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Sometimes it really is all about family...On this episode we dive into a unique and bare bones little thriller that has some surprising family connections. It's time for 'You Can't Run Forever'.A teenage girl suffering from anxiety due to a tragic event from her past finds herself hunted through the woods by a sociopath on a murderous rampage.A very simple but genius premise in this nail biter of a thriller which was a family affair in more ways then one. Mounted during the peak of COVID, the film is written and directed by Michelle Schumacher, who is married to the star, the iconic J.K. Simmons and the film's music is done by up and coming film composer Joe Simmons who just happens to be their son.I had the pleasure of talking with Michelle and Joe about mounting this production, the nature of the story, working with family and so very much more....
Michelle Schumacher and Joe Simmons calls into the podcast to talk about the film " You Can't Run Forever ", In Theaters, On Digital and On Demand on May 17th 2024.
Hey everyone, mark your calendars! The pulse-pounding thriller "You Can't Run Forever" hits theaters on May 17th. Director Michelle Schumacher crafts a relentless thrill ride that masterfully blends heart-pounding action with genuine psychological terror. But 'You Can't Run Forever' transcends genre. It's a story about facing your fears and the indomitable human spirit. And of course, J.K. Simmons is phenomenal as always. His chilling portrayal of the killer will stay with you long after the credits roll. Can't wait for audiences to experience this one! Buckle up, Celebrity Spotlight Radio listeners, because we're about to take a thrilling ride! Today, we've got a double dose of creative genius! First up, we have the visionary director behind the highly anticipated film, "You Can't Run Forever," the incredible Michelle Schumacher! Her masterful storytelling is about to leave you breathless. And joining her is the musical maestro who brings the film's heart to life with his electrifying score, the one and only Joe Simmons! Michelle and Joe, welcome to Celebrity Spotlight Radio! We're so excited to have you both here to delve into the making of "You Can't Run Forever." Let's get ready to explore this suspenseful story and the magic that went into creating it! Watch the Official Trailer Here. Subscribe Today! I thank You for the kind support. ✅ Subscribe to My YouTube Channel @CelebritySpotlightRadio Don't forget to like
The American essayist and novelist Marilynne Robinson may not be Catholic, but her writing reveals a deeply sacramental imagination. Through five books of fiction and dozens of essays, Robinson trains her readers in the art of spiritual attention. Where is God's grace operating in nature and in the ordinary ways humans love, disappoint and forgive one other? In her essay “Psalm 8” she writes, “I have spent my life watching not to see beyond the world,” but “merely to see, great mystery, what is plainly before my eyes… With all due respect to heaven, the scene of miracle is here, among us.” Robinson is best known for her novel “Gilead,” which won the Pulitzer Prize in 2005. It has three sequels, each installment following a different protagonist in the fictitious Iowa town. The last of those, “Jack” (2020), traces the wanderings of a Prodigal Son who has difficulty recognizing a place in his family, church, and hometown. We all know a Jack or two, and Robinson helps us understand their plights with empathy. In March 2024, she released a new book, "Reading Genesis," which is a long meditation on the first book of Hebrew Scripture. She defamiliarizes old stories that we thought we understood – of Adam and Eve, of Cain and Abel, of Abraham and Sarah. She challenges easy clichés – Old Testament God: bad! Jesus: good! – to show us how God's faithfulness to humanity starts right there…in the beginning. Which is why today's interview with guest host Fr. Joe Simmons, SJ, starts with Genesis, and branches out into philosophy, science, poetry and fiction, and back to theology. Fr. Simmons, who wrote his doctoral dissertation on the work of Robinson and Virginia Woolf, even talks with our guest on Ignatius Loyola and his contemporary, John Calvin – and the miseries of studying in 16th-century Paris! – which made Fr. Simmons laugh out loud. You won't want to miss that. More about Marilynne Robinson: https://us.macmillan.com/author/marilynnerobinson "Reading Genesis": https://www.amazon.com/Reading-Genesis-Marilynne-Robinson/dp/0374299404 More about Fr. Joe Simmons, SJ: https://www.marquette.edu/theology/directory/joseph-simmons.php AMDG is a production of the Jesuit Conference of Canada and the United States. www.jesuits.org/ www.beajesuit.org/ twitter.com/jesuitnews facebook.com/Jesuits instagram.com/wearethejesuits youtube.com/societyofjesus www.jesuitmedialab.org/
Ever wondered if reducing stress could be the key to unlocking your path to success? Reducing stress is not just about feeling better; it's about unlocking your pathway to success. Managing stress effectively can help boost productivity, enhance focus, and achieve your goals with greater ease. Embracing stress reduction techniques empowers you to navigate challenges confidently and create a more fulfilling life. Joe Simmons is a visionary consultant and coach helping busy professionals achieve more success with less stress. With over 20 years of experience, he has developed a unique framework to help individuals overcome stress and fulfill their goals. Today, Joe identifies common reasons goals go unfulfilled such as entitlement, impatience, and stress, and emphasizes the importance of competency over compensation through developing specialized knowledge and skills. Stay tuned! Resources MAD Money: 12 Foundational Principles To Make More Money In Half The Time With Half The Stress by Joe A. Simmons on Amazon Paradigms & Perspectives Podcast Website Joe A. Simmons on LinkedIn
Simine Vazire is a Professor of Psychology at the University of Melbourne. In this conversation, we talk about her work on meta-science, the purpose of journals and peer review, Simine's plans for being Editor-in-Chief at Psychological Science, the hidden curriculum of scienitic publishing, and much more.BJKS Podcast is a podcast about neuroscience, psychology, and anything vaguely related, hosted by Benjamin James Kuper-Smith.Support the show: https://geni.us/bjks-patreonTimestamps0:00:00: What is SIPS and why did Simine cofound it?0:05:10: Why Simine resigned from the NASEM Reproducibility & Replicability committee0:13:07: Do we still need journals and peer review in 2023?0:28:04: What does an Editor-in-Chief actually do?0:37:09: Simine will be EiC of Psychological Science0:59:44: The 'hidden curriculum' of scientific publishing1:04:03: Why Siminie created a GoFundMe for DataColada1:15:10: A book or paper more people should read1:17:10: Something Simine wishes she'd learnt sooner1:18:44: Advice for PhD students and postdocsPodcast linksWebsite: https://geni.us/bjks-podTwitter: https://geni.us/bjks-pod-twtSimine's linksWebsite: https://geni.us/vazire-webGoogle Scholar: https://geni.us/vazire-scholarTwitter: https://geni.us/vazire-twtBen's linksWebsite: https://geni.us/bjks-webGoogle Scholar: https://geni.us/bjks-scholarTwitter: https://geni.us/bjks-twtReferences/linksEpisode of Black Goat Podcast I mentioned: https://blackgoat.podbean.com/e/simine-flips-out/Mini-interview with Simine in Science: https://www.science.org/content/article/how-reform-minded-new-editor-psychology-s-flagship-journal-will-shake-thingsMy 2nd interview w/ Adam Mastroianni, and his blog post on peer review:https://geni.us/bjks-mastroianni_2Interview w/ Chris Chambers and Peer community in RRhttps://geni.us/bjks-chambersSimine's vision statement for Psychological Sciencehttps://drive.google.com/file/d/1mozmB2m5kxOoPvQSqDSguRrP5OobutU6/viewGOFUNDME for Data Colada's legal feeshttps://www.gofundme.com/f/uhbka-support-data-coladas-legal-defenseFrancesca Gino's responsehttps://www.francesca-v-harvard.org/NYT Magazine article about Amy Cuddy (and Joe Simmons)https://www.nytimes.com/2017/10/18/magazine/when-the-revolution-came-for-amy-cuddy.htmlStreisand effecthttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Streisand_effectHolcombe (during dogwalk). On peer review. Personal communication to Simine.Open Science Collaboration (2015). Estimating the reproducibility of psychological science. Science.Reich (2009): Plastic fantastic: How the Biggest Fraud in Physics Shook the Scientific
Last year, Pew Research reported that only 29% of Americans now are willing to say they have a “great deal of confidence” in medical scientists to act in the best interests of the public. That represents an 11% decline since 2020. This dramatic drop is both significant, given the historic importance of medical research in shaping public opinion, and understandable, given a growing crisis in the reliability of scientific research overall. A year ago, in a Breakpoint commentary, we described this crisis. For example, according to an analysis by University of California behavioral economists, the least reliable scientific studies are most likely to be cited by other scientists. After a review of 20,000 published papers, these researchers suggested in an article for the journal Science, that doubtful findings are cited more often because they're “interesting.” And now, the problem has led some scientists to “moonlight” as detectives, combing through the scientific literature to sniff out fraud, negligence, and mistakes. A recent article in The Wall Street Journal described one such sleuthing trio. Joe Simmons, Leif Nelson, and Uri Simonsohn run a website called Data Colada, which is dedicated to “debunking published studies built on faulty or fraudulent data.” According to the article, these scientists are able to recognize suspicious patterns in scientific papers, such as cherry-picked data, small sample sizes, bad math, or just results that make no sense. In a sense, these moonlighters are doing the kind of work that scientists should be doing as a normal part of their work. However, the scientific enterprise is plagued by what has been called a “replication crisis.” In essence, findings are too often published without anyone confirming the results with other experiments. This became common knowledge in 2016 when the journal Nature reported that “more than 70% of researchers have tried and failed to reproduce another scientist's experiments, and more than half have failed to reproduce their own experiments.” Thanks in large part to the efforts of sleuths like Data Colada, “[a]t least 5,500 faulty papers were retracted in 2022, compared with (only) 119 in 2002.” All the debunking has led to embarrassing resignations, including the former president of Stanford University, as well as “upended careers and retaliatory lawsuits.” And this is probably just the beginning. According to The Wall Street Journal report, of the nearly 800 papers one researcher reported in the last decade, “only a third had been corrected or retracted five years later.” Of course, human fallenness is behind this mess. That may sound like an oversimplification, but it's significant considering the myth of the objective scientist always following wherever the evidence leads. In addition to faulty and fraudulent results being more “interesting,” there are material incentives to fudge research. Pumping out papers “can yield jobs, grants, speaking engagements and seats on corporate advisory boards.” This “pushes researchers to chase unique and interesting findings, sometimes at the expense of truth.” And yet, as The Wall Street Journal piece described, scientific fraud has real-world costs: Flawed social-science research can lead to faulty corporate decisions about consumer behavior or misguided government rules and policies. Errant medical research risks harm to patients. Researchers in all fields can waste years and millions of dollars in grants trying to advance what turn out to be fraudulent findings. More fundamentally, scientific “authority” is often wielded as a cudgel to end all political, social, and cultural debates. On everything from evolution to abortion, pandemics to climate change, gender to gay adoptions, the “science is settled” line is frequently invoked, and people actually believe it. The more science is sold as unassailable but then corrupted by politics and personal ambition, the more its rightful authority will be compromised. That would be a real tragedy, given how vital a tool it is for discovering truth and how much it reveals about the world we live in and the kind of creatures we are. Scientists like those at Data Colada who hope to restore integrity to the scientific enterprise must hold their peers accountable. In the process, they are calling our attention back to the human element in science. It can never be, strictly speaking, an objective enterprise. After all, it is humans who are looking through those microscopes, conducting the research, and writing those papers. Even when not intentionally dishonest, humans err. That should be enough to raise our Spidey senses whenever a scientific finding is sold as if it is a pronouncement from God. Good science requires not just a sharp mind but also moral integrity, or what C.S. Lewis called “the chest” in The Abolition of Man. In this sense, the very existence of science depends on areas of knowledge that cannot be placed in a test tube: ethics, philosophy, even religion. Good science must be linked with good character. If science is to be a legitimate search for truth, then scientists must be people who love truth. This Breakpoint was co-authored by Shane Morris. For more resources to live like a Christian in this cultural moment, go to breakpoint.org.
Yoel and Alexa are joined by Joe Simmons to talk about fraud. We go in-depth on a recent high-profile fraud case, but we also talk about scientific fraud more generally: how common is it, how do you detect it, and what can we do to prevent it? This is a re-release of Episode 73, originally released on September 29, 2021. Special Guest: Joe Simmons.
If there ever was a hunting podcast where two men got on an extremly emotional level, it's this one. I will forever have a connection with Joe Simmons because of this story, the deer, and what Joe Simmons has been through. You're going to love this one.
Joe Simmons has spent half a century volunteering with his local fire brigade. He talks to Jesse about the changes he's seen in the past 50 years and what's kept him motivated to keep volunteering.
Jimmy Conley and Fr. Beretta join up with Joe Simmons and a mystery guest to talk over senior assassin, the James Harden trade, and video games! Enjoy our most unique episode yet!
Yoel and Alexa are joined by Joe Simmons to talk about fraud. We go in-depth on a recent high-profile fraud case, but we also talk about scientific fraud more generally: how common is it, how do you detect it, and what can we do to prevent it? Special Guest: Joe Simmons.
#048: Are you a budding entrepreneur? Are you looking to develop your entrepreneurial literacy?In this episode of Beyond the Culture, Dr. David M. Walker speaks with Joseph Simmons. Joseph Simmons is the Founder/Executive Vice President of The Center for Micro-Entrepreneurial Training (CMET).Joseph is a retired pharmaceutical executive with a 30 plus year history of leading rapid market share growth, multiple therapeutic product launches, people development, and exemplary sales performance. Joseph has developed a variety of educational workshops and seminars to address the fundamental business needs of a diverse clientele base. Joe is a graduate of Marshall University Huntington WV. “We've [America] got another chance to change the trajectory of black and brown lives in this country either through voting rights or through economic opportunities”—Kenneth C. Frazier (Cited by Joe Simmons) [13:00]“The organization [CMET] was put in place to provide entrepreneurial literacy to women, black and brown entrepreneurs to give them the foundation to be successful”—Joe [18:46]What you will learn in this episode: · How the pharmaceutical industry continues to affect Black America· Why The Center for Micro-Entrepreneurial Training (CMET) was founded and how it supports black entrepreneurs to build business literacy· How Coach George Raveling became the owner of Dr. Martin Luther King's “I Have a Dream” speech· How Joe's father inspired him to affect change in the lives of others RESOURCES MENTIONEDhttps://tcmet.org/join CONNECThttps://tcmet.org/joinhttps://www.drdavidmwalker.com LinkedIn: drdavidmwalkerFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/drdavidmwalkerInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/ drdavidmwalkerTwitter: https://www.twitter.com/ drdavidmwalker
We talk brewing beer and fucking METAL on this show.
In this episode, we talk to Leif Nelson, professor at HAAS School of Business at UC Berkeley. We talk about open science, "False Positive Psychology" paper and its aftermath, current Data Colada replication efforts, and Paul's undying fascination with Leif. False Positive Psychology: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0956797611417632Data Colada (blog by Leif, Uri Simonsohn, and Joe Simmons): http://datacolada.org/As Predicted: https://aspredicted.org/
Host Quain heads to Tampa again to sit with podcast regular but now brewery co-owner & head brewer of Bay Cannon Beer Co., Joseph Simmons. Along side Joe is co-owner Matthew Juaire & his assistant brewer Allie Gray. Finally, Allie gets her time on What Ales Ya finding a new home with Bay Cannon & we learn who Young Gravy is. Great beers, great location, great friends, & the perfect sponsor to our trip at FEST 18 this year. Thanks Joe for coming back on, & congrats on this amazing location & great beer.
Are we making our own decisions or are machine learning algorithms making them for us? Kartik Hosanagar, author of the book, A Human’s Guide to Machine Intelligence: How Algorithms are Shaping Our Lives and How We Can Stay in Control, explains that algorithms are merely a set of steps for making decisions. Yet he points out that artificial intelligence has become so pervasive in our lives that we’re often unaware of just how many decisions machines are making on our behalf: “The algorithms [are] driving 70-80% of the choices that people [make]…[But] if we asked people how much of your choices are driven by algorithms, they might say maybe 10-20%. We think we are…choosing…but in reality, they are curating our world for us.” In this interview, we talk about what companies should be asked to reveal about their algorithms. We also discuss why we need to educate ourselves about how they work. We also discuss some of the unexpected research findings that arise when machines learn from each other, rather than humans. For example, in one study, a surprising thing happened as machines were learning how to negotiate: Karthik explains that “…the bots were negotiating with each other using words and sentences that made almost no sense to the researchers. The bots had figured out a secret code to communicate with each other that was allowing them to communicate more efficiently.” Kartik Hosanagar is Professor of Technology and Digital Business and Professor of Marketing at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School of Business. His writing has appeared in Wired, Forbes, and the Harvard Business Review. Episode Links @KHosanagar Irresistible by Adam Alter Reporter Carole Cadwalladr’s The Guardian article on Google search bias regarding Jews A more recent article on Google search algorithm bias Kevin Gibbs and the Google autocomplete origin story Code of Hammurabi Jennifer Logg and her work on algorithmic and human judgment Berkeley Dietvost, Joe Simmons and Cade Massey’s paper on our how humans avoid algorithms after they make errors Rene Kizilcec’s paper on the effects of transparency on trust when it comes to algorithms James Barrat You can learn more about Curious Minds Host and Creator, Gayle Allen @CuriousGayle and www.gayleallen.net. If you enjoy the podcast, there are three simple things you can do to support our work. First, subscribe. That way you’ll never miss an episode. Second, tell a friend or family member. You'll always have someone to talk to about the interview. Third, rate and review the podcast wherever you subscribe. You’ll be helping others find their next podcast. A Short List of Places Where You Can Find Curious Minds Spotify iTunes Tunein Stitcher Google Play Overcast
Joe Simmons preaches on a Servant heart. Learn why, when, where, and how to serve.
All three of us were all around, at various career stages, before the "replicability crisis" became a thing. In today's episode we each share stories of our personal journeys with the larger replicability discussion in psychology, and how we went from clueless to naively optimistic to whatever we are today. Plus: A letter-writer asks how to respond to an advisor who asks you to p-hack. And Alexa tells how her students reacted to her telling them that she is an atheist. Links: Do-Gooder Derogation: Disparaging Morally Motivated Minorities to Defuse Anticipated Reproach, by Julia Minson and Benoit Monin How Many Atheists Are There? by Will Gervais and Maxine Najle False-Positive Psychology: Undisclosed Flexibility in Data Collection and Analysis Allows Presenting Anything as Significant, by Joe Simmons, Leif Nelson, and Uri Simonsohn The psychology of parapsychology, or why good researchers publishing good articles in good journals can still get it totally wrong, by Tal Yarkoni The Ironic Effect of Significant Results on the Credibility of Multiple Study Articles, by Uli Schimmack The N-Pact Factor: Evaluating the Quality of Empirical Journals with Respect to Sample Size and Statistical Power, by Chris Fraley and Simine Vazire The Black Goat is hosted by Sanjay Srivastava, Alexa Tullett, and Simine Vazire. Find us on the web at www.theblackgoatpodcast.com, on Twitter at @blackgoatpod, or on Facebook at facebook.com/blackgoatpod/. You can email us at letters@theblackgoatpodcast.com. You can subscribe to us on iTunes. Our theme music is Peak Beak by Doctor Turtle, available on freemusicarchive.org under a Creative Commons noncommercial attribution license. This is episode 11. It was recorded June 21, 2017.
Host Brian Quain sits with Joe Simmons and reminisce of the old days in Gainesville, its music, food, and culture. They discuss the beers and brewery, and all it's history.
the Geeked up boys (are joined by friend Joe Simmons) step into the game room and play- Blind Analyze (U.S. Landmarks) -Joe gives us 5 landmarks in America that we have no knowledge of, and we give our theories on locations and reasons of why they're famous.
Dan Ariely, Joe Simmons
Phil is joined by Mike Leigh and making his debut Joe Simmons as they look back at no game and discuss Newcastle at the weekend.
Series: Jonah