POPULARITY
1. Hukilau (Hawaiian Fishing) - Jacob Kelikoa's Hawaiians – Late 40’s2. I Caught Two Cods Cuddling - Fred Douglas - 19283. Hey You Want Any Codfish? - Billy West - 19224. At the Codfish Ball - Tommy Dorsey and his Clambake Seven - 19365. At the Codfish Ball - Johnny Johnson and his Orchestra - 19366. Raw Cod Fish - Lloyd Thomas and The Calypso Troubadours - 19507. Boot-Ta-La-Za - Slim Gaillard and his Flat-Foot-Floogee Boys - 19398. A Trout, No Doubt - Kay Kyser and his Orchestra with Harry Babbitt and The Campus Kids - 19479. A Trout, No Doubt - Paul Weston and His Orchestra With Matt Dennis - 194710. Pity the Poor Lobster - Benny Goodman and his Orchestra with Art Lund - 194611. Monstro the Whale - Kay Kyser and his Orchestra - 193912. La Basura (Fish and Chips) - Machito and his Orchestra – 1950’s13. I'd Rather be a Lobster than a Wise Guy - Billy Murray - 190714. Thanks for the Lobster - Van Eps Banjo Orchestra - 191415. The Sail Fish - Bud Freeman And The Summa Cum Laude Orchestra - 193916. Un Poisson dans L'eau - Jean Sablon - 193617. Fisk I Nettet18. Don't Fish In My Sea - Ma Rainey - 192619. Tennessee Fish Fry - Jimmy Dorsey And His Orchestra with Helen O'Connell - 194020. Tennessee Fish Fry - Mildred Bailey and Her Orchestra - 194021. Second Avenue Clambake - Rex Irving and the Boys - 194022. Fish Fry - Benny Carter Orchestra - 194023. At the Clam-Bake Carnival - Cab Calloway and his Orchestra - 193824. Clambake in B-Flat - The Capitol Jazzmen - 194425. Clam Chowder - Vaughn Monroe and his Orchestra - 194126. Clam Chowder Polka - Windy City Five - 194727. Clambake Boogie - John Greer and his Rhythm Rockers - 195128. I'm Like a Fish Out of Water - Dick Powell with Harry Sosnik and his Orchestra - 193829. William Logan And The Ivory Statue - Richard Diamond - 1950
So I wasn't happy with what I recorded yesterday so I decided to try and record one today for Halloween. But I ended up feeling sick again but still needed to put something out so I can be consistent. So this is probably the worst episode I've done but I'd Rather have an Episode out rather than have no episode at all --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thomas--hunnemeder/support
This episode is an Unfair Fight themed show! Members Pete and Scott join me on the show and we talk record stores, album formats, tours, and the local Las Vegas music scene. We also touch base on their new record, which at the time of this recording, no album title or release date was made yet. But the band just announced a release date and title, do check them out on Facebook (HERE) for more details on that. Songs on the episode are as follows: 1. This is My Release - A Constant Struggle [0:16] 2. I'm My Worst Enemy - Destruction of Words [11:25] 3. Embracing Terror - False Walls [17:07] 4. Set Me Free - Unfair Fight EP [22:17] 5. Motivational Ramblings - Unfair Fight EP [28:37] 6. I'd Rather be Skating - We are the Dead [44:06] 7. Inferior Future - False Walls [48:16] SOCIAL MEDIA Website: www.takingtheleadmedia.com Twitter: https://twitter.com/ttlmpodcast
Every day another article comes out about how voters are stressed by this election. But we wanted to know: what is the election doing to our biology? The American Psychological Association recently found that more than half of all Americans — 52 percent — say this year’s presidential election is a “somewhat” or “very significant” source of stress in their lives. The survey was self-reported, meaning respondents answered a few questions online and the APA took their self-assessments at face value. Anecdotally, those assessments probably ring true for many of us, but it turns out there’s a way to measure the physiological effects of election stress. Over the last few years, a group of neuroscientists and political scientists have pioneered a new field called biopolitics, the study of biology and political behavior. Professor Kevin Smith is a political scientist at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and a co-author of the book, "Predisposed: Liberals, Conservatives, and the Biology of Political Differences.” He often collaborates with Dr. Jeffrey French, who runs a lab at the University of Nebraska-Omaha and studies cortisol, a hormone we release when we’re stressed. One of Smith and French’s recent studies looked at stress and voting. They wanted to know if cortisol levels influence whether people vote. The easiest way to test cortisol is through saliva, so they collected spit samples from a bunch of participants and got their official voting records for the past six elections. The researchers found that people with higher cortisol levels vote less. And that finding correlates with another one of their studies, which found that people who voted absentee experienced less stress than people who went to the polls. So we asked French and Smith to help us design an experiment of sorts. We’d use the presidential debates as a proxy for the election. Our team would go to debate watch parties and collect saliva samples from viewers to measure their cortisol levels. We’d also ask the participants to fill out a survey about themselves: their party affiliation, age and self-reported stress level. And we’d see who had the biggest changes in their cortisol over the course of the debate. During the first two presidential debates, we went to watch parties in Times Square, Midtown Manhattan and Northern New Jersey. Participants spat three times into tiny tubes: before the debate, to get a baseline sample, midway through the debate and after the debate. We over-nighted the samples to Omaha, where Dr. French processed them in his lab. A few weeks later, he had the results. We all agreed that the debate watch parties seemed stressful. At a bar in Times Square, we talked to young Republicans unhappy with their nominee and worried about their party’s future. Others were terrified at the prospect of a Clinton presidency. In Midtown, a group of Democrats had gathered to watch at the Roosevelt Institute, a left-leaning think tank. A few of them brought their own alcohol, to temper their anxiety (French and Smith took alcohol and caffeine intake into account in their analysis) and a number of them worried about Trump’s popularity. But the results surprised us: cortisol levels stayed close to normal levels throughout the debates. Clinton supporters had a small spike at the midway point, but not by much. Overall, the stress levels for liberals and conservatives didn’t really change — with one exception. The researchers looked at cortisol levels based on whether participants had someone close to them who planned to vote for the opposing candidate. And for Trump supporters who had a conflict with a person close to them — a parent, a sibling, a spouse — cortisol levels actually went up after the debate. They probably found the debate more stressful. French and Smith warned us that this wasn’t a pristine study. In fact, both professors laughed when we asked if they’d submit our work to a peer-reviewed journal. But they agreed that this finding was statistically significant. And they didn’t find it for Clinton supporters, or voters who supported a third party candidate. The other significant finding related to baseline cortisol levels — the participants’ stress level before the debate. The researchers found that Trump supporters had much higher baseline levels compared to Clinton voters. Smith, the political scientist, couldn’t tell us why Trump voters had two times as much cortisol in their saliva compared to Clinton supporters. But he did say that our experiment served as an interesting pilot study — one that made him think differently about what he hopes to study next: tolerance. Here, Smith made a comparison to same-sex marriage. Opposition to it shifted when researchers found some biological or genetic basis for being gay — when it started to be considered innate. Smith wonders if the same is true for political difference. As he told one of our reporters, “If you're a liberal and I'm a conservative and I believe you're a liberal because you're genetically predisposed to be, then am I more tolerant of you or less tolerant of you?” In other words, if political difference is related to our biology, maybe we’ll be more tolerant of each other. And therefore less stressed. And therefore more likely to vote. At least, that’s the hope. In the spirit of encouraging less stressful conversations with the other side, here's a video with some tips for talking politics with your loved one — who's wrong about everything. Thanks to the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism students who helped out: Vicki Adame, Priscilla Alabi, Gregory Alcala, Christina Dabney, Jesenia De Moya, Robert Exley, Jeremy Ibarra, Meeran Karim, Alix Langone, Pauliina Siniauer, Anuz Thapa, Maritza Villela and Katherine Warren. And special thanks to the Young Republicans of New York City, The Roosevelt Institute, the Union County Young Republicans and the Montclair Republicans Club for allowing us to attend their debate watch parties! We've been on hiatus, working on some new stories. If you're joining us for the first time, here are some of our favorite past episodes: Keep the Baby, Get the Chemo Your Sanity or Your Kidneys Patients and Doctors Fess Up Who Are You Calling 'Inspiring'? Your Brain on Sound Bacon, Booze and the Search for the Fountain of Youth How to Stop an Outbreak A Doctor's Love Affair with Vicodin The Robot Ate My Pancreas I'd Rather have a Living Son than a Dead Daughter
Episode 100 Brings You: A Rant about Fat ~ The same amount of Music ~ My New 90-Day Challenge ~ HIT part two. HIT is High Intensive Training. It works like this: go slow, go fast, repeat. Let me show you an example: Walk slowly or at your normal pace for a minute, then, walk as quickly as you can for one minute. Then, walk slowly for fifteen seconds. Then, walk as quickly as you can for one minute. Slow for fifteen seconds - Fast for one minute - Repeat for 20 minutes. Music is Lazy Fat Stupid Americans by Goldishack Guerrillas I'd Rather by Naughty by A Don't Hug Me Christmas Carol Fat Girls Fighting by 3rd Day Syndrome Opening music is Welcome to Club Socca by ATL Producers All from MusicAlley.com. Enjoy, Exercise, Eat Less, Repeat. Obesophobia is the Fear of Fat
In this king-sized episode of Dread Media, Brother D from Mail Order Zombie stops by to discuss all things George A. Romero. Which film are they both crazy for? What secret is Brother D hiding about OJ Simpson? And who does Desmond reserve a Michael Bay-level of hatred for? You better listen. Tunes included: "Season of the Witch" by Donovan, "The Calling (Main Title)" and "I'd Rather be a Wanderer" by Donald Rubinstein, "Bruiser" by The Misfits, "George Romero" by The Sprites and "George Romero Will be at Our Wedding" by Showbread. Go to www.horror-mall.com and www.mailorderzombie.com. Contact me: dreadmedia@earth-2.net or 206-203-1213.
In this king-sized episode of Dread Media, Brother D from Mail Order Zombie stops by to discuss all things George A. Romero. Which film are they both crazy for? What secret is Brother D hiding about OJ Simpson? And who does Desmond reserve a Michael Bay-level of hatred for? You better listen. Tunes included: "Season of the Witch" by Donovan, "The Calling (Main Title)" and "I'd Rather be a Wanderer" by Donald Rubinstein, "Bruiser" by The Misfits, "George Romero" by The Sprites and "George Romero Will be at Our Wedding" by Showbread. Go to www.horror-mall.com and www.mailorderzombie.com. Contact me: dreadmedia@earth-2.net or 206-203-1213.
In this king-sized episode of Dread Media, Brother D from Mail Order Zombie stops by to discuss all things George A. Romero. Which film are they both crazy for? What secret is Brother D hiding about OJ Simpson? And who does Desmond reserve a Michael Bay-level of hatred for? You better listen. Tunes included: "Season of the Witch" by Donovan, "The Calling (Main Title)" and "I'd Rather be a Wanderer" by Donald Rubinstein, "Bruiser" by The Misfits, "George Romero" by The Sprites and "George Romero Will be at Our Wedding" by Showbread. Go to www.horror-mall.com and www.mailorderzombie.com. Contact me: dreadmedia@earth-2.net or 206-203-1213.
In this king-sized episode of Dread Media, Brother D from Mail Order Zombie stops by to discuss all things George A. Romero. Which film are they both crazy for? What secret is Brother D hiding about OJ Simpson? And who does Desmond reserve a Michael Bay-level of hatred for? You better listen. Tunes included: "Season of the Witch" by Donovan, "The Calling (Main Title)" and "I'd Rather be a Wanderer" by Donald Rubinstein, "Bruiser" by The Misfits, "George Romero" by The Sprites and "George Romero Will be at Our Wedding" by Showbread. Go to www.horror-mall.com and www.mailorderzombie.com. Contact me: dreadmedia@earth-2.net or 206-203-1213.