Podcasts about grrrr

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Best podcasts about grrrr

Latest podcast episodes about grrrr

The Craig T. Owens Audio Blog

f you're a shepherd leader, what do you do when the sheep under your care go, “Grrrr!”? Check out the video version of this episode of The Podcast. I would encourage you to pick up a copy of When Sheep Bite to help you handle your murmuring sheep in a productive and God-honoring way. ►► Would you please prayerfully consider supporting this ministry? My Patreon supporters get behind-the-scenes access to exclusive materials. ◀︎◀︎

Radio Campus France
HELOWISE | Campus Local Club, mixtape

Radio Campus France

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2025 56:41


HELOWISE alias Héloïse est une DJ et productrice française. Originaire de Bretagne, sa passion pour la musique commence dès l'enfance avec le violon puis la guitare. Elle découvre les platines en Guadeloupe (DOM) et se perfectionne rapidement grâce à une précision et une recherche musicale constante. Elle se produit ainsi dans de nombreux évènements à travers les Caraïbes avant de s'exporter dans l'hexagone. Son style musical naviguant entre la Techno et la Trance, est empreint de mélodies envoûtantes qui captivent et transportent son public dans un univers sonore irréversible. GRrrr ! SC : https://soundcloud.com/user-670597959 @user-670597959 IG : https://www.instagram.com/helowise_music/profilecard/?igsh=emR3cXdwbzhhNW9t YT : https://www.youtube.com/HelowiseMusic TikTok : https://www.tiktok.com/helowise_music Production : Radio U Radio Campus à Brest https://www.radio-u.org ------------------------------------------------------ CAMPUS LOCAL CLUB l'émission Campus Local Club : le son des collectifs de vos villes. En diffusion sur les radios du réseau Radio Campus France Toutes les mixtapes : https://www.radiocampus.fr/emission/campus-club-mixtapes ------------------------------------------------------ RADIO CAMPUS FRANCE Radio Campus France est le réseau des radios associatives, libres, étudiantes et locales fédérant 30 radios partout en France. NOUS SUIVRE | FOLLOW US www.radiocampus.fr Insta @radio_campus NOUS ÉCOUTER | LISTEN Site, webradios et podcasts www.radiocampus.fr

Campus Club
HELOWISE | CAMPUS LOCAL CLUB |

Campus Club

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2025 56:41


HELOWISE alias Héloïse est une DJ et productrice française. Originaire de Bretagne, sa passion pour la musique commence dès l'enfance avec le violon puis la guitare. Elle découvre les platines en Guadeloupe (DOM) et se perfectionne rapidement grâce à une précision et une recherche musicale constante. Elle se produit ainsi dans de nombreux évènements à travers les Caraïbes avant de s'exporter dans l'hexagone. Son style musical naviguant entre la Techno et la Trance, est empreint de mélodies envoûtantes qui captivent et transportent son public dans un univers sonore irréversible. GRrrr ! SC : https://soundcloud.com/user-670597959 @user-670597959 IG : https://www.instagram.com/helowise_music/profilecard/?igsh=emR3cXdwbzhhNW9t YT : https://www.youtube.com/HelowiseMusic TikTok : https://www.tiktok.com/helowise_music Production : Radio U Radio Campus à Brest https://www.radio-u.org ------------------------------------------------------ CAMPUS LOCAL CLUB l'émission Campus Local Club : le son des collectifs de vos villes. En diffusion sur les radios du réseau Radio Campus France Toutes les mixtapes : https://www.radiocampus.fr/emission/campus-club-mixtapes ------------------------------------------------------ RADIO CAMPUS FRANCE Radio Campus France est le réseau des radios associatives, libres, étudiantes et locales fédérant 30 radios partout en France. NOUS SUIVRE | FOLLOW US www.radiocampus.fr Insta @radio_campus NOUS ÉCOUTER | LISTEN Site, webradios et podcasts www.radiocampus.frHébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

The Nightfly with Dave Juskow

Beetlejuice Beetlejuice - don't even think about saying it again as I went to the Upper West Side to see the extremely fun sequel with friends who were extremely late. Grrrr. Also, seeing the band Squeeze in Central Park - well not seeing them - hearing them while walking around Central Park in the dark, which was incredibly entertaining, even though all the bathrooms were locked. Lame. And finally, a late night ride on the Boulevard of Death. That truly is what Queens Boulevard is called and even though it may feel safe in the dedicated bike lane, that nickname alone, stays with you. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Gag Economy
The Opera Singer One ft. Michael Hewitt

Gag Economy

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2024 70:53


HAPPY POD DAY! In this episode we have the INCREDIBLE, TALENTED AND EXTREMELY JACKED ....wait for it........MICHAEL HEWITT!! He is both known for performing and for teaching men how to be, well, more manly. GRRRR! We deep dive further into our love of opera, wellness, being naked on the job and what it's like to be silent but deadly. Stay to the end for a messy little surprise. 

Dystopia
Smirnoff Summer Special: Promillequiz, Ice Ice & Fuck You All

Dystopia

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2024 53:47


Vi fortsetter med deilig sommer cast og gir dere den siste timen med Smirnoff. Det er snakk om Icing, vi fyrer opp grillen og roaster alle før det blir en sexy, sensuell sommerquiz. Grrrr hot stuff. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Hazel & Katniss & Harry & Starr
Mailbag 37: Skins Music

Hazel & Katniss & Harry & Starr

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2024 3:57


Brenna and Joe are dismayed to hear from listener Dann that (of course!) the Muzak we're been hearing on Skins isn't what originally aired. And when we find out what we *could* be hearing, it's even more galling. Grrrr!Wanna connect with the show? Follow us on Twitter, Instagram and BlueSky @HKHSPod or use the hashtag #HKHSPod:> Brenna: @brennacgray (BlueSky/Instagram)> Joe: @bstolemyremote (Twitter/Instagram) or @joelipsett (BlueSky)Have a mail bag question? Email us at hkhspod@gmail.com Theme music: Ben Fox "Think About the Lights" Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The Writer's Almanac
Let's talk about honesty, grrrr, rrrfff, rrrfff

The Writer's Almanac

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2024 7:18


The fact is that when I was a kid in Minnesota, struggling my way through six-foot snowdrifts to school, long before lightweight down coats were invented — I was an 82-pound fourth-grader wearing 42 pounds of heavy woolens and corduroy, and one day I was caught by a pack of coyotes who carried me away to their den where I remained for several years and learned their language of growling, snuffling, snorting. I, being prehensile, was sent into the henhouse to snatch chickens, while the others distracted the farmer's dog, and I bit the chickens' throats and bled them dry and carried the bodies back to the den where we ate them raw.I was rescued by hunters and returned to my parents who had recovered from their grief and didn't know what to do with me. I relearned English and I regained a semblance of good manners, though even now, years later, I sometimes urinate on the bathroom floor to mark my space against intruders, which upsets my wife and so does my habit of woofing in my sleep and sometimes I've smelled feathers in my sleep and attacked my pillow and chewed a hole in it, so we switched to foam rubber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit garrisonkeillor.substack.com/subscribe

So Wizard Podcast
EPISODE 504: GODZILLA X KONG: THE NEW EMPIRE

So Wizard Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2024 47:33


Grrrr! Arrrgh!!! This week it's time to go back to the Monsterverse as we review GODZILLA X KONG: THE NEW EMPIRE!  Find out if this monster mash is worth a watch when you listen on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or right on our website! Check out our merch store! You can now support us on Patreon and get an extra episode of the podcast every month! Check out our You Tube channel!  Follow us on Tik Tok!  Follow us on Twitter! Like us on Facebook! Follow us on Instagram

Your Daily Lex
Dance Dance Elocution

Your Daily Lex

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2023 5:26


Grrrr. Argggggh. Grumpiness. Also, joy. Transcript

Stress Therapy
Gender Speak: How to Communicate With The Opposite Sex Successfully

Stress Therapy

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2023 29:57


Gender and communication is tricky. Why is it so hard to get your point across, resolve old arguments and just be heard? Grrrr. Today, you will learn the best way to communicate with someone who might not communicate like you do and I am telling you, this one is a life changer! Then, we will do a heart and throat chakra meditation together. In this episode we will learn: ~Why communication between the sexes seems so much harder than it seems it should be ~Exactly who Joey and Susie are and what they have to do with your conversation ~Heart and throat chakra meditation The Host for this podcast: Cheri Augustine Flake, LCSW The Stress Therapist and Author Join Cheri Flake on her Next Meditation And Yoga Retreat! In the mountains or At the beach Love the show? Please rate and review us! Send some love bucks to the show: Paypal: cheri@thestresstherapist.com Venmo: @cheri-flake Thank you! Interesting Mentions:Cheri's Book addressing the communication patterns in this podcast: Honey Do To Honey DONE! A Simple System For A Productive And Happy Household With Absolutely No More Nagging! Heartwood Retreat Center : location for Cheri's Georgia Mountain Retreats Ethereal Network of Shows Spotlight!Kerri Hummingbird Sami Soul Guide Every day offers a square centimeter of hope. To see it is to be blessed. Host of Soul Nectar Show w: www.kerrihummingbird.com e: kerri.hummingbird@gmail.com c: 512-809-9816 twitter: KerriHummingbrd facebook: Kerri.Hummingbird linkedin: Kerri Hummingbird instagram: Kerri.Hummingbird doTerra essential oils for mood rebalancing Award-winning memoir, Awakening To Me From We To Me: Emerging Self After Divorce Stay in touch with Cheri and be a part of the Stress Therapy Community!Twitter: @stresstherapy Instagram: @thestresstherapist Facebook Linkedin Website YouTube Join Cheri Flake on her next retreat! Register for a meditation and yoga retreat in the gorgeous Georgia Mountains and walk away with a new, solid daily meditation practice with benefits that last a lifetime!ORRegister for sweet, peaceful meditation and yoga beach retreat on Jekyll Island seaside right off the coast of Georgia. Want Cheri Flake to be your therapist? If you live in Georgia go here to schedule a free 15 minute consultation Follow Cheri Flake on GoodReads Buy Cheri's book: Honey Do To Honey DONE! A Simple System For A Productive And Happy Household With Absolutely No More Nagging! A word from your host, Cheri Flake, LCSW: Feeling good after our Stress Therapy session? Awesome. Check out the show notes to connect with me, The Stress Therapist on social media or go to www.iLoveTherapy.com to find out about meditation classes & meditation and yoga retreats.This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/5624757/advertisement

Manna - Food for Thought

SHOW NOTES:John 1:1-5, John 8:12, 2 Peter 1:16-19Gratitude, Review, Reflect, Response, Resolve

City Cast DC
GRRRR! Kicking Off DCPL's Dino Roar Contest

City Cast DC

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2023 17:42


The DC public library is officially kicking off its annual dinosaur roar competition. In the past, the contest has been so popular it's gone global, and the children's librarian behind the whole thing, Elaine Pelton, explains what that says about our city, and how you can join the competition.  Want some more DC news? Then make sure to sign up for our morning newsletter Hey DC. You can subscribe by just texting “DC” to 66866. Interested in advertising with City Cast? Find more info HERE. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Ken, Colleen, & Kurt Podcast
Tensions are Heightened in Windsor Heights

Ken, Colleen, & Kurt Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2023 3:50


Kurt's neighbor send a snarky text to him about the length of his grass....Grrrr.

Ken, Colleen, & Kurt Podcast
But Why the Scuba Suit?

Ken, Colleen, & Kurt Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2023 6:27


Kurt's neighbor send a snarky text to him about the length of his grass....Grrrr.

Pratt on Texas
Episode 3214: Grrrr: House prioritizes gambling votes over tax relief, other top issues central to Texans well-being – Pratt on Texas 5/11/2023

Pratt on Texas

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2023 37:16


The news of Texas covered today includes:Our Lone Star story of the day: Texas House faces another major deadline tonight, and another tomorrow, and yet leadership prioritized votes on gambling and other matters over critical issues – they haven't even gotten to tax relief reconciliation. They are getting votes for bad bills before those that affect Texans' well-being! (I guess on the gambling front it shows that you may not can buy all the votes but you can buy getting a vote on the House floor!)And on the subject of gambling, Abilene's Rep. Stan Lambert voted FOR both expanding casino gambling and online sports gambling in Texas!Texans For Fiscal Responsibility gets this right: The Petulant Children Squabbling Over Property Tax Relief.And then you have all you need know about today's Democratic Party: Texas Democrat, the heretic Rep. Talarico,  slams Ten Commandments in schools after giving pass to sexually explicit books in those same schools.Our Lone Star story of the day is sponsored by Allied Compliance Services providing the best service in DOT, business and personal drug and alcohol testing since 1995.On 11 May 1956 and 1970, Waco and Lubbock, respectively, were hit with deadly, costly tornadoes. Lubbock's 1970 F5 gave rise to Dr. Fujita's “Fujita Scale” to measure cataclysmic wind events and led to modern weather technology.  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3MjcyWk6YzoAnd, other news of Texas.Listen on the radio, or station stream, at 5pm Central. Click for our radio and streaming affiliates.www.PrattonTexas.com

Keys For Kids Ministries
The Master Prankster

Keys For Kids Ministries

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2023


Bible Reading: John 15:9-17Logan loved pranking his big sister Natalie. Today, he'd sneaked into her room while she was at soccer practice and turned everything upside down. When she got home, he hid in his room, waiting for her reaction. After several minutes, her scream echoed down the hallway. "Logan!"Logan fell onto his bed laughing as Natalie stomped in. "Why would you do that to me?" she demanded.Logan shrugged. "What's the big deal? It's funny!""Grrrr!" Natalie balled up her fists. Mom stepped in. "What's going on?""Logan pranked me again. I'm tired of it! Just look at my room!"Mom shook her head. "Come on, Logan. Let's fix this."Logan sighed and followed Mom into Natalie's room. Couldn't Natalie take a joke?Mom watched while Logan flipped Natalie's belongings so they were back to normal. It wasn't so fun this time. No wonder Natalie had been upset--if she was tired after practice, fixing her room would've been a big project.A knot formed in Logan's stomach. "Mom…I haven't been a good brother.""Why's that?" asked Mom.Logan swallowed. "I prank Natalie all the time. It's funny, and it makes me feel popular when I tell stories about it at school. But Natalie and I used to be friends--and now I've ruined it.""Friendship is powerful," Mom said. "Jesus told His disciples that the best kind of love is when we lay down our lives for our friends."Logan's eyes widened. "That's what Jesus did. He died so we could live.""Exactly. If we want to love like Jesus, we can lay down our desires for the sake of our friends."Logan nodded. He knew he had to lay down his desire to prank Natalie in order to love her better.When he finished with Natalie's room, he found her in the kitchen. "Natalie… I'm sorry."She turned. "You are?""Yeah. And I want to be friends again. What would you think about that?"When a joyful smile spread across Natalie's face, Logan knew her answer. -Becca WierwilleHow About You?How well do you love the people in your life? Do you think about how your actions will affect them? Or do you just focus on what you want? Jesus said that the greatest kind of love is laying down our lives for our friends. He did that for us when He died on the cross, and we can show that same kind of love to others, even in small ways. Are there desires you need to give up in order to love your family and friends better?Today's Key Verse:There is no greater love than to lay down one's life for one's friends. (NLT) (John 15:13 )Today's Key Thought:Love others like Jesus

jesus christ master friendship mom devotional prankster grrrr nlt john cbh keys for kids keys for kids ministries childrens bible hour
Latest Peppa pig Stories

You can buy this book now on amazon - clicking the below link: https://amzn.to/3K6kbtr Anayra was really scared of her Dentist trip so we introduced her to this beautiful kit from Amazon. She enjoyed and played with it a couple of times and then she was good to go and was waiting for her trip. https://amzn.to/3lDgXnK Transcript: Narrator: Every morning, Peppa and George brush their teeth. Peppa Pig: (She's gigging.) Narrator: Today, Peppa and George are going to the dentist. Mummy Pig: Peppa, George, are you ready to go for your check-up? Daddy Pig: We all need check-ups to make sure our teeth are clean and healthy. Peppa Pig: Ok, Daddy. (She snorts.) George, are your teeth clean like mine? Narrator: It's George's first visit to the dentist. Daddy Pig: You both have lovely, clean teeth. I'm sure the dentist will be very happy. Peppa & George Pig: (giggling.) Narrator: Peppa and George wait at the dentist for their check-up. Peppa Pig: (yawns.) Daddy Pig: This magazine is very interesting. (snorts.) It's all about potatoes. Mummy Pig: (yawns.) Peppa Pig: (yawns.) Mrs. Rabbit: Peppa, George, the dentist will see you now. Peppa Pig: Hooray! Peppa and George: (giggling) Narrator: This is Dr. Elephant, the dentist. Dr. Elephant: Hello, Peppa, have you been brushing your teeth? Peppa Pig: Yes, Dr. Elephant. Dr. Elephant: Good. Now, who's first? Peppa Pig: I'm first because I'm a big girl. Watch me, George. Dr. Elephant: Sit in the chair, please. Dr. Elephant: Hold tight. Peppa Pig: Whee! (giggling) Dr. Elephant: Open wide, please. Peppa Pig: Aaaaaah! Dr. Elephant: Wider, please. Peppa Pig: Aaaaaahhhhh! Dr. Elephant: Let's take a look. Narrator: Dr. Elephant uses a little mirror to look at Peppa's teeth. Dr. Elephant: I hope you haven't been eating too many sweets, Peppa. Peppa Pig: (garbling) Narrator: It is quite difficult to speak when your mouth is wide open. Peppa Pig: (garbling) Dr. Elephant: Ho-ho-hoh! There, All done. What lovely, clean teeth. Daddy Pig: She takes after me. All: (laughing) Peppa Pig: Can I have the special pink drink now? Dr. Elephant: Yes, but don't drink it, Peppa. Spit it out. Peppa Pig: (gargling) All: (laughing) Peppa Pig: George, now it's your turn. George Pig: No! Narrator: George does not want his turn. Mommy Pig: Maybe you can hold Mr. Dinosaur while the dentist looks at your teeth. George Pig: (giggling) Grrrr! Dinosaur. Dr. Elephant: Very pleased to meet you, Mr. Dinosaur. Peppa Pig: It's not a real dinosaur, it's made of plastic. Dr. Elephant: (laughing) Hold tight. Dr. Elephant: You're doing very well, George. Now, can you show me your teeth? Narrator: George does not want to show the dentist his teeth. Peppa Pig: George, open wide like this. Aaaaaahhhhh! George Pig: (giggling) Aaaaaahhhhh! Dr. Elephant: Ah, there they are. Dr. Elephant: All done. You have very strong, clean teeth, George. Peppa Pig: Are they as lovely as mine, Dr. Elephant? Aaaaaahhhhh! Dr. Elephant: Yes. All: (laughing) Narrator: George is very proud to have clean teeth. Peppa Pig: George, don't forget the pink drink. George Pig: (gargling) Dr. Elephant: But wait! What's this?! Mrs. Rabbit: What's wrong, Dr. Elephant? Dr. Elephant: George has clean teeth, but this dinosaur's teeth are very dirty. Peppa Pig: Oh, no! Dr. Elephant is very cross with Mr. Dinosaur. Dr. Elephant: (laughing) Not at all, Peppa. It's my job to make teeth clean. The water-jet, please, Miss Rabbit. Narrator: Dr. Elephant uses water to clean Mr. Dinosaur's teeth. Dr. Elephant: The polisher, please, Miss Rabbit. This will be a bit noisy. Narrator: Dr. Elephant polishes Mr. Dinosaur's teeth. George Pig: Pink, pink! Dr. Elephant: That's right, George. Mr. Dinosaur needs some special pink drink. Mrs. Rabbit: Gosh, what shiny teeth you have, Mr. Dinosaur. George Pig: Grrrrrr! George Pig: (giggling) Dinosaur. Peppa Pig: Eeek! Too scary! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/funwithanayra/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/funwithanayra/support

Coffee with the Counselors
Taking the GRRRR Out of Anger!

Coffee with the Counselors

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 2, 2023 21:16


In this edition of Coffee with the Counselors, the Counselors discuss addressing Anger.

Der Pferdepodcast
Episode 195 - Her mit der Box! (Teaser)

Der Pferdepodcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2022 5:21


Verfluchte Axt! Wir warten auf eine Überraschungsbox, die Pferdeleute glücklichen machen soll (und die wir in der Sendung am Montag bewerben dürfen) - aber die Post hat nicht geliefert und das Paket jetzt im Lager liegen. Grrrr... Im Teaser geht's außerdem um die weiteren Themen, die wir in der Sendung am Montag besprechen: Fehler, die man beim Ponykauf unbedingt vermeiden sollte - wir reden über ein krasses Beispiel, das wir hautnah miterlebt haben. Und wir freuen uns auf das Interview mit der Besitzerin von Jean Luc, dem malenden Pony. Eine kleine Hörprobe aus dem Interview hörst Du schon in diesem Teaser.

Odd Brew
Behave!

Odd Brew

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2022 1:56


Grrrr.... pfff. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/petrascot/message

The Purple COG Monster (PCM) Podcast
West Park Park Bench Podcast ep.14 - Be Real

The Purple COG Monster (PCM) Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2022 24:36


Come on BeReal. Come on, be real! Welcome to Episode 14 of the West Park Park Bench Podcast. Now that I'm talking to the correct end of my phone! the one with the mic spoffle, wind shield on it. I shall begin. BeReal was an app that I found at the end of last year. And it did feature in my 12 apps of Christmas for 2021. I'm really pleased that the notion of being real authentically knowing who you are, protecting your mental health, looking after your social and mental and physical well being are conversations that are being had and do get had. That's gonna look interesting on the transcript! This week I talk about the reality of event fatigue and zoom fatigue its very intimate sibling. I mini rant about platform no long with us and get a mix mixed up! Those who know will know! Grrrr. Thats the joy of live spontaneous monologues. This is episode 14 - Be Real. This podcast is recorded using Otter.AI which generates a transcript. Its not perfect but if you'd like it to help process the audio here is the link SHOW NOTES 12 Apps 2021 featuring BeReal - https://www.pcmcreative.com/12apps.html BeReal website - http://bit.ly/pcm12apps21-01 Mentioned Gone but not forgotten - Vine, Posterous, Beme, Bambuser, Seismic Still alive if by other names - SnapChat, TickTok (Musically), BeReal, Missed but work mentioning - Meerkat, Periscope, FlixWagon, Qik, fully functioning TweetDeck --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/pcmcreative/message

The Xboxcast
#GameFace! Diamond Ape Go Grrrr

The Xboxcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2022 114:21


Lee gets a new laptop. The queen has passed on.  And Kyle is making sure he is ready to be knighted.    At PAX, Lee is going to do Orange Justice! It's no Floss, so it's more of a challenge. In fact, it's so hard, Simone will give Lee $40 if he can do it. The challenge has now been laid down. Will you be at PAX with us to witness history?    The Yappening is happening in Halo, and has absorbed Kyle for a while. Big Team Skockets is amazing and the good news is that the game mode will hang around after the event ends. Could this be Halo actually listening to the community? We wait and see...    Simone's sister has started House Flipper and treats it like a role playing game - lining up the dining room table, opening the windows, and being like a real house owner! How odd. If you ever wanted to role play House Flipper, now you know how. Also, Simone discovers a secret in Halo - the legend of FlipYap! If you never heard about it, well do we have a treat for you.    Lee tries to escape hell in Hades and is convincing us to try it out, just when it's leaving Game Pass. Luckily we have the Game Pass special price. When he gets bored of failing to escape, its then time to Destroy All Humans.    If you'd like to support the podcast, but don't know how, then just leave a review on your podcast platform of choice. It takes 2 seconds and helps in more ways than you can imagine. But if you feel like thats too easy, then please share it around - social media, word of mouth, sending the link to your family group chat - anything and everything helps us find more cool people. People like you.    -- For everything about the podcast, check out our official website!  Follow us on Twitter, find all our links on LinkTree and support us on Patreon.    -- Your hosts are:   Kyle: XarCrius on Xbox and Twitter Lee: Leehoward on Xbox and Twitter  Simone: GymBeanNZ on Xbox and Twitter 

The Pop Guerrillas
High Profile: Jesse Stone #6: Book Review

The Pop Guerrillas

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2022 1:11


The Nightfly with Dave Juskow
The Fountain Soda Sublimation

The Nightfly with Dave Juskow

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2022 79:07


On this episode of Juskow in the City -- Juskow is getting to sour on the City. The pride parade becomes maddening when Sarah Silverman and I are asked to take a subway so we can cross Fifth Avenue. This does not sit well with either of us. And take your pick on any parade that makes you do that. Grrrr. Also, the trip to Ireland with the Roastmaster General begins to weigh in on what I like to think of as "go with the flow" Juskow but. . . Also, the Chinese restaurant that came out of nowhere with the Fountain Soda my sister and I went on a 2 hours mission to try and get. But that's nothing -- An hour long rant on Free Refills rounds out the hour. What a podcast!! I wish I was joking. I better get to Dublin soon.

Stop Thinking With Your Butt
Unusual Rain and the Unsolved Oakville Blobs

Stop Thinking With Your Butt

Play Episode Play 60 sec Highlight Listen Later May 22, 2022 48:59


Katie, the ever enthusiastic rain addict, talks about weird rain in all it's glory.  From frogs, to spiders; damn it Australia, unusual rains are all explained.  Except for the still unsolved mystery of the gelatinous rain known as the Oakville Blobs.  Let's laugh and then take a shower....separately or not.  Grrrr.Support the show

Musings of a Single, Divine Feminine...
chit chat: almost blew myself up, l-carnitine had me crunk...still having technical difficulties GRRRR

Musings of a Single, Divine Feminine...

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2022 10:03


'sup divine dolls, ....wevideo + anchor won't let me be great....lol. comment what you want to hear more of, i'm thinking its time we build a youtube community of healthy + wealthy divine feminine's and divine masculines. take the poll too. love you! warning, this is so choppy, it was my 3rd attempt from a different device. so, wevideo does work....but cut me off at TEN MF MINUTES!!!! i'd already tried to record on anchor...glitches...and then from my phone...but the file was too big to email to myself...so at this point i'm feeling a little pissy. welp. at least now i know i can record in 10 minute increments on wevideo....i'll need to play around and see what i'll need to do for youtube. i have uploaded to youtube before, but not "podcast" style. don't worry, i'll figure it out. just wanted to check in with you. i might come back and chat in 10 minute segments cause there's other stuff i wanted to talk about with the collective...smh. WISHIN YOU A CRUNK WEEKEND!! am i original....yeahhhh...am i the only one....am i SEX U AL...yea....i am everything you EVER wanted, so you betta rock your body righht!!! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/musingsofadivinefeminine/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/musingsofadivinefeminine/support

The Rooster Cast
Ep. 237 – The Changing Measurability of Digital

The Rooster Cast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2022 1:04


What was once measurable is still measurable but now it's somehow different. Grrrr.

digital grrrr measurability
The Nightfly with Dave Juskow
No More Gettin' Jiggy Wit It

The Nightfly with Dave Juskow

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2022 88:49


What a complete A-Hole. Will Smith ruined everyone's night. Celebrities winning and regular joes watching on TV. He is a complete douche. Other than that . . . this week we traveled down to the West Village to a show at the Comedy Cellar and walked from Chelsea to Madison Square all the way home. It was around 4:30 in the morning and it was scary. Especially since someone was whistling in the park. Yipes. AND, the worst pizza I may have had in a long time is Bruce Springsteen's favorite place in New Jersey. He's nuts. AND, of course, a 50 year anniversary Godfather tribute sprinkled throughout BECAUSE the OSCARS didn't do it right or justice. Grrrr. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

NDR - Hör mal 'n beten to

Einerseits soll man sich Passwörter leicht merken können, andererseits sollen sie sicher sein. Ein Dilemma, meint Ines Barber. "Passwöör, Passwöör sitt jo as de Höllnhund Zerberus vör allns wat di leev un düer is. Op'n PC, op Konto, Handy, Abo, ach, eenfach vör allns. De Zerberus lett jo keen Leven inne Höll rin un de Doden ni rut. Ha, Grrrr. Mien immens Barg ut extreem raffneert Passwöör …, dat is de Höll! Ik nehm jo so geern de olen Vörnaams un denn. Sowat as MarthaLouise77& CoKG, un denn rüsch ik dat denn oftins noch op mit'n besünner Salot dor an. So Plus-, Percentteken, Klammern, eenfach mit allns, wat de Tastatur in't Anbott hett. Blots … Lüüd, du warrst doch bekloppt. Ik kann mi düsse Mass vun Passwöör ni marken. Un - so'n nich Wulk as Versteek, also, ne Cloud? Nee, kümmt mi nich in't Huus. Meents würklich, dor kümmt de Häckers ni an?" Hier gibt es mehr Plattdeutsch: Podcast: Die plattdeutsche Morgenplauderei "Hör mal 'n beten to" als als kostenloses Audio-Abo für Ihren PC: https://www.ndr.de/wellenord/podcast3096.html Die Welt snackt Platt: Alles rund um das Thema Plattdeutsch: https://www.ndr.de/plattdeutsch

WhatCulture
10 Movie Endings That Wanted To Piss You Off - Now You See Me! The Mist! No Country For Old Men! La La Land?!

WhatCulture

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2022 12:16


GRRRR. Josh Brown presents 10 Movie Endings That Wanted To Piss You Off... See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Noémie de Saint-Sernin
Mon enfant est plus difficile avec moi

Noémie de Saint-Sernin

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2022 6:12


Mon enfant est plus difficile avec moiFatigue, cours de récréation et cantine bruyante, injonctions de la maîtresse, mauvaise sieste à la crèche... nos enfants emmagasinent beaucoup de stress et de contrariétés tout au long de la journée. Et alors que nous pensons qu'ils seront ravis de nous retrouver le soir, c'est crise, pleurs, absence de coopération, agitation. Cerise sur le gâteau : quand notre conjoint rentre, il lui feront une grande fête et lui obéiront au premier regard ! Grrrr... Sommes-nous de mauvaises mères ? Pourquoi notre enfant est-il plus difficile avec nous ?Vos cadeaux gratuits vous attendent ici :

MK Rocks with Rob Taylor 14th August 2020 (Carbon Friendly Edition)
New Releases with Rob Taylor 8th December 2021 email version

MK Rocks with Rob Taylor 14th August 2020 (Carbon Friendly Edition)

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2021 40:03


The email edit version of this weeks best New Releases. Even though I say there are 11 tracks there are only 10 in this edit. That's why its an edit, thanks to a new rule imposed by my email provider. Grrrr. Loadsa great new stuff from artists as varied as HRVY to Abba and Ruth Kelly to Wilkinson

Thin Thinking Podcast
Ep 35: How Our Envy of Skinny People Can Keep Us Struggling with Weight

Thin Thinking Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2021 40:54


Skinny people envy. Have you ever had it? Why is it so hard for us not to envy skinny people? Why are we resenting this subgroup of ideal weight humans for their ability to eat whatever they want and not gain an ounce? Grrrr! In episode 35 of our Thin Thinking podcast, we will be exploring this resentment that we often have with this group of people and how this belief may actually keep us struggling with our weight. As we unpack this sensitive topic, I hope that we will be able to reframe our views of skinny people and help ourselves towards our own weight mastery.   In This Episode, You'll Also Learn… How our hard held beliefs regarding skinny people helps in growing our ‘struggler identity' instead of our ‘student of weight mastery identity' How our negative opinions on skinny people actually hurts us and not them Three recommendations on how to start to change our relationship with skinny people   Links Mentioned in the Episode: Sign up for the FREE HYPNOSIS DOWNLOAD : Shift Out of Sugar Cravings My book, From Fat to Thin Thinking: Unlock Your Mind for Permanent Weight Loss (Includes a 30-day hypnosis process.) What would you love to hear about on the podcast? Click here and let me know Subscribe to the email list so that you never miss an episode! Get more thin thinking tools and strategies

Going Pro Yoga (Formerly the Yoga Teacher Evolution Podcast)
Episode #55: Pet Peeves in Yoga (Part 1)

Going Pro Yoga (Formerly the Yoga Teacher Evolution Podcast)

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2021 19:23


In this very raw episode, we go deep on yoga teacher pet peeves! Things that really commonly piss us off as teachers, and happen universally in all types of yoga classes. Byron and Michael both share some personal stories and insights into their own experiences of yoga class pet peeves. Plus if you're a yoga teacher there are some great insights and pointers in here for how to deal with some of these issues if they occur in your classes. It's also valuable to take note as a student in case you have any of these bad habits yourself. Maybe you aren't even aware, but you might be pissing off your teacher. So, at the very least, understanding your bad habits could help you be a better student. (00:00) A special Going Pro offer (02:11) Byron is PISSED OFF! (03:22) Students showing up late, GRRRR! (05:00) Locking your students out of class (06:05) Michael's lateness broke time itself… (07:35) Instagram content shouldn't be captured in a yoga class (09:15) Parents parenting in class, DON'T, instead just be a student (10:26) When Byron snaps at a parent… (12:12) Interrupting the class with a question (13:49) Talking ruins the practice for other students (14:30) Going off sequence (16:17) The beauty in everyone's flaws (17:32) Pet peeves are rooted in your childhood --- SPECIAL OFFER: Become a founding member of the much anticipated Going Pro Yoga Platform! A sneak peak of what's inside: The first EVER Priority Cueing System for over 120 yoga poses, with over 300 variations and modifications, to refine your teaching The first EVER Sequencing Vault with over 70 videos to plug-in-play and create your own sequences in minutes. The first EVER Injury Management and Injury Prevention Program for Yoga Teachers from yours truly And so much more.. When you become a founding member, you'll NEVER have to pay a monthly subscription, you'll get access for life, and you'll receive all updates and addons. The perks of being the first ones in the door! Add your name and email to the waitlist and be the first one in the door! I want to Join the waitlist and become a founding member! --- PODCAST DETAILS: This podcast is dedicated to aspiring yoga teachers who want to develop their craft with integrity and authenticity. Co-hosted by Michael Henri, Paul Teodo and Byron de Marsé Send us an email Send us a voice-note comment/question

Podcast Schmodcast
#11 - Pferd

Podcast Schmodcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2021 42:13


Wenn diese Folge keinen Award gewinnt, dann ärgern wir uns richtig, richtig dolle. Zum Wohle aller! Grrrr!

Self Defense Gun Stories Podcast
Episode 250 with Ben Branam

Self Defense Gun Stories Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2021 22:13


Firearms instructor Ben Branam brings us four new stories of armed defense. My computer decided to reset the audio settings and I didn't catch it until after the recording. Grrrr.

firearms grrrr ben branam
Pixel Bento
Retour vers le futur !

Pixel Bento

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 25, 2020 105:32


Le jeu vidéo se conjugue-t-il au passé ? Telle est la question de ce Pixel Bento ! Entre les mini consoles rétro, comme la Game & Watch: Super Mario Bros.; les innombrables compilations de classiques; ou encore les chaînes NES et SNES accessibles aux abonné.e.s Switch Online - et on ne parle même pas des remakes ! - cette question est plus que jamais d'actualité. La nostalgie est définitivement une valeur sûre. Plus sûre en tout cas que la capacité d'un grand nombre de joueurs à pouvoir mettre la main sur une... PlayStation 5 ! Grrrr... Une sortie japonaise (mondiale en fait) sous le signe de la frustration dont nous parlerons avec le cœur lourd, sans oublier de nous pencher sur le méga phénomène Kimetsu No Yaiba (alias Demon Slayer) et la ressortie de l'excellent Pikmin 3 sur Switch ! Et puis, avec ou sans console next gen, on vous souhaite à toutes et à tous de joyeuses fêtes de fin d'année !Pause musicale : Snatcher - Merry X'Mas Neo Kobe City - Konami Kukeiha Club Émission enregistrée le 29 Novembre 2020. Suivez-nous @PixelBentopod Contactez-nous pixelbentopodcast@gmail.com

Wild Southern Talk

Chris talks about an ex. Why isn't Wesley's barn finished yet? Why does Cody hate certain dogs?

The Diet Doc Life Mastery Podcast
Life Mastery Podcast 92 (Science or Fiction - Increase Testosterone)

The Diet Doc Life Mastery Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2018 20:08


It's one of the most searched questions: How do I increase my testosterone? Plenty of diet bloggers think they have the answer: Of course, just eat more meat! Red meat! Saturated fat! Grrrr! Let's see what the research says, and one article that promised big, heavy, swinging balls. Yes, if your body is increasing testosterone production, testes do grow a little in mass and weight. So maybe we don't need a blood panel - just drop your sack on a gram scale and start tracking your progress! Or...maybe just listen to this podcast. 00:00 Intro 00:52 Does decreasing fat intake make testosterone plummet? 03:44 Gender differences in testosterone levels 07:50 Research results 08:30 The #1 thing to increase your testosterone 09:30 Other ways to increase testosterone levels 10:35 Another study shows..... 13:00 The take-home 14:00 The effect of being too lean or over-training 15:11 Application for the average person Thanks for visiting! Kori Propst, PhD, and Joe Klemczewski, PhD, merge their voices to create life-enhancing conversations and content you can use every day. Kori is the Vice President and Wellness Director of The Diet Doc, LLC—a health and weight-loss licensing company founded by Joe more than 20 years ago. Together, Joe and Kori help hundreds of Diet Doc Program Owners build industry-leading nutrition coaching platforms around the world. Now they're bringing their talent to a daily podcast where nothing is off limits. Motivation, nutrition, weight loss, career, relationships, fitness entrepreneurship, and even guest interviews and features will be dissected and categorized for convenient listening or viewing. What happens when you mix 30 years of psychology, nutrition, physiology, social anthropology, and even literary journalism education with 40 years of business-building experience and almost 90 years (should I say that?) of combined real life? Let's find out! SUBSCRIBE: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/the-diet-doc-life-mastery-podcast/id1385194556?mt=2&i=1000412057177 http://www.youtube.com/subscription_c... FITNESS ENTREPRENEUR? Find out how to become The Diet Doc expert in your community! https://www.dropbox.com/s/mv4mwtiignp... FREE QUIZ: DO YOU HAVE WHAT IT TAKES TO MEET YOUR GOALS? https://www.dropbox.com/s/thmmokbc3kd... LET'S CONNECT! Website: https://www.thedietdoc.com Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/TheDietDoc Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/dietdocglobal Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/thedietdoclife Podcast: https://soundcloud.com/thedietdoc

the UMcast - Uncensored Moms Podcast
Ep 49: Nobody Loves to Pull Out

the UMcast - Uncensored Moms Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2018 61:45


Geography is hard, don't judge. Church daycare with prayers - worth it for the cheap deal? Saying “bless you” - do you? Creepy men in grocery stores and trusting your intuition. Teaching kids about boundaries with their bodies, instilling that they have the right to decide who touches them and when. No means no is something we're saying a lot, already. Michelle's first glimpse of a penis, in a bus, on the freeway… Standing up for ourselves. Sexism is real. It's everywhere. The sooner we acknowledge it, the sooner we can all work together to fix the mess. We're guilty of it too. More thoughts on Nanette and how being insensitive is NOT actually the goal. Being sensitive is actually an asset, kk. In which Vicki is super annoyed with Dax Shepard's podcast lately. Grrrr. Listener Questions! 1. How do you deal with toxic friendships? I've ended two and find myself a bit sad. 2. Sex after baby, it still sucks 18 months later…any tips? Also birth control? Hate the mini pill. 3. Do you ever resent your husband when you're stuck at home all day and he's out at work? 4. Any thoughts on single moms (differences from moms with partners)? 5. Any thoughts on affairs and the people who have them and why? TWL: Aerie Real Me Full Coverage Unlined Bra - I have the color Confidence Better Things on Hulu **** Connect with us on Instagram & Twitter: @theumcast Via the web: www.theumcast.com Via email: theumcast@gmail.com Leave Us a Voicemail, Yay!: 442-273-0026 Don't forget to subscribe to us on iTunes, rate and review. And if you like what you heard, tell a friend or two or ten! Thank you so much for listening and following along with us. We really appreciate this little community of ours. And by ours, we mean you and us, ours.

Fenzi Dog Sports Podcast
E59: Eileen Anderson - "Meeting Our Dogs' Needs"

Fenzi Dog Sports Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2018 36:48


Summary: Eileen Anderson is a writer and dog trainer. She is perhaps best known for her blog, Eileenanddogs, which has been featured on Freshly Pressed by Wordpress.com and won the award “The Academy Applauds” in 2014 from The Academy of Dog Trainers. Her articles and training videos have been incorporated into curricula worldwide and translated into several languages. Eileen also runs a website for canine cognitive dysfunction, which she started in 2013. That site is www.dogdementia.com, which has become a major resource for pet owners whose dogs have dementia. Then, in 2015, Eileen published Remember Me? Loving and Caring for a Dog With Canine Cognitive Dysfunction. She holds bachelor's and master's degrees in music performance and a master's degree in engineering science. Links www.dogdementia.com www.Eileenanddogs.com Next Episode:  To be released 4/27/2018, featuring Kathy Sdao, author of Plenty in Life is Free: Reflections on Dogs, Training, and Finding Grace, to talk about crossing over, how training dogs and marine mammals compare, and the future of dog training. TRANSCRIPTION: Melissa Breau: This is Melissa Breau and you're listening to the Fenzi Dog Sports Podcast brought to you by the Fenzi Dog Sports Academy, an online school dedicated to providing high-quality instruction for competitive dog sports using only the most current and progressive training methods. Today we'll be talking to Eileen Anderson. Eileen is a writer and dog trainer. She is perhaps best known for her blog, Eileenanddogs, which has been featured on Freshly Pressed by Wordpress.com and won the award “The Academy Applauds” in 2014 from The Academy of Dog Trainers. Her articles and training videos have been incorporated into curricula worldwide and translated into several languages. Eileen also runs a website for canine cognitive dysfunction, which she started in 2013. That site is www.dogdementia.com, which has become a major resource for pet owners whose dogs have dementia. Then, in 2015, Eileen published Remember Me? Loving and Caring for a Dog With Canine Cognitive Dysfunction. She holds bachelor's and master's degrees in music performance and a master's degree in engineering science. Hi Eileen, welcome to the podcast! Eileen Anderson: Hi Melissa, thank you so much for having me. I am stoked about this. Melissa Breau: I am too. To start us out, do you want to just share a little bit about each of your dogs, who they are, and anything you're working on with them? Eileen Anderson: Sure. That is the easiest thing in the world to talk about. I currently have two dogs. I have Zani, who is a hound mix. She looks kind of like a black-and-tan Beagle, and for those who have seen any of my pictures and videos, she's the one who tilts her head adorably. She was a rehome. I found her at age 1, and took her from someone who could not take care of her any longer. She has a fantastic temperament, and anybody would love to have Zani. What I'm working with her right now on is that she unfortunately had an accident in February and ran full-tilt into a fence, actually was driven into the fence, I suspect, by my other dog. I was there, I saw it happen, and she got a spinal cord concussion. She was knocked completely out and turned into a little noodle, and I thought I had lost her. But I took her to the vet, she got a CT scan, and they said they didn't see any permanent damage, that she had just gotten this jolt to her spinal cord. She was quadriplegic. I took her home, her not being able to walk or anything. But the vet was right — she did gradually recover, and she's still recovering. We're more than a month out now, but we're mostly practicing getting around safely, walking, going up and down the steps, and she's a little trooper. She hasn't had any mental problems at all. But it's been quite a challenge for me. I had to make her a safe space where she couldn't fall down because literally she couldn't walk at first. Melissa Breau: That's so scary. Eileen Anderson: It was really scary. It scared me to death. I thought she had died. I thought I had seen her pass away. But as those kind of accidents go, ours was pretty lucky. And my other dog is Clara. She's an All-American, she's bigger, she's about 44 pounds, and she is the one that I found as a feral puppy. I'll talk about her now and then through the podcast, but she has come so far. Right now we're working on just widening her world more. We have another friend's house that we get to go to now. She's met another dog, she's liking another person, and actually because of all the work I've done with her, she is a lot more stable in many new situations than lots of “normal dogs.” It's just such a gas to have a dog who's resilient. But that's what I'm doing with Clara right now. Melissa Breau: That's awesome. I mentioned the degrees in music and engineering science. How did you end up in dog training? Obviously you didn't start out there. Eileen Anderson: My career has kind of been all over the place. I was working first as an editor at a university, and then at my current job, which is a social services job helping women find health care for breast problems. I was all but dissertation in engineering science. I had passed my qualifying exams and was going on to be an engineer in acoustics, and I got a dog who was a challenge for me, and like everybody else, I got into dog training because I got the difficult dog. That dog was Summer. That was in 2006, and she was more than I was prepared to take care of. She chewed everything, she bullied my younger dog — my smaller dog, sorry — she jumped the fence, she was just basically a busy teenage dog. Right now I think back and it's like her problems were nothing, but at the time they were huge for me, so bad that I got depressed because it was changing my life so much to have this dog whom I loved, I loved her pretty much right away, but every time I turned around there was a new problem. And so I looked for help in the usual ways. I got on the Internet, I found a local obedience club and went through the usual things there, and somewhere along the line — of course I got a good teacher — but along the line I got hooked. And actually dog training made me quit graduate school because I was like, This is a lot more interesting than active noise control to me. Melissa Breau: You mentioned you started out finding a club. What got you started as a positive trainer? Eileen Anderson: I started at the very beginning as a positive That's what I want to do trainer, a wanna-be. I would read about it on the Internet and I thought, That's what I want to do. But when you're on your own and you don't have any coaching, and you're going by … and this was in the earlier days of the Internet and there weren't as many good instructions out there, so you try something and it's kind of in a vacuum, like “be a tree” when your dog pulls when they're walking on leash. You know, stand still and they'll stop doing that. I did that for months and it didn't work because I didn't have the other half of it, which was reinforce them for walking by your side. So I figured, Well, this positive reinforcement stuff sounds good, but it's not very practical, or maybe my dog's not very smart. I did go … those things we think, you know. I did go to a balanced obedience club. I'm still a member there, the people there adore their dogs, and we get along just fine. I've seen a lot of good changes there while I've gone there. But I knew that collar pops were not something that I wanted to do, but I could not find other ways to, for instance, get Summer to keep from wandering off into the wide blue yonder mentally whenever we were together and from physically wandering off whenever she had a chance. And so I did go that direction. I did the collar pops, I did a prong collar for a while, and then I found the agility part of the club, and that's a familiar story, I'm sure, to a lot of people as well. They were more positive — not completely, but more positive — and through them I found my current trainer, who is Lisa Mantle of Roland, Arkansas, who was trained by Bob and Marian Bailey — Bob Bailey lives here in Arkansas, by the way — and that's when I really started to get it. Lisa is a great teacher, and that's pretty much when I turned the corner. Melissa Breau: I think you mentioned some exciting news related to your experiences there. Do you want to share? Eileen Anderson: Yes. I am writing another book. I'm writing Summer's story. Summer, I sadly lost her last summer at only the age of 11. I thought she was going to live a much longer time. She was very healthy. But she got hemangiosarcoma, and after some misdiagnosis of back pain for about a month, we got the news, and by the time they did do exploratory surgery, but it was too far gone and I did have to euthanize her. I wasn't ready for that at all, nobody ever is, but I didn't have any lead time on it. But she was my crossover dog. She went through all of this with me patiently as I learned how to do things and how to treat her better, and she was a lovely soul, and I'm writing a book about that. It's the story of Summer and me, and also I'm threading into it how I came to change my training ways, and I'm trying to do it in a non-preachy way. I'm writing to pet owners in the book. Recently I saw an op-ed in … I think it was the New York Times, by somebody who just wrote a nice little piece about her old dog, and there were the hallmarks of someone who didn't know a lot about training. There were humorous moments about how they had to chase the dog down and force the pills down his throat and it took all this, and it wasn't mentioned as any kind of morality thing. It was just part of the story. I want our positive training stories to be part of the story too. Not as a preachy thing necessarily, although I can preach with the best of them, but as just part of the story, incidental, this is how we did things. I am feeling like that would be a very persuasive way to write the book. Also I just want to write the book because I loved my dog. But I'm hoping it will be another way just to get the message out in a very incidental way that there's nothing abnormal about this. This is how I trained my dog, and this is how we learned to get along. Melissa Breau: When are you thinking it's going to be available? Do you know yet, and is there anything more you want to share into how you're planning to talk about that crossing-over experience? Eileen Anderson: I'm aiming for 2019, which probably means 2020. I'm telling the story of our lives together, and that is my crossover story. Of course I can pull from blogs, which help me get a timeline there. It's hard to remember what happened when, but I will be incorporating some of the blogs. I've written many blogs about her over the years. But again, I want to tell the story. I don't want to have villains. I do want to have heroes, and I want to talk about how my mind changed as things went along, how my perspective changed, because it changed my whole life. Having an epiphany about positive reinforcement really does filter through your whole life, once you get it, and I hope I can tell that story in a very casual and again non-preachy way and make it interesting for people. Melissa Breau: Now, you mentioned that this is going to be another book. It's not your first book. I do want to talk about that first book a little bit. Can you share a little bit about Remember Me? Loving and Caring for a Dog With Canine Cognitive Dysfunction? What IS canine cognitive dysfunction, first, and how do you talk about it in the book? Eileen Anderson: Canine cognitive dysfunction is a term for mental and behavioral decline that's associated with changes in the brains of aging dogs. It's not just normal aging. We all lose some of our marbles as we age, but this is abnormal aging, it's a neurological condition, and it has behavioral symptoms. It's way under-diagnosed and it's undertreated. In the book I tell the story of my little dog, Cricket. She was a rat terrier and she lived to be probably 17, could have been even older, because she was a middle-aged dog when I got her from a rescue. She got canine cognitive dysfunction, and she had it for at least a year before I identified what was wrong. I didn't know what to tell my vet. Her first symptom was anxiety, and so I just thought she was getting nervous. I didn't realize that that could be a symptom of CCD. So the book is the story of Cricket, and how things went for her and for me. The message of the book is that there is help out there and that we need to know about this disease so dogs can get diagnosed sooner. There's no cure, but there are drugs that can ameliorate the symptoms, there are drugs that can help the dogs and the people have an easier life, and there are so many ways you can enrich the dog's life. They can still have a good life. Melissa Breau: If you could tell people just one thing about Canine Cognitive Dysfunction, what would it be? What do you wish people really knew about that? Eileen Anderson: I might cheat and I'm going to say two. One is talk to your vet. I am not a veterinarian. I can't diagnose your dog. There's lists all over the Internet now of symptoms, I certainly have one, but you can read all the symptoms but you cannot diagnose your dog. You need to talk to your vet many times about this and get educated, and if you're worried at all about your dog, talk about a diagnosis. The second thing is just from my heart. If your dog is diagnosed with Canine Cognitive Dysfunction, your dog's life is not over. Like I was saying, there are many ways to enrich your dog's life, and if we can get over our own preconceptions, see the dog standing in the corner and go, “Oh, poor thing,” well, sometimes, yes, some of their symptoms are pathetic and uncomfortable for them and need some intervention, but lots of the things they do, I think they're just in la-la land. They don't know what you know about what they used to be able to do. So that's my little lecture on that is don't give up on your dog, don't think they're miserable unless you have good evidence that they are, because some of this is just unfamiliar to us. They do odd things, and odd doesn't necessarily mean that the dog is unhappy. You need to learn about that, and again, talk to your vet about all of it. That was more than one thing. I'm sorry! Melissa Breau: That's OK! Sometimes the best things are the more than one thing, right? Eileen Anderson: Right. Melissa Breau: To move from your books to your site for a little bit – and for listeners I will make sure to include links to both of Eileen's sites in the show notes — for listeners who haven't been to your site or aren't familiar with it, can you share a little bit about the topics you usually write about? Eileen Anderson: I write about training dogs, I write about learning theory, and the thing that I'm able to do that lots of professional trainers are not is that I write about my mistakes a lot. I show things that I've tried that don't work and I show things that I've tried that do work. But on my site you get to see videos of dogs who have never learned a behavior before, and me trying to train them with the best intentions and with a lot of information, but with gaps in my understanding. You can see a typical person training their dog and making mistakes, and you can learn from my mistakes. I talk about dog body language a lot too. Having all the different dogs I've had, I have great footage of the interesting things they do with each other and with us. You know, body language is a whole other part we need to learn about when we're trying to train our dogs well. But I take a scientific approach to the training, but I show a human trying to do it. Melissa Breau: Fair enough. You mentioned the scientific piece there, and I think one of the things that I like best about your work is that you really do approach things pretty scientifically. A while ago you wrote a post asking the question, “When is citing a research study not enough?” and I'd love to talk about that a bit. When IS citing a research study not enough — at least if we want to be right about the facts and present ideas that are actually backed up by research? Eileen Anderson: OK. One research study is almost never enough. Usually when we want a research study, it's because we want to win an argument these days, or we want to know something for a fact, you know, “Let's get to the bottom of this. Let's figure it out.” The problem is that we need to look at the bulk of the literature. One brand new study, if it's the first on a certain topic, that's just the beginning of the research, and you can't flap that around and say, “Hey, I've proved it now.” You have to look at the bulk of the research, and one example I like to give is that some topics don't have studies because they are so basic that they are in textbooks. One good example of that is that people will come along and say, “I need a research study that proves that you can't reinforce fear.” OK, well, as far as I know, there isn't one, per se, and there's not one with dogs, and the reason is that that information is implicit and explicit in textbooks and review papers. To answer that question, all you need to know about — all you need to know about! — you need to know about the difference between operant behavior and respondent behavior, you need to know about how emotions work, and you need to know about the sympathetic nervous system response. And if you put all that together, which is in any psychology book, pretty much — you might have to crack a biology book for some of it — you can see why they didn't have to do a study to show that emotions are operant behaviors and you don't reinforce them. You can reinforce behaviors that come around them. But that's an example of it. You know, people want one study for something, and it's either something that's so basic that you could just open a book and find out, or it's something that's so new that we might have one study that shows it, but we need for five or ten more to come in. So I always tell people, “Look for the review study, look for the one that summarizes the research, because that's going to do the work of assessing whether the study is any good.” Because I don't know about you, but I don't have a psychology degree. I do have a graduate degree. I have two of them. So I'm familiar with research, but I don't have the basis, the basic knowledge, to really assess a study. So I have to go to the people who can help, and that's the people who write the review articles and the people who write the textbooks.   Melissa Breau: I think that's great advice and a good thing for people to remember, especially in this day and age, like you said, we tend to want to win an argument instead of thinking, Wait a minute, let's make sure we have our facts straight. The example you mentioned in the post was a post you wrote about errorless learning. I was hoping you'd be willing to maybe share that story with our listeners. Eileen Anderson: Sure, and this is an example of making a mistake. It was Susan Friedman who told me a couple of years back when I was cringing about making public mistakes and she said, “That's like science. Science gets it wrong, and then somebody comes along and gets a little better and you get a little closer. You're shaping the knowledge. So there's no shame in it, even though it really feels like there is.” I took exception to the term “errorless learning,” because I read the work of Herb Terrace, who did the famous work, I think it was in the '60s, with pigeons, where they did thousands and thousands of repetitions of pigeons pecking on a lit disc, and it had, I think, a green light on it. The errorless part was that they made it super-easy to peck on that disc, and then they were teaching them also not to peck on a red disc. At first the other disc was way far away. Then, when they did light it up, they lit it very dimly. In other words, they kept that green disc very attractive and just kind of snuck in the other one. And in thousands of repetitions, when this was done gradually, some of the pigeons had less than one percent error rate, which all of us should aspire to. Well, I just took exception to that, because they were in completely controlled, a lab environment, the pigeons were starving, you know, they always take them down to a low body weight so they're wanting to work, they controlled many, many more variables than we ever can, and it just didn't seem like something we could really emulate. And even the term to me — I nitpick words a lot — but it was not errorless. They had a one percent error rate, so you can't call that errorless. So I wrote a little … kind of a ranting article about that, and I snorted around about it. I had a friend — she could have done this through the public comments, but she didn't — I had a friend whose parents were Ph.D. students under Skinner, so she's one of the few people in the world who grew up as a human in a positive reinforcement environment, and she said, “Eileen, that's not quite right. Herb Terrace, his experiments, yes, they were famous, but he was not the first one to talk about errorless learning, and you kind of got it wrong.” She educated me, and it turns out that Skinner, back in the 1930s, was talking about errorless learning and errorless teaching, because of course to him, if the student made an error, it's really a mistake of the teacher. And it was — some of us have read about it since then — it was kind of the same principal, but of providing a path for the learner where the easiest path to go is to the behavior you want with the fewest number of errors possible. He had had an argument with Thorndike, who said, “You have to make errors to learn,” and Skinner said, “No, you don't.” And Skinner kind of won that one. We think of Skinner as just this dry, cold guy, but he was passionate about teaching and learning, and he was trying to be as humane as possible and make an easy path for the learner, and there's nothing bad about that, in my opinion. There's nothing bad. And so I wrote a Part 2, and I left Part 1 up. I was tempted to get rid of it, but I left Part 1 up and I just put a note at the top saying, “If you read this, there are mistakes in here, so please read Part 2, or just read Part 2 instead.” Melissa Breau: Fair enough. I think it's awesome that you were willing to leave that up. I think that that really says something about your willingness to be transparent about all of this. Like you said, you feel like you can show those errors and those mistakes, where a trainer may not feel comfortable with that. So I think that's fantastic. Eileen Anderson: Thank you. That's something I try to do for the community, even though even for me it's pretty hard sometimes. Melissa Breau: How do you try to keep up to date with the latest information, and how do you try to make sure that you're conducting good research on this stuff when you're writing? Eileen Anderson: One thing I learned in my science degree is you don't just read the paper. Your job is then to go through all the footnotes, to read all the footnotes, and then get on Google Scholar and look at who has cited the paper later. Because if you looked up a paper in 1975 for “Why do humans get ulcers?” that paper would say “From stress and acidic foods.” If you don't look later in the literature, you won't find out that, woops, actually it's from an infection, which they discovered in 1981 or '82. So you have to look before the research piece that you're reading and after it. What I do personally, I set up some Google Alerts, both from standard Google and Google Scholar, and there are a couple topics — one of them is dementia in dogs, and the other one is sound sensitivity and sound capabilities of dogs — and I get alerts whenever anything new is published. Most of it is crap, but I get the good stuff too. I get stuff from Google Scholar when there's a new paper, for instance, on dog dementia, which one did come out this year. That's pretty much how I try to keep up. I try to keep focus because there's way too much for anybody to learn these days. But I use the tools that are out there and I try to be thorough in terms of also looking at who is arguing against this. That's the hard part, especially when you get attached to something. You don't want to read about why it's wrong, but I try to do that too. Melissa Breau: That's awesome. To shift gears a little bit, you've also written quite a bit on your site about Clara, and you mentioned earlier that she was a feral dog and you've done a ton of socialization work with her. Do you mind just sharing a little bit about your approach there and how you've gone about that? Eileen Anderson: I would love to, and I have to credit my teacher, Lisa Mantle, with whom … I could not have done this without her. She's had a lot of experience with feral and other very challenged dogs. She actually says that Clara is one of the most challenging ones she has had. When Clara came to me, she was between eight and ten weeks old, and her socialization window was in the act of shutting, probably that very night. She was scared of me, and avoidant, and I didn't think I was going to be able to catch her. She was slinking away and acting like a wild animal. But when I opened my front door, little Cricket, the rat terrier, was barking inside, and Clara pricked up her ears and slunk by me like I wasn't there, and came into my house and sat down next to Cricket in her crate. And so it was the other dog that got Clara into the house. Within the evening she decided I was OK, and part of that was because of spray cheese, which she still thinks is manna from heaven. But I assumed, silly me, that since I had gotten in, everybody would get in, you know, Now she likes people, look, she thinks I'm great, she's sitting in my lap, she's flirting with me, she's jumping up and down. And so the next day I took her somewhere, and I had her in the crate in the car, and I said, “Look, I've got this puppy,” and opened the door and Clara went, “Grrrr,” this little tiny puppy growling in the crate. I thought, Oh dear, I've got more of a problem here than I thought. Back to getting to socialization, it was technically not socialization at some point because she was past that window — and there's a terminology dispute about this, and I try to placate the people who say, “It's not socialization after they're a certain age.” We were doing desensitization, counterconditioning, and habituation, but we started with people a hundred feet away. That's how fearful of people, and we had to start very far away. We did very, very careful exposures, and this was over the course of months and years. We did a lot of it at a shopping mall, which sounds crazy, but the layout of the place was such that we really could go a hundred feet away and there wouldn't be anybody to bother us. But it was extremely gradual, and every appearance of a person, whether they were fifty feet away or, later on, walking by on the sidewalk, was paired with something awesome, which, you know, spray cheese or something else she loved. McDonald's chicken sandwiches were also very popular. But it was just very gradual, and my teacher was very good at, when we'd hit a bump in the road or get to a plateau, sometimes we could work through it, sometimes we'd just take a different approach. She has good intuitions about that. And one day she said, “Let's just take her down the sidewalk in the mall,” and by golly, she was fine. She could walk among throngs of people, as long as … there's things she doesn't like. If someone walks up to her and says, “Oh, a puppy!” and stares at her, she's going to chuff at them. But people walking by, people brushing against her, sudden changes in the environment, wheelchairs, anything that might bother a lot of dogs, she is great with, and she has come such a very long way. But it was all very gradual, and it was done through desensitization, counterconditioning, and habituation. Melissa Breau: Just to give people a little bit of an idea, when you say “very gradual,” how old is she now? How long have you been working on this stuff? Eileen Anderson: She is 6. The point where we could walk her around in the mall was about two years after we started. But she was happy. It wasn't this, OK, she's all right walking around. She was great. Melissa Breau: Right, right. I think it's interesting to ask for the timeline a little bit there, because it helps people understand how much work goes into it sometimes. But also there's a light at the end of the tunnel. Eileen Anderson: That's right, that's right. And thinking back, a lot of people have had harder situations than we have, but we did have a pretty hard one. She basically was like a wild animal. I didn't see her as a fearful dog, she wasn't congenitally startling or fearful. She was just different, you know. She was like a wild animal and had that natural distrust of humans. Melissa Breau: I don't know about other people necessarily, but I really find that I personally struggle with what feels like two conflicting pieces of advice out there when it comes to socialization or even the stuff you're talking about. The idea that, Option 1, bring your puppy lots of places, but don't overface them, make sure it's all positive, but bring them all the places you go. And the second is never bring your puppy places unless you're absolutely sure you can just get up and leave if it's too much for them. I was curious how you handled determining what to expose Clara to, what she's ready for, and what is likely to still even today be too much for her. Eileen Anderson: That's a really great question. With her, of course we had to take mostly the second method. That was being careful that we had a way to get out. She was not a puppy that I could lug around everywhere and expose her to. I think there can be value in that, as long as you can protect the puppy from people who do the wrong stuff, which any reactive dog group will tell about those people who are going to do stuff to your dog if they get a chance. But today I feel like I need to just be careful and watch her. For instance, even without really working on veterinary visits, she's good at veterinary visits now, just because of the general work we've done. There's some times you have to take your dog to the vet, and she does really well. And I feel like I could take her to a new place with people and walk around and she would do fine. I would just watch for situations where people would be too assertive towards her. So it's not so much the environment, it's not environmental changes, it's not crowds. It's that person who zeroes in and says, “Oh, what a beautiful dog! Can I pet her?” while you're running away. Melissa Breau: Right. We're getting to the end here, and I have these three questions I typically ask everybody the first time they're on the show, so I'd love to work through those. The first one is: What is the dog-related accomplishment that you're proudest of? Eileen Anderson: It is that I used classical conditioning to prevent Clara from picking up on Summer's barking. Summer was a reactive dog and she barked regularly at things that went by the house, particularly delivery trucks and things that were hard for me to control. You can't control those, and I wasn't always home. So she had some untreated reactivity, and I did not want Clara, the baby puppy, to pick up on that. She had enough problems. And so, from the very beginning, very consistently, when Summer would bark, wherever she was, I would give Clara a magnificent treat, usually again spray cheese. It didn't matter what the dogs were doing, what was happening. So I did a classical pairing of Summer barks, wonderful treats fall from the sky. Lots of the things I think up on my own don't work out really well because I can't see down the line well enough to see the end ramifications, but that one worked out great. I have a dog who, when she hears another dog bark, looks at me eagerly instead of running to go bark with them. Just considering that she had so many other challenges, I didn't want her to have that challenge. I have a video of her literally drooling when she heard Summer bark, and so I can prove, yes, I have the Pavlovian association there — another dog barking means yummy stuff is coming my way. I am really proud of doing that. It has paid off in so many ways. Melissa Breau: That's awesome, and that's a fantastic idea. The other question, and usually this is one of my favorite questions of the podcast, is: What's the best piece of training advice that you've ever heard? Eileen Anderson: Watch the dog. And I can say that in two ways. One of them is learn about dog body language. I posted a blog just yesterday, I think it was, two days ago, about accidentally using punishing things because you're following a protocol and trying to do everything right, and you don't notice that you're snapping your hand in the dog's face or something like that they really don't like. So watch the dog. Make sure that what you're doing is OK, even when you're concentrating on your mechanics and following the directions that you've read from your teacher. So that's one way. And also I do agility, and so many times when I made an error, it's like my teacher would say: “You weren't watching your dog.” And of course there's times we have to take our eyes off them, but “Watch the dog.” That's my mantra. Melissa Breau: Excellent. It's nice and concise and easy to remember, too, which is a plus. Last question here: Who is somebody else in the dog world that you look up to? Eileen Anderson: My friend Marge Rogers. Marge and I kind of grew up together in the dog training online world and we started our journeys together. Marge became a professional trainer and I became a writer. But Marge, before there was ever a Fenzi Academy and people sharing these wonderful ideas of how to be humane to dogs in competition, before there was ever that, Marge trained her dogs way over fluency before she ever competed them. She's also fantastic at using multiple reinforcers just as a matter of course. Any dog that goes to her is going to end up being able to switch back and forth between a plate of food and a tug toy, and they can tug when the food's on the ground, and they can eat food even if they love to have a ball. They will get not only multiple reinforcers but the ability to respond to the trainer to transfer back and forth between those reinforcers. She's just fantastic at that. She helps me with all my problems. She can usually give a one-line response to whatever stupid thing I'm doing. And not only that, she's humble. She's always learning. She's one of the most humble people I know, and I just love her training. Melissa Breau: That's awesome. Thank you so much for coming on the podcast, Eileen. This has been fantastic. Eileen Anderson: You are welcome. It is my pleasure. I love to talk about this stuff, and I am very honored to be on the Fenzi podcast. Melissa Breau: Well, thank you, and thanks to all of our listeners for tuning in! We'll be back next week with Kathy Sdao to talk about everything from training dolphins to dog training — it should be a pretty deep dive on behavior! Don't miss it. If you haven't already, subscribe to our podcast in iTunes or the podcast app of your choice to have our next episode automatically downloaded to your phone as soon as it becomes available. Credits: Today's show is brought to you by the Fenzi Dog Sports Academy. Special thanks to Denise Fenzi for supporting this podcast. Music provided royalty-free by BenSound.com; the track featured here is called “Buddy.” Audio editing provided by Chris Lang.

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Evil Geeks Disassembled: Grrrr Argh! Ep 3 – All Things Xander with Nicholas Brendan

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Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2017 20:37


Its been WAAAAAYYY too long, Evil Geek Buffy-heads, but we promise it was worth the wait! Today C-Mart and Undies of Wondy are sitting down with one of the original members of the Scooby gang, Nicholas Brendan aka Sunnydale's own Xander Harris!!! We talk all things Buffy, what it's like to be part of a […]

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Evil Geeks Disassembled: Grrrr Argh! – Ep 2: Gateway to Whedon with Christa Yelich Koth

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Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2016 54:21


Hey Evil Geek Scoobies, it’s time for episode 2 of our audio shrine to Joss Whedon, Grrrr Argh! Today Undies of Wondy and C-Mart are joined by author and Buffy fan Christa Yelich Koth as they all talk about how they first got hooked on Buffy. We discuss some of our favorite episodes and establish […]

Bird's Eye View - Baltimore Orioles Unofficial Fan Podcast

Drawing the wrong conclusions, and irrationally hating on baseball players. This episode of Bird's Eye View is almost a caricature of itself. The post Episode 181: Grrrr appeared first on Bird's Eye View.

Bird's Eye View
Episode 181: Grrrr

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Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2016 54:05


Drawing the wrong conclusions, and irrationally hating on baseball players. This episode of Bird's Eye View is almost a caricature of itself. The post Episode 181: Grrrr appeared first on Bird's Eye View.

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Evil Geeks Disassembled: Grrrr Argh! – Ep 1: Learning from the Master with Mark Metcalf

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Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2016 44:22


Welcome to the very first episode of EvilGeeks.com’s newest podcast: Grrrr Argh! where we talk all things Whedon (but mostly Buffy)! We set the bar high as far as guests in this premiere episode, as The Master himself, Mark Metcalf, joins Undies of Wondy and C-Mart to talk his time terrorizing Sunnydale, as well as […]