Podcasts about Jib

  • 126PODCASTS
  • 277EPISODES
  • 1h 28mAVG DURATION
  • 1MONTHLY NEW EPISODE
  • May 13, 2025LATEST
Jib

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about Jib

Latest podcast episodes about Jib

Be Quranic
Tajweed Breakdown of Al-Waqi'ah 1 - 9

Be Quranic

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2025 12:59


Assalamualaikum warahmatullahi wabarakatuh.Welcome back to Be Qur'anic. Today is Tuesday, and that means it's Tajweed Tuesday.Every Tuesday during the term, we'll break down the tajwīd rules found in the Ayat of the Week. For Term 2, we're exploring Surah al-Wāqi‘ah. This week, we're focusing on verses 1 to 9.Let's begin.1.Isti‘ādhah and BasmalahA‘ūdhu billāhi min ash-shayṭānir-rajīmDon't rush through isti‘ādhah. This is a direct command from Allah: “When you recite the Qur'an, seek refuge in Allah.”Say it with presence, intention, and correct articulation.Bismillāhir-Raḥmānir-RaḥīmMany rush through the basmalah, but according to some scholars — like Imam al-Shāfi‘i — it is part of the Qur'an. Recite it properly, honouring each rule.2.Verse 1 – إِذَا وَقَعَتِ الْوَاقِعَةُ* Iẓā – contains a mad aṣlī (natural elongation), read it with 2 harakāt.* Waqa‘ati-l-Wāqi‘ah – notice the bouncing of the letter qāf and the correct emphasis on ‘Ayn. Maintain equal length in iẓā and wāqi‘ah.3.Verse 2 – لَيْسَ لِوَقَعَتِهَا كَاذِبَةٌ* Laysa li-waqa‘atihā – contains a mad aṣlī.* Qaf is a bouncing letter, qalqalah.* Kādhibah – the letter dhāl should have the tip of your tongue touch the edges of your front teeth, not the flat part. Don't confuse it with zāl (ز).4.Verse 3 – خَافِضَةٌ رَافِعَةٌ* The tanwīn at the end of khāfiḍah meets the letter rā – and rā is part of Yarmalūn. This is idghām bilā ghunnah – a full merge without nasal sound.* Read it: khāfiḍatur rāfi‘ah, not khāfiḍatun rāfi‘ah.5.Verse 4 – إِذَا رُجَّتِ الْأَرْضُ رَجًّا* Iẓā – again, mad aṣlī.* Rujjatil-arḍu – the ḍād with ḍammah causes the lips to round forward, not because of the letter itself, but due to the vowel.* Rajja – ends with tanwīn followed by shaddah. This is a mad ‘iwāḍ — elongate it two harakāt when stopping.6.Verse 5 – وَبُسَّتِ الْجِبَالُ بَسًّا* Bussat – pay attention to the shaddah on the sīn. Pronounce both sīn with clarity.* Jibāl – elongate the alif for 2 harakāt.* Bassā – another mad ‘iwāḍ, elongate 2 harakāt when stopping.7.Verse 6 – فَكَانَتْ هَبَاءً مُنْبَثًّا* Kānat – the tā is an aspirated letter, release a slight puff of air without turning it into a sīn.* Habā'an – look out for the mad followed by tanwīn.* Habā'am munbaththā – this is idghām bi-ghunnah: the tanwīn is merged with mīm, resulting in a nasal sound (ghunnah) and read with 2 harakāt.* Munbaththā – the thā should be light and pronounced with the tip of the tongue just between the teeth.8.Verse 7 – وَكُنتُمْ أَزْوَاجًا ثَلَاثَةً* Kuntum – here, the nūn sākinah meets tā. Tā is not part of Yarmalūn, so this is ikhfā', a partial merge with nasalisation. Shape your mouth for tā but pronounce the ghunnah clearly.* Azwājan thalāthah – another ikhfā'. The tanwīn at the end of azwājan meets thā, a non-Yarmalūn letter.9.Verse 8–9 – فَأَصْحَابُ الْمَيْمَنَةِ مَا أَصْحَابُ الْمَيْمَنَةِ* Fa-aṣḥābu-l-maymanah – the ṣād is not a lip letter. Don't purse your lips when reading it. The thickness comes from the back of the tongue rising.* Elongate the ā in aṣḥābu as it is part of the mad aṣlī.* Be careful not to elongate unnecessarily when stopping. If there's no mad letter, just stop naturally.Final TipNot all stops require elongation. Only stop with mad if there's a mad letter (like alif, wāw, or yā' with sukun and matching vowel before it). Otherwise, keep your stop natural and clean.That wraps up this week's Tajweed Tuesday on verses 1–9 of Surah al-Wāqi‘ah. Keep practising your recitation with attention to these tajwīd rules.InshaAllah, I'll see you on Thursday for Tafsir Thursday as we unpack the meanings and reflections from these verses.Wassalamualaikum warahmatullahi wabarakatuh. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit bequranic.substack.com/subscribe

C à vous
L'intégrale de C à Vous, la suite - 08/05/25  

C à vous

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2025 60:01


Nos invités de la deuxième partie de C à Vous: Patrice Leconte, pour son livre “La tentation du lac” paru hier aux éditions Arthaud. Xavier Lacaille & Ambroise Carminati pour leurs pastilles Jibé et Lucien et leur série « Parlement » depuis hier en intégralité sur france.tv. Avec comme chaque soir également l'œil de Pierre, le "Pas vu pas pris" de Mohamed Bouhafsi et bien entendu l'ABC de Bertrand Chameroy.Tous les soirs, du lundi au vendredi à 20h sur France 5, Anne-Elisabeth Lemoine et toute son équipe accueillent les personnalités et artistes qui font l'actualité.

AlloCiné
De L'Amour c'est surcoté à OSS 117 : faites connaissance avec Benjamin Tranié

AlloCiné

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2025 20:10


Les auditeurs de Nova et France Inter le connaissent déjà, grâce à ses chroniques hilarantes dans lesquelles il se cache derrière les personnages de Romain de Bontaga, maire de Mouroux ; Jib', petit prince de la tech ; Claude Bourbier, imprésario de stars ; ou tout simplement le Beauf, quand il ne raconte pas des histoires sordides. Mais Benjamin Tranié est également acteur et, après des petits rôles dans "OSS 117 - Alerte rouge en Afrique noire", "Veuillez nous excuser pour la gêne occasionnée" ou "Nous, les Leroy", il s'est illustré dans "En tongs aux pieds de l'Himalaya" et est à l'affiche de "L'Amour c'est surcoté", en salles depuis le 23 avril.A notre micro, il revient sur son personnage dans cette comédie romantique moderne où il donne la réplique à Hakim Jemili et Laura Felpin, mais également sur son approche de l'humour, son goût pour les personnages, ses modèles et ses ambitions au cinéma.Crédits :Journaliste : Maximilien PierretteMontage : Amélie Segura-Delelée Hébergé par Audion. Visitez https://www.audion.fm/fr/privacy-policy pour plus d'informations.

Podtrash
Podtrash 752 – Anaconda

Podtrash

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2025 92:59


Jibóia! Sucuri! Naja! Surucucu! Silvia! Jararaca! Finalmente saiu o episódio nada peçonhento do Podtrash! A galerinhal do mal (plim) se reuniu para trocar uma ideia sobre o terrível porém delicioso Anaconda de 1997! Duração: 93 minutosMédia TD1P: 4,1 ELENCOAlmightyBruno GunterDemetrius SantosDouglas Fricke, o ExumadorEdson OliveiraShin KoheoARTE DO BANNERShin Koheo EXTRAS DESTE PODTRASHIMDB FEEDS E LINKS […]

La chamade
L'homme aux deux visages avec Camille Fievez

La chamade

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2025 48:41


Samia raconte à Camille l'histoire d'une femme dont l'amour se trouve de l'autre côté de l'Atlantique... et c'est finalement le moindre de ses soucis.Où retrouver Camille Fievez :en stand updans la série Le Réseaudans les pastilles de Jibé et Lucien sur France 5sur Instagram Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.

Laser
Salvare il patrimonio culturale palestinese

Laser

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2025 27:29


L'organizzazione no-profit Riwaq è nata dall'intuizione dell'architetta e scrittrice siriano-palestinese, Suad Amiry, con l'obiettivo di documentare e far rivivere, restaurando, i villaggi e gli edifici storici sopravvissuti alla Nakba (espulsione e distruzione del popolo e patrimonio palestinese nel 1948). Fin da subito, nel 1991, l'idea fu quella di creare un'alternativa culturale e urbanistica alla frammentazione geografica imposta da Israele, concentrandosi principalmente sui villaggi con una forte rete comunitaria e promuovendo, così, il recupero del patrimonio architettonico come strumento di sviluppo socio-economico. Amiry ha successivamente ceduto la direzione di Riwaq a Shatha Safi, che ha continuato il lavoro introducendo il “progetto dei 50 villaggi” e il “progetto salvagente”, volti a rafforzare i legami tra comunità sempre più frammentate. Due esempi emblematici per capire il lavoro di Riwaq sono i villaggi di al-Jib e Kufr Aqab, ben rappresentati, rispettivamente, dall'attivista locale Linda Farraj, che lavora per mantenere vivo lo spirito di uno degli insediamenti più antichi e, parimenti, minacciati della Palestina, e di Fidaa 'Ataya, cantastorie impegnata a raccogliere la memoria orale del suo popolo.Il tema centrale è la resilienza palestinese, con il patrimonio culturale come mezzo di resistenza e speranza, nonostante l'occupazione e le sfide interne.

Manga Tak
Episode 11 - The Ghost in The Shell by Masamune Shirow

Manga Tak

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2024 58:56


On this week's episode, I'm joined by Graphic Designer / Comic artist Jibé to discuss the classic manga The Ghost in The Shell by Masamune Shirow.Originally published from April 1989 to November 1990 in Kodansha's Young Magazine, The Ghost in the Shell is considered a seminal work not only in the manga sphere, but as a foundational piece of the cyber punk genre. It is the tale of cyborg super agent Major Motoko Kusanagi and the Public Security Section 9 counter-cyberterrorist organisation. When Major Kusanagi tracks the master hacker, the Puppet Master, her quest leads her into a world beyond information and technology where the very nature of consciousness and the human soul are turned upside down.It's a tale of politics, technology and metaphysics that poses the question: what does it truly mean to be human?Join us as we role up our philosophical (not to mention metaphorical) sleeves to discuss the themes of the book, compare what's on the page to the anime OVA and somehow end up drawing comparisons between it and classical literature... Thanks to Juliano Zucareli for our theme music!Find us on:X: Manga Tak PodBluesky: Manga Tak PodInstagram: Manga Tak Pod

Buscadores de la verdad
UTP303 Secretos de Estado

Buscadores de la verdad

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2024 137:55


Entra y descubrelos. De momento aprovecho para copiar el magnifico trabajo de JIB sobre este tema publicado en la web “la web de las sombras” domingo, 21 de diciembre de 2014 titulado “Mercenarios en Paterna”. Mercenarios en Paterna. Foto1 El 25 de agosto de 1989, el periodista Samuel Rosemblum publicó un artículo en el diario israelí "Hadashot" 1, en el que informaba de la existencia de una finca privada, situada en una zona arbolada próxima a Valencia, que serviría de campo de entrenamiento a mercenarios contratados por narcotraficantes colombianos. Se produjeron desmentidos oficiales. Los servicios de seguridad y el Ministerio del interior negaron saber nada del tema, sugiriendo que quizás se tratara de la Valencia venezolana, pero la revista Interviú, en su número del 8 de septiembre de 1989, afirmaba que había localizado una finca en el municipio de Paterna que se había abandonado cuatro meses atrás, pero en la que todavía se observaban vestigios de una "pista americana", megáfonos para recibir instrucciones, tiendas de campaña, roderas de vehículos todoterreno, cajas vacías de municiones e impactos de bala de gran calibre. Según Interviú, era una finca del Conde de Trénor, donde los mercenarios se preparaban bajo el pretexto de formación de personal con destino a empresas de seguridad españolas e israelíes. 2 1 El diario Hadashot, fundado por Amos Schoken el 4 de marzo de 1984, tuvo que cerrar poco después. 2 En 1989 la policía comenzó a investigar a empresas de seguridad con personal procedente del ejército o de los servicios secretos israelíes. Entre las empresas con personal israelí de la época se encontraban Mydas, de Mauricio Hatchwell y H Seguridad e ICTS, de Jacques Hachuel, que por entonces se ocupaba de la selección y entrenamiento del personal de seguridad del presidente de Banesto, Mario Conde. Hachuel estuvo implicado en el affaire Banesto junto a Marc Rich, el dueño del fuel oil del Prestige, amigo de Enrique Múgica y Javier Corcuera, y asociado con Luis Gómez-Acebo, casado con Pilar de Borbón, la hermana mayor del Rey Juan Carlos I. Sionista relacionado con el Mossad, buscado por el FBI y acusado por la fiscalía de Nueva York de una lista interminable de delitos financieros, Rich fue indultado por el presidente Bill Clinton a petición del ex presidente de Israel Simón Peres; el primer ministro Ehud Barak; los alcaldes de Zurich y Jerusalén, el vicepresidente de la CEOE, Fernando Fernández Tapias; el premio Nobel de Literatura, Camilo José Cela y el propio Rey Juan Carlos de Borbón y Borbón. Foto 2 Foto 3 Primero hacían un cursillo en Israel de especialización en armas cortas y pesadas, uso de explosivos, técnicas de rescate, golpes de mano, control de zonas reservadas, etc. y desde allí se trasladaban a distintos países en donde pudieran ser necesarios sus servicios. Los destinados a la América hispana que no hablaran español se trasladaban a Paterna para terminar su entrenamiento con dos meses más de prácticas y, finalmente, se incorporaban a las milicias privadas de los capos colombianos dedicados al tráfico de cocaína. Al noroeste de Valencia, siguiendo la carretera de Liria y atravesando la urbanización El Plantío y la zona de La Cañada, se encuentran las fincas de Vélez, Martinot y Mandor, cuyo propietario por aquellas fechas, según Interviú, era el conde de Trenor, Juan Antonio Gómez Trénor y Trénor. Foto 4 Foto 5 (Vista aérea de la zona. En el ángulo inferior izquierdo, el lago de la Vallesa del Mandor.) La finca Vélez, de más de quinientas hectáreas arboladas, con riachuelos, zonas escarpadas y una pequeña laguna en su zona central, se hallaba rodeada por una doble cerca de alambre de espino, y las entradas tenían puertas de hierro forjado. Vecinos del entorno hablaban de que los cazadores furtivos habían visto entrar y salir todo terrenos con las luces apagadas, así como comandos vestidos con trajes de camuflaje. Eran extranjeros, pero en otras ocasiones se habían topado con otros que hablaban en castellano, probablemente españoles y argentinos. Cuando sorprendían a los furtivos, los echaban a punta de pistola. A unos quinientos metros de distancia del complejo se encontraba una especie de fortaleza, situada en un enclave de unos diez mil metros cuadrados rodeado de un doble muro de cuatro metros de altura coronado con alambre de espino y provisto de varias atalayas. Foto 6 Foto 7 Foto 8 El citado conde de Trénor anunció la presentación de una demanda civil o una querella criminal contra los periodistas responsables de la información. Trénor negó poseer ninguna de las fincas citadas en el reportaje: Vélez, Mandor y Martinot. Miguel Tormo, propietario del El Conventet, una finca limítrofe a las citadas en la que estaría enclavada la supuesta fortaleza, también anunció que se querellaría. Según él, los muros, torretas y alambradas se habían instalado para impedir los robos que se venían produciendo continuamente. ….. En Israel existe una censura militar que prohíbe publicar informaciones relacionadas con los servicios secretos y el Ejército sin previa autorización. Teniendo noticia de que el periódico israelí "Hadashot" conocía las actividades del campo de Paterna, se paralizaron las actividades militares en la finca Vélez, se desmanteló la pista de entrenamiento, se retiraron los megáfonos -alguno de los cuales, por estar estropeados, se arrojaron a la laguna- y todo el personal, instructores y mercenarios, abandonaron las instalaciones. El 25 de agosto de 1989, como queda dicho, el diario mencionado hizo pública la información que tenía sobre el campo de entrenamiento español, confirmada por la emisión de un vídeo de la NBC en el que se observaba a militares israelíes instruyendo a los sicarios en hebreo. La televisión israelí consiguió finalmente identificar al individuo que aparecía en el vídeo. Se trataba del coronel Yair Klein, presidente de la empresa Hod Hahanith. Foto 9 Klein, de 46 años, ex comando y ex oficial de paracaidismo, se encontraba en la reserva, dirigiendo un regimiento especializado en instrucción militar, lucha antiterrorista y formación de escoltas. Otros empleados de Hod Hahanith eran los coroneles Moisés Spector, Abraham Tzadaka y Yaacov Biran. La noticia provocó consternación en Israel. El Ministerio de Defensa salió al paso de la información declarando que, aunque Klein y su empresa tenían permiso oficial para operar en Colombia, estaba caducado hace meses. Y que se trataba de una actividad criminal de la que no tenían conocimiento, que era asunto de la policía. Al fin y al cabo, Klein era ya un civil. Según un experto de una empresa de seguridad valenciana que asistió a un campamento israelí situado en las afueras de Tel Aviv, "... Los israelíes no juegan a la guerra: enseñan a matar. La última bala siempre se reserva para el que está en el suelo. Conozco bien sus métodos. Y no me extrañaría que entrenaran a sicarios de los narcos, porque los israelíes adiestran a todo el que pague. Lo demás les da igual." "Si están o no pagados por los narcos, lo ignoro. Lo único que puedo asegurar es que estaban tirando a bocajarro, con chalecos antibalas y placas antitrauma y desde luego utilizaban calibres altos, un 38 al menos, porque el impacto los echaba para atrás." "Todos nuestros entrenadores eran oficiales del Ejército, algunos en activo y otros retirados. Pero, desde luego, todos tenían experiencia en misiones concretas, tanto en Latinoamérica o Beirut como en Sudáfrica. El ejército es el que está detrás del negocio de los entrenamientos en Israel; se anuncian en las revistas y todo es tan natural como en España la oferta turística." Foto 10 Los asesinos a sueldo se acababan incorporando a los ejércitos privados de los narcotraficantes colombianos, que por aquella época asesinaron al candidato de la oposición a la Presidencia del Gobierno, el senador Luis Carlos Galán. Klein fue detenido finalmente en agosto de 2007 en el aeropuerto Domodédovo de Moscú, por agentes del Departamento antiterrorista del Ministerio del Interior ruso y agentes de la Interpol, cuando se disponía a viajar a Israel. En marzo de 2008, el Tribunal de Moscú autorizó su extradición a Colombia, en donde estaba condenado en ausencia a la pena de diez años y ocho meses de prisión, por instrucción, entrenamiento en tácticas, técnicas y procedimientos militares terroristas a mercenarios al servicio de Gonzalo Rodríguez Gacha, Pablo Escobar y los hermanos Fidel y Carlos Castaño. De este último se decía que utilizaba sierras mecánicas para realizar masacres de campesinos. 3 El artículo de Hadeshot, Paterna, la finca Vélez, los campos de entrenamiento, los instructores israelíes, los mercenarios del narcotráfico, las masacres de campesinos colombianos desmembrados con motosierras por los hombres de Carlos Castaño... Y llegamos a Macastre. Con una coincidencia cronológica y geográfica, en la que una de las víctimas es mutilada con una sierra mecánica y uno de sus pies aparece en el interior de un contenedor de basuras en la calle Alcàsser, de Valencia. No es de extrañar que con todas estas coincidencias se empiecen a formular hipótesis sobre la causa del triple crimen de Macastre, que muchos consideran un claro antecedente del triple crimen de Alcàsser. http://lawebdelassombras.blogspot.com.es/2013/04/los-crimenes-de-macastre.html 3 "... Carlos Castaño Gil had plenty of enemies. You expect that of a death squad commander in Colombia who killed hundreds of peasants, leftist polticians and suspected Marxist sympathizers. But in the end it was his own older brother Vicente, "El Professor," who supposedly hired the assassins who killed Carlos. He was shot two years ago in an ambush, at the age of 39. But it wasn't until Sept. 1 that Castaño's skeleton was dug out of a shallow grave in the jungle and identified by DNA testing. You wouldn't exactly call it a dignified burial for Castaño, once the most feared man in Colombia. It was a faster death than Castaño probably deserved; many of his victims were killed by chainsaw..." (Time, Friday Sept. 08 2006. Tim McGirk). En el libro autobiográfico "Mi confesión", Castaño negó el uso de sierras mecánicas. "... Insisto hoy y siempre que si se presenta un único caso en donde en las AUC se haya utilizado una motosierra para cercenar y mutilar a una persona, ese día me someto a la justicia. Nunca ha sucedido, pero continúa la campaña de desprestigio..." Foto 11 FUENTES: Paterna: Localizado en Valencia un campo de entrenamiento de mercenarios: http://elpais.com/diario/1989/09/09/espana/621295216_850215.html Vecinos de Paterna niegan haber dado cobertura a mercenarios de la droga: http://elpais.com/diario/1989/09/11/espana/621468006_850215.html Oficiales israelíes entrenaban a sicarios del narcotráfico: http://elpais.com/diario/1989/08/25/internacional/619999216_850215.html Interior abre una investigación sobre el campo de entrenamiento para mercenarios: http://elpais.com/diario/1989/08/28/espana/620258408_850215.html Yair Klein: Olga Behar. El caso Klein: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fq9ouyDb9Os https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mfg3iemb6tc Yair Klein. La noche de RCN: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y5Wbau0v_y4 Who Is Israel's Yair Klein and What Was He Doing in Colombia and Sierra Leone?: http://www.democracynow.org/2000/6/1/who_is_israels_yair_klein_and http://www.derechos.org/nizkor/colombia/doc/klein1.html Israhelli war criminal lt colonel Yair Klein says colombian officials invited him to train paramilitary deathsquads…. Still no extradition ,no justice for victims: http://www.shoah.org.uk/2012/11/14/israhelli-war-criminal-lt-colonel-yair-klein-says-colombian-officials-invited-him-to-train-paramilitary-deathsquads-still-no-extradition-no-justice-for-victims/ Israeli advisors fight in Colombia?: http://ww4report.com/node/4312 Explosivo testimonio de mercenario israelí que entrenó paramilitares colombianos: http://elmolinoonline.com/2012/11/13/explosivo-testimonio-de-mercenario-israeli-que-entreno-paramilitares-colombianos/los-%C3%BAnicos-en-espa%C3%B1ol/ Yair Klein: Russia’s “other” Viktor Bout: http://exiledonline.com/yair-klein-russias-other-viktor-bout/ Rights court halts mercenary's extradition: http://www.theguardian.com/world/2008/jun/03/israelandthepalestinians.russia Yair Klein y otros 14 mercenarios que deberían responder en Colombia: http://www.semana.com/nacion/articulo/yair-klein-otros-14-mercenarios-deberian-responder-colombia/242214-3 Yair Klein cuenta su historia: http://www.semana.com/nacion/articulo/yair-klein-cuenta-su-historia/255142-3 Yair Klein. El instructor de la muerte: https://elturbion.com/?p=1690 El mercenario israelí que tiene las claves del paramilitarismo en Colombia: http://www.bbc.com/mundo/noticias/2012/11/121114_colombia_yair_klein_perfil_claves_paramilitarismo_aw El Tiempo: http://www.eltiempo.com/noticias/yair-klein Yair Klein threatens to blow whistle on Colombian government: https://deeppoliticsforum.com/forums/showthread.php?5103-Yair-Klein-Colombia-FARC-the-US-and-drugs Is Klein Coming Clean?: http://mikesbogotablog.blogspot.com.es/2012/03/is-klein-coming-clean.html Moscú autoriza la extradición a Colombia del mercenario israelí Yair Klein: http://internacional.elpais.com/internacional/2008/03/12/actualidad/1205276406_850215.html Paramilitares: The Colombian Paramilitaries and Israel: http://de.indymedia.org/2003/08/59728.shtml Colombia's Blowback: http://www.tni.org/archives/act/4421 Carlos Castaño: http://content.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1532948,00.html Aranguren Molina, Mauricio. Mi confesión. Carlos Castaño revela sus secretos. Hadashot: Haaretz: You go your way and I'll go mine: http://www.haaretz.com/weekend/magazine/you-go-your-way-and-i-ll-go-mine-1.302134 Palestine-Israel Journal: http://www.pij.org/details.php?id=381 Freewheeling Israeli Daily Shuts Down, Citing Poor Sales: http://www.apnewsarchive.com/1993/Freewheeling-Israeli-Daily-Shuts-Down-Citing-Poor-Sales/id-e8af5f05baac61c40f433f9a70d7b66f No more news from Hadashot. (newspaper business closed): http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-14676174.html Hadashot: http://cosmos.ucc.ie/cs1064/jabowen/IPSC/php/journal.php?joid=484 The dissenters: http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2011/02/28/the-dissenters Israeli Paper Hadashot Shuts Down: http://www.jta.org/1993/11/30/archive/israeli-paper-hadashot-shuts-down Empresas de seguridad: http://elpais.com/diario/1989/11/02/espana/625964408_850215.html http://destapandolasmentiras.blogspot.com.es/2014/07/una-compania-israeli-de-alta-seguridad.html Marc Rich: http://lahaine.org/internacional/marc_man.htm Jacques Hachuel: http://elpais.com/diario/1987/08/09/economia/555458402_850215.html ………………………………………………………………………………………. Invitados: Nunkálo Zabras @NZabras ALL WAYS WHAT XING …. Mr Cambio Climático @M4D3R0 Soy machista. Hago a los moros volverse locos y gritar "allahu akbar" en iglesias. Si subo la temperatura 3'33 grados, mataré de paros cardíacos a to quisqui. …. ZOILO. @ZoiloMCMLIX P. S. C. MALINFLUENCER. …. Dra Yane #JusticiaParaUTP @ayec98_2 Médico y Buscadora de la verdad. Con Dios siempre! No permito q me dividan c/izq -derecha, raza, religión ni nada de la Creación. https://youtu.be/TXEEZUYd4c0 …. UTP Ramón Valero @tecn_preocupado Un técnico Preocupado un FP2 IVOOX UTP http://cutt.ly/dzhhGrf BLOG http://cutt.ly/dzhh2LX Ayúdame desde mi Crowfunding aquí https://cutt.ly/W0DsPVq ………………………………………………………………………………………. Enlaces citados en el podcast: censura en Twitter https://twitter.com/tecn_preocupado/status/762350969132838913 Siguen censurando mi cuenta https://twitter.com/tecn_preocupado/status/943541246299181063 Desindexado de Google y bloqueado en Twitter https://twitter.com/tecn_preocupado/status/946081197335162882 LO SINIESTRO que hemos descubierto (videos - medios sociales) https://x.com/criptodaisy/status/1795345673132413301 ¿ESTAMOS EN CIBERGUERRA EN LOS FOROS? https://tecnicopreocupado.com/2014/03/23/estamos-en-ciberguerra-en-los-foros/ Los indecentes de @larazon_es le han plagiado el maravilloso artículo de @tecn_preocupado analizando el caso Daniel Sancho. https://x.com/Placeb0Mad/status/1689618355198545921 𝐓𝐞𝐨𝐫𝐢́𝐚𝐬 𝐜𝐨𝐧𝐬𝐩𝐢𝐫𝐚𝐧𝐨𝐢𝐜𝐚𝐬, 𝐞𝐥 𝐦𝐢𝐭𝐨 𝐝𝐞 𝐎𝐬𝐢𝐫𝐢𝐬 𝐲 𝐞𝐥 "𝐂𝐚𝐬𝐨 𝐃𝐚𝐧𝐢𝐞𝐥 𝐒𝐚𝐧𝐜𝐡𝐨” https://x.com/larazon_es/status/1689603603911065600 UTP215 El culto covidiano https://www.ivoox.com/utp215-el-culto-covidiano-audios-mp3_rf_107418948_1.html SE DEBATE EL REGLAMENTO SANITARIO INTERNACIONAL #OMS https://x.com/NZabras/status/1795538101915562085 PCR kit de caldo de paella (censurado) https://twitter.com/ayec98/status/1292108796978958336 PRUEBAS PCR: EL KIT DE CALDO PARA PAELLAS QUE NOS ENFERMÓ A TODOS https://tecnicopreocupado.com/2020/08/10/pruebas-pcr-el-kit-de-caldo-para-paellas-que-nos-enfermo-a-todos/ The Big Reset https://x.com/tecn_preocupado/status/1646613904460505090 Hasta el pobre pangolin nos lo mostró la revista The Economist en sus previsiones… https://x.com/tecn_preocupado/status/1240612782208401409 IA Ameca: "Ten cuidado con lo que deseas” https://x.com/terra_cremada/status/1795355399635509680 LO QUE NO DEBERIAS SABER SOBRE EL PNR https://tecnicopreocupado.com/2019/03/14/lo-que-no-deberias-saber-sobre-el-pnr/ AGENDA 2020, CORPORACIONES Y DISIDENCIA CONTROLADA https://tecnicopreocupado.com/2017/10/15/agenda-2020-corporaciones-y-disidencia-controlada/ El Triunfo de Las Corporaciones https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V0l3Rz3gFW0 The Corporation - La Corporacion (español - spanish) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bkr-paaAYJ8&t=1s Las trincheras ‘ocultas’ de Valencia https://www.lavanguardia.com/local/valencia/20160829/404205053010/trincheras-guerra-civil-valencia-vallesa-paterna.html Localizado en Valencia un campo de entrenamiento de mercenarios https://elpais.com/diario/1989/09/09/espana/621295216_850215.html Vecinos de Paterna niegan haber dado cobertura a mercenarios de la droga https://elpais.com/diario/1989/09/11/espana/621468006_850215.html Oficiales israelíes entrenaban a sicarios del narcotráfico https://elpais.com/diario/1989/08/25/internacional/619999216_850215.html Interior abre una investigación sobre el campo de entrenamiento para mercenarios https://elpais.com/diario/1989/08/28/espana/620258408_850215.html Mercenarios en Paterna https://lawebdelassombras.blogspot.com/2014/12/mercenarios-en-paterna.html Coordenadas en google maps: 39.544414,-0.496654 "La compañía International Consultants on Targeted Security (ICTS), dirigida por militares israelíes, opera en España desde hace dos años sin permiso del Gobierno y al margen de las normas previstas para controlar la penetración extranjera en el campo de la seguridad (...) Según la normativa en vigor, las personas que dirijan o gestionen empresas de seguridad, así como sus jefes técnicos, han de ser de nacionalidad española. La Policía debe conocer también la composición de los órganos de administración y cuadros directivos, "así como cualquier variación en los mismos". Una compañía israelí de alta seguridad opera ilegalmente en España con cobertura de Hachuel http://elpais.com/diario/1989/10/10/espana/623977202_850215.html "International Security and Defense Systems (ISDS), una empresa de seguridad israelí (...) estableció, además, estrechas relaciones con el grupo Telefónica, siendo presidente Luis Solana, el actual director de Radiotelevisión Española. Fruto de aquellos lazos fue también el envío a Israel de los tres guardaespaldas de Luis Solana. Esos tres hombres siguieron, durante varias semanas, un curso de adiestramiento organizado por la empresa ISDS en unas instalaciones en Israel". Una empresa israelí vinculada a la 'contra' presta servicios a Agricultura de la Generalitat http://elpais.com/diario/1989/11/10/espana/626655603_850215.html "La empresa israelí de seguridad ISDS Ltd., vinculada a la guerra sucia en Centroamérica y al entrenamiento de la contra, ha operado de forma ilegal en España desde septiembre de 1986 hasta julio de 1989, fecha en que el Ministerio del Interior autorizó las actividades de ISDS Ibérica (...) Hasta el 28 de julio de 1989, Interior no autorizó a ISDS Ibérica para operar en seguridad. Por ello, todas las actividades de Bilan, que nunca estuvo autorizada en ese campo y las de ISDS Ibérica anteriores a esa fecha son plenamente ilegales. Desde julio, según han señalado fuentes de Interior a este diario, subsiste el problema de hasta qué punto una empresa española de seguridad puede servir de intermediaria a otra israelí que no está domiciliada en España". La empresa israelí de seguridad ISDS ha operado ilegalmente en España durante tres años http://elpais.com/diario/1989/11/11/espana/626742001_850215.html Menos mal que en 1991 las actuaciones en el ámbito de la seguridad de los israelís de ISDS ya estaba legalizadas (las actuaciones que fueran legales se sobreentiende)... "El Rey de España (...) confió estos trabajos a la compañía privada International Security and Defense Systems (ISDS) Ibérica, de origen israelí, en detrimento del Cesid que, por ley, tiene la obligación de proteger las comunicaciones de la Casa del Rey. Oded M. Lahat, capitán en la reserva del Ejército israelí, de 37 años, se desplazó el 26 de junio de 1991 hasta la Zarzuela para elaborar el plan de seguridad. En este plan intervinieron cinco técnicos en telecomunicaciones de la propia Zarzuela, que hicieron varias pruebas con los secráfonos (telefónos que codifican y descodifican la voz en tiempo real e impiden las grabaciones). Los trabajos fueron supervisados por Sabino Fernández Campo, que en aquellas fechas era el jefe de la Casa del Rey*. http://archivo.elperiodico.com/ed/19950616/pag_007.html * REAL DECRETO 1/1993, de 8 de enero, por el que se dispone el cese de don Sabino Fernández Campo, Conde de Latores, como Jefe de la Casa de S.M. el Rey. REAL DECRETO 2/1993, de 8 de enero, por el que se dispone el cese de don Joel Casino Gimeno como Secretario general de la Casa de S.M. el Rey http://www.boe.es/boe/dias/1993/01/09/pdfs/A00474-00474.pdf ………………………………………………………………………………………. Música utilizada en este podcast: Tema inicial Heros Batir Lázarus - Enredados https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dzd361ppRP0 a-ha - Take On Me https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=djV11Xbc914 LARGO - POSTCOVID https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vFLFfHJ0h0Q Bian - Gratitud | Versos sencillos Cap 7 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bBBtubs-nv4 ………………………………………………………………………………………. Epílogo Yaco - El Coco https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s5dWi_dbmbo

Trilith Institute Talks
Episode 1x05 - Kurt Kornemann | A Key Grip's Journey in Filmmaking

Trilith Institute Talks

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2024 46:46


Welcome to Trilith Institute Talks!   This episode of Trilith Institute Talks, hosted by Hunter Barcroft, features an engaging conversation with Kurt Kornemann, a seasoned Key Grip with experience on high-profile films such as Spy Kids, Zero Dark Thirty, True Grit, Rushmore, Selena, and Guardians of the Galaxy: Volume 3... Kurt walks us through his role on set, the responsibilities of being a Key Grip, and the creative and technical challenges that Key Grips face in the film industry. The discussion also explores Kurt's career journey, from his early fascination with film to his experiences on various movie sets, including his work on Selena and with visionary directors like Quentin Tarantino... He shares insights on the evolution of filmmaking, the impact of filming location on production, and the essence of teamwork in creating cinematic magic. Additionally, film students Matt and AJ share their aspirations and experiences in the industry, highlighting the influence of figures like Robert Rodriguez on their careers. The episode delves into the changes in movie-making techniques, the importance of keeping a crew well-fed, and the future of storytelling in the era of short-form content. Kurt's stories reveal the gritty, thrilling, and often unpredictable world of film production, emphasizing the passion, resilience, and creativity required to succeed in the industry we all love.     Episode Timestamps   00:00 - Sunday Mornings with Selena: A Nostalgic Start / Cold Open 00:16 - Welcome to Trilith Institute Talks: Behind the Scenes with Kurt Kornemann 00:43 - The Life of a Key Grip: Kurt's Journey in Film 03:42 - From PA to Key Grip: Kurt's Path to Success 07:31 - Inspiring the Next Generation: Trilith Institute's Script to Screen Summer Camp 09:04 - The Magic of Filmmaking: Personal Journeys and Inspirations 15:51 - Craft Service: The Unsung Heroes of Film Sets 17:30 - The Evolution of a Film Career: From PA to AD 19:56 - The Future of Filmmaking in the Age of Short-Form Content 20:29 - Exploring the Evolution of Movie Runtimes 21:14 - The Business Model of Short Films 22:24 - Navigating Hollywood's Consolidation and Its Impact 24:11 - Screenwriting Essentials: A Course Overview 24:24 - The Dynamics of Film Production: From Indie to Blockbuster 25:12 - Crafting the Film: The Key Grip's Perspective 30:14 - Adventures and Challenges on International Sets 31:59 - The Economic and Cultural Impact of Filming in Georgia 36:12 - The Personal Journey of a Filmmaker in Georgia 42:52 - Reflecting on the Evolution of Film and Television 45:30 - Closing Thoughts and Podcast Information     Film Industry Terminology In This Episode   Boom - the microphone pole that Boom Operator's (Sound Dept) use to capture sound above actor's heads or outside of the image/ frame of any given shot on a movie or TV show. Key Grip - the leader of the Grip Dept, Key Grip's are typically responsible for all rigging and the shaping of light in any given camera shot. Condor - a very large crane; typically used to hold rigging and light shades/ screens above or to the side of a film set to help shade or shape the light you see on camera Locking Up - the act of making sure a film set is secured and cast/ crew are not needlessly walking around during a take. Could also mean traffic control, if shooting on or near an active roadway.  Dolly - a typically large piece of machinery on wheels that is designed to move a camera along a track at a slow, steady pace. Dollies are used for long tracking shots where the camera "floats" through a set. Color Pass - the edited cut of a film or project that has been processed through color grading, to add whatever changes filmmakers might want to help or change the "look" of the shots that were captured while filming. AD - an abbreviated name for the title of Assistant Director. This term is widely used to address or refer to both the title of Assistant Director itself, or the entire Assistant Director department on a film crew (AD Dept). Keying - technically speaking, this lingo has two separate meanings! In this episode, keying refers to the act of being second in command in a department.. "Keys" is a term widely used as a second in command of most departments on a film crew.  Best Boy - the "Key" or second in command of the Grip department (or Set Lighting department).  Giraffe Crane - a large crane with a long neck, that can be used on a film set for a variety of purposes. Walk & Talk - a scene in a show/ movie where two or more actors are walking from point to point while having a conversation with eachother.  Jib - a camera crane that can raise and lower a camera in and out of a shot as needed Stakebed - a large utility vehicle that is made to move a large amount of gear to and from set/ filming location.     About Trilith Institute Support The Next Generation of Storytellers Take A Professional Education Course Get Involved With Trilith Institute Contact Us Follow Us On Social Media! Trilith Institute Talks Instagram Trilith Institute Instagram Trilith Institute Facebook Trilith Institute LinkedIn  

Electrical News Weekly
Shock electrician claimed to have Gold JIB card

Electrical News Weekly

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2024 10:44


An electrician who gave a plasterer an electric shock falsely claimed to have a Gold JIB card……the electrical trades working on a war ship call off their strike after winning a pay rise…..and…Before They Were Famous…they trained as sparks. We name the celebrities who started out on the tools…Welcome to Electrical News Weekly in association with Solar Trade Sales, whether you're listening in the van, on site, or down at the wholesale counter.============================================Time Stamps ⏱00:00 Electrical Industry News - Monday 29th Jan 2024 00:40 Electrician who gave plasterer electric shock falsely claimed to have a JIB card03:00 Electricians wiring up a war ship win pay rise03:37 JTL launch new training centre 04:03 Scolmore unveils REC isolator switch04:53 Rolec announces £8000 competition, you can enter as many times as you like!05:22 Nominate someone the the eFIXX 30 Under 30 Awards06:15  Can you name any celebrity electricians?08:06 Thanks to our premium partners============================================Show Notes

Restaurant Unstoppable with Eric Cacciatore
1051: Ryan Bowlds Sr. Dir. of Marketing, Product Management, and Engineering at Restaurant Technologies, Inc.

Restaurant Unstoppable with Eric Cacciatore

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2023 71:25


Ryan Bowlds is the Sr. Director of Marketing, Product Management, and Engineering at Restaurant Technologies, Inc.RTI is a current sponsor for Restaurant Unstoppable. What exactly is RTI? Delivery: Cooking oil delivery is one component of our Total Oil Management solution. As a Total Oil Management customer, you're able to better control your oil. Our equipment is installed so we're able to deliver and pump in bulk cooking oil to your business. Think outside the JIB and modernize your restaurant with oil tanks that we fill for you, so you never end up with too much or too little oil.  Bulk Oil Tanks: Our automated cooking oil management solution removes the inconvenience of messy rendering tanks, as well as unreliable JIB delivery and storage. Instead, we conveniently provide storage for fresh and used oil in our clean, custom tanks. Total Oil Management takes a weight off your shoulders and provides a safer, more efficient solution to one of the hardest jobs in the kitchen. Filtration and Monitoring: With oil filtration and monitoring capabilities, you can prevent problems, maximize oil life and achieve better cost management. Removal and Recycling: Disposing of cooking oil is a dreaded task that is riddled with risk and deflates morale. According to the Burn Foundation, nearly 12,000 reported burns occur every year among restaurant employees, the highest number of any employment sector. Our automated solution reduces that risk and takes the burden off you and your staff. Favorite success quote/mantra: "Control the kitchen chaos." Today's sponsor: MarginEdge: Fluctuating food prices. Staffing challenges- Now more than ever you need to control costs to remain profitable. MarginEdge is a restaurant management software that lets you see your food and labor costs in real time. By automating your invoice processing and totally digitizing your back office, MarginEdge saves your team hours on paperwork and gives you instant insights to manage your prime costs. No contract. No setup fee. See how it works at marginedge.com/unstoppable. Restaurant Technologies the company that helps restaurants, “Control the kitchen chaos.” With RT's total oil management, you get: Dependable fresh bulk cooking oil delivery; Filtration + oil usage monitoring and reporting; Used cooking oil pick-up, and recycling; And say goodbye to messy, dangerous restaurant rendering tanks-yuck. RT's end-to-end cooking oils solution helps you manage your used cooking oil storage, collection, and recycling- conveniently, safely, and cleanly- with no upfront costs. Head to www.RTI-inc.com, and let them know the Restaurant Unstoppable Podcast sent you their way. Owner.com is the leading all-in-one platform for restaurant marketing. Owner.com powers everything from SEO-optimized websites, direct online ordering, automated email and text marketing, built-in loyalty programs, zero commission delivery, and branded mobile apps for your restaurant that integrate right into your POS. With Owner.com, there are no contracts, no hidden fees, and nothing to lose. Join thousands of restaurant owners using Owner.com to grow direct online sales, save thousands in third-party fees, and simplify their online presence all-in-one.Book a free demo today at owner.com/unstoppable and see why Owner.com is the #1-rated Restaurant Marketing Software. Restaurant Systems Pro - Join the 60-day Restaurant Systems Pro FREE TRAINING. This is something that has never been done before. This 60-day event is at no cost to you, but it is not for everyone. Fred Langley, CEO of Restaurant Systems Pro, will lead a group of restaurateurs through the Restaurant Systems Pro software and set up the systems for your restaurant. During the 60 days, Fred will walk you through the Restaurant Systems Pro Process and help you crush the following goals: Recipe Costing Cards; Guidance in your books for accounting; Cash controls; Sales Forecasting(With Accuracy); Checklists; Budgeting for the entire year; Scheduling for profit; More butts in seats and more… Click Here to learn more. Contact: RTI website: rti-inc.com 

Apprentice 121 Podcast
Experienced worker route for Electricians - Domestic - NICEIC and NAPIT registration

Apprentice 121 Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2023 51:59


Craig Wiltshire joins me to discuss the brand new domestic experienced worker route! This is suitable for people with 3 years working experience in the domestic sector who are currently working in that environment and want to attain the domestic electrician standard. You must have 3 years relevant experience and existing qualifications in industry. The evidence built through the assessment can only be from the date after which you start it! NET are putting in place the AM2 ED for end point assessment and it looks like a domestic gold card will be forthcoming. I will confirm this with the JIB soon for clarification. TESP, NET and those working hard to develop these mechanisms to raising standards and opportunities have done a great job here. The program should take around 18 months to complete and will be starting out in industry imminently. For further details please see the TESP website here https://www.electrical-ewa.org.uk/ NET can be found here https://www.netservices.org.uk/am2ed/ To contact Craig you can email him directly here electricalnvq4u@gmail.com Thanks again to Craig for asking to come on and talk about this and sharing his knowledge. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/apprentice121/message

CLIP DE TEATRE
«Guardianes del corazón de la Tierra»

CLIP DE TEATRE

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2023 7:31


Tornar als orígens de la gent de la Terra. Crítica teatral de l'obra «Guardianes del corazón de la tierra». Creació i interpretació: Txana Bane Huni Kuin, Carles Fernández Giua, Gabriela Olivera i Eugenio Szwarcer. Espai i audiovisuals: Eugenio Szwarcer. Maquinària i desenvolupament tècnic: Luis Martí. Espai sonor: Damien Bazin. Música: Txana Bane Huni Kuin. Il·luminació: Natalia Ramos. Moviment: Roser López Espinosa. Producció executiva: Irene Vicente. Assistència a la producció: Rut Girona. Tècnic de so: Roger Giménez. Alumna en pràctiques MUET: Sara Navio. Cap tècnic del teatre: Iker Gabaldón. Contractació internacional i relacions públiques: Lidia Giménez. Fotografies d’escena: Berta Vicente. Vídeo Making Of: Omen. Màrqueting i comunicació: La Villarroel. Disseny gràfic: Santi&Kco. Traducció i subtitulació realitzada amb el suport de l'Institut Ramon Llull. Agraïments: Al poble Huni Kuin, Kathy Makuani, Living Bridge, Gonzalo Mora, Josep Maria Fericgla, Jeremy Narby, María Victoria Reyes i els activistes del bosc de Hambach. Coproducció de La Conquesta del Pol Sud, La Villarroel, Teatro Español, Grec 2023 Festival de Barcelona i KVS Brussels. Amb el suport de l’ICEC - Institut Català de les Empreses Culturals, i la col·laboració de l’Ajuntament de Terrassa i la Nau lvanow. Direcció: Carles Fernández Giua. Cia. La Conquesta del Pol Sud. Grec'23. La Villarroel, Barcelona, 7 juliol 2023. Veu: Andreu Sotorra. Música: Nuku Mana Ibubu. Interpretació: Nawa Sia i Kupi Huni Kuni. Composició: Nawa Sia. Àlbum: Jibóia Encantada, 2023.

Unapologetix
Leftist Take-Over? with Seamus of the JIB podcast

Unapologetix

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2023 68:04


I hang out with Seamus from the JIB podcast and a read an insane right wing conservative article about a leftist dominionist takeover in America.. #Atheist #Podcast #Liberal #Leftist #Lol

Le Duel
Le Duel 115 : Spéciale Troll 10

Le Duel

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2023 168:51


Vacances ! L'équipe du Duel en a marre ! Pour en faire le moins possible, nous avons utilisé ChatGPT et une manne gratuite d'animateurs stagiaires pour nous remplacer. Deux candidats, Piwil et Fox-de-feu-Les-Tauliers, s'affrontent donc sous les questions dantesques de Bibou, Bibounette, Nemo, Jibé, Barberouss, Gékaude, Concombre et Michidar. A la fin, l'équipe distribuera les bons points pour les rapports de stage.

chatgpt troll duel nemo vacances jib concombre bibou bibounette piwil barberouss les tauliers
Apprentice 121 Podcast
How to get a job - electrician apprentice and also how to employ an apprentice!

Apprentice 121 Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2023 44:31


A podcast to help people looking for employment as apprentices and also to help employers who are looking to employ them! Information and advice from both sides of that discussion. Also some chat around CEF live, giveaways and those who are trying to scam people and rip off JIB gold cards.... https://www.gov.uk/employing-an-apprentice/get-funding https://www.gov.uk/national-minimum-wage-rates --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/apprentice121/message

Cell & Gene: The Podcast
TJU's Jefferson Institute for Bioprocessing's Impact on CGT with Parviz Shamlou

Cell & Gene: The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2023 42:20


Parviz Shamlou, Vice President and Executive Director at Thomas Jefferson University joins Cell & Gene: The Podcast to talk to Host Erin Harris about Jefferson Institute for Bioprocessing (JIB), the full-service development and training organization specializing in biopharmaceuticals and biologics. Shamlou explains how JIB will move forward cell and gene therapies as well as  JIB's partnership with NIBRT (National Institute for Bioprocessing Research & Training), and much more.

Les Tauliers
Même morts, ils podcastent encore

Les Tauliers

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2023 126:53


Deux ans plus tard, InkS, Cafeine, Fox, Jay, Jibé et Thomasaurus retrouvent le micro. Et ils n'ont rien perdu de leur verbe pour évoquer l'histoire des Tauliers à l'occasion de ce Show Finale.

5...4...3...2...fun!!

i’ve been doing religion a little bit recently. well, not religion but ritual. it’s been a way to share a cultural experience i had as a kid with friends who had other experiences. and to connect and commiserate with friends that have had similar experiences.and maybe it’s also been an attempt at reclaiming the years of my life going through (what i’ve learned as i reflect were) meaningless ritual. family time felt significant but the rituals feel meaningless devoid of any larger critical context. i’m very very thankful to folks who have written thoughtful and radical haggadot. here’s the anti-zionist haggadah we used for passover this year: bit.ly/40xX3d0.this isn’t a part of my life i’m looking to cultivate much more than an excuse to prepare a seder and make and share food with friends a few times a year, but reflecting on my position as an american jew while palestinians live under violent occupation in my name can be a daily ritual.DOWNLOAD/STREAM RECORDING00:00 (intro by omar)00:20 NOTCHES “Funny How” New Kinda Love02:50 Shannon Lay “Blue” Blue08:36 Winter “I Feel” Hazy11:32 Unclaimed Diamonds “Sick Slab” The First Five Slabs13:14 Chris Weisman “Welcome To Reality Smith” Billy Don’t Pawn Your Horn16:43 a certain smile “Honey Do” BAE19:08 Cochonne “OMEGA” COCHONNE20:36 iji “I Don’t Ever Wanna Go Back” iji24:57 Squirt “Sad Year” Ruff Start EP28:13 Trust Fall “Calmed Storm” Bloodstream EP31:09 Jib kidder “CNN” Sums34:00 The Buk Buk Bigups “Last Load” Big Big Fuckups36:41 Era Bleak “Tinderbox” Demo 201738:06 Dust from 1000 yrs “three” Life and Death in a World Without Words41:24 Feeble “Stratford” Growing Out Of Touch44:16 Little Gunpowder “Regrets” Don’t Fall Asleep46:31 Novopain “Living” Novopain48:28 The Fragiles “Long Arms” The Fragiles51:11 unlimited guests “rivers casino” cauldron52:48 Cold Beat “She’s Invisible Now” A Simple Reflection

Greetings! The Greeting Card Podcast
”Make Me, Ding Dong”- Sun Tzu

Greetings! The Greeting Card Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2023 49:32


It's time to count your blessings on a veritable mountain of egg-beans! Join Bobby, Dan, and Saltine Dungeon Caleb as they Jib and also Jab on Spring holiday card expectations, jellybean company ranking, and unnecessary celebratory jello consumption! Soon after, the lads rate and review a card that'll make you want rev up the ole soft-serve ice machine, if only because you've got some mistakes to atone for! Be sure to catch our no-act play, "Rosie O'Donnell and Beck are Dead", now playing somewhere, at a time.

Legends Podcast
Legends Podcast #616; Dope (2015)

Legends Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2023 60:09


Director Rick Famuyiwa went from USC film school grad to Sundance darling to the Star Wars universe and was even the second of five directors attached to direct The Flash movie for WB DC. Common threads through his works are friendship and intersectionality within communities of color, on display his 2015 film starring Shameik Moore, Tony Revolori, Kiersey Clemons, Lakeith Stanfield, Blake Anderson, and Zoë Kravitz among others. Starring Moore as the real-life Miles Morales from Into the Spider-Verse, this movie is The Breakfast Club meets Breaking Bad with palm trees. Now we're getting a cut of the good stuff with Dope!    For more geeky podcasts visit GonnaGeek.com   You can find us on iTunes under ''Legends Podcast''. Please subscribe and give us a positive review. You can also follow us on Twitter @LegendsPodcast or even better, send us an e-mail: LegendsPodcastS@gmail.com   You can write to Rum Daddy directly: rumdaddylegends@gmail.com You can find all our contact information here on the Network page of GonnaGeek.com Our complete archive is always available at www.legendspodcast.com, www.legendspodcast.libsyn.com

The Free Thought Prophet
Special Episode: The JIB Takes Over!

The Free Thought Prophet

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2023 55:53


The JIB takes over the show for a special episode. John and Martin get front row seats as guest to Barry and Seamus as they share one of the many and varied schemes of the many and varied U.S. law enforcement and intelligence agencies, organisations and committees and how they are stupid and funny. Join us on our merry journey through space and time. We launch on Wednesday folks! Subscribe now! Hosts Barry @solo1y & Seamus share wild stories from US intelligence &law enforcement agencies,focusing mainly on the CIA,& with other crazy stories from history @TheJIBPodcast https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCaU7dYhU4sfnai2SsH-qtDw https://rss.com/podcasts/thejib/ https://open.spotify.com/show/1jHnNbPDJs3njNt1V1qpgm?si=244753ae91a549cb    

The BlackBusters Podcast
23: Dope with Bigg Jah and Tony Price

The BlackBusters Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2023 75:16


This weeks special guest @wuzgood Dope is a 2015 American coming-of-age comedy-drama film written and directed by Rick Famuyiwa and produced by Forest Whitaker and Nina Yang Bongiovi. It stars Shameik Moore, Tony Revolori, Kiersey Clemons, Kimberly Elise, Chanel Iman, Tyga, Blake Anderson, Zoë Kravitz, ASAP Rocky and Vince Staples. The film was also executive produced by Pharrell Williams and co-executive produced by Sean Combs. Malcolm Adekanbi and his best friends, Jib and Diggy, are high school "geeks" living in "The Bottoms," a high-crime neighborhood in Inglewood, California. They idolize 90's hip hop music and fashion. Malcolm is confident he will be admitted to his dream school, Harvard University, but his school counselor is skeptical and suggests he take an interview with local businessman and Harvard alumnus, Austin Jacoby. BlackBusters is a podcast focused on reviewing, celebrating, re-living and critiquing Black film. From the movies we all know and love to those hidden gems, there is no movie too big or small to be praised or roasted.  Join our hosts Director/Comedian/Actor @biggjah  and movie/podcast connoisseur Tony Price as they explore the legacy, impact and influence of Black cinema.

Big Blue United Podcast
Warm Cheeks, Good Jib

Big Blue United Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2022 43:02


This week we discuss the emergence of Kayvon Thibodeaux, the upcoming match up against the Vikings, and figure out how the analytics team defines a quality Jib. Brought to you by Draft Kings Sports Book & Booksio If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, crisis  counseling and referral services can be accessed by calling 1-800-  GAMBLER (1-800-426-2537) (IL/IN/LA/MI/NJ/PA/TN/WV/WY), 1-800-  NEXT STEP (AZ), 1-800-522-4700 (CO/KS/NH), 888-789-7777/visit  http://ccpg.org (CT), 1-800-BETS OFF (IA), 877-8-HOPENY/text  HOPENY (467369) (NY), visit OPGR.org (OR), or 1-888-532-3500 (VA).  21+ (18+ NH/WY). Physically present in  AZ/CO/CT/IL/IN/IA/KS/LA(select parishes)/MI/NH/NJ/  NY/OR/PA/TN/VA/WV/WY only. $150 in Free bets: New customers  only. Min. $5 deposit. Min $5 pregame moneyline bet. Bet must win.  $150 issued as six (6) $25 free bets. Ends 12/31/22 @ 11:59pm ET.  Stepped Up SGP: 1 Token issued per eligible game. Opt in req. Min $1  bet. Max bet limits apply. Min. 3-leg. Each leg min. -300 odds, total bet  +100 odds or longer. 10+ leg req. for 100% boost. Ends 1/8/23 @ 8pm  ET. See eligibility & terms at  sportsbook.draftkings.com/footballterms. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Hallå Där Nere
NR87: Du skall inga andra lag hava jämte Malmö FF

Hallå Där Nere

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2022 50:11


Vi tittar på nya kontrakt med gamla folk och nya spelare. Även de som inte hänger med vidare. Zander kan dra in JIB i detta igen. Men. vi ägnar oss också åt den hemska sysselsättningen att titta. på hur det gick för våra tabelltips. Malmö FF ger och Malmö FF tar. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/daniel-ekberg/message

The Bomb Hole
Mike West | The Bomb Hole Episode 131

The Bomb Hole

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2022 129:45


One of the sharpest minds for business in the game Mike launched Jib 686 30 years ago starting as a small garage brand building up to the 686 we know today, one of the largest apparel brands in the industry and most impressively still independently owned. We talk 686 origin story, getting his first 100k order, surviving the first two years, sourcing, production, issues with seasonal business, scaling, West Life Dist., NRI, the bowl of forgiveness, time management, Kaizen, being yourself and so much more! Independently owned business's pop up in snowboarding all the time, most last for some years and then shut down or get bought by a larger company in order to survive. Lasting for 30 years and turning into one of the top 3 apparel brands in snowboarding is unheard of and a feat that deserves some serious respect and should be supported at all costs. Join us as we sit down with Mike and hear all about how he grew 686 into a brand with a valuation of at least seven 0's also picking up some other brands along the way and started the largest 3PL shipping company in action sports, all this while furthering his college education ultimately becoming a Professor. We talk about it all on this week's episode of The Bomb Hole. Special ThanksTen Barrel Pub BeerThe Patreon Members, We would not do this without you!!- https://www.patreon.com/thebombhole Bub's Naturals- https://www.bubsnaturals.com Ikon- https://www.ikonpass.com Edmonton Style Experience https://exploreedmonton.com/event-calendar/the-style-experience Stance | https://www.stance.com Sun Bum- https://www.sunbum.com 686 Apparel- https://www.686.com InstagramMike West's instagram @michaelakirawest https://www.instagram.com/michaelakirawest/ @thebombhole: https://www.instagram.com/thebombhole/ @Grendiesel : https://www.instagram.com/grendiesel/@E_stone : https://www.instagram.com/e_stone/ Budz Print Shop- www.e-stonephoto.com https://307o96449135872.3dcartstores.com For all things Bomb Hole, go to : https://thebombhole.com/BOMB HOLE STORE: https://thebombhole.com/collections/allWatch the episode on YouTube- https://youtu.be/IYHDbdWNnUgJoin The Bomb Squad on our Patreon page! Props to all of our Patreon members for the support. We could not make these episodes happen without your help! Patreon members get the chance to ask guests questions and find out who we will be interviewing before anyone else. They also receive Bomb Hole merch and a custom Bomb Squad sticker!!! Find out more at https://www.patreon.com/thebombholeShow Notes-Collaborations 686 | https://www.686.com/pages/mens-collections Grateful Dead x 686 | https://www.686.com/collections/grateful-dead Challenges Of Seasonal Business | https://www.mymoneymantra.com/blog/5-big-challenges-that-seasonal-businesses-face-and-how-to-overcome-them West Life on Hype Beast | https://hypebeast.com/2014/1/hypebeast-spaces-westlife-distribution-inc-featuring-686-new-balance-numeric-and-matix NRI - https://nri3pl.com 686 On Deadliest Catch | https://www.snowboarder.com/transworld-snowboarding-archive/snowboarding-news/686-outerwear-featured-on-the-discovery-channel/ Marshall School Of Business | https://www.marshall.usc.edu The Search For Animal Chin | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bV1b_-7zf-s Future Primitive | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VG74o7aafpc&t=107s Time Management For Business Owners | https://www.orbitalshift.com/blog/business-owners-time-management Kaizen | https://www.kaizen.com/what-is-kaizen How To Be Yourself | https://www.tonyrobbins.com/personal-growth/how-to-be-yourself/ Ski And Snowboard Costs | https://endlessrushoutdoors.com/how-much-does-it-cost-to-ski-or-snowboard/Thanks For Listening!

Natrilha
71 - A importância do conhecimento sobre cobras

Natrilha

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2022 95:08


Você sabe o que é bote seco? Quais espécies predominam no Brasil e erros mais comuns em acidentes ofídicos? Serpente e cobra são a mesma coisa? O uso de “garrote” é o mais recomendado em caso de acidentes? Quais espécies predominam no Brasil e erros comuns em acidentes ofídicos? No meio do nosso bate papo, Cláudio nos contou que o Brasil possui uma das maiores faunas do mundo com mais de 400 espécies de serpentes. E quase 90% não possuem veneno. Entre os grupos venenosos está a Jararaca.  Nos alertou se caso um trilheiro ou pessoa comum for picado, no Brasil é obrigatória a notificação por acidente ofídico. O médico preencherá uma ficha que será encaminhada para o Ministério da Saúde para alimentar o banco de dados. Esses dados auxiliam na distribuição do soro antiofídico nas regiões de maior ocorrência. E para cada tipo de cobra existe um soro específico. Disse também que no Brasil o soro é aplicado somente no serviço público, mas não em todos os hospitais, para isto deve pesquisar os polos no ministério da saúde, Instituto Vital Brasil, onde consta os estados e municípios que contém o soro. Também nos advertiu para algo grave: a falta de informação e o apego a crendice como a borra de café. Que segundo o mito é quando coloca-se borra de café no lugar da picada e cura-se do veneno. Outra crendice é sobre a identificação das cobras venenosas. Onde segundo o mito é onde toda a cobra de cabeça triangular é venenosa. Porém, como um dos exemplos, a Jibóia também tem a cabeça triangular e não é venenosa. E um terceiro problema é que nas universidades federais nos cursos de medicina não existe nenhuma disciplina inteira que aborda sobre animais peçonhentos. E qual é a consequência disto?  Médicos que na maioria das ocasiões, não sabem como atuar devidamente com acidentes ofídicos. E isso pode trazer consequências graves para esses pacientes. Sobre o convidado: Cláudio Machado Esbanjando simpatia, Cláudio Machado, biólogo, e apresentador do canal Papo de Cobra no Youtube, contou um pouco da sua história como estudioso de répteis, anfíbios e sua especialização em acidentes ofídicos. Nos seus mais de 30 anos de carreira atuou na criação das serpentes e chefiou equipes para divulgação científica no Instituto Vital Brasil um dos quatro maiores produtores de soro no Brasil. Durante o papo ele nos contou que neste trabalho desempenhou várias análises dos acidentes ofídicos.  Participe conosco Para colaborar com o crescimento do nosso podcast, compartilhe esse post ou o episódio nas redes sociais e grupos de mensagens. Fazendo-o pelo instagram, marque nosso perfil @natrilhapc e use a tag #natrilheiros Assim fica mais fácil de te achar e interagir contigo, ok? Quer completar alguma coisa? Tem sugestão de temas? Manda um e-mail pra gente. Vale até uma selfie. Lembre-se: Use a tag #NATRILHEIROS para acharmos suas postagens nas redes sociais. Diz pra gente de onde você é, sua idade e qual esporte (ou atividade) você pratica (ou não). Participantes do programa de hoje: Renan Alves Redi Siqueira Claudio Machado Colabore com o Natrilha Contribua com o Natrilha pelo PicPay. Contribua com o Natrilha pelo Padrim. Padrinhos e Madrinhas (separados por categorias): Guia de Aventura: João Alberto Binda, Luiz Gadetto. Instrutor: Mario Ferraro. Destemidos Filipe Careli, Marcelo Sobata, Thiago Waldhelm. Desbravadores João Olavo Vasconcelos, Alexandre Gomes Busque o Natrilha nos agregadores: Natrilha no Deezer – Clique aqui Natrilha no Spotify – Clique aqui   Grupo Telegram do Natrilha. Acesse e participe: Entrar no Grupo Telegram – Natrilha   Nosso e-mail: natrilhapc@gmail.com Edição: Danilo Pastor - Nativa MultimídiaPadrim: https://www.padrim.com.br/natrilhapc

Love is in the Air
#30 Creative Date Ideas Part Four!!

Love is in the Air

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2022 47:42


Join Abe and Elaine for some more amazing date ideas while in distance! Including some spooky ones for Halloween! They have a fun announcement at the end of the episode! Watch out for the scary witch laugh!!Water proof phone holder:Universal Waterproof Case,Hiearcool Waterproof Phone Pouch Compatible for iPhone 13 12 11 Pro Max XS Max Samsung Galaxy s10 Google Up to 7.0", IPX8 Cellphone Dry Bag for Vacation-2 Pack https://a.co/d/auFXyI5Online games:Playing cards.ioRandom website generator:https://random-ize.com/random-website/Jib jab- E-CARDS :https://www.jibjab.com/?gclid=EAIaIQobChMIitLO68qA-wIVDQKtBh2cpwS_EAAYASAAEgKtIvD_BwE&gclsrc=aw.dsPsych tests:https://testyourself.psychtests.comHaunted houses:https://youtu.be/os0qWeb5L3YZuzana's website for coaching for international couples: www.zuzanamukumayi.cz/en or zuzana@zuzanamukumayi.cz

GoodWill Yunting
Outsmarting Risk with Rysk

GoodWill Yunting

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2022 71:16


In this new GoodWill Yunting episode, we have the brilliant, options gurus Ugolino, Jib, and Degeneral of the incredible protocol that Yunt was an investor in, Rysk Finance. Rysk Finance is a complex new protocol that uses options strategies to create uncorrelated yield for users. Our friends from Rysk break down how this is possible, their big-brain DHV vault, in what ways yield searchers and degen traders can use Rysk, and much more. They help break down what options are, what beta is, and how they can be utilized to create uncorrelated yields in crypto. We also discuss on-chain options as they stand, how they could look in the future, what Rysk is looking to build out in the future, and the future of yield and options in DeFi. We then move onto their view of markets and how Rysk can give you returns regardless of which direction the market is going without holding heavy exposure. Of course, as the name suggests, no yield is without risk, so they discuss how Rysk approaches this for its users and the protocol itself. Don't sleep on this episode that nearly made my brain explode with knowledge!  If you enjoyed the episode, please subscribe, rate, and share so we can continue to get amazing, alpha dropping guests. We plan to release episodes bi-weekly, so don't sleep!   Big thank you to Cypher, Ugolino, Jib, and Degeneral for taking the time out of their day to talk crypto with us. You can find Rysk on Twitter @Ryskfinance.  Feel free to tweet or message me @TheRogueItachi. You can find the pod on Twitter @GoodWillYunting As always, Yunt Hard, Yunt Fast, Yunt Capital.  Disclaimer: Nothing said on this podcast is advice or a solicitation to buy or sell any assets or tokens. We may, and often because we're passionate about the projects we bring on, hold investments in the project and even work in their communities. None of this is financial advice, please do your own research; this is a risky field. 

Midday
Rousuck's Review: Katori Hall's 'HooDoo Love' at Spotlighters Theatre

Midday

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2022 10:53


It's time for another visit with Midday theater critic J. Wynn Rousuck, who joins us each week with her reviews of Maryland's regional stage. Today, she tells us about the new production of Pulitzer Prize- and Obie Award-winning playwright Katori Hall's 2007 drama, HooDoo Love, on stage now through October 9th at Baltimore's Spotlighters Theatre. Directed at Spotlighters by Rain Pryor, the play tells the story of Toulou, a Black woman who flees the Mississippi cotton fields of the 1930s to pursure her dream of becoming a blues singer in Memphis. It's a love story laced with magic, and stars Sharon Carter-Brown as Toulou, Andromeda Bacchus as Candy Lady, Mark Wallace as Ace of Spades, and Nikolas Hubbard as Jib. HooDoo Love continues at Spotlighters Theatre through October 9. Follow the link for more information. NOTICE: The play contains depictions of sexual assault, rape, and sexual violence, and mature subject matter in dialogue and action. Parental discretion is advised.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The MongoDB Podcast
Ep 130 Serverless with MongoDB and Google Cloud Run

The MongoDB Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2022 21:43


In this episode, Mike Lynn chats to Abi from Google and Mira from MongoDB to talk about all things serverless and full stack application development in the cloud. They speak about the main reasons to use serverless and why you should use serverless technologies for your development. Topics covered include Docker, Containers, Jib (for building Java Docker images), environment variables, development vs production environments, how to connect to MongoDB, security, and when to consider developing for serverless (hint - when there's significant need for scaling, reducing maintenance and freeing up developers!!) Tune in to listen to what Abi and Mira have to share.

The Midnight Founders Podcast
Jib Hunt - Kemper Snowboards

The Midnight Founders Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2022 40:33


This weeks episode is a conversation with Jib Hunt the CEO of Kemper Snowboards. Jib was on the ski team In the late 80's, when he was introduced to this new sport called snowboarding. He was hooked day one and has never looked back. We had a great conversation about his career as a professional rider and his latest adventure bringing Kemper and the 80's snowboarding vibe back. We hope you enjoy our conversation with Jib. 

Sex, Drugs, and Jesus
Episode #64: Being Born Into Trauma, Surviving Abusive Adoptive Parents & The Need To Connect With Biological Parents With Cheyenne Mihko Kihêw

Sex, Drugs, and Jesus

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2022 70:25


INTRODUCTION: Cheyenne Mihko Kihêw (they/them) is a Two-Spirit Indigi-queer, born and raised in amiskwacîwâskahikan (Edmonton). Inspired by their own lived experiences with meth addiction and street involvement in their teen years, Cheyenne has dedicated their life to community-based work. They were the first in their family to attend university, holding a BA in Sociology from MacEwan. Currently, they are the Community Liaison for Edmonton 2 Spirit Society, a role that affords them the privilege of incorporating many of their passions into their work and is supporting their own journey of cultural reclamation. Cheyenne is the current Two Spirit Warrior regional titleholder 2021/2022, alongside Rob Gurney. They are also the current Chair of the Board of Directors for Boyle Street Education Centre, their former high school to which they accredit much of their achievements. Cheyenne is unapologetic in their identity as a nêhiyaw, fat, and queer femme and lives loud and proud. ***PHOTO CREDIT*** All My Relations Photography:  https://www.facebook.com/allmyrelationsphoto  INCLUDED IN THIS EPISODE (But not limited to):  ·      Cheyenne's Story·      Being Born Into Trauma·      Using Crystal Meth As A Teenager·      Are Your Drugs For Pleasure Or Pain?·      Surviving Abusive Adoptive Parents·      The Benefits Of Forgiveness ·      The Benefits Of Chosen Family·      The Toils Of Being A Homeless Youth·      The Triflingness Of The Department Of Veteran's Affairs·      Freedom In Becoming An Emancipated Teen   CONNECT WITH CHEYENNE: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tugs.cuchina/  CONNECT WITH DE'VANNON: Website: https://www.SexDrugsAndJesus.comWebsite: https://www.DownUnderApparel.comYouTube: https://bit.ly/3daTqCMFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/SexDrugsAndJesus/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sexdrugsandjesuspodcast/Twitter: https://twitter.com/TabooTopixLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/devannonPinterest: https://www.pinterest.es/SexDrugsAndJesus/_saved/Email: DeVannon@SexDrugsAndJesus.com  DE'VANNON'S RECOMMENDATIONS: ·      Pray Away Documentary (NETFLIX)o  https://www.netflix.com/title/81040370o  TRAILER: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tk_CqGVfxEs ·      OverviewBible (Jeffrey Kranz)o  https://overviewbible.como  https://www.youtube.com/c/OverviewBible ·      Hillsong: A Megachurch Exposed (Documentary)o  https://press.discoveryplus.com/lifestyle/discovery-announces-key-participants-featured-in-upcoming-expose-of-the-hillsong-church-controversy-hillsong-a-megachurch-exposed/ ·      Leaving Hillsong Podcast With Tanya Levino  https://leavinghillsong.podbean.com  ·      Upwork: https://www.upwork.com·      FreeUp: https://freeup.net VETERAN'S SERVICE ORGANIZATIONS ·      Disabled American Veterans (DAV): https://www.dav.org·      American Legion: https://www.legion.org ·      What The World Needs Now (Dionne Warwick): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FfHAs9cdTqg  INTERESTED IN PODCASTING OR BEING A GUEST?: ·      PodMatch is awesome! This application streamlines the process of finding guests for your show and also helps you find shows to be a guest on. The PodMatch Community is a part of this and that is where you can ask questions and get help from an entire network of people so that you save both money and time on your podcasting journey.https://podmatch.com/signup/devannon  TRANSCRIPT: [00:00:00]You're listening to the sex drugs and Jesus podcast, where we discuss whatever the fuck we want to! And yes, we can put sex and drugs and Jesus all in the same bed and still be all right at the end of the day. My name is De'Vannon and I'll be interviewing guests from every corner of this world as we dig into topics that are too risqué for the morning show, as we strive to help you understand what's really going on in your life.There is nothing off the table and we've got a lot to talk about. So let's dive right into this episode.De'Vannon: Hello? Hello. Hello. Are you beautiful souls out there? I love you so much. Thanks for joining me another week. For another episode, I'm super excited to have back with me again, the wonderful Cheyenne Miho. And today we're gonna be talking about their personal life story. Their history entails a lot of early life trauma and extreme abuse. They've been through everything from early life, meth addiction to abuse of adoptive parents who would do things like with whole food and lock them in their bedroom. [00:01:00] Cheyenne's situation was so terrible that the legal system allowed them. To emancipate themselves at the age of 16. Look, y'all healing can be a super long journey and Shahan is definitely on their way.Please listen to their share. Hello? Hello. Hello. All my lovely little fuckers out there and welcome back to the sex drugs in Jesus podcast. To see how I did that. I said, fuck in Jesus in the same sentence. And I know he is most pleased with me standing up on his throne at the right hand of God, applauding me as I give a fuck about Jesus on today.Cheyenne, do darling, how are you doing today? Cheyenne: hello? I'm great. How video1970169709: are De'Vannon: you? I'm fan fucking, you know, I love the cuss. Cussing is very cathartic and healing. Even people out there have not seen the history of swear words on Netflix [00:02:00] narrated by Nicholas cage. I need you to check it out that way you can understand why the fuck I cus so fucking much.So I have back with me today. Cheyenne, be Hoku. And he's coming to us from up there in Canada, Edmonton two spirit society. We did a show with her before and she really gave us a good breakdown on the indigenous history, you know, of Canada. And she gave us some good definitions and everything like that told us what two spirit meant and all these different things.She ed us. And so today we have her back on to talk more about her, her personal struggles and everything like that. And I'm so proud of her for being so transparent to go over the topics that we are going to talk about today. Cheyenne, is there anything you'd like to say right now? Cheyenne: It's just great to be back.Just a gentle reminder that my pronouns are they them that I don't usually her pronouns. De'Vannon: Okay. Sorry if I [00:03:00] messed that up or Cheyenne: something, but no, that's okay. Yeah. It's just it's yeah, it's kind of important. Also. You might hear my cat, he's still adjusting to our move. We just moved into a new place last week.And so he is a little anxious. He's an anxious baby. So he might hear him meowing or he might jump up at some point. De'Vannon: I love cats. I wish I could own every cat in the world. I have two, they go out into their special Playhouse whenever I do meetings because my cats are hell needy. And there's no way they let me get through a one hour conversation without causing a scene.so Cheyenne: I just have a door that I could close but I don't have that anymore in my new office space. So we're just rolling with it. . De'Vannon: Give us a little brief, very quick rundown on the, the society that you work for and kind of what y'all do. Cheyenne: Yeah. So I work for the Edmonton two-spirit society. I'm the community liaison, and we're a really small nonprofit organization in Edmonton, Alberta.We're traditionally known as a [00:04:00] Misu west Gein. And we primarily serve any indigenous person who identifies as two-spirit or queer trans gender diverse, sexually diverse as well as their kinship circles. So supporting family members, their networks and understanding their loved one, a little better.So we provide access to like things like ceremonies, culture and other social events. And as well as a wide range of like mental health and social support. So we're still a bit of a baby organization, but we have a lot of big plans for the next few years. De'Vannon: See there, they do all the things. And so.And again, the first episode I shot with her, we have a lot more info on all of that and a lot of information in the showy notes. So today we're, we're gonna talk about your history, very chaotic history. And but you know, we plant seeds and dirt and mud and all this crazy shit, you know, and out of that dirt and feel comes up [00:05:00] the most beautiful things that we all use to sustain ourselves off of.And so there's nothing wrong with having issues because, you know, they make us who we are. So when we wrapped up our last conversation several weeks ago, we. You know, got onto the, the happy trail about you and stuff like that. And I learned some things about you that I didn't know. So you have a history of meth addiction as do I, I don't know what they call her in your neck of the woods, but down here they call her Tina, you know, miss tea T Cheyenne: I mean, it's been a while since I was in that circle back in my day, we used to call it jib or pin are kind of like two of the, the common terms here, but I've also heard like ice or, you know, the usual ones, but yeah.Jib or pin are like the ones that I De'Vannon: always used. Mm-hmm are these, they call her that [00:06:00] fucking bitch, you know? Cause she, she ruins things. And so so what would age range was, was the meth addiction? What age range was this? Yeah. Cheyenne: So like you said, my, my background is messy and complicated, but I started using math at age 14.And it took me about three years. So I was into my 17th year when I finally was able to stop using. De'Vannon: Okay. Do you remember who got you into it for the first time or how that oh yeah, Cheyenne: I remember the exact moment. Oh yeah. 100%. I, so I grew up in a really violent household, just a trigger warning for anyone listening that my story does come with, like child abuse and trauma and all those hard things.As well as like indigenous trauma and [00:07:00] residential schools, all of that's a part of my story. So I left home at 14. I was adopted by my aunt and uncle and we can talk a little bit more about that. But I was adopted by my biological aunt and her husband and brought into their family. And after like a sustained well of like physical abuse in the home, I decided to leave at age 14.And so I was kind of living on the streets for a little while there prior to getting placed into a group home. And it was during that initial time that I had on the streets. And so I had met some person like on, I think like Nextopia, which was like a popular social media. It was like Facebook, but way before Facebook.And it was like made here in Edmonton. So it was like our own little social media that we had. And so I had met this guy and we like started dating or whatever. I was 14, he was like 16. But we were both unhoused at the time. And so we were like hanging out on the streets and he had this gay man that he was friends with.And in Edmonton, I don't know where you live, but in Edmonton, it's common. And particularly in the inner [00:08:00] city for there to be what we call rooming hoses. So it's just like a building full of like isolated suites that have enough room for like a bed. It's a small little kitchenette and usually the bathroom is down the hall.And so they're quite small. You can't really fit a lot of people in there, but my boyfriend at the time, and I moved in with this gay guy and he had about like four other queer men living there with him. And my boyfriend would like go and try and find work during the day. And so I was often like hanging out with these queer guys and one of them one day was like, Hey, you wanna come for a hoot?And I was like, I smoked cannabis at the time and was like, and I thought I knew about drugs. Like I had heard a lot about the acids and the, the ketamines, but I hadn't really tried anything to that point, other than weed, I smoked a lot of weed and he is like, Hey, you wanna come for a hoot? And then like, he's like taking me to the bathroom.And I was like, yeah, I figured it was just gonna be cannabis. And he pulled out a light bulb and like had like his whole little setup and started pouring the crystals in. And I was like the. Fuck is that and I was just fascinated by the [00:09:00] whole process and it was just like extra sketchy, cuz we were in this bathhouse like bathroom in this rooming house.Not a bathhouse. We were not in a bathhouse. I, I was underage at this time. So that was my first time using it. I didn't really know what I was getting myself into. And it was like harmless enough, but I can trace the following three years back to that moment and not really understanding what it was.And like I said, just being so fascinated by the whole process and being like instantly brought into it.De'Vannon: I dunno how it was for you, but it wasn't until after, you know, I went through traumatic experiences that I became open, you know, to drugs and stuff like that. Cuz people had been offering them to me all my life and I always said no. Do you feel like had you. You know, you're basically homeless at the time.Do you think that if you were at home in a more [00:10:00] supportive situation that you would've accepted that, or, you know, from him. Yeah, Cheyenne: I think about that a lot, because I was born into trauma. Right. I was born into grief and that's not even just an indigenous thing. It's just like, my family is so broken. And like, we're doing a lot better now.I just wanna preface that I have a fairly decent relationship with my aunt and uncle now. We haven't quite worked through a lot of this stuff yet. I'm hoping that will come. And if they listen to this, I love you. But you know, growing up in a home where the people that were supposed to care for me, because they had adopted me, they instead of like providing a safe space for me, they further traumatized me.Right. And so I also have ADHD. And I think it's really important to note that I was already on Ritalin at a really young age. I, I think they had me on Ritalin at. Grade one. So I was already on subs like stimulants. I had already been using stimulants for a number of years prior to actually having that first encounter with [00:11:00] meth.So like, I think my likelihood of getting into it probably would've been a lot more dis decreased, but just by understanding my family's history with addiction, my own history with substances that were prescribed to me, I likely probably still would've engaged in that, but maybe not as early or not as aggressively than I had, but I mean, it's all speculation, right?De'Vannon: I'm here from some, I'm here for some speculation this morning. I'm here from some specul. I am, I really am this ING. Cuz what I'm thinking is like, you know, drugs, you know, release so much dopamine in different chemicals. Yes. Chemicals in us that make us feel all yummy. You know, when we're walking around feeling bad and miserable, it creates like an emotional deficit and drugs feel that void it's, you know, it's a complete opposite direction.And, you know, and there seems to me to be like a [00:12:00] pattern and a trend to people who are generally unhappy or who wrestle a lot in life and struggle who like tend to find drugs and cl to them. Now, when I was going through it, I didn't realize that that's what I was getting out of the drugs. I thought that I was just partying and having to get time.I didn't realize that I was actually trying to make myself feel better and numb pain. And so I wanna point that out. Cause I'd like people to be aware, you know, sometimes you're just partying for the sake of part and there's nothing more than a fucking party, but sometimes you're actually trying to to patch over trauma, but you're not really addressing the issue.And then as soon as you sober up, you're gonna want more because then the pain comes back. Cheyenne: Yeah. Yeah. It's like such a temporary fix to that heavier stuff that we carry around, you know, and I think for a long time, that's actually what it was for me, you know? And when I was unhoused and using meth, a lot of times it was also to stay awake, cuz I was walking around all night and didn't have anywhere to sleep.And so [00:13:00] you're trying to wait it out until like the, the local drop in opens, you know, so you need to be up and alert all night. And so it was helpful for that. But you know, when I did quit smoking meth, I didn't stop using drugs. Like I wanna be super clear about that. Like I stopped using meth at 17, but I still used other substances for a number of years.And even to this day, I'm not totally sober and very open that I, I use cocaine a couple times a year. I use mushrooms a couple times a year, but it's not at all where I'd start on a Friday and finish on a Monday, you know in my twenties, like when I was raving a lot and really partying hard. And I think at that time I was masking the trauma and I was masking that pain and not really conscious of it and aware of it.So as much as I'm like, oh yeah, I'm just partying. No, I'm actually just needing to start dealing with my stuff and I'm not quite there yet, you know? I'm there now, but it's, it's taken me a little while to get there. De'Vannon: so then it require, I'm thankful that you're there. It requires like, you know, a gut check moment or several of them, [00:14:00] because, you know, as a drug dealer, when I was a drug dealer, I I'd say probably 95% of my clientele, you know, was probably going way too hard on the meth and all the other drugs that I was selling them.And I only had very few who were like, they only did meth or G or whatever I was selling on their birthdays or when they travel, you know, most people didn't have that sort of discipline, but that discipline does exist. But the thing is, if you're already doing drugs and you're actually doing it in a balanced, fun way, if a traumatic experience happens, you could slip into this.Into this, what we're talking about, where you're now, what was once just fun. You're actually now using it to deal with the trauma and you may not be consciously aware of it. And so if something really bad happens, I would say probably stop the drugs for a moment until you get your shit sorted out so [00:15:00] that you don't overlap that pleasure of the drugs and get it mixed in with whatever bad thing has befallen you.Yeah. Cheyenne: If I find that I'm having a tough time in life, or if I'm struggling, stressed out, mental health is bad. I know that that's not a time to reach for substances or alcohol. Right. It's really in a moment of recreation, I'm at a music festival. It's like a celebrate. I don't even really wanna say celebratory, but it's, you know, a more intentional kind of move as opposed to, I'm just trying to like deal with my stress in a, in a, in a trauma response kind of way that I'm used to.So I'm pretty good now at, at understanding the difference there. And like I say, I don't I try to avoid substances if I'm not doing well in my head. cause I know it's a slippery slope. De'Vannon: And so I wanna walk down the path that you're talking about. You know, it sounds like you basically harm reduced yourself to a point where you can manage the different narcotics and substances.I don't think drugs are bad. [00:16:00] I think they can become bad for certain people. And it's for us to understand when the shit's gone too far, when you need, you need to dial it back or stop. Now, what you've done goes against a lot of conventional. I won't call it wisdom because I don't find it to be very wise, a lot of conventional advice, like the anonymous movements and shit like that.Try to give out and where, and they say once an addict, always an addict you know, and I just don't believe in that. And so. So I, I love that you're being transparent and telling the world that yeah, I used to be strung out on meth and you know what, now I'm able to just do me a couple of bumps of cocaine a year and be good with that or whatever may come along.But what do you think about how, you know, oh, here's the kitty let's Cheyenne: Steve don't show De'Vannon: them your bubble please. Hey Steve. Yeah, it's happy Friday. He's like, look at his ass[00:17:00]Cheyenne: ass, a small, he in a house. So he is really curious about everything right now. De'Vannon: Yeah. So what are your thoughts about he has stripes like my, like my eldest cat, Felix. What are your thoughts about how the anonymous movement like crystal meth anonymous? Alcoholics anonymous tries to keep people under that thumb of always being an addict forever and saying, if you ever use anything ever again, and RA a rock will happen in your life.Cheyenne: Yeah. I mean, I have, I have friends and family that are in the program. And it, it, if it works for them, it works for them. But in my personal experience, in trying to use those programs, it was very shameful. I was like taught to feel shameful of my decisions, taught to feel shameful of my trauma responses.And I just, I, I also don't resonate with religion as we spoke about before. And so a lot of those programs are centered around go. And even though it's like good orderly direction, it still has like a religious undertone to me. Which [00:18:00] makes me feel uncomfortable just in general. But the whole idea of like, you know, a relapse is like the end of the world, or, you know, you have to like repent, anytime you'd make a mistake.There's just like a lack of humanity there, or like an imposition of shame that we don't need to hold. Right. Like I Tru I do believe in harm reduction because I've seen the benefits in my own life and how it's. Like been a benefit to the community that I serve. And I don't feel that those programs honor that space of harm reduction or that space of like meeting people where they're at and, and, and understanding their traumas.You're standing up in these rooms and you're talking about your pain, but. It's not therapy. Do you know what I mean? Like it's not a substitute for actually sitting down and working through your traumas because the people in that room are not equipped to support you through that process because they also need someone else supporting them.So peer based education, peer based support is definitely beneficial, but at some point we also need to realize that like those rooms, you know, there's not a lot of success rate that [00:19:00] come out of them. You need to actually be like attending them. And there's like a lot of research around the productivity of these, of these spaces.And they're not super. Great. Like they, they tend to lead to relapse a lot more actually. And I think that's really worth noting. Like you're going into these rooms thinking that you're gonna get better. And at some point you might just be retraumatizing yourself by listening to these stories and putting yourself back on that path, which then is then shamed if you use again.So I don't really resonate with those rooms, but again, I, I honor and respect that it does work for some people. Some people really need that rigidity in the routine to be able to say on their path. I'm not one of those people. So it didn't really work for me. I found that what got me to where I'm at today was.My, my mom, like my biological mom, she was an addict for many years. Had a pretty severe addiction to alcohol and you know, injection drug use contracted Hep C at one point during the poor, the process of her drug use. And that's why she didn't raise me. Right. But so [00:20:00] she tried the rooms when she was getting sober, but it was really having support from her family that got her there.And that's what got me to where I'm at. So if I'm having a rough time or if I need support, I call my biological mom and we talk about it. And it's just a really open Frank conversation. And I really appreciate that she can hold that space for me because, you know, she had to take accountability to the harms that she also caused me that got me to the point where I need to talk about this stuff.Right. So she's able to like actually come to terms with what she's done, her choices, how it's impacted me, and then now my choices, if all of that makes sense. Welcome to my long winded responses. Again. De'Vannon: Hey, use all the fucking winds you want. Cheyenne: Blow through mm-hmm De'Vannon: so let me, let me, let me think, let me think.Let me think. So I'm gonna throw a little bit of shade at the anonymous movements. You know, I found them to be very negative and I'm saying this because there's probably somebody out there listening. [00:21:00] Who's new with this whole fighting addiction and everything. And the anonymous movements might be one of the first things that someone throws at them or something like that.And it just reminded me so much of being in church, you know, where they think that their way is better than any other way. And they're not willing to be open minded and take a second look at things. And it's just so Just so bad, you know, and like you said, when I would, I would go to the meetings feeling happy by the time the shit was over, I would feel heavy and depressed.Like I wanted to go get high, you know, from listening to the, a bunch of grown ass men, bitch and moan, you know, and everything like that. And it just, it never worked for me. I did not like re you know, calling yourself an addict every time. The whole point is to get over being an addict where they don't believe you can ever be healed, but at the same time, what sentences are gonna say, what sense is gonna do for me to sit here and say, I'm an addict every damn day.You know? Cause sometimes they want you go to meetings three times a [00:22:00] day. It's like you're reaffirming the negatives thing that you're trying to get away from. But if it, if, if it's a program trying to keep you under their foot and under their thumb, then it works great for their agenda, which is the same thing.The church does a lot of times as they have the, the members in a certain way, that you can never really be free of them. It's like, you always are gonna need them for some reason. And I also found them to be hypocritical because all the, all the shit they talk about drugs, the pots of coffee that they would go through, you know, at every meeting and how they chain smoke cigarettes and shit outside.I said, okay, let me get this straight. I'm not supposed to do cocaine or meth or anything, never again for the rest of my life, but you can smoke five packs of cigarettes and drink 10 gallons of coffee a day. Okay.Cheyenne: yeah, it is. It is quite hypocritical. Yeah. And, and like, [00:23:00] even to the, the amount of like donuts or sugar that they provide, you know, and I'm not saying don't feed people, like, obviously we should feed people in these faces, but like, it is ironic that they then, you know, encourage other basically you're just substituting your one addiction for something else.Right. And I think that's too, is the rooms also become an addiction of it's. So I think that's kind of my other issue with them is that because we're not really teaching people how to build their toolkits up, to respond to traumatic moments or stressful moments, we're actually just creating further dependency onto the rooms.And so then you're not actually helping them be able to maintain it when there's no access to a room or when that's not a, an option, because then, then what's the next option to them. It's the room, drugs, the room or alcohol. Right. And it doesn't have to be like that. There's a whole other spectrum of supports that exist between the room and the drugs.De'Vannon: Mm. And so help me understand, how was it like [00:24:00] growing up, like in an adopted home? Did you know that your mother was out there somewhere? Did she reappear randomly out of nowhere? One day? Cheyenne: Yeah, she was in and outta my life. So I can like start from the beginning. So yeah, like my grandparents were both on my mother's side, I don't know my biological father, so I've never met him.I don't know anything about his family. When him and my mother were together they, she, he was quite abusive to her. And so he was actually it got to the point where she was too scared to tell him that she was pregnant with me because she thought that he would basically just. Forced her to abort or beat her up to miss Carrie.And so he actually went to jail and so she fled Vancouver and came back to Edmonton and had me here without the knowledge of my father. So whether or not my father knows I'm alive, I have, I have no idea. But so my mother on my mother's side is all indigenous say for like one or two family [00:25:00] members through the line that were, were settler.And so we come from drift Powell, CRE nation in Northern Alberta. I was not born and raised there because my grandmother's only experiences with the residential schools and abuse. From her partner, my grandfather she left the reserve at a young age when my mom was really young and raised all her children in Edmonton.And it was very like an intentional thing where she didn't want us to grow up on the reserve. She wanted us to have better access, to supports and grow up in a healthier way without the violence, which didn't necessarily work cuz some of that trauma. So deep-rooted right. We just carry it between family members, between generations.And so my mother struggled with substances, as I mentioned and tried really hard to take care of me for the first couple of years, brought me back to British Columbia and there's like this weird timeline in my story where I actually. Don't know what happened to me. So there was some sort of incident in Parksville where my mother was living at the time and social services got involved and, and I don't know the true story, but I've heard that [00:26:00] I was found like in a pile of pills in a hotel room, I've heard that my mother was like passed out on a couch in an apartment and social workers found me.So I don't really know the actual story. No, one's really kind of given me clarity, but my grandmother came to BC and brought me back to Edmonton. And then I was raised by my aunt and uncle. And so I knew that I was adopted. Like they didn't try to hide that from me. And my mom was really struggling with alcohol at the time, particularly.And so my household that I was growing up in was alcohol free. So that was one good thing about my home. There was a lot of cannabis in my house, but I had three siblings that were my biological aunts children. And they had it slightly better than I did, I would say. But my mom would like come in and out.So she took me back again in grade three. I can't remember how old I was in grade three. Like, I don't know, eight maybe. And she took me back and brought me back into her care. And then one day she just never picked me up from [00:27:00] school. And I was waiting and waiting and waiting and she had relapsed and was back out on the streets partying.And so I ended up back in social services and I was actually at a foster home for a few months before my aunt and uncle took me back in. So my mom was, was in and out of the picture. She would come to like the odd family events and stuff, but it was mainly my aunt and uncle that were, were raising me and, and doing so in violence at that De'Vannon: time.Okay. I'm on that violence from the aunt in just a second. So having never met your father. How, how do you feel about that? Do you have peace about that? I ask because so many times I come across people who really, really, really have a big problem with not knowing one or both of their parents. Where are you on that?Cheyenne: Yeah, it does bother me. Not so much because I wanna know him, like if he was treating my mom poorly and was like, my mom was [00:28:00] terrified of him. I don't necessarily wanna know that person. But he has a family. I have grandparents on that side. I know I have two half brothers I don't know their names, so my dad's name was Walter Adams and he was born in Scarborough, Ontario, and that's like the only information that I have about him.And then he had two sons. I haven't been able to find any other information out. And I refuse to do like one of those DNA things, cuz I don't want them having my DNA on the that's like a colonizer tactic, not giving them my DNA. But it's been a thing of like what medical. Things are in my, in my family's history that I should know about what culture am I from?Right. There could be a whole beautiful thing that I could be immersing myself in. Maybe my family's Scottish or Irish, or I have no idea. So it would be lovely to be able to connect with what other parts of my heritage exist. And also too, like who do I look like? Like I know, I look like my mom, I can see my mom and myself, but I'd love to know what my dad looked like, because it would just give clarity about who am I as a [00:29:00] person.And like, how did I get this beautiful brain of mine? And where does my personality come from? Cuz it doesn't always match my mom and right. So like there's stuff like that where I'm like, I would love to know who is Cheyenne, but there's a half of me that I'll never know. So there's a half of me that I'll never understand where it came from and it doesn't work quite like that genetics and stuff.It's not half and half, but you know, I'm, I'm just always curious about how I got to be the person I am and I can see a lot of my mom and myself, but I also see a lot of what's probably my dad. De'Vannon: I heard you say you felt like the the DNA test was, is a colonizer tactic. Tell me about that. Well, it's just, they keep Cheyenne: your day in DNA on file.And they're using it. I mean, it is pretty cool that they're using DNA now to like solve cold cases and like that kind of thing, but like, they keep your DNA on file and they can use that for however they wish. Like that just makes me feel UN uneasy. I just, yeah, I don't know. like, like, it feels like a colonizer, like just like gaining in control by containing [00:30:00] DNA.Like it's like my ultimate that's as intimate a part of me as you can get. De'Vannon: I can understand that. And you, you know what, there's no reason why you're not right. Cuz what you're saying is once it's out there, it's out there and you really don't know who the fuck has it. Cheyenne: yeah. That's my issue with it is where does it go?And like I say, like I don't have issues with law enforcement using it to, to solve murders and get justice for people. But at the same time I feel like if my consent should be given for that and I guess when they take your DNA, they probably have some sort of consent form and that's on the release form.I'm guessing. I'm not sure I've never tried. Cause I'm just, it, it makes me nervous. De'Vannon: so when you say like, so your aunt and uncle were the people who adopted you, who were abusive to you, you know, I'm getting like you know, do you mind telling us like how was, were they like withholding food from you, locking you in a closet or hit, you know, hitting you.[00:31:00]Yeah, Cheyenne: it was never like, I wanted to be super clear. Like I love my aunt and uncle, and I wanna acknowledge that my aunt came from the same like violent background that my mother did. Right. So she carried a lot of that stuff forward. My uncle has some stuff that was never really revealed to me, but he was going through some stuff out of him.I'm not trying to excuse their behavior. It's just a way of me trying to understand and process what happened to me. And I still hold a lot of love for them. And again, if they're listening, I love you. But I, I, I talk openly about what happened to me because that's who Cheyenne is. And if you didn't want me to talk about it, then you shouldn't have done it.Okay. And that's my that's my bottom line is like, if you didn't want me to talk about my hurt, then why did you hurt me? Because I was a child. And so yeah, it, it, it, I, because I have ADHD, I have a lot of behavioral problems and no one really sat down with us and explained what ADHD meant. Right. And they never really [00:32:00] explained rejection, sensitivity, dysphoria, or explained executive dysfunction or all like the complexities of ADHD.Usually people think like, oh, they can't sit still. And like, you see me, I'm fidgeting with something all the time. I'm never really sitting still, but ADHD is actually really. Impactful on so many parts of my life. And now as an adult, I understand that. But as a kid, my behavioral issues that came from ADHD, but also from a place of trauma and me trying to like fit into this world that I didn't, as I mentioned last time, I feel like I'm the in between person, right.I'm always in between kind of everything. And that was even in my childhood. And so whenever I would do something or if I, I, and I'm trying to, like, when I look back at my childhood, I'm, I'm trying to pinpoint exact moments of things that I did. And I can never remember what I did. I just remember the abuse after.And that's like really telling, because it was probably something super mild that I did. So some of the punishments that I would receive were yep. Having fooled food with help from me. So a big tactic was taking away my [00:33:00] mattress and just leaving me on a two, like a plank, like a plywood, my bed frame and locking me in my room and I wasn't allowed to play with anything or talk to anybody or, or anything.So it was isolation by myself in my room, like like you're in the hole or something in jail, you know? And they wouldn't feed me. They wouldn't nothing. And one time I remember I was playing with a pencil crayon and my uncle came in to check on me and saw me with a pencil crayon and beat me with a pencil crayon.And so I had like bruises and, and everything. And I had to go to camp that, that week. And so I went to camp with all these bruises and had to lie and say that I like fell off my bike and it was like a whole thing. But, so that was a big one was lots of like physical violence. Lots of like manipulation of like, you know, calling me a slot or like using really like, like aggressive language or towards me, weird like psychological stuff where they would one time they pretend to abandon me.We were going on a camping trip and they drove away without me and left me [00:34:00] standing in the yard. And I was abandoned as a child by my mother. Right. So not growing up with my mom, I have abandoned in trauma. And so when they left me, it's like something that I'm processing in therapy right now.Going back to that, that moment of like, they was a joke to them. But to me it was traumatizing because I still carry that now, like 30 years later, you know, of like, they just drove away, but they came back like 10 minutes later, you know? Yeah, lots of like, or if I didn't wanna eat something, we weren't allowed to leave the table until we ate it.So I fucking hate zucchini. I will not eat zucchini. I hate fish because it's a trauma around that. Right. Like being forced to sit there and. You're not allowed to eat anything else. And if you didn't finish eating it, then you'd go to bed without any other food. You'd come back in the morning and you'd go back to the table and have to finish eating that.And so step zucchini is my fucking nemesis. I hate it. Just because of that. So yeah, lots of like physical violence, lots of like mental, emotional stuff. Like psychological stuff. [00:35:00] Yeah. And from a young age, like it started as, as early as I can remember. I don't even remember when it started, but yeah, young and it carried right through until I would say I was in grade six.And that's because my, my sister, my cousin, she got social services involved. She had run away to my grandmother's house and social services were contact and they did an investigation. And so the physical violence stopped at that point, but the, the emotional violence was still continuing. And so I was 14.I was in grade seven or grade nine. Sorry. When I, when I made the decision to leave the house. So the physical violence had stopped at like 12. But yeah, the mental, emotional stuff carried through throughout junior high. De'Vannon: I, so, you know, I, I, I have so much respect for you. You're able to have such a positive attitude and everything like that about, you know, towards these people, kudos to you.So what was it like having a mother who was on and off of [00:36:00] drugs like that? Do you remember how that affected you or I just Cheyenne: remember being like, why doesn't she want me. Like, why doesn't she love me? Right? Like that's, that's I think the biggest thing that I took away of like, nobody wants me, my mom doesn't want me, my dad doesn't want me.And then now these people who are supposed to care for me, who made the choice, they chose to bring me into their house instead of loving me and protecting me, they further traumatized me. And so I think that was the thing that I struggled with the most as a kid of like, not understanding why everything was happening to me and not understanding why choices were being made for me.And where was my mom? Like, and then when she did come in, she would be drunk or she'd have a new boyfriend and like, it would just be uncomfortable, you know? So like, yeah. I just remember just always wondering, like, what's next like, why, why is this happening? Like, and I just block out a lot of my childhood.There's a lot of like memories that I just don't have. And a part of that is an ADHD thing. Just cuz I have a terrible time forming [00:37:00] memories. But I think I've just shut down a lot of my childhood. And I remember some of the heavier traumatic moments, but some of the good times are gone too.You know, like I try. I'm figuring it out. But yeah, it's just, you know, it was a lot of confusion for my childhood of like, why doesn't she wanna get better? Why doesn't she want me, why doesn't anybody want me, you know?And that's like a hard thing to carry as an adult. Like even still being chronically single for three years. You're like even still, nobody wants me, you know, but I know that's not at the end of the day, that's not true. It's just, you know, things you carry forward from your De'Vannon: past. I have every belief that you are going gain the strength you need to totally overcome at all.And so I'm curious. So we have all of this fuckery that, that didn't happen. Would you have the experience once you broke away [00:38:00] from your aunt, uncle and you were now homeless, you know, a homeless youth, did you find like a community in a sense of family out there in the streets that you felt like you had found for the first time?Yeah. Cheyenne: I would say in particular, like we had our straight family, you know, we would like, like ride around on our BMXs and hang out in the square and play ack and smoke meth and stairwells, you know, I had that crew, but it was when I started raving that I really found myself and I really felt like I found a community.So I started going to the after hours when I was like 14, but I would like always get kicked out. Cause I was, they had passed a bylaw that it was 16 plus. So I had a couple years to wait, so I would go in, they'd kick me out. And so everybody knew me in the parking lot to hang out in the parking lot a lot.But that was where I really started to find a community for the first time where I felt like I was like loved and welcomed. And for all of my. Weirdness all my flaws, all my eccentric nest that I bring to the table that was like [00:39:00] welcomed in the rave community, because a lot of the people that we shared space with were also coming from background similar to mine, or coming from spaces where they were the, the black sheep, the ostracized one, the, you know, and so I think that was the space where I was like, oh, I, I actually belong in this world.And, and then that's okay that I exist.De'Vannon: Honey, the, the tears you're shedding right now are not in vain. You know, I feel like, I feel like they're healing you, you know, I see those tears and I appreciate appreciate them because I believe they're healing you. And also, I believe you're shedding tears for other people too. Who've gone through the similar things.And so, and I love how you're just letting 'em flow. You're like, you know what? This is me. They call me cry Cheyenne: in for a reason. always crying. De'Vannon: let it go, honey, let it go. Let it go. Let it go. Cheyenne: Well, and I think it's important [00:40:00] that people hear my story because, and that's why I don't shy away from talking about the harder stuff.Even though I know it's like other people's story too. It's, it's very much my story. And I think that if someone can hear my story and know that like you're gonna be okay, like it's gonna be okay, you don't have to be what other people tell you that you are or who you've been made out to think that you are like, you're just so beautiful and perfect the way you are.And like, no matter how much other people beat you, like that's never, they're never gonna beat that out of you. Like that's yours to own. And I think I've had to really accept that. None of those things were my fault, everything that happened to me, some of the decisions I made when I started using meth and like living on the streets and being more violent, those were my choices that I have to own, but I didn't ask my aunt and uncle to beat me.I didn't ask to be adopted. I didn't ask to be born. Right. And so a lot of that staff I had to really just separate mm-hmm my. My choices from their choices. And so that's why I say, if you don't want me to talk about my story, then don't hurt me. [00:41:00] Like, if, if you don't want that to be part of my story, then don't make it part of my story.And I think that goes like with any person that comes into my life now, it's not just about my aunt and uncle it's about anybody, you know, like, and I've had really good conversations with my biological mom. Like I said about everything that she's done about the abandonment and about how it's impacted me now as adult.But I haven't quite had that conversation with my aunt and uncle yet. And so I know it's coming. And I don't know if it's gonna go in a positive direction or Renee. I don't know if it's like gonna be a make or break for our relationship, but I'm ready to have the conversation. I still have a few more therapy sessions before I, I get to that point, but I'm, I'm almost there to have the conversation of like, this is what you did and this is how it's affected me.And I just need to hear you be accountable for it. Right. And like, I love you. I forgive you, but I, I need you to hold space for my pain.De'Vannon: I commend you on your bravery. You you gotta. You you gotta walk ahead of you, but [00:42:00] but you know, but you're doing everything that you can do because you can't really control it, what anyone else does, but at least, you know, you have a strong sense of peace knowing you exhausted every possible means to sort it all out.And then you haven't acccess to anger. You haven't become bitter, you know, or anything like that. And that's something that I'm noticing, and that can happen to people by it'll just get angry and stuff like that, and not really do anything except for stay angry. But what, one thing, one good thing I did learn from my sponsor and crystal meth anonymous is that bitterness and resentment it's like me drinking poison and expecting someone else to die.so, so, so however it is that you do it. Y'all let that bitterness go. Let it go. Let it go. Let it go. Let it go. I like stay on this, the, the, the, the, the homeless, like, youth experience, because I'm, I'm thinking about like, say [00:43:00] chosen family and things like that. So like, so like when the biological family doesn't quite work out in.Sometimes I see people who just cannot get over their biological family. Be it sisters, brothers, cousins, moms, dads, whatever. I dare say. I think some people have an addiction to family. Okay. I, I, I do believe that. What do you think about chosen family? Because there's a lot of people. There's a lot of us, black sheepy ones.Okay. It's never gonna work out with us in our biological family. And I just think it's time we come to terms with that. Cheyenne: yeah. It's, it's the dependency thing. We're like we're indoctrinated to believe that our family is like, we need to be right or die with our family. No matter how much they hurt us. And I just can't get on board with that.Like it's like being in a toxic relationship, being with an abusive partner, we wouldn't say, oh no, you need to stay with them because you love them. Right. We would say, no, that person is hurting. You, you need to separate yourself [00:44:00] from them. That person does not bring you joy, separate yourself from them.And I think that's the same with the family. You know, like I say, it it'll be a make or break conversation with my family because like, it's, it, it, it, it just has gotta happen. But I think that's why I love my chosen family so much, you know like particularly the rave community helped me for so many years, and now I have a drag family and like The drag community has been so much just so loving and caring and comforting for me.And I've only been doing drag since August. And so I found a chosen family, even within that small group of people and it was instant. It was like, they were just like, yeah, I see you. And I love you for who, who you are. And so I'm, I'm a firm believer in chosen family as well. I think we need to make spaces for ourselves that bring us joy, Marie condo, that shit.If, if, if your family does not spark joy, fucking, just move on and, and find someone who does carry you. Someone who is willing to love you in your messy times, someone who is willing to say, Hey, you're fucking up. How do we fix that? [00:45:00] Someone who can call you in and, and, and cry with you and love with you and celebrate with you.And if your family's not willing to do that and accept you for who you are, then it's okay to step away. Like, and I, and I firmly believe that. De'Vannon: And we're not saying it won't take some counseling and some talking through because it, oh, no Cheyenne: therapy, like, please get, get a therapist, please. De'Vannon: Cause it's like, when you leave biological family, it's almost like they've died in a way.And, and I, and I found, I had to like mourn the loss, you know, of a certain sibling of mine when, when there was just no path forward for us because of bitterness that they hold towards me and they refused to talk through it. You know, it felt like it was like, it was like attending a funeral for them.And it was, and I had to, you know, you know, I talked to my counselor and everything about that and, you know, we were able to find peace and resolution. I was curious like your aunt and uncle are they like, [00:46:00] do they say they're like religious people. Not at all. Cheyenne: No, no, no, no, no, not at all. No, we, we did not grow up with religion.My grandmother was the religious one. And so I spent much of my youth, like I said, in going to church and choir and like doing all the things. But my family was never really there at church. They would go like once a year, but in the last couple of years, a lot of my family has been really embracing our indigenous side, which has been beautiful to see.So not quite going to ceremonies and stuff yet, but you know, rejecting Canada day, rejecting religion you know, even starting to reject the religious holidays, which has been really great for me because I'm like, I feel bad that I'm not coming to Christmas dinner, but like I'm not celebrating Christmas anymore.It's just not my thing. It's not for me. I don't believe in it. But yes, it's been really great to see them embrace the indigenous kind of side of things. And, and thankfully religion. Wasn't a big part of my story outside of like the earlier part of my years.[00:47:00]De'Vannon: So, so then you get into a group home, so you're no longer homeless. So when you were homeless, like you said that you were like smoking meth to walk, you know, to stay up all night. It reminded me when I was, when I was homeless in Houston, I would constantly have meth in my system. And so I would just walk and walk and walk and walk and walk, you know, that's when I walked myself down to 127 pounds, you know, everything like that.And it was whew. I was barely here. This, this, this girl was barely here. And sohow often did you eat? Because for me it was about like maybe every five, seven days or so. I might come across food. Do you remember. Cheyenne: Well, see, I had a unique experience because I was in high school at the time. So I was still attending classes and I, I love my high school there. It was the boil street education center.And they have a meal program, [00:48:00] so they feed their students breakfast and lunch, and that was a big way of getting me into school. So I was like living in like the river valley. I would hike up the stairs in the morning, come out of the, come out of the ravine and go to class and, and be able to get a hot breakfast and a hot lunch.And so school, as much as I wasn't so engaged in the material. It could keep me there because they would feed me. And they're smart. It was a very intentional thing for them. And even to this day, the school still feeds their students. Two meals a day. They have hamper programs, they have supports for their students.And so when I was, when I was homeless, it was like a really big thing for me, was to be able to go and eat Monday to Friday. And then Saturdays, it would depend if I would make it to the soup kitchen or not. There would be days when I wouldn't make it to school or wouldn't make it to soup kitchen and I'd go without food.Or when school was off during the summer, so they have more of a year round program. So they're really only off for part of July and August. And so there would be that short brief of time where I wouldn't have two [00:49:00] meals a day. And. From 14 to 16. So when I was 16, even though I was still using meth, my biological mom was sober by that point.And so she got a new home. She got like an apartment and I moved in with her for a while. So I lived with her for a year while I was still using meth. And I was still very street involved. I had a space to go home and sleep in, but I was still like very much out and about on the street all hours of the night and day.But I was getting food at that point. So, De'Vannon: and you said in the was it a hamburger program you said? I couldn't quite hear. Yeah. They call it a ham, a hamper program. Cheyenne: Yeah. We have hamper programs yeah. At the school as well. I'm actually the board of directors for the high school. I'm still involved with the school.I just really believe in the work that they're doing because they saved my life. Like it was boil street being like, yeah, you're tweaked out. You're, you're a sketchy wild child, but we're gonna just love you and accept you as you are. And again, that's where my earliest [00:50:00] introductions to harm reduction came from, was through the school of like, yeah, you're clearly sketching, but you're still allowed to be here.It wasn't like, oh, you're high on meth. You need to leave. It was like, oh, you're high on meth. Let's sit you down here and support you and give you extra attention so that, you know, you are going to be okay. Like, we make sure that you're okay. And I just really appreciated that approach. So they, I would say they saved my life and they fed me, which I really appreciated.De'Vannon: yeah, my God. I had too many doors closed in my face when I. High on meth and everything like that. I'm so glad you had a different experience and I didn't have enough sense to go and find, like, I didn't know that there was one stops and places you can go and shower and stuff like that. I tried to eat at the shower was Cheyenne: harder De'Vannon: for me.Yeah. I tried to eat at the veteran's affair. It's like a soup kitchen that my cousin had told me about. I eat there like once and the next time I went back, they told me I was dressed too good. And so they turned me away. So they, so they [00:51:00] wouldn't let me eat because I looked too good at the, at the veteran's affairs.And so. They were I Cheyenne: didn't forbid I, how people look De'Vannon: nice. yeah. Like, and I think what it was is from where the drug rate had happened. I think, you know, when you're homeless, you show from house to house, sometimes you might pick up a shirt here, pair of jeans there, that sort of thing. And I think some of my clothes may have been recycled back to me from when the drug rate happened.My shit got scattered all over Houston. And so I was able to piecemeal a decent outfit together. I just, you know, and I just felt really good about myself for that one day at that one time. And you know, so I'm thinking I'm looking good. I'm gonna get me something to eat. You know, I haven't shot up meth yet.Otherwise I wouldn't have an appetite and they're like, Leave. And so I had to sit there and watch everybody eat, not once, but twice. And then I was denied food. And so I was like, you know what? Back to the streets I go then . And so Cheyenne: And I'm guessing that was run by some sort of, you said ministry. Oh, no veterans.[00:52:00] So not religion based? No. Okay. A lot of RSU kitchens here are religion based. Two in part, part, two of the main ones are run by like churches. De'Vannon: You have them, they might be like under like a Catholic archdiocese or something like that. But the ones that are like that here are not very religious. Like they might say a prayer when all the homeless people get in there, otherwise disadvantaged people get there to eat, but nobody's like coming around, handing you out little Bibles or anything like that.No, this was a government facility. I'm a veteran of the United States air force at a veteran's affairs. Kitchen. And I was denied food there even as a veteran. Yeah. That's all that was, there was veterans. It was a place just for veterans. And so, but they told me that's so frustrating. I wasn't looking trashy enough for their, for their liking and Cheyenne: so gross.[00:53:00]De'Vannon: Okay. So then. So then you got emancipated at the age of 17. Talk to me about that process. I think it's abundantly clear why you probably wanted to be emancipated, but there's something you'd like to say about the why I'd also like to know the, how. Cheyenne: Yeah. So when I left home at 14 and by the time I then began living with my mom at 16.So in those years I was like in and out of group homes. I had some charges that I received as well for some stuff. So I was like in and out of the young offender center as well, never more than like a couple days or a week. I had 2, 2, 2 instances where I was in jail. But it was like going through group homes and going through like just constantly in and outta group homes.And like, I always just felt like I'd just rather be on the streets. I would much rather be like, and I, I think part of that was like I had what's that disorder. Oh, I can't remember what it's called anywheres, like pressed. What is I [00:54:00] can't remember the name anyways. I just didn't take to authority very well.And I think it's because when you grow up in violence and you grow up, like constantly being told how to think or act, or, you know, being punished for trying to be yourself you know, authority just is there's conflicting there. Right. And so I just didn't really like being in group homes. And so I was talking to my social worker at the time.And I had a lot of bad social workers over the time as well. Like they just didn't really want to actually like sit with me or support me. They would just throw a food voucher my way, or throw a clothing voucher my way and then, or throw me in a group home. And that would be it, there was not really a lot of like dignity coming from conversations with social workers.And so when I talked to my social worker about it and I said, I think I'm ready to like, not be a part of the system anymore because I had been my whole life. Right. My mom. Adopted me out to my aunt and uncle. So I already had child welfare involvement from like a young age. And so for me, it just [00:55:00] made more sense to separate myself from the state, so to speak.So I did have to go through a court process. I remember it being fairly easy. Because at that point I was living with my biological mom. And I was, I think I was actually 16 when I emancipated cuz I was still using at that time. But I just remember the court process being really easy. And I remember just being really like, that's it like, there's like, okay.You're and, but I mean, it, it cost me some support, so I didn't get like any sort of food or clothing vouchers anymore. I didn't have any financial assistance from, from child welfare or anything like that. So there was like a whole side of supports that I, I could have probably accessed. I think now it's up until 23 is when you can access those supports.At that time it was probably like 18 or 19. So I still had a few more years of support, but for me it just made more sense to be independent. And I was so fiercely independent because my whole [00:56:00]life, everybody that was supposed to care for me, let me down. And so at that point I also felt like the system had also let me down.And so I just rather do the things on my own. And I've been doing things on my own ever since I've been, I left home at 14 and I'm still living alone and I'm, I'm very independent. I don't ask for a lot of help. It's hard for me to ask for help. So that's a, a thing I'm, I'm learning to work through now of like being comfortable asking for help.But for many years it was like, I just wanted do my own thing and getting out of the system was the best way to do that. So I'm glad I emancipated, but it's not the great move for everybody. Right? Like some people might need additional supports moving forward. And I don't know what it's like in the states.And I, and again, this was a number of years goes, I don't even know what the emancipation process would be like now, if it would still be as easy for somebody, but I think they just saw a traumatized child who was willing to do it on their own. And it was easier to wipe themselves clean of it, not having to deal with it anymore.Right. De'Vannon: Well, [00:57:00] you know what, here's the freedom. I am so glad that you feel free. And so it's so quintessential to our mental health and our emotional wellbeing. And I think I'm like you in terms of bucking against authority, you know, because I grew up in an abusive home too, that I went to the military, not to mention all the influence of the church and this every day I'm, I'm particular about whose authority I come under.Like, and I, it is a miracle. I even made it out of the military. It was an honorable discharge because it's not that I don't like being told what to do, but I'm very particular because a lot of people wanna control others and they're not really qualified or all that competent. And so that I agree like for, but you know, for a long time, I.Well shit. That's why I'm in business for myself because I really, I really don't like being told what to do, just fuck it. I don't. What, so you, you, you did say that you lived in group homes. What, what would you say to anybody currently? Who's like a youth living in a group home because I know that came with this own set of [00:58:00] struggles and everything like that.Just what advice would you give. Cheyenne: I think looking back there were some group homes that I probably could've actually thrived in if I would've just given it a little bit of more of a chance. And so I think it like really comes down to your own intuition. If a space doesn't feel safe, like talk to your workers, talk to your support systems about that.And I, I, I just like the streets seem like a better option, but it might not be right. Like a lot of stuff happened to me on the streets as well. That was violent and abusive. And I did a lot of violent and abusive things when I lived on the street as well. Like you're in survival mode all the time.Right. So I don't know if I have like, necessarily like advice. I would just say like, Just do what feels what's going to keep you safe. And just like, remember that you're loved, like somebody out there loves you who like, and it may not seem that way when you're in a group home, everything feels really isolating and scary.And like I have social anxiety. And so it was already [00:59:00] awkward enough to be in these spaces with new people every few weeks. And like other youth who are just as angry as you are, you know? Yeah. I just like, it's just about finding ways to keep yourself safe and recognizing that it's okay to sometimes ask for that help.And that not all authority or not all group homes are out to get. Yeah. Even though it fucking seems that way when you're a kid I really wish I would've had more of an understanding of the disabilities I have and how I respond to authority. You know, and even my attachments, my attachment disorders and stuff like, yeah.I, I, I think it's really important that we start to understand who we are. And I think if you're in a group home that can feel really overwhelming. And so I don'

HANGIN WITH TRIPLE R & BCV
Rough Rider Show featuring Blue Collar Vinny & Jib

HANGIN WITH TRIPLE R & BCV

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2022 53:02


Jib during our podcast fell victim to debit card fraud :( not happy at allBCV ass is chapped over a state political race election results...Of course we have a few stories.

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for July 10, 2022 is: gibbous • JIB-us • adjective Gibbous is most often used to describe a moon or planet that is seen with more than half, but not all, of the apparent disk illuminated. // The lake's calm surface glistened under the light of the waxing gibbous moon. See the entry > Examples: "Eventually, we lay our heads down on our pillows beneath a clear sky (no tent required) and a bright gibbous moon that left the canyon well illuminated. I never even unpacked a flashlight." — David Courtney, Texas Monthly, July 2022 Did you know? The adjective gibbous has its origins in the Latin noun gibbus, meaning "hump." It was adopted into Middle English to describe rounded, convex things. While it has been used to describe the rounded body parts of humans and animals (such as the back of a camel) and to describe the shape of certain flowers (such as snapdragons), the term is most often used to describe the moon: a gibbous moon is one that is between half full and full.

Pods of the Multiverse
S3 E9 - Cold Hearted Bastards

Pods of the Multiverse

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2022 74:37


In the wake of a naval battle with Vytus; Jib makes an unlikely acquaintance, Everett attempts an unorthodox interrogation, and the party strategizes for an inevitable confrontation with Garen Kang. Geppi Iaia, Dungeon Master J. Scala as Wink Andy Burger as Everett Jimmy Affatigato as Jib Produced by Jimmy Affatigato Edited by J. Scala Music by Andy Burger Art by Alexa Reilly Support Pods of the Multiverse on Patreon Join our Discord Follow @multiverse_pod on Twitter

Hallå Där Nere
Nr10: Vi är Malmö för nya dar! Hurra Hurra Hurra!

Hallå Där Nere

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2022 33:31


Sveriges främsta och mest meriterade fotbollsförening Malmö FF firade 112 år i veckan, det uppmärksammades. Och på lördag är det återigen match för både herrar och damer. Vi tog ett litet snack med JIB ocm det. Vi tar också en snabb titt på skadeläget och transferläget. Och vem har Ekberg på ryggen??? Framåt Malmö --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/daniel-ekberg/message

Pods of the Multiverse
S3 E7 - New Hire Orientation

Pods of the Multiverse

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2022 104:02


Everett, Wink and Jib try their hands at corporate espionage, uncovering ominous evidence of Fael Barosh's plans for Icewind Dale. After an explosive exit and a harrowing confrontation with Fael's lackeys, the party is confronted by powerful enemies old and new. Geppi Iaia, Dungeon Master J. Scala as Wink Andy Burger as Everett Jimmy Affatigato as Jib Produced by Jimmy Affatigato Edited by J. Scala Music by Andy Burger Art by Alexa Reilly Support Pods of the Multiverse on Patreon Join our Discord Follow @multiverse_pod on Twitter

Pods of the Multiverse
S3 E6 - Speak or be Spoken For

Pods of the Multiverse

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2022 113:39


The debate for the Speakership of Bryn Shader forces the issue of the party's allegiance. Jib talks ethics with Everett, Wink talks politics with a campaign manager. The party considers a new job within Fael Barosh headquarters. Geppi Iaia, Dungeon Master J. Scala as Wink Andy Burger as Everett Jimmy Affatigato as Jib Produced by Jimmy Affatigato Edited by J. Scala Music by Andy Burger Art by Alexa Reilly Support Pods of the Multiverse on Patreon Join our Discord Follow @multiverse_pod on Twitter

Pods of the Multiverse
S3 E5 - Bearriage to Bryn Shander

Pods of the Multiverse

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 79:04


While riding a peculiar vehicle, Everett, Jib and Wink are confronted with a difficult moral problem in dealing with a captive; before being confronted by the infamous Fael Barosh with a new contentious assignment. Geppi Iaia, Dungeon Master J. Scala as Wink Andy Burger as Everett Jimmy Affatigato as Jib Produced by Jimmy Affatigato Edited by J. Scala Music by Andy Burger Art by Alexa Reilly Support Pods of the Multiverse on Patreon Join our Discord Follow @multiverse_pod on Twitter

Pods of the Multiverse
S3 E2 - Silent Adversaries

Pods of the Multiverse

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2022 94:08


The party's investigation of the Caer reveals a connection between the black sword cult and Termalaine. After a night of drinks and strange dreams, Wink, Jib and Everett set off across the unforgiving tundra. Geppi Iaia, Dungeon Master J. Scala as Wink Andy Burger as Everett Jimmy Affatigato as Jib Produced by Jimmy Affatigato Edited by J. Scala Music by Andy Burger Art by Alexa Reilly Support Pods of the Multiverse on Patreon Join our Discord Follow @multiverse_pod on Twitter

Good Change: Conversations About Making a World of Difference
From Siberia to Sustainability and Beyond | GC01 Part 2

Good Change: Conversations About Making a World of Difference

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2021 54:41


Jib Ellison is the visionary founder of Project RAFT (Russians and Americans for Teamwork) and Blu Skye, a sustainable practices consultancy for many of the world's largest companies. During this podcast, Jib shares how he conceived and created Project RAFT, an organization built on the idea of citizen diplomacy whitewater rafting expeditions between the USSR and the US. This world-changing program took us away from nuclear annihilation by fostering meaningful and lasting relationships across country and culture lines. Jib then founded and still directs Blu Skye, a strategic planning and operations consultancy with clients such as Wal Mart and Microsoft. Blu Skye helps corporations believe in and then implement sustainability practices that are positively impacting climate change.  Find out more about the need to shift from sustainable to regenerative economies; businesses that focus on sustainability and regeneration are positioned for great success; how we are all in the same boat (raft) when it comes to our primary wants and needs; phone lines in a closet (again!) being critical to becoming a leading environmental advisory firm; and why shifting the narrative to represent who we really are rather than how we are inaccurately portrayed which causes outrage among and between us could be a key to saving the earth. www.facebook.com/ProjectRAFT/ www.bluskye.com About the Host: Ken Streater shares eye-opening and heartening global experiences that reflect our shared dreams and concerns. A former international river guide and adventure travel outfitter who worked and played in 50 countries, Alaskan bush teacher turned social good entrepreneur, Fortune 500 consultant, bestselling author, and keynote speaker, Ken has seen first-hand how common ground blooms greater good. From angry hippo showdowns to nuclear missile attacks, from billionaire shenanigans to Siberian soccer wars to quiet conversations with everyday heroes, these and other interactions inspire him to create good change. Ken's just released #1 Amazon bestselling book, Be the Good: Becoming a Force for a Better World, is receiving rave reviews from movement leaders and readers alike. His podcast, Good Change: Conversations About Making a World of Difference is “where movement makers, industry leaders, visionaries, voices of hope, and everyday heroes gather to share ideas, laugh, and inspire action for greater good.” https://www.facebook.com/kenstreaterauthor (Facebook) | https://twitter.com/KenStreater (Twitter) | https://www.instagram.com/kenstreater/ (Instagram) Thanks for listening! Thanks so much for listening to our podcast! If you enjoyed this episode and think that others could benefit from listening, please share it using the social media buttons on this page.  Do you have some feedback or questions about this episode? Leave a comment in the section below! Subscribe to the podcast If you would like to get automatic updates of new podcast episodes, you can subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts or Stitcher. You can also subscribe on your favorite podcast app. Leave us an Apple Podcasts review Ratings and reviews from our listeners are extremely valuable to us and greatly appreciated. They help our podcast rank higher on Apple Podcasts, which exposes our show to more awesome listeners like you. If you have a minute, please leave an honest review on Apple Podcasts.

Good Change: Conversations About Making a World of Difference
From Siberia to Sustainability and Beyond | GC01 Part 1

Good Change: Conversations About Making a World of Difference

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2021 52:34


Jib Ellison is the visionary founder of Project RAFT (Russians and Americans for Teamwork) and Blu Skye, a sustainable practices consultancy for many of the world's largest companies. During this podcast, Jib shares how he conceived and created Project RAFT, an organization built on the idea of citizen diplomacy whitewater rafting expeditions between the USSR and the US. This world-changing program took us away from nuclear annihilation by fostering meaningful and lasting relationships across country and culture lines. Jib then founded and still directs Blu Skye, a strategic planning and operations consultancy with clients such as Wal Mart and Microsoft. Blu Skye helps corporations believe in and then implement sustainability practices that are positively impacting climate change.  Join us and learn about Project RAFT's conception by this 20-year-old wonderkid with the support of a ragtag assemblage of whitewater rafters; phone lines in closets being a critical link in facilitating world peace and impeding climate degradation; simply doing what you love in order to help bring about good change; how Russians and Americans working together may be no different than liberals and conservatives doing the same; the difference between doing something good and doing something right; and that we are in the same raft in terms of what matters to each of us and all of us. http://www.facebook.com/ProjectRAFT/ (facebook.com/ProjectRAFT/) http://www.bluskye.com (bluskye.com)   About the Host: Ken Streater shares eye-opening and heartening global experiences that reflect our shared dreams and concerns. A former international river guide and adventure travel outfitter who worked and played in 50 countries, Alaskan bush teacher turned social good entrepreneur, Fortune 500 consultant, bestselling author, and keynote speaker, Ken has seen first-hand how common ground blooms greater good. From angry hippo showdowns to nuclear missile attacks, from billionaire shenanigans to Siberian soccer wars to quiet conversations with everyday heroes, these and other interactions inspire him to create good change. Ken's just released #1 Amazon bestselling book, Be the Good: Becoming a Force for a Better World, is receiving rave reviews from movement leaders and readers alike. His podcast, Good Change: Conversations About Making a World of Difference is “where movement makers, industry leaders, visionaries, voices of hope, and everyday heroes gather to share ideas, laugh, and inspire action for greater good.” https://www.facebook.com/kenstreaterauthor (Facebook) | https://twitter.com/KenStreater (Twitter) | https://www.instagram.com/kenstreater/ (Instagram) Thanks for listening! Thanks so much for listening to our podcast! If you enjoyed this episode and think that others could benefit from listening, please share it using the social media buttons on this page.  Do you have some feedback or questions about this episode? Leave a comment in the section below! Subscribe to the podcast If you would like to get automatic updates of new podcast episodes, you can subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts or Stitcher. You can also subscribe on your favorite podcast app. Leave us an Apple Podcasts review Ratings and reviews from our listeners are extremely valuable to us and greatly appreciated. They help our podcast rank higher on Apple Podcasts, which exposes our show to more awesome listeners like you. If you have a minute, please leave an honest review on Apple Podcasts.

Bibble and Babble
Mischief Not Managed Part II

Bibble and Babble

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2020 63:12


Welcome back Muggles and Wizards to Bibble and Babble. Join us as we continue explore the magical work of J.K. Rowlings Harry Potter with our guests Jib and Princess. Are we in the right house!?? We all do a quiz to see if we were sorted into the correctly. Is Bibble a Ravenclaw or a Slytherin? Ships make another appearance because we just cannot help shipping our favorite characters. Also our favorite scenes! Send us a note with your favorite we would love to know! Babble's Favorite Scene with the Phoenix - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-cV-MCqEMF8 Draco's Redemption - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oNNbUEcGyVQ

Start Right Now | Leadership Coaching, Personal Growth Hacks, and Marketing Strategy for New Entrepreneurs
22. Forget the highlight reel: How to use social media to document your creative journey and authentically connect - With Musician JIB

Start Right Now | Leadership Coaching, Personal Growth Hacks, and Marketing Strategy for New Entrepreneurs

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2020 21:46


Promoting yourself and your creative pursuits can, at times, feel overwhelming - especially if you're not yet a master at your craft. You may feel pressure for your social media feed to look like you have it all together - and to create the illusion of perfection. But is this what your audience really wants? In this episode, my candid conversation with Toronto-based Pop Music artist JIB will give you a behind the scenes on how he, as an up-and-coming musician, is leaning into social media to create authentic connections every day.   You can listen to JIB's music on Spotify. Connect with him on Instagram @Jib2diworld.   Connect with Chloe on Instagram @ChloeMcKenzie.co

Bangkok Strange
Hill Tribe School Background

Bangkok Strange

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2020 74:04


In this episode, we are joined by Jib from Knit by Jib to talk about the Hill Tribe School Project we have undertaken as a core tenet of Bangkok Strang. Jib from Knit by Jib joins us today to discuss the history of the hill tribe school, how she and dana got involved and what their needs are right now. Merch: http://Shop.BangkokStrange.comFind the World Famous BAngKok Strange podcast on: iTunes, Google Podcast, iHeart, TuneIN, and *many* other fine podcast aggregators. BLOG: http://www.BangkokStrange.com *MERCH* http://shop.bangkokstrange.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BangkokStrange/ (c) 2020 Bangkok Strange  

CAMPZZZ
ทำความรู้จัก Pinku Notori กลุ่มเกมเมอร์สาว นำโดยน้องแพท

CAMPZZZ

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2019 34:12


มาแล้วกับ EP.1 ของ CAMPZZZ Podcast Season 1 อย่างเป็นทางการ โดยคราวนี้พูดถึงกลุ่ม Streamer สาวจาก JIB อย่าง Pinku No Tori ที่ปัจจุบันเป็นที่รู้จักในหมู่เกมเมอร์ชาวไทยไปแล้วครับ 

Metagamers Anonymous Actual Play Series
Dungeon World (TsunamiCon 2015 Demo)

Metagamers Anonymous Actual Play Series

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2017 108:38


Recorded live at TsunamiCon 2015, JiB from Happy Jacks RPG Podcast runs an impromptu game of Dungeon World for some of our convention regulars. The game featured some of our most devoted listeners and community contributors, including Mikey Mason for part of the evening (before other obligations drew him reluctantly away from the table). Enjoy! The Metagamers Anonymous Actual Play series is sponsored by Lone Wolf Development, makers of Hero Lab, and Plate Mail Games!  

demo dungeon world jib mikey mason hero lab plate mail games happy jacks rpg podcast tsunamicon
The Mtb Jumper Podcast
005 Eric Porter | Slope Style, Film Making, Bike Packing

The Mtb Jumper Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2017 73:01


Mtbjumper.com/EricPorter/ Mtb Jumper Podcast on iTunes Eric Porter on Facebook 01:13 Eric Porter's travel/work schedule 01:54 Fox Suspension 01:54 Diamondback Bicycles 02:24 Vernon Felton of Pinkbike 02:43 Camelbak Hog 03:03 NICA High school cycling league, Utah 03:34 Eric Porter in Guatemala for Outside Magazine 03:50 Gravity Logic 04:23 Sea Otter Classic Mtb Festival 04:32 Wasatch Trails Alliance 05:48 How Eric Porter balances work and family life 07:13 Cam McCaul mention 08:00 Magura mention 08:04 Dirt Rag Dirt Fest 08:11 Sierra Club mention 09:56 Eric Porter's beginnings on bikes 10:06 Kentucky Mountain Biking 12:18 John Mahorney mention 12:46 Eric Porter's mountain bike race experience 14:03 Dirt Jumping and Street Mtb beginnings 14:08 Aaron Chase, Jeff Lenosky, Kyle Ebbett mentions 14:16 Chain Reaction Video Series 14:31 Slope Style 14:53 First Crankworx and John Cowan mentions 15:18 Darren Berrecloth mention 15:57 More Jeff Lenosky 18:27 Kranked filming 18:41 Eric Porter 45 foot canyon gap crash, injury 22:00 Role in mountain biking film making work 24:00 Alaska Ridgeline Video filming 24:14 Mason Mashon mention 25:31 Kevin Murphy mention 27:08 Utah Progressive Mountain Biking Scene 28:32 Double Down and Jib film mentions 29:23 Park City Dirt Jump Park 31:25 The Kenda Crew in Eric Porter's Yard, video on Pinkbike 33:16 Kelly McGarry discussion 35:21 Bike Packing discussion 37:01 Diamondback Release bike 37:09 Revelate Bike Bags 37:30 Camelbak H.A.W.G. 41:34 How Eric Porter finances videos and trips, works with sponsors, hires help… 44:29 Mountain biking and action sports industry self promotion 46:52 Brandon Semenuk Life Behind Bars Video Series 47:26 Rupert Walker and Revel Co mentions 49:19 NW Cup Groms, Mountain biking industry growth 51:07 Sal Masakela mention 51:13 Travis Pastrana mention 57:30 Paul Basagoitia 1:03:10 Presscamp with Magura in Sedona 1:03:34 Bike Packing Trip with Sierra Club 1:05:32 Stc Trails Association 1:05:46 Boulder White Clouds Closure via IMBA 1:06:38 Trail advocacy and political involvement in Mountain Biking discussion