convenience store: "コンビニエンスストア"Restroom: "トイレ"Peering through: "透明なガラス越しに"Brightly lit interior: "明るく照らされた店内"Seeing is believing: "Seeing is believing"Confident voice: "確信に満ちた声"Neatly arranged shelves: "商品がきっちりと並べられた棚"Gleaming cooler cases: "光り輝くクーラーケース"Staff member: "店員"Excuse me: "すみません"Reached the restroom: "トイレを目の前にする"Sense of accomplishment: "達成感"Small challenge: "小さな困難"Lesson learned: "学んだ一つの教訓"
A group of fresh-faced new back-country rangers travel through the dangerous wilderness, hoping to uncover the origins of a tragedy that has haunted them for the past 606 episodes. On Episode 606 of Trick or Treat Radio we discuss the film Lovely, Dark, and Deep from first time feature director Teresa Sutherland! We also talk about what makes sword and sorcery films great, we debate the greatest illegal narcotics, and find out whether or not we're scared of the woods. So stop fumbling with your headgear, get your dongs out for DnD, and strap on for the world's most dangerous podcast!Stuff we talk about: Sword and Sorcery flicks, Deathstalker, Steven Kostanski, Daniel Bernhardt, pet the cat, the king of scat, validating, GMT, Wolfenstein in Ravenshadow clothing, One Crazy Summer, pod-NARC, Pod-Knocker, Connor Sweeney, a caddish rogue, why would you remake a porn, #releasethebrauncut, Cocaine Werewolf, Cocaine Shark, Mark Polonia, Stephen Scarlata, Rondo Awards, Spooktacular, Sharksploitation, The Last Podcast on the Left, Christian Slater, Voyagers, deadly set mishaps, Sixteen Candles, Anthony Michael Hall, Ryan Kruger, Street Trash, Toxic Avenger IV, Terror Firmer, Joel Robinson, the Bathsalt Gators, Flakka, second run theaters, making moms watch gross movies, Boston Museum of Fine Arts, 2001: A Space Odyssey, A Clockwork Orange, Dune Popcorn Buckets, Darby Scissorhands, the Paisano Brothers, Darby Allin, Saltburn, Barry Keoghan, Mass Transit, GG Allin, Feces Pieces, NDA All Day, Robert Frost, Lovely Dark and Deep, Kobayashi Maru, Powerman 5000, Bad Religion, Social D, Derek Mears from IT, weird dreams, oxford comma, Bird Box, Twin Peaks, Sator, Georgina Campbell, take nothing leave nothing kill nothing, the woods as the antagonist, Caterpillar Carnage, Blair Witch Project, Midnight Nation, Shida Shahabi, dealing with grief, the Guardians of the Green, The Iron Claw, Anthony Landry, Zac Efron, Will Ferrell, Flavor Rave, Highlander, Christopher Lambert, Sean Connery, Clancy Brown, Queen, Michael Kamen, Emma Stone, Mark Ruffalo, Willem Dafoe, New York Ripper, Dune 2, Fumbling with Headgear, Dongs Out for DnD, The Renaissance of Sleaze, Interspecies Kombat, You Packing Any Gravel?, Oxford Karma, Lost Comma on the Left, and so chuffed I've been chafing.Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/trickortreatradioJoin our Discord Community: discord.trickortreatradio.comSend Email/Voicemail: mailto:podcast@trickortreatradio.comVisit our website: http://trickortreatradio.comStart your own podcast: https://www.buzzsprout.com/?referrer_id=386Use our Amazon link: http://amzn.to/2CTdZzKFB Group: http://www.facebook.com/groups/trickortreatradioTwitter: http://twitter.com/TrickTreatRadioFacebook: http://facebook.com/TrickOrTreatRadioYouTube: http://youtube.com/TrickOrTreatRadioInstagram: http://instagram.com/TrickorTreatRadioSupport the show
2007's HOT ROD tells the story of aspiring stuntman Rod Kimble, played by Andy Samberg, and his attempts to pull off his most impressive stunt yet to help raise money to save his stepfather, played by Ian MacShane. And there's some skateboarding.Kevin and Mike are joined by their pal Guy Benoit to discuss this deeply silly movie. So strap on your best false mustache and check out this exciting installment of Gleaming the Tube! Cool beans! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
What's Up Nerds!? Rich, Ron, and Diesel are back to bring you our weekly movie review! This week we dust off our skateboards and review Gleaming the Cube (1989) for its 35th Anniversary! Will this movie skate its way to Certified Nerd or will it wipeout? For More Information About The 3FN Podcast Visit 3fnpodcast.com Visit Dubby.gg and use Promo Code 3FNPOD at checkout for 10% off
It's a typical holiday episode, in that we're discussing Julia Child, Pop Rocks, and Newsies. But there are some vaguely holiday-themed subjects too, including Kornflake's newfound candy cane addiction, Kevin's recent guest appearance on Gleaming the Tube (discussing old Christmas specials!), and a round or two of the Figgy Pudding Pages. We're keeping it super-short this week and passing the savings on to you. Go do something festive. Gleaming the Tube - Our Favorite Holiday Specials! And our regular links... The Flopcast website! The ESO Network! The Flopcast on Facebook! The Flopcast on Instagram! The Flopcast on Mastadon! Please rate and review The Flopcast on Apple Podcasts! Email: info@flopcast.net Our music is by The Sponge Awareness Foundation! This week's promo: The Watch-A-Thon of Rassilon!
Skip joins the guys for It's Just Bodybuilding with Big Ron Partlow & Scott McNally. Dusty was traveling TIME STAMPS BELOW
This week's episode of The Literary Life we bring you a special interview with Jenn Rogers! Angelina Stanford and Cindy Rollins talk with Jenn about her own literary life and how she learned the things she is now passing on to others through The House of Humane Letters. Jenn shares how languages and literature were a part of her life from a young age as a child of missionaries in the Dominican Republic and homeschooled in a Charlotte Mason style. She also shares how surprising challenges ended up opening a door for her family to use AmblesideOnline and other resources, using their imaginations and creativity in getting a great education. The House of Humane Letters is currently having their Christmas sale until December 31, 2023. Everything is now 20% OFF, so hop on over and get the classes at their best prices now. In addition to the sale, you can also sign up for Atlee Northmore's webinar “A Medieval Romance in a Galaxy Far, Far Away: How to Read Star Wars.” Cindy is also offering at 20% OFF discount throughout the holidays. Use coupon code “advent2023” on MorningTimeforMoms.com/shop until January 2024. Commonplace Quotes: But if literature teaches us anything at all, it is this, that we have an eternal element free from care and fear which can survey the things in life we call evil with serenity, that is, not without appreciating their quality but without any disturbance of our spiritual equilibrium. Not in the same way, but in some such way, we shall all doubtless survey our own story when we know it, and a great deal more of the Whole Story. J. R. R. Tolkien, from The Letters of J. R. R. Tolkien This final argument is an indication of how monastic writers like Ælfric sought to understand the cycle of the seasons. They wanted to read and interpret the natural world, to learn to recognize the meaning God had planted in it. They saw time and seasons, from the very first day of the world, as carefully arranged by God with method and purpose, so they believed it would be possible to organize the calendar, not according to the randomness of custom and inherited tradition, but in a way that reflected that divine plan. Eleanor Parker, from Winters in the World It is both the glory and the shame of poetry that its medium is not its private property, that a poet cannot invent his words and that words are products, not of nature, but of a human society which uses them for a thousand different purposes. In modern societies where language is continually being debased and reduced to nonspeech, the poet is in constant danger of having his ear corrupted, a danger to which the painter and the composer, whose media are their private property, are not exposed. On the other hand, he is more protected than they from another modern peril, that of solipsist subjectivity; however esoteric a poem may be, the fact that all its words have meanings which can be looked up in a dictionary makes it testify to the existence of other people Even the language of Finnegan's Wake was not created by Joyce ex nihilo; a purely private verbal world is not possible. W. H. Auden, from The Dyer's Hand Cliche Came Out of Its Cage by C. S. Lewis You said 'The world is going back to Paganism'. Oh bright Vision! I saw our dynasty in the bar of the House Spill from their tumblers a libation to the Erinyes, And Leavis with Lord Russell wreathed in flowers, heralded with flutes, Leading white bulls to the cathedral of the solemn Muses To pay where due the glory of their latest theorem. Hestia's fire in every flat, rekindled, burned before The Lardergods. Unmarried daughters with obedient hands Tended it By the hearth the white-armd venerable mother Domum servabat, lanam faciebat. at the hour Of sacrifice their brothers came, silent, corrected, grave Before their elders; on their downy cheeks easily the blush Arose (it is the mark of freemen's children) as they trooped, Gleaming with oil, demurely home from the palaestra or the dance. Walk carefully, do not wake the envy of the happy gods, Shun Hubris. The middle of the road, the middle sort of men, Are best. Aidos surpasses gold. Reverence for the aged Is wholesome as seasonable rain, and for a man to die Defending the city in battle is a harmonious thing. Thus with magistral hand the Puritan Sophrosune Cooled and schooled and tempered our uneasy motions; Heathendom came again, the circumspection and the holy fears ... You said it. Did you mean it? Oh inordinate liar, stop. Or did you mean another kind of heathenry? Think, then, that under heaven-roof the little disc of the earth, Fortified Midgard, lies encircled by the ravening Worm. Over its icy bastions faces of giant and troll Look in, ready to invade it. The Wolf, admittedly, is bound; But the bond wil1 break, the Beast run free. The weary gods, Scarred with old wounds the one-eyed Odin, Tyr who has lost a hand, Will limp to their stations for the Last defence. Make it your hope To be counted worthy on that day to stand beside them; For the end of man is to partake of their defeat and die His second, final death in good company. The stupid, strong Unteachable monsters are certain to be victorious at last, And every man of decent blood is on the losing side. Take as your model the tall women with yellow hair in plaits Who walked back into burning houses to die with men, Or him who as the death spear entered into his vitals Made critical comments on its workmanship and aim. Are these the Pagans you spoke of? Know your betters and crouch, dogs; You that have Vichy water in your veins and worship the event Your goddess History (whom your fathers called the strumpet Fortune). Books Mentioned: The Collected Letters of C. S. Lewis, Volume 3 by C. S. Lewis Macbeth by William Shakespeare Support The Literary Life: Become a patron of The Literary Life podcast as part of the “Friends and Fellows Community” on Patreon, and get some amazing bonus content! Thanks for your support! Connect with Us: You can find Angelina and Thomas at HouseofHumaneLetters.com, on Instagram @angelinastanford, and on Facebook at www.facebook.com/ANGStanford/ Find Cindy at morningtimeformoms.com, on Instagram @cindyordoamoris and on Facebook at www.facebook.com/CindyRollinsWriter. Check out Cindy's own Patreon page also! Follow The Literary Life on Instagram, and jump into our private Facebook group, The Literary Life Discussion Group, and let's get the book talk going! http://bit.ly/literarylifeFB
This week we're gleaming the KubeCon. Ok, some people say CubeCon, while others say KubeCon…we talk with Solomon Hykes about all things Dagger, Tammer Saleh and James McShane about going beyond cloud native with SuperOrbital, and Steve Francis and Spencer Smith about the state of Talos Linux and what they're working on at Sidero Labs.
It's the quick fill-in episode to end all quick fill-in episodes! With Kornflake still unavailable (busy at a lobster-and-British-comedy convention, we assume), there's nobody left in the studio except Kevin and a few stray rubber chickens. So we just have a bunch of podcast recommendations for you, because somebody out there must have more going on than us. There are the other fine shows of the ESO Network, of course, including two new ones: 3 Fries Short (all about Stargate) and Tales From Hollywoodland (with special guest STEVE GUTTENBERG)! Beyond ESO, we also recommend: A Podcask of Amontillado, Bizarre Albums, Built to Go, Conan O'Brien Needs a Friend, Mallwalkin', The Dana Gould Hour, TV Guidance Counselor, Decoder Ring, Dreamland, The Funny Music Podcast, Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast, Gleaming the Tube, Hit Parade, The Hustle, Luke and Carrie's Bad Rapport, The Real Brady Bros, The Skeptics' Guide to the Universe, Strange Animals Podcast, and Who Cares About the Rock Hall. We could go on, but that should get you through the week. And if you'd rather rip out those earbuds and read something instead, we're also enjoying the new book Galloping Around the Cosmos. It's a collection of essays about growing up with Star Trek, and several of the authors are friends of the Flopcast. It makes us want to break out our old Mego Enterprise playset. Next week: We'll either get back to our usual silly business, or we'll turn the whole show over to the chickens. The Flopcast website! The ESO Network! The Flopcast on Facebook! The Flopcast on Instagram! The Flopcast on Mastadon! Please rate and review The Flopcast on Apple Podcasts! Email: info@flopcast.net Our music is by The Sponge Awareness Foundation! This week's promo: Earth Station Who!
“There is something terribly wrong with this country, isn't there? Cruelty and injustice, intolerance and oppression. And where once you had the freedom to object, to think and speak as you saw fit, you now have censors and systems of surveillance coercing your conformity and soliciting your submission. How did this happen? Who's to blame?”— V for VendettaON THE GO? SUBSCRIBE TO HAGMANN'S PODCASTiTunes: (https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/hagmann-report/id631558915?uo=4)Spotify: BANNED!iHeart: (https://www.iheart.com/podcast/256-hagmann-report-30926499/)--------------------------------Our website: https://www.hagmannpi.com/--------------------------------Help take years off the clock with Collagen - http://www.HealthWithDoug.com
When Ferree (rhymes with "Marie") became a widow the day before her 44th birthday, she didn't have a clue about what to do, where to start, or if she'd even remember to breathe. But eventually--(because believe it or not--grieving takes more than two weeks) --through the timeless, biblical story of Ruth and Naomi, she found hope and purpose. She's been there; she "gets it" about widowhood. Now, along with writing and speaking, she helps widows groups, provides life coaching, and is the author of "Postcards from the Widows' Path." Her book has been comforting and giving hope to thousands of widows since 2012. She holds a BA from Moody Bible Institute and was a pastor's wife in Ohio for over twenty years before her first husband died. She's remarried to Tom Hardy, who was also widowed in 2000. "Postcards from the Widows' Path—Gleaning Hope and Purpose from the Book of Ruth" opens each short chapter with a "postcard" from Ruth or Naomi, which illustrates her struggle and development through grief. Widows relate to this tale of transformation and find their life-changing journey through guided exercises, key Bible verses, and simple prayers. It's available from Ferree in person or through her blog bookstore at ww.widowschristianplace.com. With 5-star reviews, it's a thoughtful gift or small group reading choice. Paperback, 248 pages, $14.99. Ferree Hardy Personal Website widowschristianplace.com Social Media Links https://www.facebook.com/ferree.hardy
Post Show Recaps: LIVE TV & Movie Podcasts with Rob Cesternino
In this episode of the podcast, Josh and Mike recap Season 1 Episode 13 of Battlestar Galactica, "Kobol's Last Gleaming, Part 2."
In this episode of the podcast, Josh and Mike recap Season 1 Episode 13 of Battlestar Galactica, "Kobol's Last Gleaming, Part 2."
Post Show Recaps: LIVE TV & Movie Podcasts with Rob Cesternino
In this episode of the podcast, Josh and Mike recap Season 1 Episode 12 of Battlestar Galactica, "Kobol's Last Gleaming, Part 1."
In this episode of the podcast, Josh and Mike recap Season 1 Episode 12 of Battlestar Galactica, "Kobol's Last Gleaming, Part 1."
In what may be one of the most brazenly nerdy Remnant episodes ever recorded (which is really saying a lot) Duke University's Bruce Caldwell joins the program to discuss the life and work of Friedrich Hayek. Dr. Caldwell, the pope of Hayekian geekdom, recently published the first installment of a two volume biography of the famed economist. Guided by Jonah's gleeful prompting, he explores how Hayek rose to international prominence, what he was like as a man, and how we should view his great works today. If you woke up feeling all Austrian this morning, it's a must listen.Show Notes:- Dr. Caldwell's page at Duke- Dr. Caldwell's new book, Hayek: A Life, 1899–1950 - Dr. Caldwell's intellectual biography of Hayek, Hayek's Challenge- Hayek: “The Intellectuals and Socialism”- Hayek: “The Use of Knowledge in Society”- Dr. Caldwell on -Political Economy with Jim Pethokoukis