POPULARITY
After a dramatic weekend and an embarrassing week, the White Sox are hopefully looking ahead to this weekend's series after taking two straight sets. Ideally, the dirty secrets are over and maybe the news will break that there are several coaching and front office jobs opening up. (It won't happen, but a girl can dream.) Jordan White joins the show to talk about the first-place Brewers. You might know Jordan from Pitcher List, and the recently-ended podcast In The Deep. He's also your go-to guy if you want advice on fantasy baseball pickups. The pitching matchups look promising, so long as Michael Kopech can maintain the magic from his previous start, and Dylan Cease can bounce back from what was probably his worst start ever. Jordan's Pitcher List departure has him watching baseball for fun again. The Brewers are in first place, but the National League Central is still wide-open What's going on in Milwaukee, anyway? The Cubs' annoying hot streak Baseball butts: Mark Cahna edition Jordan's MVP on the Brewers A White Sox and Brewers trade Twitter questions! Pitching matchups and a series preview Fears, threats, and the keys to winning the series Chrystal and Jordan make unconfirmed plans because baseball is better with friends Around the league Find Jordan on Twitter and see some of his work on Pitcher List. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Keep or Kut - It's the Third Annual Pitcher List Podcast Network Post-350 ADP Mock Draft! After Pete (@PeteBBaseball) and Chad (@chadyoung) joined On The Wire and In The Deep to discuss interesting names with late ADP, this year Keep or Kut got to host. Adam Howe (@eightygrade) from On the Wire and Jordan White (@buntsingles) and Chris Weber (@shwebsi) of In the Deep joined us for a draft, with each pod picking a C, CI, MI, OF, 2 SP and 2 RP, all with ADP later than 350. Get ready for more than 100 minutes and more than 24 names you can look at late in drafts, many with long-term keeper potential.Join Pitcher List Plus and get an ad-free website and access to the Pitcher List Discord community, while supporting the podcast.Timestamps4:17 - We start with a quick glance at last year's results, where Jeremy Pena, MJ Melendez, Ramon Urias and others stand out.6:07 - A reminder of the structure of this draft.6:58 - Adam likes the opportunity in front of Spencer Steer enough to take him first.11:18 - Pete takes Brandon Pfaadt, best of the bunch in Arizona16:30 - Jordan believes in Braxton Garrett, but he needs to get a real shot18:22 - ITD takes SP back-to-back, and it's Spencer Turnbull for Shwebsi22:13 - If you need saves late, Chad suggests speculating on Reynaldo Lopez24:59 - Adam's co-host Kevin Hastings took Anthony Volpe, and Adam is on the hook to explain Kevin's picks32:11 - Nick Martinez is joining Adam's squad to help him early36:01 - Pete introduces Keep or Kut's newest recurring feature, The Massey Moment with Michael Massey39:36 - Jordan was ahead of the curve on Addison Barger44:49 - Shwebsi bets on talent over role with Hunter Harvey47:57 - Chad is in on Clarke Schmidt and his breakers51:10 - Adam tells us Kevin took Trayce Thompson largely because the Dodgers seem to trust him57:50 - With his own pick, Adam creates a stir with Garrett Cleavinger1:03:39 - Pete shocks everyone by nabbing Tanner Houck1:07:29 - J Join: PL+ | PL ProProud member of the Pitcher List Podcast Network
Keep or Kut - It's the Third Annual Pitcher List Podcast Network Post-350 ADP Mock Draft! After Pete (@PeteBBaseball) and Chad (@chadyoung) joined On The Wire and In The Deep to discuss interesting names with late ADP, this year Keep or Kut got to host. Adam Howe (@eightygrade) from On the Wire and Jordan White (@buntsingles) and Chris Weber (@shwebsi) of In the Deep joined us for a draft, with each pod picking a C, CI, MI, OF, 2 SP and 2 RP, all with ADP later than 350. Get ready for more than 100 minutes and more than 24 names you can look at late in drafts, many with long-term keeper potential. Join Pitcher List Plus and get an ad-free website and access to the Pitcher List Discord community, while supporting the podcast. Timestamps 4:17 - We start with a quick glance at last year's results, where Jeremy Pena, MJ Melendez, Ramon Urias and others stand out. 6:07 - A reminder of the structure of this draft. 6:58 - Adam likes the opportunity in front of Spencer Steer enough to take him first. 11:18 - Pete takes Brandon Pfaadt, best of the bunch in Arizona 16:30 - Jordan believes in Braxton Garrett, but he needs to get a real shot 18:22 - ITD takes SP back-to-back, and it's Spencer Turnbull for Shwebsi 22:13 - If you need saves late, Chad suggests speculating on Reynaldo Lopez 24:59 - Adam's co-host Kevin Hastings took Anthony Volpe, and Adam is on the hook to explain Kevin's picks 32:11 - Nick Martinez is joining Adam's squad to help him early 36:01 - Pete introduces Keep or Kut's newest recurring feature, The Massey Moment with Michael Massey 39:36 - Jordan was ahead of the curve on Addison Barger 44:49 - Shwebsi bets on talent over role with Hunter Harvey 47:57 - Chad is in on Clarke Schmidt and his breakers 51:10 - Adam tells us Kevin took Trayce Thompson largely because the Dodgers seem to trust him 57:50 - With his own pick, Adam creates a stir with Garrett Cleavinger 1:03:39 - Pete shocks everyone by nabbing Tanner Houck 1:07:29 - Jordan originally selected Joe Mantiply but wishes he had taken Caleb Thielbar 1:11:03 - Chas McCormick is enough of a compiler to appeal to Shwebsi 1:15:34 - Chad goes with rule five pick Blake Sabol, the latest ADP player taken in our draft 1:20:53 - Kevin picks Bryan Abreu for rates and K's and Adam thinks he might be the heir apparent 1:22:45 - Adam, like the Mets, wants Omar Narvaez to hold down the job until someone better is ready 1:24:55 - Pete grabs Brett Baty believing he can win the job 1:30:51 - Last year, Jordan took Jorge Alfaro as a late power-speed play at C and this year...he did it again. 1:33:59 - Shwebsi finishes the ITD roster with Harold Ramirez and makes an Oscar Gonzalez comparison 1:37:47 - Chad thinks there is a chance Will Benson fixed his Ks 1:45:19 - Kevin made the last pick, but Adam would rather have David Peterson, who has a job, than Ryne Nelson, who doesn't Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | TuneIn | Google Podcasts | RSS Connect: Twitter | keeporkut@gmail.com | Join PL+ Get PL+ and join our Discord: https://pitcherlist.com/plus Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Keep or Kut - It's the Third Annual Pitcher List Podcast Network Post-350 ADP Mock Draft! After Pete (@PeteBBaseball) and Chad (@chadyoung) joined On The Wire and In The Deep to discuss interesting names with late ADP, this year Keep or Kut got to host. Adam Howe (@eightygrade) from On the Wire and Jordan White (@buntsingles) and Chris Weber (@shwebsi) of In the Deep joined us for a draft, with each pod picking a C, CI, MI, OF, 2 SP and 2 RP, all with ADP later than 350. Get ready for more than 100 minutes and more than 24 names you can look at late in drafts, many with long-term keeper potential. Join Pitcher List Plus and get an ad-free website and access to the Pitcher List Discord community, while supporting the podcast. Timestamps 4:17 - We start with a quick glance at last year's results, where Jeremy Pena, MJ Melendez, Ramon Urias and others stand out. 6:07 - A reminder of the structure of this draft. 6:58 - Adam likes the opportunity in front of Spencer Steer enough to take him first. 11:18 - Pete takes Brandon Pfaadt, best of the bunch in Arizona 16:30 - Jordan believes in Braxton Garrett, but he needs to get a real shot 18:22 - ITD takes SP back-to-back, and it's Spencer Turnbull for Shwebsi 22:13 - If you need saves late, Chad suggests speculating on Reynaldo Lopez 24:59 - Adam's co-host Kevin Hastings took Anthony Volpe, and Adam is on the hook to explain Kevin's picks 32:11 - Nick Martinez is joining Adam's squad to help him early 36:01 - Pete introduces Keep or Kut's newest recurring feature, The Massey Moment with Michael Massey 39:36 - Jordan was ahead of the curve on Addison Barger 44:49 - Shwebsi bets on talent over role with Hunter Harvey 47:57 - Chad is in on Clarke Schmidt and his breakers 51:10 - Adam tells us Kevin took Trayce Thompson largely because the Dodgers seem to trust him 57:50 - With his own pick, Adam creates a stir with Garrett Cleavinger 1:03:39 - Pete shocks everyone by nabbing Tanner Houck 1:07:29 - Jordan originally selected Joe Mantiply but wishes he had taken Caleb Thielbar 1:11:03 - Chas McCormick is enough of a compiler to appeal to Shwebsi 1:15:34 - Chad goes with rule five pick Blake Sabol, the latest ADP player taken in our draft 1:20:53 - Kevin picks Bryan Abreu for rates and K's and Adam thinks he might be the heir apparent 1:22:45 - Adam, like the Mets, wants Omar Narvaez to hold down the job until someone better is ready 1:24:55 - Pete grabs Brett Baty believing he can win the job 1:30:51 - Last year, Jordan took Jorge Alfaro as a late power-speed play at C and this year...he did it again. 1:33:59 - Shwebsi finishes the ITD roster with Harold Ramirez and makes an Oscar Gonzalez comparison 1:37:47 - Chad thinks there is a chance Will Benson fixed his Ks 1:45:19 - Kevin made the last pick, but Adam would rather have David Peterson, who has a job, than Ryne Nelson, who doesn't Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | TuneIn | Google Podcasts | RSS Connect: Twitter | keeporkut@gmail.com | Join PL+ Get PL+ and join our Discord: https://pitcherlist.com/plus Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
On The Wire - Adam Howe and Kevin Hasting are joined by special guests Christopher Weber and Jordan White of the In The Deep podcast along with Pete Ball and Chad Young of the Keep or Kut podcast as they create an annual tradition of mocking out a mini-team made up of only players currently going past ADP 350. We draft three rosters made up of a catcher, a corner infielder, a middle infielder, an outfielder, two starting pitchers, and two relief pitchers in an effort to dive into late round options to keep an eye out for as you fill out your drafts. Players discussed: MJ Melendez, Art Warren, Anthony Bender, Carlos Hernandez, Michael A. Taylor, Nick Senzel, J.D. Davis, Jeremy Peña, Darin Ruf, Ramón Urías, James Kaprielian, Jonathan Loáisiga, Roansy Contreras, Nate Pearson, Jorge Alfaro, Garrett Cooper, Tucker Barnhart, Bryson Stott, Pierce Johnson, Daniel Hudson, Nick Lodolo, Michael Lorenzen, Keston Hiura, Mitch Keller Enter Fantrax's Wander Franco give-a-way by visiting fantrax.com/pitcherlist Hosts: Adam Howe | Kevin Hasting Guests: Jordan White | Christopher Weber | In The Deep Chad Young | Pete Ball | Keep or Kut Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | TuneIn | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | RSS Connect: Twitter | OnTheWirePod@gmail.com| Join PL+ Get PL+ and join our community: https://www.pitcherlist.com/plus
On The Wire - Adam Howe and Kevin Hasting are joined by special guests Christopher Weber and Jordan White of the In The Deep podcast along with Pete Ball and Chad Young of the Keep or Kut podcast as they create an annual tradition of mocking out a mini-team made up of only players currently going past ADP 350. We draft three rosters made up of a catcher, a corner infielder, a middle infielder, an outfielder, two starting pitchers, and two relief pitchers in an effort to dive into late round options to keep an eye out for as you fill out your drafts. Players discussed: MJ Melendez, Art Warren, Anthony Bender, Carlos Hernandez, Michael A. Taylor, Nick Senzel, J.D. Davis, Jeremy Peña, Darin Ruf, Ramón Urías, James Kaprielian, Jonathan Loáisiga, Roansy Contreras, Nate Pearson, Jorge Alfaro, Garrett Cooper, Tucker Barnhart, Bryson Stott, Pierce Johnson, Daniel Hudson, Nick Lodolo, Michael Lorenzen, Keston Hiura, Mitch Keller Enter Fantrax's Wander Franco give-a-way by visiting fantrax.com/pitcherlist Hosts: Adam Howe | Kevin Hasting Guests: Jordan White | Christopher Weber | In The Deep Chad Young | Pete Ball | Keep or Kut Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | TuneIn | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | RSS Connect: Twitter | OnTheWirePod@gmail.com| Join PL+ Get PL+ and join our Discord: https://pitcherlist.com/plus
Romeo is an actor and has been featured on popular TV shows such as "Arrow", "Supernatural", “The Flash, award-winning short film "In The Deep", and Commercials for Subaru & Vancity. Romeo has also created custom portraits for celebrity artists Kat Von D and Norah Jones. He is also a singer-songwriter and has released music under his full name, "Romeo Ryu Reyes". Romeo is an advocate for the Transgender community & has been featured on CBC Radio One's "On The Coast - Future of Gender" segment with Gloria Macarenko, Philippine Canadian News & OMNI Filipino News. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/kristian-kabuay/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/kristian-kabuay/support
On The Corner - Nick Pollack (@PitcherList) sat down with Scott Chu (@ifthechufits) to discuss his 2022 Pitcher List Staff Mock Draft. Scoring Settings: 12-teamer, 23 rounds, 5x5 H2H, Daily, 3 OF, 2 UTIL. 2x Ohtani, Yahoo! View the full draft board here. Listen to Chris' In The Deep podcast here. Subscribe: iTunes | Android | Stitcher | Spotify | Google Play | RSS | Join Pitcher List Plus to support the podcast and get an Ad-Free Website + access to our Discord community! Players Mentioned: Juan Soto Max Scherzer Jacob deGrom Whit Merrifield Carlos Rodón Giancarlo Stanton Jose Abreu Mitch Haniger Lance McCullers Emmanuel Clase Yasmani Grandal Willy Adames Jarred Kelenic Eugenio Suarez Tarik Skubal Avisail Garcia Wade Miley Carlos Carrasco Taijuan Walker Akil Baddoo Jameson Taillon Brendan Rodgers Michael Fulmer
On The Corner - Nick Pollack (@PitcherList) sat down with Scott Chu (@ifthechufits) to discuss his 2022 Pitcher List Staff Mock Draft. Scoring Settings: 12-teamer, 23 rounds, 5x5 H2H, Daily, 3 OF, 2 UTIL. 2x Ohtani, Yahoo! View the full draft board here. Listen to Chris' In The Deep podcast here. Subscribe: iTunes | Android | Stitcher | Spotify | Google Play | RSS | Join Pitcher List Plus to support the podcast and get an Ad-Free Website + access to our Discord community! Players Mentioned: Juan Soto Max Scherzer Jacob deGrom Whit Merrifield Carlos Rodón Giancarlo Stanton Jose Abreu Mitch Haniger Lance McCullers Emmanuel Clase Yasmani Grandal Willy Adames Jarred Kelenic Eugenio Suarez Tarik Skubal Avisail Garcia Wade Miley Carlos Carrasco Taijuan Walker Akil Baddoo Jameson Taillon Brendan Rodgers Michael Fulmer Get PL+ and join our Discord: https://pitcherlist.com/plus
On The Corner - Nick Pollack (@PitcherList) sat down with Chris Weber (@Shwebsi) to discuss his 2022 Pitcher List Staff Mock Draft. Scoring Settings: 12-teamer, 23 rounds, 5x5 H2H, Daily, 3 OF, 2 UTIL. 2x Ohtani, Yahoo! View the full draft board here. Listen to Chris' In The Deep podcast here. Subscribe: iTunes | Android | Stitcher | Spotify | Google Play | RSS | Join Pitcher List Plus to support the podcast and get an Ad-Free Website + access to our Discord community! Players Mentioned: Kyle Tucker Ozzie Albies Francisco Lindor Zack Wheeler Ketel Marte Anthony Rendon Trevor Rogers Michael Conforto Aroldis Chapman Edwin Diaz Marcus Stroman Franmil Reyes Framber Valdez Noah Syndergaard Keibert Ruiz Bobby Dalbec Casey Mize Camilo Doval Eric Lauer Cal Quantrill Harrison Bader Oneil Cruz Gavin Lux Get PL+ and join our Discord: https://pitcherlist.com/plus
On The Corner - Nick Pollack (@PitcherList) sat down with Chris Weber (@Shwebsi) to discuss his 2022 Pitcher List Staff Mock Draft. Scoring Settings: 12-teamer, 23 rounds, 5x5 H2H, Daily, 3 OF, 2 UTIL. 2x Ohtani, Yahoo! View the full draft board here. Listen to Chris' In The Deep podcast here. Subscribe: iTunes | Android | Stitcher | Spotify | Google Play | RSS | Join Pitcher List Plus to support the podcast and get an Ad-Free Website + access to our Discord community! Players Mentioned: Kyle Tucker Ozzie Albies Francisco Lindor Zack Wheeler Ketel Marte Anthony Rendon Trevor Rogers Michael Conforto Aroldis Chapman Edwin Diaz Marcus Stroman Franmil Reyes Framber Valdez Noah Syndergaard Keibert Ruiz Bobby Dalbec Casey Mize Camilo Doval Eric Lauer Cal Quantrill Harrison Bader Oneil Cruz Gavin Lux
On The Wire - Adam Howe (@EightyGrade) is joined by Jordan White (@BuntSingles), co-host of the In The Deep podcast (@InTheDeepPL) to break down this week's FAAB period, as well to talk about why Jordan likes focusing on players that no one else wants. Welcome Jordan (0:39) San Francisco infielders (3:21) Boyd vs Kluber (6:17) Can Kwang Hyun Kim still be useful? (11:42) On The corners in Philly (15:04) Asdrubal Cabrera in Cincy (18:00 Boston second base situation (21:19) Is Jacob Junis a thing? (24:57) Why Jordan likes all the players no one else does (32:10) FAAB Suggestions.... Power (50:21) Speed (57:17) Opportunity and Schedule Notes (1:02:31) Wins and K's (1:10:43) Future 2-Start Pitchers (1:19:15) Ratios (1:24:06) Saves (1:30:09) Wild Cards (1:33:46) Mailbag: Aaron Ashby's value ROS (1:37:41) Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | TuneIn | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | RSS Connect: Twitter | OnTheWirePod@gmail.com| Join PL+ Please rate and review the pod on your favorite platform and check out the rest of the Pitcher List Podcast Network (@PitcherListPods) Get PL+ and join our Discord: https://pitcherlist.com/plus
On The Wire - Adam Howe (@EightyGrade) is joined by Jordan White (@BuntSingles), co-host of the In The Deep podcast (@InTheDeepPL) to break down this week's FAAB period, as well to talk about why Jordan likes focusing on players that no one else wants. Welcome Jordan (0:39) San Francisco infielders (3:21) Boyd vs Kluber (6:17) Can Kwang Hyun Kim still be useful? (11:42) On The corners in Philly (15:04) Asdrubal Cabrera in Cincy (18:00 Boston second base situation (21:19) Is Jacob Junis a thing? (24:57) Why Jordan likes all the players no one else does (32:10) FAAB Suggestions.... Power (50:21) Speed (57:17) Opportunity and Schedule Notes (1:02:31) Wins and K's (1:10:43) Future 2-Start Pitchers (1:19:15) Ratios (1:24:06) Saves (1:30:09) Wild Cards (1:33:46) Mailbag: Aaron Ashby's value ROS (1:37:41) Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | TuneIn | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | RSS Connect: Twitter | OnTheWirePod@gmail.com| Join PL+ Please rate and review the pod on your favorite platform and check out the rest of the Pitcher List Podcast Network (@PitcherListPods) Get PL+ and join our community: https://www.pitcherlist.com/plus
Adam and Kevin are joined by the hosts of In The Deep (Jordan White and Christopher Weber) and Keep or Kut (Chad Young and Pete Ball) to discuss their selections in the inaugural post 350 ADP Mock Draft. Follow everyone Adam Howe (@EightyGrade) Kevin Hasting (@HastingKevin) Christopher Weber (@shwebsi) Jordan White (@BuntSingles) In The Deep (@InTheDeepPL) Chad Young (@ChadYoung) Pete Ball (@PeteBBaseball) Keep or Kut (@KeepOrKut) Welcome Jordan and Chris from In The Deep (1:04) Welcome Chad and Pete from Keep or Kut (1:59) Pick 1 / In The Deep (Chris): Dylan Cease (4:52) Pick 2 / Keep or Kut (Pete): Brendan Rodgers (11:39) Pick 3 / On The Wire (Kevin): Marwin Gonzalez (17:59) Pick 4 / On The Wire (Adam): Alex Reyes (24:17) Pick 5 / Keep or Kut (Chad): Josh Naylor (29:15) Pick 6 / In The Deep (Jordan): Jackie Bradley Jr (35:41) Pick 7 / In The Deep (Chris): Miguel Rojas (42:50) Pick 8 / Keep or Kut (Pete): Madison Bumgarner (49:42) Pick 9 / On The Wire (Kevin): Kyle Wright (58:48) Pick 10 / On The Wire (Adam): Christian Pache (1:04:36) Pick 11 / Keep or Kut (Chad): Evan White (1:08:19) Pick 12 / In The Deep (Jordan): Brandon Belt (1:11:22) Pick 13 / In The Deep (Chris): Trevor Rogers (1:18:06) Pick 14 / Keep or Kut (Pete): Casey Mize (1:21:15) Pick 15 / On The Wire (Kevin): Tejay Antone (1:26:04) Pick 16 / On The Wire (Adam): Carter Kieboom (1:28:02) Pick 17 / Keep or Kut (Chad): Gregory Soto (1:31:38) Pick 18 / In The Deep (Jordan): Emmanuel Clase (1:35:41) Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | TuneIn | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | RSS Connect: Twitter | OnTheWirePod@gmail.com| Join PL+ Please rate and review the pod on your favorite platform and check out the rest of the Pitcher List Podcast Network (@PitcherListPods) Get PL+ and join our Discord: https://pitcherlist.com/plus
Adam and Kevin are joined by the hosts of In The Deep (Jordan White and Christopher Weber) and Keep or Kut (Chad Young and Pete Ball) to discuss their selections in the inaugural post 350 ADP Mock Draft. Follow everyone Adam Howe (@EightyGrade) Kevin Hasting (@HastingKevin) Christopher Weber (@shwebsi) Jordan White (@BuntSingles) In The Deep (@InTheDeepPL) Chad Young (@ChadYoung) Pete Ball (@PeteBBaseball) Keep or Kut (@KeepOrKut) Welcome Jordan and Chris from In The Deep (1:04) Welcome Chad and Pete from Keep or Kut (1:59) Pick 1 / In The Deep (Chris): Dylan Cease (4:52) Pick 2 / Keep or Kut (Pete): Brendan Rodgers (11:39) Pick 3 / On The Wire (Kevin): Marwin Gonzalez (17:59) Pick 4 / On The Wire (Adam): Alex Reyes (24:17) Pick 5 / Keep or Kut (Chad): Josh Naylor (29:15) Pick 6 / In The Deep (Jordan): Jackie Bradley Jr (35:41) Pick 7 / In The Deep (Chris): Miguel Rojas (42:50) Pick 8 / Keep or Kut (Pete): Madison Bumgarner (49:42) Pick 9 / On The Wire (Kevin): Kyle Wright (58:48) Pick 10 / On The Wire (Adam): Christian Pache (1:04:36) Pick 11 / Keep or Kut (Chad): Evan White (1:08:19) Pick 12 / In The Deep (Jordan): Brandon Belt (1:11:22) Pick 13 / In The Deep (Chris): Trevor Rogers (1:18:06) Pick 14 / Keep or Kut (Pete): Casey Mize (1:21:15) Pick 15 / On The Wire (Kevin): Tejay Antone (1:26:04) Pick 16 / On The Wire (Adam): Carter Kieboom (1:28:02) Pick 17 / Keep or Kut (Chad): Gregory Soto (1:31:38) Pick 18 / In The Deep (Jordan): Emmanuel Clase (1:35:41) Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | TuneIn | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | RSS Connect: Twitter | OnTheWirePod@gmail.com| Join PL+ Please rate and review the pod on your favorite platform and check out the rest of the Pitcher List Podcast Network (@PitcherListPods) Get PL+ and join our community: https://www.pitcherlist.com/plus
Hard-hitting Nashville rockers LONELYOUTH are back with their newest and heaviest release, "In The Deep." Stream the song here: https://spoti.fi/3oIc619. Watch the lyric video for "In The Deep" here: https://bit.ly/2HMLdYW. Of the new single, guitarist Josh Dawn says, "In the Deep" brings to mind the sweat and blood covered basement show where you get punched in the face with rhythms and melodies big enough to get an arena airborne. This song rattles your bones and peaks those adrenaline levels. If you have no fear of your blood vessels bursting go ahead and spin it." Vocalist Tyler Vinatelli adds, “Blending influences of the Nu-metal kings we grew up, mixed with inspiration from the metalcore giants we watched at shows and where we found our home comes “IN THE DEEP.” A perfect blend of aggressive, and melodic that pushes the boundaries of what is going on in heavy music today. If you're looking for something fresh and real to bang your head to, give it a spin or 100. It's a new era for LONELYOUTH” To date, LONELYOUTH has released an impressive body of work, collaborating with industry veterans on singles that were produced and co-written by Rick Rubin & Kid Harpoon engineer Jeremy Hatcher (Harry Styles, Shawn Mendez, Florence and the Machine), mixed by Michael Pepe (Taking Back Sunday producer and engineer) and mastered by West West Side Music's Alan Douches (Motorhead, Every Time I Die, The Dillinger Escape Plan). The band's previous video singles “Mile One” & “My War, My Shame” were featured in Journey's stores throughout North America, and “My War, My Shame” & “The Escape Artist” were selected as exclusive premieres by Alternative Press. LONELYOUTH maintains an engaging social media presence with their fans and tours nationwide. LONELYOUTH Tyler Vinatelli - Vocals Josh Dawn - Guitar Austin Wright - Drums This episode is proudly brought to you by: #Manscaped: https://www.manscaped.com/ use code "SUCKITPODCAST" for 20% off and free shipping #Betterhelp : https://www.betterhelp.com/sipod for 10% off #H2one #Handsanitizer : https://h2one.com/ BUY MERCH!!!!! #Merch Store: https://www.dckproductions.com/shop Follow me: https://www.instagram.com/suckitpodcast https://www.facebook.com/suckitpodcast https://www.twitter.com/suckit_podcast --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thedarksideofmusic/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thedarksideofmusic/support
Host Cyrus Webb welcomes author Loreth Anne White to #ConversationsLIVE to discuss her literary journey and the new book IN THE DEEP.
Catherine Ingram joins Tahnee on the podcast today. Catherine Ingram is an international dharma teacher and former journalist specialising in empathy and activism. Catherine is the author of several books including; In the Footsteps of Gandhi, Passionate Presence, A Crack in Everything, and the long-form essay “Facing Extinction.” Catherine has published over 100 articles and interviews throughout the 1980s and early 1990s with leading thinkers and activists of our time. Catherine and Tahnee take a deep dive today, sharing a beautiful conversation around the philosophical landscape of activism, empathy, Buddhism, dharma practice, mindfulness and sensitivity. Tahnee and Catherine explore: The mindfulness industry and how it is often misguided. The 1970's Dharma movement. Catherine's experience of Buddhist meditation and philosophy. The nature and burden of sensitivity - "if you're not at least a little bit sad, you're not paying attention" - Catherine Ingram The relationship between grief and love. Activism, empathy and compassion. The themes of Catherine's essay; Facing Extinction. The Resilient Byron project. Who is Catherine Ingram? Catherine Ingram is an international dharma teacher with communities in the U.S., Europe, and Australia. Since 1992 Catherine has led Dharma Dialogues, which are public events that encourage the intelligent use of awareness within one’s personal life and in one’s community. Catherine leads numerous silent retreats each year in conjunction with Dharma Dialogues. Catherine is president of Living Dharma, an educational non-profit organisation founded in 1995. Catherine has been the subject of numerous print, television, and radio interviews and is included in several anthologies about teachers in the West. A former journalist specialising in issues of consciousness and activism, Catherine is the author of two books of nonfiction, which are published in numerous languages: In the Footsteps of Gandhi: Conversations with Spiritual/Social Activists (Parallax Press, 1990) and Passionate Presence: Seven Qualities of Awakened Awareness (Penguin Putnam, 2003); and one novel, A Crack in Everything (Diamond Books, 2006). In February 2019, Catherine published the long-form essay “Facing Extinction” as a free link, an essay she updates every month as new data emerges about the crises we face. Over a fifteen-year period beginning in 1982, Catherine published approximately 100 articles on empathic activism and served on the editorial staffs of New Age Journal, East West Journal, and Yoga Journal. For four years Catherine also wrote the Life Advice column for Alternatives Magazine based in Oregon. Since 1976, Catherine has helped organise and direct institutions dedicated to meditation and self-inquiry and, more recently, human and animal rights. Catherine is a co-founder of Insight Meditation Society in Barre, Massachusetts (1976). Catherine also co-founded the Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization (UNPO) in The Hague, Netherlands (1991) and is a member of the Committee of 100 for Tibet. For six years (1988-1994), Catherine served as a board director for The Burma Project, dedicated to raising international awareness about the struggle for democracy in Burma. Catherine is currently serving on the board of Global Animal Foundation, which works on behalf of the world’s animals. Resources:Catherine's Website Catherine Facing Extinction Essay In The Deep Podcast Coronavirus: Courage and Calm PodcastCatherine's Books The Resilient Byron Project Q: How Can I Support The SuperFeast Podcast? A: Tell all your friends and family and share online! We’d also love it if you could subscribe and review this podcast on iTunes. Or check us out on Stitcher :)! Plus we're on Spotify! Check Out The Transcript Here: Tahnee: (00:01) Hi everybody and welcome to the SuperFeast podcast. Today I'm really excited to have Catherine Ingram here. She's the author of several books. Footsteps to Gandhi, Passionate Presence, A Crack in Everything and this incredible essay called Facing Extinction that you can find online. We'll link to it in the show notes. Catherine's an amazing former journalist as well so she's spoken to so many wonderful people and it seems to be this real emphasis on compassion and humanity and activism and empathy. And I know she's published over 100 articles and interviews throughout the '80s and '90s. I don't know if those are all available online, Catherine, but maybe people can have a little dig. Since '92, Catherine has been leading international retreats and public sessions known as Dharma Dialogues. I've been fortunate to go to some of those in Lennox and in Byron Bay. They're just really beautiful ways to check in and connect to this deeper meaning and purpose of life and our own inner compass toward well being. Our passions and all those kinds of things. She's also served on the board of numerous human rights organisations, as a board member of Global Animal and also is part of a newly founded organisation called Resilient Byron, which I'm excited to talk to her about today. Tahnee: (01:19) Catherine, so busy. I know you're going to be doing some Dharma Dialogues online digitally, which is really exciting as well. Thanks so much for being here today. We're really excited. Catherine Ingram: (01:32) Thank you for inviting me. Tahnee: (01:33) So we've been touching on a lot of big themes lately on the podcast, which I think this time obviously takes us all deeper into ourselves for sure. I know that a lot of your work has focused on these big themes. Has that been something that you've been interested in forever or were you more drawn into these things over time? Can you give us a little sense of how Catherine becomes Catherine? Catherine Ingram: (02:01) Well I fell into the study of Buddhist meditation from a pretty young age. I started doing retreats, attending retreats in 1974 and it became basically my world. I helped found a big centre in Massachusetts called Insight Meditation Society, which is one of the famous mindfulness centres in the world. But at the time, we were just this ragtag band of hippies. It was a very small scene in those days. Really small. We all knew each other, everywhere. I know a lot of the very famous mindfulness teachers, the older ones. They're old friends. I was in that study and in that practise and in that organisation for 17 years until about '91. Along the way, I became interested in how does a mindful life or an empathic life or a life based on loving kindness, how does it show up for anybody else? It's all well and good that we're all having a fine time but how does it matter in the world? Catherine Ingram: (03:11) That became a focus for me in journalism. I decided to become a journalist in order to have access to what I considered the people who could be my teachers, my mentors in that new field of study, that is activism with a consciousness or empathic base. I thought to myself, why would any of those people want to talk with me or hang out with me? And I thought, well they would if I were a journalist and if I could publish their words. So I became a journalist, I kind of backed into it with a side motivation, which was, I wanted access [inaudible 00:03:50] I wanted to study with.. And that's what it gave me. So for the next 12 years, I focused entirely on that. I published, as you mentioned, many, many articles in the days... It was pre-Internet [inaudible 00:04:05] available, a few of them we did manage to scan and put online. I did that for all those years writing for print magazines and then I began having sessions myself, having meditative, initially dialogue-based meditation sessions. In other words, part of it would be silent but also it would be a dialogue format to keep people on a certain frequency, and in conjunction with silent retreats that I led all over the world. Well not in Russia. Not in Africa. Tahnee: (04:52) Not in every single country on the planet. Catherine Ingram: (04:56) Not every country. Not even every continent but I did that and still do, although we're in lockdown at the moment. Yeah, I've been focused on these matters, the confluence of activism and empathic action that has a dedication to the greater good. It's always been important to me. I remember long ago, I heard a Tibetan teacher talk about the two wings of the bird. One is wisdom and one is compassion and that it can fall off... I'm sorry, no, that got... That's how a bird flies. But I've heard other teachers talk about wisdom and compassion being like two different types of temperament and I've always thought, how can there be wisdom without compassion? It doesn't make sense. How can there be any kind of wisdom that doesn't include compassion? Since I was quite young in my career, I've always wanted the understanding that your awareness includes and is expansive. I'm a bit allergic to systems of thought and philosophy that are very self motivated. Self improvement, self wellbeing. Tahnee: (06:33) You must love Instagram. Just kidding. Catherine Ingram: (06:36) I don't use Instagram and I'm also [inaudible 00:06:38] social media in general, though I'm forced to a little tiny bit because we have to- Tahnee: (06:44) Necessarily evil unfortunately. Catherine Ingram: (06:46) Exactly, yeah. That's why I don't have an Instagram account. Tahnee: (06:51) Could I just quickly... I just want to grab on that because this is honestly my biggest bugbear with how even mindfulness and all of these things have been taken and turned into almost competitions or ways of making yourself better than somebody else. Catherine Ingram: (07:07) It's so co-opted and it's gotten corporate. I mean the Buddha would roll over in his grave if he had one. Yeah, it's really devolved over the years, I have to say. It's kind of tagged onto everything you can think of. It's very, very different than what I knew it to be back in the day. I studied with a lot of the older Asian teachers who've all since died. It was a very monastic scene back in those days but now it's a very different animal. I have to say though, there are other ways of understanding presence and how to use your attention and in those ways of understanding and of deep immersion, it would be anathema to your spirit to co-opt that understanding and use it for any kind of mercenary production. I think that there are ways to understand a dharmic life and to live a dharmic life and, as I say, use your mind and your heart in ways that in at least the original Buddhist teachings and language, it would be totally commensurate with all of that. Tahnee: (08:53) So I mean, how do you get to Buddhism? I mean, I don't know exactly how old you are but I assume it wasn't readily available to study Buddhist practice. No. Catherine Ingram: (09:09) Very obscure in those days. What happened though was this Tibetan teacher named Trungpa Rinpoche came along and he had been living in the UK. He was an exile from Tibet. He'd been living in the UK and he was a very hip... He was young and he was extremely hip and very interested in Western culture and in Western arts and all kinds of arts and he founded something called Naropa Institute in Boulder, Colorado in 1974 and he gathered there, all of the biggest named teachers of the day. Now they were still obscure and they had relatively small scenes, each one individually, like Ram Dass and all these people. Even though eventually that became a much larger scene, it wasn't at the time, and some of the big name Buddhist teachers who were unknown, totally unknown in those days, they were invited. He managed through his scene, his students, to get hold of all these people and gather them in this one spot to found this Buddhist university called Naropa Institute and I heard about it and I went. I decided to attend and I was 22 years old and I was in Europe. I was actually going to India, I thought. I was in Europe travelling around on my way to India. Catherine Ingram: (10:38) I didn't know what I was doing exactly. I wanted to go find a teacher in India but I heard about Naropa and I thought, all these teachers are going to be right there in one place in my own country. I should go there. It's a long, long story. That story alone of being there that summer, in the midst of all of that. Like imagine, I used to- Tahnee: (11:00) Be wild. Catherine Ingram: (11:02) I use this way of describing it. Imagine like a Burning Man but that was only about Dharma and only about philosophy and only about these deeper arts. That's what it felt like for a whole entire summer. 10 weeks. That was a real turning point because there I met my whole community and I fell into a particular strain of the... There were so many different types of teachings there. They weren't all Buddhist. There were just a few of the Buddhists. There was [inaudible 00:11:34], the Tibetan Buddhists, the Zen Buddhist and then this tiny little scene led by Joseph Goldstein. He had a class, a tiny, little, dinky class called the essential Buddhism. Hardly anyone came but I walked into his class and I just felt at home. He was my teacher and also later on, my boyfriend. So that's how I began Buddhist practise. I became incredibly immersed in those teachings, especially I heard the first noble truth, the truth of suffering, the truth of the unsatisfactoriness of existence and I just thought, sign me up. I get it. Anyway, that was my world for a long time. I basically just went from retreat to retreat. I was one of the managers of the retreats. I helped found the centre, as I said, that we did in 1976. Catherine Ingram: (12:44) I went to Asia. I finally did go to Asia after that first attempt. I went overland from Italy to India in a time when you could still do that and I was gone for... We were all over Southeast Asia studying in different temples with different of our teachers. I did that for a year. I went back many, many times to India. I went to India 10 times over the next 20 years. It was a whole... What to say, you could write a book on just that. Or I could, I guess. Tahnee: (13:24) Well I think that's the dream. I know in this area. There's so many young people looking for that authentic, and I'm using air quotes but the authentic experience, which I mean really that generation of yours was, there were so many socio political and cultural reasons that those experiences were able to be had. Catherine Ingram: (13:47) We were in a moment in history where our music was all about that. It was a whole, it was a zeitgeist that was happening among the counter culture but it wasn't as huge as people think. Certainly not the dharma slice of it but what was called the psychedelic generation, it wasn't as ubiquitous as people think but it was powerful and we all knew each other and hung out with each other. It was a really great, great time and then I fell into having my own sessions, as I said, and that's been really wonderfully rich. Just the intimacy of that and sharing a dharma life with people and having those kinds of conversations, I feel so privileged because I feel like I have of what you might call deathbed conversations but they're not on the deathbed, although sometimes. It's basically... Well the name of my podcast channel is In The Deep. Tahnee: (14:57) You go there. Catherine Ingram: (15:01) It just feels like you can stay on a certain channel of a shared frequency that is in the deep. I find that's, for me, the most satisfying kinds of conversation. Tahnee: (15:19) Have you found it hard to integrate... Again, I'm using air quotes, a real life with that kind of desire for that deep connection? I've heard you speak in Dharma Dialogue that your family were not... They were quite conservative, I think, if I'm remembering correctly. Have you found it difficult to connect back to your lineage and to the real world? Because you do inhabit this space that is not... There's a dearth of this kind of communication in our culture. People don't want deep. They want instant news and 24 hour Fox. Catherine Ingram: (15:57) That is why I always sought out the quieter places, the quieter minds, you could say. Those kinds of conversations and the power of sangha, of the dharmic community. I've always gravitated to that kind of crowd. In the work that I do, by definition, that's the kind of conversation... What I do is called Dharma Dialogues and so I have certainly my fair share of that kind of interaction and I spend a lot of time alone in quiet. I live a very retreat-like life. When I do have conversation, it tends to be about the deeper matters. It's not that we always have to be philosophical or anything. I mean, I'm happy to talk about the latest drama that we all might be watching. I enjoy that tremendously but because I don't have a lot of chit chat possibility in my life really, because I live alone, and my work is about this in the deep conversation, the conversations I do have tended to be in the nature such as the one we are having now, about what matters and what are the priorities and how does one live? What structure of life in your creative expression do you want to offer? That's been a very fortunate component. Catherine Ingram: (17:50) Regarding my family and of course other people in our lives that we may not be on the same page with, I've learned over the many years to just find points of connection that we do connect on. They can be very ordinary things and that's fine. I love ordinary also. I frame it and I spoke about it in my book Passionate Presence, as finding the language of the heart that you can intuit, you can sense, especially if you're quiet inside, you can sense the language that someone might be able to hear and you try to stay on those topics. Just as you do instinctively, as we all do instinctively when, say, we're with a child and whether it's a five year old child or a 10 year old child, you adjust your language a bit, or someone who you sense is highly intelligent but is speaking... English is their second language and they're not super fluent in it so you adjust. Instinctively you adjust how you're speaking so that they'll understand all your words. Catherine Ingram: (19:15) It's like that. You just have a radar that is sensing. The whole purpose of the conversation is to meet in the heart. It's not to just impose your great opinions. Tahnee: (19:35) That really makes me think because so many people are like, they need to change, the world needs to change and so often, it's us, sadly that needs to change. Catherine Ingram: (19:48) [inaudible 00:19:48] though, that way. Tahnee: (19:52) I mean I think about my own family and I remember reading a Ram Dass book and he was talking about coming home from India to see his father and he had to stand side by side with his father and all he wanted to do was tell him all these truths and what he learned and his dad just needed him to stand there and help him make a pie or whatever and he said, "All I could do was just love him," and in that his dad softened and changed and they found commonality. I think so often we come to each other with our agenda. Catherine Ingram: (20:23) Yeah, Ram Dass used to tell another story, which was that a woman wrote to him and said, "I'm about to go home for Christmas and I don't get along with my family that well and I know that they judge me about what I'm doing and they think I'm weird." Anyway, I don't know what he said to her but anyway, she went off to her family holiday and when she got back she wrote Ram Dass a letter and said, "My family hates me when I'm a Buddhist but they love me while I'm a Buddha." Tahnee: (20:52) That's so beautiful. Isn't that the truth? I remember hearing you speak that you've almost stepped away from Buddhism and that whole scene in a way because it was that identification with... Maybe I'm misunderstanding what I- Catherine Ingram: (21:10) No, I did step away from it completely. I'm so happy for that training and for those years and for the wonderful friendships. It was a whole evolutionary phase of my life but I wouldn't at all call myself a Buddhist. I don't have any kind of... There was a guy in the States, his name was Abbie Hoffman, he was a great activist back in my era. He died a long time ago. Kind of young when he died but he was a very famous radical activist in the '60s and he had a great line, "All of the isms are wasms," which I really related to. I don't have any isms that I'm adhering to. I have come to realise that Gandhi, the story of his... I'm sorry. His autobiography is called The Story Of My Experiments with Truth, and I feel that I've just been making my own experiments with truth and I don't claim as true with a capital T. I would say it's my experiments with truth, my experiments of what has made sense to me, what works, what has been consistently true for me in my experimentation about what is... Catherine Ingram: (22:29) Like we've been saying, what is the way through? What is the dharmic line, thread of harmony through this rocky road called life? That's been, for me, I have been exposed to so many kinds of teachings, beautiful teachings over the years. Whether in literature, I love great literature... I mean, you can have profound experiences just by reading some of the great works of literature, and movies too. Movies have shaped my consciousness. Tahnee: (23:09) Art, right? It's every... Humans have created that to tell stories since- Catherine Ingram: (23:15) That's right. Tahnee: (23:17) Yes, there's the vortex of, some of it is commercial and corporate and manipulative but I think so much of it is truth. Like you say, little 't' truths. Someone trying to capture what's true for them through their art form. Catherine Ingram: (23:33) Yeah and what's so beautiful about all of that, and music, my goodness, music... What's so amazing about that is that's like our humanity is so... It's so sensitive and so universal in each of us. I mean it is why music translates to everybody, pretty much, that sometimes someone comes along and just in their own innocent, true expression, taps a chord that just reverberates through not only their own time but down through the ages. I'm always listening for those chords, however I can find them, whether in dharma circles and great works of philosophy and teachings from all different traditions but also in all these art forms and also just in- Tahnee: (24:39) Life. Catherine Ingram: (24:39) No, I mean in watching animals. You mentioned that I'm part now of a group called Global Animal, which is actually an animal rights organisation. I have been involved with human rights a lot in the past. Now I've switched over to the animals. The other animals, I should say. We are animals as well. Anyway, I'm just continually blown away by the tenderness and the emotional intelligence of animals, especially mammals, of course. It's all of these ways, all of these portals of wisdom that come across the transom of your mind that some minds just are looking for those, have incredible receptors for those, have neurological receptors for those kinds of channels and those kinds of bits of information and I think one can, in a sense, train the awareness to look for those. Tahnee: (25:51) That was going to be my question because I mean, I feel like I... I sometimes try and nut this out in my head and I don't get very far. I remember as a child being very sensitive and open and then kind of going through a science phase and a cynical phase, I suppose, in my early 20s and I feel like I've come full circle back to this very sensitive place but I have, I think, now the capacity to handle it. In reading your essay especially, the one on facing extinction, I speak to so many people about this in my community and it's this sense of, it's too much and I can't carry it. The sensitivity I have, it's a burden instead of a gift. I've found, for me, refuge in stillness and quiet and all the things you were talking about. Aloneness. Nature for me is a huge part of it and why I choose to live here and I've heard you say the same about moving to Lennox. Is there ways you've seen people grow into their sensitivity and their perceptiveness/ because I think these people, they're so required right now. Those empaths and those people that feel it all. I don't know how to help them. It's like, you just have to keep going. Catherine Ingram: (27:20) Yeah, it's a conundrum. It's a great question. It's not one I have a clear answer on in that the sensitivity comes with the deepening and widening awareness. It's a challenge because the more sensitive you are, the more subject to feeling the sorrows of the world and of the people you love and you as a young mother- Tahnee: (27:49) Many feelings. Catherine Ingram: (27:53) Yeah. The problem is, you kind of can't help it. You can't really help it if you're someone who feels very, very deeply and you notice things and you have natural empathy. Now I think people do shut down. They harden their hearts. They put blinkers on. They're essentially armoured because they're frightened and feeling too deeply is just too painful for them but I don't see any way around if you're paying attention, if the awareness is widening, which in a way it does on its own but like I said, you can sort of direct it, train it more to look for wisdom wherever you can find it and that includes ways to let go and to try to be strong. If that's how you're built then sorrow comes with it. Just as I sometimes say, if you're not at least a little bit sad, you're not paying attention. All of these happiness programs, they just make my skin crawl. Be happy and real happy and happy happy. Tahnee: (29:23) Uhg! And they've coerced Buddhist, the dharma teachings. I mean, I'm on social media, unfortunately in some ways and I see this stuff and I just think... I mean, one of my teachers calls it the bandwidth. We want to be able to feel a spectrum of things and just to expect that it's just happy and sunshine, rainbows, lollipops all the time is- Catherine Ingram: (29:50) Yeah, I often say, have said for 30 years that we live on a spectrum of feelings and on one end is deep suffering and sorrow and sadness and depression and all kinds of things and at the other is incredible joy. We live on that spectrum. And that to shut down one end also shuts down the other. So some people want to play it safe and go right into the middle, don't feel too much on either side. You shut down any... Like basically grief is connected to love. That's why we grieve is because we love, like I said in my essay. So if you're going to give up, if you're so afraid of grieving, then you really can't invest in your love. You're going to be at risk. So that's what we've got here as human creatures. I think in this time, where the world has stopped, even though it's starting to move about a bit more, but I think a lot of people have reset their priorities and have understood perhaps in ways they never understood. But for many of us who've been looking at these things and feeling into them, we've understood them more deeply. That this life that we are so privileged to be living, it really never had any guarantees. We kind of drifted into an illusion in our rich cultures of just, you know, kind of having a party. I mean just going along. Catherine Ingram: (31:33) Just get what you want. Go where you want. Study what you want. Go here. Flit there. So we've just been having a grand old time and now we're confronted with our entire way of life has not only changed for now but it's changed and probably it's going to stay changed. It's going to get more and more challenging. I believe we're headed into a cascade of crises. The coronavirus crisis is going to perhaps be the kickstart. But we've got all the big ones waiting. The worse ones are waiting in the wings. They're cooking away in the background. We haven't been talking about them as much during this one. But they're going along. They're going a pace. Unlike this one, which might have some mitigation to it, I don't think those other ones do. So I think what we're facing is a lot more letting go and a lot more needing to find empathy and understanding and getting way closer to the ground in terms of how we live simply. I don't know if you've noticed this but I have... I've just not been spending money on pretty much anything except food and paying the utilities- Tahnee: (33:05) Yeah the things you have to pay. Catherine Ingram: (33:08) [inaudible 00:33:08] monthly charges and I'm grateful to be able to do that. I've seen, gosh, even though it's kind of stripped down, those are really essential things. Food and having the water come on when you turn it on. Tahnee: (33:26) Basic necessities. Yeah well it's definitely... I mean again a theme I'm really witnessing is a move toward... So we've just put in a chicken coop, which we started before all this happened but it didn't get finished until the middle of all of this. I contacted a breeder for the chickens. I was looking for a heritage breeder. He said, "The pandemic hit and I've sold out." He said, "I've sold every chicken I have until October." He's like, "Everyone's gone self-sufficient." I was like, "Well wow, that's crazy." I've noticed all of these permaculture people are offering courses on sustainable backyard gardens and farming. I'm like, "That's so great that people are starting." If that's one of the, I guess, impacts of this on a micro level, that people start to think- Catherine Ingram: (34:17) It's a great benefit because things are still kind of holding together. We're not in massive drought or fires or some [inaudible 00:34:26] war thing happening over resources. We're basically just told to stay in our homes. The skies are blue and the waters are clear. The earth is actually breathing a great sigh of relief in having us stopped. So it is a perfect time to learn those kind of basic life- Tahnee: (34:47) Life skills. Catherine Ingram: (34:49) [inaudible 00:34:49] yeah. Tahnee: (34:50) That's something... I mean I copied a quote out of your essay, which was, "On the last day of the world, I would want to plant a tree." I nearly cried when I read that. I'm nearly crying now because I think that's something, when people feel the overwhelm and the kind of impact of what is going on on a more macro level, they just become numb. Business as usual I suppose carries on. I think it's... To think that even if the world was coming to an end, we would still make an offering that we would not live to see come to fruition I think is- Catherine Ingram: (35:28) But just to be clear that wasn't my quote. I quoted that. Tahnee: (35:30) No sorry. It was Merwin. But you quoted it and I mean, all the quotes you chose for that were really beautiful. But that one, I just really... Because I think I've definitely... I studied environmental science for a year and a half at university. Catherine Ingram: (35:46) [inaudible 00:35:46]. Tahnee: (35:46) I really struggled with... You were either angry and like trying to cut off from the world and go off the grid and disappear or you were kind of apathetic and well, "It's all going to happen anyway. Humans are a virus. They should all be killed." It was like, there didn't feel like much of a middle ground but I fel like everyone was really... And even then there was the women that were like, "All the men should die. The patriarchy's the problem." Like, "None of this really resonates with me." Catherine Ingram: (36:17) It's kind of like displaced... It's displaced grief. Tahnee: (36:21) Yeah. When I think about the stages, right? Denial, anger, bargaining, depression... But then I also was recently reading that they've added another stage. Because it used to end at acceptance. Now they've added transformation into meaning. I thought... Into insight. I was like, that's so perfect because I feel like over two decades that's been my experience. I'm sure you've seen that. Catherine Ingram: (36:44) Yeah definitely, yes. I know, I love that quote as well from Merwin and it's exactly that. You live, like my teacher [inaudible 00:36:57] once said, "Death is when the next breath doesn't come." So basically it's simple as that. You've living until then and how are you living here? How are you showing up? It still has meaning as long as we're here. It has meaning even after we're gone as well but while we're here we're part of the meaning of it. And so what do you do with your energy, your time, your attention? Your activity? Your service? So yeah, of course. I mean we've got so many beautiful examples through history of people who were in just terrible dire circumstances and who carried on and did it in grace, in beauty. So that's... I think that's the play on the board. In a way then that you're off the hook in terms of, you don't have to manipulate and try to change how it goes. Because it's going to go... This is a big juggernaut now. I mean, the thing I think people don't understand fully is that although we have changed the natural expressions of our world, we've changed them for the worse in that it's killing life, it doesn't follow necessarily that we can change them back. Catherine Ingram: (38:31) I don't see the will in terms of the powerful players doing that anyway. But even if they would, I certainly am not convinced that if every single person woke up tomorrow and that was their full dedication for the rest of their lives, that it would save us, frankly. Because we have put things into play now that are on their own. That the warming is actually now on its own trajectory. So there may be some sort of technology that, I don't know, cools it or- Tahnee: (39:06) That was something else I copied from your... Because I mean I guess, being of the age where a lot of my peers are really involved in conspiracy theories and the... Like it's so easy to be in that place of like, we're all pawns in a... But I mean you said something around Elon Musk is just like that nerdy guy who... And I've said this to my partner multiple times, like Bill Gates, they're just these people that they think that what they're doing is right because they don't have the self-reflect... You know they just don't have perspective to see. And you said something like, "Their intelligence is one dimensional." To paraphrase you. Catherine Ingram: (39:51) [crosstalk 00:39:51] excellent. They do have amazing intelligence. It's just disconnected a lot from the Earth systems and from the natural systems. But it's not to say that they aren't well intended. I think they actually are well intended. They just get it from their own paradigm. Tahnee: (40:09) Exactly and what they think is best is maybe not what we think is best. But I mean to call someone evil, I think it's a tricky line to walk. And I see that, that technology will save us and I've seen some eco-activists talk to that as well. I don't know, I just feel sinking in my gut when I read that sort of stuff because it doesn't- Catherine Ingram: (40:33) It's just more manipulation with nature. It's just more of what got us into this mess actually. All these different green technologies and it all just feels so misguided. It's just more of the same. We have hubris, you know? This sort of, what Derrick Jensen calls the myth of human supremacy. Instead of understanding it, we've got to just cut back everything. We've got to stop. That's probably not going to save us either. Tahnee: (41:02) And civilizations have fallen so many times through history through their own arrogance and their own excessive... And you look at nature and the plagues of locusts and they eat everything and they all die. That's the way it goes. Catherine Ingram: (41:21) Locust plague going on right now. 160 million people are on the verge of starvation. Estimates that it's going to be double that in- Tahnee: (41:28) Well I've been reading all this stuff. The ninth article on a page sometimes, or even you have to go a few pages deep but it's like, the food supply is gone for a lot of places. That's something I struggle with so much because I see it here and we do live in this place that's so rich in food and abundance and nature. I am privileged to go to the beach every day. I buy from a farmer's market. There are people in countries in the world right now that are really struggling and suffering and not even in... Like I know America's having a tough time but... I know India's going through it. I know Iran. I know parts of Africa are having a really tough time. It's like, how do we even help? What do we do? Catherine Ingram: (42:12) I know. The chickens are coming home to roost in terms of what we've been doing here. We've got to really... We're going to need a lot more courage in ourselves. We've been so spoiled. It's not our own fault because we came into the spoils of our cultures. We've been reared up in this kind of abundance and calm and safety and all these things that we've just taken for granted. But now we're in a different phase. I think we're going to have to really get to that quiet sanctuary in ourselves a lot and find there a growing sense of courage and a growing acceptance and setting aside our own hubris about how long a life we should have and how much we should have and all of those things. It's hard. And yet that's... We can either accept or fight the reality. Those are our options. Tahnee: (43:28) I guess I've heard you speak a lot about the... There's something I love about when you lead meditation and the animal nature of us. I think if we can... Because that's one of the things I think that has created so much of the drama is like we've separated ourselves so much from the fact that we are animals. We do have rhythms that flow with nature. We have needs like animals. We communicate with animals. I'm reading this great book called the Tao of Equus right now. She's talking about how horses, we've dominated them and used them for so long but now they're moving into this space of like, taking us back to connecting with ourselves and nature and just this idea that, especially through women and the wisdom held by, I guess that more feminine energy but I think everyone has the Yin and the Yang, that's definitely something I feel to be true, but like yeah, I can really feel that this is a time of... If you think about the elders and keeping the culture on track and present and like that's, I think, such a requirement of this time. Tahnee: (44:36) You look at all the leadership, it's all men. It's all men of a certain kind of privilege and a certain type of personality type, thinking of some narcissistic leaders off the top of my head right now. I think it's that older wise woman thing that we need. I don't know if you know Helena, who's a local to this area, she might be involved in Resilient Byron with you? Catherine Ingram: (44:58) No. Tahnee: (45:01) Okay well she was one of the women that I first spoke to these things about. She's a bit older. She was one of the women to start the community farmer's markets here and everything. This idea of local features, you know, like that we have to look for leadership and strength and resilience in our own communities. And then build on that. To me, that's something I'm really craving and hoping becomes more prominent. I know you're working with Resilient Byron. Is it mostly people that are out of their childbearing years or is it a mix of people? Catherine Ingram: (45:34) A mix. We don't have a huge steering group at the moment but it's definitely a mix of ages for sure yeah. I think I'm the oldest in fact. Tahnee: (45:46) How do you feel like age has then, I guess, brought you... Is there like a... I read this great story the other day in a book called If Women Rose Rooted. She said it's this combination of like wrath and gentleness as you get older. Catherine Ingram: (46:04) Yes. I definitely feel that actually inside myself. I feel what's happened for me, one of the great things is you just get a lot more authentic when you get older, women. Because I think for many women, we fell into needing to be pleasers. We kind of like to please a lot. Sometimes we compromised what we really felt and what we really thought and what we wanted to do and all of those things. Because somebody else needed us to be some other way. So that's something one grows out of, which is a happy- Tahnee: (46:44) [crosstalk 00:46:44]. Catherine Ingram: (46:48) You just get a lot more clear about... You get more savage about your time I must say. You are less inclined to spend time on nonsense or to indulge certain mind streams that you know are just going to end up in a dark alley. It has all kind of benefits along with some great disadvantages that come along. But again, it does have some beautiful silver linings. Tahnee: (47:23) Was it like a difficult... Because I mean when did you move? Because you've been in The States most of your life, right? Catherine Ingram: (47:29) Yeah. Tahnee: (47:30) And then you moved out here when? Catherine Ingram: (47:31) About [inaudible 00:47:33] half years ago. Tahnee: (47:35) And so, was that a big shift for you, culturally and professionally and yeah? Catherine Ingram: (47:40) That was a big shift. Massive, massive shift. To do it at the age I was as well. But I had felt for a very long time I wanted to get out of America. And that alone wouldn't have pulled me out but it was a combination of wanting to get out of there and also falling in love with this part of the world, Australia. And also New Zealand. I love New Zealand as well. Tahnee: (48:02) Me too. Yeah. Catherine Ingram: (48:04) So you kind of get both when you come in as a resident of Australia. So I just have been so grateful to be living here. Just I feel so lucky. And everybody in the states, all the people I talk with so often, everybody says, "Oh God you're so lucky." Except that one isn't living... We're living always in a context of "Yes I'm here and I'm lucky but my friends, my oldest friends and my whole family are over there." So my heart is over there as well. Not entirely. But I mean I often feel like, it feels something like it must have felt in Germany if you were a Jew and you were getting out but all your family was still there. You're never really entirely free in that regard. Now I'm [inaudible 00:49:05] and I hold things in as big a space as I can as I view them, but these feelings of course arise with a great frequency. And yeah, but I am very happy to be in this particular place. This is a paradise in any context, you know? And especially now. Tahnee: (49:31) I know we've been really, I guess not struggling with guilt but we've been really conscious of that feeling of like, "Well, our lives haven't been deeply impacted by this." It's obviously, I guess, I feel like I'm more focused now and I'm prioritising things more. I feel like my inner journey through this has been really powerful but in terms of what my outward life looks like, I don't obviously do as many external things. But I'm still at the beach every day. I'm still going to the farmer's markets at a social distance. It's like, I'm still kind of doing a lot of the things, and yeah, it's a tricky one to imagine. Like in some ways I think having the bush fires was a really good thing for Australian's to realise. Catherine Ingram: (50:23) I do too. Tahnee: (50:23) Yeah like that there actually is going to be an impact. Because it's so easy when it's over there to kind of forget about it or to take- Catherine Ingram: (50:33) Yeah well it was also somehow helpful in that we were already sort of crisis ready. Tahnee: (50:41) Orientated. Turning toward crisis. Catherine Ingram: (50:45) We've already gotten our crisis muscles well exercised. I mean I know people could argue and say, "Yeah well we're in crisis fatigue." But I actually think there was some benefit in terms of of a way that, first of all, that whole sense of, "Okay what's important? What matters? If my house catches fire, what is it in it that I needed even? My photographs maybe or whatever. My computer possibly." But you know, and of course then you think, one of my girlfriends, this is a little bit telling a tale out of the school but, one of my girlfriends in LA owns a Picasso. And so one time, LA gets a lot of fires. And so one time she was telling me that during one of the recent fires she had actually, she had grabbed of course her dogs and the bunny rabbit and she was trying to figure out how to get the fish. She gets everything kind of ready to get loaded into the car and then it turns out they didn't need to go. And I said, "What about the Picasso?" And she said, "I didn't even think about the Picasso." I thought, "That's so cool. The bunny rabbit made it in there before the Picasso." It's like, that's really cool. Tahnee: (52:07) It sounds like she's got her head on straight yeah. Catherine Ingram: (52:09) Exactly. I think a lot of us would make those choices actually. The living thing. So yeah, I think we had, through the fires, come to those kinds of recognitions. What actually does one need in a life? We're so happy because we went through all that drought, we got a big lesson in water. In water rationing and we got a huge lesson in don't take any of this for granted. So yeah, these are going to be the lessons coming forth, I do believe. Tahnee: (52:46) It's interesting what you're... Because you said something else in the essay around... It was around Auschwitz and the people that survived were the ones that had had struggles already in their lives. I think that's something... That resilience that we build through meeting life's challenges and learning from them. I think when you look at how far our civilization has to fall compared to others, it might be that there is parts of humanity that survive because of what they've been through. Catherine Ingram: (53:21) Already existing local resilience, doing without, living on very little, helping [inaudible 00:53:27] community. Yes. I think they're in a far better circumstance to get through this than we are because we're so dependent on a very complicated system. And we're not used to a certain kind of community sharing, which is very much what we want to start focusing on with this group. Tahnee: (53:48) So in terms of what you are looking to create, I suppose, could you just give us the elevator pitch or some kind of sense of what the ideal outcome of this organisation would be? Catherine Ingram: (54:01) Resilient Byron, well there's one part of it is resilient and the other part is regenerative. But I'm more interested in the resilient. I actually think we're going straight into crises one after the next. So in that conversation, it's been about starting a framework of neighbourhood units of resilience basically so that people would start focusing on their own neighbourhoods. Whatever that means to you. Whether it's your street or your particular area. And start sharing resources. We've got the Facebook page, which is serving as a kind of clearing house at the moment for just information and for people to find out about things like during the coronavirus crisis. Like where to get things you need, food or help in various ways. We're going to start having more conversations about food security, community gardens, security security. Like just how to stay safe. What about housing for people who may... Either don't have housing currently or may need it at some point. Catherine Ingram: (55:17) So there's lots of, I mean it's really in the formative stages but we're just basically looking at lots of different ways that we're going to organise to perhaps be a system in this region that is de-linked from the national sort of federal system. I don't mean that we're going to do a political coup but rather that we're going to have a lot of local resources we're relying on. Those can be also shared with nearby like [inaudible 00:55:51] and up where you are. Tahnee: (55:54) [inaudible 00:55:54]. Catherine Ingram: (55:58) It could be an entire Northern Rivers sort of eco-community that is helping each other. Tahnee: (56:08) That's so exciting to me because I mean I think I can see how that becomes something that can roll out. I have a friend in Melbourne and I know, on her street, she's has food and she grows things and her neighbours do and they all trade eggs and vegetables. And just that little bit of connection with the people on your street and that's such a... It has such a profound impact on your wellbeing. That was one of the solutions you offered up in the essay was community and I think- Catherine Ingram: (56:36) It's number one yeah. It's the number one- Tahnee: (56:38) And what we've really done is separate ourselves. I remember living in the city and if you like smiled at somebody... I was lucky to be raised in the country where you knew everybody, which had pros and cons. Because you knew everybody. I remember being really naughty as a teenager and like the local policeman was my mum's mate and I was like, "Hey." He was like, "Oh dear." Anyway. But yeah, I think it's really, this kind of getting to know the people that we live beside every day. Just getting a sense of, well, "Yeah they're the people we lean on." Our cul-de-sac through this time has been my saving grace. I have babysitters and I have friends for my children and I have people to share stories with. It's just been... Yeah it's been such a beautiful experience. Catherine Ingram: (57:32) That's wonderful. That's really it. That's wonderful. That's what humans have relied on through all of human history until quite recently was, you lived with your tribe. And of course as civilization so called erupted, still people lived with their tribes in a different way. They lived mostly with family or rural communities or if you lived in a city it wasn't a huge city. There weren't huge cities really. Tahnee: (58:04) Well and even people stayed in their boroughs, you know? They didn't leave their neighbourhoods. Very infrequently. Yeah. Catherine Ingram: (58:13) You'd still live within a tribe within the city. So yeah, we've gotten far from that but we can... That is one thing I think we can bring back. Well dear I should go because- Tahnee: (58:25) Yes I was going to say, thank you so much. It's actually nearly 11:11 so that's perfect. I just wanted to say that was such a great note to end on. And also because that's something you do with the Dharma Dialogues. I always got so much... I haven't been to them in a while because you weren't doing them and then this has happened but just being around people who are able to articulate their human experience and then just the sharing and I think that's, for me, been such a balm. And also obviously your wisdom and insight. So I know you've got two weekends per month coming up. Is it through June and July that you'll be doing that? Catherine Ingram: (59:03) I'm actually going to do it indefinitely. I'm going to start- Tahnee: (59:05) Oh wonderful. Catherine Ingram: (59:07) Since we're locked down I'm just going to start doing online- Tahnee: (59:09) Great so they'll be replacing, in a way the Lennox events? Catherine Ingram: (59:13) Yeah. Tahnee: (59:13) Okay. Fantastic. Okay well that's super exciting. Okay so those'll go up on your website soon so we can link to them and if anyone... Is it just through sign up to your email kind of thing and you'll be notified? Catherine Ingram: (59:25) Yeah. Tahnee: (59:26) Awesome. Well thank you so much for your time. I know- Catherine Ingram: (59:29) Thank you so much for inviting me. That was lovely. Tahnee: (59:31) Yeah it's been really beautiful to speak with you. I'll also link to your books as well because Passionate Presence is the only one I've read but I really enjoyed it. Yeah, I really just appreciate everything you're offering because it helps people like me navigate their lives. So much love. All right Catherine well I'll hopefully see you in the flesh again one day soon. Enjoy the rest of your day. Catherine Ingram: (59:55) And you. Bye dear. Tahnee: (59:57) Bye hun. Catherine Ingram: (59:57) Bye.
Shelflife 6 from Calibre, Quarter to Quarter compilation, corona business from Hugh Hardie and Koherent, instrumental goodness from Camo & Krooked and more than 10 newcomers. Enjoy! www.facebook.com/musicintelligencednb twitter.com/MusicIntell www.musicintelligencednb.com info@musicintelligencednb.com - Promo / Demo submission Track list: # Track Title Artist 1 Beholden Phil Tangent 2 Space To Be Yourself Askel and Elere 3 Follow me ( In The Deep mix ) Promenade 4 Hypersleep Senpai 5 Somebody Else (feat. Lydia Plain) Kings Of The Rollers 6 Splash Synthezia 7 Hurt So Bad Dose ft. Confusious 8 Day 1: Back & Forth Hugh Hardie 9 Sweet Sound Calibre 10 Things Like This Calibre 11 Carried Away [Deadline Remix] Charlotte Haining 12 U No Who U R Anile 13 In My Mind (Break Remix) (feat. IAMDDB) Lenzman 14 The Traveller Nelver 15 Universe (2020 Remaster) Marcus Intalex, ST. Files 16 Sweet Harmony Macca and Loz Contreras 17 Way Home Detect Theory and Exorf 18 Be Your Girl (Koherent Bootleg) Koherent 19 Heart Crossed Workforce 20 Need Your Lovin Changer 21 Divorced FLM 22 Years Calibre 23 All Night - Red Bull Symphonic Camo & Krooked 24 Climax - Red Bull Symphonic Camo & Krooked 25 Numbers (Camo & Krooked Remix) - Red Bull Symphonic John B
In The Deep is on location this week at Blue Bonnet Beer Company. I interview my student and friend David Hulama. David started Jiu-Jitsu at age 50. Listen as he tells you about his experiences in Jiu-Jitsu and much more.
In this Episode of the In The Deep, I am joined by Coach Ryan of Nu Era BJJ (CJJF Hilo). Coach Ryan and I discuss the corona virus pandemic globally and locally. We also discuss ways our schools have dealt with closures and government mandates. Lastly, we discuss our plans to keep our students motivated during the time our gyms must remain closed.
In this Episode of In The Deep, I invited my student and friend, Greg Parris, to share his experiences with injuries in combative sports. Greg has extensive experience in wrestling, Judo, Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu and Mix Martial Arts. His experiences has also brought many injuries while preparing for competitions and MMA fights. Listen as Greg and I distinguish between being "hurt" or "injured" while going over mindset as we return from an injury and much, much more.
Powerful interview with Catherine Ingram, spiritual teacher and author of extended essay Facing Extinction. Catherine talks candidly about the environmental crisis and the research that led her to believe we may be facing human extinction. She shares her insight into how to face the upcoming times without blame or denial and the opportunity inherent in being alive right now for deep presence and transformation. Catherine has been a journalist for many years reporting on social and environmental issues. She is the author of a several books including Passionate Presence and In The Footsteps of Ghandi where she interviewed the Dalia Lama, Thich Nhat Hahn, Desmond Tutu and Leonard Cohen. You can read her extended essay here: https://www.catherineingram.com/facingextinction/ And listen to her podcasts, In The Deep here: https://www.catherineingram.com/podcasts/
Kathleen “Bird” York is a study in creative versatility: an Oscar nominated songwriter and recording artist, (IN THE DEEP from Oscar winning film CRASH), a screenwriter who has developed pilots for Warner Bros, Sony, Paramount and Fox, and an accomplished actor having starred or costarred in dozens of films, miniseries and Emmy award-winning television series.A musician since fifteen, Bird's songwriting ability got the attention of Warner Chappell which then lead to her critically acclaimed record with EMI. Her love for writing to picture found her composing and producing songs for several projects including Oscar winning film maker Paul Haggis' CBS drama FAMILY LAW, Sony's SEVEN POUNDS, Magnolia Pictures DUMBSTRUCK, and Warner Bros' SUBLIME, as well as for television series CSI:NY, HOUSE, AMERICAN IDOL, ARMY WIVES, STAND OFF, NIP TUCK and WAREHOUSE 13. As an actor, she is best known for her work as Congresswoman Andie Wyatt on the West Wing, and can currently be seen as a series regular on the CBS/CW series IN THE DARK.
KORN - The Nothing, LINDEMANN - Steh Auf, Neuerscheinungen (u.A. Green Day, Alter Bridge) | DerSchoppCast #010 In der heutigen Folge knüpfe ich an mein Album Review zu KORNs neuestem Werk "The Nothing" an und gebe Updates zu meiner Meinung über einzelne Songs. Des Weiteren sage ich noch ein paar Worte zu ein paar der neu erschienenen Singles dieser Woche und rede somit unter Anderem über "Father Of All..." von Green Day und "In The Deep" von Alter Bridge. Ebenfalls geht es um die neue LINDEMANN Single "Steh Auf", welche ich bereits auf meinem Youtube Kanal (unten verlinkt) interpretiert habe. Im Podcast gehe ich nochmal auf Details ein, die mir im ersten Eindruck entgangen sind und spreche über die tatsächliche Bedeutung der Lyrics. DerRockSchopp wünscht viel Spaß! Schaut auch hier vorbei: DerRockSchopp bei Youtube Die RockSchopp Playlist bei Spotify DerRockSchopp bei Instagram --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/derrockschopp/message
11.2.18 | "It's In The Deep" | Brother Trevor Sloss by The Rock Church of Fort Myers
Les premiers blockbusters de l'été 2017 arrivent et 24FPS fait le point sur tous les films, ou autres œuvres visuelles, vues pendant le mois de juin.Voici donc les 19 œuvres évoquées dans l'émission par Jerome et Julien, entièrement sans spoiler : Voletarium (à partir de 0h05m05) Rakka et Firebase (Oats Studio) de Neil Blomkamp (à partir de 0h14m30) Conspiracy (Unlocked) de Michael Apted (à partir de 0h27m28) L'Amant Double de François Ozon (à partir de 0h38m25) HHhH de Cédric Jimenez (à partir de 0h44m04) The Wall de Doug Liman (à partir de 1h03m35) The Jane Doe Identity (The Autopsy Of Jane Doe) de André Øvredal (à partir de 1h13m42) Alibi.com de Philippe Lacheau (à partir de 1h27m58) La Momie (The Mummy) de Alex Kurtzman (à partir de 1h33m27) KO de Fabrice Gobert (à partir de 2h08m09) Baywatch : Alerte à Malibu de Seth Gordon (à partir de 2h15m18) In The Deep (47 Meters Down) de Johannes Roberts (à partir de 2h33m50) The Belko Experiment de Greg McLean (à partir de 2h42m01) The Last Girl - Celle Qui A Tous Les Dons (The Girl With All The Gifts) de Colm McCarthy (à partir de 2h51m35) It Comes At Night de Trey Edward Shults (à partir de 3h01m16) Le Grand Méchant Renard Et Autres Contes de Benjamin Renner et Patrick Imbert (à partir de 3h24m25) The Big Sick de Michael Showalter (à partir de 3h34m50) Transformers: The Last Knight de Michael Bay (à partir de 3h40m48) Okja de Bong Joon-ho (à partir de 4h16m00)Bonne écoute, et n'hésitez pas à partager votre avis sur les blockbusters insupportables du moment !Crédits musicaux : Croque Monsieur de Gert Verhulst et James Cooke, et L'Homme Pressé de Noir Désir, issu de l'album 666.667 Club (1996)
I avsnitt 93 av vår filmpodcast går vi på djupet bokstavligt talat. Vi tar en båttur i Mexico tillsammans med två systrar som blir övertalade av ett par killar att det är superfränt att krypa ner i en hajbur och titta lite närmare på stora vita fiskar med vassa tänder. 47 Meters Down eller In The Deep som filmen ibland kallas är Tomas filmuppdrag denna vecka. Kommer han nappa på denna djupgående fiskthriller eller kommer det att bli bottenkänning på denna ?Dessutom har vi spanat in en åldrande Logan som tar med sig sin gamla läromästare Charles Xavier på en roadtrip där uppdraget är att föra en liten flicka i säkerhet. Hon har lite speciella färdigheter som påminner om Logans. Hugh Jackman har annonserat ut att detta är hans svansång som Wolverine/Logan... Så frågan är ifall vi får se det vanliga bjäbb-Marvelsmörjan eller kan detta äntligen vara en film som levererar i superhjälte-universumet.Vi förhandspeppar också om den kommande Star Wars : The Last Jedi och pratar nostalgi.Och så presenterar vi vinnaren i vår Fantastic Beast-tävling. Tack för alla tävlingsbidrag och filmförslag till kommande podcastavsnitt. Men "There Can Be Only One", som vinner.Välkommna till ett ovanligt speedat och ostädat avsnitt av vår trivsamma filmpodcast. Nu åker vi!
Feel stuck in life? Are you in the right place? Are you thinking that life is going to be what it is and there's nothing you can do about it? This is how it will always be? In “The Deep,” Pastor Jamie encourages those struggling with these questions to keep moving because you may just be one space away from the purpose and place God has always destined you to be.
On this episode we talk about The Miami Connection, In The Deep, The Shallows, Sausage Party, Clown, Goobers, Bibleman, and much more! Check out Tom’s [...]
Tune into Flesh Wound Radio Aug. 25 at 9:00 pm eastern (or anytime shortly after we wrap). On this fright filled episode we cover In The Deep aka 47 Meters Down the new Shark flick pulled from store shelves at the last minute for a theatrical release. In addition to that early review we will also break down the gory and depraved Violent Shit The Movie. The depravity continues with reviews for Massacre Video's Hunters, Eli Roth's Clown, Arrow's new blu ray of Microwave Massacre, and season premiere of Fear The Walking Dead. Don't miss it Flesh Wound Freaks and be sure to add Flesh Wound Radio on Facebook, Horror Society on Twitter, and download us on itunes and Stitcher.
Join us for Trailer Park Podcast #59! The Legend of Tarzan swings in as our headliner and Nathan, Daniel and The Intern take a deeper look at the very extensive (and very white) history of Tarzan. Wiener-Dog is the new film from director Todd Solondz and he has a lot of currency with us here at TPP because his previous film "Happiness" is a masterpiece. The Shallows used to be called In The Deep and they tell you that... on the poster. The BFG is an acronym for Big Friendly Giant and in hindsight it's fairly easy to figure it out; did we have to explore all of the other possibilities of what it could be an acronym for? No... but we did. Free State of Jones charges in like a militia recruitment video as our last trailer in this lineup and we discuss how it is being criticized for every man, woman and child in the trailer holding a gun. Stick around for The Burden List and the Intern Archive Update.
2013-10-13 In the Deep