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In this powerful and emotionally resonant episode of The Worst Girl Gang Ever, hosts Bex Gunn and Laura Buckingham sit down with award-winning performance poet Harry Baker to explore the raw, messy, and rarely spoken-about reality of trying to conceive. Harry shares the deeply personal journey behind his viral spoken word poem “Trying,” a moving piece that captures the rollercoaster of hope, grief, waiting, and heartache that comes with infertility, miscarriage, and longing for parenthood. Together, they tackle the emotional and mental toll of fertility struggles, the silence around male infertility grief, and the taboos that keep so many couples suffering in silence. This is a must-listen episode for anyone who has experienced pregnancy loss, IVF, male factor infertility, or simply the endless wait that trying to conceive can bring. In this show, we discuss: Male infertility and grief from the perspective of a non-pregnant partner How writing and poetry can help process baby loss and fertility struggles The emotional impact of miscarriage and trying to conceive over time IVF journeys, same-sex fertility barriers, and NHS funding inequality Feeling left behind as friends announce pregnancies Why men often stay silent about baby loss and fertility issues The power of vulnerability and storytelling in grief support Mental health in infertility and why therapy helps Taboo feelings like jealousy, guilt, shame, and not feeling “entitled” to grieve How to support others going through baby loss or infertility About The Worst Girl Gang Ever: The Worst Girl Gang Ever is a real, honest, and emotive podcast that covers the heartbreaking subject of miscarriage, infertility, and baby loss. Expect raw conversations about unspoken experiences, hosted by TWGGE founders Bex Gunn and Laura Buckingham. This show aims to break the silence and open dialogue around miscarriage and pregnancy loss. No more shame, no more taboo—let's change the narrative for future generations. Support and Resources: The Worst Girl Gang Ever Foundation - Live Brunch and Podcast Recording Come join us for a fun-filled morning at Big Creative Training Campus! We're hosting a live brunch and podcast recording where you can meet the hosts and be part of the action. Expect laughter, good food, and empowering conversations with a side of sass. Don't miss out on this unique opportunity to be part of The Worst Girl Gang Ever Foundation community in person. Grab your tickets now!https://www.eventbrite.com/e/the-worst-girl-gang-ever-foundation-live-brunch-and-podcast-recording-tickets-1299445058149?aff=oddtdtcreator Lunch Time Support Sessions We are running FREE drop in sessions for ANYONE that needs them. The session will run from 12-1pm GMT you can just come drop in at any point during that time slot. https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfIHuqZMIAoL3_4e_HvjqlbNRKyypQEUfxon-9yJ5B3npD8Tw/viewform?fbclid=PAZXh0bgNhZW0CMTEAAaZ0INPJ1b6lBMfyh71mlZcZjKKjog7u2j3Qp9y6aacI5bUwn93aUVTxsLM_aem_LFb-GGo98awVY62Lt_7YEw Our book We are here to tell you that you are entitled to grieve, and that your grief is not disproportionate to your loss. We are here to open up the dialogue around miscarriage, so we don't perpetuate the shame, judgement and isolation so many of us feel following pregnancy loss. We are here to equip you with knowledge, tools and guidance to support and help you in whatever way you need. https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/aw/d/0008524998/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?ie=UTF8&sr= Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Zak Mir talks to Harry Baker, CEO of Borders & Southern, after the London-based independent oil and gas company with assets offshore the Falkland Islands announced a fundraising campaign to raise approximately £1.86 million. They discuss the new “drill, baby drill” mantra in the market and Borders' strategy and outlook. Borders & Southern is an independent oil and gas exploration company based in the UK, primarily focused on the Falkland Islands. Recently, the company made headlines with its announcement of a fundraising initiative aimed at raising approximately £1.86 million. This move reflects the company's strategic approach to capitalizing on its assets and positioning itself in the market. Understanding the Fundraising Announcement During a recent discussion, Harry Baker, the CEO of Borders & Southern, elaborated on the reasons behind this fundraising effort. Historically, the company has raised two years' worth of working capital, but in the last round of fundraising in October, they opted to raise only one year's worth. Baker emphasized that the decision was made because the company's share price at the time did not accurately reflect the potential internal and external catalysts that could drive the stock's value upward. Funding for Future Opportunities The primary goal of the recent fundraising is to ensure that Borders & Southern is fully funded until the end of 2026. This financial cushion is crucial as the company seeks to engage in farm-out conversations regarding its significant discovery project. Baker expressed that being well-funded allows the company to negotiate from a position of strength, enabling them to pursue the right deals rather than settling for the first offer that comes along. https://www.share-talk.com/zak-mir-talks-to-harry-baker-chief-executive-of-borders-and-southern-petroleum-plc/
Today, you'll learn about a bacteria that turns plastic into spider webs, a massive deep-sea discovery right in our own backyard, and how CRISPR could reshape agriculture for an entire continent. Silk-Making Bacteria •“Researchers Engineer Bacteria That Eat Plastic, Make Multipurpose Spider Silk.” Technology Networks. 2024. •“Two-step conversion of polyethylene into recombinant proteins using a microbial platform.” by Alexander Connor, et al. 2023. •“Our planet is choking on plastic.” UNEP. n.d. •“In Images: Plastic is Forever.” UN. n.d. Deep Coral •“World's largest deep-sea coral reef found lurking beneath the Gulf Stream ‘right on the doorstep' of US coast.” by Harry Baker. 2024. •“Status of Coral Reefs.” Reef Resilience Network. N.d. •“Life Below Water.” UN. 2020. CRISPR Agriculture •“CRISPR-edited crops break new ground in Africa.” by Heidi Ledford. 2024. •“Witchweed.” USDA. n.d. •“Africa's agricultural revolution: From self-sufficiency to global food powerhouse.” By Gareth Hodder & Brenda Migwalla. 2023. •“GMOs or non-GMOs? The CRISPR Conundrum.” By Aftab Ahmad, et al. 2023. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
We recorded this on the eve of Davina's birthday, but in this episode we give *you* the gift of recommendations! As always, send us your ideas to our instagram @makingthecutpodcast.Choreomania - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qf1VYwALPKELightning Poems - https://www.instagram.com/lightning.poems/The Simple Things - https://www.thesimplethings.com/Harry Baker - https://www.harrybaker.co/Forest Feast - https://forestfeast.com/Monsters - https://www.imdb.com/title/tt13207736/Holy Carrot - https://www.holycarrot.co.uk/Caroline Barnes - https://www.instagram.com/carolinebarnesmakeup/?hl=enAlfie Jukes - https://www.instagram.com/alfiejukes_/?hl=enRight Here, Right Now - https://www.imdb.com/title/tt26455132/Nobody Wants This - https://www.imdb.com/title/tt26933824/ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
John Warner explores stressing pedagogical principles over AI promises on episode 536 of the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast. Quotes from the episode Once they've done the writing or as even as they're doing the writing, they're reflecting on their own metacognitive understanding of their own practices. -John Warner While you are in the act of writing, you are processing your own idea. -John Warner Resources Engaged Education, John Warner's Newsletter Structure + Freedom = Engagement: A Frankenstories case study, by John Warner Just Say No to Historical Figure Chatbots: Against digital necromancy, by John Warner The Science of...Writing? Teaching requires lots of experimenting, but that doesn't make it a "science" By John Warner On Becoming: Bonni and Alexis' MYFest24 Session Frankenstories Joy Comes Back A reminder to myself to never take for granted how wonderful life can be. Unashamed, by Harry Baker
Flowtation is our favorite hybrid: 60 Minutes of Flow, 10 Minutes of Meditation...this one starts with a flow class focused on how our arms connect to our heart and core ... and finishes with the poem Wonderful by Harry Baker, and includes a guided heart centered meditation.
Episode 52: Harry Baker (re-release)World Poetry Slam Champion Harry Baker is a poet and a maths graduate. He writes about important stuff like hope, dinosaurs and German falafel-spoons. His latest collection ‘Unashamed' was published with Burning Eye in 2022 and he has been sharing poems from it at every available opportunity ever since.“Harry Baker's intricate, quick-fire rhymes have always been on the impressive side of mind-blowing” - The Scotsman“Spectacularly Witty” ***** (Whatsonstage) “Blistering wordplay” ***** (Threeweeks) “Not one syllable out of place” ***** (The Wee Review) “The Spell Over The Audience Is Tangible” ***** (Broadway Baby) “Simply put... The greatest performer on earth” ***** (BBC Radio 1)#HYGYSTPOD #haveyougotyoursh*ttogether #HYGYST #caitlinoryan #HarryBaker #poet #falafelHave You Got Your Sh*t Together? with Caitlin O'Ryan, is a podcast that celebrates not having your sh*t together! In each episode, Caitlin interviews guests who seemingly “have their sh*t together” - be that in life/love/work/hobbies. Throughout the conversation, the questions unveil whether they actually do, or whether the whole concept is a lie! With a mix of guests from various backgrounds, the podcast is sure to be relatable, honest, and an antidote to Instagram culture. Producer - Ant Hickman (www.ahickman.uk)Artwork - Tim Saunders (www.instagram.com/timsaunders.design)Photography - Patch Bell (www.patchstudio.uk)Music - Cassia - 'Slow' (www.wearecassia.com)Web: www.hygystpod.comInsta: www.instgram.com/hygystpodEmail: hygystpod@gmail.comRSS: https://feeds.acast.com/public/shows/644a8e8eadac0f0010542d86 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
news birthdays/events easter desserts from around the world word of the day news funny april fool's idea game: can you tell the song by the drums? what defines 'good customer service' for you? news recent genius inventions (buzzfeed) game: classic tv show quotes listener feedback break news easiest veggies to grow game: 5 second rule goodbye/fun facts....Lemon Chiffon Cake Day commemorates the sweetness of the flavorful light lemon cake that was invented by Harry Baker in 1927. Back then in the 1920s, the angel food cake was famous, but it contained no butter, fat, or shortening of any sort. stiffened egg whites are folded into the batter and Baker replaced the butter with vegetable oil. Harry was a Los Angeles insurance agent but eventually became a caterer for Brown Derby Restaurant in LA...He kept the recipe a secured secret for years, until he finally sold it to Betty Crocker in 1947. So the next time life gives you lemons, make a Lemon Chiffon Cake.
Today, let's talk about March Madness, and how to harness all that awesome enthusiasm to get your students excited about poetry. Last year I worked with Melissa Alter Smith from #teachlivingpoets to create a March Madness bracket for The Lighthouse, and I learned a lot from her in the process! This is such a fun and easy way to bring more voices into your curriculum and help kids see a lot of different sides of poetry. You can set up your poetry bracket on your white board or on Google Slides. Then you fill it in with poetry that you love. You can mix together classic poetry, performance poetry from The Button Classroom-Friendly Youtube channel, readings by contemporary authors that you find online, or favorites from Def Poetry Jam. There are so many options! You can get fancy and have poems face off initially that cover similar themes or are from similar outlets, or you can just randomly scatter in poems and see what happens. All you need is a few minutes a day to read or play the two poems of the day in the classes that participate in the tournament. You can just have students close their eyes and raise their hands to vote, or you can build some writing and argument into it by having them rate the poems and defend their scores. Either way, keep track of the votes in each class and at the end of the day, move your winners forward in your tournament bracket. By the end of your tournament, your students will be used to how this all works and it really should just take a few minutes a day that hopefully everyone will be looking forward to. Need a few poets to get you started? Take a look at Harry Baker, Amanda Gorman, and Sarah Kay for a start. Or check out the poetry bracket Melissa has created on the Teach Living Poets site or, if you're in The Lighthouse, the one that she and I built in the Teach Living Poets section. A March Madness poetry bracket is such an easy way to integrate more poetry from many voices into your curriculum and, of course, get more student buy-in for it! That's why this week I want to highly recommend you give it a try. Learn more about The Lighthouse: https://sparkcreativity.kartra.com/page/C4Z236 Teach Living Poets March Madness Bracket: https://teachlivingpoets.com/2023/02/26/march-madness-poetry-bracket/ Go Further: Explore alllll the Episodes of The Spark Creativity Teacher Podcast. Join our community, Creative High School English, on Facebook. Come hang out on Instagram. Enjoying the podcast? Please consider sharing it with a friend, snagging a screenshot to share on the ‘gram, or tapping those ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ to help others discover the show. Thank you!
Today, you'll learn about the reason and the history of leap year, how scientists could tailor microgreens to your own personal dietary needs, and a lesson in getting teens to listen to your advice. Leap Year “Why do we have leap years? And how did they come about?” by Harry Baker. 2024. “Which years are leap years?” Royal Museums Greenwich. N.d. Tailored Microgreens “Microgreens made to order: Italian scientists have tailored iodine and potassium content of radishes, peas, rocket and chard.” EurekAlert! 2024. “Soilless cultivation systems to produce tailored microgreens for specific nutritional needs.” by Massimiliano D'Imperio, et al. 2023. “Why You Should Eat Microgreens.” Cleveland Clinic. 2023. Teenage Advice “Got advice? Here's how to get teens to listen.” by J.D. Warren. 2024. “Relations Between Daily Activities and Adolescent Mood: The Role of Autonomy.” by Sally M. Weinstein & Robin Mermelstein. 2008. Follow Curiosity Daily on your favorite podcast app to get smarter with Calli and Nate — for free! Still curious? Get exclusive science shows, nature documentaries, and more real-life entertainment on discovery+! Go to https://discoveryplus.com/curiosity to start your 7-day free trial. discovery+ is currently only available for US subscribers. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Today, you'll learn about a bacteria that turns plastic into spider webs, a massive deep-sea discovery right in our own backyard, and how CRISPR could reshape agriculture for an entire continent. Silk-Making Bacteria “Researchers Engineer Bacteria That Eat Plastic, Make Multipurpose Spider Silk.” Technology Networks. 2024. “Two-step conversion of polyethylene into recombinant proteins using a microbial platform.” by Alexander Connor, et al. 2023. “Our planet is choking on plastic.” UNEP. n.d. “In Images: Plastic is Forever.” UN. n.d. Deep Coral “World's largest deep-sea coral reef found lurking beneath the Gulf Stream ‘right on the doorstep' of US coast.” by Harry Baker. 2024. “Status of Coral Reefs.” Reef Resilience Network. N.d. “Life Below Water.” UN. 2020. CRISPR Agriculture “CRISPR-edited crops break new ground in Africa.” by Heidi Ledford. 2024. “Witchweed.” USDA. n.d. “Africa's agricultural revolution: From self-sufficiency to global food powerhouse.” By Gareth Hodder & Brenda Migwalla. 2023. “GMOs or non-GMOs? The CRISPR Conundrum.” By Aftab Ahmad, et al. 2023. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Episode 40: Harry BakerWorld Poetry Slam Champion Harry Baker is a poet and a maths graduate. He writes about important stuff like hope, dinosaurs and German falafel-spoons. His latest collection ‘Unashamed' was published with Burning Eye in 2022 and he has been sharing poems from it at every available opportunity ever since.“Harry Baker's intricate, quick-fire rhymes have always been on the impressive side of mind-blowing” - The Scotsman“Spectacularly Witty” ***** (Whatsonstage) “Blistering wordplay” ***** (Threeweeks) “Not one syllable out of place” ***** (The Wee Review) “The Spell Over The Audience Is Tangible” ***** (Broadway Baby) “Simply put... The greatest performer on earth” ***** (BBC Radio 1)#HYGYSTPOD #haveyougotyoursh*ttogether #HYGYST #caitlinoryan #HarryBaker #poet #falafelHave You Got Your Sh*t Together? with Caitlin O'Ryan, is a podcast that celebrates not having your sh*t together! In each episode, Caitlin interviews guests who seemingly “have their sh*t together” - be that in life/love/work/hobbies. Throughout the conversation, the questions unveil whether they actually do, or whether the whole concept is a lie! With a mix of guests from various backgrounds, the podcast is sure to be relatable, honest, and an antidote to Instagram culture. Producer - Ant Hickman (www.ahickman.uk)Artwork - Tim Saunders (www.instagram.com/timsaunders.design)Photography - Patch Bell (www.patchstudio.uk)Music - Cassia - 'Slow' (www.wearecassia.com)Web: www.hygystpod.comInsta: www.instgram.com/hygystpodEmail: hygystpod@gmail.comRSS: https://feeds.acast.com/public/shows/644a8e8eadac0f0010542d86 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
We're back! Our spring season ('spring' is a bit 'hopeful' at the moment and also autumn for southern hemisphere listeners) opens with a look at vocal jazz in the cool company of the sextet, STANDARD DEVIATION. Ever tried it yourself and wondered just how it works? Now you can. Robert is joined by Tegan Eldridge, Olivia Hugh-Jones, Nell Norman, Hugh Beckwith, Harry Baker and Tom Lowen.TRACK LISTING :Swingin' Till The Girls Come HomeOscar Pettiford & Jon Hendricks, arr. Harry BakerA Red Red Rosetrad./Burns, arr. Edward Randell (ex-Swingle)I Know You KnowEsperanza Spalding, arr. Aled WalkerSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/choral-chihuahua. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Today, you'll learn about the psychological toll of steroid use, a very slow moving penguin-iceberg collision, and why we sometimes get dizzy when we stand up. Steroid Psychopath “Male weightlifters who use steroids are more prone to psychopathology than those who do not.” by Vladimir Hedrih. 2023. “Clustering psychopathology in male anabolic-androgenic steroid users and nonusing weightlifters.” by Marie Lindvik Jorstad, et al. 2023. “Anabolic Steroids.” Cleveland Clinic. 2023. Iceberg Crash “45-mile-long iceberg slams into penguin refuge in Antarctica, almost causing ecological disaster.” by Harry Baker. 2023. “A Brief Iceberg-Island Encounter.” by Adam Voiland. 2023. “Chinstrap Penguin.” n.a. N.d. “Chinstrap Penguin.” National Geographic. N.d. Stand Up Dizziness “Why do you get dizzy if you stand up too fast?” by Anna Gora. 2023. “Orthostatic Hypotension.” NIH. 2023. “A Brief REview on the Pathological Role of Decreased Blood Flow Affected in Retinitis Pigmentosa.” by Yi Jing Yang. 2018. Follow Curiosity Daily on your favorite podcast app to get smarter with Calli and Nate — for free! Still curious? Get exclusive science shows, nature documentaries, and more real-life entertainment on discovery+! Go to https://discoveryplus.com/curiosity to start your 7-day free trial. discovery+ is currently only available for US subscribers. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
On this week's episode of Open, Emma is joined by spoken word artist, author and poet, Harry Baker. Harry became the youngest ever Poetry World Slam Champion in 2012 and his first collection of poems, The Sunshine Kid, was published in 2014. A math's graduate, his poem Love Poem For Lonely Prime Numbers has been translated into more than twenty languages and his Ted talks watched by millions. He hosts a live performance podcast, Something Borrowed and his second poetry collection Unashamed is a book of heart, humour and hope. You can follow Harry on Instagram - @harrybakerpoetAnd find out more (including where to see him live) via his website - www.harrybaker.coThe sponsors of this season of Open are Boho Betty - an affordable gemstone jewellery brand and go to destination for meaningful gifts that promote a sense of well being. Their stunning, handcrafted collections are timeless, unique and exude style making them the perfect gifts for yourself or your loved ones.Use the exclusive discount code OPEN15 to enjoy 15% off the whole range. T's & C's Apply.www.bohobetty.co.ukInstagram - @bohobettyukEmma Campbell - @limitless_emwww.limitlessem.comOpen with Emma Campbell is produced by Pretty Fire Audio Productions @prettyfireaudioproductions
This week we have an interview with poet Harry Baker. As well as performing some of his poetry, he talks about faith and prayer, and about how creativity is, inherently, a worshipful act. As he says, 'If I didn't write poetry about dinosaurs then who would?' Christmas, Tradition, Truth and Total Bauble - talk by Nick Page at Southwark Cathedral Support the podcast Contact the podcast through your email machine Mentioned in this episode: Harry Baker: Website 'A Love Poem For Lonely Prime Numbers'
Today, you'll learn about a successful moon landing that could launch another space race, an answer to the age-old debate about whether you should marry for love or money, and a 250 million year old human-sized armored sea lizard. Indian Moon Landing “India's successful moon landing follows recent failures by other countries.” by Katherine Kornei. 2023. “How many countries have been to the moon.” Starlust. 2023. “NASA's Artemis program: Everything you need to know.” by Adam Mann & Ailsa Harvey. 2022. “Ice at the moon's poles might have come from ancient volcanoes.” by Anna Gibbs. 2022. “India's first attempt to land on the moon appears to have failed.” by Lisa Grossman. 2019. “Israel's first moon mission lost moments before landing.” by Maria Temming. 2019. Love or Money? “Should You Marry for Love or for Money?” by Aaron Ben-Zeev, Ph.D. 2023. “Do Americans marry for love or money? Finally, an answer.” by Quentin Fottrell. 2019. “75% Of Women Would Not Marry Someone In This Circumstance.” by YourTango. 2023. “Why The Smartest Women Marry For Money.” by aol health. 2022. “Does Love Always Win.” by Aaron Ben-Zeev Ph.D. 2018. Giant Sea Lizard “Ancient human-sized sea lizard rewrites history of early armored marine reptiles.” by Harry Baker. 2023. “An armoured marine reptile from the Early Triassic of South China and its phylogenetic and evolutionary implications.” by Andrzej S Wolniewicz, et al. 2023. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Today, you'll learn about how barnacles could lead researchers to the site of a lost plane crash, a record breaking polar bear party up north, and a new dinosaur discovery that could shed light on the era of their demise. MH370 Barnacles “Barnacles may help reveal location of lost Malaysia Airlines flight MH370.” ScienceDaily. 2023. “Flight 370 ‘will be found' near ‘7th arc'.” by Jeff Pegues & Tucker Reals. 2014. “What are barnacles?” NOAA. 2023. Polar Bear Town “‘Polar bear capital of the world' soon to be overrun with record number of bears due to shifting sea ice.” by Harry Baker. 2023. “Inside Canada's Polar Bear Jail.” by Lina Zeldovich. 2023. “Town of Churchill.” Town Website. N.d. Dino Discovery “Newly discovered ‘primitive cousins of T rex' shed light on the end of the age of dinosaurs in Africa.” ScienceDaily. 2023. “69-Million-Year-Old T. Rex Cousins Found Among Africa's Last Dinosaurs.” by Rachael Funnell. 2023. “Abelisauridae.” Dinopedia. N.d. Follow Curiosity Daily on your favorite podcast app to get smarter with Calli and Nate — for free! Still curious? Get exclusive science shows, nature documentaries, and more real-life entertainment on discovery+! Go to https://discoveryplus.com/curiosity to start your 7-day free trial. discovery+ is currently only available for US subscribers. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Today, you'll learn about a new weapon in the war against toxic shock syndrome, how scientists used AI to understand how humans evolved to walk upright, and a new discovery that changes what we know about saber-toothed cats. TSS Bacto-Battles “Inhibition of Toxic Shock Syndrome Associated Staphylococcus aureus by Probiotic Lactobacilli.” by Patrick M. Schlievert. 2023. https://journals.asm.org/doi/10.1128/spectrum.01735-23 “Probiotic combo stops bacteria that cause toxic shock syndrome.” Science Daily. 2023. https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/07/230721113221.htm “Toxic shock syndrome.” Mayo Clinic. 2022. https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/toxic-shock-syndrome/symptoms-causes/syc-20355384 Why We Walk “These bones were made for walking.” Columbia University Irving Medical Center. 2023. https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/07/230721113151.htm “Study Sheds Light on Why Humans Walk on Two Legs.” by Claudia Morain. 2007. https://www.ucdavis.edu/news/study-sheds-light-why-humans-walk-two-legs “Why humans walk on two legs: a close look at chimpanzees puts some old theories to the test.” The Conversation. 2022. https://theconversation.com/why-humans-walk-on-two-legs-a-close-look-at-chimpanzees-puts-some-old-theories-to-the-test-194193 Saber-Tooth Cat Party “5 million-year-old fossils reveal 2 new species of saber-toothed cats in South Africa.” by Harry Baker. 2023. https://www.livescience.com/animals/extinct-species/5-million-year-old-fossils-reveal-2-new-species-of-saber-toothed-cats-in-south-africa “Human ancestors were walking upright 7 million years ago, ancient limb bone suggests.” by Ann Gibbons. 2022. https://www.science.org/content/article/human-ancestors-were-walking-upright-7-million-years-ago-ancient-limb-bone-suggests Follow Curiosity Daily on your favorite podcast app to get smarter with Calli and Nate — for free! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Walk Among Heroes is honored to welcome Episode 38 guest, Lieutenant Colonel (retired) Harry Baker. LTC Baker, 102 years-old and a resident of Pewaukee, Wisconsin, served as an artillery officer during World War II in Company C, 302nd Field Artillery Battalion, 76th Infantry Division. He arrived in Europe right as Germany was mounting their largest counterattack of the war, later known as the Battle of the Bulge. LTC Baker and his men landed and immediately moved straight to the front lines. After repelling the German attack and eliminating the ‘bulge,' the 76th Division advanced eastward into Germany, eventually forcing the Germans to surrender. Following the war, LTC Baker remained in the Army Reserve and finally retired as a lieutenant colonel. As a civilian, LTC Baker had a wonderful career with Sears & Roebuck, and his proudest accomplishment, a 77-year marriage to Pat, the love of his life. An amazing man with an amazing story. We are so honored to meet him and to share his story.A special ‘thank you' to Mike Tarr, Louie Schultz, and Coey Podraza, for helping to arrange this amazing meeting.
Richard Diamond, Private Detective came to NBC in 1949. Diamond was a slick, sophisticated detective, with a sharp tongue for folks who needed it. Diamond enjoyed the detective life, but not as much as entertaining his girl, Helen Asher. After each show, he would croon a number to his Park Avenue sweetheart.Mr. Powell, a former song and dance man, was perfect for the role. He added an extra dimension to the 40's hokey private eye drama.Diamond was a rough gumshoe that would often get knocked on the head with a revolver butt or other items. His counterpart on the police force was Lt. Levinson who often accepted Diamond's help reluctantly. Levinson would claim to get stomach trouble whenever Diamond would call him and would take bicarbonate to settle his aching stomach. Although they always seem at odds with each other, Diamond and Levinson were best friends.The Harry Baker Case: Harry Baker's romance with his secretary is complicated by a $300,000 jewel robbery. Originally aired September 3rd, 1949.Support the show
Esoteric News Briefs 3.8 – Ancestral Ghost Genome Join the Esoteric Archive! Esoteric Book Club teeshirts http://www.folkherocoffee.com/ Coupon Code: esoteric22 “Gold coin hoard worth $300K found beneath kitchen floor in England”, by Jennifer Nalewicki: https://tinyurl.com/yeymteea “Classified UFO videos would 'harm national security' if released, Navy says”, by Brandon Specktor: https://tinyurl.com/3mrwh2d4 “New Study Suggests Aliens Don't Visit Us Because Our Sun Is Too Boring”, by Evan Gough: https://tinyurl.com/yybrehwp “Aliens haven't contacted Earth because there's no sign of intelligence here, new answer to the Fermi paradox suggests”, by Stephanie Pappas: https://tinyurl.com/3m29epbc “Mineral Samples May Have Just Revealed The Mysterious Birthplace of Asteroid Ryugu”, by David Nield: https://tinyurl.com/4sfbs99w “Asteroid Ryugu Reveals Ancient Grains of Stardust Older Than The Solar System”, by Michelle Starr: https://tinyurl.com/mubtcjdj “Cobra bites boy, boy bites it back (the boy was fine, the snake wasn't)”, by Harry Baker: https://tinyurl.com/fyjtchda “An AI Found an Unknown 'Ghost' Ancestor in The Human Genome”, by Peter Dockrill: https://tinyurl.com/bdhrkxfj “Half-a-Million Year Old Signs of Extinct Human Species Found in Poland Cave”, by Michelle Starr: https://tinyurl.com/yc427pzy “Russia Has Got a Problem with Witches”, by Robyn White: https://tinyurl.com/bdf6nuwp “The Haunted Frequency”: https://tinyurl.com/eukt2e5m “2 Viking swords buried upright might have connected the dead to Odin and Valhalla”, by Laura Geggel: https://tinyurl.com/yckz4fyn “'Mind-boggling' alloy is Earth's toughest material, even at extreme temperatures”, by Robert Lea: https://tinyurl.com/4ykk5se5 “What really happened to Ronald Hunkeler, who inspired ‘The Exorcist'”, by Isabel Vincent and Jack Morphet: https://tinyurl.com/yckcrpxt Esoteric Book Club can be found on: Facebook: @esotericbookclub Instagram: esotericbookclub Web: www.esotericbookclub.org Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/Esotericbookclub Paypal: paypal.me/esotericbookclub
World Slam champion Harry Baker shares his poem A-Z and offers tips on having fun with poetry and using limitations to unlock creativity. He also discusses his latest show Unashamed which he was performing at Norwich Arts Centre
After sharing about some of the loudly colored fashions of the day, Richard shifts to a matter of Harry Baker becoming involved with his private secretary. Is Connie moving too…
After sharing about some of the loudly colored fashions of the day, Richard shifts to a matter of Harry Baker becoming involved with his private secretary. Is Connie moving too…
On the 23rd of June 1958, the body of 61 year old Harry Baker was found wrapped in two sacks just over a wire fence by the A50 roadside near Knutsford in Cheshire. His beaten and battered body made him almost unrecognisable. Links were made by 5 different police forces and he was eventually identified. He had disappeared from his rounds working as a credit draper in the town of Bootle in Merseyside over 2 weeks before. Who had killed this meticulous and caring man, where had it happened and why? Important information provided by: All contemporary articles from Find my past: https://www.findmypast.co.uk/https://www.liverpoolecho.co.uk/news/liverpool-news/body-flowerbed-murder-baffled-detectives-18404153History of Bootle: https://historic-liverpool.co.uk/interactive-maps/historic-townships/bootle/Today's sponsors: BED STU Use code US20 for 20% off your first order- https://www.bedstu.com/Music by: dl-sounds.comFollow the Unseen Podcast on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-unseen-podcast/id1318473466?uo=4Follow the Unseen Podcast on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/0xWK7Mu3bTP6oziZvxrwSK?si=QxvyPkZ2TdCDscnfxyeRawFollow the Unseen Podcast on Stitcher: https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/the-unseen-podcastJoin our Facebook group https://www.facebook.com/unseenpodFollow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/theunseenpodFollow us on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/theunseenpod/Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/theunseenpod?fan_landing=trueSubscribe to 10 Minute True Crime: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/10-minute-true-crime/id1591474862
Tonight we have fossil vomit, dinosaur sentience, and Spanish Megaliths! “Lost fossil 'treasure trove' rediscovered after 70 years”, by Harry Baker: https://tinyurl.com/38488jrj “Did the asteroid that wiped out the dinosaurs have a sibling? Crater in West Africa hints maybe.”, by Stephanie Pappas: https://tinyurl.com/mt99tpe3 “Rare fossilized vomit discovered in Utah's 'Jurassic salad bar'”, by Jennifer Nalewicki: https://tinyurl.com/5n6f3axs “Given the immense time period that dinosaurs existed for, why did none of them develop sentience?”, by Dr. Stephen Brusatte: https://tinyurl.com/2p97rdwb “'Dinosaur mummy': Researchers believe they found one of the best preserved dinosaurs ever”, by Orlando Mayorquin: https://tinyurl.com/bdk7faz3 “Ice age children frolicked in 'giant sloth puddles' 11,000 years ago, footprints reveal”, By Laura Geggel: https://tinyurl.com/2zpk4njy “A Study of Prehistoric Painting Has Come to a Startling Conclusion: Many Ancient Artists Were Tiny Children”, by Sarah Cascone: https://tinyurl.com/ubpfns76 “Giant Megalithic Complex of 500 Standing Stones Is Among The Largest in Europe”, by AFP: https://tinyurl.com/2tca2zbp “Scientists Are Turning Dead Spiders Into 'Necrobots' And We Are So Creeped Out”, by Felicity Nelson: https://tinyurl.com/we8pbvyd “An AI Just Independently Discovered Alternate Physics”, by Fiona MacDonald: https://tinyurl.com/2nsfu8m6 “Capitol Records Severs Ties With A.I. Rapper FN Meka, Apologizes to Black Community for “Insensitivity””, by J. Clara Chan: https://tinyurl.com/yc79yfm3 “An AI-Generated Artwork Won First Place at a State Fair Fine Arts Competition, and Artists Are Pissed”, by Matthew Gault: https://tinyurl.com/2s4k49jj Esoteric Book Club can be found on: Facebook: @esotericbookclub Web: www.esotericbookclub.org Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/Esotericbookclub Paypal: paypal.me/esotericbookclub Youtube: EsotericBookClubPodcast
Song, the new album from cellist Sheku-Kanneh Mason, features music from across the entire spectrum of classical, folk, jazz, and pop - all personally curated by Sheku. The eclectic mix of styles are tied together by one thing - the unique singing voice of Sheku's cello. On Song, Sheku collaborates with friends and family, including jazz pianist Harry Baker, singer-songwriter Zak Abel, and soprano Pumeza Matshikiza.Purchase the music (without talk) at:Sheku Kanneh-Mason - Song[2 LP] - Amazon.com Music Classical Music Discoveries is sponsored by La Musica International Chamber Music Festival and Uber. @CMDHedgecock#ClassicalMusicDiscoveries #KeepClassicalMusicAlive#LaMusicaFestival #CMDGrandOperaCompanyofVenice #CMDParisPhilharmonicinOrléans#CMDGermanOperaCompanyofBerlin#CMDGrandOperaCompanyofBarcelonaSpain#ClassicalMusicLivesOn#Uber Please consider supporting our show, thank you!Donate (classicalmusicdiscoveries.store) staff@classicalmusicdiscoveries.com This album is broadcasted with the permission of Katlyn Morahan from Morahan Arts and Media.
Greetings, bonjour, what's happeningJust a quick little intro, not going to waffle like I normally do. I may or may not get to upload anything on Friday. I'm back and forth at the minute between Maidstone and London, with two very hot and bothered dogs; needs must. My wife's had to attend some important family business abroad, so daddy's in charge and he's gotta' sort out the out day care.All next week is the get-in for this Out Here show. It's a group called Friends from Afar, via a organisation called Dream Arts. They're made up of Londoners that I've been working with for the last year, developing it. I've written a script based on characters and scenes they devised and composed the music. Really excited for it but it's gonna be a nuts week.Thursday 28th July, 7pm, at the Institute of Contemporary Arts, London. Tickets are free if you wonna come along and support these guys.Below is the final part of the Edinburgh blog from 2016. I'll probably be back in a couple of weeks, hopefully with the first live-stream all good to go as well.Enjoy the sunPeas and tatersPaulCount Up To Edinburgh #9 Mission CompleteDuring the Edinburgh festival, if someone were to circulate a false rumour that so and so big-bollox TV executive / stage producer was holding open-auditions a mile out into the shark and sewage infested sea, beyond Leith docks; a hyper-enthusiastic undulating throng of: merry actors, comedians, poets, magicians, clowns, knife-throwers and jugglers would saunter en-masse (armed with flyers), down to the murky waters only to perish to certain death; disappearing in floating pools of blood and sludge and flyers with review quotes stapled to them. For years after, passers-by along Leith Port would hear distant murmurs of 'free comedy' and '4 star review' haunting the docks. Let's have it right, I'd probably be one of them mugs, though I'm sure I would have got half-way there, seen all the people heading in the same direction, cussed them off for being more organised than me and then abandoned all hope and sulked off to one of them late night takeaways that sell chips in curry-sauce. Either that or I'd turn up on the wrong day or something. In short. Edinburgh is like an extreme form of Monopoly, only difference is, it can seem, depending on what kind of day you've had, that everyone starts off with more dough and know-how than you. Mate. Edinburgh was nuts. I knew it would be nuts. Knowing it would be nuts didn't make it any less nuts, it was still nuts. But all in all, a good-nuts, like Terry Nutkins. Reast in Peace. It was really wild. To do it, and to want to do it, then want to go back and do it again, you do have to be at least slightly nuts. It just helps (a lot) if you've got the sort of dough behind you that would see you drinking in the sort of pubs that sell 10 different varieties of flavoured nuts (which come in jam jars) as a poncy alternative to crisps (which in itself is nuts, because crisps are banging, they're not nuts, but it is nuts, as all crisps, are banging, even Space Invaders.)I pretty much had 3 objectives going up there, well, 4 actually.1: To book, organise and get a show up there then put it on every day. (This stuff does not come easy to me)2: Get my face in front of some new people, outside of London and from hopefully as many different places as possible (though half of the people at the Fringe are probably from London)3: Get a couple of reviews.4: Have a laugh (though this one was more of a given)I'm happy to say that I achieved all of those objectives. The outcomes could have been better but also could have been a lot of worse. Could of improved in all of those above areas, particularly in my preparation; prior to this I'd never sent out a press release before let alone written one. Probably could have used my time up there more efficiently as well, flyering other events etc but all in all, I was pleased.The first week was very up and down and despite having a good audience for my first 2 shows it really dropped off and I was struggling a bit. Walking around the city, already sodden and cold, seeing all the massive hoardings and billboards advertising really banal-looking shows, most of which had some quirky face on, with some quirky show name, each one seemingly telling me, 'you can't afford this, go home, you small time mug.'Sounds a bit melodramatic but at times that's how I felt. Some of these people that take shows up there, must be able to write off £10K or some other ludicrous amount and it not be a problem for them. For many people though, it must break the bank. Everything up there costs and it's very difficult if you don't have a lot of money. High venue costs. High accommodation costs. Massive billboard posters. PR Companies. It's a lot. Thank God then for The Free Fringe and the ethos with which is stands for, which meant I didn't pay for hiring the venue I performed in, which is a massive cost. Simple really. We don't pay to hire the venue, audience don't pay to come in, venue takes the bar. It can work. The Pilgrim, where I was based, did really well, smashing all their targets.All in all I spent about £1500 squid, not even a fraction of what some of these shows must have cost. It also helped that all the other guys in my venue were really helpful and pitched in with flyering, and regular pick-me-up support etc. Made The Pilgrim a decent place to work at. Large up Soundman Davey Jones, Gecko (best flyer-er in the game mate!) Jake Wildhall, Joel Autterson and all the Boomerang Club crew, Harry Baker and Chris, Robert Garnham, Dave and Byron and of course all of the Pilgrim staff who were all really supportive.Second week picked up and I got a lot better at flyering and generally pulling people in etc. All the additional gigs helped too, Boomerang, Stand Up and Slam, Raise The Bar, Prepare To Fail. Felt like I got a into a good swing with it and the audiences were good too, generally really responsive. My mate Gary From Leeds said to me before we went up that things would start slow then pick up, and he was right. He was right about most things up there, though I did manage to persuade him that chips in curry sauce was better than chips in gravy, eventually he came round and he's Northern. Had a reviewer come in from Broadway Baby who gave me a decent 4 star 0eview which I was chuffed about. Have a butchers hereAlso somewhere in the second week I had a nice chat about it all with Paul McMenemy from Lunar Poetry. As always, I talked to much. I'd just done a show so my voice was a bit raspy. It was fun though. Have a listen HEREThe last week was wicked. Audiences were good and I felt like I knew what I was doing by this point. There was bit of a dip on one or two days but from what I'd heard this was felt throughout the festival. Couple of people said to me that in general numbers were down on previous years, something to do with The Olympics or Great British Bake Off or some other nonsense.I really enjoyed the chats I got to have most days, out and about on the streets, with other performers, punters etc. Big up Bob Walshy Walsh, who I had a good chinwag with most days about all things football and South London. When out flyering, it's a bit like a melty version of The Wire, on the street, all hand signals and that, communicating to the other flyerers, working out the punters movements and who's likely to want to take a flyer. It was thoughts like that which kept me amused on the slow days. But yea, in the end it all went well.The last show was by far the biggest and most generous audience I'd had and it was great to go out on a banger. Had another decent review from a young reviewer too by the name of Ben Huxley, have a butcher's here (though both Dominic Berry and I had a bit of giggle about the unlikely comparison.) Though I got to perform too lots of new and different people, I was chuffed that on most days there was someone I knew in the audience, a lot who took me by surprise. I had a lot of friends and family who came all the way up. Conrad, Fez and Junior came twice! Mum, Dad and Nat flew up just for the day. Met some really great people to, some who also came twice, like this really nice family from Cambridge, two of which were teachers. Had a lot of teachers. Big up Riko and family too. Thankyou, all of you, even the one or two rude ones who didn't pay any attention and were talking or playing on their phones throughout. Don't understand why you do that when you can just get up leave, it's Free Fringe innit, but still, you interest and annoy me in equal measure.Special mention must go to all the residents of Poetry House. My flatmates for the duration of the festival. Had a great time staying with these guys, all the nonsense chats in the kitchen and the many pick-me-ups along the way. Fay Roberts (got to do the best / worst / weirdest gig with Fay), Dominic Berry,(ahhhhhhhhhhh football-style audience support) Alexander Rhodes, Hannah Chutzpah all the various poets and mates of mates who came up and stayed, and of course my roomate, Gary From Leeds. Legend,mate. Helped me all the way back from last year, to get my arse up there and pull it off. In that tiny cabin room that stank of damp towels, we had a good laugh, through the good times and the bad. Highlight of the Fringe for me was when Gary rescued a component from my beard trimmer from off of the roof, using gaffer tape, a brolly, a broom and sheer MacGyver like skills.So yea, all in all, I had a wonderful time, high and lows, old friends, euphoria and sadness, new friends and a lot of laughs. Would I do it all again? Probably. Yes. Dunno...ask me in 6 months mate. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit cree.substack.com
Esoteric News Briefs 3.2 – “When your Web Browser Becomes a Sentient AI” “Evolution May Be Happening Up to 4 Times Faster Than We Thought, Massive Study Finds” by David Nield: https://tinyurl.com/2p9ber2a “Ruins of Hidden 3,400-Year-Old City Emerge as Giant Dam Dries Up” by Michelle Starr: https://tinyurl.com/384wk9fh “NASA confirms it will join US govt's team to search for UFOs: Report”, by C. Krishnasai: https://tinyurl.com/2xb36z5k “Penis graffiti and explicit insult carved into ancient stone 'raises eyebrows' at Roman fort”, by Harry Baker: https://tinyurl.com/4t5d9fau “4 hostile alien civilizations may lurk in the Milky Way, a new study suggests” by Brandon Specktor: https://tinyurl.com/35x486b8 “Why don't we have many giant animals anymore?”, by Michael Dhar: https://tinyurl.com/radpj4s6 “Building Blocks of Life Were Found on an Asteroid in Space For The Very First Time”, by Ben Turner: https://tinyurl.com/5n7pjehj “Scientists Have Developed 'Living' Skin For Robots, And It's Quite Something”, by Tessa Koumoundouros: https://tinyurl.com/3ns4v25x “Did an AI Really Invent Its Own 'Secret Language'? Here's What We Know”, by Aaron J. Snoswell: https://tinyurl.com/4jhahna3 “Google AI Claims to Be Sentient in Leaked Transcripts, But Not Everybody Agrees”, by Brandon Spektor: https://tinyurl.com/2p83x42a “Is LaMDA Sentient? — an Interview”, by Blake Lemoine: https://tinyurl.com/yc29xw4h Esoteric Book Club can be found on: Facebook: @esotericbookclub Web: www.esotericbookclub.org Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/Esotericbookclub Paypal: paypal.me/esotericbookclub Youtube: EsotericBookClubPodcast
Haley and Jillian are reunited after a long COVID driven hiatus and try something different--telling short survival stories about big wave surfing. Jillian talks about the big wave accidents of Garrett McNamara, Maya Gabeira, and Shawn Dollar, and Haley talked about the harrowing experiences of Billy Kemper and Andrew Cotton. Sources: The Wave, Susan Casey What's the tallest wave ever recorded on earth?, Harry Baker, Live Science The biggest waves in the world, Surfer Today Big Wave Surfer Garrett McNamara on His Chase For The ‘100 Foot Wave', Kelsey Snell, NPR How Garrett McNamara Recovered From the Wipeout of a Lifetime, Hans Aschim, Men's Journal Surfer Billy Kemper says he gilmpsed at death after a wave broke his pelvis in half, Don Riddell, CNN How Big-Wave Surfer Billy Kemper Recovered From His Injuries, Jon Coen, Surfer.com Maya Gabeira: I Just Thought “This Is It, I'm Going To Die, Lou Boyd, The Red Bulletin ‘My red badge of courage': when female big-wave surfers wipeout - and get back in, Jim Kempton, The Guardian My Greatest Challenge, Andrew Cotton, Redbull.com How Pro Surfer Shawn Dollar Stayed Calm- and Alive - During the “Terrifying” Accident That Broke His Neck In 4 Places, Jeff Truesdell, People The Dangers of Surfing Big Waves and Brain Injuries, Dashel Pierson, Surfline Life After Near Death: Shawn Dollar, Neal Kearney, Santa Cruz Waves
If you read the title and ask "Huh!?", then you have the correct response. Don't worry. Everything will be explained! (Edit: Increased the volume on the original recording) “Do trees exist (scientifically speaking)?”, by Ashley Hamer: https://tinyurl.com/2tru35us “These meteorites contain all of the building blocks of DNA”, by Nicoletta Lanese: https://tinyurl.com/53c7jyw3 “Mind-Altering Parasite May Make Infected People More Attractive, Study Suggests”, by Peter Dockrill: https://tinyurl.com/nrr65srn “'Magnetic anomalies' may be protecting the moon's ice from melting”, by Brandon Specktor: https://tinyurl.com/yck2z3eb “An interstellar object exploded over Earth in 2014, declassified government data reveal”, by Brandon Spektor: https://tinyurl.com/mtewdj97 “US gov't report proposed nuking the moon, newly released documents reveal”, by Brandon Spektor: https://tinyurl.com/yckrkmea Paranormal Neighborhood Watch “Was that ‘triangular-shaped' object seen flying over east Charlotte a UFO? This is what we know”, by Evan Moore: https://tinyurl.com/48xzyxss “West Virginia Turkey Hunter Discovers Giant Sloth Skull That's at Least 11,000 Years Old”, by Bob McNally: https://tinyurl.com/yckksz6m “Cops at a Forensics School are Learning Witchcraft to Find Dead Bodies”, by Shira Li Bartov: https://tinyurl.com/5a42uh3v “Russia is using military-trained dolphins in the Black Sea, according to satellite images”, by Ben Turner: https://tinyurl.com/28ep574x News of the Weird “Astronauts can no longer commit crimes on the moon, Canada decrees”, by Brandon Specktor: https://tinyurl.com/45cf3rwu “No, the Loch Ness Monster was not a whale's penis”, by Harry Baker: https://tinyurl.com/3c3bakr9 “Groundbreaking Study Confirms Pterosaurs Really Did Have Feathers – And That's Not All”, by Peter Dockrill: https://tinyurl.com/396fmu7x “Why have aliens never visited Earth? Scientists have a disturbing answer”, by Ben Turner: https://tinyurl.com/mc89fcw6 “Potentially Alive 830-Million-Year-Old Organisms Found Trapped in Ancient Rock”, by Michelle Starr: https://tinyurl.com/4tz9kh5y Esoteric Book Club can be found on: Facebook: @esotericbookclub Web: www.esotericbookclub.org Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/Esotericbookclub Paypal: paypal.me/esotericbookclub
Tonight we have Dinosaur Sword Tails, Denisovan Slumber Parties, and a Tennessee Fossil Pit. “Oldest Remains of Mysterious, Extinct Human Ancestors Unearthed in Siberian Cave”, by CHARLES Q. CHOI: https://tinyurl.com/yck68csk “Mammoths Survived in Canada Until 5,000 Years Ago”, by Ruth Schuster: https://tinyurl.com/s5njdny3 “Woolly mammoths survived on mainland North America until 5,000 years ago, DNA reveals”, by Cameron Duke: https://tinyurl.com/5cv2bmvv “Mummy with gold-foil 'tongue' found in sealed Egyptian tomb”, by Laura Geggel: https://tinyurl.com/2p9dkfjs “'Garbage dump' discovered in ancient Egyptian tomb dedicated to fertility goddess”, by Laura Geggel: https://tinyurl.com/2p9ebdvy “Meat-eating dinosaurs were terrifyingly fast, footprints reveal”, by Mindy Weisberger: https://tinyurl.com/22n63j88 “This 'Very Weird' Newly Discovered Dinosaur Was Armed With a Slashing Weapon”, by Laura Geggel: https://tinyurl.com/yjwb2t95 “Darkness caused by dino-killing asteroid snuffed out life on Earth in 9 months”, by Mindy Weisberger: https://tinyurl.com/yckpucdc “A fossil site reveals an ancient sinkhole and its enormous occupant”, by Jeanne Timmons: https://tinyurl.com/3npfsees “Women executed 300 years ago as witches in Scotland set to receive pardons”, by Caroline Davies: https://tinyurl.com/kzft3un6 “NASA wants to put a nuclear power plant on the moon by 2030 — and you can help”, by Brandon Specktor: https://tinyurl.com/3twpfss8 “High-Speed Space Junk Risk Forces NASA Astronauts to Abandon Spacewalk”, by Morgan McFall-Johnsen: https://tinyurl.com/2p9ds9bu “Imaginary numbers could be needed to describe reality, new studies find”, by Ben Turner: https://tinyurl.com/yck6469h “Flecks of silver in poop of ancient Cambrian creature baffle scientists”, by Harry Baker: https://tinyurl.com/ycknvb5v “Crows Are So Smart They Seem to Understand The Concept of Tool Value”, by TESSA KOUMOUNDOUROS: https://tinyurl.com/2p862yjx “A Weird Paper Tests The Limits of Science by Claiming Octopuses Came From Space”, by Mike McRae: https://tinyurl.com/y762r5m5 Esoteric Book Club can be found on: Facebook: @esotericbookclub Web: www.esotericbookclub.org Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/Esotericbookclub Paypal: paypal.me/esotericbookclub
Our composer of the month Harry Baker joins us for a full episode! Harry Baker is an award-winning improvising pianist and composer active in jazz, classical, and new-music settings. Harry shares his story, tips and tricks for aspiring composers. Not only that, we get insight into his performances on stage and radio, as well as collaborations with the National Youth Choirs of Great Britain and the award-winning Cellist Sheku Kanneh-Mason. Be sure to check out Harry's debut EP, ‘The Floating Boy' it's a suite for big band and voices, recorded live by Oxford University Jazz Orchestra and The Oxford Gargoyles. Enjoy! ______________ Harry's Links: Website | Instagram | 'The Floating Boy' EP Support us: www.patreon.com/aaopera Our links: Website | Instagram --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/aa-opera/support --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/aa-opera/support
Hello and here we go! This episode is mostly just Ash + Avi have the best time! In addition to the last segment from this weeks 'Composer of the Month' Harry Baker! But this episode is really quizzical! have a listen and we would love to hear your answers and what was the most surprising thing you learned about us? Harry's Links: Website | Instagram Support us: www.patreon.com/aaopera Our links: www.aaoperapod.com --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/aa-opera/support
Get ready to have a good time everybody! On this week's episode, we are joined by Mexican Tenor, Eleazar Rodríguez. An acclaimed international opera singer celebrated for his vibrancy, and he certainly brings smiles to us in this interview. You may also know him as a comedy extraordinaire riding the wave of Reels over on Instagram, we really have him to thank for bringing some much-needed humour through what has been a difficult year in the Opera industry. Listen in for insights into his career and invaluable advice for artists! Our composer of the month Harry Baker is also here to showcase his second piece ''Seven Swans A-Swimming" Check out all links below! Eleazar's Links: Website | Instagram Harry's Links: Website | Instagram Support us: www.patreon.com/aaopera Our links: www.aaoperapod.com Get in touch click here --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/aa-opera/support --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/aa-opera/support
We are delighted to be joined by Mezzo-Soprano Claire Barnett-Jones! Claire has been a busy bee since we recorded this interview... Winning the Dame Joan Sutherland Audience Prize in Cardiff Singer of the World 2021 has been a particular highlight! What a treat to be joined by such a wonderful lady who is taking the Operatic world by storm! We chat about Claire's early steps in the industry, insights into the Harewood Artist Program at ENO, and we chat about performing in a pandemic! Also, hear about how you can join the Opera community over on Clubhouse! That's not all, composer of the month is BACK! Harry Baker will be with us throughout August, tune in and check out the links below to discover his music! Claire's Links: Website: www.clairebarnettjones.com Insta: www.instagram.com/cbjmezzo/?hl=en Support us: www.patreon.com/aaopera Our links: www.aaoperapod.com Get in touch click here --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/aa-opera/support --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/aa-opera/support
Choice Classic Radio presents to you Richard Diamond Private Detective, which aired from 1949 to 1953. Today we bring to you the episode titled "The Harry Baker Case.” We hope you enjoy the show! Please consider supporting our show by becoming a patron at http://choiceclassicradio.com
Ian McMillan explores the skill of collaboration - joined by guests Nicci Gerrard and Sean French, who write best-selling thrillers under the pseudonym Nicci French, and by Britain's finest, if only, comedy-jazz-rap duo 'Harry and Chris' (poet Harry Baker is a Poetry Slam Champion, and Chris Read is an award winning songwriter); they talk - and sing - about the ups and downs of creative collaboration. Nicci French's latest book is 'The House of Correction'. 'Harry and Chris' are performing with a socially distanced audience in May and June. https://www.harryandchris.com/
Say Owt, but Stay In, Tapes. Conversations with poets and spoken word artists during the global Coronavirus pandemic, hosted by Henry Raby. In this podcast, Henry chats to Harry Baker and Amy King. Harry is a Poetry World Slam Champion and host of the Something Borrowed podcast and a Wikipedia Page. Amy is a queer, northern poet, Say Owt Slam Champion, and Kate Nash enthusiast. Themes include: Touring, performing and Andy Burnham's cagoule
Is it possible to find hope in a pandemic? One thing many agree on is that a pandemic can reveal much about who we really are, individually and as a society. Pandemics can expose the cracks in our health care and the inequalities that separate us – nationally and globally. If that’s true, pandemics also give us a chance to learn how to care for one another better. That’s a message we often hear from those working in development charities around the world as they’ve continued to combat poverty and hunger, wave after wave of this pandemic. William Crawley speaks with Esther Lehmann-Sow, World Vision’s partnership leader for faith and development and Shahin Ashraf, Islamic Relief's head of global advocacy. Devotional music and religious chanting have long been a way for people to express an emotional response to the world around them –that’s even more the case, as you might imagine, during a year of pandemic. For many British Hindus and Sikhs, the demands of this year has required them to find creative ways to come together while staying apart. Vishva Samani has been speaking to some of them. Coldwater swimming is not for everyone. But there is growing evidence that taking a dip in a lake or the sea can help to alleviate stress and anxiety. There’s certainly been a lot of that about this year, which may explain why 2020 has seen a rise in people taking to the waters to exercise. The RNLI has even published new guidance to encourage people to stay safe while they seek out the stress-relief of a cold-water plunge. The poet and spoken word artist Harry Baker is one of those people. We asked him to capture his experience on paper for us. Editor Tim Pemberton Producers Carmel Lonergan Louise Clarke-Rowbotham Photo Credit Worldvision
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In this episode of Storyteller Lisa speaks to Harry Baker about his journey from becoming the youngest ever World Poetry Slam Champion in 2012, to TED talk viral star, to full time poet. In this fun and wide-ranging conversation, Lisa and Harry cover the importance of joy and hope in difficult times, what happens when you become a TED sensation, writing and performing poetry during lockdown and what it means to see the brightness in things. Show notes:Read “When This Is Over”, the poem Harry reads in the episode -> https://twitter.com/harrybakerpoet/status/1249970647821737984?lang=enFind Harry on Instagram -> @HarryBakerPoetTwitter -> @HarryBakerPoet Website -> https://www.harrybaker.co/Something Borrowed Podcast -> https://www.harrybaker.co/something-borrowedListen to Storyteller anywhere you get podcastsFollow Storyteller on Instagram @storyteller_pod and on Twitter @storytellerpod1Follow host Lisa Golden on Instagram @lisagoldenjozi and Twitter @lisajoziEmail the show at storytellerpod[@]gmail.com See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
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Follow our new Horror Movie's Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/anangryboy Support our Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/scarymysteries Scary Mysteries Merch: https://newdawnfilm.com/scary-mysteri... Video Production Services:: https://newdawnfilm.com/request-a-quote/ Subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCiE8 _________________________________________________________ 5 Terrifying Murders From Wales Murders happen everywhere. Even if you live in a small town, you might have heard of one or two cases that happened nearby. For this week, we’re visiting the country of Wales. Although part of the United Kingdom, Wales has its distinct identify. But like any place, crime also happens here. These are 5 Terrifying Murders from Wales. 5. Peter Moore Murders It’s one thing to love horror films, but for British serial killer Peter Moore, he took his love for the character to a whole new level. Moore comes from North Wales. He ran a movie theatre cinema for his daily business and job. A fan of horror films, he was particularly fascinated with Jason Voorhees, the vicious serial killer in the Friday the 13th films. 4. Megan and Harry Tooze It was in July 1993 at a farmhouse close to Llantrisant, South Wales where an elderly couple, Megan and Harry Tooze were found brutally killed. Tooze (67) and his wife, Megan (65) were discovered dead in a cowshed at their farm. Both were shot in the head with a shotgun and then covered in a carpet. 3. Harry Baker On the morning of August 28, 2019, police were called at around 5:50 am regarding a disturbance at the Barry Intermodal Terminal in South Wales. When police got there, they discovered the dead body of 17-year old Harry Baker from Cardiff. Baker’s family describes him as a “fun-loving son and brother” who always believed that family time was precious. His family and friends are shocked at what happened and are at a loss for the incident. 2. Karen Price It was on July 2, 1981, when 15-year old Karen Price from Cardiff, Wales was last seen. Price, at the time of her disappearance, was living at a residential children’s home. It’s unclear whether she has any parents or relatives who looked for her. 1. Clydach murders When first responders and journalists arrived at the small town of Clydach, they thought they were there to report on a tragic fire. It wasn’t until a press conference by the officers revealed the true horror of the incident.
Richard Diamond, Private Detective came to NBC in 1949. Diamond was a slick, sophisticated detective, with a sharp tongue for folks who needed it. Diamond enjoyed the detective life, but not as much as entertaining his girl, Helen Asher. After each show, he would croon a number to his Park Avenue sweetheart. Mr. Powell, a former song and dance man, was perfect for the role. He added an extra dimension to the 40's hokey private eye drama. Diamond was a rough gumshoe that would often get knocked on the head with a revolver butt or other items. His counterpart on the police force was Lt. Levinson who often accepted Diamond's help reluctantly. Levinson would claim to get stomach trouble whenever Diamond would call him and would take bicarbonate to settle his aching stomach. Although they always seem at odds with each other, Diamond and Levinson were best friends. Shop For Richard Diamond, Private Detective Shows