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Improv extraordinaire Brian James O'Connell makes his 4th appearance again. Going for the podcast's 5-timers club, BOC returns to talk all things art and improv with Jason. After catching up we hear a little more insight into Brian's early time in improv and his approach, why he thinks of him less of a teacher and more of a librarian, his All Improv guide which is a beast that he keeps updating for you (for you), makes some excellent comparisons to music, whether there's concern for improv becoming homogenized, the state of improv, this awesome "Rust Belt" tour he's going on, and much more! Always a great chat with BOC! Brian's YouTube: youtube.com/@therealbrianjamesoconnell Twitter: @b3OC, @ThereItIsPod, @JasonFarrJokes Instagram: @b3OC, @ThereItIsPod, @JasonFarrPics Facebook: @ThereItIsPod Subscribe to our comedy newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/e22defd4dee2/thereitis
On this episode, Aaron talks with Dr. James O'Connell, author of Stories from the Shadows: Reflections of a Street Doctor. Dr. O'Connell discusses his work providing medical care for the homeless in Boston, his experience working as a doctor for the homeless during the AIDS crisis, and the perverse incentives of the medical profession.
Our penultimate episode of VIDtober, our celebration of the movies released by New World Video, is also our 100th New World movie! Appropriately, we're discussing Donald G. Jackson's I LIKE TO HURT PEOPLE, a documentary? Sports film? Slasher? Whatever it may be, it contains a lot of wrestling! Even PRINCESS BRIDE actor Andre the Giant wrestles in it! Joining us is returning guest Brian James O'Connell, a director, writer, and wrestling fan, who sorts out the whole world of 1970's and early 80's wrestling world for us, teaching us about "jobbers" and the 5 motivations for a wrestler (we even add one more)! Plus, we go into what this movie was originally going to be, and what we discovered was, well, A LOT. You won't believe your ears (nor should you, if they talk to you)! Follow Brian here: https://twitter.com/b3OC https://www.instagram.com/b3oc/?hl=en For more about the podcast, head to https://newworldpicturespodcast.com/
Melbourne Theatre Company's most recent play 'My Sister Jill' stars this weeks guests.Lucy Goleby and James O'Connell have worked together on many projects. Can they work together to answer Cindy's 10 questions. Listen and find out!'My Sister Jill' is playing at the Sumner Theatre for one more week.Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/the-saturday-quiz. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
It's the reason for the season! VAMPril continues with the film that inspired it all: 1986's VAMP! And who better to discuss this vampire comedy than our guest, Brian James O'Connell, the director of the vampire comedy BLOODSUCKING BASTARDS starring Pedro Pascal! We discuss the difficulty of making horror comedies, the correct age to play spin the bottle, and the incredible Grace Jones! Plus, Ryan reveals he knows NOTHING about NASCAR, Marc crunches some numbers, Erica upsets cinephiles, Brian figures out the New World Pictures crossover film that should have set the NWPCU in motion, and we all takes turns using the Bryant Gumbel method of interviewing!
Join us for Part 2 of the powerful discussion we started at the end of last season (Season 4, Episode 6), with our 2 experts on caring for people experiencing houselessness, James O'Connell, MD, MACP (Boston Healthcare for the Homeless) and Rachel Solotaroff, MD, FACP (Central City Concern- Portland, Oregon). From the HIV epidemic to the rise of multi-drug resistant TB and the opioid crisis, those caring for people experiencing houselessness and housing insecurity saw the rise of each of these epidemics in their patient populations long before the rest of us. The devastating impact of the COVID-19 pandemic was particularly harsh for those in shelters or unhoused. Some say that caring for those experiencing houselessness reveals the fractures in our healthcare system earlier and more clearly than healthcare in other settings. In our discussion, Drs. O'Connell and Solotaroff describe some of the obstacles faced by these patients and their healthcare providers in obtaining/delivering healthcare, and some of the opportunities to learn from and address these challenges.Learning Objectives:Identify challenges and lessons for both clinical teams and people experiencing houselessness in providing and accessing healthcare.Describe different models of housing support and healthcare delivery for which clinicians can advocate in order to support those experiencing and emerging out of houselessness, and to ultimately reach the goal of ending houselessness.Discuss some of the challenges facing houseless individuals who are seriously ill and/or at end-of-life, and facing those who are providing their end-of-life healthcare.Episode Credits:Guests: Dr. James O'Connell, Dr. Rachel SolotaroffCo-Hosts: Dr. Marianne Parshley, Dr. Elisa ChoiExecutive Producer: Dr. Tammy LinCo-Executive Producers: Dr. Pooja Jaeel, Dr. Tiffany LeungSenior Producers: Dr. Maggie Kozman, Dr. DJ GainesEditor/Assistant Producer: Clara BaekProduction Assistants: Nilgoun Farhadi, Leyna NguyenWebsite/Art Design: Ann TruongMusic: Chris Dingman https://www.chrisdingman.comTwitter: @thedeishiftInstagram: @thedeishiftWebsite: https://www.thedeishift.comEmail: thedeishift@gmail.comContinuing Medical Education/Maintenance of Certification (CME/MOC) credits are available as an American College of Physicians national member benefit. To submit for CME/MOC credit for this episode, visit: https://www.acponline.org/cme-moc/cme/internal-medicine-podcasts/the-dei-shift
From the HIV epidemic to the rise of multi-drug resistant TB and the opioid crisis, those caring for people experiencing houselessness and housing insecurity saw the rise of each of these epidemics in their patient populations long before the rest of us. The devastating impact of the COVID-19 pandemic was particularly harsh for those in shelters or unhoused. Some say that caring for those experiencing houselessness reveals the fractures in our healthcare system earlier and more clearly than healthcare in other settings. Join us for the first of 2 episodes with 2 experts on caring for this population, Dr. James O'Connell, MD, MACP (Boston Healthcare for the Homeless) and Rachel Solotaroff, MD, FACP (Central City Concern- Portland, Oregon). In our discussion of the obstacles faced by these patients and the opportunities to learn from them, Drs. O'Connell and Solotaroff describe the root causes of houselessness, the best terms to use when addressing people experiencing houselessness, and some of the challenges in delivering healthcare to these patients.Learning Objectives:Define houselessness/homelessness and housing insecurity.Explore and define root causes of the crisis of houselessness in the U.S.Understand the challenges to access and provision of healthcare to houseless folks.Episode Credits:Guests: Dr. James O'Connell, Dr. Rachel SolotaroffCo-Hosts: Dr. Marianne Parshley, Dr. Elisa ChoiExecutive Producer: Dr. Tammy LinCo-Executive Producers: Dr. Pooja Jaeel, Dr. Tiffany LeungSenior Producers: Dr. Maggie Kozman, Dr. DJ GainesEditor/Assistant Producer: Clara BaekProduction Assistants: Nilgoun Farhadi, Leyna NguyenWebsite/Art Design: Ann TruongMusic: Chris Dingman https://www.chrisdingman.comTwitter: @thedeishiftInstagram: @thedeishiftWebsite: https://www.thedeishift.comEmail: thedeishift@gmail.comContinuing Medical Education/Maintenance of Certification (CME/MOC) credits are available as an American College of Physicians national member benefit. To submit for CME/MOC credit for this episode, visit: https://www.acponline.org/cme-moc/cme/internal-medicine-podcasts/the-dei-shift
Improv legend (also actor, director, filmmaker and teacher) Brian James O'Connell is here to nerd out about THE DECONSTRUCTION, an improvisational form he describes as "an unscripted one-act play about the dark joy of the human condition." Episode Links: BOC's Website Dr. God Pack Theater Signature Creative Coaching Improv 1 to 1 Improv Utopia Joe's Patreon Mr. Owl's Website
Feature film director Brian James O'Connell came across the case of a North Dakota man arrested for the brutal killing of four people in 2019, and became so intrigued that he traveled to North Dakota to attend part of the trial. On this episode of A Study Of Strange, Brian shares details of the bizarre case that shocked the city of Mandan, ND. The alleged killer, Chad Isaak, professed during his trial that he was not the murderer, but all of the evidence pointed directly to Isaak. Evidence that includes security camera footage of a man with a distinct walk, just like Isaak's, the discovery of the murder weapons, blood on and in his truck, and more. What makes this case even more strange is that there appears to be no motive. No connection with the killer to the victims. Today we attempt to make sense of the senseless, and share recent news related to Chad Isaak. Join Patreon to get access to special content and a free giveaway for the next 50 days! Visit www.astrudyofstrange.com for more show notes, resources, and strange info! Find our more about Brian O'Connell: http://itsboc.com/ http://drgodcomedy.com https://www.facebook.com/Improv1to1/ http://www.improvutopia.com/ Theme Music by Matt Glass http://www.glassbrain.com/ Instagram: @astudyofstrange Hosted by Michael May ©2022 Convergent Content, LLC Links: https://www.kvrr.com/tag/chad-isaak/
Brian James O'Connell is a working actor, writer, director, filmmaker and teacher in Los Angeles. Brian has been a staple in the improv community for over 20 years! He helped found the improv theater: The Pack. BOC (as his friends call him) is part of the improv powerhouse & comedy collective Dr. God. He directed the comedy ANGRY WHITE MAN starring Matt Berry, Scoot McNairy, Steve Agee and Mary Birdsong. Also, he directed the feature film project BLOODSUCKING BASTARDS, starring Fran Kranz, Pedro Pascal, Joey Kern, Joel Murray, and Emma Fitzpatrick. The film was the Opening Night Premiere at Slamdance and is available now on Amazon Prime. The animated series HELL DEN is currently available on SYFY Channel where BOC and Dr. God serve as the Creator, Executive Producers, Producers, Directors and Writers. ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ Brian James O'Connell ⌲ IMDB: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0640031/ ⌲ IG: https://www.instagram.com/b3oc/?hl=en http://itsboc.com/ - Writer/Director/Dreamweaver http://drgodcomedy.com - Member of premiere comedy group http://www.packtheater.com/ - Co-Founder https://www.facebook.com/ALLIMPROV/ - Signature Creative Coaching https://www.facebook.com/Improv1to1/ - Owner & Founder http://www.improvutopia.com/ - Board Member ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ The Moving Spotlight Podcast ⌲ iTunes: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-moving-spotlight/id1597207264 ⌲ Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/7cjqYAWSFXz2hgCHiAjy27 ⌲ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/themovingspotlight ⌲ ALL: https://linktr.ee/themovingspotlight ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ #BloodSuckingBastards #ThePack #IOWest #TheHarold #Deconstruction #LongFormImprov #ShortFormImprov #UCB #SecondCity #Improv #BOC #YesAnd #DrGod #Emmys #TVTime #iTunes #Actor #ActorsLife #Believe #Success #Inspiration #Netflix #Hulu #Amazon #HBO #AppleTV #Showtime #Acting #Artist #Theatre #Film #YourBestBadActing #Content #CorbinCoyle #JohnRuby #RealFIREacting #TMS_Pod --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/the-moving-spotlight/support
Best Of Belfast: Stories of local legends from Northern Ireland
People come and go in our lives — “friend's for a season” — folks who we journey with for a while and then part ways. But every now and then a connection is made that you know will last a lifetime. For me, podcaster James O'Connell from Dublin is one of those connections. After strangely being introduced by previous podcast guest and current Mental Health co-host Stephen Ilardi, I first met James when he moved to Belfast last year and now he's moving on, we decided to mark the occasion with a conversation that captures some of what we've wrestled with over the course of our friendship so far. The result is a long-form conversation about dopamine, mental health, commitment, relationships, confrontation and compassion that dips into science, psyche, scripture and our own story along the way. We don't have the answers. We don't have it all figured out. But we are trying — and hope that this raw, real-time wrestle will be a springboard for newfound courage, action and change in your own life. — Matt https://bestofbelfast.org/stories/james-and-matt
Just trust us, do NOT eat the mushrooms; they will not make you a FUN GUY. This week, Bri and special guest Brian James O'Connell (director/co-writer of Bloodsucking Bastards) try to convince Cozi and the audience to watch the 1963 horror movie Matango! Directed by Ishirō Honda, this psychedelic film about mushroom people covers some deep themes and the darkness that emerges with human desperation. Will Cozi be interested in this underrated slow-burn horror film or will he pass on the mushroom people altogether? Recommendations: Cozi - Everything Everywhere All at Once (2022) Bri - The series Minx (HBO) BOC - Easy Trick To Clean Cast Iron --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/youneedtoseethis/support
This story was told on Zoom on 22 Dec 2021. It's not about Christmas - who wants to hear about Christmas at this stage? James O'Connell (& friends) made his tenx9 debut with this tale of cults, meditation & onions.
Welcome to the first Hospo Reset podcast. My guest is James O'Connell of the Hospitality Company. He's based in Christchurch New Zealand and is constantly watching out for and coaching in best-practice hospitality management. He's leading the way with the very important principle we are going to talk about today - Open Book Management.You'll find the Show Notes and links for today's episode on the HospoReset.com website. Don't forget to subscribe to the weekly Hospo Reset newsletter, and connect with Ken Burgin on Linkedin and on Twitter.
Emory University professor Dietrich Stout discusses an evolutionarily motivated definition of technology that highlights three key features: material production, social collaboration, and cultural reproduction; UC San Diego professor Pascal Gagneux discusses how recent comparative genome studies have revealed that this polymorphic system is ancient and shared between humans and non-human primates, this despite the fact that none of the great ape species carries all four ABO blood types; and University of Utah professor James O'Connell discusses food sharing, evaluates one hypothesis that focuses on males acquiring big game meat and marrow to provide for mates and offspring. The other hypothesis surrounds how certain kinds of savanna plant food set up the forager interdependence which propelled all aspects of life history change. Series: "CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny" [Humanities] [Science] [Show ID: 37528]
Emory University professor Dietrich Stout discusses an evolutionarily motivated definition of technology that highlights three key features: material production, social collaboration, and cultural reproduction; UC San Diego professor Pascal Gagneux discusses how recent comparative genome studies have revealed that this polymorphic system is ancient and shared between humans and non-human primates, this despite the fact that none of the great ape species carries all four ABO blood types; and University of Utah professor James O'Connell discusses food sharing, evaluates one hypothesis that focuses on males acquiring big game meat and marrow to provide for mates and offspring. The other hypothesis surrounds how certain kinds of savanna plant food set up the forager interdependence which propelled all aspects of life history change. Series: "CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny" [Humanities] [Science] [Show ID: 37528]
Emory University professor Dietrich Stout discusses an evolutionarily motivated definition of technology that highlights three key features: material production, social collaboration, and cultural reproduction; UC San Diego professor Pascal Gagneux discusses how recent comparative genome studies have revealed that this polymorphic system is ancient and shared between humans and non-human primates, this despite the fact that none of the great ape species carries all four ABO blood types; and University of Utah professor James O'Connell discusses food sharing, evaluates one hypothesis that focuses on males acquiring big game meat and marrow to provide for mates and offspring. The other hypothesis surrounds how certain kinds of savanna plant food set up the forager interdependence which propelled all aspects of life history change. Series: "CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny" [Humanities] [Science] [Show ID: 37528]
Emory University professor Dietrich Stout discusses an evolutionarily motivated definition of technology that highlights three key features: material production, social collaboration, and cultural reproduction; UC San Diego professor Pascal Gagneux discusses how recent comparative genome studies have revealed that this polymorphic system is ancient and shared between humans and non-human primates, this despite the fact that none of the great ape species carries all four ABO blood types; and University of Utah professor James O'Connell discusses food sharing, evaluates one hypothesis that focuses on males acquiring big game meat and marrow to provide for mates and offspring. The other hypothesis surrounds how certain kinds of savanna plant food set up the forager interdependence which propelled all aspects of life history change. Series: "CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny" [Humanities] [Science] [Show ID: 37528]
CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny (Video)
Emory University professor Dietrich Stout discusses an evolutionarily motivated definition of technology that highlights three key features: material production, social collaboration, and cultural reproduction; UC San Diego professor Pascal Gagneux discusses how recent comparative genome studies have revealed that this polymorphic system is ancient and shared between humans and non-human primates, this despite the fact that none of the great ape species carries all four ABO blood types; and University of Utah professor James O'Connell discusses food sharing, evaluates one hypothesis that focuses on males acquiring big game meat and marrow to provide for mates and offspring. The other hypothesis surrounds how certain kinds of savanna plant food set up the forager interdependence which propelled all aspects of life history change. Series: "CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny" [Humanities] [Science] [Show ID: 37528]
Emory University professor Dietrich Stout discusses an evolutionarily motivated definition of technology that highlights three key features: material production, social collaboration, and cultural reproduction; UC San Diego professor Pascal Gagneux discusses how recent comparative genome studies have revealed that this polymorphic system is ancient and shared between humans and non-human primates, this despite the fact that none of the great ape species carries all four ABO blood types; and University of Utah professor James O'Connell discusses food sharing, evaluates one hypothesis that focuses on males acquiring big game meat and marrow to provide for mates and offspring. The other hypothesis surrounds how certain kinds of savanna plant food set up the forager interdependence which propelled all aspects of life history change. Series: "CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny" [Humanities] [Science] [Show ID: 37528]
Emory University professor Dietrich Stout discusses an evolutionarily motivated definition of technology that highlights three key features: material production, social collaboration, and cultural reproduction, UC San Diego professor Pascal Gagneux discusses how recent comparative genome studies have revealed that this polymorphic system is ancient and shared between humans and non-human primates, this despite the fact that none of the great ape species carries all four ABO blood types, and University of Utah professor James O'Connell discusses food sharing, evaluates one hypothesis that focuses on males acquiring big game meat and marrow to provide for mates and offspring. The other hypothesis surrounds how certain kinds of savanna plant food set up the forager interdependence which propelled all aspects of life history change. Series: "CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny" [Humanities] [Science] [Show ID: 37528]
Humans are unusual in that we depend on shared foods, especially among families and friends and between potential mates. Food sharing occurs between healthy individuals and those that are infirm or elderly. We also differ from other great apes in our early ages at weaning, late ages at maturity, short birth intervals and survivorship decades past menopause. The emergence of these patterns was crucial to early human development. In light of observations among modern East African hunter-gatherers, University of Utah professor James O'Connell evaluates two alternatives. He discusses one hypothesis that focuses on males acquiring big game meat and marrow to provide for mates and offspring. The other hypothesis surrounds how certain kinds of savanna plant food set up the forager interdependence which propelled all aspects of life history change. Series: "CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny" [Humanities] [Science] [Agriculture] [Show ID: 37384]
Humans are unusual in that we depend on shared foods, especially among families and friends and between potential mates. Food sharing occurs between healthy individuals and those that are infirm or elderly. We also differ from other great apes in our early ages at weaning, late ages at maturity, short birth intervals and survivorship decades past menopause. The emergence of these patterns was crucial to early human development. In light of observations among modern East African hunter-gatherers, University of Utah professor James O'Connell evaluates two alternatives. He discusses one hypothesis that focuses on males acquiring big game meat and marrow to provide for mates and offspring. The other hypothesis surrounds how certain kinds of savanna plant food set up the forager interdependence which propelled all aspects of life history change. Series: "CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny" [Humanities] [Science] [Agriculture] [Show ID: 37384]
Humans are unusual in that we depend on shared foods, especially among families and friends and between potential mates. Food sharing occurs between healthy individuals and those that are infirm or elderly. We also differ from other great apes in our early ages at weaning, late ages at maturity, short birth intervals and survivorship decades past menopause. The emergence of these patterns was crucial to early human development. In light of observations among modern East African hunter-gatherers, University of Utah professor James O'Connell evaluates two alternatives. He discusses one hypothesis that focuses on males acquiring big game meat and marrow to provide for mates and offspring. The other hypothesis surrounds how certain kinds of savanna plant food set up the forager interdependence which propelled all aspects of life history change. Series: "CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny" [Humanities] [Science] [Agriculture] [Show ID: 37384]
Humans are unusual in that we depend on shared foods, especially among families and friends and between potential mates. Food sharing occurs between healthy individuals and those that are infirm or elderly. We also differ from other great apes in our early ages at weaning, late ages at maturity, short birth intervals and survivorship decades past menopause. The emergence of these patterns was crucial to early human development. In light of observations among modern East African hunter-gatherers, University of Utah professor James O'Connell evaluates two alternatives. He discusses one hypothesis that focuses on males acquiring big game meat and marrow to provide for mates and offspring. The other hypothesis surrounds how certain kinds of savanna plant food set up the forager interdependence which propelled all aspects of life history change. Series: "CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny" [Humanities] [Science] [Show ID: 37384]
CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny (Video)
Humans are unusual in that we depend on shared foods, especially among families and friends and between potential mates. Food sharing occurs between healthy individuals and those that are infirm or elderly. We also differ from other great apes in our early ages at weaning, late ages at maturity, short birth intervals and survivorship decades past menopause. The emergence of these patterns was crucial to early human development. In light of observations among modern East African hunter-gatherers, University of Utah professor James O'Connell evaluates two alternatives. He discusses one hypothesis that focuses on males acquiring big game meat and marrow to provide for mates and offspring. The other hypothesis surrounds how certain kinds of savanna plant food set up the forager interdependence which propelled all aspects of life history change. Series: "CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny" [Humanities] [Science] [Show ID: 37384]
Humans are unusual in that we depend on shared foods, especially among families and friends and between potential mates. Food sharing occurs between healthy individuals and those that are infirm or elderly. We also differ from other great apes in our early ages at weaning, late ages at maturity, short birth intervals and survivorship decades past menopause. The emergence of these patterns was crucial to early human development. In light of observations among modern East African hunter-gatherers, University of Utah professor James O'Connell evaluates two alternatives. He discusses one hypothesis that focuses on males acquiring big game meat and marrow to provide for mates and offspring. The other hypothesis surrounds how certain kinds of savanna plant food set up the forager interdependence which propelled all aspects of life history change. Series: "CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny" [Humanities] [Science] [Show ID: 37384]
Humans are unusual in that we depend on shared foods, especially among families and friends and between potential mates. Food sharing occurs between healthy individuals and those that are infirm or elderly. We also differ from other great apes in our early ages at weaning, late ages at maturity, short birth intervals and survivorship decades past menopause. The emergence of these patterns was crucial to early human development. In light of observations among modern East African hunter-gatherers, University of Utah professor James O'Connell evaluates two alternatives. He discusses one hypothesis that focuses on males acquiring big game meat and marrow to provide for mates and offspring. The other hypothesis surrounds how certain kinds of savanna plant food set up the forager interdependence which propelled all aspects of life history change. Series: "CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny" [Humanities] [Science] [Show ID: 37384]
Humans are unusual in that we depend on shared foods, especially among families and friends and between potential mates. Food sharing occurs between healthy individuals and those that are infirm or elderly. We also differ from other great apes in our early ages at weaning, late ages at maturity, short birth intervals and survivorship decades past menopause. The emergence of these patterns was crucial to early human development. In light of observations among modern East African hunter-gatherers, University of Utah professor James O'Connell evaluates two alternatives. He discusses one hypothesis that focuses on males acquiring big game meat and marrow to provide for mates and offspring. The other hypothesis surrounds how certain kinds of savanna plant food set up the forager interdependence which propelled all aspects of life history change. Series: "CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny" [Humanities] [Science] [Show ID: 37384]
Humans are unusual in that we depend on shared foods, especially among families and friends and between potential mates. Food sharing occurs between healthy individuals and those that are infirm or elderly. We also differ from other great apes in our early ages at weaning, late ages at maturity, short birth intervals and survivorship decades past menopause. The emergence of these patterns was crucial to early human development. In light of observations among modern East African hunter-gatherers, University of Utah professor James O'Connell evaluates two alternatives. He discusses one hypothesis that focuses on males acquiring big game meat and marrow to provide for mates and offspring. The other hypothesis surrounds how certain kinds of savanna plant food set up the forager interdependence which propelled all aspects of life history change. Series: "CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny" [Humanities] [Science] [Show ID: 37384]
Brian joins Jennifer and David on a bridge to discuss the art of improv, Pack Theater in L.A., and what BOC has been up to during the pandemic. Brian James O'Connell is a working actor, writer, director, filmmaker and teacher in Los Angeles. After selling his feature film debut as a writer/director, KILLER VIEW (the only film shot on disposable video), he followed it up by directing the 35mm Southern indie comedy ANGRY WHITE MAN starring Matt Berry, Scoot McNairy, Steve Agee and Mary Birdsong. BOC (as his friends call him) is part of the improv powerhouse & comedy collective Dr. God, who delivered their first feature film project BLOODSUCKING BASTARDS in 2015, starring Fran Kranz, Pedro Pascal, Joey Kern, Joel Murray, and Emma Fitzpatrick, which O'Connell directed as well as co-writing the script with Dr. God. The film was the Opening Night Premiere at Slamdance in 2015 and is available now on Amazon Prime after it's 15 city theatrical run along with a two year run on Showtime. Dr. God's new animated series HELL DEN is currently available on SYFY Channel where they serve as the Creator, Executive Producers, Producers, Directors and Writers. Season 2 premiered in Fall of 2020 as part of TZGZ. With multiple projects in development, BOC is currently pitching his pilot THE ANARCHIST COOKBOOK (based on the IP of the same name) under Executive Producer Emmet McDermott (60 Second Docs). Please give him more stuff to do. It brings him joy. http://itsboc.com/ - Writer/Director/Dreamweaver http://drgodcomedy.com - Member of premiere comedy group https://www.facebook.com/ALLIMPROV/ - Signature Creative Coaching https://www.facebook.com/Improv1to1/ - Owner & Founder http://www.improvutopia.com/ - Board Member http://www.packtheater.com/ - Co-Founder
If This Is True would like to introduce you to Brian James O'Connell. You might know him from his directorial success with the movie Bloodsucking Bastards, or his TV success with Hell Den on SYFY, or his improv success with Dr. God, iO West and the Pack Theater. I'll bet you didn't know that BOC is a fan of modern Roman history, went to college with Captain America, and thinks about improv ALL THE TIME (It's true, he does). We recorded this on Say Day and touched on the importance of appreciating one another. BOC apologizes for the quality of his voice. I apologize for my editing skills. Otherwise, it's a damn good episode! If This Is True appreciates YOU! Enjoy the episode! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/christopher-hall7/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/christopher-hall7/support
This talk features inspiring stories from Dr. Nancy Oriol's work with the Family Van and Dr. James O'Connell's work with Healthcare for the Homeless. Also featured are influential Native American leaders: Harvard Medical School student Victor Anthony Lopez-Carmen and acclaimed radio host Tiokasin Ghosthorse. The ancient understanding of healthcare rooted in compassion for people and planet, resonates deeply with mystic and visionary Sadhguru, who recently visited several Native American reservations. Sadhguru explains how to approach healthcare indiscriminately and offers wisdom from his groundbreaking social justice projects. Together, the panel brainstorms creative approaches to improve healthcare for Native Americans.
This talk features inspiring stories from Dr. Nancy Oriol's work with the Family Van and Dr. James O'Connell's work with Healthcare for the Homeless. Also featured are influential Native American leaders: Harvard Medical School student Victor Anthony Lopez-Carmen and acclaimed radio host Tiokasin Ghosthorse. The ancient understanding of healthcare rooted in compassion for people and planet, resonates deeply with mystic and visionary Sadhguru, who recently visited several Native American reservations. Sadhguru explains how to approach healthcare indiscriminately and offers wisdom from his groundbreaking social justice projects. Together, the panel brainstorms creative approaches to improve healthcare for Native Americans.Conscious Planet: https://www.consciousplanet.org Sadhguru App (Download): http://onelink.to/sadhguru__appOfficial Sadhguru Website: http://isha.sadhguru.orgSadhguru Exclusive: https://isha.sadhguru.org/in/en/sadhguru-exclusiveSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Under cover of darkness 3 Para began their assault on Mount Longdon in June 1982. The three platoons of B Company each approached the mountain silently, treading carefully through a series of defensive minefields. But following an explosion fighting quickly escalated with shocking speed and severity, resulting in some of the harshest close-hand fighting experienced by British troops since the Korean war. Read 'Eating Smoke: One Man's D escent into Crystal Meth Psychosis in Hong Kong's Triad Heartland.' Paperback UK: https://amzn.to/2YoeaPx Paperback US: https://www.amazon.com/dp/0993543944 Support the podcast at: https://www.patreon.com/christhrall (£2 per month plus perks) https://www.gofundme.com/f/support-our-veterans-to-tell-their-story https://paypal.me/TeamThrall Sign up for my NON-SPAM newsletter and FREE books: https://christhrall.com/mailing-list/ Social media Links: https://facebook.com/christhrall https://twitter.com/christhrall https://instagram.com/chris.thrall https://linkedin.com/in/christhrall https://youtube.com/christhrall https://discord.gg/yqvHRUN https://christhrall.com
Midwife Brooke Schmoe shares with Michelle the incredible and inspirational story of her journey to becoming a midwife and her calling to provide high-caliber health care to women in all stages of life. Brooke believes that every woman deserves to be heard, helped, and supported by competent providers who care about her. Thus, The Midwife Bus was born! No one is turned away, regardless of their health history, socioeconomic status, or inability to pay. The Midwife Bus is a retired Bloodbank bus that has been renovated into an ultramodern midwifery clinic on wheels. It was first purchased by Charlie Rae Young, a Tampa midwife, who pioneered the idea of a mobile midwifery clinic to provide care to underserved populations. Brooke was inspired by Charlie's work (and by a serendipitously timed NPR interview with Dr. James O'Connell, a doctor for the homeless in Boston). After working at a high-volume birth center in Orlando, Florida, she was determined to do something with her midwifery training that would bring quality women's health care to the most vulnerable women in her hometown of Osceola County, Florida. When Brooke reached out to her, Charlie happened to be looking for a new home for the bus, as her philanthropic efforts had taken her in a different direction. She willingly gifted the bus to her to continue spreading the important work she had begun.Starting with a lot of passion but very few resources to help make this dream a reality, Brooke came across a grant opportunity offered by a local hospital chain, Orlando Health. The Midwife bus was blessed to be chosen out of dozens of applicants to receive their top Community Benefit Grant award in 2019. These resources allowed Brooke to complete phase two of the bus renovation and to get the bus back out on the road again!Brooke also serves as a homebirth midwife for Central Florida Families."I am driving a bus. Like, just little ol' me, driving a bus. It's so random. But it's working, and really God is using me to touch so many people. And, just to help where people wouldn't normally have any options or any resources. Just being able to help them, it's been amazing."—Brooke Schmoe About Brooke:Brooke Schmoe is a native of Kissimmee, Florida. She grew up amongst the medical journals and birth stories of her OBGYN father, which sparked an interest in women's health from an early age. Birthing her first daughter under the care of a midwife inspired her to pursue midwifery as a profession. She went on to have three more home births (all girls!) under the care of amazing midwives. She graduated in 2015 from The Florida School of Traditional Midwifery in Gainesville, Florida. She began dreaming about The Midwife Bus concept after working at a high volume practice and seeing the blatant disparities in education, pregnancy health, emotional health, birth outcomes, and quality of life between the wealthy and indigent families. Wanting to bring gentle, respectful care into all neighborhoods, she founded The Midwife Bus in 2018. Brooke cares sincerely about educating women, giving them autonomy over their own healthcare, and connecting families with resources that will help them establish self-reliance. She currently resides in South-East Orlando with her husband Nathan and their four daughters. Connect with Brooke:Donate: The Midwife BusWebsite: https://themidwifebus.org/Facebook: @themidwifebusInstagram: @themidwifebus Connect with Michelle Smith:Classes with Michelle: birtheaseservices.com/birth-ease-childbirth-education, birtheasehypnobirth.com/hypnobirthing-classes-orlando-michelleFacebook: Birth Ease, The Birth Ease Podcast, Birth Ease Baby Loss SupportInstagram: @birtheasemichellesmith, @birtheaselossssupportYouTube: Birth EaseLinkedIn: Birth Ease Michelle SmithWebsite: BirthEaseServices.com birtheasehypnobirth.com
James O'connell - Three Days in June... with TRE's Giles Brown
In this episode, Chris, Sam, and Jaymie enlist the help of Brian James O'Connell to fix improv.
Actor, improviser, and writer Brian James O'Connell returns to the podcast for a third time! Brian reached out to Jason to talk about improv because of something he heard in our recent episode with Alrinthea Carter. The two talk about the power you have in improv, how far mastering your instrument goes in improv, how improv theaters can improve and manage the dynamic between the school and stage time, what the world of live comedy will look like after lockdown, and more! Instagram: @b3oc, @ThereItIsPod, @JasonFarrPics Facebook: @improv1to1, @ThereItIsPod Twitter: @ThereItIsPod, @JasonFarrJokes Subscribe to our comedy newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/e22defd4dee2/thereitis
On the second part of this podcast Jimmy Morham recounts the bloody battle for Mount Longdon and the recovery back to the UK following the Argentinian surrender. He then moves on to the lessons learned from the war and how he applied them to the training environment of the STA Patrol's Selection Course. On desert island dits Jimmy's choice of book is Three Days In June by James O'Connell. His film choice is Tunes Of Glory Colin's pick this week is Red And Green Life Machine: Diary Of The Falklands Field Hospital by Rick Jolly. Kev's choice is Wingate and The Chindits: Redressing The Balance by David Rooney. Find out about the current serving unit at STA Patrols Special Observer. Follow us on Instagram "@the_unconventional_soldier_pod" and Facebook "The Unconventional Soldier Pod" (search for @lateo82). We are also available to download on iTunes, Spotify, Youtube and Google podcasts. Email us: unconventionalsoldier@gmail.com This episode brought to you in association with ISARR a veteran owned company.
This week's episode of How I Built My Business features business partners/childhood friends James O'Connell and Dave Carlsen. After some whiskey and a coin toss, they landed on the name Carlsen O'Connell Commercial Real Estate. They help companies find office space to rent and commercial buildings to buy. Need help with commercial real estate? Go to www.CarlsenOConnell.com for more information.
Brian James O'Connell is a filmmaker, improviser, and all around great dude. Ben & Jenn talk to BOC about sheltering in place in this weird time out in LA. We also talk about how to find joy in Southern colloquialisms which means, especially for improvisers, that this was one heck of a rioting interview!
In the very first episode of Exploring Improv, host Andy Barrett speaks with the renowned and multi-talented Brian James O'Connell (aka "BOC"). BOC is a Co-Founder of The Pack Theater in Los Angeles, an actor, writer and director who (among many other things) co-created the TV series "Hell Den" and directed the film "Bloodsucking Bastards" Please subscribe the Exploring improv, and check me out on Twitter @ironblimp. Also be sure to like Relentless Comedy on Facebook. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/exploringimprov/support
Brian James O'Connell is a working actor, writer, director, filmmaker and teacher in Los Angeles. He currently teaches as part of the Core Faculty at The Pack Theater and at iOWest. Brian is the Creator and Executive Producer of Big Yellow Taxi, the Executive Producer and Founder of Long Hard Tuesdays, the Executive Producer and Founder of The Lady Invitational and Executive Producer of Genre Night! at The Pack Theater. Brian is a graduate of the prestigious North Carolina School of the Arts (David Gordon Green, Danny McBride, Jody Hill, Anthony Mackie, Peter Hedges, Mary-Louise Parker, Dane DeHaan, Terrence Mann, Chris Parnell, Jada Pinkett-Smith and Jeff Nichols) and moved to Los Angeles in 2000 to follow his dreams of a career in filmmaking. BOC (as his friends call him) is part of the comedy collective Dr. God, who recently completed their first feature film project BLOODSUCKING BASTARDS, starring Fran Kranz, Pedro Pascal, Joey Kern, Joel Murray, and Emma Fitzpatrick, which O'Connell directed (his third feature as a director) as well as co-writing the script with Dr. God. The film was the Opening Night Premiere at Slamdance in 2015 and is available now on DVD and On-Demand after it's theatrical run. A regular performer, coach and teacher in Los Angeles, Brian derives most of his approach to improv from The Deconstruction, the form created by iO's legendary team, The Family (Miles Stroth, Neil Flynn, Ian Roberts, Matt Besser, Adam McKay, Ali Faranahkian.). With his internationally touring improv duo Billyhawk and iOWest's legendary improv group Dr. God, Brian has performed and taught in festivals in Denver, Phoenix, Toronto, Philadelphia, Austin, Salt Lake City, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Chapel Hill, NC. Well-respected as one of Los Angeles' premier improvisers, Brian is famous for his encyclopedic knowledge of minutiae and his insane recall ability and memory. BOC also serves as the Director of Camp Outreach and is a board member for the non-profit Camp Improv Utopia, the premiere improv, acting and training retreat in the country. Check out www.facebook.com/Improv1to1/ for Brian's signature 1-on-1 improv coaching.
Ep.118: For some reason, the studios have chosen the seemingly unimportant day of September 18th to release a bunch of potentially interesting movies, and The Movie Guys are all over them - "Maze Runner: The Scorch Trials", "Everest", "Captive" and "Black Mass". Plus, filmmakers and comedy troupe Dr. God cast members Brian James O'Connell & Justin Ware discuss their new horror/comedy "Bloodsucking Bastards", now on V.O.D. The Movie Guys are Paul Preston, Karen Volpe, Adam Witt & Bart Kias Like good movie talk? Please subscribe! www.themovieguys.net @TheMovieGuys Vimeo.com/themovieguys iTunes: bit.ly/1l0hCpG Tumblr: themovieguys.tumblr.com/ Instagram.com/themovieguys Youtube.com/user/TheMovieGuysOnline