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Lauren and Thad continue to review "In Through the Out Door", "Goofy Ball", and "420" as part of our "Games of Folly" Recapisode! In Part B we talk about some more of our unit favorites, give our best episode enigmas, and go over Thad's conspiracies!
LAUREN'S BACK for this Recapisode of our Games of Folly Unit! Lauren and Thad revisit Hoodoo Factory classic categories and enjoy reviewing these episodes! "In Through the Out Door", "Goofy Ball", and "420" get the antidote treatment!
Welcome to the Instant Trivia podcast episode 1066, where we ask the best trivia on the Internet. Round 1. Category: Let'S Go Online 1: Oh my God! It's a double rainbow video! Seen by more than 19.3 million people on this site! What does this mean?!. YouTube. 2: "The Clone Wars: Fierce Twilight" and "The Powerpuff Girls: Fast and Flurrious" are games at this TV channel's .com. Cartoon Network. 3: On May 15, 2007 Shawn Cotter used this site to prank friends, creating the rickroll. YouTube. 4: There's no place like this cozy page, the first page of a website. the home page. 5: Nora Ephron is editor at large for this political site co-founded by Arianna. the Huffington Post. Round 2. Category: The Unicorn 1: This Japanese beer brand uses a unicorn for its logo and that's what its name means. Kirin. 2: In "Through the Looking-Glass", she meets a unicorn who is stunned to discover she's not a monster. Alice. 3: The endangered Indian species of this large ungulate has the scientific name R. unicornis. rhinoceros. 4: The "Gentleman Caller" breaks Laura's prized figurine in this play from 1945. The Glass Menagerie. 5: This unicorn-like whale's "horn" is really a long tusk. narwhal. Round 3. Category: Good Knight 1: The Poor Knights of Christ became known by this name after occupying a house near the Temple of Solomon. the Knights Templar. 2: Anne Crompton reworks medieval lit by pairing this knight not with the Green Knight but rather with "Lady Green". Gawain. 3: "The Hedge Knight" is a graphic novel set in the same world as this author's "A Song of Ice and Fire". George R.R. Martin. 4: When a woman gets a knighthood from the British, she gets this title before her name. dame. 5: 11th century knight El Cid was a soldier of fortune for both Christians and these Spanish Muslims. Moors. Round 4. Category: Culture Around The World 1: Drawing from the name of our motion picture capital, it's the name for India's movie industry. Bollywood. 2: This museum's original holdings consisted of art collected by the Hapsburg and Bourbon monarchs of Spain. the Prado. 3: In 1953 the Shakespeare Festival in this Ontario, Canada city held its first performance. Stratford. 4: This form of Japanese drama that incorporates music, dance and mime developed in the 1600s. kabuki. 5: Originated by 2 high schoolers in 1971 , the Roskilde culture and music festival in this country is one of Europe's largest. Denmark. Round 5. Category: Tough Oz 1: The Wicked Witch of the West dies when Dorothy does this to her. Sprays her with water. 2: The 3 kinds of animals fretted about in the forest, "Oh My!". Lions and tigers and bears. 3: It's the part of the Tin Man's body that Dorothy oils first. his mouth. 4: The warning on the Haunted Forest signpost says "I'd" do this "If I were you". Turn back. 5: This animal pulls the coach in the Emerald City. the Horse of a Different Color. Thanks for listening! Come back tomorrow for more exciting trivia!Special thanks to https://blog.feedspot.com/trivia_podcasts/ AI Voices used
We're back to discuss the second half of the Led Zeppelin discography as we pick our Best & Worst tracks from each album. Led Zeppelin's career from 1974-1982 was a period of great success, with the band releasing some of their most iconic albums, including Physical Graffiti, Presence, and In Through the Out Door. They also toured extensively during this time, playing to sold-out crowds around the world. However, the band's success was not without its challenges. In 1977, drummer John Bonham died suddenly, leaving the band devastated. They eventually regrouped and released one more album, Coda, in 1982, but they never fully recovered from Bonham's death. The band disbanded in 1980. In this episode we each pick what we think is the best song and worst song from each album during this period. Will we agree? Will we argue? You'll have to listen to find out! Let us know what YOUR best and worst songs are for each of these albums in the comments section! We hope you enjoy The Best & Worst of Led Zeppelin Part 2 and SHARE with a friend! Decibel Geek is a proud member of the Pantheon Podcasts family. Contact Us! Rate, Review, and Subscribe in iTunes Join the Facebook Fan Page Follow on Twitter Follow on Instagram E-mail Us Subscribe to our Youtube channel! Support Us! Buy a T-Shirt! Donate to the show! Stream Us! Stitcher Radio Spreaker TuneIn Become a VIP Subscriber! Click HERE for more info! Comment Below Direct Download Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
We're back to discuss the second half of the Led Zeppelin discography as we pick our Best & Worst tracks from each album. Led Zeppelin's career from 1974-1982 was a period of great success, with the band releasing some of their most iconic albums, including Physical Graffiti, Presence, and In Through the Out Door. They also toured extensively during this time, playing to sold-out crowds around the world. However, the band's success was not without its challenges. In 1977, drummer John Bonham died suddenly, leaving the band devastated. They eventually regrouped and released one more album, Coda, in 1982, but they never fully recovered from Bonham's death. The band disbanded in 1980. In this episode we each pick what we think is the best song and worst song from each album during this period. Will we agree? Will we argue? You'll have to listen to find out! Let us know what YOUR best and worst songs are for each of these albums in the comments section! We hope you enjoy The Best & Worst of Led Zeppelin Part 2 and SHARE with a friend! Decibel Geek is a proud member of the Pantheon Podcasts family. Contact Us! Rate, Review, and Subscribe in iTunes Join the Facebook Fan Page Follow on Twitter Follow on Instagram E-mail Us Subscribe to our Youtube channel! Support Us! Buy a T-Shirt! Donate to the show! Stream Us! Stitcher Radio Spreaker TuneIn Become a VIP Subscriber! Click HERE for more info! Comment Below Direct Download Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
TVC 618.6: Ed welcomes Dale Pederson, the writer, director, and producer of In Through the Out Door, an upcoming time travel/suspense/thriller series that not only draws inspiration from H.G. Wells' The Time Machine, but blends elements of the true crime genre by thrusting its two protagonists back to 1893 Chicago, where they find themselves terrorized by notorious serial killer H.H. Holmes. Topics this segment include how the premise of In Through the Out Door is also somewhat reminiscent of that of Lost in Space. In Through the Out Door is set to premiere later in 2023. You can follow Dale @MagicTVFilms on Instagram for updates and more information. Want to advertise/sponsor our show? TV Confidential has partnered with AdvertiseCast to handle advertising/sponsorship requests for the podcast edition of our program. They're great to work with and will help you advertise on our show. Please email sales@advertisecast.com or click the link below to get started: https://www.advertisecast.com/TVConfidentialAradiotalkshowabout Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
We discuss the second half of Led Zeppelin's discography, starting with Houses of the Holy 8:26 - 22:22, Physical Grafitti 22:23 - 48:18, Presence 48:19 - 1:00:49, In Through the Out Door 1:00:50 - 1:12:54, John Bonham's death, Coda, and top 10 songs + album rankings 1:12:55 - end.
Dale PetersonTake a walk with me down Fascination Street as I get to know Dale Peterson.Dale is the writer / director of the upcoming television series 'In Through the Out Door'.In this episode, we chat about his career. Starting as a music video director in the Detroit area, Dale made a name for himself in the music scene and quickly became a 'go to' for music videos. We touch on Dale's early struggles with dyslexia, and how he overcame some of those obstacles. Then we talk about a couple of documentaries that Dale made a few years ago; one was about the homeless population on Skid Row in Los Angeles, and the other was for National geographic about the return of wolves into Yellowstone national park. Of course, I ask him all about his feature film Hello, My Name Is Frank, which is a road trip comedy about a man with Tourette Syndrome. Then we move onto his newest project: In Through the Out Door, which is In Through the Out Door stars: Garrett M. Brown, Martin Copping, Christine Kilmer, and Jesse C. Boyd. Dale is very frank, open, and honest about his struggles with dyslexia. I applaud him and appreciate his generosity and candor. Thank you, Dale.This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/4068452/advertisement
Award-winning writer/director Dale Peterson is the writer/director/creator of the exciting new television series In Through the Out Door,” a time travel horror-thriller starring Martin Copping (Call Of Duty), Jesse. C Brown (Halloween Ends), Christina Kilmer (High Holidays) and Garrett M. Brown (Kick-Ass). One of Peterson's notable achievements came in 2016 with the completion of his feature film, Hello, My Name is Frank, starring Garrett M. Brown (Kick-Ass), Rachel DiPillo (Chicago Med), Hayley Kiyoko (Insidious: Chapter 3) and Travis Caldwell (The Magnificent 7) which is an uplifting story about a recluse with severe Tourette Syndrome who is dragged on a road trip with three teenage girls. The film garnered critical acclaim, winning seven awards in six festivals, including Best Dramatic Feature and Best Actor at the Manhattan Film Festival. It also received the prestigious Best Feature honors at the international Tourette Film Festival. Peterson's sensitive and accurate portrayal of a man with Tourette's earned the film an unprecedented endorsement by the Tourette Association of America, further solidifying his impact as a filmmaker. Peterson has dedicated himself to writing screenplays and directing his own films and TV pilots. His documentary I'm Gonna Do It Until The Day I Die won Best of Fest at the Arizona Underground Film Festival and Best Short at the Charlotte and Detroit Film Festivals in 2009. In 2011, his film Hard to Come By earned seven awards at nine festivals, including Best Short at the Manhattan and Palm Beach International Film Festivals, and he received the Best Director award at the Los Angeles ITN Film Festival. In addition to his work in music videos, Dale Peterson has made significant contributions to the world of filmmaking. He produced Bring Your Best, a nationally-acclaimed documentary about homelessness in LA's Skid Row, shedding light on an important social issue. During the '90s, he captured the return of wolves to Yellowstone National Park in National Geographic: Wolves, a Legend Returns to Yellowstone, and delved into the rich talent of poets and musicians in the LA coffeehouse scene in Halo in My Coffee (executive produced by Steve Martin). Originally from Detroit, Dale started his career in entertainment by producing, writing, directing, shooting, and editing over 100 music videos for Detroit and Los Angeles record labels and bands including The Melvins and Alice in Chains.
Oh the Hoo-dacity, a Hoodoo Factory Production, is hosted by Thad. "In Through the Out Door" is 1st episode in our "Games of Folly" Unit. This effort to continue our examination and enjoyment of NewsRadio episodes is an assortment of questions and observations that hopefully add some enjoyment for fans. Questions like: Who really drives the storylines? Who is the Villain of the episode? If the characters were divided into teams, which would "win" the scored episode? Will be answered! Special thank you to Frank from the Start the Show podcast, Pepsi Chris, Tricia not Trish, and Lauren for all the patience, support and encouragement in making this monstrosity happen!
In good fashion we decided to complete the Led Zeppelin discography by listening to Houses of the Holy, Physical Graffiti, Presence, In Through the Out Door, and Coda. Led Zeppelin has influenced every rock band since the 1970s and on, they will always be covered and emulated for their progressive style. We hope you enjoy the show, tune in for disparaging comments next week. Title music and artwork by Rob Fortune Direction by Jack Falcon Editing by JoMo
Our first repeat guest is back with a new ring, a new book and she is helping us elevate peer support. Valery Brosseau is back and the first time she asked us, is it in the blood? But now she is screaming the way out is through. We continue with our suicide prevention series with a bad ass story of how Valery went through and has a book of her poetry “through”. She has a lifetime invitation here at AGP and after listening to her you will understand why. Congratulations to her and Shane on their recent marriage. We wish them both all the best. It's expensive to be crazy, jokes Valery Brosseau. About what the cost is to have a mental illness, and run your own business. Val is a self contained creator of sorts. More humor and levity is necessary when combating stigma and allowing for people to see someone they might view differently. The universe will come together when you represent what the universe wants to reflect in you, expounds Val., In Through, her first poetry book, she opens up her hope chest and displays it in the rawest of view, for the world to see, to judge. But judgement don't matter when you are a black belt in karate and a purple in Brazilian jujitsu. I told you, she kicks ass. If you need one person or five people to pick you back up, there is no shame in any of that, expounds Brosseau. Self compassion she views as a key ingredient in healing and moving forward. Setbacks will happen it is inevitable. The best response is to take a deep breath and explore your body, your mind. We are fallible. We are human doings. Little moments of joy and being able to find those moments she acknowledges is the second key to getting over a setback. The only path we have is to move forward. Val was recently excepted into a Master's of Social Work program and is pursing her dreams. Val says… “expressing is better than impressing.” Valéry Brosseau can be found at https://www.valerybrosseau.com Val's book of poetry, Through, is available from Amazon. Thank you for listening to another week of Above Ground Podcast. Sunday September 25th is the 2022 Out of the Darkness Walk for RITA. Taking place at the Saratoga State Park at 9am. Sign up with this link TO SIGN UP Please come and join us in celebrating the lives of the lost and the survivors who carry on their memories. Walk to raise awareness and end the stigma surrounding suicide and mental illness overall. Sign up now and join us on Sunday. Please continue to share and follow us at all our links. Please support Nippertown.com, our partner in community and in platform. Until next week, get well, be safe, stay ABOVE
The Sound Chaser Progressive Podcast is on the web. On the show this time we have a mix of old and new progressive music, a long suite from Daevid Allen and Harry Williamson, an In Memoriam segment in memory of Vangelis and Alan White, new music from starfish64, and the Symphonic Zone. All that, plus news of tours and releases on Sound Chaser. Playlist1. NOA - Kilimanjaro, from If Tomorrow ComesIN MEMORIAM VANGELIS2. Aphrodite's Child - Rain and Tears, from End of the World3. Vangelis - Yin & Yang, from China4. Jon & Vangelis - Curious Electric, from Short StoriesIN MEMORIAM ALAN WHITE5. Alan White - Avakak, from Ramshackled6. Yes - Release, Release, from Tormato7. Circa: - Look Inside, from Circa:END IN MEMORIAM8. starfish64 - Space Junk, from Scattered Pieces of Blue9. Led Zeppelin - Fool in the Rain, from In Through the Out Door10. Eloy - Voyager of the Future Race, from Ra11. George Winston - Longing / Love, from Autumn12. Inner Prospekt - Free Walk, from Seven Ways to Lose Yourself13. Tangerine Dream - Ghazal (Love Song), from Optical RaceTHE SYMPHONIC ZONE14. Karfagen - Yuletide, from Magician's Theatre15. Circuline - Return, from Return16. Kaprekar's Constant - Holywell Street, from Depth of Field17. Kaprekar's Constant - Ghost Planes, from Depth of Field18. Lodger Wright - It's All in the Mind (Jung at Heart), from Master of None19. Banco del Mutuo Soccorso - Interno Città, from Canto di Primavera20. Glass Hammer - In That Lonely Place, from Perilous21. Glass Hammer - Where Sorrows Died and Came No More, from Perilous22. Triumvirat - I Believe, from Old Loves Die Hard23. Band of Rain - Merlin, from Petrichor24. Marco Bernard & Kimmo Pörsti - The Land of the Fools, from GulliverLEAVING THE SYMPHONIC ZONE25. Daevid Allen & Harry Williamson - Twenty Two Meanings, from Twenty Two Meanings26. Glass - Black on White, from No Stranger to the Skies Volume III27. Gentle Giant - River, from Octopus28. Armageddon - Silver Tightrope, from Armageddon29. Esperanza Spalding - City of Roses, from Radio Music Society
I'll bet you this next episode of WKJP is awesome: double or nothing! Kayleen and Jordan are talking about the twentieth episode of NewsRadio, “In Through the Out Door”! Recommendations: Kayleen - The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel on Amazon Jordan - Taking care of your feet Theme music is "You Say But You Don't Know" by Trouble's Afoot Game music is “Winners” by Delicate Steve
The human-canine story is the greatest love story that has ever existed. But too often we look at things only from our own perspective and impose unrealistic expectations on our canine companions. In Through the Eyes of a Canine, animal behavior specialist David J Kurlander takes us on a journey through history, science, biology, animal behavior, quantum theory, and personal development to illustrate exactly how we can shift our way of seeing things and learn to perceive the world as they do. Based on decades of work with more than 150,000 dogs and years observing wild canines, Kurlander offers real-world examples, practical suggestions, and exercises you can implement immediately. As you open your mind to this new way of relating to your furry family member, you will begin to recognize how developing a relationship of reciprocity and mutuality with the dogs in your life can create a harmonious pack, and even change the world. This return episode introduces my new book, Through the Eyes of a Canine, and is why I have been so preoccupied for so many months. My focus was un-waivered to provide you, the reader, with the best of my research and experience. I hope you enjoy the book as much as I enjoyed writing it. AVALIABLE WORLD WIDE NOW ON AMAZON. https://www.amazon.com/dp/1737218712/ref=mp_s_a_1_2?dchild=1&keywords=through+the+eyes+of+a+canine+david+kurlander&qid=1634296829&sr=8-2
Released in 1979, Led Zeppelin's In Through the Out Door doesn't usually make it to the top of most hard rockers fave album lists. But The Wolf thinks this masterpiece has aged quite well and given us a glimpse into what might have been for a proggier, more democratic and experimental Led Zeppelin. We go track by track and compare it to the rest of the catalog while relaying our personal experiences with LZ and seeing Jimmy Page & Robert Plant live.
It’s our forth annual year end-show and this time, rather than discussing our favorite releases of the year, we talk about the music (and music ephemera) that got us through 2020, a year like no other when music was one of the few joys to be found against the backdrop of a global pandemic, social unrest and economic upheaval. Recommended Listening 1. Mike: Greg Dulli Random Desire https://open.spotify.com/album/2G1UlLUbyEm8BC025rLx5q?si=JH8bevErSje3exbP6WVAAA Rod: Bouncing Souls Christmas Live Stream https://liveatstudio4.com/pages/tsl-direction-livestream Glenn: Giant Eagles https://open.spotify.com/artist/6MnRws9d3TsZMUOFDF7y4U?si=6vwQCyqETnKgyygacceERw 2. Mike: Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah The Centennial Trilogy https://open.spotify.com/playlist/0NmFPbywKknrBnxIB02z7E?si=fDcm3jKxRWKSC0HLYwAv5g Rod: Ticket Stub Art Project Glenn: Screeching Weasel Some Freaks of Atavism https://open.spotify.com/album/57OucSQfWFUBLa0XZBJHnZ?si=hufEU-ucSMeZtgVSmOFwWA 3. Mike: Mogwai https://open.spotify.com/artist/34UhPkLbtFKRq3nmfFgejG?si=psopuB6ERee4kUX-NKGL0Q Rod: JJ Johnson Blue Trombone https://open.spotify.com/album/51LqCupKXSrH7lkmUnN8Pw?si=sED6-V1XSwCkqn8Njjv0AA Glenn: Record Collecting https://blog.discogs.com/en/personal-guide-to-record-collecting-for-beginners/ 4. Mike: Led Zeppelin Houses of the Holy, Physical Graffiti, Presence, In Through the Out Door https://www.amazon.com/Hammer-Gods-Led-Zeppelin-Saga/dp/0061473081/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=hammer+of+the+gods&qid=1609264230&sr=8-1 Rod: Record Collecting w/ the wife https://blog.discogs.com/en/personal-guide-to-record-collecting-for-beginners/ Glenn: Mutations (book) by Sam McPheeters https://www.amazon.com/Accelerando-Sam-McPheeters/dp/1947856987/ref=sr_1_1?crid=3O7WZH1ABF1MN&dchild=1&keywords=mutations+book&qid=1609264293&sprefix=mutations+%2Caps%2C210&sr=8-1 5. Mike: Mulatu Astatqe Ethiopoiques 4: Ethio Jazz & Musique Instrumentals 1969-1974 / Haiti Direct Comps https://open.spotify.com/album/5VKvVk4gaPAJyXjof8NnzX?si=xPGvLdtwTcOD2Eab0llRTw https://open.spotify.com/album/6yabelYFJPpkXf1k0YhwUk?si=EDI3XZrbQROuyk1RqBqI6A Rod: More Fun in the Nee World (book) by John Doe & Tom Desavia https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0306922126/ref=ox_sc_act_title_2?smid=ATVPDKIKX0DER&psc=1 Glenn: The Mandalorian https://disneyplusoriginals.disney.com/show/the-mandalorian 6. Mike: Run The Jewels RTJ4 https://open.spotify.com/album/6cx4GVNs03Pu4ZczRnWiLd?si=K3TTA62OQHqxnxpE45vB6w Rod: The Huntsman Hill Podcast https://huntsmanhill.com Glenn: Vinyl Community on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=vinyl+community 7. Mike: Mastodon https://open.spotify.com/artist/1Dvfqq39HxvCJ3GvfeIFuT?si=MV7KnO9OQXuzCgCMPj9bng Rod: The YouTube Rabbit hole https://www.youtube.com Glenn: Podcasts: The Dummy Room, End on End, Alma Martyr https://open.spotify.com/show/4Zvmdz9sV2s6D1mmAYMT6J?si=T-G6Q5mUSqOz6t_c_19q7Q https://open.spotify.com/show/2Wz3qdtz6obG3RYlgG9YWN?si=7JdD6qrHTFeqPdpruURd0A https://open.spotify.com/show/0jdsqPO54Dyg4hTtw8diUB?si=0HM2wWlkS7WTh_CSzgWD-A 8. Mke: Dream Pop & Shoegaze (genres) https://open.spotify.com/playlist/0jBbtuJAmSHk4OhZiOvCXx?si=vtMrKP5JShmuYuCC4b5xLg https://open.spotify.com/playlist/3JBCdBtG0IlzIuK2fSSGVP?si=0iJ5vmsqShyuYFUzt30zgg Rod: Skinhead Reggae 1969 compilation https://www.discogs.com/Various-Skinhead-Reggae-1969/release/9183082 Glenn: Death by Unga Bunga https://open.spotify.com/artist/3GbYOxp3xc7O9lpuJQRi9K?si=CMlVEL1nSzuJ2fDWlAgB1w 9. Mike: Deftones Ohms https://open.spotify.com/album/0VEFy5MsBiq0u2lWL0OwOd?si=DPeGrpceSdGs3BqDJSSdfQ Rod: Christmas records from all genres https://open.spotify.com/album/2Tksxz3ZN1g4O2WisL4Z2g?si=VSFcQYczS1aiFCm4j4Om0A Glenn: Metal (genre) https://open.spotify.com/playlist/37i9dQZF1DWWOaP4H0w5b0?si=oBR4uyN_StqP5nTzgT_P7w 10. Mike: Sleaford Mods / Idles https://open.spotify.com/artist/0otAqZw8htTsGHfqR491Yh?si=q70p-adxRvCPDzylJYRZ0w https://open.spotify.com/artist/75mafsNqNE1WSEVxIKuY5C?si=ZT4RQKp3TbuDvV_SOC8iqQ Rod: Bang! The Bert Berns Story (doc) https://www.imdb.com/title/tt5432624/ Glenn: The Lawrence Arms Skeleton Coast https://open.spotify.com/album/1KoFC7rBDqWZrDbLFAPXAu?si=hX5xoyAtQBOQT4e0ImxoQw huntsmanhill.com #huntsmanhill Spotify Playlist: https://open.spotify.com/user/1298220429/playlist/4gy1wWwypkoFS2lUztvZ44?si=waSq07DBQlq3x9G1_nK0pg
In Through the Night documentary filmmaker Loira Limbal looks at a home-based 24-hour day care center run by Deloris and Patrick Hogan. Deloris, known to all as Nunu, is at the heart of this film as she steps up to give working mothers—primarily women of color—the flexibility they need as they work multiple jobs and/or night shifts. Filmed over a two-year period, it becomes clear as we see the Hogans teach, feed, guide and love these children that Nunu provides not just child-care but a critical social safety net for mothers working long hours to keep their families afloat. Limbal, herself a single mom of two, also introduces us to two of the mothers: Marisol who works three part-time jobs to provide for her family, and Shanona a pediatric ER nurse whose shifts typically run 14 hours. Through the Night is an inditement of the current childcare system in which mothers are forced to make impossible choices and an affirmation of the ingenious ways people come together to support one another in the face of systemic challenges. It is a remarkable film, and Loira is a passionate advocate for the women who make do against all odds while observing a system that doesn't work for them. Loira talks about her determination to make Through the Night, the women she met during filming, her own journey as a filmmaker, the challenges of making the film as a mother of two with a full-time job and bringing out a documentary during the pandemic.
In Through the Night documentary filmmaker Loira Limbal looks at a home-based 24-hour day care center run by Deloris and Patrick Hogan. Deloris, known to all as Nunu, is at the heart of this film as she steps up to give working mothers—primarily women of color—the flexibility they need as they work multiple jobs and/or night shifts. Filmed over a two-year period, it becomes clear as we see the Hogans teach, feed, guide and love these children that Nunu provides not just child-care but a critical social safety net for mothers working long hours to keep their families afloat. Limbal, herself a single mom of two, also introduces us to two of the mothers: Marisol who works three part-time jobs to provide for her family, and Shanona a pediatric ER nurse whose shifts typically run 14 hours. Through the Night is an inditement of the current childcare system in which mothers are forced to make impossible choices and an affirmation of the ingenious ways people come together to support one another in the face of systemic challenges. It is a remarkable film, and Loira is a passionate advocate for the women who make do against all odds while observing a system that doesn’t work for them. Loira talks about her determination to make Through the Night, the women she met during filming, her own journey as a filmmaker, the challenges of making the film as a mother of two with a full-time job and bringing out a documentary during the pandemic.
Episode 117 of YWIL is here! This week Dan reviews Led Zeppelin's In Through the Out Door, Taylor Reviews Taika Waititi's What We Do in the Shadows, and Josh reviews Power Trip's "Nightmare Logic". After the reviews we talk about what we've been watching and do a bit of Josh Trivia for Josh's birthday. The big topic of discussion this week is the start of the NFL season. The guys give their predictions by division and give their super bowl picks! Check out all this and more on Episode 117 of You Watch, I Listen!
What's your path to sustainability? This week's #earthconversepodcast is with Thurstan Crockett. Who is a coach, retreat leader and sustainability consultant…and a shaman and elder in training. His story starts with bit of a splash at 2 years old and developing a deep sense of connection with certain places growing up. A birdwatcher and a good man living a full life, we explore… (74 mins) · the importance of being a mentor to young men, helping them with rites of passage and his work with A Band of Brothers (10:04) · his road to sustainability including via journalism, Greenpeace, the Wildlife Trust and Shell. (16:52) · feeling immense pressure in his Sustainability role at Brighton and Hove City Council, having a crisis and seeking healing and ‘a different wild' in Cornwall (36:00) · his offerings In Through the Outdoors, helping people reconnect with themselves through nature, involving nature based processes such as a ‘land reading' (42:00) · conversing with the earth, the sea (49:39) · his forthcoming retreat in September (56:09) · stories from ‘Incredible Encounters with Nature Revealing our True Myth' (56:31) · how a deeper connection with nature has changed his approach to sustainability and himself (1:08:00) · some nature reading recommendations! (1:11:00) EPISODE EXTRAS: You will want to check out his website and offerings here: https://thurstancrockett.com, including his writing https://thurstancrockett.com/spring-inspiring/ Keep an eye out for events and sign up for the forthcoming retreat ‘Through the Outdoors', Late Summer in magical West Penwith from 24-27 September here. https://thurstancrockett.com/events/ A Band of Brothers: https://abandofbrothers.org.uk NEW HERE? ABOUT EARTH CONVERSE AND I Hi, I am Penelope Mavor, podcast host and founder of Earth Converse a nature-based leadership collaborative helping leaders have the conversations they need to: with themselves, each other and the earth. Please get in touch for executive coaching and leadership development programmes. https://linktr.ee/EarthConverse Email: info@earthconverse.com And the wind, the trees...
Agradece a este podcast tantas horas de entretenimiento y disfruta de episodios exclusivos como éste. ¡Apóyale en iVoox! La Tienda De Biblioteca Del Metal: Encontraras, Ropa, Accesorios,Decoracion, Ect... Todo Relacionado Al Podcats Biblioteca Del Metal Y Al Mundo Del Heavy Metal. Descubrela!!!!!! Ideal Para Llevarte O Regalar Productos Del Podcats De Ivoox. (Por Tiempo Limitado) https://teespring.com/es/stores/biblioteca-del-metal-1 Led Zeppelin fue un grupo británico de hard rock fundado en 1968 por el guitarrista Jimmy Page, quien había pertenecido a The Yardbirds. La banda estuvo integrada por John Paul Jones como bajista y teclista, el vocalista Robert Plant y John Bonham a la batería (que había coincidido con Plant en The Band of Joy). Led Zeppelin presentó elementos de un amplio espectro de influencias, como el blues, el rock and roll, el soul, la música celta, la música india, el folk, y el country. Más de treinta años después de la disgregación de la banda en 1980, la música de Led Zeppelin continúa vendiéndose, disfruta de una amplia difusión radiofónica, y ha demostrado ser una de las bandas más influyentes en la música rock. Hasta la fecha, ha vendido más de 300 millones de álbumes en el mundo, incluidos 111 millones sólo en los Estados Unidos, . Es, junto a los Beatles, la banda con más discos de diamante de la historia de la música (otorgados cada diez millones de ventas en EE. UU.). Los discos con esta certificación son: Led Zeppelin IV (23 millones), Physical Graffiti (15 millones), Led Zeppelin II (12 millones), Houses of the Holy (11 millones) , Led Zeppelin I (10 millones) y Box Set (10 millones). En 2004, la revista Rolling Stone los clasificó en el número 14 en su lista de los «100 artistas más grandes de todos los tiempos» Led Zeppelin se formó a finales de 1968 cuando Jimmy Page, que ya tenía cierta reputación en el Reino Unido por su labor como músico de estudio y por ser el último guitarrista de la banda The Yardbirds, buscaba nuevos músicos para su nuevo proyecto, The New Yardbirds (nombre que provocaba ciertos problemas legales), constituido a partir de la disolución de The Yardbirds. El nombre de la banda surgió a raíz de un chiste de Keith Moon, baterista de The Who (en una sesión de grabación de una canción de Jeff Beck en el que participaban Jimmy Page, John Paul Jones, John Entwistle y el propio Keith Moon), cuando dijo que la banda fracasaría y caería «como un zeppelin de plomo». El nombre surgió en un principio como Lead Zeppelin (“zeppelin de plomo”), pero a recomendación de Peter Grant, el mánager de la banda, se suprimió la a de lead, para evitar problemas de pronunciación por parte de los hablantes norteamericanos, ya que las vocales ea se pronuncian como una i en el inglés de Norteamérica, Sin embargo, el bajista de The Who, John Entwistle, posee su propia versión de los hechos: «Hace unos cuatro años empecé a estar harto de los Who, así que hablé con un tío que ahora es jefe de producción de Led Zeppelin. Estuve hablando con él en un club, en Nueva York, y le dije “Sí, estoy pensando en dejar el grupo y formar el mío. Lo voy a llamar Led Zeppelin. Y como portada del disco voy a poner el Hindenburg en llamas, ya sabes, todo este asunto...” Y unos dos meses después, empezó a trabajar con Jimmy Page, y como estaban buscando un nombre, él sugirió Led Zeppelin, a Page le gustó y salieron con la misma portada de disco que yo había planeado» El jefe de producción al que se refiere Entwistle podría ser Richard Cole, futuro road manager de la banda. The Yardbirds se separó en 1968, y Page y el bajista de la banda, Chris Dreja, comenzaron a buscar miembros para una nueva formación, mientras innovaban su música junto al guitarrista actual de The Bulens, J. Jencquel. El primer candidato para el puesto de vocalista fue Terry Reid, quien se negó a ser parte de la banda, pero recomendó a un amigo suyo llamado Robert Plant, En agosto de 1968, Page, Dreja y Peter Grant viajaron a Birmingham para ver la banda de Plant, Hobbstweedle. Plant aceptó la oferta de Page para entrar en la banda en una reunión en la casa de Page. Plant tenía un amigo que tocaba la batería, John Bonham, que también se uniría al grupo. Poco después de la llegada de Bonham, Dreja abandonó la música para convertirse en fotógrafo, por lo que los tres componentes de la banda se ven obligados a buscar un nuevo bajista. John Paul Jones, un amigo de Page y conocido músico de sesión, se enteró de la noticia y le propuso a su amigo su entrada en la formación, quedando cerrada la banda. Lo primero que hicieron fue ensayar un blues normal de 12 compases. En ese momento se vio la "química" que había entre los cuatro miembros. Su primer cometido fue acabar una gira pendiente en Escandinavia bajo el nombre de The New Yardbirds, en la que tocaron muchas de las canciones que forman parte de su álbum debut. Después de la gira, y ya bajo el nombre de Led Zeppelin, Peter Grant, mánager de la banda, otorgó a la banda 200 000 dólares a cambio de producirles su primer álbum. Tal suma de dinero provenía del sello Atlantic Records, que estaba interesada en fichar el mayor número posible de grupos que surgían durante aquella época amparados bajo el estilo blues y hard rock, algo que Led Zeppelin cumplía a la perfección, por lo que Atlantic contrató a la banda sin siquiera haberlos visto, solamente bajo la recomendación de Dusty Springfield. Su primer disco fue publicado el 12 de enero de 1969, bajo el nombre de Led Zeppelin. Fue grabado en apenas una semana (grabado, mezclado y editado) en los estudios Olympic de Londres en octubre de 1968, empleando apenas 30 horas de estudio y sin casi horas de ensayo. Al principio, el público británico no respondía muy efusivamente al lanzamiento del álbum, producido por Page, lo que se convertiría en una constante a lo largo de la historia del grupo, un hecho que provocó que la banda no publicase sencillos en el Reino Unido. Tras embarcarse en su primera gira norteamericana y gracias a las explosivas actuaciones de la banda, el álbum tuvo un éxito inmenso en crítica y público, sobre todo en Estados Unidos. La prensa calificó al álbum como heavy metal, algo con lo que la banda no estaba de acuerdo. Robert Plant declaró que «es injusto calificar a la banda como heavy metal, ya que un tercio de nuestra música es acústica». Poco después de la edición de este álbum debut, la banda decidió no publicar ningún sencillo en Inglaterra, deteriorando la promoción del disco y de los trabajos posteriores. Como curiosidad cabe destacar que, durante la gira de apoyo al disco Led Zeppelin en Dinamarca, el grupo actuó bajo el nombre de The Nobs por prohibición de la baronesa Eva von Zeppelin (familiar del inventor del dirigible) a utilizar su nombre real, quien arguyó que eran unos "monos gritones", además de criticar la portada del disco, foto cortesía del exbajista de la banda, Chris Dreja, Además, las autoridades de Singapur impidieron a la banda entrar en el país para dar un concierto debido a que tenían el pelo demasiado largo. Durante 1969, la banda se las arregló para terminar las giras europea y americana y grabar durante las mismas su segundo trabajo, que fue publicado el 22 de octubre de dicho año bajo el nombre de Led Zeppelin II. Este álbum los consagró definitivamente, llegando al número 1 en las listas británica y estadounidense (destronando al Abbey Road de The Beatles, el cual había permanecido 11 semanas en el número 1. y permaneciendo allí durante siete semanas, probablemente gracias al éxito de canciones como "Whole Lotta Love" y "Heartbreaker". Como apoyo al disco, la banda dio un par de giras más por Estados Unidos cada vez ante audiencias más grandes debido al aumento de popularidad que supuso la publicación del segundo álbum del grupo, alargando los conciertos durante más de tres horas. Para la composición del tercer disco de Led Zeppelin, los miembros de la formación se retiraron a Bron-Yr-Aur, una remota casa rural de Gales, en 1970, donde también grabaron el material allí ideado. El 5 de octubre de 1970 se publica su tercer disco, Led Zeppelin III, tras el cual algunos acusaron al grupo de ser un montaje comercial, debido al carácter íntimo y acústico de las canciones contenidas en dicho álbum, que a pesar de no ser muy bien recibido tanto por la crítica como por sus admiradores, contenía composiciones que con el tiempo se convirtieron en clásicos, como "Immigrant Song", el primer single de la carrera del grupo a pesar de sus negativas a que fuese publicado, o "Since I've Been Loving You". La banda entera y sobre todo Jimmy Page se tomó personalmente estas críticas, lo que provocó que su cuarto trabajo, en su edición original, no tuviera título ni nada que permitiera identificarlo, a excepción de cuatro extraños símbolos (Zoso.svg), uno para cada miembro de la banda, Este álbum, reconocido comúnmente como Untitled y principalmente como Led Zeppelin IV por inercia, publicado el 8 de noviembre de 1971, fue el LP más vendido de la banda (actualmente está en la ubicación nº 4 de los álbumes más vendidos de la historia según la RIAA), en el que destaca su mayor éxito, "Stairway to Heaven", además de clásicos de la banda como "Black Dog", "Rock and Roll", "Going to California" y "When The Levee Breaks", de la cual destaca el imponente sonido atronador y pesado de la batería de John Bonham. El solo de guitarra de Stairway To Heaven fue elegido por los lectores de la revista Guitar World Magazine como "el mejor solo de todos los tiempos" l disco vino acompañado de un ligero cambio de imagen de los integrantes del grupo, quienes comenzaron a vestir vistosas ropas y extravagantes collares y joyas al estilo de las grandes estrellas de la época. Es también durante este tiempo cuando se popularizaron los excesos de Led Zeppelin, ya que empezaron a viajar en un jet privado (llamado "The Starship" alquilando plantas enteras de los hoteles en sus estancias durante las giras. Hasta julio de 2006, el cuarto disco de Led Zeppelin ha vendido 23 millones de copias en Estados Unidos, convirtiéndose en el cuarto álbum más vendido de la historia, Su siguiente disco, Houses of the Holy, publicado el 28 de marzo de 1973, supuso una nueva idea en el grupo, mezclando diversos estilos musicales, blues, rock, folk, e incluso matices reggae. Como siempre, el álbum causó controversia entre los críticos a pesar de tener excelentes ventas. La canción "Houses of the Holy" fue grabada inicialmente para incluirse en su álbum homónimo, aunque finalmente aparece en su siguiente trabajo.La portada del disco también tuvo su polémica, ya que en ella aparecen los hijos de Robert Plant desnudos escalando una especie de cuesta empedrada (que se trata de la calzada del gigante en Irlanda del Norte), por lo que fue prohibido en algunos países, entre ellos España. La gira de presentación del disco fue multitudinaria, consiguiendo en un concierto en Florida la cifra de 56 800 espectadores, superando el récord anterior ostentado por The Beatles,4 ingresando ese día 309 000 dólares. Para sentirse más cómodos en la grabación de sus álbumes, Led Zeppelin crearon en 1974 su propio sello discográfico, Swan Song, aunque dependiendo todavía de su compañía discográfica Atlantic Records. El nombre de la compañía viene de una de las pocas canciones inéditas del grupo. A partir de ese momento, la banda hizo todas sus grabaciones bajo este sello. El logotipo de la compañía, que reproduce al dios griego Apolo, se convirtió en el símbolo de Led Zeppelin, incluyéndose en muchos objetos de merchandising de la banda a partir de entonces. Dicha compañía fue rentable durante la vida de Led Zeppelin, aunque tres años después de la separación de la banda, el sello tuvo que cerrar. Entre 1973 y 1974 la banda se tomó un descanso de su frenética combinación de grabaciones y espectaculares giras, dedicándose a realizar colaboraciones, componer canciones y a otros muchos asuntos no tan relacionados con la música. El 24 de febrero de 1975 se publicó Physical Graffit, el primer trabajo concebido desde Swan Song. Se trataba de un álbum doble que además de contener piezas nuevas como "Kashmir", de la que Robert Plant dijo que era la canción definitiva de Led Zeppelin, incluía material descartado de álbumes anteriores. Este álbum es considerado uno de los mejores de la banda, probablemente por la cantidad y diversidad de temas. 1975 supuso la coronación de Led Zeppelin como una de las mejores bandas de rock de la historia, tanto por la crítica como por las actuaciones en directo de ese año, que fueron apoteósicas y multitudinarias. Sin embargo, el acelerado ritmo de trabajo de Led Zeppelin se vio interrumpido cuando en el verano de ese mismo año Robert Plant sufrió un grave accidente automovilístico en la isla griega de Rodas, dejando a su mujer Maureen al borde de la muerte. El accidente fue seguido por una difícil y larga recuperación que se extendió aproximadamente un año hasta finales de 1976. Fue en este año en el que se preparó a toda velocidad el siguiente trabajo de la banda, Presence, publicado el 31 de marzo de 1976 y grabado entre la ciudad alemana de Múnich y Malibú, en California, caracterizado por no tener ninguna canción acústica y no hacer uso de ningún teclado. Es un álbum marcado por el estado convaleciente de Robert Plant, quien grabó sus tomas vocales sentado en una silla de ruedas o en muletas. El álbum fue recibido con diversidad de opiniones por crítica y público debido a su carácter más suave y lento. Jimmy Page siempre dijo que este es su disco preferido, y el tema que da inicio al disco, "Achilles Last Stand", su tema favorito con sus más de 10 minutos. Posteriormente editaron su primer disco en vivo, The Song Remains The Same, banda sonora de la película del mismo nombre, la cual muestra unas actuaciones de 1973 en Nueva York que finalizaron una gira estadounidense, mezcladas con unas escenas de fantasía ideadas por la propia banda. Sin embargo, el disco caló negativamente en el Reino Unido debido al potente auge de las nuevas bandas de punk británicas, considerándose a la banda como "obsoleta" Tras volver a los escenarios en 1977, de nuevo Robert Plant volvió a verse afectado por la desgracia, esta vez por la muerte de su hijo Karac Pendra de seis años, a causa de una infección estomacal. Este hecho marcó profundamente a Plant, llegando a plantearse su continuidad dentro de la banda. Sin embargo, el vocalista recapacitó y en 1978 la banda volvió al estudio, concretamente al del grupo ABBA en Estocolmo, para grabar el que sería inesperadamente su último álbum de estudio, In Through the Out Door publicado el 15 de agosto de 1979. Desgraciadamente, de nuevo encontrarán problemas para terminar el álbum ya que por aquel entonces, Jimmy Page y John Bonham se encontraban en un estado de adicción a la heroína y al alcohol respectivamente, un hecho que hace de In Through the Out Door el único álbum de Led Zeppelin que contiene los primeros y únicos temas de la banda en los que no figura Page como autor. En la gira de 1979 se vio por primera vez a unos Led Zeppelin no tan concentrados en la improvisación (era un rasgo bastante característico de su compenetración como banda en directo), y más centrados en las canciones en sí. A pesar de ello, una audiencia de cerca de 120 000 personas respaldó a la banda en un concierto en Copenhague. La banda había llegado a un estado de madurez, tanto a nivel compositivo como a nivel personal habiendo apartado ya la mayoría de sus excesos y reemplazándolos por profesionalismo. Por aquel entonces eran de las únicas bandas capaces de llenar un estadio frente al fracaso comercial de las bandas punk rock surgidas entonces. Durante esta época, Robert Plant había estado pensando en abandonar la banda debido al cansancio ocasionado por la gira de 1979, aunque Peter Grant consiguió convencerlo para continuar. Dicha gira se extendió hasta 1980, cuando Bonham tuvo que ser ingresado en un hospital de Núremberg, Alemania, debido a una indigestión, aunque la prensa especuló con las drogas y el alcohol como posibles causas. La banda acabó la gira en Berlín el 7 de julio del mismo año. Con la llegada de 1980 Led Zeppelin volvió a las grandes giras europeas, anunciando un nuevo gran tour por Norteamérica ese año, que nunca pudo ser realizado ya que el día 25 de septiembre fue la fecha más trágica en la historia del grupo: John Bonham murió en The Old Mill House, la mansión de Page en Windsor, asfixiado por la aspiración accidental de su propio vómito provocado por el consumo excesivo de alcohol, No se encontraron drogas en el cuerpo del baterista, como se había especulado, La idea de continuar nunca se cruzó por la mente de los restantes integrantes de la banda a pesar de los rumores de la incorporación de nuevos bateristas. Elaboraron un comunicado oficial en el que explicaron que ya nada era lo mismo sin Bonham, y que era inútil continuar sin él. Al tener firmado un contrato que los obligaba a sacar un nuevo álbum, y ante la negativa de grabar nuevas canciones sin Bonham, se optó por buscar material inédito hasta entonces que conformó el LP Coda (1982), disco que presenta canciones que se descartaron en la realización de discos anteriores y alguna toma en directo de canciones ya grabadas. En los años siguientes los integrantes de Zeppelin mantuvieron su decisión de no reunirse. Solo en esporádicas ocasiones se los vio juntos en un escenario. Últimamente Page y Plant decidieron encontrarse para hacer algo juntos, grabando algún disco conjunto algunos años después de la separación de la banda, pero jamás utilizando el nombre o referencias a Led Zeppelin. Una de las obsesiones líricas de Led Zeppelin, en especial de Robert Plant, es la obra de J. R. R. Tolkien. Así podemos encontrar varias referencias a las novelas del escritor británico en canciones como "Bron-Y-Aur Stomp", "Ramble On" o "The Battle of Evermore"; y en el título de la canción "Misty Mountain Hop" Además hay referencias a la mitología escandinava, como por ejemplo en la canción "Immigrant Song" en donde menciona "We come from the land of the ice and snow" pudiendo hacer referencia a Asgard, o también donde nombra «Hammer of the Gods» pudiendo hacer referencia al martillo de Thor, Mjolnir, y donde clama «Valhalla I am coming» donde Valhalla es el paraíso al cual los héroes van, al morir en combate. Parece ser que la inspiración de esta canción hay que encontrarla en un viaje a Islandia del grupo, en el año 1970. Muchos de los mitos de la banda que se mantienen hasta la actualidad son los rumores acerca de que la banda practicaba magia negra y que en los temas "Dazed & Confused", "Whole Lotta Love", "The Battle of Evermore", "Stairway to Heaven", "Four Sticks", "No Quarter" y "Kashmir" aparecían mensajes satánicos, cosa que generó controversia sobre las producciones de la banda. La controversia más famosa está relacionada con "Stairway to Heaven", ya que han sido bastantes personas quienes aseguran haber percibido mensajes satánicos («Here's to my sweet satan» / «Aquí está mi dulce Satanás») reproduciendo la canción al revés, cosa que siempre ha sido negada por la banda. Otra de las canciones que, presuntamente, contienen mensajes de carácter satánico es «Dazed and Confused». Page siempre estuvo interesado en la vida y obra de Aleister Crowley, llegando a adquirir la mansión de veraneo de este, Cabe también destacar que al final del disco Led Zeppelin III puede escucharse una famosa cita de Crowley, que dice: «Haz lo que tú quieras, será toda Ley».
Hoje, eu e Biofá falamos sobre a discografia, álbum a álbum, do Led Zeppelin. Led Zeppelin (1969) Led Zeppelin II (1969) Led Zeppelin III (1970) Led Zeppelin IV (1971) Houses of the Holy (1973) Physical Graffiti (1975) Presence (1976) In Through the Out Door (1979) Coda (1982)
Sermon preached by the Rev. Greg Millikin on Sunday May 3, 2020 (The Fourth Sunday of Easter, Year A, on Psalm 23 and John 10:1-10), entitled “In Through the Out Door”.
We made it to episode 20—we can’t believe it. Because of this, we thought it was only appropriate to talk about one of the most famous bands in history. Plagiarism, statutory rape, vagina sharks—we cover it all. Apologies in advance, but also these guys were brutal, for real.Closing track: “In the Light” from Physical Graffiti (1975)Check out our episode playlists on Spotify! https://open.spotify.com/user/motherpuncherincMike’s Picks:Houses of the Holy (1973) — Best Album, Personal FavoriteUntitled (Led Zeppelin IV) (1971) — Least FavoriteIn Through the Out Door (1979) — Worst AlbumAlex’s Picks: Untitled (Led Zeppelin IV) (1971) — Best AlbumHouses of the Holy (1973) — Personal FavoriteIn Through the Out Door (1979) — Worst Album, Least FavoriteAlbums we discussed this episode…Led Zeppelin (1969)Led Zeppelin II (1969)Led Zeppelin III (1970)Untitled (Led Zeppelin IV) (1971)Houses of the Holy (1973)Physical Graffiti (1975)Presence (1976)In Through the Out Door (1979)Follow Mike on Instagram @popejesseventura and Alex @motherpuncher
What up, bros?! This week on the podcast, we have a very special episode for you to celebrate 75 episodes! We thought we'd do something special for everyone and we are doing something a little different. But first, in Adventures in Hunting, we have few new lines. And Funko is also doing something new with a Christmas Village as well as a new Harry Potter line, a new James Bond line, and a new starter Pokemon! In Blu-Rays, being released this week we got Alita: Battle Angel, Hellboy, and The Missing Link. In Through the Wall, we got some news about Thor 4, a new suit for CW's Supergirl, and we discuss the live-action Little Mermaid casting news. Then, Rose updates us on the Box Office Top 5 of the week. And finally, for the Main Event of the Evening, we have a showdown between all of the Avengers: Endgame Pop figures. And, for the special part, we recorded it! I know what you're going to say... "No shit!" but that's not what I meant. I mean we filmed it! And the video is on YouTube! Go check it out on our page to join in on the fun with us. As always, be sure to subscribe to us on either iTunes, Google Play, Stitcher, iHeart Radio, RadioPublic or Spotify! And also check out our content on YouTube. New videos today! Also, be sure to follow us on Facebook at facebook.com/theallbros Or on Twitter and Instagram @theallbros And if you have something you want us to discuss in the next episode or a movie we should see, be sure to email us at theallbroschannel@gmail.com or you can fill out our form on our website tinyurl.com/theallbros We hope to hear from you guys!
What up, bros?! This week in Adventures in Hunting, we talk about the variety of Pops that are coming our way soon. If you like, Hocus Pocus and The Nightmare Before Christmas, there may be some figures for you. In Blu-Rays, we talk about Shazam that is being released this week. If you haven't seen it, be sure to go get it. It's an amazing film. In Through the Wall, we are a little light on news, but we did get some first thoughts and a rating for the live-action remake of The Lion King. Moving on to This Week's Sneak Peeks, we talk about the new trailer we got for the live-action remake of Mulan, the second trailer for Dora, and the second trailer for Maleficent: The Mistress of Evil. So... nothing too special there. And we now have a name for our new Box Office segment, "What's In The Box?". So join us in welcoming this new segment into the family. Lastly, we have Vic from Crash and Taz's Movie Cellar join us while we breakdown Spider-Man: Far From Home. This is a major spoiler review so listen at your own risk. But, please, enjoy the episode. If you want to hear more from Vic, be sure to find their podcast on Spotify or Anchor, and follow them on the socials. Twitter- @AndCellar Instagram- @crash_n_taz_movie_cellar As always, be sure to subscribe to us on either iTunes, Google Play, Stitcher, iHeart Radio, RadioPublic or Spotify! And also check out our content on YouTube. New videos will be heading your way soon. Also, be sure to follow us on Facebook at facebook.com/theallbros Or on Twitter and Instagram @theallbros And if you have something you want us to discuss in the next episode or a movie we should see, be sure to email us at theallbroschannel@gmail.com or you can fill out our form on our website tinyurl.com/theallbros We hope to hear from you guys!
What is happening, bros?! This week on the podcast, we have a lot of new and exclusive Pops for you that were announced or are coming out this week. And when I say a lot, I mean a lot. In Through the Wall news, we have a couple castings that happened with Ghostbusters and The Eternals. Also, the score for Spider-man: Far From Home got released and we are thrilled with the results. With This Week's Sneak Peeks, we have a trailer for the new Charlie's Angels and... thoughts... We are also introducing a new segment to you guys that we don't have a name for yet. We need to summon some demons to gift us a name for it. And finally, we breakdown the reimagining that is Child's Play. I can't tell you if it's an amazing episode because I don't control your life. But listen and let us know if it is. As always, be sure to subscribe to us on either iTunes, Google Play, Stitcher, iHeart Radio, RadioPublic or Spotify! And also check out our content on YouTube. New videos will be heading your way soon. Also, be sure to follow us on Facebook at facebook.com/theallbros Or on Twitter and now on Instagram @theallbros And if you have something you want us to discuss in the next episode or a movie we should see, be sure to email us at theallbroschannel@gmail.com or you can fill out our form on our website tinyurl.com/theallbros We hope to hear from you guys!
Word recommender and guest host, Renee joins Extreme Vocabulary this week for a discussion on one of the deadliest words we've ever featured. Tracing this word's histories back to the time of the Reformation, we learn about how people used DEFENESTRATION as a particularly effective way to remove a religious authority from power? Is there a way to DEFENESTRATE things in our own time? Efren brings us a meditation on today's word from Elijah Matthew Tubbs, author of In Through a Door, out a Window, and we all contemplate the many reasons we might find ourselves flying out a window. So, come to our window and join us for another great episode of EXTREME VOCABULARY.
Presence and In Through the Out Door by Led Zeppelin as we finish the Zepathon... --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/ogb/support
For a long time Paul Barnsley was the only investigative journalist on the Native beat, and today he remains one of the most respected journalists among Indigenous people in Canada. In Through the Looking Glass he talks about his career and offers wisdom from his own experience to non-Aboriginal reporters breaking in on the beat. It’s part of a series of interviews celebrating the 10th anniversary of APTN investigates. Please help people find it, by leaving a rating or comment.
Green Beans, Mushroom Soup, & Strawberry Ice Cream_with your host Marc Gladstone
There’s still 4 albums left from this iconic band! Houses of the Holy; Physical Graffiti; Presence and In Through the Out Door… (yeah, okay… Coda too, but that was released after John Bonham’s death)... plus… if you didn’t already know about the Starship… the copious amounts of cocaine… more groupies than any band on the planet before them… Page’s addiction, Plant’s bad luck, Bonham’s death… you want to download this show!! http://www.pacificnorthwestradio.com/ (Support the show.) Support this podcast
Join Dave this evening for an introduction to “Digital Audio Workstation’s” followed by Led Zeppelin In Through the Out Door side 1&2 on “Drop the Needle” The All vinyl show. http://www.pacificnorthwestradio.com/ (www.pacificnorthwestradio.com)http://www.pacificnorthwestradio.com/contribute.html (Support the show.) Support this podcast
Led Zeppelin fue un grupo británico de hard rock fundado en 1968 por el guitarrista Jimmy Page, ya viejo conocido nuestro. La banda estuvo integrada por John Paul Jones como bajista y teclista, el vocalista Robert Plant y John Bonham a la batería. Led Zeppelin tuvo muchas influencias musicales, bebió de las fuentes del blues, el rock and roll, el soul, la música celta, la música india, el folk, e incluso el country. Más de treinta años después de la disolución de la banda en 1980, la música de Led Zeppelin continúa vendiéndose, disfruta de una amplia difusión radiofónica, y ha demostrado ser una de las bandas más influyentes en la música rock. Hasta la fecha, ha vendido más de 300 millones de álbumes en el mundo, incluidos 111 millones sólo en los Estados Unidos. ¡¡¡Es que son muchos!!! Su primer disco fue publicado el 12 de enero de 1969, bajo el nombre de Led Zeppelin. Se grabó en apenas una semana (grabado, mezclado y editado) en los estudios Olympic de Londres en octubre de 1968, empleando apenas 30 horas de estudio y sin casi horas de ensayo. Al principio, el público británico no respondía muy efusivamente al lanzamiento del álbum, producido por Page, lo que se convertiría en una constante a lo largo de la historia del grupo, un hecho que provocó que la banda no publicase sencillos en el Reino Unido. Tras embarcarse en su primera gira norteamericana y gracias a las explosivas actuaciones de la banda, el álbum tuvo un éxito inmenso en crítica y público, sobre todo en Estados Unidos. La prensa calificó al álbum como heavy metal, algo con lo que la banda no estaba de acuerdo. Como curiosidad cabe destacar que, durante la gira de apoyo al disco Led Zeppelin en Dinamarca, el grupo actuó bajo el nombre de The Nobs por prohibición de la baronesa Eva von Zeppelin (familiar del inventor del dirigible) a utilizar su nombre real, quien arguyó que eran unos "monos gritones", además de criticar la portada del disco. Además, las autoridades de Singapur impidieron a la banda entrar en el país para dar un concierto debido a que tenían el pelo demasiado largo. ¡¡¡Que tiempos!!! El 5 de octubre de 1970 se publica su tercer disco, Led Zeppelin III, tras el cual algunos acusaron al grupo de ser un montaje comercial, debido al carácter íntimo y acústico de algunas de las canciones contenidas en dicho álbum, que a pesar de no ser muy bien recibido tanto por la crítica como por sus admiradores, contenía composiciones que con el tiempo se convirtieron en clásicos, como "Immigrant Song". El tiempo pone a todos en su sitio, a los críticos y a los artistas. Porque este otro tema del mismo disco, “Since I’ve Been Loving You”, no tiene desperdicio… La banda entera y sobre todo Jimmy Page se tomó personalmente estas críticas, lo que provocó que su cuarto trabajo, en su edición original, no tuviera título ni nada que permitiera identificarlo, a excepción de cuatro extraños símbolos, uno para cada miembro de la banda. Este álbum, reconocido comúnmente como Led Zeppelin IV, se publicó el 8 de noviembre de 1971 y fue el LP más vendido de la banda (actualmente está en la ubicación nº 4 de los álbumes más vendidos de la historia según la RIAA), en el que destaca su mayor éxito, "Stairway to Heaven", que ya hemos escuchado, además de clásicos de la banda como la maravillosa "Black Dog". O el trepidante “Rock and Roll". O la atronadora batería de John Bonham en "When The Levee Breaks", En esta época fueron famosos los excesos de Led Zeppelin, ya que empezaron a viajar en un jet privado, a alquilar plantas enteras de los hoteles en sus estancias durante las giras. Pero es que, hasta julio de 2006, el cuarto disco de Led Zeppelin había vendido 23 millones de copias en Estados Unidos, convirtiéndose en el cuarto álbum más vendido de la historia. Su siguiente disco, Houses of the Holy, publicado el 28 de marzo de 1973, supuso una nueva idea en el grupo, mezclando diversos estilos musicales, blues, rock, folk, e incluso matices reggae. Como siempre, el álbum causó controversia entre los críticos a pesar de tener excelentes ventas. La canción "Houses of the Holy" fue grabada inicialmente para incluirse en su álbum homónimo, aunque finalmente aparece en su siguiente trabajo. La portada del disco también tuvo su polémica, ya que en ella aparecen los hijos de Robert Plant desnudos escalando una especie de cuesta empedrada (que se trata de la calzada del gigante en Irlanda del Norte), por lo que fue prohibido en algunos países, entre ellos España. Para sentirse más cómodos en la grabación de sus álbumes, Led Zeppelin crearon en 1974 su propio sello discográfico, Swan Song, aunque dependiendo todavía de su compañía discográfica Atlantic Records. Entre 1973 y 1974 la banda se tomó un descanso de su frenética combinación de grabaciones y espectaculares giras, para publicar, el 24 de febrero de 1975 el primer trabajo concebido desde Swan Song: Physical Graffiti. Se trataba de un álbum doble que contiene piezas nuevas como "Kashmir", de la que Robert Plant dijo que era la canción definitiva de Led Zeppelin. Lamentablemente, la exitosa trayectoria de Led Zeppelin se vio interrumpida cuando en el verano de ese mismo año Robert Plant sufrió un grave accidente automovilístico en la isla griega de Rodas, dejando a su mujer Maureen al borde de la muerte. El accidente fue seguido por una difícil y larga recuperación que se extendió aproximadamente un año hasta finales de 1976. En este mismo año de 1976 se preparó a toda velocidad el siguiente trabajo de la banda, Presence, publicado el 31 de marzo de 1976 y grabado entre la ciudad alemana de Múnich y Malibú, en California, que curiosamente se caracteriza por no tener ninguna canción acústica y no hacer uso de ningún teclado. Es un álbum marcado por el estado convaleciente de Robert Plant, quien grabó sus tomas vocales sentado en una silla de ruedas o en muletas. El álbum, como marca de la casa, fue recibido con diversidad de opiniones por crítica y público debido a su carácter más suave y lento. Jimmy Page siempre dijo que éste es su disco preferido, y el tema que da inicio al disco, "Achilles Last Stand", su tema favorito con sus más de 10 minutos.23 Posteriormente editaron su primer disco en vivo, The Song Remains The Same, banda sonora de la película del mismo nombre, la cual muestra unas actuaciones de 1973 en Nueva York que finalizaron una gira estadounidense, mezcladas con unas escenas de fantasía ideadas por la propia banda. Sin embargo, el disco caló negativamente en el Reino Unido debido al potente auge de las nuevas bandas de punk británicas, considerándose a la banda como "obsoleta”. Tras volver a los escenarios en 1977, de nuevo Robert Plant volvió a verse afectado por la desgracia, esta vez por la muerte de su hijo Karac Pendra de seis años, a causa de una infección estomacal. Este hecho marcó profundamente a Plant, llegando a plantearse su continuidad dentro de la banda. Sin embargo, el vocalista recapacitó y en 1978 la banda volvió al estudio, concretamente al del grupo ABBA en Estocolmo, para grabar el que sería inesperadamente su último álbum de estudio, In Through the Out Door publicado el 15 de agosto de 1979. Desgraciadamente, de nuevo encontrarán problemas para terminar el álbum ya que por aquel entonces, Jimmy Page y John Bonham se encontraban en un estado de adicción a la heroína y al alcohol respectivamente, un hecho que hace de In Through the Out Door el único álbum de Led Zeppelin que contiene los primeros y únicos temas de la banda en los que no figura Page como autor. A pesar de ello, una audiencia de cerca de 120 000 personas respaldó a la banda en un concierto en Copenhague. La banda había llegado a un estado de madurez, tanto a nivel compositivo como a nivel personal habiendo apartado ya la mayoría de sus excesos y reemplazándolos por profesionalismo. Por aquel entonces eran de las únicas bandas capaces de llenar un estadio frente al fracaso comercial de las bandas punk rock surgidas entonces y que habían despreciado a los obsoletos Led Zeppelin. En 1980 Led Zeppelin volvió a las grandes giras europeas, anunciando un nuevo gran tour por Norteamérica ese año, que nunca pudo ser realizado ya que el día 25 de septiembre John Bonham murió asfixiado por la aspiración accidental de su propio vómito provocado por el consumo excesivo de alcohol. No se encontraron drogas en el cuerpo del baterista, como se había especulado. La banda elaboró un comunicado oficial en el que explicaron que ya nada era lo mismo sin Bonham, y que era inútil continuar sin él. Al tener firmado un contrato que los obligaba a sacar un nuevo álbum, y ante la negativa de grabar nuevas canciones sin Bonham, se optó por buscar material inédito hasta entonces que conformó el LP Coda (1982), disco que presenta canciones que se descartaron en la realización de discos anteriores y alguna toma en directo de canciones ya grabadas. De este LP es esto que está sonando… Walter's Walk En los años siguientes los integrantes de Zeppelin mantuvieron su decisión de no reunirse. Sólo en esporádicas ocasiones se los vio juntos en un escenario. Últimamente Page y Plant decidieron encontrarse para hacer algo juntos, grabando algún disco conjunto algunos años después de la separación de la banda pero que, como veréis, poco o nada tenía que ver con el sonido Zeppelin. Por hoy, esto ha sido todo. Hemos vislumbrado mínimamente la trayectoria de una de las bandas más importantes de todos los tiempos. La vida y milagros de unos músicos que ya han pasado a la historia de la música como los genios que fueron y, afortunadamente, son todavía. Esperamos que nuestro objetivo de entretener e informar se haya cumplido también hoy, porque, lo que es nosotros, lo hemos pasado muy bien en vuestra compañía.
Led Zeppelin fue un grupo británico de hard rock fundado en 1968 por el guitarrista Jimmy Page, ya viejo conocido nuestro. La banda estuvo integrada por John Paul Jones como bajista y teclista, el vocalista Robert Plant y John Bonham a la batería. Led Zeppelin tuvo muchas influencias musicales, bebió de las fuentes del blues, el rock and roll, el soul, la música celta, la música india, el folk, e incluso el country. Más de treinta años después de la disolución de la banda en 1980, la música de Led Zeppelin continúa vendiéndose, disfruta de una amplia difusión radiofónica, y ha demostrado ser una de las bandas más influyentes en la música rock. Hasta la fecha, ha vendido más de 300 millones de álbumes en el mundo, incluidos 111 millones sólo en los Estados Unidos. ¡¡¡Es que son muchos!!! Su primer disco fue publicado el 12 de enero de 1969, bajo el nombre de Led Zeppelin. Se grabó en apenas una semana (grabado, mezclado y editado) en los estudios Olympic de Londres en octubre de 1968, empleando apenas 30 horas de estudio y sin casi horas de ensayo. Al principio, el público británico no respondía muy efusivamente al lanzamiento del álbum, producido por Page, lo que se convertiría en una constante a lo largo de la historia del grupo, un hecho que provocó que la banda no publicase sencillos en el Reino Unido. Tras embarcarse en su primera gira norteamericana y gracias a las explosivas actuaciones de la banda, el álbum tuvo un éxito inmenso en crítica y público, sobre todo en Estados Unidos. La prensa calificó al álbum como heavy metal, algo con lo que la banda no estaba de acuerdo. Como curiosidad cabe destacar que, durante la gira de apoyo al disco Led Zeppelin en Dinamarca, el grupo actuó bajo el nombre de The Nobs por prohibición de la baronesa Eva von Zeppelin (familiar del inventor del dirigible) a utilizar su nombre real, quien arguyó que eran unos "monos gritones", además de criticar la portada del disco. Además, las autoridades de Singapur impidieron a la banda entrar en el país para dar un concierto debido a que tenían el pelo demasiado largo. ¡¡¡Que tiempos!!! El 5 de octubre de 1970 se publica su tercer disco, Led Zeppelin III, tras el cual algunos acusaron al grupo de ser un montaje comercial, debido al carácter íntimo y acústico de algunas de las canciones contenidas en dicho álbum, que a pesar de no ser muy bien recibido tanto por la crítica como por sus admiradores, contenía composiciones que con el tiempo se convirtieron en clásicos, como "Immigrant Song". El tiempo pone a todos en su sitio, a los críticos y a los artistas. Porque este otro tema del mismo disco, “Since I’ve Been Loving You”, no tiene desperdicio… La banda entera y sobre todo Jimmy Page se tomó personalmente estas críticas, lo que provocó que su cuarto trabajo, en su edición original, no tuviera título ni nada que permitiera identificarlo, a excepción de cuatro extraños símbolos, uno para cada miembro de la banda. Este álbum, reconocido comúnmente como Led Zeppelin IV, se publicó el 8 de noviembre de 1971 y fue el LP más vendido de la banda (actualmente está en la ubicación nº 4 de los álbumes más vendidos de la historia según la RIAA), en el que destaca su mayor éxito, "Stairway to Heaven", que ya hemos escuchado, además de clásicos de la banda como la maravillosa "Black Dog". O el trepidante “Rock and Roll". O la atronadora batería de John Bonham en "When The Levee Breaks", En esta época fueron famosos los excesos de Led Zeppelin, ya que empezaron a viajar en un jet privado, a alquilar plantas enteras de los hoteles en sus estancias durante las giras. Pero es que, hasta julio de 2006, el cuarto disco de Led Zeppelin había vendido 23 millones de copias en Estados Unidos, convirtiéndose en el cuarto álbum más vendido de la historia. Su siguiente disco, Houses of the Holy, publicado el 28 de marzo de 1973, supuso una nueva idea en el grupo, mezclando diversos estilos musicales, blues, rock, folk, e incluso matices reggae. Como siempre, el álbum causó controversia entre los críticos a pesar de tener excelentes ventas. La canción "Houses of the Holy" fue grabada inicialmente para incluirse en su álbum homónimo, aunque finalmente aparece en su siguiente trabajo. La portada del disco también tuvo su polémica, ya que en ella aparecen los hijos de Robert Plant desnudos escalando una especie de cuesta empedrada (que se trata de la calzada del gigante en Irlanda del Norte), por lo que fue prohibido en algunos países, entre ellos España. Para sentirse más cómodos en la grabación de sus álbumes, Led Zeppelin crearon en 1974 su propio sello discográfico, Swan Song, aunque dependiendo todavía de su compañía discográfica Atlantic Records. Entre 1973 y 1974 la banda se tomó un descanso de su frenética combinación de grabaciones y espectaculares giras, para publicar, el 24 de febrero de 1975 el primer trabajo concebido desde Swan Song: Physical Graffiti. Se trataba de un álbum doble que contiene piezas nuevas como "Kashmir", de la que Robert Plant dijo que era la canción definitiva de Led Zeppelin. Lamentablemente, la exitosa trayectoria de Led Zeppelin se vio interrumpida cuando en el verano de ese mismo año Robert Plant sufrió un grave accidente automovilístico en la isla griega de Rodas, dejando a su mujer Maureen al borde de la muerte. El accidente fue seguido por una difícil y larga recuperación que se extendió aproximadamente un año hasta finales de 1976. En este mismo año de 1976 se preparó a toda velocidad el siguiente trabajo de la banda, Presence, publicado el 31 de marzo de 1976 y grabado entre la ciudad alemana de Múnich y Malibú, en California, que curiosamente se caracteriza por no tener ninguna canción acústica y no hacer uso de ningún teclado. Es un álbum marcado por el estado convaleciente de Robert Plant, quien grabó sus tomas vocales sentado en una silla de ruedas o en muletas. El álbum, como marca de la casa, fue recibido con diversidad de opiniones por crítica y público debido a su carácter más suave y lento. Jimmy Page siempre dijo que éste es su disco preferido, y el tema que da inicio al disco, "Achilles Last Stand", su tema favorito con sus más de 10 minutos.23 Posteriormente editaron su primer disco en vivo, The Song Remains The Same, banda sonora de la película del mismo nombre, la cual muestra unas actuaciones de 1973 en Nueva York que finalizaron una gira estadounidense, mezcladas con unas escenas de fantasía ideadas por la propia banda. Sin embargo, el disco caló negativamente en el Reino Unido debido al potente auge de las nuevas bandas de punk británicas, considerándose a la banda como "obsoleta”. Tras volver a los escenarios en 1977, de nuevo Robert Plant volvió a verse afectado por la desgracia, esta vez por la muerte de su hijo Karac Pendra de seis años, a causa de una infección estomacal. Este hecho marcó profundamente a Plant, llegando a plantearse su continuidad dentro de la banda. Sin embargo, el vocalista recapacitó y en 1978 la banda volvió al estudio, concretamente al del grupo ABBA en Estocolmo, para grabar el que sería inesperadamente su último álbum de estudio, In Through the Out Door publicado el 15 de agosto de 1979. Desgraciadamente, de nuevo encontrarán problemas para terminar el álbum ya que por aquel entonces, Jimmy Page y John Bonham se encontraban en un estado de adicción a la heroína y al alcohol respectivamente, un hecho que hace de In Through the Out Door el único álbum de Led Zeppelin que contiene los primeros y únicos temas de la banda en los que no figura Page como autor. A pesar de ello, una audiencia de cerca de 120 000 personas respaldó a la banda en un concierto en Copenhague. La banda había llegado a un estado de madurez, tanto a nivel compositivo como a nivel personal habiendo apartado ya la mayoría de sus excesos y reemplazándolos por profesionalismo. Por aquel entonces eran de las únicas bandas capaces de llenar un estadio frente al fracaso comercial de las bandas punk rock surgidas entonces y que habían despreciado a los obsoletos Led Zeppelin. En 1980 Led Zeppelin volvió a las grandes giras europeas, anunciando un nuevo gran tour por Norteamérica ese año, que nunca pudo ser realizado ya que el día 25 de septiembre John Bonham murió asfixiado por la aspiración accidental de su propio vómito provocado por el consumo excesivo de alcohol. No se encontraron drogas en el cuerpo del baterista, como se había especulado. La banda elaboró un comunicado oficial en el que explicaron que ya nada era lo mismo sin Bonham, y que era inútil continuar sin él. Al tener firmado un contrato que los obligaba a sacar un nuevo álbum, y ante la negativa de grabar nuevas canciones sin Bonham, se optó por buscar material inédito hasta entonces que conformó el LP Coda (1982), disco que presenta canciones que se descartaron en la realización de discos anteriores y alguna toma en directo de canciones ya grabadas. De este LP es esto que está sonando… Walter's Walk En los años siguientes los integrantes de Zeppelin mantuvieron su decisión de no reunirse. Sólo en esporádicas ocasiones se los vio juntos en un escenario. Últimamente Page y Plant decidieron encontrarse para hacer algo juntos, grabando algún disco conjunto algunos años después de la separación de la banda pero que, como veréis, poco o nada tenía que ver con el sonido Zeppelin. Por hoy, esto ha sido todo. Hemos vislumbrado mínimamente la trayectoria de una de las bandas más importantes de todos los tiempos. La vida y milagros de unos músicos que ya han pasado a la historia de la música como los genios que fueron y, afortunadamente, son todavía. Esperamos que nuestro objetivo de entretener e informar se haya cumplido también hoy, porque, lo que es nosotros, lo hemos pasado muy bien en vuestra compañía.
About Through the Flames: Overcoming Disaster Through Compassion, Patience, and Determination After miraculously surviving a plane crash in Myanmar, Allan Lokos shares what his long and painful recovery process is teaching him about humanity’s ability to survive—and even thrive—in the face of suffering. In Through the Flames, Allan Lokos tells the terrifying story of being on board a plane on Christmas Day with his wife, Susanna, when it crashed and exploded in flames. Lokos was severely burned in the accident, and in the days and weeks following the crash, Susanna was told by the many doctors who examined Lokos that he would not survive.As founder and guiding teacher of the Community Meditation Center in New York City, Lokos had spent decades cultivating compassion and non-attachment. Since the plane crash, his Buddhist practice has been mightily tested. In this inspiring account of his against-all-odds recovery, Lokos uses his experience as a window through which to examine the challenge of human suffering in general and addresses the question of how we can thrive in the midst of pain and uncertainty. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit healthmatters.substack.com
This week we’re joined by Jim Hanke from Vinyl Emergency to explore all of the strange, cool and unusual designs found in classic and current albums. We cover everything from edible EPs to covers featuring pictures of pants with fully working zippers (even if it did sort of ruin the physical album inside.) Jim brings his fantastic wealth of information, while Michael and Richard team up with stuff they found on Wikipedia. Who will win? Only Jeff knows, but honestly, the answer is pretty obvious. Make sure you follow Vinyl Emergency on Twitter and Facebook along with checking out his show, where he has interviewed big shots including Matthew Sweet and Roseanne Cash. SHOW NOTES 8:41 – “Gummy Song Skull EP” by the Flaming Lips (Jim’s Choice) 15:30 – “Sticky Fingers” by the Rolling Stones (Richard and Michael’s Choice) 22:26 – “Vitalogy” by Pearl Jam (Joint Choice) 38:30 – “In Through the Out Door” by Led Zeppelin (Richard and Michael’s Choice) 43:23 – “Lazaretto” by Jack White (Joint Choice) 55:15 – “Friday the 13th (Original Motion Picture Score)” by Harry Manfredini (Jim’s Choice) 1:00:01 – “Yesterday and Today” by the Beatles (Jeff’s “Borglum’s Bag” Choice)
Conversations about death during hospitalization are among the most difficult imaginable: the moral weight of a human life is suspended by stressful conversations in which medical knowledge and personal context must be negotiated. In Through the Valley of Shadows: Living Wills, Intensive Care, and Making Medicine Human (Oxford University Press, 2016), Samuel Morris Brown approaches the problem of end-of-life care with a clinician's eye and a scholar of religion's touch. The book places advance directives in the clinic in their historical context while unpacking their ethical and legal nature, describes the psychological aspects of medical decision-making and how moral distress clouds judgment, and provides recommendations on how to heal the process of healing in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU). An ICU physician himself, Brown's account is interwoven with powerful stories that render his argument for humanistic care particularly salient. As such, Through the Valley of Shadows offers as much to dyed-in-the-wool humanists as it does to those focused on measuring and improving outcomes. This is the second of a pair of interviews on communication in health care, preceded by Listening for What Matters: Avoiding Contextual Errors in Health Care, by Saul Weiner and Alan Schwartz. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/medicine
Conversations about death during hospitalization are among the most difficult imaginable: the moral weight of a human life is suspended by stressful conversations in which medical knowledge and personal context must be negotiated. In Through the Valley of Shadows: Living Wills, Intensive Care, and Making Medicine Human (Oxford University Press, 2016), Samuel Morris Brown approaches the problem of end-of-life care with a clinician's eye and a scholar of religion's touch. The book places advance directives in the clinic in their historical context while unpacking their ethical and legal nature, describes the psychological aspects of medical decision-making and how moral distress clouds judgment, and provides recommendations on how to heal the process of healing in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU). An ICU physician himself, Brown's account is interwoven with powerful stories that render his argument for humanistic care particularly salient. As such, Through the Valley of Shadows offers as much to dyed-in-the-wool humanists as it does to those focused on measuring and improving outcomes. This is the second of a pair of interviews on communication in health care, preceded by Listening for What Matters: Avoiding Contextual Errors in Health Care, by Saul Weiner and Alan Schwartz. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/psychology
Conversations about death during hospitalization are among the most difficult imaginable: the moral weight of a human life is suspended by stressful conversations in which medical knowledge and personal context must be negotiated. In Through the Valley of Shadows: Living Wills, Intensive Care, and Making Medicine Human (Oxford University Press, 2016), Samuel Morris Brown approaches the problem of end-of-life care with a clinician’s eye and a scholar of religion’s touch. The book places advance directives in the clinic in their historical context while unpacking their ethical and legal nature, describes the psychological aspects of medical decision-making and how moral distress clouds judgment, and provides recommendations on how to heal the process of healing in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU). An ICU physician himself, Brown’s account is interwoven with powerful stories that render his argument for humanistic care particularly salient. As such, Through the Valley of Shadows offers as much to dyed-in-the-wool humanists as it does to those focused on measuring and improving outcomes. This is the second of a pair of interviews on communication in health care, preceded by Listening for What Matters: Avoiding Contextual Errors in Health Care, by Saul Weiner and Alan Schwartz. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Conversations about death during hospitalization are among the most difficult imaginable: the moral weight of a human life is suspended by stressful conversations in which medical knowledge and personal context must be negotiated. In Through the Valley of Shadows: Living Wills, Intensive Care, and Making Medicine Human (Oxford University Press, 2016), Samuel Morris Brown approaches the problem of end-of-life care with a clinician’s eye and a scholar of religion’s touch. The book places advance directives in the clinic in their historical context while unpacking their ethical and legal nature, describes the psychological aspects of medical decision-making and how moral distress clouds judgment, and provides recommendations on how to heal the process of healing in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU). An ICU physician himself, Brown’s account is interwoven with powerful stories that render his argument for humanistic care particularly salient. As such, Through the Valley of Shadows offers as much to dyed-in-the-wool humanists as it does to those focused on measuring and improving outcomes. This is the second of a pair of interviews on communication in health care, preceded by Listening for What Matters: Avoiding Contextual Errors in Health Care, by Saul Weiner and Alan Schwartz. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In Through the Blood and Through the Flood Rev. Kirk DuBois helps you understand who you are and what you have because you have accepted Jesus Christ as your Savior. Many Christians who should be helping to bring in the harvest are instead caught up in trying to perfect themselves and heal the wounds of their past. "God didn't save you and then tell you to go into the desert for 40 years until you are perfect and 'functional' before going to reach the world."
In Through the Blood and Through the Flood Rev. Kirk DuBois helps you understand who you are and what you have because you have accepted Jesus Christ as your Savior. Many Christians who should be helping to bring in the harvest are instead caught up in trying to perfect themselves and heal the wounds of their past. "God didn't save you and then tell you to go into the desert for 40 years until you are perfect and 'functional' before going to reach the world."
In Through the Blood and Through the Flood Rev. Kirk DuBois helps you understand who you are and what you have because you have accepted Jesus Christ as your Savior. Many Christians who should be helping to bring in the harvest are instead caught up in trying to perfect themselves and heal the wounds of their past. "God didn't save you and then tell you to go into the desert for 40 years until you are perfect and 'functional' before going to reach the world."
In Through the Blood and Through the Flood Rev. Kirk DuBois helps you understand who you are and what you have because you have accepted Jesus Christ as your Savior. Many Christians who should be helping to bring in the harvest are instead caught up in trying to perfect themselves and heal the wounds of their past. "God didn't save you and then tell you to go into the desert for 40 years until you are perfect and 'functional' before going to reach the world."
In Through the Blood and Through the Flood Rev. Kirk DuBois helps you understand who you are and what you have because you have accepted Jesus Christ as your Savior. Many Christians who should be helping to bring in the harvest are instead caught up in trying to perfect themselves and heal the wounds of their past. "God didn't save you and then tell you to go into the desert for 40 years until you are perfect and 'functional' before going to reach the world."
In Through the Blood and Through the Flood Rev. Kirk DuBois helps you understand who you are and what you have because you have accepted Jesus Christ as your Savior. Many Christians who should be helping to bring in the harvest are instead caught up in trying to perfect themselves and heal the wounds of their past. "God didn't save you and then tell you to go into the desert for 40 years until you are perfect and 'functional' before going to reach the world." ENGLISH WITH SPANISH INTERPRETER
In Through the Blood and Through the Flood Rev. Kirk DuBois helps you understand who you are and what you have because you have accepted Jesus Christ as your Savior. Many Christians who should be helping to bring in the harvest are instead caught up in trying to perfect themselves and heal the wounds of their past. "God didn't save you and then tell you to go into the desert for 40 years until you are perfect and 'functional' before going to reach the world." ENGLISH WITH SPANISH INTERPRETER
In Through the Blood and Through the Flood Rev. Kirk DuBois helps you understand who you are and what you have because you have accepted Jesus Christ as your Savior. Many Christians who should be helping to bring in the harvest are instead caught up in trying to perfect themselves and heal the wounds of their past. "God didn't save you and then tell you to go into the desert for 40 years until you are perfect and 'functional' before going to reach the world." ENGLISH WITH SPANISH INTERPRETER
In Through the Blood and Through the Flood Rev. Kirk DuBois helps you understand who you are and what you have because you have accepted Jesus Christ as your Savior. Many Christians who should be helping to bring in the harvest are instead caught up in trying to perfect themselves and heal the wounds of their past. "God didn't save you and then tell you to go into the desert for 40 years until you are perfect and 'functional' before going to reach the world." ENGLISH WITH SPANISH INTERPRETER
In Through the Blood and Through the Flood Rev. Kirk DuBois helps you understand who you are and what you have because you have accepted Jesus Christ as your Savior. Many Christians who should be helping to bring in the harvest are instead caught up in trying to perfect themselves and heal the wounds of their past. "God didn't save you and then tell you to go into the desert for 40 years until you are perfect and 'functional' before going to reach the world."
In Through the Blood and Through the Flood Rev. Kirk DuBois helps you understand who you are and what you have because you have accepted Jesus Christ as your Savior. Many Christians who should be helping to bring in the harvest are instead caught up in trying to perfect themselves and heal the wounds of their past. "God didn't save you and then tell you to go into the desert for 40 years until you are perfect and 'functional' before going to reach the world." ENGLISH WITH SPANISH INTERPRETER
In Through the Blood and Through the Flood Rev. Kirk DuBois helps you understand who you are and what you have because you have accepted Jesus Christ as your Savior. Many Christians who should be helping to bring in the harvest are instead caught up in trying to perfect themselves and heal the wounds of their past. "God didn't save you and then tell you to go into the desert for 40 years until you are perfect and 'functional' before going to reach the world." ENGLISH WITH SPANISH INTERPRETER
In Through the Blood and Through the Flood Rev. Kirk DuBois helps you understand who you are and what you have because you have accepted Jesus Christ as your Savior. Many Christians who should be helping to bring in the harvest are instead caught up in trying to perfect themselves and heal the wounds of their past. "God didn't save you and then tell you to go into the desert for 40 years until you are perfect and 'functional' before going to reach the world." ENGLISH WITH SPANISH INTERPRETER
In Through the Blood and Through the Flood Rev. Kirk DuBois helps you understand who you are and what you have because you have accepted Jesus Christ as your Savior. Many Christians who should be helping to bring in the harvest are instead caught up in trying to perfect themselves and heal the wounds of their past. "God didn't save you and then tell you to go into the desert for 40 years until you are perfect and 'functional' before going to reach the world." ENGLISH WITH SPANISH INTERPRETER
In Through the Blood and Through the Flood Rev. Kirk DuBois helps you understand who you are and what you have because you have accepted Jesus Christ as your Savior. Many Christians who should be helping to bring in the harvest are instead caught up in trying to perfect themselves and heal the wounds of their past. "God didn't save you and then tell you to go into the desert for 40 years until you are perfect and 'functional' before going to reach the world." ENGLISH WITH SPANISH INTERPRETER
In Through the Blood and Through the Flood Rev. Kirk DuBois helps you understand who you are and what you have because you have accepted Jesus Christ as your Savior. Many Christians who should be helping to bring in the harvest are instead caught up in trying to perfect themselves and heal the wounds of their past. "God didn't save you and then tell you to go into the desert for 40 years until you are perfect and 'functional' before going to reach the world." ENGLISH WITH SPANISH INTERPRETER
In Through the Blood and Through the Flood Rev. Kirk DuBois helps you understand who you are and what you have because you have accepted Jesus Christ as your Savior. Many Christians who should be helping to bring in the harvest are instead caught up in trying to perfect themselves and heal the wounds of their past. "God didn't save you and then tell you to go into the desert for 40 years until you are perfect and 'functional' before going to reach the world." ENGLISH WITH SPANISH INTERPRETER
In Through the Blood and Through the Flood Rev. Kirk DuBois helps you understand who you are and what you have because you have accepted Jesus Christ as your Savior. Many Christians who should be helping to bring in the harvest are instead caught up in trying to perfect themselves and heal the wounds of their past. "God didn't save you and then tell you to go into the desert for 40 years until you are perfect and 'functional' before going to reach the world." ENGLISH WITH SPANISH INTERPRETER
In Through the Blood and Through the Flood Rev. Kirk DuBois helps you understand who you are and what you have because you have accepted Jesus Christ as your Savior. Many Christians who should be helping to bring in the harvest are instead caught up in trying to perfect themselves and heal the wounds of their past. "God didn't save you and then tell you to go into the desert for 40 years until you are perfect and 'functional' before going to reach the world." ENGLISH WITH SPANISH INTERPRETER
In Through the Blood and Through the Flood Rev. Kirk DuBois helps you understand who you are and what you have because you have accepted Jesus Christ as your Savior. Many Christians who should be helping to bring in the harvest are instead caught up in trying to perfect themselves and heal the wounds of their past. "God didn't save you and then tell you to go into the desert for 40 years until you are perfect and 'functional' before going to reach the world." ENGLISH WITH SPANISH INTERPRETER
In Through the Looking Glass the Hatter says, "We're all mad here." In this episode we look at articles that seem to make that quote come true. The overlying theme asks the question, "in what reality is this right?" Join us for the conversation this Sunday night at 9 pm or listen any time at http://www.frontporchtalk.net Articles for this episode posted at http://goo.gl/n29Ju5
This week, Dave and Gunnar talk about Le PRISM, Slashdot Gunnarbait, OpenStack Security Guide, the Indie Web, a petabyte of tax data, and an interview with the creator of CommaFeed. Subscribe via RSS or iTunes. Welcome to Texas, Gunnar. Le PRISM: France Has A PRISM-Like Program With Millions Of Trillions Of Metadata Elements PRISM & Big Data: Big Data and Analytics: The Hero or the Villain? PRISM Break: EFF’s list of free, open, secure alternatives to proprietary software Gunnarbait: NSA Backdoors In Open Source and Open Standards: What Are the Odds? The OpenStack Security Guide is up! When almost every networking vendor works togeter on the OpenDaylight project, they have to tell the DOJ Why Automakers Should Stop the Infotainment Arms Race LibreOffice Accelerates Open Source Spreadsheets, Thanks to AMD El Reg encounters mObi: R2-D2 for retailers Microsoft to shut down TechNet subscription service Red Hat Developer Tools & Services are available Red Hat is Developer Wonderland Young Coders at PyOhio 2013 Akron LUG August 1: Teaching your kids to code with Scratch on Raspberry Pi by Lauren Egts Intuit runs RH Storage, could his 1PB this year Linux Journal white paper: Using an Open Source Framework to Catch the Bad Guy by Red Hat superstar Mark St. Laurent The Alamo Drafthouse Ticketbot An Open Source Project We Like: CommaFeed from Jérémie Panzer PC Magazine 4 out of 5 star review! Eric Mill’s definitive guide to owning your online identity Why you should look at IndieWebCamp PermitRootLogin forced-commands-only is basically magic Term of the week: The Purdie Shuffle Made famous by Bernard “Pretty” Purdie Dave wants to learn whatever he’s teaching: Led Zeppelin’s “Fool in the Rain” from the 1979 album In Through the Out Door John Bonham’s isolated drum track and awesome article discussing other Purdie Shuffle variations by Steely Dan and Death Cab for Cutie Toto’s “Rosanna” from the 1982 album Toto IV Toto drummer Jeff Porcaro (RIP) on the Rosanna shuffle Bonus link: Mother of All Funk Chords featuring Bernard “Pretty” Purdie and a dude with a mullet playing the theremin at 2:43 Cutting Room Floor A Citizen’s Guide to Open Government, E-Government, and Government 2.0 Avira says farewell to Linux German antivirus company Avira is discontinuing its Linux products in order to focus more on developing its Mac OS X and Windows lines. The company says small businesses and consumer systems “almost exclusively rely upon Windows or Mac operating systems” and that “Linux installations have been declining steadily for years.” Sign that the Linux desktop is declining, or that the Linux desktop doesn’t need commercial antivirus since it has AIDE, Tripwire, and ClamAV? Pi-Rex – Bark Activated Door Opening System with Raspberry Pi New Breed of Banking Malware Hijacks Text Messages Tricks people to install a 3rd party app on their phones to intercept SMS messages and forward them LinkedIn, Twitter, and banks use SMS for 2 factor authentication SMS transmission alternatives which may aid in two factor authentication A Standard for the Transmission of IP Datagrams on Avian Carriers 256 milligram MTU! Lauren asked Dave if it mattered if you used an African or European swallow IP over Avian Carriers with Quality of Service Adaptation of RFC 1149 for IPv6 Doubling down on Markdown for science Prior art: Superman intvented 3D printing in 1964 A New Way to Heal Broken Bones: 3D-Printed Casts MindMup: Open source browser based mind mapping Where the Egts family went on vacation two years ago: The National Museum of Computing History (TNMOC) in Bletchley Park We Give Thanks The authors of the OpenStack Security Guide Jérémie Panzer for all his work on CommaFeed and taking the time to let us interview him Jason Hibbets for the Citizen’s Guide tip Adam Clater for the IP over Avian Carrier tips
The Venture Bros. TV-MA | 22min | Animation, Comedy, Sci-Fi | TV Series (2003– ) The bizarre animated escapades of pseudo-heroic scientist Dr. Rusty Venture, his competent, high strung bodyguard, and his two over-enthusiastic sons. Creator: Christopher McCulloch Stars: Christopher McCulloch, James Urbaniak, Michael Sinterniklaas, Patrick Warburton ## Episode Cast[Edit](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Eeney,_Meeney,_Miney..._Magic!?action=edit§ion=2) * **[James Urbaniak](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/James_Urbaniak)** as [Dr. Venture](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Dr._Venture). * **[Michael Sinterniklaas](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Michael_Sinterniklaas?redlink=1&action=edit&flow=create-page-article-redlink)** as [Dean Venture](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Dean_Venture). * **[Patrick Warburton](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Patrick_Warburton?redlink=1&action=edit&flow=create-page-article-redlink)** as [Brock Samson](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Brock_Samson). * **[Christopher McCulloch](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Christopher_McCulloch)** as [Hank Venture](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Hank_Venture) (though misspelt). * **[Doc Hammer](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Doc_Hammer)** as [Tommy](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Tommy). * **[Steven Rattazzi](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Steven_Rattazzi?redlink=1&action=edit&flow=create-page-article-redlink)** as [Dr. Orpheus](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Dr._Orpheus). * **[Lisa Hammer](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Lisa_Hammer?redlink=1&action=edit&flow=create-page-article-redlink)** as [Triana Orpheus](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Triana_Orpheus). * **[Rachael Simon](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Rachael_Simon?redlink=1&action=edit&flow=create-page-article-redlink)** as "Fantasy Mom". * **[Tom Vollette](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Tom_Vollette?redlink=1&action=edit&flow=create-page-article-redlink)** as "Signer" (the American Sign Language interpretor). * **[Mia Barron](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Mia_Barron?redlink=1&action=edit&flow=create-page-article-redlink)** as [Molotov Cocktease](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Molotov_Cocktease) (though not credited). * **[Soul-Bot](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Soul-Bot?redlink=1&action=edit&flow=create-page-article-redlink)** as [H.E.L.P.eR.](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/H.E.L.P.eR.) ## Cultural References[Edit](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Eeney,_Meeney,_Miney..._Magic!?action=edit§ion=3) * [Dean Venture](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Dean_Venture) wears a Burger King crown in his fantasy of being [Triana Orpheus](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Triana_Orpheus)'s hero. * Triana sarcastically calls Dean "David Koresh" in a reference to the word "compound" when Dean says "So, I'll see you around [the compound](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/The_Venture_Compound)?" * When asked about the skull and crossbones on her shirt, Triana replies that she is going for a "retro _Adam and the Ants_ kind of thing", referring to the new romantic band of the same name. * Dean apparently watches reruns of _Kolchak: The Night Stalker_. * The brothers wrap Dean's shirt around Brock's head after peeing on it. This is a reference to the movie _Total Recall_ where a character wrapped a wet towel around his head to disrupt a tracking device. * When Hank is shuffling through a box of [Brock Samson](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Brock_Samson)'s cassette tapes, he finds the _Led Zeppelin_ album "In Through the Out Door" and ask if he and Brock can listen to it, but Brock refuses stating that "Zep sold out on that one", and the album brings back memories of the only woman he ever loved (most likely [Molotov Cocktease](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Molotov_Cocktease)).