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Best podcasts about jaime lee

Latest podcast episodes about jaime lee

Aphasia Access Conversations
Treating Discourse with Jessica Obermeyer

Aphasia Access Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2026 36:30


Interviewer info Lyssa Rome is a speech-language pathologist in the San Francisco Bay Area. She is on staff at the Aphasia Center of California, where she facilitates groups for people with aphasia and their care partners. She owns an LPAA-focused private practice and specializes in working with people with neurogenic communication disorders. She has worked in acute hospital, skilled nursing, and continuum of care settings. Prior to becoming an SLP, Lyssa was a public radio journalist, editor, and podcast producer. In this episode, Lyssa Rome interviews Jessica Obermeyer about group treatment for aphasia. Guest info Jessica Obermeyer, PhD, CCC-SLP, is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. Her area of specialization is acquired adult neurogenic language disorders. Dr. Obermeyer's research interests include discourse production in aphasia, treatment efficacy, and the cognitive requirements of language production. Prior to earning her doctorate, she worked in a variety of clinical settings where she specialized in assessment and treatment of adult neurogenic populations.     Listener Take-aways In today's episode you will: ● Recognize the role of written communication in clients' daily activities, including texting, email, and online tasks. ● Adapt ARCS-W treatment components to match each client's preferred writing modality (handwriting vs. typing). ● Identify candidates with aphasia who are well-suited for discourse-level writing treatment. Lyssa Rome Welcome to the Aphasia Access Aphasia Conversations Podcast. I'm Lyssa Rome. I'm a speech language pathologist on staff at the Aphasia Center of California, and I see clients with aphasia and other neurogenic communication disorders in my LPAA-focused private practice. I'm also a member of the Aphasia Access Podcast Working Group. Aphasia Access strives to provide members with information, inspiration, and ideas that support their aphasia care through a variety of educational materials and resources. I'm today's host for an episode that will feature Dr. Jessica Obermeyer, who was selected as a 2024 Tavistock Trust for Aphasia, Distinguished Scholar, USA and Canada. Dr. Obermeyer is an assistant professor in the Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. Her area of specialization is acquired adult neurogenic language disorders. Dr Obermeyer's research interests include discourse production and aphasia treatment efficacy and the cognitive requirements of language production. Prior to earning her doctorate, she worked in a variety of clinical settings, where she specialized in assessment and treatment of adult neurogenic populations. Jessica Obermeyer, welcome to the podcast, and thanks for being here. Jessica Obermeyer Thank you. It's a pleasure. Lyssa Rome So I wanted to get started with a question we often ask, which is: How did you get into this? Was there an aha moment for you and what led you to research aphasia? Jessica Obermeyer That's a great question. I think it was more of a slow awakening and journey to realizing that this is how I wanted to spend my days. When I started studying speech language pathology, I knew I wanted to work in adult rehab with people with traumatic brain injury, stroke, and aphasia. But as an undergraduate and a masters student, I worked on a lot of research related to traumatic brain injury and cognition. But then I had some exposure to aphasia research, and as a clinician, I just loved working with people that had aphasia. I loved running aphasia groups. I started aphasia groups, and when I decided to go back for my PhD, that is what I wanted to focus on. I also had the opportunity to work in adult outpatient, so I got to see a lot of people that had aphasia and were at different points in their rehabilitation journey. And those experiences just made me want to continue and especially do research that could develop and evaluate different treatment approaches for people that had aphasia. Lyssa Rome One of the sort of through lines in your research has been discourse. And I'm curious about how you landed on that as the focus of your work, why discourse? Jessica Obermeyer It's how we talk. It was always, you know, something I was interested in. I think, as a clinician, I felt really daunted by discourse, because it is laborious, you know, it takes a lot of time to think about how you're going to analyze it. But I was always so fascinated by all the linguistic components that make up discourse as a clinician. And then I think as a researcher, I really appreciate how important it is. Everything we do in our day to day lives is often at a discourse level, and that looks so different depending on the type of discourse. So your text exchange is discourse, your emails, your conversations, the interaction with a barista. You know, every kind of functional way that we communicate is often at a discourse level. But it's so different depending on what that interaction looks like, and that's just endlessly fascinating to me as a researcher… challenging but fascinating. Lyssa Rome Challenging both to evaluate and, I guess, to some extent, to treat. One of the things that I really appreciate is that it's how we communicate in our daily lives, and so if we're thinking about life participation and sort of functional approaches to treatment, to my mind, discourse is kind of where it's at. So I'm really excited to get to talk to you more about it. So speaking of discourse, I thought we could talk about your work on ARCS. Maybe we could start by telling us a little bit about the origins and how you became involved in researching. Jessica Obermeyer Yes, I'd be happy to. I started doing research with ARCS as a doctoral student. So it's been a long time, but the origin of ARCS, or Attentive Reading with Constrained Summarization, started with Yvonne Rogalski and Lisa Edmonds, and they published the first paper, I think, in 2009, but someone should go back to check that, and it was originally for someone that had primary progressive aphasia. And then there was another paper published for two people with Wernicke's aphasia. So in the original version, it's based on constrained summarization, and constrained only in that you're giving someone guidelines for how to summarize so they have to read through a segment of text. Usually it's a current event article, but clinically, you could use pretty much any written text. And I've actually done it with someone listening as well. Typically with ARCS, you would have someone read a segment of written text and then summarize it with the constraint or guideline to be specific. So avoid words like it, stuff, thing, he, she. So use that really intentional word retrieval. That's not what we typically do. We often use non-specific words, but it's that therapeutic, like try to go for the really precise and specific word exercise that retrieval and to also stay on topic, so try not to add a tangent, or, you know, additional information that's not related to what you're reading. And then in my work, I've added an additional guideline that's just based on what that person needs. So if they're repeating a lot, then that might be part of the guideline. Often, the guideline is to try to include the essential information that you've identified already. So that's the origin of ARCS. And as a doctoral student, I really wanted to do treatment research. I became really interested in cooperative learning theory, in how people can work together in their learning, collaborate to improve learning. And when I was doing that, reading and thinking about cooperative learning, writing seemed like such an excellent tool for that, because I think one of the hard things about spoken language is that it's just gone. You say it, it's gone. It's very hard to monitor, which I'm acutely aware of right now in this recording. But with written text, you have this wonderful record of what you've produced, and that can be really helpful for thinking about language and planning, especially in an approach like ARCS or ARCS-W that emphasizes this planning, process-driven component, where you're thinking about, "What do I need to include in this discourse? What's important? What's not important? And what have I actually produced? Does that meet, you know, the guidelines I've tried to meet?" So that's how writing actually got pulled into it. And I wanted to keep the spoken language because, I don't know that I've ever met someone with aphasia who told me they didn't want to continue exercising their spoken language, but the writing was just I think, an important addition, because there are so few written discourse treatment options. And it allowed for this emphasis on monitoring and planning and some of the cognitive components of discourse that can be hard to address. Lyssa Rome And maybe you could say a little bit about what you found when you've studied ARCS-W, so the Attentive Reading and Constrained Summarization-Written. Jessica Obermeyer Well, people have improved, which is great. So the one of the things about ARCS and ARCS-W that's maybe unique when we think about aphasia treatment as a whole, is that it's not a treatment with trained items, so no items are repeated. You're working on the process of discourse production, this process of monitoring and trying to be specific, be efficient, you know. In written discourse, people have made improvements in correct information units or CIUs. So at the word level in discourse, the amount of informative and correct information that they're producing, people have made improvements at the utterance level, where they're producing more relevant utterances and more utterances that have a basic sentence structure, and then this hasn't been looked at in all of the studies, but for some of the participants, where we've measured things like main concepts, the amount that the person is conveying the main ideas or concepts in the discourse has improved for some people as well. And then at this spoken discourse. So ARCS-W, it's half spoken, half written. Basically, people have also made similar improvements. So it's been encouraging so far, ARCS-W I would say, compared to ARCS is for people in the more mild aphasia end of the spectrum, especially with the writing component. Any clinician who's worked with people with aphasia will know that writing is often a stressful thing for people with aphasia. So it's for people that are writing at a phrase level already. It doesn't mean that their spelling is perfect, but if they're really struggling to get out a single word, this is probably not the ideal you know treatment for them, but for folks that are more on the mild end who want to work on spoken and written discourse, we have seen some positive results in their spoken and written discourse production. Another thing that I think is really important for this treatment is that it is so multi-modality. When we write normally, we're reading as well. You know, we're not just writing in a vacuum. A lot of the time. We're rereading our text, we are reading that text message and then responding to it. So I like that. I like multi-modality treatments. I like that this is a treatment that allows people to address multiple types of language goals, while, you know, keeping it pretty simple and low tech. Lyssa Rome I think that that really hits on one of the reasons that I like using ARCS-W in my work with people is that It can be used with so many different kinds of texts. So I've used both, you know, work emails, if their goal is to get back to work, newspaper articles that interest them, simplified newspaper articles that interest there's so many possibilities. And anyway, it's exciting to hear you talk about that. Jessica Obermeyer Yeah, I think that as a clinician, that's why I liked ARCS. It was so flexible, so easy to implement. And that's definitely one of the things I like about ARCS-W as well. Make treatment work hard for you. Lyssa Rome So that is interesting to people as well. Where are you going next with your ARCS research? Jessica Obermeyer Great question. I'm writing up results from about six people we ran over the last couple years, so that, I hope, gets submitted for publication soon. And I would really like to adapt this treatment a little further to use more assistive technology for folks that are really wanting to write, but aren't wedded to handwriting or typing in a traditional sense. So can we use speech-to-text? I always mix it up. And can we use methods to support people producing written language that are, you know, different than just typing it? Because people have really different needs in their life. So if that is a way to meet their writing needs, excellent, and I'd like to do that in the future. Lyssa Rome I think that gets back to this idea that it's so flexible, right? You could adapt it in so many different ways. I think that that's really exciting, because it sort of further underscores the flexibility of this approach. And we were talking earlier, before we started recording, about using the same ARCS framework, or ARCS-W framework for material that clients have listened to, things like podcasts or TED Talks. So it seems like it's so adaptable, which is part of what I think makes it really exciting. Jessica Obermeyer I think that's a great idea. We actually did use listening and then summarization for one of the participants in the first arc study, because that met their profile. That's how they wanted to interact with the treatment, and it worked out really well for them, and it's a great way to incorporate people's different interests. Not everyone wants to read, so being able to listen is a great option. And in the treatment for everybody, they always select their writing modality so they can either hand write or type, depending on what's relevant for them. In the population of people that have aphasia now, and I know that this will change over time, people have really different comfort levels with technology and with typing. So if someone says, "No, I never typed. I want to handwrite," then we can do that. And if, if it's the other, we can type. So I think listening is just another way to make it meet someone's needs better. Lyssa Rome I was hoping that you could talk a little bit more about the similarities and differences between different types of discourse. So spoken and written discourse, typed and versus handwritten discourse. Tell us a little bit more about that. Jessica Obermeyer Yeah, of course. Well, I should, I guess, start off by saying, working on the ARCS-W treatment research, I recognized just how little information is out there on written discourse and the majority of discourse measures that we use in aphasiology are based on spoken discourse production. But there are differences in how we speak versus how we write. So in spoken language, we've already talked a little bit about this, it's temporal, it's just gone. So writing is tangible. You have a record of your writing, and that can be really beneficial for people with aphasia. But of course, there's there's other things that can make writing more challenging as well. With spoken language, of course, we have the suprasegmental components of what we're saying. So we have our tone and our facial expression and things that allow us to impart meaning without actually saying it, and we don't have that in writing. Although things are shifting with text messaging technologies, we can add emojis and memes that help us communicate information. But I think when we're thinking about traditional writing, it doesn't have those additional components, and therefore people have to be more explicit with their word choice and a little more clear in what they're trying to say. People are often more efficient in writing. They use fewer words than they would in speaking. So those are some of the differences. We can't automatically correct our written output because we see that our partner doesn't understand. Because in writing, there's this distance between when we're writing versus when we think someone's reading it. Even in more instant platforms like text messaging, we don't know exactly when someone's reading something or how their face looks when they read it, in the way we know with speaking. So those differences do impact how we complete the task. And of course, the context of writing changes it dramatically. So you write notes to yourself really differently than you write a research paper or a work email. And that's not so different from speaking, right? The context is still going to impact how we speak or write, very much. So in my work, I've looked at how writing and typing are the same or different. And this is a pretty new area. There's a couple papers out there on it now, and I think it's gaining traction, which is great, because most people write through typing in their daily life now. What I found is that at a group level, it's pretty similar. Writing and typing look pretty similar for people that have aphasia. But individually it can be very different. So an individual person with aphasia might have a strength or weakness in handwriting versus typing for lots of different possible reasons, like their experience, or hemiparesis, their desire to do one or the other. But it's not, the patterns aren't completely clear. I think clinicians are probably really used to hearing that every individual with aphasia has the potential to be different. So I think that keeps with written and typed language output, handwritten and typed. Some of my recent work has been related to looking at different writing modalities for people with aphasia. So are there differences in their handwritten versus typed discourse production. There's a couple papers out on this now, and hopefully there'll be even more as it gains traction. And I think it's getting more attention in the research literature because of how important writing is in our daily lives now. I mean, most activities of daily living are now completed through, you know, the virtual world, so banking, shopping, lots of messaging are completed through reading and writing now. So that's kind of why I became interested in also working with ARCS-W and having people handwrite versus type, depending on their interest and comfort level. It was always interesting to me why certain people picked one or the other, and kind of what I was seeing. There is some research out there that shows that handwriting is advantageous for learning. So the specificity of how we're moving our fingers to create letters is helpful for retention and learning items, but when we're thinking at the discourse level, when we're not using the same items necessarily, things could potentially be a little different. So I was interested in just exploring some of those differences and patterns that might emerge, and if there was anything I could figure out that might be driving a pattern. So if someone's better at typing than handwriting, is there a reason that they're better? So what I have found so far, and it's it's pretty preliminary, is that at the group level, handwriting and typing look very similar for people with aphasia, so oftentimes, there's not a big difference in the total words that they produce, and that's been confirmed by a larger study as well from Jaime Lee and colleagues. But then when we look at the individual level, that's when you can start to see differences. And I don't think any clinician would be surprised to hear that people with Aphasia are variable or different. So we know that that is common, but it's been pretty interesting and striking in my own work to see how at the group level, these differences just totally even out. But then when we look at individuals, you do see that, you know, someone is more proficient with typing, someone else is more proficient with handwriting. So in a study I did, I think from 2024, we had people fill out this historical information about their typing experience and exposure, we knew about if they had a hemiparesis or not, and so were they able to use both hands or one hand for handwriting or typing? And like I said, we did find these individual differences for some people, but there wasn't a really clear pattern in what was driving those differences? Was it that they hadn't worked with a keyboard a lot? Was it that they only had the use of one hand? And we just didn't have enough data potentially to discern any specific patterns? Lyssa Rome We've talked a little bit about different types of discourse, written, spoken for written, typed versus handwritten. But I wanted to kind of come back to how we measure and analyze discourse, and wanted to ask about a more recent paper and have you describe a little bit about your work on discourse measurement and training clinicians to measure discourse? Jessica Obermeyer That paper is a perceptual rating paper. We've talked a lot about discourse in this chat, and I think probably one of the first things I might have mentioned was how daunting discourse analysis can be. So researchers are aware of that, and always kind of thinking that discourse is so rich, it provides us so much information about someone's linguistic ability, but also their success with communication in a way that other levels of language don't necessarily tell us. So how can we benefit from that rich information in a way that clinicians can do. Because with discourse analysis, you know, in the clinical session, it might not take that long. You're having someone participate in 10 minutes of conversation—that is not a lot of time in your session. The time is all backlogged. The time is after the session is over, and you're trying to transcribe what they've said and then identify discourse measures that you're interested in. And another thing that makes discourse just complex and dynamic is that there's not one measure, you know, there's not a measure of word retrieval and discourse. There are lots of measures that can give you insight into word retrieval and discourse. So this project I did with my collaborator, Marion Lehman, who also works on discourse, and especially conversation. We wanted to see if it was possible to train people to rate conversation samples from people with aphasia on linguistic measures, so measures of language ability. So there are other perceptual rating scales, but a lot of them might be looking at speech acts like initiation or presence or absence of errors. And we were really interested in if these, if perceptual ratings, could map on to the things we're doing in our labs, so you know, correct information units or the degree of informativeness, utterances that have basic structure, coherence, you know, these measures that we are spending many hours, you know, coding line by line, or even word by word, for some. So she and I developed this training and introduced—so the paper that's published, we used research assistants in our research labs, and we exposed them to the linguistic measures that we were interested in. Had them watch some practice videos, and then told them how we had coded them. So what was the value based on our lab coding? And then we did five test samples, so there were four linguistic measures. The training lasted about three hours, and I did five test samples. And we got some really good feedback from the RAs who did the training and rating samples. We had some promising results for especially two of the measures that we used in their training, and now we're really interested in extending that work with clinicians. So the people that were in the study before had very limited experience listening to people that had aphasia. They hadn't worked with people that had aphasia, they hadn't done extensive clinical training. We're hopeful that if we can use their feedback to fine tune the training and rating procedures and recruit some clinicians to participate, that hopefully we could get even better results and hopefully provide a tool to clinicians where they can be thinking about linguistic components of conversation in a way that's more feasible to their schedule and their workload, because we recognize how much time it takes. And I think it's, it's just a barrier to entry, even, because if someone is feeling like, "I can't do this, I don't have time to do this," then it's hard to even learn about or get started. Lyssa Rome Yeah, I'm so happy to hear that you're that you're focused on the feasibility for clinicians who have productivity requirements, who don't necessarily have a lot of time at the end of the day to do that kind of really in depth analysis. I think it's exciting. Jessica Obermeyer Oh, for sure, and clinicians, I think, work a lot of extra hours, but they have a whole caseload, you know, so balancing everybody's needs and being able to to provide excellent care to everybody is, is always a challenge, and hopefully, hopefully we'll, we'll be able to continue this work. We're trying to get some funding for the project because we want to be able to pay SLPs who participate in the research. Lyssa Rome As we start to wrap up, I'm wondering what you would like clinicians who are listening to this podcast to take away from what we've talked about today, from your work. Jessica Obermeyer I think one takeaway would be for clinicians to think about incorporating handwriting and typing into their existing treatment practice. So I've talked a lot about ARCS-W. ARCS-W is not for everybody. It is a very specific treatment approach for people that have mild aphasia who want to work on discourse-level writing. But there are so many ways to have people engage with handwriting and typing that will serve them in their daily life. So we've talked a lot about how literacy is just such a big—it's a bigger part of our lives than it was 20 years ago. People can achieve a lot of independence and autonomy if they're able to interact with reading and writing and complete it successfully. So I would really encourage clinicians to think about how they can incorporate reading and writing into their existing treatment. A study I was involved with— Liz Madden surveyed SLPs on their practices assessing and treating reading and writing, and one of the take-homes from that project was that clinicians evaluate writing more than treating it. And especially handwriting, versus typing. But I think that given the way society is moving, asking people like, "What's important for you, handwriting or typing?" and let's make that our practice. Lyssa Rome I appreciate how person centered and flexible that advice is right. We're trying to meet people where they're at and recognizing that our treatment can be tailored to the person who's sitting in front of us. I'm curious to hear what is coming next for you. What are you excited about in your work? Jessica Obermeyer That's actually a great segue about how we can tailor treatment, because that is one of the projects that I'm working on now, how we can think about treatment in terms of what are the things that make it work, versus things that maybe aren't essential components of the treatment? With the last study I did with ARCS-W of the things that we were really trying to understand better was: Did it matter if people hand wrote or typed? Did they have the same kind of level of generalization to the other writing modality? And in that study, it doesn't seem that they did. And I think there's really specific reasons for that, because we're working at this discourse level without repeated items. And so you might not see the same impact of that handwriting learning boost, because we're not repeating things as often. That's one of my real interests is thinking about how we work on treatment, how we deliver treatment, how clinicians can deliver treatment. Because I am very guilty of this. Working on writing takes a long time. It takes a long time for people with aphasia to produce written discourse level text. So in the ARCS W studies, it's an hour-and-a-half treatment session where we only work on ARCS-W. But I know I recognize that that's like not most clinicians' daily life, and it doesn't mirror what therapy many people with aphasia receive. So thinking about treatment in a more component-based and mechanistic way that makes it easier for clinicians to adapt to their their practice is is one of the things I would like to flesh out in the future. And then continuing to work on this training and perceptual rating protocol. One of the things my colleagues and I would like to do is create a training that can be shared freely, where clinicians can easily get access to it, and then collect more robust data. I mean, only if we get good results, of course. If we don't, we will not be sharing it. But those are the big things I'm thinking about in the next couple of years, and then beyond that, even more. Lyssa Rome Well, I look forward to reading more of your work and to seeing what comes next as well. Dr. Jessica Obermeyer, thanks so much for talking with us. I really appreciate it. Jessica Obermeyer It's been a pleasure. Thank you. Lyssa Rome And thanks also to our listeners for the references and resources mentioned in today's show. Please see our show notes. They're available on our website, www.aphasiaaccess.org. There, you can also become a member of our organization, browse our growing library of materials and find out about the Aphasia Access Academy. If you have an idea for a future podcast episode, email us at info@aphasiaaccess.org. Thanks again for your ongoing support of Aphasia Access. For Aphasia Access Conversations, I'm Lyssa Rome. Resources Obermeyer, J. (2024). Using and modifying standardized restorative treatments in aphasia: Clinician perspectives. American Journal of Speech‑Language Pathology. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1044/2024_AJSLP-23-00349 Obermeyer, J., Leaman, M., & Oleson, J. (2025). Feasibility and preliminary data for a training protocol and perceptual rating scale of linguistic conversation measures in aphasia. American Journal of Speech‑Language Pathology. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1044/2025_AJSLP-24-00420 Obermeyer, J. A., Rogalski, Y., & Edmonds, L. A. (2021). Attentive reading with constrained summarization-written, a multi-modality discourse-level treatment for mild aphasia. Aphasiology, 35(1), 100-125. Obermeyer, J. A., & Edmonds, L. A. (2018). Attentive reading with constrained summarization adapted to address written discourse in people with mild aphasia. American Journal of Speech‑Language Pathology, 27(1S), 392–405. https://doi.org/10.1044/2017_AJSLP-16-0200 Obermeyer, J. A., Leaman, M. C., & Edmonds, L. A. (2020). Evaluating change in the conversation of a person with mild aphasia after Attentive Reading with Constrained Summarization–Written treatment. American Journal of Speech‑Language Pathology, 29(3), 1618–1628. https://doi.org/10.1044/2020_AJSLP-19-00078 Obermeyer, J., Edmonds, L., & Morgan, J. (2024). Handwritten and typed discourse in people with aphasia: Reference data for sequential picture description and comparison of performance across modality. American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, 33(6S), 3170-3185  

New Books in Political Science
Jaime Lee Kucinskas, "The Loyalty Trap: Conflicting Loyalties of Civil Servants Under Increasing Autocracy" (Columbia UP, 2025)

New Books in Political Science

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2025 26:48


The Loyalty Trap: Conflicting Loyalties of Civil Servants Under Increasing Autocracy (Columbia University Press, 2025) explores how civil servants navigated competing pressures and duties amid the chaos of the first Trump administration, drawing on in-depth interviews with senior officials in the most contested agencies over the course of a tumultuous term. A revealing investigation that is now more relevant than ever. Jaime Kucinskas is Associate Professor of the Department of Sociology at Hamilton College. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/political-science

New Books in Sociology
Jaime Lee Kucinskas, "The Loyalty Trap: Conflicting Loyalties of Civil Servants Under Increasing Autocracy" (Columbia UP, 2025)

New Books in Sociology

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2025 26:48


The Loyalty Trap: Conflicting Loyalties of Civil Servants Under Increasing Autocracy (Columbia University Press, 2025) explores how civil servants navigated competing pressures and duties amid the chaos of the first Trump administration, drawing on in-depth interviews with senior officials in the most contested agencies over the course of a tumultuous term. A revealing investigation that is now more relevant than ever. Jaime Kucinskas is Associate Professor of the Department of Sociology at Hamilton College. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/sociology

New Books in Public Policy
Jaime Lee Kucinskas, "The Loyalty Trap: Conflicting Loyalties of Civil Servants Under Increasing Autocracy" (Columbia UP, 2025)

New Books in Public Policy

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2025 26:48


The Loyalty Trap: Conflicting Loyalties of Civil Servants Under Increasing Autocracy (Columbia University Press, 2025) explores how civil servants navigated competing pressures and duties amid the chaos of the first Trump administration, drawing on in-depth interviews with senior officials in the most contested agencies over the course of a tumultuous term. A revealing investigation that is now more relevant than ever. Jaime Kucinskas is Associate Professor of the Department of Sociology at Hamilton College. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/public-policy

New Books in Politics
Jaime Lee Kucinskas, "The Loyalty Trap: Conflicting Loyalties of Civil Servants Under Increasing Autocracy" (Columbia UP, 2025)

New Books in Politics

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2025 26:48


The Loyalty Trap: Conflicting Loyalties of Civil Servants Under Increasing Autocracy (Columbia University Press, 2025) explores how civil servants navigated competing pressures and duties amid the chaos of the first Trump administration, drawing on in-depth interviews with senior officials in the most contested agencies over the course of a tumultuous term. A revealing investigation that is now more relevant than ever. Jaime Kucinskas is Associate Professor of the Department of Sociology at Hamilton College. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/politics-and-polemics

New Books in American Politics
Jaime Lee Kucinskas, "The Loyalty Trap: Conflicting Loyalties of Civil Servants Under Increasing Autocracy" (Columbia UP, 2025)

New Books in American Politics

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2025 26:48


The Loyalty Trap: Conflicting Loyalties of Civil Servants Under Increasing Autocracy (Columbia University Press, 2025) explores how civil servants navigated competing pressures and duties amid the chaos of the first Trump administration, drawing on in-depth interviews with senior officials in the most contested agencies over the course of a tumultuous term. A revealing investigation that is now more relevant than ever. Jaime Kucinskas is Associate Professor of the Department of Sociology at Hamilton College. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Real Ass Podcast
0005. Che Durena, Rob Crews, Emily Wade and Jaime-Lee Simmons

Real Ass Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2025 72:00


Che Durena, Rob Crews, Emily Wade and Jaime-Lee Simmons join Zac Amico and they discuss Shaq pooping his pants on air, Flavor of Love spin-off shows, famous leaked sex tapes, Jamie-Lee pegging a boyfriend who cheated on her, a follow up on the Aussie twins who speak in unison, racial play in the bedroom, tickle play, tricks restaurants use to make you spend more money, getting a boob reduction and what the equivalent is for men, a Battle of the Sexes trivia game and so much more!(Air Dates: April 28th, 2025)Support our sponsors!Support the show and get 15% off your Huel order, plus a free gift for new customers, with minimum $75 purchase. Use code ZOO at https://www.huel.com/ZOO!YoKratom.com - Check out Yo Kratom (the home of the $60 kilo) for all your kratom needs!Help Replace Shannon's Cannons - https://www.gofundme.com/f/help-shannon-lee-replace-her-boobsZac Amico's Morning Zoo plug music can be found here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oMgQJEcVToY&list=PLzjkiYUjXuevVG0fTOX4GCTzbU0ooHQ-O&ab_channel=BulbyTo advertise your product or service on GaS Digital podcasts please go to TheADSide.com and click on "Advertisers" for more information!Submit your artwork via postal mail to:GaS Digital Networkc/o Zac's Morning Zoo151 1st Ave, #311New York, NY 10003You can sign up at GaSDigital.com with promo code: ZOO for a discount of $1.50 on your subscription and access to every Zac Amico's Morning Zoo show ever recorded! On top of that you'll also have the same access to ALL the shows that GaS Digital Network has to offer!Follow the whole show on social media!Che DurenaTwitter: https://twitter.com/CheDurenaInstagram: https://instagram.com/CheDurenaRob CrewsTwitter: https://twitter.com/RobCrewsComedyInstagram: https://instagram.com/TheAttentionHorseEmily WadeInstagram: https://instagram.com/LoudEmilyJaime-Lee SimmonsInstagram: https://instagram.com/TheJaimeLeeShowZac AmicoTwitter: https://twitter.com/ZASpookShowInstagram: https://instagram.com/zacisnotfunnySee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Keeley quizzes Ezra on plot points from seasons 7-9, something he had no way to study for! Will he pass? Find out in this episode! This was so fun, and a great way to end his chapter on the show. Potentially triggering content in this episode: violence, teen s*xuality, s*xual assault, infidelity, Spemma endgame follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast
RECAP: S6E18-19 "Don't You Want Me?" (WITH A BIG SURPRISE)

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2025 123:09


I promise, you'll want to listen to the end for this one! If you follow me on Insta you already know. But Keeley and Ezra are finally here! At Ezra's final recap, and Keeley's favorite episodes. They follow Alex's journey into exotic dancing when Chad absolutely ruins her life. Plus, Emma invents a baby! Woo! Thanks so much for following us through these recaps, it's been a blast and a half fam. Potentially triggering content in this episode: sex work, teen s*xuality, slut shaming, assault, pregnancy, abuse, financial insecurity, that asshole Chadfollow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast
RECAP: S6E17 "Sunglasses at Night"

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2025 87:29


Dylan's in Switzerland and Marco is in the trenches in this episode. He has a poker addiction that literally turns him into another person. Oh, and Peter and Darcy are there too. Join us as we recap for the second-to-last time!Potentially triggering content in this episode: gambling, addiction, homophobia, Italian stereotypes. follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Paige is having her Carrie Bradshaw moment! Love it, hate Jesse, Keeley thinks Spinner is hot but Ezra refuses to agree. Oh, and Emma and Sean are gonna take their relationship ~to the next level~. Enjoy!Potentially triggering content in this episode: teen sexuality, infidelity, anxiety, love clichesfollow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Okay what IS this holiday!!! Paige comes home for....???...and can't tell anyone about her struggles at Banting. Join Ezra and Keeley in their latest-recorded episode yet and we DO get late night sleepover vibes, just a warning.Potentially triggering content in this episode: anxiety, panic attacks, Peter's past antics, exploding turkeysfollow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Manny's moving out, Emma's triggered, Dylan's being sneaky, and Marco's being insane! You'd think this would make for a more exciting episode but the most exciting thing we get is Emma and Manny looking like they're going to rap battle. Enjoy! Potentially triggering content in this episode: MURDER, violence, bullying, eating disorders, homophobia, infidelity, MyRoom pages follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast
SEMI-RECAP: S6E12 "The Bitterest Pill"

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2025 18:53


SO we lost a great amount of this episode and could not bring ourselves to re-record it. But we try to give you all something in addition to the last 10 minutes of the real episode. Sorry! Regularly scheduled episode next week! Potentially triggering content in this episode: death, infidelity, Toby & Liberty kissing follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Content Amplified
Interview-Focused Content Marketing

Content Amplified

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2025 17:56 Transcription Available


Send us a textIn this episode, we interview Jaime Lee, Senior Director of Brand at NoFraud, to explore her innovative approach to interview-led content strategies and how she leverages AI to scale authentic storytelling.What you'll learn in this episode:How to conduct meaningful interviews that yield valuable insightsStrategies for repurposing interviews into diverse content formatsWhy original, experience-driven content stands out in an AI-saturated landscapeTactical tips for using AI to expedite content creation without sacrificing authenticityThe future of content marketing in a post-SEO eraTune in to discover how Jaime navigates the content world with creativity, curiosity, and practical wisdom.

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Keeley, Ezra, and Daniel are here with the most long-awaited recap of all time! Join them in the post-JT's-death chaos and find out if Ezra will want to finish off the season at all! And I'm SO SORRY for the story you're going to hear from Daniel at the beginning of this episode. Potentially triggering content in this episode: MURDER, violence, bullying, teen s*xuality, dr*g abuse, alcoholism, Daniel's traumatizing December 23rd follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast
RECAP: S6E9-10 "What's it Feel Like to Be a Ghost?"

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2024 111:44


Craig's back and he's got a fun new dr*g habit! And Ezra and Keeley are covering his great return with an intervention. Join them as Keeley gushes over Craig and Ellie, they laugh at the absurdity of the Lakehurst feud, and gear up for next week's wild episode! Potentially triggering content in this episode: DR*G ABUSE, violence, infidelity, Taking Back Sunday follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast
RECAP: S6E8 "Crazy Little Thing Called Love"

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2024 68:08


This week on Days of Our Lives...Just kidding, it's Degrassi! But you wouldn't know it from the melodrama of it all. Join us as we really talk shit about this episode, wonder what the heck Mr. Perino's deal is, and give possibly our lowest episode ratings ever! Potentially triggering content in this episode: incarceration, teen s*xuality, violence, grooming, Emma Nelson liberation follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

It's time to cover everyone's favorite sickly Victorian waif, Fiona Coyne! Listen to Keeley and Daniel do bad Australian accents while deconstructing Degrassi's very own lesbian Blair Waldorf. Enjoy! POTENTIALLY TRIGGERING CONTENT IN THIS EPISODE: inc*st, ab*se, g*n violence, mental health, s*icide follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Daniel at: @dannyboyherman on Instagram and Twitter follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast
RECAP: S6E7 "Working for the Weekend"

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2024 54:02


We had to speed run this true filler episode of an episode so Ezra could finally see Wicked, but there really isn't much to even talk about except that Spinner might have to go to clown college! Enjoy the episode as we discuss Jermaine Brooks being hot and also an asshole, wonder how Alex became good at lacrosse, and wonder if ACAB applies to Spinner Mason! Potentially triggering content in this episode: violence against people with d*sabilities, bullying, clown college, police academy, and lumberjack school follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast
RECAP: S6E5-6 "Eyes Without a Face"

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2024 102:05


This week, Darcy Edwards finds attention online from creeps who only like her for her short shorts and NOT her pie recipes. It's tragic, actually. Keeley and Ezra recap this whole journey and discuss JT's orange pie, the introduction of Clare, and the line that ruined the whole episode. Enjoy! Potentially triggering content in this episode: teen s*xuality, p*dophilia, teen parenthood, bazongas follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast
RECAP: S6:E4 "Can't Hardly Wait"

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2024 79:59


Jimmy and Ashley try to bang AGAIN...and fail AGAIN...it's kind of cute that they just can't seem to do it innit! Keeley and Ezra recap this episode and Ezra makes some VERY INTERESTING comments/predictions about the rest of the season. Potentially triggering content in this episode: disability, teen s*xuality, teen parenthood, violence, Vibangra follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Basically "Here Comes Your Man" part 3, but y'all aren't ready to talk about that. We follow Emma through her Challengers-level struggle and follow Ellie as she's being romantically blackmailed by her boss but like, in a hot way! Enjoy! Potentially triggering content in this episode: eating disorders, dr*gs, teen incarceration, Jesse and Craig not looking alike follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast
RECAP: S6E1-2 "Here Comes Your Man"

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2024 93:33


We're here, at our FINAL SEASON of recap coverage on this podcast. How crazy is that!!! There's a lot that's going to happen in the next 20 or so episodes, but of course we have to start with Sean's 2 Fast 2 Furious return. Potentially triggering content in this episode: infidelity, slut shaming, reckless driving, being hit by a car, Amberley follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

2 Girls 1 Blunt
Middle School Smart with Mike Cannon

2 Girls 1 Blunt

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2024 68:50


Today on 2 Girls 1 Blunt, we have on Mike Cannon, a NYC based comedian who just dropped an amazing special entitled Mike Cannon: Traumatized Animal. Mike dropped into the pod to discuss his upbringing, we commiserate about growing up Irish-Catholic, discuss hand deformities, being a "feral" boy, and learn more about college level words. Today's word is anticipation.Check out Mike Cannnon's new special: Traumatized Animal:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ox42kz7j5mU&t=2349sCome see Mike on tour:https://www.mikecannoncomedy.com2 Girls 1 Blunt Podcast is hosted by Miami based stand up comedians, Jaime Lee Simmons and Emily Wade, two filthy fn st0nrs originally from Boston. Their raw, relatable, and unapologetic take on the dating scene, personal experiences, improving your mental health, and the end of the world will leave you laughing, crying, and high on life.Submit your questions, topics you'd like to hear on the podcast, wild stories, & funny videos to: 2girls1bluunt@gmail.comLeave a voicemail at 857-271-9663 to be featured on the next episode!Find 2G1B on social media:https://kite.link/2girls1bluntpodFind Jaime + Emily on socials:https://www.instagram.com/thejaimeleeshow/https://linqapp.com/jaimeleesimmons/https://instagram.com/loudemilyhttps://hoo.be/loudemilyWe appreciate your support every single week! If you could take 30 seconds out of your day and leave us a comment, a glowing review on Apple Podcasts, or a 5 star review on Spotify, it would mean the world to us!

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

This first episode is just a lot of repetition but the second episode SLAPS. Listen to Keeley and Ezra discuss the season 5 finale and Spinner's slutty tendencies and whether getting someone shot makes you a virgin or not. Potentially triggering content in this episode: infidelity, religious trauma, child death, creepy Toby follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast
RECAP: S5E17 "Total Eclipse of the Heart"

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2024 66:13


In this episode, Marco's a VICTIM. And Dylan's a sociopath. And Liberty's bad at being drunk. And Derek's just a little guy. Potentially triggering content in this episode: sociopathy, infidelity, teen pregnancy, Antoine's quiet extra lines follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast
RECAP: S5E15-16 "Our Lips Are Sealed"

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2024 116:42


This week, Keeley and Ezra get into what's eating Emma Nelson (and the answer is...her eating disorder!) and debate how well these iconic episodes tackled such sensitive subjects. And, spoiler alert, they don't think it did very well. Enjoy! Potentially triggering content in this episode: EATING DISORDERS, mentions of self harm, infidelity, Sometimes When We Touch by Dan Hill follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Uh oh, Friendship Club is showing their true colors and Spinner's being used as a pawn! Listen to Keeley and Ezra discuss Linus's potential to be the most evil Degrassi character, figure out who is doing this safe sex seminar, and debate whether or not that stripper ACTUALLY looked like Snake! Potentially triggering content in this episode: religious trauma, h*mophobia, teen s*xuality, Linus follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

We were gone for two weeks but we're BACK to give Craig a proper sendoff! Join us as Ezra learns that this is the end of Craig as a main character, listen to us critique his music, and describe all the ways smarmy music producers are portrayed on TV! Potentially triggering content in this episode: d*ath, ab*se, sexism, pregnancy, birth, saying "yo" unprompted follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Keeley and Daniel cover probably their favorite Degrassi Queen Bee (don't tell Paige), Holly J Sinclair! Join them as they discuss Holly J's arc, her tacos, her adoption, and why she shouldn't die because she's capable of love! POTENTIALLY TRIGGERING CONTENT IN THIS EPISODE: bullying, financial problems, g*n violence, dirty ginger viruses follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Daniel at: @dannyboyherman on Instagram and Twitter follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast
RECAP: S5E11-12 "The Lexicon of Love"

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2024 111:25


It's Keeley's favorite episode of the season!!! Join her and Ezra as they gush over Paige and Alex, wonder if Ezra will ever come around to Jay, and discuss whether the maintenance guy at the movie theater thought Snake, Daphne, Emma, and Peter were a smooching family! Potentially triggering content in this episode: domestic violence, homophobia, adultery, being bribed with a Mexican vacation follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

This week Keeley and Ezra take some time to talk about the man upstairs! That's right, they join Spinner on his journey to finding God. They discuss Jimmy's mural, Jay's ugly orange car, and figure out whether Linus is the president or the Pope of Friendship Club! Potentially triggering content in this episode: religion, g*n violence, disability, s*xual assault, purity rings follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast
RECAP: S5E9 "Tell It To My Heart"

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2024 83:32


This week Keeley and Ezra join Marco on his coming out journey, Shakespearean ruffle collar and all! We discuss whether or not the drama festival was a competition, if Peter is cute or not, and bully Tim mercilessly. Enjoy! Potentially triggering content in this episode: homophobia, home insecurity, Hamlet follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Not Simple
Dr. Jaime Lee, the Power of Rest

Not Simple

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2024 33:18


"How do you experience rest while doing what you love? What if we could even experience a sense of relaxed focus while hosting a party for 20?"  In our latest podcast episode, we dive deep into the art of grounded leadership with Dr. Jaime Lee, a fellow CL colleague. Jaime believes that true leadership starts with connecting to our health and the innate intelligence of our bodies. She expertly guides her clients and teams through the intricate balance of work, life, health, and relationships, helping them reclaim their sovereignty, alignment, and wholeness for a more effortless flow.  Jaime explores how we can cultivate rest daily, even while hosting a party or pursuing our passions. She challenges the traditional view of self-care, suggesting that instead of fixing deficiencies, we can embrace self-acceptance and see that we already have everything we need. Discover how making time your friend and putting "breathe" on your to-do list can transform your life, allowing you to be more generous with yourself and more trusting of the world in this latest podcast hosted by Rebecca Scott.   

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Man, you ever just leave an episode of television feeling completely empty and hollow inside? That's what happened to Ezra and Keeley watching this week's episode where JT becomes a drug dealer and almost dies! Have fun! Potentially triggering content in this episode: food, dieting, teen s*xuality, teen pregnancy, dr*gs, s*icide, lawyers for parents follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast
RECAP: S5E6 "Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For"

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 24, 2024 68:12


Jimmy's found wheelchair basketball AND art? Oh no, how will he ever get his get his get his head in the game??? Keeley and Ezra recap this episode by lamenting about Drake's acting career, screaming about JT and Liberty's pregnancy, and wondering what it is about Ellie that keeps placing her in the middle of love triangles. Potentially triggering content in this episode: disability, teen pregnancy, pregnancy loss, early 2000s flashback editing follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast
RECAP: S5E5 "Weddings, Parties, Anything"

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2024 67:30


Ezra and Keeley find themselves enthralled in the Craig-Ellie-Manny love triangle, as well as Daddy Joey dating a 23-year old! This episode is fun, we even talk about whether or not our parents use condoms. Enjoy! Potentially triggering content in this episode: teen pregnancy, ugly wedding favors follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

tiktok jaime lee weddings parties anything
Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Keeley was nervous to show Ezra this episode of his favorite boy becoming a teen father, but he took it surprisingly well! Listen to them discuss whether JT and Liberty seem like they fuck, debate whether Christianity is a cult, and, as always, fight about loving Spinner! Enjoy! Potentially triggering content in this episode: teen pregnancy, teen s*xuality, religious trauma, Friendship Club follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast
RECAP: S5E3 "Death of a Disco Dancer"

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2024 70:53


Paige is aiming HIGH this episode...figuratively and literally, since she's not only wanting to get into ~the Harvard of the North~ but she's smoking weed for the first time! Keeley and Ezra recap this weird episode and decide that season 5 is not out to a strong start, but they have fun kicking Matt off the show and making fun of Derek. Enjoy! Potentially triggering content in this episode: dr*g abuse, domestic ab*se, poverty, Snake bullying Peter follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Keeley and Daniel are BACK after Keeley had to learn to use a new editing software! In this episode, they discuss Keeley's #1 Degrassi Crush, Savtaj Bhandari. They go through his relationship with his parents, his arranged marriage, and talk about how his parents really ate when they picked Farrah. POTENTIALLY TRIGGERING CONTENT IN THIS EPISODE: xenophobia, racism, sexism, older siblings follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Daniel at: @dannyboyherman on Instagram and Twitter follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Keeley and Ezra kick off season 5 with a...bizarre episode, to say the least! Join them as Keeley reconsiders why she ever liked this episode in the first place and how she and Ezra try to desperately figure out wtf Manny is even thinking throughout it. Enjoy! Potentially triggering content in this episode: racism, xenophobia, classism, slut shaming, insecurity, body dysmorphia, plastic surgery, Peter Stone follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast
RECAP: S4E21-22 "Goin' Down the Road"

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2024 95:40


I can't believe I'm saying this but...I've kind of warmed to Kevin Smith and Caitlin in this episode! Yikes, who am I?! Ezra and Keeley watched the season 4 finale and it took two weeks to edit. Enjoy! Potentially triggering content in this episode: p*dophilia, infidelity, mental illness, homelessness, violence, busking follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Keeley and Ezra reach the peak of the Manny/Paige feud one ugly pink dress at a time! Join us as we discuss Kevin Smith's Degrassi debut, figure out who was worse to who, and mourn JT and Toby's old personalities! Potentially triggering content in this episode: violence, p*dophelia, infidelity, cheerleader conspiracy follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Marco runs a blood drive AND breaks up with his boyfriend! Fun episode, even if we had some technical difficulties. This episode is kind of unhinged and I apologize for that - we'll be back on our game next week, friends! Potentially triggering content in this episode: homophobia, infidelity, blood, bad side parts follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

tiktok fun jaime lee moonlight desires
Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Paige and Mr. O's relationship takes an unexpected (and unappreciated) turn in this episode! Join Keeley and Ezra as they complain about why these two are even still together, discuss the entrance of Chantay, and say goodbye to Chester after two episodes! Potentially triggering content in this episode: p*dophilia, violence, teen s*xuality, the harm menstrual products cause to the environment follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Ezra at: @ezrapartier on Instagram follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

Cuckoo Bananas! A Degrassi: the Next Generation Podcast

Keeley and Daniel cover everyone's favorite little chameleon, Anya MacPherson! Join them as they talk through her relationships, her drug problem, and fight over who gets to claim her LARPing for themselves. POTENTIALLY TRIGGERING CONTENT IN THIS EPISODE: dr*g abuse, cancer, pedophilia, Wesley's wet dream follow Keeley at: @omgitskee on Instagram and Tiktok  follow Daniel at: @dannyboyherman on Instagram and Twitter follow the podcast at: @cuckoobananaspodcast on Instagram  email us at: cuckoobananaspodcast@gmail.com  music: https://www.purple-planet.com  cover art by: Jaime Lee (@nosoyhere on Instagram)

The Jason Ellis Show
Jaime Lee Simmons Loves Nerdy Guys

The Jason Ellis Show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2024 75:11


Comedian Jaime Lee Simmons joins Jason Ellis and Michael Tully to discuss Animals Watching Intimate Moments, The Civil War, Beating Your Kids, Soap in ones own mouth, Nerdy Guys, David Goggins, Video Games are Unattractive, Sobriety, The Rock, Hitting on People at The Gym, Doing Standup Stoned, and Getting Out Of Your Party Phase. Head to FACTORMEALS.com/ellis50 and use code ellis50 to get 50% off. Promo Code - ELLIS50 Free Shipping of mountain water, flavored sparkling, and iced tea 8 packs with Amazon Prime. Go to liquiddeath.com/ELLIS More Jaime Lee Simmons: https://jaimeleesimmons.com https://www.instagram.com/thejaimeleeshow https://www.tiktok.com/@thejaimeleeshow?is_from_webapp=1&sender_device=pc Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Guys We F****d
YOU HAD A SEIZURE WHILE FCKING IN THE BACK OF A KARATE STUDIO? ft. Jaime-Lee Simmons and Emily Wade

Guys We F****d

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2023 120:15 Transcription Available


Happy Friday, Fckers! On this week's episode of Guys We Fcked, Corinne and Krystyna bring in trusted big dcked male punching bag, Mike, to break down what they did on their summer vacations. This week's guests are JAIME-LEE SIMMONS AND EMILY WADE from 2 Girls 1 Blunt podcast. The four discuss curing codependency with celibacy, surviving Münchausen syndrome by proxy, and seizing during sex.   WATCH THE GWF COMEDY SPECIAL -- "OUR SPECIAL DAY" -- FOR FREE: https://www.youtube.com/guyswefcked     Follow Guys We Fucked on IG/Twitter/TikTok: @guyswefcked Follow Corinne Fisher on Twitter/IG: @PhilanthropyGal (And follow Corinne's store on IG @PerfectlyCenteredStore) www.corinnefisher.com    Follow Krystyna Hutchinson on Twitter/IG: @KrystynaHutch www.krystynahutchinson.com    Follow Jaime-Lee Simmons: @thejaimeleeshow   Follow Emily Wade: @loudemily   Follow Mike Coscarelli on Twitter/IG: @MikeCoscarelli    THIS WEEK'S FEATURED MUSIC: Ellie James   https://open.spotify.com/artist/5FTHHKXgwZgdpY12FB96gD?si=1utKOjDKQ963fKknXg-i9gSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.