Podcasts about Harpa

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Best podcasts about Harpa

Latest podcast episodes about Harpa

All Things Iceland Podcast
Reykjavík's Live Music Venues — From Harpa to Hidden Gems

All Things Iceland Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2025 17:31


Whether you're a fan of classical, experimental, indie rock, jazz, or even Cuban-inspired grooves, Iceland's capital offers a surprising variety of venues catering to every musical taste. Today, I'm taking you on a virtual tour of some of the most beloved — and sometimes overlooked — places to catch a live performance in and around Reykjavík.So, let's crank up the volume and dive in! 1. Harpa Concert Hall - Iceland's Premier Music Venue Let's start with the crown jewel of Reykjavík's music venues: Harpa. This stunning glass building by the harbor is not just an architectural icon — it's a world-class concert hall. Harpa is home to the Iceland Symphony Orchestra and Icelandic Opera, so it's your go-to for classical music, opera, and large-scale productions.But don't be fooled — Harpa also hosts jazz nights, electronic music events, and international artists across genres. The acoustics here are unmatched, and the setting? Simply magical. 2. Gamla Bíó A short walk from Harpa is Gamla Bíó, or “The Old Cinema.” This historic venue has been transformed into a cozy concert hall with vintage charm. Expect indie rock, folk, pop, and the occasional orchestral ensemble. It's an intimate setting with incredible sound, perfect for catching Icelandic artists and touring international acts in a space that feels like a hidden gem. 3. Hús Mál og Menningar Now, let's talk about one of my personal favorites: Hús Mál og Menningar, right on Laugavegur, Reykjavík's main shopping street. This bookstore-slash-bar is a cultural hub, and the upstairs stage is often alive with acoustic sets, singer-songwriter sessions, jazz, and even spoken word. The vibe here is chill, creative, and unmistakably Icelandic — it's where you can sip a drink, browse books, and hear something totally unexpected, all in one evening. 4. Mengi If you're into avant-garde, experimental, or contemporary classical music, Mengi is the place. Located in a small venue on Óðinsgata, this artist-run space regularly features performances by composers, interdisciplinary artists, and improvisational musicians. It's intimate, forward-thinking, and always pushing the boundaries of what live music can be. 5. Salurinn (Kópavogur) — Special Highlight And just a short ride outside Reykjavík in Kópavogur is Salurinn, a beautiful, acoustically rich concert hall often hosting classical, jazz, and world music.And here's something you won't want to miss: On May 31st, Icelandic musician Halli Guðmunds will be performing live at Salurinn with a six-piece band. What makes this show special? The group will be playing Cuban-inspired music and original tunes, blending Latin rhythms with Icelandic flair.It promises to be a night of danceable beats, sophisticated arrangements, and pure joy. If you're anywhere near Reykjavík at the end of May — mark your calendar. You'll be treated to a one-of-a-kind musical journey.Click here for tickets for Club Cubano. 6. Lemmy On the edgier side, we have Lemmy, Reykjavík's go-to bar for rock, punk, and metal fans. The energy here is high-octane, the drinks are flowing, and the crowd is passionate. It's the kind of place where you go to let loose and discover bands that might just blow your mind. Lemmy is carrying the torch for Reykjavík's hard rock community — gritty, loud, and unapologetically fun. 7. Gaukurinn (currently closed for renovations) Gaukurinn, one of Reykjavík's key underground venues, is temporarily closed for renovations. When open, it's a haven for alternative music, from hardcore and punk to drag shows and open mics. We'll be watching closely for its return because this venue has long been a platform for some of the boldest, rawest talent in the country. 8. Dillon Whiskey Bar If you're craving classic rock vibes with a cozy, old-school atmosphere, Dillon is the place. Nestled in a wooden house near Laugavegur,

Podcast Filosofia
Especial de Páscoa: Reflexões sobre o Filme Chocolate

Podcast Filosofia

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2025 55:17


Neste episódio, especial de Páscoa, mergulhamos na doce e curiosa narrativa do filme Chocolate (2001), dirigido por Lasse Hallström, que conta a história de uma mulher que desafia as tradições de uma pequena vila francesa ao abrir uma loja de chocolates durante a Quaresma. Através de uma lente filosófica, os professores voluntários da Nova Acrópole analisam o filme e trazem importantes chaves sobre tolerância, fraternidade, relações humanas e polaridades. Sobretudo do quanto somos capazes de amar, integrar, e sermos gentis. O que guia nossas escolhas - o medo da transgressão ou a coragem de viver com autenticidade? Entre moralidade e compaixão, emerge uma ética humana, feita de presença e propósito. Este episódio é um convite doce e profundo para enxergar a vida com olhos mais livres e coração mais desperto. Participantes: Paula Poloni, Gustavo Massen, Danilo Gomes Trilha Sonora: Claude Debussy - Sonata para Flauta, Viola e Harpa 

Mannlegi þátturinn
Þorvaldur og eldgosin, heilsa hinsegin fólks og dansslagur í Borgarleikhúsinu

Mannlegi þátturinn

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2025 50:00


Hættumat Veðurstofu Íslands vegna jarðhræringanna á Reykjanesskaga helst óbreytt. Töluverðar líkur eru á eldgosi og kvika í kvikuhólfinu undir Svartsengi á Reykjanesskaga er komin að neðri þolmörkum og því gæti gosið á Sundhnúksgígaröðinni í þessari eða næstu viku. Kvikan sem hefur safnast fyrir í kvikuhólfinu undir Svartsengi síðan síðasta eldgosi lauk er örlítið meiri en kvikan sem fór út þá. Þorvaldur Þórðarson prófessor í eldfjalla- og bergfræði kom í þáttinn og spáði í stöðuna og nýjustu tölur. Hinsegin fólk býr almennt við verri heilsu og líðan en þau sem eru ekki hinsegin og það þarf að bregðast við því. Þetta sýna niðurstöður rannsóknarinnar Heilsa og líðan hinsegin fólks sem er hluti af aðgerðaráætlun lýðheilsustefnu Reykjavíkur. Sérstaklega var skoðuð reynsla af ofbeldi, áfengis- og vímuefnaneyslu og geðheilsu. Þórhildur Elínardóttir Magnúsdóttir, sérfræðingur í málefnum hinsegin fólks og Harpa Þorsteinsdóttir, verkefnastjóri lýðheilsumála á skrifstofu borgarstjóra og borgarritara, komu í þáttinn og sögðu okkur frá niðurstöðum rannsóknarinnar og hvernig þær verða nýttar. Svo í lok þáttar fræddumst við um street dans, eða götudans, og Dance Battle, eða dansslag, sem er eins konar hólmganga í dansi þar sem dansarar sýna færni sína til að skáka andstæðingi sínum. Það mátti til dæmis sjá slíka keppni á síðustu Ólympíuleikum þar sem keppt var í breikdansi. Í gær mættust dansarar úr Íslenska dansflokknum og Ice Crew í Borgarleikhúsinu og var áhorfendum meðal annars boðið að taka þátt. Erna Gunnarsdóttir, dansari hjá dansflokknum, og Mikael Christopher Grétarsson, úr danshópnum Ice Crew, komu í þáttinn og sögðu okkur hvernig fór í gær og frá nýrri sýningu dansflokksins þar sem dansarar úr flokknum mæta street dönsurum í verki eftir íranska danshöfundinn Hooman Sharifi. Tónlist í þættinum í dag: Clementine / Hraun (Svavar Knútur Kristinsson) Until I Met You / Manhattan Transfer (Freddie Green & Don Wolf) Everything is beautiful / Ray Stevens (Ray Stevens) Í góðu skapi / Sniglabandið (Pálmi J. Sigurhjartarson, Þorsteinn Marel Júlíusson og Björgvin Ploder) UMSJÓN GUÐRÚN GUNNARSDÓTTIR OG GUNNAR HANSSON

Rauða borðið
Rauða borðið 28. jan - Ríkið, kosningar í Þýskalandi, Dylan, Harpa og veiðar á fyrri tímum

Rauða borðið

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2025 272:31


Þriðjudagur 28. janúar Ríkið, kosningar í Þýskalandi, Dylan, Harpa og veiðar á fyrri tímum Við ræðum sparnað hjá ríkinu og hlutverk ríkisrekstrar á næstu dögum. Björn Brynjúlfur Björnsson framkvæmdastjóri Viðskiptaráðs og Ólafur Stephensen framkvæmdastjóri Félags atvinnurekenda ríða á vaðið. Ragnar Hjálmarsson stjórnmálafræðingur ræðir áhrif af uppgangi fasismans á kosningar í Þýskalandi. Michael Dean Odin Pollock gítarleikari, Dagur Kári Pétursson leikstjóri, Arnar Eggert Thoroddsen félagsfræðingur, Guðni Tómasson framkvæmdastjóri Sinfóníunnar og Kristján Freyr Halldórsson rokkstjóri ræða um Bob Dylan og myndina um hann, A Complete Unknown. Hljóðverkfræðingurinn Ólafur Hjálmarsson gagnrýnir hljóðið í Eldborgarsalnum í Hörpu. Hann segir að bæta verði úr hljóðvistinni. Már Jónsson prófessor og Dalrún Kaldakvísl Eygerðardóttir sagnfræðingur segja okkur frá veiðum Íslendinga fyrir tíma vélvæðingar.

Radio Mallorca
Entrevista a Margalida Aguiló (5 de enero)

Radio Mallorca

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 5, 2025 8:06


El Concert de Reis, un evento centenario, llega este lunes al Teatre Principal d'Inca. La directora de l'Orfeo l'Harpa d'Inca, Margalida Aguiló, explica en 'A vivir Baleares' cómo es su historia, organización y el acto en sí.

180 Nutrition -The Health Sessions.
Dr Jack Kruse - Decentralized Medicine

180 Nutrition -The Health Sessions.

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2024 81:04


This week, I'm excited to welcome Dr Jack Kruse. Dr Kruse is a board certified neurosurgeon, health educator, and proponent of unconventional health and wellness practices. Dr. Kruse's philosophy often challenges conventional medical approaches, emphasizing the importance of natural living and reconnecting with ancestral health principles. In this episode, Dr Kruse explains the current state of play around decentralised medicine. View all episodes at www.thehealthsessions.com.au Learn more about Dr Jack Kruse at https://jackkruse.com Episode Transcript: Stuart Cooke (00:01.252) Hey guys, this is Stu from the Health Sessions and I am delighted to welcome Dr. Jack Cruz to the podcast. Dr. Cruz, how are you? Yeah, I'm very well, very well indeed. Very excited to have this conversation. But first up for all of our listeners that may not be familiar with you or your work, I'd love it you could just share a little about yourself, please. Dr Jack Kruse (00:08.76) Pretty good, how about you? Dr Jack Kruse (00:21.976) Yeah, I'm a board certified neurosurgeon in the United States. I have been living in El Salvador for the last four years. When COVID hit, I began to question a lot of the things that were present, and I decided to unretire, go back and do trauma call to see if they were lying to us or not. And I found out that they were. So then I decided to do something about it. and I wound up presenting to the Bukele administration in El Salvador and they shared some of their country-wide data with me and things that they were facing. And they asked me, what did I think was the solution? And I told them, I think you need to have a constitutional amendment put into your constitution so this would never happen again. And I think you need to re-educate some of the people in your health ministry, I think. You need to educate the doctors. You need to tell people the truth. You need to have freedom of the press. You need to embrace freedom. And this was an easy message for Bukele because he gave his people freedom almost as soon as he got elected the first time in 2019, 2020 made Bitcoin legal tender. And that basically returns freedom back to people and their, and their money. So since he did that first, and then he cleaned up the crime problem in the country, fixing the next problem actually was pretty easy. The real hard part, since you're Australian, I can imagine you know this because it's still going on in your country, that you can't get even people to admit that there was a problem with COVID. And if you can't admit there's a problem, you can't solve for X. And that's kind of where we're going. And then after me helping President Bukele, then... Stuart Cooke (01:59.77) Mm-hmm. Dr Jack Kruse (02:16.854) that information started to bleed into Bobby Kennedy's vice presidential candidate, Nicole Shanahan. And then Bobby called me about the law and then they started to use the law in their campaign. And then next year, know, this summer he joins forces with Donald Trump and then Donald Trump has got the message now too. So I would consider myself more of a lethal pathogen for probably the COVID narrative than most other people that you could probably have on. Stuart Cooke (02:45.957) Fantastic, wow, that is quite an introduction. And very interesting times ahead. Let's see what happens. mean, game on. Everything that we've been speaking about in the counterculture world of health, wellness and human performance is about to take centre stage. So really, really interested. So coming from a traditional medicine background into being one of the... one of the leaders in the biohacking and wellness space now. How do you look at traditional medicine right now? Dr Jack Kruse (03:16.664) Traditional medicine is like a sweet on the Titanic. They would like to renovate it and I would like the boat to sink. Why? Because we've gone past the point, you know, it's like a patient with metastatic cancer in just about every Oregon. You know, the time to fix it was to do the prevention earlier, but you have to realize that Stuart Cooke (03:26.829) Right. Dr Jack Kruse (03:42.636) The people that control big pharma really are the bankers. It's a, it's a very big story. And when I mean big, complicated because it's a Leviathan to know where all the missing pieces and parts are, you know, it take a lot longer time than you have allocated to talk to me. But in the last, I would say six months in the United States, I have been doing a ton of podcasts. Why? Because people in the United States, unlike probably Australia, unlike Canada, unlike Europe, they're ready for this discussion about really what happened. And I think, you know, the people in the States voted that way on November 5th, that they were sick and tired of being lied to. And we didn't go down the path that, you know, Canada went, you guys went, Europe went, or even places like South America went. We decided that we're still for the freedom of speech. Stuart Cooke (04:16.12) Hmm. Dr Jack Kruse (04:42.456) And we're still fighting for the truth. We're not going to have digital IDs or we're saying right now that we're not going to have central bank digital coins. But I don't know if that's going to be true or not. I think there may be a path to that because the people that truly control the United States, which are the bankers and the industrial military complex, may have different designs because effectively, you know, what Trump and Bobby Kennedy are bringing to the table right now, really is the vaccine for Big Pharma. It's really the vaccine for the bankers. It's quite a lot to swallow. And like I said, one of my good friends in this story, Kevin McKiernan, who's the person that found SV40 in the jabs, said it's kind of like expecting Trunk and Bobby to go into the Death Star and somehow make Darth Vader nice. I don't know if that's really possible. But I certainly think that it's worth an opportunity to do it. I think other places in the world have actually got collateral effects from COVID. And that's actually what the people who were doing this, the Agenda 201 people, the WEF people, I know there's a lot of people in Australia that are now really fighting hard against this. But you guys already got digital ID. You guys are. are headed towards a CBDC. you know, basically they're interested in making us economic slaves on the plantation. And it's kind of the way in which they've done it is, I'm going to tell you, it's brilliant. It's a brilliant plan. It's been crafted over 120 years and they've done small little changes, insidious changes that you're like, come on, this isn't that bad. But when you add the whole collection up, you know, it's not a good situation. And they've used medical tyranny to pull it off. They've also used financialization, you know, through rehypothecation of money. That's actually the base problem for every country, including my own. And it's actually the base problem that was here in El Salvador. But El Salvador was the one country who started to reverse this trend because during their civil war, Dr Jack Kruse (07:09.292) that the United States CIA effectively started, you know, 30 years ago, they lost their fiat currency called the Cologne and they started to use, you know, U.S. dollars as their economy. So they're completely, you know, dollarized and that creates, you know, a huge problem. when Bukele got in and broke the cycle of corruption that was down here, the first thing he did was, I'm going to give my people a parallel monetary system. that's not tied to the Federal Reserve. And I don't think people like all over the world realize how big a thing that was. And believe it or not, that's actually what got me to come to El Salvador because I realized that this type of maneuver was like what George Washington did for the United States where was, but Kelly was like George Washington on steroids. Why? Most people don't know the history. of the United States well enough, especially you guys, since you're a commonwealth. Thomas Jefferson and James Madison wrote in Federalist Papers before our founding documents were done. They actually had fights with each other and a guy named Alexander Hamilton, which you probably heard. And Jefferson was ardent that the biggest problem with the Bank of England was that their level of usury. and also the way the bank handled business. And he said that no government will ever be successful if you allow the bankers to have this level of control. And Alexander Hamilton took the other side and said, well, that's all well and good, but if you're to create a country like we're trying to do here in the United States, you still have to have a monetary system. right now, going back to the Magna Carta, the Britons have done a pretty good job for about 1,000 years. Why don't we just roll with that until something comes up? And we didn't have a better form of money, you know, at that time. But the funniest part of the story is when Jefferson becomes president after George Washington, his vice president, Aaron Burr, kills Alexander Hamilton in a duel. Like this problem has not gone away in the United States. And I would say to you, it went all the way up into the Bitcoin Nashville event in Dr Jack Kruse (09:29.816) You know, July this year, when you had both Trump and Bobby, when they were both running for president, both of them said that they were about making Bitcoin a reserve currency to back the US dollar, you know, to make it affect how it used to be prior to 1971 when it was backed up by gold. And that's a good step. You know, for me as a Bitcoin maximus, it's not what I want to see. But is that a really positive step? you know, for the United States, yes. If it's a positive stuff for the United States, when we do something, everybody else usually follows. The interesting part is, I don't think Britain is gonna be doing that now because what did they do in their election? They voted for a version of Kamala Harris with a penis. That's called pure scarmor. And generally what the UK does, that's what Canada does, that's what Australia does. And a lot of times the same thing is true with Europe. But this is the first time I can tell you, think, maybe since World War I, when the United States and Britain have gone two different paths. Trump is radically different than King Charles. And in a good way, King Charles is trying to bring the UK and the Commonwealth back to the Dark Ages, medievalism, feudalism, you know, some, I think you guys call it Fabianism, because it's a version of you know, communism, but that's good for a monarchy. And, you know, I'm perfectly fine if the people of Australia, Canada, and the UK are cool with that because, you let's face it, you guys lived with it for a really long time. But that version of bullshit doesn't follow in the United States. Remember, we are the misfits that told the king to kiss our ass in 1774. So I can tell you that I am the latest iteration of that asshole. in 2024 because I don't want any part of what England's doing. I don't want any part of what Australia is doing. I don't want any part of what Canada is doing. I like our founding documents. And this was the case that I made to Bukele in his basement. I actually had to teach him the story that Jefferson went through with a guy named Benjamin Rush. The only remnants that you'll ever hear about Benjamin Rush from anybody else, he was a Dr Jack Kruse (11:57.706) a doctor and a politician who is originally British. You know, he was born in the States, but he had lots of ties to England because remember, we're effectively British just like you guys are in the States. And what Benjamin said that we needed to put a constitutional amendment in our founding documents and the founding fathers who are writing these papers, they went back for 5,000 years and couldn't find anything in human history where Medical Tierney was the attack vector to take a government down and apart. And Jefferson told him, he says, look, I think it's a good idea, but I just don't think that we can do this and do it well because it's going to slow our process down. And there was a lot of different things that went back and forth if you read the Federalist Papers. But I told Bukele the story, and that's when Bukele said to me, so you think that's the best plan of attack? I said, yeah, it is. Because if you try to use lawfare, like having lawyers go after Pfizer, Moderna, AstraZeneca. That's gonna be a giant shit show, especially in the United States. And the reason why is most people don't know this, and I know you guys are just waking up to this, but who is the distributor of the jab? It's the Department of Defense in the United States government. It wasn't Big Pharma. Big Pharma acted like the local street dealers that sell cocaine on the streets. The guy who is the big cartel in Columbia selling the jab is the Department of Defense. This came directly from a bio weapons program that I laid out on some of the podcasts that I had told you about earlier. The specific one is the Danny Jones podcast where I really let it all hang out. And when you find out that the original SV-40 problem showed up in 1951 through 1957 in the polio jabs by Salk, And now we have proof positive that they're present in the jab. 75 years later, you gotta ask yourself a question unless you're completely brain dead. How does, how does SV 40 wind up in the first generation of the polio vaccine and now in these brand new, supposedly cutting edge vaccines? Well, the reason why is because the program isn't what it was designed to be. It was a bio weapon that they decided to use at Dr Jack Kruse (14:24.704) a specific time to actually try to slow Trump down and get him out of office. And it was successful. And in the United States, the real big issue that happened was not only did they get Trump out, they were trying to manufacture, you know, falsified election. That's what January 6th, you know, 2020 was all about. Everybody thought that these people were trying to overthrow the government, but it was actually the opposite. The government certified a falsified election. And we now know that. If I would have told you that three or four years ago, I probably would have the FBI and CIA knocking on my door. But now we now know that things were falsified in Arizona. We know that they were falsified in Pennsylvania. We know that it were falsified here and there. But it's four years later. You can't change history once the government certifies the election on January 6th. They try to pin this insurrection on Trump, which was an absolute joke, but believe it or not, they've thrown a lot of Americans in jail over this issue. Like I know you guys in Australia, Europe, and Canada, you guys actually really bought the story hook, line, and sinker that these people were truly crazy and they were trying to overthrow their government. They were let in by the government. This was a government PsyOps. And it fits now with the narrative that we see with the aftermarket data for the four years of COVID. We are the people for the rest of the world now overturning and putting Windex on all your glass eyes just how bad this really was. So I told people early on, this is before the jabs even were coming out, I looked at the patents of Moderna and Pfizer and I noticed something very interesting, that there was two legal definitions in the Pfizer patent, one for BioNTech and another one for Pfizer. And I just looked at it and I said, this doesn't make sense to me. My initial gut feeling was that they were going to present one to the FDA and then they were going to use one that they were going to mass produce. So that way the FDA wouldn't have all the true data. And since vaccines are protected in this 1986 law, that's horrible that we have, they could unleash this as a giant experiment. Dr Jack Kruse (16:47.5) to get the jab out. I told people, I did a documentary with Robert Malone and Robert McCullough, who are two doctors here in the States that you probably have heard of. And that had to be behind a paywall because you can imagine at that time, the things that we were saying were pretty controversial. Now I was the least controversial person in the movie. Why? Because I didn't really talk too much about medicine. I talked about these two legal definitions at length. And why was I doing that? Because I knew the story in detail more than anybody knew that I knew. Now people know it because I unleashed that story on the Danny Jones podcast. And I felt that they were going to put SV40 in one of the jabs. Why? Because their development team at Pfizer wasn't as advanced as Moderna. Moderna was using an E. coli vector, which I could see in the patents. made sense to me. you know what they were doing. I still thought it was a bad idea because it didn't have any proper safety testing. But I didn't have as big a problem with Moderna as I did with the Pfizer thing. And that's what I said in the documentary. So here we go till 2022 and all of a sudden, this guy, Kevin McKiernan, for those of you in Australia who don't know him, you need to know him. In fact, he just came out on the Danny Jones podcast because I hooked him up with Danny Jones to get his end of the story down because the aftermarket data we have now is even more devastating, probably even more devastating than you know in Australia because something just got published that he did, which we'll talk a little bit about. Kevin got two vials of Pfizer jabs from two lots, tested them in 2022 and found out that the SV40 promoter was in it. He published that information on Twitter. And of course you can only imagine what happened on Twitter at that time. everything exploded, everybody that was on the opposite side, the Biden and Kamala Harris side, the Operation Warp Speed people, the big pharma, they're like, this guy's full of shit, we don't believe him. It got so bad that one of the molecular virologists who is part of the evil empire, or the dark star as we talked about before, he said, I'm gonna prove him wrong, I'm gonna do the test myself. His name's Philip Buchholz, he's at the University of South Carolina, very accomplished. Dr Jack Kruse (19:16.856) virologist who works and has lots of grants with the federal government. Lo and behold, guess what he found? He didn't prove Kevin wrong, he proved Kevin right. And to his credit, to his credit, I have to give him a lot of credit here, he immediately went to the state Senate in South Carolina and actually told the senators that this is a huge problem. Why? Because now we have to start to question other things that potentially could be going on. Because at that time, The initial pulse in the aftermarket data is that I think everybody everywhere in the world knew about the myocarditis story. We knew about the clotting story, but we had just started to see there were several people with several locks that were getting cancers who had no history of cancer at all. And they were getting not minor cancers. These were stage three and stage four cancers in very young fit people. Remember, we were all told the lie that all the fatties were going to die. And it turned out that also was a lie early on. The fatties weren't the ones dying even in the hospital. The people who are dying are the people who getting Tony Fauci's drugs and the people who got intubated. It actually was the hospital algorithmic medicine treatment, you know, that the people in big tech and what we call HARPA, which is a version of DARPA, those are the people that are Silicon Valley connected healthcare folks. came up with these algorithms to treat people with and it became obvious something was going on. So you remember when we started this podcast, I told you I was effectively retired. And when I started hearing all this story, you can only imagine Uncle Jack said, I'm going to check into this bullshit big time. So what did I do? I go back and start volunteering to do a week of trauma call and I'm spending time in the ERs and spending time in the ICUs because that's what neurosurgeons do. So I got to see the sickest of the sick. Stuart Cooke (20:55.641) Mm. Dr Jack Kruse (21:15.352) And lo and behold, what did I find over two years between actually two and a half years, 2021 through 2024? I was averaging 13 clots and at least eight to 10 cancers in a week that would show up in the hospital. And most of those were in vaccinated people. The most amazing part of my observations is that there was no unvaccinated people. that were afflicted by these problems. Like people who just had regular COVID, this truly was like the cold or the flu. And these people never sought care in the ICUs. They came to the ERs, but the ERs would send them out. They wouldn't do anything with them. The people that got admitted, they got put on these algorithms that the hospitals did. And it turned out the hospitals were incentivized by CMS is the government version of healthcare that pays for things and the government would pay for things that they wanted done. They wouldn't pay for the things that shouldn't get done. That's where you heard nobody would let us use hydroxychloroquine, ivermectin. They wouldn't let us use methylene blue. They wouldn't let us use vitamin D. And it turned out all those things for the people that were in the ER that went home, they did really well. In fact, that's actually what Bukele found. Bukele found within two months of doing the jobs, they started to notice a problem. So what did he do? Even through his own Twitter feed, started telling people, we're going to give you little bags of goodies in it that had a lot of these off-label medications. And they didn't have a huge problem. It turned out the people that got admitted and wound up having to go into the ICU who were getting drugs they shouldn't have gotten and got intubated, those are the people that died. And the story continued to get worse. Why? Because we started to see the pulse of the serious stuff, meaning these turbo cancers, the spike in the data went straight up. And for you guys in Australia who don't know this, there's a guy on Twitter that you should follow. His name is the Ethical Skeptic, at Ethical Skeptic. And he is a former Navy intelligence officer in the United States. What did he start doing? Dr Jack Kruse (23:40.856) He's good with numbers. So he started to post many different things and to show how the CDC, the FDA, and everybody was lying through these numbers. And when I saw this, plus I had my observations of being in the hospital, that's part of the reason when Bukele tapped me in 2023 to write this law. I said, you can't fix this problem in the United States with lawfare. And that's when I found out that El Salvador had assigned these special agreements with the drug manufacturers because guess what? El Salvador doesn't have a 1996 vaccine protection law. Turns out Australia doesn't either. Neither does Europe. Neither does Canada. So guess what? This should tell all of you in those countries that the politicians who were in charge at that time, they signed those documents with them. That means they're all technically a path, a legal path in your country to actually go after them soon. But this is only if the politicians aren't crooked. And it turns out in Australia, we found out they're as crooked as all get out. know, the chick that was in charge of New South Wales, she was being paid off by Fisler. We know that. So, and we also know how serious the lockdown effect was, you know, in Canada and Australia. I think you guys probably had it way worse than we did because remember, as Americans, we didn't put up with too much. And I can tell you what I did. I closed my clinic in Louisiana and moved to Florida where DeSantis was. It was business as usual. I was on the beach the whole time, you know, during COVID. And we didn't give a shit. We actually laughed at you guys. And here I was getting on planes and going to states where the COVID situation was bad. And I was actually able to go see what was happening in different areas. And of course, then I started talking to other doctors in the United States to see what their experience was. And what I found out is the zip code of where people were linked to the ideology and the politics of a specific policy. And it was much worse when you were around people who were, how shall we say, left-wing progressives, where they were taking freedom away much faster, kind of like King Charles. Dr Jack Kruse (26:02.316) you know, has advocated through his, you know, good friendship with Klaus Schott. Like, you know, his famous saying is, you'll own nothing but yet be happy about it kind of stance. You know, that's kind of what the Mararkey was all about for a long period of time. And I noticed that the states that had politicians that are in power like that had the worst outcomes. And it turned out places that should have been bad, like for example, One of the things that I did very early is I started to look at data in Africa. Nobody in Africa was getting any problems from this, even though the vaccines were given to them just about for free. But nobody took them because nobody got sick. And it turned out the ethical skeptic started showing that there was a lot of people in Equatorial Africa that were already immune to the virus. Why? Because that was proof positive the virus had gotten out earlier than anybody said. That's when I realized that we were in a giant PsyOps. This was a bioweapons program gone wrong through a lab leak in Wuhan. And we knew the link in the States because we know the story of Fauci. We know why he had to go offshore because of 9-11, because of the Patriot Act. The Patriot Act has a provision in it that we're not allowed to do gain-of-function study in the United States. If you do, it's punishable by treason. So why did the Department of Defense decide to give Anthony Fauci a 67 % raise a long time ago? Because he moved the bioweapons lab to both Wuhan and the Ukraine. Maybe that'll tell you why we have a Ukraine war going on as well, because we're protecting something that we don't want anybody else to know about. And all of this stuff starts to come free through Freedom of Information Acts. And we start to find out that his links are to this cat in a place called EcoHealth Alliance. That's the guy that basically creates all the gain and function studies that get shipped over to the bioweapons lab. Then all of a sudden the story makes sense. The aftermarket data continues in 23 and 24. And it's very clear now when you look at it that we have huge problems not only with clotting and that's with certain jabs. Like all the jabs have different Dr Jack Kruse (28:26.55) diseases associated with them. And we now know through Kevin McKiernan's work, because he's kept on this, when the turbo cancer data came up, he went to Germany and found someone who got four injections, four jabs, patient got colon cancer, the patient decided to have a biopsy done. Kevin was able to sequence the first tumor, then he did another biopsy a week later. and then he did a postmortem biopsy. And what he was looking for was the sequence in the spike protein, the sequence in the cancer, was there intercalation of the plasmid from, you know, Pfizer in the tumor itself? In other words, are you a GMO person if you took this jab? And it turned out without a doubt you are. So that proved what Philip Buchholz was really concerned about when he went to talk to the centers in South Carolina. because frame shift mutations are one cause of cancer. But the other big one is could these little plasmids that are in these jabs also show up? This made Kevin go look further. And then he found out that every single jab you get, there's 60 billion copies of DNA plasmids in each one. That's common to all the messenger RNA. See, SV40 is only in the Pfizer one. But it turns out, is there another nuclear bomb? with the other Jabs and it is, it's that there's DNA plasmids all in there. How did many of the manufacturers hide the level of plasmids in there? They made sure that they put aluminum in their Jabs. Why? Because it turns out aluminum, they'll tell you it's an adjuvant, but it's really an agglutination effect that decreases the number of plasmids so you can get it through, you know, a regulator, which in our country is the FDA and I know in your country has a different name. And I know they're under fire right now too. for some of the stuff that's going on in Australia. But this is how it went down. And this is exactly how they got the Gardasil vaccine approved in the United States as well. It was through this aluminum effect. So the question immediately came up, you know, for guys like me and Kevin, who started to communicate and also communicate with the ethical skeptic and many other researchers in the world. We're talking about Jay Badachari, Martin Kulldorf. We've all started chatting. Dr Jack Kruse (30:52.652) you know, and had our private conversations because we put this together better than the FDA, CDC, and the people in Washington, DC. We figured out the scam very, very quickly. And we started to say, these are the things that we need to start testing and looking for. We now know that in the spike protein of these German cancer patients who had colon cancer, there's sequences in there. that are not attributable to the Pfizer vaccine. So you know what that means? It means one of two things. That means this came from somewhere else, another vector, like it's out there running around, or it came from the people who manufactured the vaccine in there, meaning that this can go through jump conduction. That's a really big problem because that means that now we have a new problem to worry about. This is the latest data I'm bringing to you. It's only two weeks old. Okay, no one's talking about this. Like in the gain of function world, nobody knows what I'm telling you right now. I know nobody in Australia knows this. I imagine when you put this out, people's heads are gonna explode. But I can tell you that Kevin McKiernan just talked about this live on Danny Jones, which is the reason why I told Danny Jones to get Kevin on. podcast because this is information that you're never going to get from the Department of Defense. You're never going to get from the CDC. You're never going to get it from the FDA. Why? Because this directly exposes the fraud and the problems that were present. And not only that, this now takes this vaccine story to a true next level. This means people who took the jab, not only they potentially genetically modified humans, but they may be the source of many future pandemics down the road. And the diseases they get, this is the thing we don't know. This is the next level testing. We need to test every lot in every jab to see what the effect is because what we believe now is that people are gonna get. Dr Jack Kruse (33:16.562) certain diseases from different companies and different lots within those companies. So this is the reason why in the United States we see certain lots associated with turbo cancers. This is why we see certain lots associated with clotting. This is why we see certain lots associated with myocarditis. And this is the reason why we see people getting rhabdomyolysis. And we're starting to see another pulse now with people getting really nasty diseases. called prion diseases, those are diseases neurosurgeons deal with, that's diseases like Jakob-Kreutzfeld disease or amyloidosis, okay? And autoimmune conditions. And the autoimmune conditions have really spiked up. We're starting to see a lot of cases of very unusual type one diabetes in people who shouldn't have it. And we're also starting to see some very unusual. cases of neuroendocrine tumors and guts that normally we wouldn't see that are usually associated with people that have bad diabetes over a period of time. And we're also starting to see neurodegeneration happen at very rapid rates, meaning generally when someone gets diagnosed with a dementia, whether it's frontal temporal dysplasia, Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, any disease like that usually has a prodrome that takes, you know, a couple of decades to go. These people are getting going from like mild cognitive delay to serious neurodegeneration. Many of the stories that you you hear in Australia, Canada, Europe, where people call it long COVID, it doesn't stay long COVID forever. Certain people get it, certain people don't. Our belief right now has to do with the changes in the lots that are there. So that means we need to start testing every single lot that's out there. Do you think that that kind of issue is gonna happen in the United States where big pharma sits at the Cantillon effect? The answer is no. In fact, here's the real joke of the situation. Big pharma, those medicines haven't even withdrawn from the market here yet. At least, you know, the crown got rid of the AstraZeneca one. There was enough for NHS to say, okay, enough of this shit. Dr Jack Kruse (35:38.672) And Johnson & Johnson in the United States was really smart because they pulled their drug off the market themselves. I think they realized that this is a can of worms that nobody really wants to go through. And Johnson & Johnson has a very different vaccine than everybody else. They used an adenovector virus. They're not polluted with a lot of the same things that Pfizer and Moderna are. But Pfizer's risk right now, in my opinion, off the chain. I really think that while we may not be able to get them by lawfare in the United States, even by some of the things that Bobby Kennedy will probably do in HHS, because of the vaccine law, because of the Dole Buy Act, which you may not know about, but that allowed guys like Fauci to profit off of taxpayer funded research, that's actually the incentive that dictate the outcome why Fauci Stuart Cooke (36:15.822) Hmm. Dr Jack Kruse (36:37.794) you know, was so incentivized to work with gain-of-function people and move it offshore because he made a lot of money. And we now know about a year ago, we found out that he got $440 million in royalties through the NIH and CDC. That money was then redeployed to other scientists that supported his criminality. So you can see that this is a giant conspiracy and we have a law that actually Bobby Kennedy's father was important in writing. It's called the RICO statute. And when Bobby Kennedy Sr. was our attorney general when his brother was president before the government killed him, he's the one that came up with the RICO statute. It turns out, even with this 1986 law that's on the books in the states with the Bayh-Dole Act, there's no protection for these people from a RICO case. So guess what may happen? What may happen? And I think this is where Bobby's going to go in HHS. And this is the reason why I think he's going to have a really tough confirmation process in the United States, even though the Senate is now, you know, weighted to the Republicans. You have to realize in the United States, there's a uniparty problem, meaning the DNC and the RNC has a lot of people that are being paid off by Big Pharma, kind of like what I told you happened in New South Wales. And I'm sure there's many people. and many politicians in Australia, Canada, and Europe, who often has been paid off. We'll find out about this eventually, but that's not my current focus. My current focus really is what can we do to help these people that have been harmed by the vaccine? And that's really my focus, you know, in the future, because I'm the guy that understands the interplay between the nuclear genome and the mitochondrial genome. And that's what decentralized medicine really focuses in on. And you have to realize Stuart that the system that you have in Australia, the system they have in Canada and the system in the UK and in the United States is centralized, meaning that no one will ever get to the point that these people are going to need who've been harmed by this bio weapon. And while I would love to jump into the fray on the medical legal side of things, that's not Uncle Jack's expertise. My expertise is understanding how do we keep Dr Jack Kruse (39:04.098) the genetically modified people in the world, how do we silence that DNA? There's no way we're gonna be able to get it out of our DNA. Like a lot of people are gonna tell you you can detox from it. That is absolute pure insanity. That's the kind of thinking that comes from not understanding truly the science behind it. That's what Kevin McKiernan is really good at explaining. So my goal is to teach people the science that I've been developing over 20 years so we can help people. Now, do I think we're going to come up with new treatments down the road? Yes. So what would I like to maybe end this so you can ask me your next question? It's this is going to be much like the AIDS virus. When AIDS came out, it was a death sentence for everybody who got it. And then magically, slowly over time, We did come up with something called protease inhibitors that actually has now made, you know, AIDS almost a non-issue for most people. But the problem is we had 20 years, 25 years of people dying from it before we came up with the answer. I think that we have a duty as decentralized clinicians to help the people in that 25 year span that's gonna happen between now and then. So that really is my focus. And I think The focus that I brought to the table, at least in the United States, the last 12 months is I went from being apolitical to political. Why? Because I believe this story needs to get out. I believe people like you in Australia, the people in the UK and the people in Canada need to know the truth from the United States because guess what? We made you sick and you bought our bullshit story, hook line and sinker. So I believe that my government has a duty to all of you to tell you the truth. And since my government is not telling you the truth, I'm going to come on podcasts and I'm going to fucking light their house on fire. Stuart Cooke (41:08.482) Boy boy boy. So much to unpack and I think we'll get lots of people scrabbling for the show notes as well to cut and paste names into browsers and to follow this path a little bit further. I just want to share a little bit of a story that happened to me last night in as much as I have had internet problems at home and I'm looking for a new internet service provider and I actually signed up with the same one again but for a faster plan and I had to go through and enter credit card details and give them all of my details. And right at the very end of the conversation with the agent on the phone, she said, I'm gonna send you a link and this link will be for you just to finalise your digital ID. And I said, I'm not sure what you mean. I was expecting to give you my bank. my bank details and my personal details, et cetera. And she said, no, no, you need to take a picture of yourself on your mobile phone. You need to scan some documents, your driver's license, your Medicare number, and that will play a part of your digital ID. And I said, well, no, I'm not very comfortable with that. I don't want to do it. So I think I'll just end. I'll end this. Don't worry about that at all. And she rushed off and went to her manager and came back and said, Well, you don't actually have to give us your digital ID right now. You can go into the store afterwards. And I said, well, I don't want to go into the store afterwards. I'm not very comfortable with me giving you my details and building up a digital profile. I'm not going to do that. Does that mean I won't be able to access the service? And she said, no, no. You will be able to access the service. Perhaps you can do it in the future if you like. So hence, I have my new internet plan, at least I will do at the end of the week. I don't have a digital ID. But that's just an example of a curveball that's thrown out perhaps to me as an unsuspecting and law-abiding citizen as part of the plan that I'm sure will develop into something much bigger down the line. So my question to you is that if we've been following the advice of the government and all the powers that be, and we're guided to what we put in our mouths, which typically will be... Stuart Cooke (43:15.713) a low-fat diet, lots of healthy whole grains. We go out into the sunshine. We're taught in Australia to slip, slap, slop, so hatch, sunscreen, avoid the sun at all costs. And now we seem to be in a little bit of a mess where we are getting sicker, we're getting fatter, children have diabetes, obesity, every autoimmune condition. Dr Jack Kruse (43:38.456) You also have the highest skin cancer rate in the world, just so you know that. No, it's not bizarre to me. It makes total sense to me. It's bizarre to you guys. Turns out the sun doesn't give you cancer. It's all the artificial light around you that does. Stuart Cooke (43:42.357) It's bizarre, isn't it? Stuart Cooke (43:49.72) But what if... Stuart Cooke (43:54.446) Well, I'm a British citizen, so I've lived for 21 years of my life under doom and gloom. So there was no sun. You may get a week in the summer, of which we called our heat wave. But now living in Australia, And I've been in this health and wellness sphere for best part of a decade and a half, doing the complete opposite of what I've been told, in terms of what I'm eating and how I'm exposing myself to the sun. I'm drawn to it like a magnet every day and we get plenty of it. No burns, nothing of any of that sort. I've managed to dodge the medical system for best part of 25 years. I've only been into the doctors to get tests that I've wanted to, bloods and things like that. So my question to you is, It seems almost impossible for Joe Public to be able to even conceptualise doing the right thing because they think they're doing the right thing, because they're following all the roles that we are told that the science and the doctors and the powers that they tell us to do. So where do we go? Dr Jack Kruse (44:58.25) everything they say you do the opposite. If you go and look at my Twitter, what does it say in the little circle? Do not comply. And I got news for you. Every, I famously said this to Rick Rubin and Andrew Uberman on a Tetragrammaton podcast that 99.9 % of things that I learned in medical school and residency are pretty much wrong. And there's a lot of reasons why they're wrong. Stuart Cooke (45:00.279) Yeah. Yeah. Stuart Cooke (45:06.202) Yeah. Stuart Cooke (45:15.673) Hmm. Dr Jack Kruse (45:28.002) But you have to realize that incentives dictate outcomes. The reason why you're told to do many of these things, like I've said this in the United States, I haven't said it too much in Australia, but I'll say it to you. Ask yourself this question, why do Bill Gates, ophthalmologist and dermatologist all want to block the sun? Because it's a great business model for them to be profitable. That's exactly the answer. And it turns out if you are not a dumbass Australian, Stuart Cooke (45:51.416) Yeah. Dr Jack Kruse (45:56.554) and you go out to the bush and you see, you know, the kangaroos running around and you see the birds out there. Notice they don't have sunglasses and sunscreen on, right? They go under a tree. mean, the kangaroos really smart. They actually lick their arms to cool themselves off. But they don't, they don't run away from the sun. And the interesting thing is even when you're under a tree, you still have all the light around you. problem is most people in Australia now they go inside under these fake lights and you don't realize it turns out there's no light controls in any of the dermatologist studies. Like for example, when a dermatologist tells you that UV light causes cancer, you're actually allowed to believe that. You know why? You have a duty that the doctor didn't tell you that the study was done with UV light by itself. Let me ask you this question. Does UV light ever show up from the sun by itself? Or does it have six other colors with it? Turns out it's got six other colors. And you told me you're a British guy, so you know the whole famous story about Newton and the prism, right? He's the guy that created the Pink Floyd album cover so that everybody knows there's seven colors from the sun. Well, it turns out, if you take UV light by itself, yeah, that's a problem. That's what the dermatologists hitched their wagon to. But here's the thing. They didn't tell you that red light is the antidote to purple and to blue. Stuart Cooke (47:08.216) That's right. Dr Jack Kruse (47:22.488) And here's the funny part. Anytime the sun's up, anytime the sun sets, red light's always present. And guess what? It's the most dominant part of the solar spectrum, of terrestrial sunlight. 43 % is infrared A or near infrared light. So when you begin to realize that nature has got the antidote for you and you have a government or a doctor or Bill Gates telling you... No, no, no, we want to geoengineer our skies, want to geoengineer your eyes, and we want to geoengineer your skin. It shouldn't be shocking to you why they're telling you to do it. But I would fully agree with you. When I've been to Australia, I look at them and I think they are the dumbest asses in the world to not figure this out. Why? Because even in the dermatologist's literature that's published in Australia, it shows people that have all the skin cancers have the lowest vitamin D level. If they dermatologists are right, it should be exactly the opposite. People that have the highest vitamin D levels, because you can only make vitamin D from UVB light, right? You know that. They should be the ones that have all the skin cancer. And it turns out every single paper that looks at this shows the lower your vitamin D is, the worse your skin cancer is. How do you like that? So when you think about that and you're wearing sunglasses and slip slather and... Stuart Cooke (48:27.812) Mm-hmm. Stuart Cooke (48:41.262) Yeah. Dr Jack Kruse (48:45.91) all that other bullshit's on the side of your buses. It's no shock to me, actually the reason why you guys have that, but it's also the reason why you were very compliant with the government. Because guess what? What's the part of the story that no one in Australia has heard yet? It's what I talked to Danny Jones about. Turns out when you block the sun, you change the orbital frontal gyrus in your brain, dopamine levels drop, and you become more suggestible. That is a program that started back in the United States, but really started in Nazi Germany called MKUltra. Then MKUltra was graduated to the Stanford Research Institute. Then it was graduated to the Brain Health Initiative. In other words, this is how the bioweapons program in DARPA, part of the DOD that also made the jab, how this all links together. And when you begin to realize that these ideas that you have in Australian medicine actually link to why you guys all rolled up your sleeves and took the visor jab, then you begin to understand why Uncle Jack, know, 20, 25 years ago, everybody thought I was a crazy sob on the internet. I got news to you. It's amazing to me how less crazy I've gotten and how brilliant everybody thinks I am in the last four years because guess what? Just about everything I told people was coming, came and it happened. And right now, Uncle Jack's not just talking to Stuart. Cook on the internet. He's talking to Bukele. He's talking to Nicole Shanahan. He's talking to Bobby Kennedy. And he's talking to Donald Trump. I'm also talking to people in different states about taking this law and putting on the books. Why? Because through the lawfare that's happened with Big Pharma, we've created a big mess in the United States. And as I told you before about going into the Death Star in the Pentagon or Washington, DC, I don't believe that Trump and Bobby are going to be able to fix all the problems. Like, I know that most of you guys in the free world now are hoping that Trump and Bobby can do a lot so that that tsunami wave will come to Australia, come to UK, come to Europe and come to Canada to try to help you. I'm going to be, I'm probably going to be the bearer of bad news to you, my friend. I don't think that's going to happen. And I think Bobby is going to be hamstrung by Dr Jack Kruse (51:14.258) some of the powers that be that are linked to the bankers and Big Pharma. And we probably don't have a long enough podcast for me to explain how all these things link, but I can promise you that Big Pharma was the reason why the First Amendment was destroyed in the United States. Why? Because the money that they were able to use, were, Obama changed the law in the United States. It used to be against the law to actually have Big Pharma ads on TV. He changed that. It's called the month act and it was changed I believe in 2008. Soon as they were able to do that, what did that do? Pharma started paying for all the ads on news media and that means the news media was incentivized to tell the propaganda story of Big Pharma on there. And if they didn't, they would just defund them and not pay him. So it turns out all the news anchors and everybody on those places, they all became shills for Big Pharma. In other words, they were just like the drug dealers on the street for the Colombian drug cartel. That's exactly what happened. And this slowly happened from 2008 to 2024. So now when you put on like Fox News or ABC or NBC in United States, all you see is stuff for this drug, that drug, the other drug, you don't see like, you know, advertisements for kiddie food, because kiddie food can't pay their salaries. Okay. But Big Pharma can. And this is why I don't think you guys, you know, across the pond. Stuart Cooke (52:34.593) You Dr Jack Kruse (52:42.124) really understood how important Elon Musk was for the political process in the United States. Why? Because when he bought Twitter from Jack Dorsey, that actually, remember the first thing he did, he got rid of advertising, right? The advertisers all boycotted him. That was the biggest mistake ever because then Twitter or X, however you want to call it, became truly the town square in the United States. That's where people who were canceled under the previous regime, actually got a voice back. And unfortunately, I've told people this and I don't think you know this and probably the people in Australia do. I was one of the few doctors that weren't canceled on Twitter. Why? Because Jack Dorsey was one of my friends and one of my patients. He followed all of my stiff. Why? Because he was a big technologist. You know that he owned Twitter from the beginning and he got sick from his own tech and he came to me to get better. This is the reason why he lives now in a place with a lot of sun. and he does many of the things that Stuart, you do, and you understand the reason why, but what most of you don't understand in Australia and I think UK and Canada, and this is important for you here, this is gonna be a tough swallow for you. If you go look at the last Jason Bourne movie that was made in 2016, do you know why that Hollywood, the Harvey Weinstein and his friends made that movie? That was a direct threat. to Jack Dorsey and Mark Zuckerberg, either you're gonna play ball with us or we're gonna kill you. So guess what? Go look at the storyline. I'm telling you, I knew that. And how can I tell you that I knew? At the Bitcoin Miami event in 2021, Dorsey came to meet with some of my VIPs and told us then that he was gonna sell Twitter. Why? Because at that time he was getting called up in front of Congress all the time and they were talking about section 230 and all this and that. And he said, look, I'm done playing ball with these assholes. you look at just what happened in the United States, did you hear Jack Dorsey say anything about Kamala or Trump? No, he was totally out the mix. He washed his hands of all that. But guess what? Elon Musk knew everything directly from Dorsey. See, many people think Jack's a bad dude. He wasn't a bad dude. Remember, he's 100 % Bitcoin maxi. He's just like what I told you about Boo Kelly in the beginning of this. Dr Jack Kruse (55:07.532) He believes in freedom of money and he realized that Twitter was a bad experiment gone wrong because his board was filled with all those assholes from Silicon Valley that I told you were behind the jab. Those were all the bankers that were tied to this. Like A16Z, these guys are the worst of America. Like we create really amazing products, but you have to realize there's a dystopian side of this side of business. Stuart Cooke (55:20.185) Hmm. Dr Jack Kruse (55:37.66) And this was really why I give Elon a lot of credit, because there's a lot of things about Elon I don't like. I don't like Neuralink. I don't like Starlink. I don't like being controlled from above, because I think DARPA is going to use that technology to do that to all of us eventually. They just haven't got to that point in the game yet. But what Elon did is he gave Americans that had different ideas the opportunity to speak. And I can tell you that's the reason why the election went the way it went. I got news for you guys in Australia think that this was a landslide. I think it was even bigger than that. Why? Because we know that the Democrats did a ton of cheating and even with their cheating they couldn't overcome this because guess what? Americans are truly fed up with what went on. Like you guys think you're a little bit mad? Dude, you have no idea how pissed off. people are here because we understand the scale. And most people are waking up to the stuff that I shared with you here about SV40 and the DNA plasmids and the 60 billion per shot. Dude, that's not even why Trump really won. He won because of all the shit with inflation, the open borders, and the global socialism that the people who are behind the jab, the people in the Department of Defense, they're all in cahoots with each other. That's the stuff that you're dealing with right now with the world economic forum and the people that are in charge in Australia. All of these people got their marching orders from King Charles. Remember, King Charles has been, when he was the prince, he was up Klaus Schwab's ass from almost 50 years ago. And who was their best friend in the United States? Henry Kissinger. He's another guy that's tied to the Council of Foreign Relations. How far does this go back? mean, look, you're a UK guy. You remember the whole story about the Pilgrim Society and the Rhodes Scholars. This all was stuff that came out after Queen Victoria died and the new monarch came in, which was King George, who was Queen Elizabeth's grandfather. His brother, you know this story very well. His brother, Edward VIII, abdicated because everybody wanted to talk about Wallace Simpson. No, he abdicated because the royal family Dr Jack Kruse (58:02.156) was part of propping up Hitler with their bankers, the Rothschilds. And we now know that. It's very obvious. And that's the reason why the king really had to step down. It got so bad in World War I that the king had to change their name from Saxe, Coburn, Gotha to Windsor. They took it off a castle. Wasn't even, you know, didn't even think about it good. And why did they do that? They had to do that because one of the guys from Russia, who took over their land, shot and killed the Romanovs, which was the cousin of the king in England, also the cousin of Wilhelm in Germany. Well, they didn't plan on that. They didn't plan on killing him. But we now know that the Rothschild bankers at the time were the ones with the king that wanted the Romanovs put in jail in Siberia. Why? Because people always forget this. This Bolshevik revolution happens in the middle of World War I. It's the craziest thing ever that you can have a revolution in a royal family and they were worried. But it turned out one of the guys of the three in Russia, that's Trotsky. Trotsky is the one that made the decision to kill the Romanovs. Guess what? Lenin and Stalin didn't want that to happen. They knew that that was going to create a huge problem down the road. When you think about this as a Briton now, now I'm talking to you as a Brit and not as an Australian. Remember what the British Empire is all about. They're all about that imperialism and you are part of the Commonwealth. Well, in one stroke, you lost Russia. You lost the United States in 1774. So what was really World War II all about? It was about setting up a bad deal for the Germans in the Treaty of Versailles so you can guarantee a second world war. That's really what happens. Why? Because the king wanted to bring the United States and Russia back into a war so they could regain a loyal title. And let me just tell you something. There's one thing you're going to learn about the royal family from this midfit who came from you in England, is that the royal family and their bankers Dr Jack Kruse (01:00:23.82) have screwed up the 20th and 21st century more than you can ever imagine. Most of the things that we're all dealing with now are because they want to recapture the lands that they lost and bring them back under British rule. And it turns out the one thing they've done, they've infiltrated a lot of the United States government with people who are still loyal. That's what the Council of Foreign Relations is. And who is the main group in the United States that the Royal Family and the Rothschilds partner with. It's the Rockefellers. Rockefellers were richer than the Rothschilds and the Royal Family. So guess what? They brought them in. And then, magically, we got the Council of Foreign Relations. They're tied to Tavistock. They're tied to the Committee of 300. You got this whole story. And then, magically, we get the Federal Reserve, which is basically all of the families that were in Europe, now the big ones in the United States, who are also all ex-Britain. Now they're all in bed together and go, hey, let's start this process in the United States to see if we can get back to the Middle Ages where everybody's on a feudal plantation and they're working for us and they're happy about it. That's just the marketing slogan that changed from the 1920s to 1973 and 71 when Kissinger and Schwab start the world economic forum. The process for the last 50 years, slow incremental changes to get us back. to the one world government idea. That's all the stuff that we're talking about, all the health stuff, all the COVID stuff. That is the true metastatic cancer that sits at the base of this shit sandwich. Stuart Cooke (01:02:13.032) I think you're like the modern day magnum PI on steroids. What is it we don't know? Dr Jack Kruse (01:02:18.956) Well, just think, well, Stuart, this is what I will say to you, and hopefully this resonates with you and resonates with the audience. There's two type of people in the world, those that believe the government and then those that know the history. And it turns out when you know the history, you have to have one caveat. The victors write the history books, but it turns out the real history is still discoverable if you know what rocks to look under. And when Stuart Cooke (01:02:46.328) Yeah. Dr Jack Kruse (01:02:48.286) I started this whole process because people have asked me, how did you figure a lot of this stuff out? Well, it turned out my mentor in this whole thing, which is Robert O. Becker, who's a doctor in the United States who was canceled by the Industrial Military Complex over the effect of non-native EMF. Turned out when I saw how he was canceled, it was tied to the same story. And when he got canceled in 1977, I met with him in 2007. He had 30 years to figure out who really did him wrong. And let me tell you something, if you think Uncle Jack is salty, you should have met this cat. He was truly pissed off. This guy was twice nominated for the Nobel Prize. So when I sat down with him and we shared notes, he casually warned me. He said, don't do anything crazy like I did and go on 60 minutes and try to tell the world the truth. because the world will never believe the truth because they're in a propaganda of lies. And those lies were set up by the architects that I just told you about, the bankers, Big Pharma, all the corporations, all the people that BlackRock own in the United States, those are all the people that you guys are affected by too. BlackRock affects Australia, UK, everybody else. And the idea of BlackRock... is you only have to have 5 % ownership in a company. Everybody else has fractional ownership. So effectively, this is the same idea that the Rothschilds used in 1812 at the Battle of Waterloo when they took over the banking situation. You they had better information than anything else. You don't have to own a company 100 % or 51 % to control it. If you control the finances, you control the country. And that's actually what Thomas Jefferson warned. are people about in 1774. This is the reason why Thomas Jefferson was absolutely adamant that the Bank of England was filled with a bunch of criminals. And he was right. I mean, I hate to tell you this, but this problem has now persisted on for 250 years in United States. And I would love to tell you that we were smarter than the Britons, but we weren't. We use their system. And now the system is so broken. Dr Jack Kruse (01:05:09.622) and it's so slated to them, they're going, they think we're complete idiots. So they're trying to, you know, completely go back to the way it used to be. And that makes King Charles very happy. Makes the Rothschilds happy, makes the Rockefellers happy. Why? Because they're able to recapture everything. If they can get the United States, they believe they can eventually get Russia back. That should make you realize truly what's going on with NATO, the Ukraine and Putin right now. It completely gives you a different spin on things when you look at what's happened in European, you know, world history here lately. And I just want to be the guy to tell you that I think if you focus on the history here, you'll understand more of the biology and why decentralized medicine is really important for you to follow from this point forward. Like the story that you told me about the digital ID. I really appreciate it because it definitely ties into the story. I think every resident of the UK, every resident of Australia needs to follow your model. think what you said and that you weren't going to comply with this level of intrusion and surveillance is absolutely it. mean, look, we got a guy in the United States right now, Edward Snowden, who warned us about this and he's sitting in in Russia being protected. If you don't think that this story resonates with people in the United States, you're crazy. And look, you guys have a guy that just got out of jail for WikiLeaks. And you forget what WikiLeaks was about. It was about turning all the state's evidence through WikiLeaks of all these connections that I'm telling you about now. And the crazy thing is they treated D platform, right? Through the bank. They got rid of his bank accounts through the Bank of England and all the banks in Australia. Stuart Cooke (01:06:37.123) Yeah. Stuart Cooke (01:07:03.097) Hmm. Dr Jack Kruse (01:07:06.808) So what did he do to continue to do it? He used Bitcoin. Bitcoin actually allowed us to realize that John Podesta, the Clintons, Jeffrey Epstein, all these people were all linked together. This is how a lot of this story started to come out, Stuart, so that the regular folk on the people in Main Street could start talking about it on Twitter. That people like Matt Taibbi, you know, dropped the Twitter files and everybody in the world was like, holy shit, Snowden was right. You know. Julian Assange was right. Like this is no more, this is not a mystery Stuart. You know what the mystery is? Is that people all over the world are too busy watching Netflix, rugby games, soccer games, and doing Circus Maximus. It's the same story that we were told in Plato's Allegory of the Cave, that even when the slave is shown the truth, they're like, I'm gonna go back in the cave, just put my cuffs back on and I'm good. Most of you probably won't like to hear, Stuart Cooke (01:08:02.956) Yeah Dr Jack Kruse (01:08:06.038) of just how much disdain I have for you. But that's the truth. I told the people the same thing in the United States before the election. I said, if you vote for Kamala Harris, you are the slave that's going back in the cave. And I'm not telling you that Trump's any prize package, but he's got less warts than the other person. And I think it's going to take a while for us to really get rid of this metastatic cancer. Organ by organ, we have to change it. But I'm hoping by doing a podcast like this with you, Stuart Cooke (01:08:17.401) Hmm. Stuart Cooke (01:08:23.501) Yeah. Dr Jack Kruse (01:08:36.29) that you can really understand how decentralized finance and decentralized health are linked together. This story is just like the medical caduceus that you look at. The two snakes are intertwined. And it's our job as the patient not to comply with fiat money, with bullshit CBDCs, when any kind of things are controlled, whether it's the internet company or your bank. Take all your money out of the bank. Don't leave it in the bank. And I would tell everybody, I think

covid-19 united states america tv university netflix canada donald trump australia europe google hollywood uk freedom washington battle england americans british germany africa russia joe biden european arizona ukraine australian german elon musk dc er dna medicine oregon pennsylvania barack obama congress bank abc fbi world war ii defense bitcoin nbc states silicon valley south carolina republicans britain louisiana navy martin luther king jr vladimir putin democrats council id alzheimer's disease senate columbia adolf hitler cia boy cook traditional titanic kamala harris south america caves fox news cdc fda mark zuckerberg bill gates aids stuart rico nato fantastic pi committee pfizer parkinson pentagon medicare el salvador queen elizabeth ii newton freedom of speech monopoly nhs queensland anthony fauci federal reserve kamala moderna ron desantis commonwealth nobel prize pink floyd tanzania icu unbelievable george washington jeffrey epstein darth vader wuhan plato joseph stalin harvey weinstein dnc main street first amendment gmail makes blackrock astrazeneca royal family windsor waterloo colombian mm julian assange new south wales organ big pharma edward snowden constitutional gmo starlink pharma treaty thomas jefferson nih uv rnc siberia nazi germany versailles middle ages wikileaks dod neuralink cms cologne sv leviathan king charles mk ultra british empire henry kissinger rockefeller trunk ids dorsey rna jack dorsey foreign relations kate middleton emf schwab lenin decentralized death star rothschild wef wilhelm alexander hamilton vips james madison hhs central bank digital currency darpa dark ages queen victoria rick rubin britons jason bourne allegory psyops kruse clintons patriot act sergey klaus schwab magna carta jabs rhodes scholar bukele king george aaron burr matt taibbi robert malone operation warp speed bobby kennedy coburn ers icus uvb sergey brin yandex trotsky tavistock romanovs john podesta saxe federalist papers salk windex gotha cantillon jack kruse nicole shanahan circus maximus tetragrammaton susan wojcicki uncle jack gardasil harpa danny jones edward viii benjamin rush stanford research institute bitcoin miami joe public sv40 equatorial africa health sessions robert o becker stuart cooke
Faktoria
Alaia Belaunzaran:"Erdi aroko musika folkloretik oso gertu egonda askok uste baino errrazago entzuten da"

Faktoria

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2024 23:27


Harpa-jotzailea da Alaia Belaunzaran eta goi mailako ikasketak ditu. Egun, Entrebescant Ensemble taldeko kide da, eta Erdi Aroko musika ikertzeaz gain, interpretatu eta hainbat zuzeneko programa dituzte prestatuta oholtzaratzeko....

Meeting Malkmus - a Pavement podcast

We've got Rachel from Portland in the house this week on The Pavement Top 50 Countdown. Rachel and jD discuss her Pavement origin story and unveil song number 14. TranscriptTrack 2:[0:00] Previously on the Pavement Top 50. And there it is at track 15 from Wowie Zowie, Rattled by the Rush. What are your thoughts on Rattled by the Rush, Ross from Fife? Well, I already said since I came to it last, Wowie's not my jam. I love it. It's still a Pavement album. It's never the one that I go to. Right. and Rattled by the Rush might be the last pavement hit that I actually heard oh really? Yeah, I don't think I heard it until at some point in the early 2000s I bought, I can't remember what it's called the DVD, Slow Century Slow Century, yeah I think maybe that's the first time I ever heard it oh, because they showed the video on that Yeah, I can't remember if it's the proper video or not. I know that they had to re-release the video because it was making people sick. People used to be such fucking pussies. Hey, this is Westy from the Rock and Roll Band Pavement.Track 3:[1:14] And you're listening to The Countdown. Hey, it's J.D. Here, back for another episode of our Top 50 Countdown for Seminole Indie Rock Band, Pavement. Week over week, we're going to count down the 50 essential pavement tracks that you selected with your very own top 20 ballots. I then tabulated the results using an abacus and a calculator watch operated by the power of friendship. How will your favorite song fare in the rankings? You'll need to tune in to find out. So there's that. This week, I'm joined by pavement superfan Rachel from Portland. How the fuck is it going, Rachel? Going pretty well, JD. Thanks for having me. No, it's my pleasure. It's good to have you here. Well, let's not waste any time and get right to it. Rachel from Portland. Talk about your pavement origin story.Track 3:[2:07] Hmm. Well, I first started listening to Pavement in high school and I am sure Cut Your Hair was the first song that I heard and it's just so catchy. And I don't even remember like where I heard it. I'm sure it was maybe on the, maybe on the radio, but it really grabbed me. There's something about just that it's so happy and it's so silly and I'm a very silly person and really gravitate towards that kind of music. So I got really curious about Pavement, but you know, Back in the 90s, CDs were really expensive. This was before I've heard a lot of people on your show talk about downloading tracks from Napster. I think I'm a little bit older than that, or maybe I'm a little technically not inclined.Track 3:[2:51] So I made a lot of mixtapes with a tape recorder next to the radio to record songs off the radio. Um so i actually don't really i don't have a super clear memory of of like how it evolved from there i know there were a few other pavement songs that i heard and really liked like specifically trigger cut and and you know just some of the other really um happy ones but but i was also you know um you know getting really into the grateful dead and and other things so i didn't i didn't really pursue my love of pavement a lot but it but it always had this really special place in my heart. I think that when you, uh, the music that you listen to when you're growing up, it kind of just never, like, it always takes you back to that place in a certain way.Track 3:[3:38] Um, so, uh, fast forward and I was, I was in high school, so I was a little too, um, you know, at that point I was kind of like going off and seeing some concerts. I never got to see pavement at that point. Um, but then, uh, fast forward a bunch of years when they got back together for their, reunion tour in 2010, and they'd released... Oh, your dog is so cute. Oh, just a second. Just one second. I'm sorry. Okay. Yes?Track 3:[4:10] Hello? That doesn't typically happen, because typically the door is locked, and that means I'm recording, so I apologize. Now I'll be doing some editing. Are they? Yes, no problem. So they got back to there for their reunion tour and they released Quarantine the Past, Um, which, yeah, which is, is really interesting because in some ways, you know, the albums, there, there aren't some bands I listened to the albums like straight through and some I kind of pick and choose the songs and pavement. I really love listening to the albums themselves, um, and kind of each song in context of the album though. Sometimes I'll, you know, I, I like them more and more. So, um, I, they were coming to, they were coming just outside of Portland to Troutdale that year, and I'm pretty sure it was sold out. And I just had this feeling of like, I have to go. It just like wouldn't, kind of wouldn't leave me. And so I ended up buying tickets from some like strangers off of Craigslist. And I can't remember which of my friends was supposed to go with me, but whoever was supposed to go couldn't make it. And the day before the show, I randomly had, I was going to hang out with a woman that I had met through the yoga studio where I teach. And we were hanging out at her house. It was like our first friend hangout. And I saw that she had pavement tickets on her fridge. Like they were paper tickets.Track 3:[5:40] And I said, are you going to the pavement show tomorrow? She said, yes, I love pavement. And I was like, can I go with you? And so I ended up going with her and her crew to the show. And it was one of, it was at the time, and this was 2010, I've been to a lot of concerts, but it was one of the, the like best shows I've been to in terms of just the energy on the stage and the way it just, the way it made me feel so alive and just so like joyful, you know, with, and, and one thing I love about Pavement is kind of this, this range of emotions that they go through. They have this very, you know, there's this whole thing about them being like slackers and being, you know, but, but they're very smart and they're very silly. And they kind of go from, you know, they kind of, they kind of go from these, like, they go through some really deep themes in their songs. So, you know, which we'll talk about when we get to our song for today. So I, I was after that, I was just so I was so hooked again. And I started like devouring the albums a little bit more and more. And so at that point, I started listening to them a lot more. And then they came back in 2022 to the same venue in Troutdale, Oregon.Track 3:[6:47] And I was so excited. I mean, I bought the tickets as soon as they went on sale. I couldn't wait. And it was a great show. It really, really was so fun. But I couldn't actually, from where I was standing in the venue, I couldn't really see what was going on on stage, which is kind of a bummer because they're so fun to watch them and their interactions. Um but after that show I just had this feeling that was 22 and I had this feeling of I I need I need more pavement I need more pavement now and so I looked at their whole tour schedule and it was like Australia and and I just couldn't do it there was no there was no way I could like drop my whole life to to go on pavement tour you know and they and they just don't I mean they were playing a lot that year but they don't.Track 3:[7:30] They don't play that much generally. And so in January of 23, when I saw them announce Iceland in July, I was like, I'm free those days. And then the cincher was that there's a nonstop flight from Portland to Reykjavik. I was like, nonstop. Really? Yeah, there's a lot of nonstop flights. That's beautiful. And there were a lot of bands at the time that were doing residencies at Harpa, like Papin did. Disco Biscuits did one. um freeze mcgee did one and wilco did one so um and a bunch of my friends are into those those bands and they had gone um for those shows so i just booked the flight and i and i was just like i'm gonna go i bought the tickets for the show and i bought specifically um the front row of the balcony because i really really wanted to see everything that was happening on stage um Um, and I was planning on going alone, you know, just cause there's so many bands that, you know, when I go see shows, I love going with friends and, you know, I'm, I'm a big fish fan and there's so many people in the world who are, who are into fish and they, and so like, when I go see fish, I have to decide, like, should I go with these fish friends or this friend with pavement? There's like, none of my friends are into, almost none of my friends are into pavement, um, which is, which is really sad. And so, um, I was just going to go. You've got some work ahead of you. Well, yeah, yeah, for sure.Track 3:[8:56] And so, but two of my girlfriends really wanted to go to Iceland. And so they joined me on the trip and we ended up extending the trip a little bit. And we went around the whole, we rented a camper van and went around the whole island for a week, which was just out of this world. And I'm so grateful to, and neither of these women like pavement. They both came with me to the first show, but they were not into it. But one of them did all of the planning. She did all of this research and planned out our entire trip around the island. And all I did was listen to as much pavement as I could possibly get my hands on for one.Track 3:[9:35] And so we had an amazing trip. They came to the first show. They weren't into it. And they didn't come to the other shows, which was fine because I'm like, I got to read. I got to read really hard. But I met some really lovely people, other pavement fans. There and the shows were beautiful they played quite a few repeats which were um the second night felt a little like i expected some repeats the second night it felt a little disappointing i was like how could there be so many repeats but by the third night they were mostly repeating stuff that i really like so i was okay with it um and i knew they were gonna do that you know i kind of expected it um there's a it's tough because they took what 70 70 songs on the road I forget. Somebody told us it was either 60 or 70. I was just re-listening to the episode with Steve West that I think maybe came out very recently. And he said 60. He said they took 60 songs on the road. That's who it was. Yeah. Yeah. And then they play 30 songs a night. So you're going to get some repeats. Yeah. Yeah. Which I expected. They did advertise B-sides and rarities for Iceland.Track 3:[10:42] There were only so many, but it still was wonderful. And Harpa is a gorgeous venue. It's beautiful. It was also really funny. There's like no security in Iceland, you know? And so like, I'm so used to like hiding all my things when I go into a show. And like you know nobody they barely looked at my ticket that was pretty funny yeah it was um they they were they were lovely shows i had a really sweet moment um uh i think it was after the first show i was walking with my friends we were maybe a lot we were maybe two blocks from the venue and it's you know it's it's late at night but it's still light out because it was july in iceland and i saw this this kid he was probably maybe seven years old he looked like he He was, I don't know if he was Icelandic or if he was somehow related to the band. I think I've seen pictures of him in the front row from those shows. So maybe he was connected somehow.Track 3:[11:37] But he was this kid and he was walking, I think, with his mother. And we were a few blocks from the venue. And I hear the kid just like, I hear him singing like, do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do. And I just perk up and I start singing it with him. And he looks at me and his eyes just light up. And I was like, there's this connection that happens when people, you know, when it's this, it's familiarity. And we just, we didn't speak any words. We just had this like these huge smiles at each other and kept singing it as we were walking. So it was really cute. The magic of pavement. Wow. Cool. I really feel that.Track 3:[12:14] Yeah. Oh, and then, and then after that, you know, they, they, they played those Brooklyn shows. I really wanted to go to them, but I couldn't go because I had to be in New York the next week. I actually had jury duty that week, so I just couldn't get to New York to go to the Brooklyn shows last year. But then this year, and then they played South America this year. I was like, I can't get to those either. I've got a lot of dreams of traveling for music that I can't quite make happen. But then they just played Bumbershoot in Seattle, which is only three hours away. way. And I was like, I was really torn because one of my dear friends was having a big blowout for his 50th birthday that same night. And I was just like, the pavement's not going to play that much longer, I don't think. And he said, I would never fault you for going to see music. So I went by myself. I took the train up to Seattle and had such a great time. And part of the reason I actually wanted to come on your podcast was one of the things that was so interesting to me about being at that show was, After being mostly in the balcony in Iceland, I did go down to the floor for the third night of that run. But I was determined. I was like, I want to be front row center for this show.Track 3:[13:33] And the way that the Bumper Shoot is this really great festival. It's set up in Seattle Center. It's really beautiful. And so I was standing kind of to the outside of the stage where they were going to play as the band before them was finishing. And as soon as they were done, I kind of started walking towards the middle. And there was a spot on the rail I could have taken, but it was off to the side. I really wanted to be more central. So I went all the way to the center and I ended up, you know, like fourth or fifth row. But it was still an hour before they were going to start. And so there were all these people who were also crowding around, like waiting for them. And so a bunch of us ended up sitting down and just chatting. And these two people that I was sitting with and who I talked to a lot, And we, you know, we saved space for each other during that time. It was so fascinating. The, it was this, it was this man and this woman and she had, she had just three weeks ago turned 21.Track 3:[14:28] And, and I know I just, I couldn't believe it. And so I asked her, and so I was like, tell, tell me how you got into pavement, you know, channeling you Diddy. And, and so we had this amazing conversation just about how she got into pavement and her favorite songs and everything. thing. And one of the things that I thought was so interesting, you know, we all know that, you know, pavement's having this TikTok resurgence. I'm not even on TikTok, so I don't know, you know, like all that stuff. But, but it was so interesting to me that there are, you know, and, and, oh, and almost all the, there was a lot of people who were, I'd say in my age range, slightly older than me, you know, maybe like in their fifties who were there, who were like really enjoying the show. But all the, most of the people who are right around me were, were in their twenties and it was so fascinating. And so the idea to me that there are people who, there are people who love pavement, like who are, who, who love pavement and love talking about pavement and love seeing pavement as much as I do, but have a completely different relationship with cut your hair than, than I do, you know, or that people who got into pavement, you know, when they first, when they first came out, it's so different. Um, and I was so fascinated by, by all of that. And then one of the weirdest things was that they didn't play cut your hair at the show. And, you know, I mean, they've played it in every other show I've been at, so it was okay. But I was actually really shocked about it. I was like, you know, they're catering to their new fans and they're not catering to their original fans.Track 3:[15:56] It's very cool to think that, you know, all this touring and the TikTok stuff has really led to a new generation enjoying this band. And that's just a testament to, you know, the music they made, right?Track 3:[16:18] For sure. And it's interesting that they, you know, like in some ways I really appreciate that they're not making new music as pavement. Like I love the new music that they're making. Otherwise I'm a really big fan of, you know, Stephen Malkin's and the Jicks and all of that work. And, and I'm really excited about the hard quartet stuff that's coming out. But, you know, there, there is a part of me that, that wonders, you know, what that would be like. And, and as much as I, in some ways, I wish like pavement hadn't broken up, like the stuff that Stephen Malkin, you know, created afterwards is so, so rich and so brilliant that, you know, I know that that was supposed to happen in that way. Yeah, I liken it to every time I make wishes about changing my past, you know, I think, I can't do that. I have two kids and I don't want anything to happen to them. I don't want to wish them away by accident. That would be terrible. Yeah, you want a butterfly to take your kids away. You know, the same thing goes with this man. Yeah. If they'd been broken up, you'd be on a totally different life path. Totally. Well what do you say rachel from portland that we take a break and then come back and listen to song number 14 yeah i'm into it all right let's do that hey.Track 2:[17:39] This is bob nastanovich from pavement thanks for listening and now on with a countdown down.Track 3:[17:47] 14...Track 3:[21:19] This week, we're on the horn with AT&T. How are you feeling about song number 14, Rachel, from Portland?Track 3:[21:29] I love AT&T. The song is super fun. I really love the way in which, like, the verses go into this, you know, when he goes into the, like, whatever, whatever. And there's a kind of screaming thing in it. It almost feels like the whole song, like, could be complete. And then it like starts again with the second verse, which I really love. Um, I just go, it takes you on a really cool journey. And I also love to me, there's so much like meaning in it. And there's also so much, um, that I don't understand and feels a little bit nonsense, nonsensical to me, um, which, which I, which really, which I also love. Cause that, that really feels part of like the essence of pavement, you know, like there was something really deep and there was something that's really nonsense. Sense and and it's almost like i almost feel like as a band they like both want you to want to figure it out and they're like don't be a fool and try to figure it out i love that yeah i can see that my first talk with spiral stairs ever he talked about the mystery of the band and you know how the first uh couple eps they were just spiral stairs and sm people didn't even quite know on the the first EP, whether the band's name was Pavement or whether it was Slay Tracks.Track 3:[22:49] So they loved that mystery. So who knows, that might have carried forward rather than in Persona, but in the music. That's a nice assessment.Track 3:[23:07] So what else do you think about when you think about this track? This is from Wowie Zowie. Is it one of your standout Wowie Zowie tracks?Track 3:[23:22] Yes and no. I mean, I love Wowie Zowie. It was, you know, I never submitted my top 20 ballot to you because I didn't find out about your podcast until after the ballots were in. And so when I, when I go through my like top 20, there's like, I don't know, 14 or so that are, that are very clearly in my top 14. And then there's, and then there's like 15 songs vying for the last six months. So this wasn't in that original, um, uh, roundup for me, but it is a song I really love. And, and there's most things on Wowie Zowie that I, you know, that again is an album I really enjoy listening to through. Through um and uh and I you know I would never I would never I would never skip this song when it came on it's um uh and now and now that I've like spent so much time listening to it for this podcast it it definitely might it might up its way into my top 20 a little bit um yeah but there's so many good songs on Wawi Zawi it's hard to it's hard to you know um I don't I don't think there's any on wawi zawi that i don't really love that much yeah i put you on the spot yeah, so um what do you think this one's do you have a do you have a take on this on this one i do i do have a take on it and i'm just gonna say i'm gonna preface.Track 3:[24:48] This by saying that um i i'm a life coach and so i think that i'm um coming to this from a little bit of like a life coach you know uh way of viewing it so i also will say that you know that's just my perspective and i i don't need to be right on any of this this is just the interpretation that that i came up with based on reading it um okay so a couple things that so first of all um at&t you know obviously it's a um you know phone company communication company so i think that that in essence there's this idea about, um, the, the way in which we are like in communication with each other, but also the way in which we are in communication with ourselves.Track 3:[25:30] Um, and the way in which that can be like clear and the way in which that can be clouded a little bit. Um, I did, I did go online and just kind of like look up the lyrics and read some things. And there, you know, there's a lot of different, there's a lot of different controversy about the lyrics in terms of, um, the way that they're printed like on the, you know, if you look, if you look at the lyrics, there's a lot of people who are like, no, that's not right. So, so, you know, who knows, who knows about that stuff. But, um, Uh, I, I personally think that there's a, well, let me just tell you, let me tell you what I'm feeling. All right. So, um, so when it starts with this, maybe someone's going to save me. I did, I did read somewhere that it's, that that's kind of like, um, punking Oasis a little bit. I don't know if that's true, but I, I kind of like the idea of it. Um, but, but to me, what it really means is like, I kind of feel that this is somebody who, you know, this song is really kind of speaking about somebody who is almost like afraid to take action in their own life and is kind of like swimming in the soup of what they, of like what they think they're supposed to be doing, you know, whether that's like the corporate ladder or, you know, or having success in certain ways. And so this idea of like, maybe someone's going to save me is, is kind of like, I'm not going to take my own action and I'm just going to kind of wait for someone else to come in and create direction.Track 3:[26:54] And, and so I think that kind of, to me, I really feel that in the, like, the laps I swim from lunatics don't count. Like, I'm like, I think a lot of us take, you know, we do, it's not like we're totally inactive. It's not like we're sitting on the couch all day, like couch potatoes, but we're maybe doing things that, that are, you know, helpful to others, but not necessarily helpful to ourselves, you know, or, or, you know, like, not, not the most urgent or meaningful things that we need to do, even though, even though they're, you know, it's action. So the things that when it when it says that open up your stockings, pull out of the things you never wanted from room service calls. To me, that really has to do with like, The the ways in which, you know, like the limiting beliefs or the bad habits that we've that we've gotten either like from our parents or from society or from the people who cared for us and the ways in which our brains kind of took that and and and turned it into operating systems for how we move through the world, which, you know, I think in general, those are very helpful in the sense that they got us through what we needed to get through. But they're not always helpful because they somehow sometimes they really limit us and they create like false beliefs that keep us from achieving what we want to achieve in our lives i know i'm getting i'm getting real deep here this is just the first verse.Track 3:[28:17] No this is cool i'll tell you what because i'm a little high right now and you're taking me places rachel from portland this is all right so keep at it okay cool so um so the whole idea was like open up your hands and let me see the things you keep in there in there. Like that to me really speaks to me about this idea of like, of like being vulnerable and like showing your true authentic self. And what I think the song is, is kind of challenging is this idea that like.Track 3:[28:46] That it is like, that's how we make real connection. And at the same time, it's really vulnerable and uncomfortable. We don't always want to do it. Right. You know, like and so, and so that, you know, that's kind of, That's kind of how I see this song, that like somebody who's really kind of afraid to connect with their own full, authentic, true self and is kind of experiencing the discomfort of, you know, living in a world where they're like putting on a face.Track 3:[29:19] Does that make sense? Yeah. I mean, does it make sense? Maybe you haven't thought about that song this song in that way i haven't thought about it in this way for absolute sure no this is cool um yeah keep yeah keep going i was i had a question slips away, Okay, yeah, let me know if you remember it. So then because then it goes into the like, whenever, whenever I feel fine, which I just love the riff on this. It's so high energy and fun. And then it gets into those really silly, like, like groovy, groovy kitty. But, um, but it's this idea of like, whenever I feel fine, I'm going to walk away from all this, all that. And it's kind of like, I don't know if you've heard people say, I'm sure I'm sure we've all heard people say things like, Oh, I can't do this because of this. Or like, you know, when this thing happens, then I'll be then I'll be able to do this. And it's almost like, wait, you know, I hear the character like waiting for, you know, waiting for that someone's that's going to save me. And when I feel better, then I'm going to do these things as opposed to just taking the action to make themselves be ready to do it. You know, like I'll walk away now as opposed to when I'll walk away whenever it is that I feel better.Track 3:[30:32] And this is where we get to one part where there was a, there's a, what's the word I'm looking for? Discrepancy in the lyrics. The lyrics that I found say, yeah, the lyrics I found say, you skinny, skinny people don't like that when you calm them. But I read online, somebody said, no, it's when you call them or when you call on them, which also works for AT&T. I think both ways work in terms of this interpretation. Like, like people don't like it when you're not authentic with them, you know? And so, or when you, in terms of a calm them, if it is call on them, then it could be like, Like, you know, almost this feeling of fear that if you ask someone for something, then, you know, it's like almost a fear of our own neediness, if that makes sense. You know, like everybody has needs, but nobody wants to be needy, you know, like we all want like, but we all have needs. And so I think if you're, you know, if it's like, if it's saying, you know, people don't like that when you call on them, if that's the lyric, then then there's almost this idea of like, a fear that if I ask someone for something, then they're gonna, you know, then then it's very vulnerable. Again, it puts you out there in a way that could be considered uncomfortable.Track 3:[31:49] Very, very interesting look at that. And it's nice that you prefaced it with your occupation. Because it's... No, where I'm going with this is we all bring our shared experiences to these songs. And you've shared some experiences with people as well. Well, so you're probably bringing all of that, you know, like you've got, yeah, you've given us some stuff to think about. Anyway, that's where I'm going with that. Yeah, for sure. And I wonder if the band would like laugh at me and be like, no, this isn't what it's about at all. I can honestly say all 50 episodes of this, the band would laugh.Track 3:[32:40] I think all 50 episodes. it's like but be grateful as well because they get to meet all all of y'all so that's the cool part as for um in i started university as a poetry major creative writing and poetry and, that's all you do in the first in the first semester is analyze poetry and it's like 90% of it is putting yourself out there, you know, on the limb, right? Most people, most people don't. Well, Rachel from Portland, do you have anything you'd like to plug? Um.Track 3:[33:25] I don't think so. There might, there might be a, a time coming soon where maybe a pavement song might be sung by me somewhere, someplace, but I'm not going to, I don't think I can say too much more about that. So if you happen to be in Portland, you know, you can find me somewhere. Get it recorded and you can submit it to the pod list next year. Oh, maybe I will. See?Track 3:[33:54] That's good. All right. That's what I've got for you. Uh want to thank rachel and i want to definitely thank pavement for at&t and all the other songs that we've heard so far next week we are going to track number lucky number 13, so uh hit the roulette wheel put it all on 13 and just some jd sent you and in the meantime wash your goddamn hands.:Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/meeting-malkmus-a-pavement-podcast/exclusive-contentAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

Segðu mér
Harpa Fönn Sigurjónsdóttir lögfræðingur og umhverfissinni

Segðu mér

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2024 38:47


Heilsuvarpid
#97 Gynamedica Harpa Lind og Sonja - Breytingaskeiðið

Heilsuvarpid

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2024 50:01


Harpa Lind og Sonja frá Gynamedica eru hafsjór af fróðleik um allt sem viðkemur breytingaskeiðinu. Gynamedica er lækninga og heilsumiðstöð fyrir konur sem fagna 2 ára afmæli um þessar mundir. Þar starfar teymi lækna, hjúkrunarfræðing sem bjóða stuðning, fræðslu, eftirfylgni á breytingaskeiði. Leggið vel við hlustir og dragið fram glósubækurnar. Styrktaraðilar @nowiceland @netto.is

leggi harpa styrktara
Rauða borðið
Helgi-spjall: Harpa Njáls

Rauða borðið

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2024 162:05


Laugardagurinn 18. maí Helgi-spjall: Harpa Njáls Harpa Njáls félagsfræðingur er gestur Helgi-spjalls, segir okkur frá baráttu sinni fyrir að samfélagið og stjórnmálin horfist í augu við fátæktina en líka frá uppvexti sínum á Suðureyri við Súganda, áföllum sem riðu yfir, basli og erfiðri lífsbaráttu, þátttöku sinni verkalýðsbaráttu og annarri baráttu fyrir betra lífi lágstéttanna.

La radio del fin del mundo
EL harpa climática / grillo al escabeche 24 13.5.2024

La radio del fin del mundo

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2024 55:56


¡Bienvenidos al Episodio #112 de la Temporada 6!

Le Disque classique du jour
Harpa Romana. Arias & Cantatas by the 17th-Century Virtuosos - Riccardo Pisani, La Smisuranza

Le Disque classique du jour

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2024 12:52


durée : 00:12:52 - Le Disque classique du jour du mardi 07 mai 2024 - Dans son nouvel enregistrement, l'ensemble La Smisuranza, avec sa formation unique de trois harpes doubles, accompagne le ténor Riccardo Pisani à Rome, dans un voyage sonore passionnant

Amorosidade Estrela da Manhã
Vídeo - DESBRAVADORES DE SI MESMOS NÃO VÃO QUERER FICAR ETERNAMENTE NO CEUZINHO TOCANDO HARPA, ABANANDO E DANDO UVAS NA BOCA DE DEUS. DEIXA PARA OS QUEROBOBOS. ISSO É DEUSOLATRIA ENTEDIANTE/REPUGNANTE

Amorosidade Estrela da Manhã

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2024 8:07


Amorosidade Estrela da Manhã
Áudio - DESBRAVADORES DE SI MESMOS NÃO VÃO QUERER FICAR ETERNAMENTE NO CEUZINHO TOCANDO HARPA, ABANANDO E DANDO UVAS NA BOCA DE DEUS. DEIXA PARA OS QUEROBOBOS. ISSO É DEUSOLATRIA ENTEDIANTE/REPUGNANTE

Amorosidade Estrela da Manhã

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2024 8:07


Amorosidade Estrela da Manhã
ME DIZ UMA COISA, QUANDO EU SAIR DAQUI SE EU TIVER O MERECIMENTO VOU FICAR ETERNAMENTE TOCANDO HARPA EM LOUVORES A DEUS SENTADO EM SEU TRONO, DO CONTRÁRIO GARFADAS EM MEUS IRMÃOS PARA ALEGRAR O DIABO

Amorosidade Estrela da Manhã

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2024 3:59


Mannlegi þátturinn
Skátahreyfingin, stytting menntaskólanámsins og móðurmálin

Mannlegi þátturinn

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2024 52:41


Þankadagurinn eða World Thinking Day er í dag og er dagur alþjóðlegrar vináttu þar sem skátar út um allan heim hugsa hlýtt til annarra skáta og senda þakklæti út í heiminn. Haldið hefur verið upp á þankadaginn á hverju ári síðan 1926. Harpa Ósk Valgeirsdóttir Skátahöfðingi Íslands og Kolbrún Ósk Pétursdóttir móttstjóri Landsmóts skáta komu í þáttinn í dag og sögðu okkur frá skátahreyfingunni, þankadeginum og landsmótinu sem verður haldið í sumar í fyrsta skipti í 8 ár en Covid setti strik í reikninginn því mótið er venjulega haldið á fjögurra ára fresti. Samkvæmt rannsókn við Háskóla Íslands hefur stytting framhaldsskólanámsins haft slæm áhrif á einkunnir ungmenna í háskóla, fjölda eininga teknum í háskóla og brotthvarf úr háskóla. Líklegra er að breytingin hafi haft slæm áhrif á drengi en stúlkur. Við fengum Tinnu Laufey Ásgeirsdóttur, prófessor við hagfræðideild Háskóla Íslands, sem er ein þeirra sem standa að þessari rannsókn til að segja okkur frekar frá niðurstöðum rannsóknarinnar. Í gær var Alþjóðlegi móðurmálsdagurinn og í tilefni hans er unnið svokallað Menningarmót með 6. bekkingum Hlíðarskóla. Börnin unnu verkefni tengd tungumálum, til dæmis var gerður tungumálaregnbogi þar sem orð á 20 tungumálum koma saman og fleira. Ferlinu lýkur á morgun þar sem foreldrum barnanna verður boðið á Menningarmót í Veröld og sjá það sem börn þeira hafa verið að gera. Kristín R. Vilhjálmsdóttir, sjálfstætt starfandi tungumálamiðlari í Danmörku og á Íslandi og höfundur Menningarmótsaðferðarinnar og Eyjólfur Már Sigurðsson forstöðumaður Tungumálasmiðstöðvar HÍ komu í þáttinn og sögðu frá. Tónlist í þættinum í dag: Sjóddu frekar egg / Bogomil Font (Bragi Valdimar Skúlason) Yakkety yak smacketty smack / Change (Jóhann Helgason) Gamla Húsið / Ellen Kristjánsdóttir (Þorgeir Ástvaldsson og Bjartmar Guðlaugsson) Mirror Mirror / Pinkerton Assorted Colours (Tony Newman) UMSJÓN: GUNNAR HANSSON OG GUÐRÚN GUNNARSDÓTTIR

Segðu mér
Leikararnir Árni Pétur Guðjónsson og Harpa Arnardóttir

Segðu mér

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2024 38:44


"Það sem kannski einkennir okkar vináttu er að við höfum virkilega gaman að því að leika okkur" segir Harpa Arnardóttir. Hún og vinur hennar Árni Pétur Guðjónsson dansa saman í splunkunýju dansverki sem nefnist Árstíðirnar.

Sunnudagssögur
Sonja B. Jónsdóttir

Sunnudagssögur

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2023 49:28


Hulda G. Geirsdóttir ræddi við Sonju B. Jónsdóttur sem sagði frá uppvextinum í Norðurmýrinni, óvæntri óléttu á menntaskólaárunum og dásamlegu dótturinni sem hún átti svo ung. Þær mæðgur voru nánar, en Harpa, dóttir Sonju, lést í bílslysi aðeins 19 ára gömul. Sonja sagði frá því hvernig óttinn heltók hana þegar hún eignaðist annað barn og í marga mánuði sleppti hún ekki takinu af litla drengnum. Smám saman lærði hún að taka lítil skref í rétta átt og sleppa takinu, en sorgin fylgir henni alltaf. Nú hefur Sonja skrifað ljóðabókina Í myrkrinu fór ég til Maríu til minningar um Hörpu þar sem hún rekur ævi hennar og þeirra saman, missinn og söknuðinn í einlægum og áhrifamiklum texta.

sm harpa sonju hulda g geirsd
Sunnudagssögur
Sonja B. Jónsdóttir

Sunnudagssögur

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2023


Hulda G. Geirsdóttir ræddi við Sonju B. Jónsdóttur sem sagði frá uppvextinum í Norðurmýrinni, óvæntri óléttu á menntaskólaárunum og dásamlegu dótturinni sem hún átti svo ung. Þær mæðgur voru nánar, en Harpa, dóttir Sonju, lést í bílslysi aðeins 19 ára gömul. Sonja sagði frá því hvernig óttinn heltók hana þegar hún eignaðist annað barn og í marga mánuði sleppti hún ekki takinu af litla drengnum. Smám saman lærði hún að taka lítil skref í rétta átt og sleppa takinu, en sorgin fylgir henni alltaf. Nú hefur Sonja skrifað ljóðabókina Í myrkrinu fór ég til Maríu til minningar um Hörpu þar sem hún rekur ævi hennar og þeirra saman, missinn og söknuðinn í einlægum og áhrifamiklum texta.

sm harpa sonju hulda g geirsd
CONOCE  AMA Y VIVE TU FE
Episodio 901:

CONOCE AMA Y VIVE TU FE

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2023 50:44


Luis Román entrevista al grupo de Música Sacra Harpa Dei. Pulsa Aqui para ver el video del programa¡Convierte en Miembro Cristero de Nuestro Canal Hoy!! Pulsa aquiSupport the show YouTube Facebook Telegram Instagram Tik Tok Twitter

Segðu mér
Harpa Magnúsdóttir framkvæmdastjóri

Segðu mér

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2023 39:39


Harpa Magnúsdóttir stofnaði sitt eigið fyrirtæki Hoobla árið 2021 og segir frá því ferli öllu.

Segðu mér
Harpa Magnúsdóttir framkvæmdastjóri

Segðu mér

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2023


Harpa Magnúsdóttir stofnaði sitt eigið fyrirtæki Hoobla árið 2021 og segir frá því ferli öllu.

66 Degrees of Sound
We're Back, Baby!

66 Degrees of Sound

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2023 56:32


We're back from hiatus! After a few weeks of retooling and behind-the-scenes makeover montages, your pals Rex and Jói are back with a lemon-fresh new episode of 66 Degrees of Sound.66 Degrees of Sound by The Reykjavík Grapevine is your one-stop shop for brand new Icelandic music, where Grapevine journalists Rex Beckett and Jóhannes Bjarkason (aka Jói) discuss the latest Icelandic music releases and upcoming events. The show will now exist in podcast form only and mainly focus on new music, with discussions, artist interviews, and track listens. We will keep including one or two notable events per episode, but may not be relevant if you get hooked and go listen to back episodes. On our first episode back, we oil our rusty podcasting hinges talking about the gorgeous new album by Laufey, a delightful surprise from newcomers Hreyfing, the mesmerizing and wonderous latest release from Ingibjörg Turchi, and friend of the show MSEA's brand new baby. We also highlight the upcoming Anna Þorvaldsdóttir double-bill, with the Iceland Symphony Orchestra performing her works on October 5th & 6th.Episode tracklist:Laufey — California And Me (Bewitched, r. September 8)Hreyfing — See You Later (Alligator) (Hreyfing Presents: Greatest Hits r. September 8)Ingibjörg Turchi — Epta (Stropha r. September 1) MSEA — It's got a little ring to it (Our Daily Apocalypse Walk r. September 15)The Iceland Symphony Orchestra performs the works of Anna Þorvaldsdóttir over a two night programme:October 5th at Harpa performing AION along with cello soloist Kian Soltani performing the additional works of Elgar.October 6th at Hallgrímskirka performing ARCHORA with accompaniment of the Klais organ.You can find that and more events on our site events.grapevine.is. You can also upload your for free.Check out grapevine.is for the full magazine coverage and events.grapevine.is for more upcoming events. Instagram: @rvkgrapevine Facebook: The Reykjavík Grapevine Youtube: The Reykjavík Grapevine

Esquina do Jazz
A harpa de Brandee Younger no jazz contemporâneo e sua homenagem a Dorothy Ashby

Esquina do Jazz

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2023


The Maximum Lawyer Podcast
How Harpa.ai Revolutionizes Research, SEO, and Content Generation

The Maximum Lawyer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2023 7:35


Are you in the market for a new AI tool to help make your life easier? In this episode, Tyson Mutrux introduces in his new tech segment where he shares an AI tool called Harpa.ai. This tool is a side window to your browser and does a wide variety of things. The tool can answer questions that you ask it, provide a summary and even rewrite what you are looking at on the page. Harpa.ai can integrate with other websites or apps. For example, it can provide summaries of Youtube videos with timestamps and can read the PDF you are working on.It is a great tool for writing as well. Whether you are writing a paper, website or a blog, the tool can mimic a specific writing style that you like. It also helps audit websites. If you have a website and you want it analyzed because you want to change some things, Harpa.ai will give you keyword reports, a strategy and meta descriptions. Take a listen to learn more about the various ways to use Harpa.ai!1:16 Introducing Harpa.ai2:21 The numerous features and capabilities of Harpa.ai

Helgaspjallið
Þáttur 153 - Harpa Kára um hugsjón, tvíburamömmu hlutverkið og velja fyrir sig

Helgaspjallið

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2023 108:39


Þátturinn er í boði: Nettó - www.netto.is - náið í Nettó appið í app-store og sparið! Chitocare - www.chitocare.is - afsláttarkóði: Helgaspjallið IceHerbs - www.iceherbs.is Sleepy - www.sleepy.is - fæst í Vest Ármúla Harpa Kára er eins og maður mundi segja á góðri ensku ' powerhouse ' en hún ákvað ung að taka örlítið aðra leið í lífinu en vinahópurinn en hún dýfði sér ofaní sminkuheiminn og varð fljótt okkar eftirsóttasta sminka, hún er algjör jarðýta í starfi og lífi en hún hefur skrifað bók, opnað eitt fallegasta stúdíó landsins og í haust sjáiði hana á Stöð2 sem dómari í glænýrri þáttaröð sem heitir Útlit. Við Harpa förum um víðan völl, skrautlegt verkefni þegar hún fékk að vita að hún ætti von á tvíburum og hvernig það er að jöggla lífi og starfi. Við förum einnig yfir námsskeiðin sem við höfum verið með uppí Make Up Studio og ásamt svo mörgu öðru. Þátturinn var tekinn upp í Nóa Síríus Stúdíó-i Podcaststöðvarinnar

Agency Exposed Podcast
Ep 135: More rest, more value, more profit = better life

Agency Exposed Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2023 50:10


Subtitle:  Dive into a world where business insights blend with the rhythm of excellence, as we unpack the essence of the "Messi Effect." Just as a catchy jingle sticks in your mind, on today's episode, we explore how aligning strengths and impeccable timing can revolutionize success. Join the guys as they discuss how to simplify the complex, fine-tune your abilities, and conduct your own symphony of achievement.    Summary: In this week's episode, the guys talk about their summer experiences, rest, value, profit, simplicity, and more. Ken shares his family's annual trip to upstate New York, emphasizing the significance of establishing deep familial connections in the Adirondacks. Brad delves into his newfound intentional rhythm for managing tasks and avoiding feeling overwhelmed. Bob describes his Florida vacation and the highlight of his summer – witnessing Lionel Messi's debut in MLS. He extrapolates important life and business lessons from Messi's approach, highlighting the value of understanding one's strengths, staying focused, and delivering when the time is right. The discussion shifts to business matters. Ken outlines positive changes his business has made, underlining the importance of proper pricing and recommending reframing the term "agency" to bring about transformative shifts. Ken introduces a tool called Harpa for analyzing longer texts and segues into the "Messi Effect," advising businesses to focus on their core strengths and remain within their expertise. The conversation touches on the tendency to overlook simple solutions and the value of practicing intentional simplicity. Brad observes that relentless busyness doesn't necessarily drive business growth, while Bob introduces the effort justification bias as it relates to focusing on strengths. Brad advocates for setting aside personal time to enhance creative flow and cognitive capabilities. Bob concludes the episode by stressing the need to balance and nurture both sides of the brain, preventing burnout and cognitive overload by renewing, resting, and reviving mental capacities.   Top 3 Curtain Pulls in this episode:    Maximize the Messi Effect. By concentrating on unique strengths, mastering expertise, and delivering value strategically, you can achieve remarkable results. This approach prioritizes focus over dispersion, encouraging alignment with core competencies and seizing timely opportunities for impactful outcomes. “He knows his lane. He knows what he's good at. And he doesn't try to be anything. But when it's time for him to stand up, he delivers. He doesn't try to be all things and doesn't try to defend. His timing is impeccable. He's always passing, he's unselfish.” Seek out the simple. In the realm of business, valuing simplicity is a potent yet often overlooked strategy. Embracing simplicity cuts through the noise, unveiling efficient solutions. “It took me a long time to realize that we as humans are conditioned to think that the simple solution is not the right solution…The thing that you are really good at, just do a lot of that thing. So don't jump to the other side.” Create a rhythm to optimize your abilities. Establishing a consistent routine enhances efficiency and minimizes overwhelm. By aligning actions with energy levels, you unlock cognitive and creative potential. This rhythm becomes a reliable guide, smoothing the path to your goals. Take time to rest, enjoy nature, and use the other half of your brain. “In the creative space, the flow is what gets your juices going, but you have to shut everything out. Allow your brain to maximize its capability. It's soothing and healing.”   For more tips, discussion, and behind the scenes: Follow us on Instagram @AgencyPodcast Join our closed Facebook community for agency leaders   About The Guys:  Bob Hutchins: Founder of BuzzPlant, a digital agency that he ran from from 2000 -2017. He is also the author of 3 books. More on Bob:  Bob on LinkedIn twitter.com/BobHutchins instagram.com/bwhutchins Bob on Facebook Brad Ayres: Founder of Anthem Republic, an award-winning ad agency. Brad's knowledge has led some of the biggest brands in the world. Originally from Detroit, Brad is an OG in the ad agency world and has the wisdom and scars to prove it. Currently that knowledge is being applied to his boutique agency. More on Brad: Brad on LinkedIn Anthem Republic twitter.com/bradayres instagram.com/therealbradayres facebook.com/Bradayres Ken Ott: Co-Founder and Chief Growth Rebel of Metacake, an Ecommerce Growth Team for some of the world's most influential brands with a mission to Grow Brands That Matter. Ken is also an author, speaker, and was nominated for an Emmy for his acting on the Metacake Youtube Channel (not really). More on Ken:  Ken on LinkedIn Metacake - An Ecommerce Growth Team Growth Rebel TV twitter.com/iamKenOtt instagram.com/iamKenOtt facebook.com/iamKenOtt   Show Notes: [0:35] Brad opens this week's episode with the idea that the guys should have a jingle for Agency Exposed. [1:30] Bob asks the guys what they did this summer. [2:00] Ken talks about his family's trip to upstate New York to the Adirondacks and the value of putting down deep familial roots. “I've gone every year for my entire life. It's just a special place for us.” [7:55] Brad tells the guys about his new 1980 Porsche and his trips up to Michigan. [12:15] Brad also breaks down his new intentional rhythm he's been creating over the summer. “I feel like this summer I have been able to kind of just create more of a rhythm and it's been really helpful…there's a point where you start feeling overwhelmed, and you really don't know why. You have to stop and take a look at your day and try to figure out how do I do what I need to do, but not feel overwhelmed when I'm doing it?” [14:07] Bob talks about his vacations to Florida and his highlight of the summer, seeing Lionel Messi play his first MLS game. “There's just something amazing about watching people that are like the highest elite level of their game.” [18:05] Bob breaks down some important life and business lessons he's learned from Messi. “He knows his lane. He knows what He's good at. And he doesn't try to be anything. But when it's time for him to stand up, he delivers. He doesn't try to be all things and doesn't try to defend. His timing is impeccable. He's always passing, he's unselfish.” [19:44] Bob segues into a new topic by asking the guys about their businesses. [19:57] Ken mentions some of the positive changes his business has made, the importance of pricing, and why you shouldn't call yourself an agency. “Change the name to change the game.” [23:35] Brad talks about AI, its explosive growth, and the potential for all businesses.  [24:11] Bob adds that it's important to, “stop yourself and go, what can I automate, and what can I make more efficient with this tool?” [27:18] Ken tells the guys about Harpa, a tool he uses to analyze and understand longer or larger texts. [29:50] Ken talks about “The Messi Effect”, and how to apply it to your business. “I think it comes down to like doing what you're really, really good at, and just staying in that lane.” [33:51] Ken discusses the tendency to overlook the simple answer, and the importance of intentionally practicing simplicity. “It took me a long time to realize that we as humans are conditioned to think that the simple solution is not the right solution…The thing that you are really good at, just do a lot of that thing. So don't jump to the other side.” [37:19] Brad adds on saying, “I've noticed that,I felt like in business that if I wasn't running hard, that wasn't moving the needle in my business. That never gets you anywhere.” [39:36] Bob mentions an important psychological principle, effort justification bias, and relates it to pursuing the simple; focusing on your strengths and assets.  [41:11] Ken talks about the importance of your time because it's, “the most valuable thing in your life. And it's the only thing that you have to really leverage into doing something of worth or good.” [46:51] Brad discusses the value in setting time aside for yourself to prepare and reset in order to maximize your brain's capabilities. “In the creative space, the flow is what gets your juices going, but you have to shut everything out. Allow your brain to maximize its capability. It's soothing and healing.” [47:57] Bob closes this week's episode by talking about the importance of accessing both parts of the brain to prevent burnout or cognitive overload. “You have to renew it, and you have to rest it, and you have to revive it.”

Dragão Careca
DC 189 - Decifrando a letra da música: uma análise sem dó!

Dragão Careca

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2023 69:09


Após travar uma sangrenta batalha com um observador que protegia um calabouço cercado de baús vazios, os aventureiros encontram-se novamente sem sorte alguma. Não satisfeito com a falta de tesouros, começam a procurar portas ocultas que possam revelar passagens repletas de peças de ouro, e, para sua surpresa, encontram um cofre atrás de um quadro que continha um instrumento musical mágico: a Harpa da Desconfiança. E bastou Troah tirar algumas notas do artefato para que o grupo passasse a não acreditar em mais nada e achar que há uma verdade secreta por trás de tudo. E nem tinham bebido nada. Juro.

The Good Enough Mompreneur Podcast
53. From Strategy to Success: Dr. Brett Lane's Expert Advice on Leveraging AI and SEO in Digital Marketing for Business

The Good Enough Mompreneur Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2023 57:18


Welcome back to another exciting episode of The Good Enough Mompreneur Podcast! Today's episode features an interview with special guest Dr. Brett Lane, an expert in SEO, AI, and digital marketing, who shares his insights and strategies on how mompreneurs can leverage these powerful tools to grow their businesses. Whether you're a busy mom balancing entrepreneurship and family life or someone looking to start your own business, this episode is packed with valuable information to help you navigate the ever-evolving online landscape.In this episode, Dr. Lane also talks about his incredible story of resilience by overcoming his battle with skin cancer that was the topic of a TEDx Talk.  Dr. Lane dives into resilience in your personal and professional life, as well as creating new neuropathways, and having the courage to learn new things and take action!  So, grab a pen and paper, and get ready to learn valuable strategies and insights from Dr. Brett Lane on resilience, as well as leveraging SEO, AI, and digital marketing to take your mompreneur journey to the next level.  Let's dive right in!Highlights of topics discussed:Having resiliency in your life by not being defined by what you do and the importance of creating new neuropathwaysWhat is digital marketing and how to use Chat GPT to develop your digital marketing content and strategyWhat is SEO and how to use AI to help you focus on SEOHow you can use AI tools such as ChatGPT to create 300 pieces of content in one hour per month to amplify your brandWhat is digital marketing and how to use Chat GPT to develop your marketing and marketing strategyBuilding a strategy – being able to scale your business cost effectiveThe paradigm shift that is using  AI tools to 10x your time in your business and why moms and parents can benefit the most from AI tools Measuring digital marketing success and brand amplification – defining your goals and successResources mentioned:TEDx Talk - Dr. Brett Lane:  Increasing Your Capacity for Personal and Professional ResiliencyChatGPTPlannableOpus ClipGoogle TrendsSEO focus – Harpa.aiConnect with Dr. Lane:Website: SEOOutsourcing.com |  Instagram @DrBrettSLane | YoutubeLet's connect! Head on over to my website at:

Macroaggressions
Flashback Friday | #128: Our Digital Enslavement

Macroaggressions

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2023 61:08


We are quickly sliding into a dystopian nightmare scenario fueled by our addiction to technology. The group that is plotting the way that the world will work in the future has big plans for us, but it isn't a pretty picture. As we seek to predict where things are going, some of the ideas come from existing industries that are changing in order to incorporate technology into their business models. The development of HARPA will alter the way we deal with healthcare, as the new internet is rolled out as a way to control and track everyone's actions. Will the social credit program that is rolling out in China be adopted by America, and are Smart Cities a realistic part of the future of the United States? We will see, but if the Davos crowd has their say in things we might be saying goodbye to privacy very soon. Sponsors: Emergency Preparedness Food: www.preparewithmacroaggressions.com Chemical Free Body: https://www.chemicalfreebody.com and use promo code: MACRO C60 Purple Power: https://c60purplepower.com/ Promo Code: MACRO Wise Wolf Gold & Silver: www.Macroaggressions.gold True Hemp Science: https://truehempscience.com/ Haelan: https://haelan951.com/pages/macro Solar Power Lifestyle: https://solarpowerlifestyle.com/ Promo Code: MACRO Coin Bit App: https://coinbitsapp.com/?ref=0SPP0gjuI68PjGU89wUv Macroaggressions Merch Store: https://www.teepublic.com/stores/macroaggressions?ref_id=22530 LinkTree: linktr.ee/macroaggressions Books: HYPOCRAZY: https://amzn.to/3VsPDp8 Controlled Demolition on Amazon: https://amzn.to/3ufZdzx The Octopus Of Global Control: Amazon: https://amzn.to/3VDWQ5c Barnes & Noble: https://bit.ly/39vdKeQ Online Connection: Link Tree: https://linktr.ee/Macroaggressions Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/macroaggressions_podcast/ Discord Link:  https://discord.gg/4mGzmcFexg Website: www.theoctopusofglobalcontrol.com Facebook: www.facebook.com/theoctopusofglobalcontrol Twitter: www.twitter.com/macroaggressio3 Twitter Handle: @macroaggressio3 YouTube: www.youtube.com/channel/UCn3

Monocle 24: The Monocle Daily

Morgunbladid's senior editor Andrés Magnússon has the latest as Council of Europe leaders meet in Harpa, Iceland. In the studio, Aliona Hlivco and Michael Binyon discuss corruption in Ukraine's legal system and using astrology for travel advice. Plus: singer-songwriter Josh Ritter on his new album ‘Spectral Lines'.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Umphreak Parents Podcast
Florida 2023

Umphreak Parents Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2023 47:30


This week on the show, host Sara J gets into the recent Florida run, April 12th at Vinyl Music Hall in Pensacola, April 13th at Jannus Live in St. Petersburg, April 14th at House of Blues in Orlando and April 15th at Miami Beach Bandshell in Miami Beach.  Check the show notes for a link to Sara J's 2023 highlights playlist! Support DATC Media Company on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/Datcmediacompany"We've Come So Far" (datcmediacompany.com)DATC Media Company: https://datcmediacompany.comDATC Media YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCXM4rMP_2fWvjcVP4UH0G1QEmail: droppedamongthiscrowdpod@gmail.comShow Instagram page: https://www.instagram.com/droppedamongthiscrowdpodcast/Show Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/droppedamongthiscrowd/Twitter: https://twitter.com/amongthiscrowdBook a conversation on "Dropped among this Crowd":https://datcmediacompany.com/contact/ola/services/be-on-dropped-among-this-crowd-podcastUmphrey's McGee Tour Dates:https://www.umphreys.com/tour/Shop the Umphrey's McGee Official Store (umphreys.com)Umphrey's McGee UMXXV Digital Collectibles: umphreys.xyzThe Umphreys "WOW" Show: https://the-umphreys-wow-show-with-rob-turner-jimmy-knowledge.simplecast.com/Contact the Umphreys "WOW" show:  umwowshow@gmail.comJimmy Knowledge: https://twitter.com/UMfactsWall of "WOW": https://datcmediacompany.com/wall-of-%22wow%22-wednesdays"Stew on This": https://stew-on-this.simplecast.com/Tales from Scamp with Joel Cummins & Sara J: https://tales-from-scamp-with-joel-cummins.simplecast.com/A gift to my listeners - Get three months FREE of Amazon Music - Limited Time Offer Until 4/28: https://www.amazon.com/music/unlimited/?tag=saraj08-20&ref_=dmm_acq_asc_inf_us_saraj08-20Episode 225: https://droppedamongthiscrowdpod.simplecast.com/episodes/aspen-2023Joel's Response to playing inside at The Stone Pony mentioned in this episode: https://twitter.com/goldlikejoel/status/1650623811719659520?s=20Archive Roulette Rolls On - Umphrey's McGee (umphreys.com)nugs.net | My Playlists | Dropped Among This Crowd Podcast - 2023 HighlightsSetlists for the shows discussed in this episode: Setlists / Umphreys Mcgee April 12 2023 Vinyl Music Hall Pensacola Fl Usa - All Things Umphrey'sSetlists / Umphreys Mcgee April 13 2023 Jannus Live St Petersburg Fl Usa - All Things Umphrey'sSetlists / Umphreys Mcgee April 14 2023 House Of Blues Lake Buena Vista Fl Usa - All Things Umphrey'sSetlists / Umphreys Mcgee April 15 2023 Miami Beach Bandshell Miami Beach Fl Usa - All Things Umphrey'sWhere you can listen to the shows discussed in this episode: April 12th:Umphrey's McGee Setlist at Vinyl Music Hall, Pensacola, FL on 04-12-2023 (nugs.net)Live Recordings Archive | Umphrey's McGee (umlive.net)April 13th:Umphrey's McGee Setlist at Jannus Live, St. Petersburg, FL on 04-13-2023 (nugs.net)Live Recordings Archive | Umphrey's McGee (umlive.net)4/13/23 Umphrey's McGee | RelistenUmphreys McGee Live at Jannus Live on 2023-04-13 : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet ArchiveApril 14th: Umphrey's McGee Setlist at House of Blues - Orlando, Orlando, FL on 04-14-2023 (nugs.net)Live Recordings Archive | Umphrey's McGee (umlive.net)April 15th: Umphrey's McGee Setlist at Miami Beach Bandshell, Miami Beach, FL on 04-15-2023 (nugs.net)Live Recordings Archive | Umphrey's McGee (umlive.net)"Mantis/I Don't Know What I Want / Mantis" performed at The House of Blues in Orlando, FL on April 14th, 2023: https://youtu.be/IlQZ03nCsAM1348 - Hajimemashite -1348, live from Eldborg Hall at Harpa in Rekyjavik, Iceland on March 26th, 2022: https://youtu.be/5h9suqAMEc8 

TSF - Sinais - Podcast
Harpa e cães de loiça

TSF - Sinais - Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2023


edição de 6 março 2023

Igreja Batista Alameda Santa Felicidade
#018 | Harpa & Taça - Adoração nos Céus | Gabriel Braga | 12/02/23

Igreja Batista Alameda Santa Felicidade

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2023 64:21


Harpa & Taça - Adoração nos Céus | Gabriel Braga | 12/02/23

Pyngjan
Ársreikningar: Ammóníakfnykur almennings (1/2) - LÍN, RÚV & Harpa

Pyngjan

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2023 65:08


Þá er komið að tveggja þátta seríu sem enginn bað um. Við kynnum með skömm: Ammóníakfnykur almennings! Í þessum fyrri þætti af tveim tökum við fyrir ríkisstofnanirnar LÍN, RÚV og Hörpu og gerum okkar besta við að miðla þeim upplýsingum sem fyrir liggja í bókum þeirra. Við firrum okkur allri ábyrgð á því sem fram kemur í þessum þætti. Góða hlustun.

Encontro com a Beleza
Não há stress ao som da harpa

Encontro com a Beleza

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2023 13:40


Em tempos de maior exigência, Martim Sousa Tavares dá por si a ouvir música para harpa em repeat. Será que este instrumento tem propriedades terapêuticas?See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Católico PodCast
Tota pulchra es Maria - Version Harpa Dei

Católico PodCast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2023 18:57


Tota pulchra es Maria - Version Harpa Dei --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/jlio4/message

Víðsjá
Svipmynd af Hörpu Arnardóttur, leikkonu og leikstjóra

Víðsjá

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2022 55:00


Harpa Arnardóttir er leikkona og leikstjóri að mennt en hefur fengist við fjölbreytt verkefni alla tíð, bæði á sviði lista og ýmissa annara tengdra sviða. Harpa hefur starfað sem leikkona og leikstjóri í Borgarleikhúsinu, Þjóðleikhúsinu og hjá sjálfstæðu leikhópunum og hefur kennt leiklist og spuna hjá Kramhúsinu, Listaháskóla Íslands og víðar. Hún lauk mastersnámi í ritlist í Háskóla Íslands 2014 og frumflutti sitt fyrsta leikrit "Bláklukkur fyrir háttinn" á Listahátíð Reykjavíkur, en verkið var flutt í jurttjaldi á fjórum stöðum á hálendi Íslands sumarið 2019. Harpa hefur líka lært myndlist, jógafræði, og margt fleira en hún en hún er, að eigin sögn, umfram allt, náttúruverndari. Þessi fjölkunnuga listakona er gestur svipmyndar í þætti dagsins. Umsjón: Halla Harðardóttir og Melkorka Ólafsdóttir

Víðsjá
Svipmynd af Hörpu Arnardóttur, leikkonu og leikstjóra

Víðsjá

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2022


Harpa Arnardóttir er leikkona og leikstjóri að mennt en hefur fengist við fjölbreytt verkefni alla tíð, bæði á sviði lista og ýmissa annara tengdra sviða. Harpa hefur starfað sem leikkona og leikstjóri í Borgarleikhúsinu, Þjóðleikhúsinu og hjá sjálfstæðu leikhópunum og hefur kennt leiklist og spuna hjá Kramhúsinu, Listaháskóla Íslands og víðar. Hún lauk mastersnámi í ritlist í Háskóla Íslands 2014 og frumflutti sitt fyrsta leikrit "Bláklukkur fyrir háttinn" á Listahátíð Reykjavíkur, en verkið var flutt í jurttjaldi á fjórum stöðum á hálendi Íslands sumarið 2019. Harpa hefur líka lært myndlist, jógafræði, og margt fleira en hún en hún er, að eigin sögn, umfram allt, náttúruverndari. Þessi fjölkunnuga listakona er gestur svipmyndar í þætti dagsins. Umsjón: Halla Harðardóttir og Melkorka Ólafsdóttir

Víðsjá
Svarthol, Annie Ernaux og morgunsöngur í Laugarnesskóla

Víðsjá

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2022 55:00


Í gallerí Stak við Hverfisgötu, er að finna nokkur Svarthol, og inn um eitt þeirra liggja ormagöng alla leið inn í Mengi við Óðinsgötu. Það er myndlistarkonan Sara Riel sem hefur skapað þessi svarthol, í gler, á vegg og á pappír og striga. Við lítum inn í Svartholið með Söru hér rétt á eftir. Í dag er dagur íslenskrar tónlistar. Að því tilefni kynnum við okkur áratugalanga morgunsöngshefð í Laugarnesskóla. Árið 1951 lagði Ingólfur Guðbrandsson það til að nemendur skólans kæmu saman daglega í sal skólans til söngs. Enn þann dag í dag koma allir saman, nemendur og kennarar, og syngja tvö lög eftir fyrsta tíma dagsins. Þessi góða og skemmtilega hefð er fastur punktur í tilveru skólans og sjá stjórnendur og tónmenntakennarar um undirleik og að leiða sönginn. Tveir af aðstandendum morgunsöngsins, saxófónleikarinn og fyrrum aðstoðarskólastjórinn Kristinn Svavarsson og tónlistarkonan og tónmenntakennarinn Harpa Þorvaldsdóttir segja okkur nánar af hefðinni og samstarfi sínu, sem hófst með þeirra kynnum í Laugarnesskóla. Og Gauti Kristmannsson segir okkur frá nýjasta nóbelsverðlaunahafanum, hinni frönsku Annie Ernaux, og einu bók hennar sem komið hefur út í íslenskri þýðingu, Staðurinn í þýðingu Rutar Ingólfsdóttur. Umsjón: Halla Harðardóttir og Melkorka Ólafsdóttir

Víðsjá
Svarthol, Annie Ernaux og morgunsöngur í Laugarnesskóla

Víðsjá

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2022


Í gallerí Stak við Hverfisgötu, er að finna nokkur Svarthol, og inn um eitt þeirra liggja ormagöng alla leið inn í Mengi við Óðinsgötu. Það er myndlistarkonan Sara Riel sem hefur skapað þessi svarthol, í gler, á vegg og á pappír og striga. Við lítum inn í Svartholið með Söru hér rétt á eftir. Í dag er dagur íslenskrar tónlistar. Að því tilefni kynnum við okkur áratugalanga morgunsöngshefð í Laugarnesskóla. Árið 1951 lagði Ingólfur Guðbrandsson það til að nemendur skólans kæmu saman daglega í sal skólans til söngs. Enn þann dag í dag koma allir saman, nemendur og kennarar, og syngja tvö lög eftir fyrsta tíma dagsins. Þessi góða og skemmtilega hefð er fastur punktur í tilveru skólans og sjá stjórnendur og tónmenntakennarar um undirleik og að leiða sönginn. Tveir af aðstandendum morgunsöngsins, saxófónleikarinn og fyrrum aðstoðarskólastjórinn Kristinn Svavarsson og tónlistarkonan og tónmenntakennarinn Harpa Þorvaldsdóttir segja okkur nánar af hefðinni og samstarfi sínu, sem hófst með þeirra kynnum í Laugarnesskóla. Og Gauti Kristmannsson segir okkur frá nýjasta nóbelsverðlaunahafanum, hinni frönsku Annie Ernaux, og einu bók hennar sem komið hefur út í íslenskri þýðingu, Staðurinn í þýðingu Rutar Ingólfsdóttur. Umsjón: Halla Harðardóttir og Melkorka Ólafsdóttir

PiCast
Mozart K.622

PiCast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2022 43:07


John M. Kennedy Traverso de invita a escuchar. Muchas fuentes fidedignas indican que Mozart odiaba el sonido de las flautas. Algunos relatos cuentan que Morzart no soportaba el sonido de la flauta a un extremo tal que alguna vez enunció: "Lo único peor que una flauta son dos". De todas maneras al menos es un hecho que todos sus conciertos para flautas los compusó solamente porque le fueron encomendados con encargos muy explícitos; hasta que parece que Mozart ya no pudo más con la flauta y decidió reemplazarla del todo por el clarinete; y es así que ahora podemos disfrutar del extraordinario concierto para Clarinete K.622. Lo más curioso es que sólo desde esa fecha en la que Mozart compusó aquel magnífico concierto, al clarinete se le consideró y se le incluyó en las grandes orquestas. Orchestra: Simfónica de Islandía Concierto realizado en Harpa, Reykjavík un10 de Setembre, 2015 Conductor: Cornelius Meister Clarinete: Arngunnur Árnadóttir Compositor: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Clarinet Concerto in A major, K.622 0:27 - Allegro 12:58 - Adagio 20:07 - Rondo (Allegro) --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/john-kennedy98/message

Monocle 24: The Urbanist
Tall Stories 334: Harpa concert hall, Reykjavík

Monocle 24: The Urbanist

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2022 8:28


Tamsin Howard visits a concert hall in the Icelandic capital that tells the tales of the surrounding culture and landscape.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Normið
180. Harpa Gyna medica - Breytingarskeiðið

Normið

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2022 72:06


Helgaspjallið
Þáttur 97 - Apríl / Rvk Gypsea um mindful co-parenting og endurprógram trauma

Helgaspjallið

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2022 63:59


Þátturinn er í boði: Chitocare - www.chitocare.is - afsláttarkóði: Helgaspjallið Dominos - www.dominos.is - IceHerbs - www.iceherbs.is Dr. Teals Helgaspjalls uppáhald Apríl Harpa snýr aftur í sínum þriðja þætti hér en í hvert skipti sem hún kemur þá fær plantar hún alltaf fallegum fræjum í mig og hlustendur. Apríl er stödd á Íslandi með dóttir sína Lúnu, en hún deilir með okkur skilnaði við barnsföður og deilir með okkur hvernig hún þurfti að beita sér rétt innan þess að ala dóttir þeirra upp í samlyndi þrátt fyrir krefjandi verkefni sem skilnaður er. Hvert var sjálfstalið og hvernig tókst henni að gera það með fallegum og heilandi hætti. Talandi um heilandi, þá förum við einnig um það, en hugtakið að heila sig heyrir maður meira og meira en Apríl vill meina að það sé kannski endilega ekkert heilun sem þarf að eiga sér stað hjá okkur, heldur að endurprógramma trauma og gömul mynstur og prógrömm í heilanum okkar. Apríl kemur með endalausar áhugaverðar neglur sem vert er að skoða til að stækka og blómstra sem manneskjur. Þátturinn var tekinn upp í Nóa Síríus Stúdíói Podcaststöðvarinnar

The Wise Fool
Nína Óskarsdóttir, Conceptual Ceramic Artist (Iceland)

The Wise Fool

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2022


We discussed: craft, Iceland traditions, marketing, gender specific art forms (traditionally), craft vs art, artistic concepts, domestic art, icelandic clay, grassroots, gentrification   https://ninaoskarsdottir.com   People + Places mentioned: Harpa - https://harpa.is Listval - https://listval.is     Audio engineering by Mickey at CushAudio Services Music by Peat Biby     Supported in part by: EEA Grants from Iceland, Liechtenstein + Norway – https://eeagrants.org               And we appreciate the assistance of our partners in this project: Hunt Kastner – https://huntkastner.com Kunstsentrene i Norge – https://www.kunstsentrene.no  

The Wise Fool
Nína Óskarsdóttir, Conceptual Ceramic Artist (Iceland)

The Wise Fool

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2022 47:24


We discussed: craft, Iceland traditions, marketing, gender specific art forms (traditionally), craft vs art, artistic concepts, domestic art, icelandic clay, grassroots, gentrification   https://ninaoskarsdottir.com   People + Places mentioned: Harpa - https://harpa.is Listval - https://listval.is     Audio engineering by Mickey at CushAudio Services Music by Peat Biby     Supported in part by: EEA Grants from Iceland, Liechtenstein + Norway – https://eeagrants.org               And we appreciate the assistance of our partners in this project: Hunt Kastner – https://huntkastner.com Kunstsentrene i Norge – https://www.kunstsentrene.no  

Morgunútvarpið
7. apríl-Vinnurými, stjúpsamfélag, gull, stríðsglæpir, skátar, rafmynt

Morgunútvarpið

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2022


Margir vinna í opnum vinnurýmum og nú standa fyrir dyrum breytingar í Háskóla Íslands sem miða að því að opna vinnurými háskólaprófessora. Þessu hafa prófessorarnir mótmælt harðlega og vísa til mikilvægis akademísks frelsis auk þess sem þeir hafa oft á tíðum viðkvæm gögn um nemendur á skrifborðum sínum. Rúnar Vilhjálmsson Formaður félags prófessora við ríkisháskóla, kom til okkar. Stjúpsamfélagið varð til árið 2021 og er fallegt og hvetjandi samfélag á samfélagsmiðlum sem snýst um hugleiðingar, hvatningu og fróðleik um stjúpfjölskyldu formið og fjölskyldu formið almennt. Kristjana Jenný Ingvarsdóttir er konan á bak við samfélagið og við fengum hana til okkar og fræddumst um áskoranir og tækifæri stjúpsamfélagsins. Morgunblaðið greindi frá því í vikunni að kanadíska námuvinnslufyrirtækið AEX Gold hefði fundið mikið magn gulls eftir tilraunaboranir á Grænlandi í fyrra. Við ræddum við Eld Ólafsson, sem stofnaði og stýrir félaginu, um gullgröft og fyrirhugaðar framkvæmdir. Ríkissaksóknari Úkraínu segir að rannsókn standi yfir á hátt í sex þúsund atvikum sem flokkast geti sem stríðsglæpir af hálfu Rússa. Rannsóknin beinist meðal annars að framferði þeirra í Bucha og byggist á lögum um framferði í stríði. Við töluðum við Þórdísi Ingadóttur, prófessor við lögfræðideild Háskólans í Reykjavík, um hvar mörkin liggja og hvaða afleiðingar stríðsglæpir geta haft. Skátaþing fór fram um síðustu helgi á Bifröst. Þar var Harpa Ósk Valgeirsdóttir kjörinn nýr skátahöfðingi og við fengum hana til okkar í spjall um skátahreyfinguna á Íslandi, áherslur starfsins og útbreiðslu. Nokkuð hefur verið rætt um rafmynt á undanförnum vikum, bæði vegna stríðsins í Úkraínu og mikillar verðbólgu, en einnig vegna umfjöllunar um orkunýtingu hér á landi. Við ræddum við Kjartan Ragnars hjá Myntkaupum um stöðu og framtíð þessa ósýnilega orkufreka gjaldmiðils. Tónlist: Jón Jónsson - Lengi lifum við. Guðmundur Pétursson - Stay the ride. Dire Straits - Walk of life. Margrét Rúnars - Mömmuhjarta. Eiríkur Hauksson - Gull. Birgir Steinn - Hold on. Alicia Keys - Superwoman. Flott - Flott.

Boiler Room
Economic Warfare Against EVERYONE! (Pt. 2)

Boiler Room

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2022 58:49


Alternate Current Radio Presents: BOILER ROOM - Learn to protect yourself against predatory mass media cartels.In the second segment of this episode, the Boiler Room is looking at what is happening with the Pandemic Industrial Complex while the mass media cartels are trying to make the public feel like its no longer 'a thing' in lieu of War in Ukraine. The gang maintains that this is NOT the case and that the War is conveniently being used to obfuscate from the continued global, systemic institutionalization of the illegal and immoral Pandemic procedures and so called emergency powers that governments continue to take while the public suffers the now long-term effects of lockdowns, shutdowns, mandates, and experimental mRNA gene therapy. Further topics include the creation of "HARPA" or 'DARPA-H,' the Senate voting to end the C-19 emergency powers while Biden promises to veto the bill, a proposed new "W.H.O. constitution" will override a countries constitution in future pandemics or natural disasters and much more!Featured:HesherSporeRuckusInfidel PharaohMindSpaceArtChopperhttps://alternatecurrentradio.com