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Frank Murray of The Evergreen Park Public Library returns to talk hunky vampires, Taylor Swift, drunk Travis Kelce, a community job fair, free trees and that awkward moment when you're the only one raising your hand in a crowded room. The Village Board got rid of vehicle stickers and you soon have a chance to ask the Mayor about it too! Evergreen Park's Podcast is "30 Minutes of Good!" Brought to you by The First National Bank of Evergreen Park! Find the account that is right for you today! Get the latest news and information concerning everything going on in and around Evergreen Park and stay connected to your neighbors! Evergreen Park residents join Chris Lanuti at his 9-foot homemade basement bar each week. Listen, interact & get all of your free subscription options at theEPpodcast.com!
Our chat with Chet is a journey into the experiences, stories and anecdotes with one of the coolest rudimental drummers on the scene. He's played with some of the greats, because he IS a great! His mark on percussion is big and his work using drumming as a vehicle to make a difference in the lives of young people is even BIGGER! Enjoy this talk with Chet Doboe. You're gonna LOVE IT! --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thebotg-podcast/support
Max Kerman, lead singer of Arkells, talks about how to write songs in an age of law suits, and the often weird ways a song gets placed in films and commercials. Plus, Brooklyn Deluge! And the democracy-loving Dems would have done something about Diane Feinstein. Produced by Joel Patterson and Corey Wara Email us at thegist@mikepesca.com To advertise on the show, visit: https://advertisecast.com/TheGist Subscribe to The Gist Subscribe: https://subscribe.mikepesca.com/ Follow Mikes Substack at: Pesca Profundities | Mike Pesca | Substack Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
KPFA theatre critic Richard Wolinsky reviews “The Hippest Trip: The Soul Train Musical” at the ACT Toni Rembe (Geary) Theatre through October 8, 2023. The post Review: “The Hippest Trip: The Soul Train Musical” at ACT Toni Rembe Theatre appeared first on KPFA.
For more than 3 decades, Soul Train brought the coolest music and dancers to TV sets across the country. It also featured the coolest host, Don Cornelius, who started the program in Chicago in a studio the size of a small living room at WCIU Channel 26. On the 53rd anniversary of Soul Train going national, we take you back to its earliest days, and see how it still looms large over local culture.
Max Dechame – King's Road: The Rise and Fall of the Hippest street in the world...with TRE's Giles Brown
Author Ericka Blount Danois joins the boys for an overall look into Soul Train, known by its on-air slogan as "the hippest trip in America!" We discuss Ericka's book, Love, Peace and Soul: Behind the Scenes of America's Favorite Dance Show Soul Train: Classic Moments, and other subjects about this classic TV show! We discuss the role of host Don Cornelius (as well as the other hosts) in shaping Soul Train, as well as his fading interest upon one musical genre's arrival! We also touch upon his completing suicide. Mostly, it's about the music, the dancers (many of whom became stars themselves), and the impact the show had on its viewers, and the musicians of the era! We love our sponsors!!! Please visit their web sites, and support them because they make this crazy show go: Boldfoot Socks https://boldfoot.com Crooked Eye Brewery https://crookedeyebrewery.com/ Don't forget that you can find all of our episodes, on-demand, for free right here on our web site: https://imbalancedhistory.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Author Ericka Blount Danois joins the boys for an overall look into Soul Train, known by its on-air slogan as "the hippest trip in America!" We discuss Ericka's book, Love, Peace and Soul: Behind the Scenes of America's Favorite Dance Show Soul Train: Classic Moments, and other subjects about this classic TV show! We discuss the role of host Don Cornelius (as well as the other hosts) in shaping Soul Train, as well as his fading interest upon one musical genre's arrival! We also touch upon his completing suicide. Mostly, it's about the music, the dancers (many of whom became stars themselves), and the impact the show had on its viewers, and the musicians of the era! We love our sponsors!!! Please visit their web sites, and support them because they make this crazy show go: Boldfoot Socks https://boldfoot.com Crooked Eye Brewery https://crookedeyebrewery.com/ Don't forget that you can find all of our episodes, on-demand, for free right here on our web site: https://imbalancedhistory.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Thank you for tuning in! On today's show you will learn all about the history of Soul Train, one of the longest running television shows in American history. You will learn how the show got started and by whom, as well as the impact it had on popular culture. This episode was suggested by my Dad and when you listen, you will learn why!Contact me anytime:Email: popcultureretrospective@gmail.comTwitter : @popcultureretroInstagram: @popcultureretrospective
@sagewlf_interviews@hank_the_hamchop (my sidekick interview assistant :)The scene:We are sitting in the “Secret Garden” of Rachel and Chris's LA home - which they so generously have made my home with them. These guys are my family, truly. They let me be 1000% myself and whomever I'm becoming. After many others' requests for me to be interviewee, I chose Rachel to be my interviewer for my Sagewlf Interviews Podcast. I knew from the moment I met her that we were sisters for life and actually it was more like “It's so nice to see you again!” Join us in the garden for the truth-telling of Sagewlf.Highlights:+ When I started going by Sage, my middle name+ My “thing” that I can't not do is these interviews with all of you+ Creating an intentional gypsy life+ Traveling to always be headed toward the people I love+ My process in editing and note-taking for the interviews+ The importance of curating the environment for the interviewee+ Using social media to build community+ How Sagewlf Interviews began+ Learning how to build a website and do audio editing+ Being a recovering perfectionist+ Saying fuck it and pressing publish+ Experimenting with and learning new tools+ Beginning recording with my grandfather's life story+ Figuring out what is true to me, what I give a shit about+ Doing everything at 150%, so choosing my “things” wisely+ Recovering from perfectionism+ Resourcing interviewees from my life - past and present+ Learning how to approach a stranger for an interview+ Being intentionally honest and vulnerable with others+ Bringing out vulnerability and the desire to share in others+ Learning to listen to others and making them feel heard+ Changing from a fly on the wall to a fully expressed and joyful human+ Why the name Sagewlf - a story about wolf behavior+ Having interviewees choose their environment to create comfort+ Eliminating considerations of vulnerability+ Being invited into a sacred space by another+ Being strong-willed, perseverant and adaptable+ Disappearing from confrontative experiences+ We have what we need in us already, we just have to learn how to use it+ Self-reliance is a buffer for being vulnerable with others+ Moving from LA to Utah and waking up to your own BS+ Cultivating community without stereotypes+ Finding “family” and “home” everywhere+ Mormons are some of my favorite humans on the planet+ Getting high off human exchanges+ Contouring ourselves to create a comfortable place for others+ Seeing ourselves - our own reflections - in others+ Not allowing humility to keep you from interacting with others+ Loving your younger little sad self+ Aiming to get back to the young, innocent, confident self+ Appreciating self as we are+ What I want the outcome of the interview project to be+ We have an obligation to share our unique gift with our world+ The journey is the joyA taste:“It's up to us, we have a conscious choice to make. We live in a very victim mentality culture […] and it has intentionally disempowered us. It's time for people to realize how actually powerful they already are and all they need to do is act on that […] and see their power and not be afraid of that. I have total control over every situation because I choose how to respond […] I can create an opportunity out of that for myself to better learn something..."Favorite saying:“Lemonade.” (When you get lemons, make lemonade)“When the student is ready, the teacher arrives.” (from interviewee Lisa Farmer)“Amazing.” “Beautiful.” “Gorgeous!”Support the show
Follow the podcast on Twitter and Instagram.VOTE NOW: Best Local Podcast, Best of CharlestonElton John tour datesCredit One StadiumElton John Is Pop's Hippest 74-Year-Old Tastemaker - SlateAnti-marijuana group launches opposition campaign to SC's Nancy Mace reelection bid - P&CHow Clemson's Media Forensics Hub is spotting faked fact-checks of faked anti-Ukrainian propaganda - S.C. Public RadioClemson University Media Forensics HubRising Fares, Low-Cost Airlines: Navigating the New Reality in the Sky - NYTTSA statsFOLLOW:twitter.com/nowcharlestoninstagram.com/nowcharlestonWE WANT YOUR FEEDBACK:sam@nowchs.com843-474-1319INFO AND SHOW NOTES:nowchs.com
Upcoming show! Journey to the Center of the Milks April 2 - May 22, 2022 Morris Graves Museum - Humboldt Arts Council - 636 F Street, Eureka, CA 95501@nancy_._tobinnancy-tobin.com@vintage_avengervintageavengerhumboldt.comThe scene:We are sitting in Nancy's store, The Vintage Avenger in Arcata, CA, which I have been coming into since it's inception in 1999…yeah, that's 23 years ago. I'm pretty sure up until a recent move, I still had the hand-dyed vintage slips that Nancy dyed, which I wore as dresses - because it was early 00's and we were so grunge. How many vintage stores do you know of that have been open that long? I'm convinced it's due to her genuine passion for what she does and why she does it - and that everyone recognizes that. Join us in her store while Nancy hand-sews a piece for her new installation at the Morris Graves Museum of Art in Humboldt, CA.Highlights:+ Being proud and humble+ Retaining your own power+ Self-reliance as a response to trauma+ Military kid+ Being ousted socially+ The mind of a super creative+ Art as self-therapy+ The source of life and destruction+ A love letter to others+ Be resourceful+ Creating with waste+ Build it, they will come+ Give them the opportunity to say yes+ Dad was a helicopter pilot in Vietnam+ Give yourself permission to say yes+ Learning self confidence+ Letting kids be of themselves+ Adaptability+ Peace out of a pandemic+ HSU art degree+ “How to run a consignment shop”+ You've got to build it+ Isolation and missing people+ We need other people, the right people+ Find something and polish it up+ Changing others' minds about value+ The hobby became the everything+ Competition brings demand+ Single parenting+ Tough times come in sets, like waves in surfing+ Don't try to bend things to your will+ Work WITH the obstacles+ Let go and let God+ College of the Redwoods is THE best school+ Being self-sufficient+ An artist and also an accountant+ Minimalizing a vintage collection+ Coming out of the womb independent+ Introverts need people too+ Extroverts are over-celebrated+ Inspiring others visually+ Get weird!+ Bringing others joy and laughter+ Fearing people disliking us+ The slut from Arizona+ Keyed cars in high school+ Working for yourself+ The covid sabbatical+ Do it all the same, but in Hawaii+ Presenting the groom with an umbilical cord+ Meow Wolf in Las Vegas+ Counting on friends to keep us in check+ Life is messy, and beautiful+ Show the process+ Wabi Sabi+ Getting back to being childlike+ Letting go of inhibitions+ Seasons of life experiencesA taste:“It seems like things come in cycles and in waves, and so when something bad happens it's always like there's going to be a set of them coming through. And so I'll be like, uhhhp, here we go! You can just tell. I've seen it enough times. There's going to be a little set of things here. So I try to think of it like surfing - so it's like get on your board and just get out past the break and just let the waves roll under you and try to float on top of it and just let them pass.”Favorite saying:“Making Lemonade.”“Don't wait for the stars to align before you begin.”Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/sagewlf)
Classic Jamz every Saturday 4pm PST on AcceleratedRadio
The low-budget, upstart and, to some, shocking dance show on a pioneering African-American-owned TV station put a screenful of Detroit teenagers on the air every day. If you were of an age in the 1970s and 1980s, you watched. Today's Detroit History Podcast gives the back story of a most unlikely -- and important -- piece of the city's cultural history. We talk with show host Nat Morris, former Detroit News TV writer Jim McFarlin, and television producer Tony Mottley.
Peter and Adam rate some classic TV theme songs that somehow manage to be more hip than corny.Links from this episode: Check out a free lesson from Bob DeBoo's new bass course Walk Like Paul Chambers Have a question? Leave us a SpeakPipe Watch Live: YHI LIVE Mondays at 4pm ET on YouTube Want more of Adam and Peter? Check out Open Studio Pro here Woosh or No Woosh? Hit us up on Twitter and let us know which team you are on Support the pod by spreading the word with the link youllhearit.com Interested in more music advice? Go here to browse our catalog of jazz lessons and courses available for purchase. And be sure to check out our All Access Pass - every course from Open Studio on every instrument.Let us know what you think by leaving a ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ review, or head over to our YouTube channel.Follow us on Facebook | Twitter | Instagram
CLASSIC MEETS COOLMy guest today is Barron Ryan: musician, artist, entertainer, and educator. His love for music has always been divided. The son of two musicians, he grew up in a house filled with the sounds of artists ranging from Mozart to Michael Jackson. So when it comes to his own performance, he's not content drawing on just one influence. He combines them all into a musical adventure that's vintage yet fresh, historical yet hip, classic yet cool.WHAT WE DISCUSSBarron and I start at his early childhood where he began playing piano at 4 years old. He shares the influence that both of his parents had on him. He tells about going to study at the University of Oklahoma and the difficulties of starting out as a performing music artist. We discuss the range of his projects from satirical rap to his original work for the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre. You'll hear how some of the best things that have happened to him were born out of crisis. We end the conversation by talking about what is ahead. https://www.barronryan.comhttps://www.firstofitskind.nethttps://www.instagram.com/barroncp/https://www.thisistulsapodcast.comSupport the show (https://www.buymeacoffee.com/thisistulsa)
HippoPlayer returns after a 20 year absence, Zelda gets the Game and Watch treatment, and Leicester's Retro Computer Museum reopens. Join special guest host Amigo Aaron and John as we cover this week's top stories in Retro!
Well, we made it. Now let's all just sit down for a moment, take a deep breath, and figure out what that means for these golden boys of comedy and insight. We mean us!
Excerpt from-https://www.amazon.com/ Portland-Then-Now%C2%AE-Dan-Haneckow/dp/1911216473Portland Then and Now pairs historic photographs with specially commissioned views of the same scenes as they look today. The book traces the evolution of Portland from the early years of photography to the present, showing how it became Oregon’s largest and most vibrant city.Set against the backdrop of snow-capped Mt. Hood and Mt. St. Helens, Portland’s skyline is a mixture of ultra-modern skyscrapers and elaborate Victorian structures that reveal a rich architectural heritage. Originally no more than a cluster of log structures and wood-frame buildings carved out of the dense forest, "Stumptown" soon became the Pacific Northwest’s premier freshwater port, filled with supply ships bound for the gold fields of California, but also intent on becoming a cultural center. This fascinating book traces the evolution of this popular tourist destination from a small town long dominated by cast-iron, terracotta and brick buildings to a city with ornate mansions, carefully designed neighborhoods, and a downtown that bespeaks pride in good city planning. Sites include: New Market Theater, Blagen Block, Royal Palm Hotel, Grand Stable & Carriage Building, Pioneer Courthouse, First National Bank, City Hall, Berg Building, Portland Art Museum, Masonic Temple, Paramount Theatre, Union Station, Pittock Mansion, Bagdad Theater, Hollywood Theatre, St. John’s Bridge, Swan Island --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/bhsales/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/bhsales/support
After 18 months, a campaign started by then 18-year old Mercedes Baptiste Halliday, a Black photo student in London, to stop the sales of a republication of Gian Butturini's "London" by Martin Parr has come to and end. An official apology plus Parr's request to destroy the remaining inventory (although publisher Damiani has apparently put the books on sale rather than destroyed them) has given Halliday a well-earned victory against racism and an entrenched "generation of white, middle-aged men who do what they want without any consequences."Plus, three male doctors create fake social media accounts to spy on female medical professionals for the purposes of moral judgement, some great photos of NEOWISE, and an octogenarian couple in Taiwan become the latest hit on Instagram.
Corny, I know but hey, I have a shiny new hip this week! 50 plus is hitting hard these days. Recovery has been a little rough but getting better every day. I talk about my late hours coaching call with many hungry entrepreneurs and we have Mikey Minutes where he talks about taking risk. I also had the chance to be on a really great podcast called Dreams Are Real with my friend Dan McPherson. https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/dreams-are-real/id1480067188?i=1000475066668
A chat with Nico, the owner of Holybelly, which is the hippest and most happening cafe restaurant in Paris. Maybe even France. We talk about the secret to success, how Holybelly has gone beyond the hype and turned into an institution, and the time basketball superstar LeBron James came for breakfast. We also talk about what to order if you find yourself in a terrible Paris restaurant, a few tips for the 10th district, and how exactly to order a steak in French. Find Holybelly at: 5 AND 19 Rue Lucien Sampaix, 75010 Paris Nico's new podcast: That Restaurant Thing After our chat, it's tour guide Bertrand from My Private Paris talking about the fascinating history of the tenth district. My Private Paris is the boutique tour agency sponsoring this podcast season. Find out more about My Private Paris here (and tell them I sent you!) If you want to find more about The Earful Tower, here's the website, here's the Patreon link, and here's my Instagram. Get a copy of my new book here.
With JC, Peter, and Erin (in for Melody Rose), here’s what you’ll find on the latest C100 Mornings podcast: Things you thought you’d never hear: “My wife’s psychic is ruining my life!” This guy thinks his wife needs a reality check and you’re just the one to give it to her. The details you’ll need to know are on the pod. Here’s the scoop. If we can follow all the rules they’ve given us to avoid the Coronavirus, we’ll all be fine. Unfortunately, we can’t possibly follow all of the rules they’ve given us. Or can we? We’ll tell you how we’re gonna WIN this battle. On Tell Us Something Good, The most PRODUCTIVE winter getaway to the Dominican EVER, Gourmet Popsicles hit the big time! And we’ll hear from C100’s indisputably HIPPEST listener. On Trending, Demi Lovato’s new song is amazing, as is a house on Morris Street in Halifax that’s for sale that includes an ancient-Egyptian-themed-third-floor. Our $1000 Minute player needs to know local and world geography to have a chance at a grand. How did she do and how would you have done? Have a listen to find out. BTW, you can play $1000 Minute weekdays at 8:10 and listen to C100 mornings every weekday from 5:30 to 10 am.
This week on California Cooking, Jess is checking out West Hollywood’s newest hot spot, Olivetta. In a city where new restaurants are popping up all the time, Olivetta stands out among the rest. Not only is the restaurant visually stunning, but the food is spectacular. Owner Marissa Hermer, who you may know from the Ladies of London, opened Olivetta because she and her husband believed that Los Angeles was missing this kind of restaurant. She teamed up with executive chef Michael Fiorelli and they created a menu that Hollywood's biggest stars cant get enough of!
OG Talk NYC Ricky Powell is a photographer who specializes in the environmental portrait. He is well known for his intimate photographs that have been featured in The New York Times, the New York Post, the Daily News, The Village Voice, TIME, Newsweek, VIBE, The Source, Rolling Stone, and many other publications. Oh Snap!: The Rap Photography of Ricky Powell featured 88 photos, 53 of which were in full color. Powell's first book, “Oh Snap!” was a ten-year retrospective of some of the best known rap and hip hop artists of all time, including old school rappers Public Enemy, Run DMC and LL Cool J to some of the biggest stars of the day. The Rickford Files: Classic New York Photographs was Powell's second work, featuring what he considered “the real New York”, beyond the tourist glaze of Times Square and the deteriorating Greenwich Village. Frozade Moments: Classic Street Photography of Ricky Powell is a book of postcards consisting of candid snapshots of celebrities, local luminaries, and lowlifes that offer a view of New York City. The celebrities include Madonna, Jam Master Jay, KRS-One, Frankie Crocker, Andy Warhol and Flavor Flav. With Public Access: Ricky Powell Photographs 1985-2005, Powell celebrated two decades of capturing moments in his signature style, documenting much of the early era of hip-hop and presenting the actors, musicians, performers, and artists that inspired him, including Method Man, Doze Green, Bill Adler, Slick Rick, Run DMC, Eric B & Rakim, Keith Haring, Steven Tyler, Barbara Walters, Cindy Crawford, Eazy-E, and Fab Five Freddy. These photographs are distributed amongst graffiti splattered renderings by Lee Quinones, Ron Galella, Ron English, and others. Powell depicts a nostalgia for New York's back-in-the-day with universal downtown cool with sentiments from Zephyr, Charlie Ahearn, Glenn O'Brien, and Zoe Cassavetes. Rappin With the Rickster The original Rappin’ With the Rickster aired from 1990–1996, as Powell interviewed numerous stars on the show including: Russell Simmons, Doug E Fresh, Harold Hunter, Kool Keith, Rahzel, Laurence Fishburne, and Cypress Hill.[9] With his Public-access television show, Powell became the face of New York's downtown party scene, connected to both musical and visual artists such as Sonic Youth, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Russell Simmons, Harold Hunter, Dondi White, and Sofia Coppola.[10] “Rappin’ With the Rickster” often has been called the world's hippest-ever public access TV show, as Powell gave insight into the artistic phenomena of the day, with an excess of candid footage, impromptu interviews, and a vision of Powell's New York. Powell considered the show “a time capsule of someone growing up in Manhattan during that era and being around the music scene”. A DVD collaboration with long-time friend and respected graffiti artist Brian Nobili on “Rappin’ With the Rickster”, released in 2010, was declared a must-have by Juxtapoz https://www.rickypowell.com/
Rabbi Simcha Weinstein is an internationally known, best-selling author. His first book “Up, Up and Oy Vey!,” received the Benjamin Franklin Award for the best book of 2007. He has appeared on CNN Showbiz Tonight and NPR, and has been profiled in leading publications, including The New YorkTimes, The Miami Herald and The London Guardian. He is a contributor to The Jerusalem Post and The Jewish Telegraphic Agency (JTA), The Royal Shakespeare Company, Condé Nast and other publications and chairs the Religious Affairs Committee at the renowned New York art school, Pratt Institute. Rabbi Weinstein resides in Brooklyn, NY.Simcha and his wife Ariella run the ROHR Chabad Jewish Center, a DIY community reflects and embraces the diversity of their neighborhood and celebrates the mitzvah of exploring, sharing, creating, incubating, and showcasing creative self-expression and reflection!Check out Simcha's podcast, The Hipsid Podcast, where he schmoozes with his favorite people about spirituality, superheroes and soccer in a bi-weekly conversation. Don't forget to subscribe to The Great Day PodcastYou can watch the full episode on YouTubeAnd be sure to follow my Instagram page to stay up to date on everything I'm working on.I'm Meir Kay and Have A Great Day! Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.
Ohio's capital has trendsetting craft breweries, first-rank cultural institutions, and a seemingly endless supply of artsy neighborhoods bursting with hip bars, restaurants, boutiques, and coffee shops.
This week, Sam is joined by Michael Eldridge, and they discuss Road rage but not on the road, bad behavior at gigs, Sam continues to be menaced by a hit man, Jamie T pops in, The boys explain the plot of the classic stoner comedy 'The Green Mile' and Michael divulges some secrets about his prior life as a footballing man. Like subscribe and share for more! Find Sam here: https://www.facebook.com/SamRhodesCE/ Patronize here: www.patreon.com/SamRhodesCE
Proudly Presented by The Zombie Podcast Network On the Tuesday December 5th edition of Alternative Wrestling Radio your host "Zombie" Matt Mann will once again grace the internet airwaves with his silky voice and tremendous wittyness. In the first fall we will be joined by "The Hippest of the Hepcats,The Adoptive Son of Dr Jerry Graham, The B*tch Boy" Vandal "The Handle" Drummond. We discuss LuchaWorld, being the most popular 6:05 Superpodcast co-host, the art of being sexy and so much more. In the second segment we will Zombie's former RGR co-host "Big Ang" Angelo Reyes. We will discuss JAPAN, working on an over the air radio show and so many other topics. In the Main Event we will be joined by Zicky Dice. Zicky is a young up and coming pro wrestler that has to be seen to be believed. We'll discuss training at Black and the Brave, competing in the APW / GRPW YLC tourney, future plans,being in a touring punk band and so much more. All this plus listener calls! Make sure to join AWR LIVE at 7PM pst/10PM est as "Zombie" will bring the goods like only he can!
On Wednesday November 8th a Zombie,a Hippie,a Lawyer,a Big Bad Booty Daddy and a Wrestling Promoter walk into a bar.Well not really a bar but you guys will have to settle for a live edition of Alternative Wrestling Radio. In first segment we will be joined by "The Hippest of the Hepcats,The Adoptive Son of Dr Jerry Graham, The B*tch Boy" Vandal "The Handle" Drummond. It's been TOO many years since Vandal has chopped it up with KZ. We will discuss the 6:05 Superpodcast,Riki Ataki,Lucha,going to shows with Fredo and so much more. In the second segment we will be joined by "Pro Wrestling's Resident Lawyer and Co-King of The Handheld" Bob Barnett. We'll discuss tape libraries, AreEf,tales of Mike Lano and many more topics. In the 3rd fall we will be joined by world traveler Royce Isaacs. We'll discuss Royce's move to Cali, touring Japan for DDT and what to look for in his future. In the Main Event we will be joined by the man behind Defy Wrestling and the man that has single handily destroyed Jeremey Tate's back, "Suicide King" Matt Farmer. We will discuss being a promoter, Indyriffic, Alvarez, in-ring memories and way much more. Make sure to join us LIVE at 7pm pacific/10pm eastern as your host "Zombie" Matt Mann will once again attempt to infect the internet with his deadly virus known as Alternative Wrestling Radio!
Bamboo Detroit Update with Amanda Lewan Romy catches up with co-founder, Amanda Lewan to hear about the most recent expansion of one of Detroit’s hottest hippest co-working spaces. Listen in to some of the secrets of the success including the special nature of the diversity in members and programming. http://bonfiresofsocialenterprise.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/Bamboo-Detroit-instagram.jpg () Full Transcript Read Full Transcript Romy: Thanks for joining me for another episode of the Bonfires of Social Enterprise! This is Romy and I want to thank you for your loyalty and following. It keeps us all going around here! This time, we follow up with Amanda Lewan of Bamboo Detroit. Bamboo is a co-working space that has some very special characteristics… it is very diversified and full of energy. Not to mention that it is one of the ‘hippest' places in town. Is that even a word? ‘Hippest?' Oh well, you know what I mean. People want to be there! We did an interview with Amanda back in Season 1. She is one of the owners and visionaries of this space. We will catch up with her in just a moment because we are going to hear from Hudson Robertson of Traverse City, Michigan on the fun fuel… Hudson: My name is Hudson Robertson and I am bringing the Fun Fuel for this episode. This information comes from an article published in the online magazine PhatRice.com on September 18th of 2014. The article is called “7 Crazy-Interesting Facts about Bamboo” 1. Bamboo is anti-bacterial - bamboo has natural pest-fighting powers, thanks to the plant's unique resistance to bacteria and fungi. 2. Panda's Did not always eat it like you see in pictures. - At some point, pandas came to love the taste of bamboo and hate hunting, giving us the peaceful and herbivorous, bamboo-munching creatures we know today. Here are a few more…. Bamboo tastes delicious, it grows on every continent, and Bamboo is stronger than steel - In compression tests, bamboo comes out stronger than brick, wood, concrete or steel, meaning it can hold more force than any of those materials. Some scientists even theorize that a length of bamboo 10 centimeters across could hold a 11,000-pound elephant -- though that particular experiment has yet to be attempted. I hope you enjoyed this Fun Fuel. This is Hudson Robertson. Enjoy the show! Romy: Thanks so much Hudson. I might have to go find some Bamboo to try in a salad. I hadn't thought about that before! Ha ha Okay, let's turn our attention to Amanda Lewan from Bamboo Detroit… Amanda: Yes, we just opened up at our new location, 1420 Washington Boulevard on floor three. The building is called the Julian C. Madison Building, so we're super pumped about it. It's a beautiful building right downtown. It's locally owned by a wonderful family. The building's named after our landlord, Sharon Madison's father, Julian C. Madison. He was a history-making entrepreneur himself. Romy: Oh, he was? Amanda: It's very inspiring to live that sort of similar path with our inclusive entrepreneurial hub here. Romy: Yeah, can we hear a little bit about that story? Amanda: Yeah, so Sharon's father and grandfather were trailblazers. They were the first and third African American engineers in the state of Ohio, and I think his grandfather was one of the very first engineers, African American engineers hired by the federal government. When they bought this building, they named it after her father. One of the things they always described it as he always had a spirit of ... A belief that one should take their life into their own hands, and create with it. I guess he [inaudible 00:02:33] always give back and help raise up the younger generation for their own businesses. It was a really good fit for us seeing a great shared workspace for entrepreneurs and creatives, and fostering and sharing those values of inclusion and diversity. We're super pumped. I think it's really good to partner with people who share your...
Crank Journal is back for an 8th episode! Michael hosts automotive writer and radio personality Jim Cherry, who writes a blog on curbside.tv about the most bizarre and obscure cars ever to turn a wheel. He talks about writing a chapter in the recently released book "King of the Kustomizers," a story about legendary Hollywood car customizer George Barris, as well as being a test driver for Ford and chasing down wayward Lincoln LSs. Michael, of course, decides to talk about lead poisoning and about a time when cars drove on railroad tracks to get to Key West.
Cody is joined by performer Charlie Baker and writer/performer Gwynn Fulcher to get supes rad up in this Elizabethan homeskillet, broham. You can find the book on Amazon, and in the back pocket of the HIPPEST youth pastor in Nebraska. YOLO Juliet (OMG Shakespeare) by William Shakespeare and Brett Wright Imagine: What if those star-crossed lovers Romeo and Juliet had smartphones? A classic is reborn in this fun and funny adaptation of one of Shakespeare’s most famous plays!
When Julien Callede was standing on the platform at Gare du Nord in February 2010 with a one-way ticket to London in his hand, he had no idea he was about to launch one of the internet's best-known furniture brands. Five years and several new markets later, he explains why he chose the UK to launch his business, why all good internet retailers should have a bricks-and-mortar showroom, and why Germany is a scary place if you're an exporter.
Will Ron McLean assume the hockey throne once again now that Strombo has been iced. Chefs Plate is the latest in culinary convenience and co founder Jamie Shea dishes with us. Plus the Tragically Hip put on their biggest performance ever.
Allison Josephs interviews Rabbi Simcha Weinstein, author of, "Up, Up, and Oy Vey: How Jewish History, Culture, and Values Shaped the Comic Book Superhero" and "New York's Hippest Rabbi."
Malcolm Cowley said “Bohemia is always yesterday.”
Get an inside look cocktail culture in Brooklyn on a spirited episode of In the Drink as Joe Campanale is joined by Peter Thomas Fornatale, co-author of Brooklyn Spirits: Craft Distilling and Cocktails from the World’s Hippest Borough. Peter has spent a good part of the last two decades drinking in Brooklyn. He’s also been a publishing professional in that time frame at Simon and Schuster and Random House. He took cocktail classes from legendary New York bartender (and author) Dale DeGroff and spent a summer supporting a horseracing habit by bartending at the acclaimed Chez Sophie in Saratoga Springs. Cocktails are literally in his blood: his grandfather, John T. Flynn, was a brand manager at Seagram’s for many decades. He is also a site coordinator at The Park Slope CSA, putting him in close touch with the best local ingredients (and the people who buy them). This program was brought to you by Visit Napa Valley. “Cocktail books can be kind of same-y and I don’t think this one falls into that trap.” [10:30] “There’s a lot to appreciate in much of the whiskey coming out of Brooklyn right now.” [22:00] –Peter Thomas Fornatale on In the Drink
Hear from the authors of Brooklyn Spirits: Craft Distilling and Cocktails from the World’s Hippest Borough on a brand new episode of The Speakeasy. In the popular tradition of farm-to-table cookbooks, Brooklyn Spirits: Craft Distilling and Cocktails from the World’s Hippest Borough, is the first distillery-to-glass cocktail book. Organized into chapters focused on these distilleries, each chapter will take an in-depth look at the distillery’s story and the spirits they offer, and will present half-a-dozen cocktail recipes. Within these chapters, there will be sub-sections on several varying topics: a look at the bars and restaurants serving the Brooklyn-produced spirits; highlights on the work of local mixologists; and subsections on the history of distilling in Brooklyn. This program was brought to you by Michters. “One of the reasons its easy to promote a book like this is we’re promoting really cool work other people are doing. I’m hoping we did a good job capturing it. [06:00] “This is a yearbook in a sense. It’s capturing what’s happening right now.” [14:00] –Peter Thomas Fonatale on The Speakeasy
Odradek Theatre's Mike Sater and Jonathen Wikholm are proving that having normal does not impact on behavior. Mike does a special live edition of Mike Wants to Know and then pulls a Brad Brubaker in Hippest of the Hip. If you are hip to the fringe, check out Odradek Theatre for info about Pains of Youth taking place at Oracle Theatre. www.odradektheatre.com Special thanks to sponsor for EP93 Andiamo Creative, www.andiamocreative.com.
Stephen Leonard is is a G that sings songs that still have a lot of meaning for all of us A's, probably L's too. He played Hippest of the Hip against Man Called Noon's Tony Giamichael, so it was, like, super musical y'all. stephenleonardmusic.com Special thanks to sponsor for EP80 Bucky Gear! Remember if you liked this episode to click the heart, share and subscribe.
Musician Brad Brubaker is our most experienced guest ever and it shows with a perfect game of Hippest of the Hip. Check out Brad performing on May 21st at Uncommon Ground and June 25th (2013) in The Whisky Radio Hour, or just go to http://bradbrubaker.bandcamp.com/
It's a brand new AWSM, and we've got Adam Guerino, host of Queer Comedy at Zanies playing Hippest of the Hip with Eric Michaels of Paper Thick Walls.
MARSYAS: THE HIPPEST SATYR - (COMEDY / DRAMA) A jazzed up modern version of the Greek myth of Marsyas which tells the story of a cursed satyr. From the Audio Gothic series produced by Crazy Dog Audio Theatre
This week we feature Roger Gregg's smokin' adaptation of the Greek myth of Marsyas. Marsyas was just an average satyr, drinkin', screwin', sleepin' and generally carrying on with the band of Dionysus… until he fights a magical horn which changes his life (and attitude) forever. Off the Audio Gothic collection, which just about finishes this […] The post Episode 120: The Hippest Satyr Gets Smoked appeared first on Radio Drama Revival.