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Dan and Paul from Small Vines. Paul Sloan from Small Vines Wines joins Steve Jaxon and Dan Berger on California Wine Country. Daedalus Howell also joins us today. Small Vines Wines makes “world class wines of distinction.” Paul grew up in Sonoma County on a 250-acre horse and cattle ranch, on the eastern side of Santa Rosa. He worked in restaurants and ended up at John Ash & Co., known as one of the original farm-to-table restaurants. His favorite wines were always from families that grew the fruit and also made the wine. When he fell in love with age-worthy, food-friendly wines, he continued to work for the Dutton family and studied viticulture at Santa Rosa JC. He planted some high-density vineyards over the years and his wines come from them. High-Density Vines Dan Berger says that the predictions of weather are less reliable than ever, as climate change is not uniform. Paul finds that high-density planting helps, in hot years by shading the vines. High density planting works but you have to take careful care of the vines. Paul was the first person to actually design a wine with good natural acidity by planting high density vines. California Wine Country is brought to you by Rodney Strong Vineyards and Davis Bynum Wines. Phylloxera is a root louse that is so small it is hard to see. It chews on certain roots and in particular, native roots. So you have to choose rootstock that is impervious to it. It appeared in the late 1980s. It was inevitable that all the vines affected had to be torn out and the vineyards replanted. The more leaf surface you have, the more dappled sunlight you have, instead of direct light. By planting a 4-foot tractor row instead of an 8-foot tractor row, you can get fifty percent less direct sunlight on the fruit. Daedalus asks about automation and the potential to use drones in the vineyard. Paul tells about advanced tractors that gather data. The high end producers will continue to do things by hand, but a lot of less expensive wines will have to use some automation. Dan Berger mentions that a lot of the automation is in the winery, rather than in the vineyard. There are tanks with built-in chemical analysis equipment. Also, sorting the fruit is still an important manual process. Ideally, you only harvest the ideally formed clusters of fruit. Their first tasting is a 2021 TBH Chardonnay, that demonstrates the fruit selection. They sort the fruit on the vine. You only take the ideal length of cluster and diameter of berries. Their 2021 Chardonnay is the current release. His goal is to make age-worthy, food-friendly wines, so he sees no reason not to hold his wines for a few years before releasing them.
Something different, I'm joined by Alex Wesche, Mick Houghton, John Ash and Paul Gotts. We are gathered to talk about this fantastic and exciting project we have all been working on. Please help support this great project by buying a book and print. Got to https://homephotobook.co.uk Back in the summer of 2023 we were lucky enough to attract Alex, Mali and Mick to work on a new project, Home. We asked each to make around 20 images over a three month period with a view to 36 of them going in a final book, ideally balanced between the photographers. Our only stipulation was that the images should: Be taken from areas very close to home (ideally within a mile) and certainly involve little transport Be taken in areas that we might normally just pass by Have a focus on the natural environment. We sent a hard copy of the images and sequence to author Jeff Young to write some words for us and tie the whole thing together.We want the book to serve as an inspiration for photographers to look again at areas that they pass by every day and start to think about what possibilities they offer. Please help support this great project by buying a book and print. Got to https://homephotobook.co.uk Stay steady and create photography your way. SITHEE! Please give the podcast a review and click the stars. Also don't forget to give your support and get your ears on the extra content over on Patreon here: ➡️ Mali Davies Photography On Patreon Thank you for taking the time to listen. Spondecking! Don't forget to grab yourself a copy of my first published photobook - AN-STAPA Standing Still available now CLICK HERE If you are enjoying my podcast and youtube channel please consider subscribing and dropping some support for all the content I produce. The price of half a cider or a cup of tea will help me massively. Thank you to all the comments and support you give, it is very appreciated. ➡️ Click here to subscribe #HomePhotoBook #letscreate #LetsTalk #Podcast Join me on social media and my website... ➡️ Mali Photography Website ➡️ Check out all my social media links and join me on various groups Feel free to drop me a message and have a chat. Thank you and SITHEE!
Steve Garner and Chef John Ash talk about Steve's recent trip to Chicago and some of the culinary highlights. They also chat about National Hazelnut Day! Check the Good Food Hour recipes for some great ideas from Chef John Ash. In the second half of the show, Steve and John talk about KOREA! Korean movies, culture, fashion and FOOD have exploded on the world stage these past 5 years, and there are no better chroniclers of where the action is than Chef Deuki Hong and Matt Rodbard. They began seeking out Korean food superstar chefs and producers 10 years ago, releasing the smash best seller 'Koreatown: A Cookbook' in 2017. Now their highly anticipated follow up 'Koreaworld: A Cookbook' has just been released. Matt Rodbard joins us today, sharing stories and of course great recipes.
If you care about this show as a public good, consider signing up on Substack or Patreon today for bonus episodes, live calls, and more — or at least mash “subscribe” on Spotify or Apple Podcasts and leave a five-star review. The unborn future archaeologists who find these episodes inscribed in DNA will thank you!Today I welcome you to join me for a long-awaited trialogue with two of the most thoughtful people I know: Gregory Landua, co-founder of Regen Network (and CEO of Regen Network Dev PBC), a project to bend finance and computing back into service of regenerative land stewardship, and Speaker John Ash, a machine learning engineer and artist/musician who walked away from his fintech job in 2017 in protest of the profit motive to build a democratic language model named Iris based on Cognicism, a new framework for collaboration rooted in shared wisdom. Gregory and John are two of the most prominent and articulate advocates in my network for a third way beyond starry-eyed technoutopianism and desperate doomer thinking. Neither of them pull any punches when it comes to their cutting critiques of extractive capitalism and its capture of both sustainability discourse and potentially emancipatory new information technologies. But both recognize, as I do, that with a deeper and more fundamental understanding of the nature of trust, money, technology, and value that humankind is fully capable of a socioeconomic transformation that could empower us to make every transaction serve our collective well-being.It took me a while to come around to believing in the notion that AI and Web3 could actually heal the damage we're doing to the biosphere, and even now I acknowledge that tools, like people, tend toward the production of harmful externalities when embedded in structurally unjust systems. But as I discussed with evolutionary biologist Manfred Laubichler and physicist Geoffrey West back in episode 212, not all innovation is created equal — and we may be on the cusp of a psychological and cultural reformation that opens up new paths to sanity and right relations. And it's well past time for us to move beyond a “nature good, tech bad” or “tech good, nature bad” duality — both sides come from the same flaw in comprehension that allows us to believe we can escape our natural limits, or that self-destruction will allow us to escape our duties as the steward-servants of our living world.Enjoy this soulful and provocative discussion!✨ Mentioned & Related Links:The Dawn of Everything by David Graeber & David WengrowUSGS on climate change and monsoons in the US SWEarlier recording of Gregory Landua & Speaker John Ash in dialogueGregory Landua on Kevin Owocki's Green Pill PodcastMG on “value creation” as the export of externalitiesSpeaker John Ash on CognicismSpeaker John Ash on Cognition & ConflictSpeaker John Ash on SpotifyAn Oral History of The End of “Reality” by MGAccelerando by Charles StrossGlasshouse by Charles StrossRapture of the Nerds by Charles Stross & Cory Doctorow✨ Support The Show:• Subscribe on Substack or Patreon for COPIOUS extras, including private Discord server channels and MANY secret episodes• Make one-off donations at @futurefossils on Venmo, $manfredmacx on CashApp, or @michaelgarfield on PayPal• Buy the music (intro/outro: “Olympus Mons” & “Sonnet A”; episode codas “Transparent” & “Signal”) on Bandcamp• Buy the books we discuss at the Future Fossils Bookshop.org page and I get a small cut from your support of indie booksellers• Browse and buy original paintings and prints or email me to commission new work✨ Related FF Episodes:213 - Amber Case & Michael Zargham on Entangled Technologies & Design As Governance206 - Scout Rainer Wiley on AI vs. BS Jobs, The Return of Culture, and Eldritch Wonders in The Bright Apocalypse193 - Kimberly Dill on Environmental Philosophy: In Defense of Wildness & Night181 - Jim Rutt on The Pre- and Post-History of GameB178 - Chris Ryan on Exhuming The Human from Our Eldritch Institutions176 - Exploring Ecodelia with Richard Doyle, Sophie Strand, and Sam Gandy at the Psilocybin Summit163 - Bitcoin & Fungal Economies with Toby Kiers & Brandon Quittem146 - Raising Earth Consciousness with Ralph Metzner, Dennis McKenna, Gay Dillingham, Valerie Plame Wilson, Allan Badiner, and Michael Garfield at Synergia Ranch, April 2016141 - Nora Bateson on Warm Data vs. The Cold Equations133 - Brian Swimme on Telling A New Story of Our Universe122 - Magenta Ceiba on Regenerative Everything94 - Mark Nelson on Ecotechnics & Biosphere 2 (Part 1)61 - Jamaica Stevens (On Crisis, Rebirth, Transformation)60 - Sean Esbjörn-Hargens Goes Meta on Everything: Integral Ecology & Impact56 - Sophia Rokhlin (Anarchy, Ecology, Economy, and Shamanism)51 - Daniel Schmachtenberger (Designing A Win-Win World for Everyone) This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit michaelgarfield.substack.com/subscribe
Nurses in Saskatoon are once again sounding alarm bells surrounding patient overcrowding in St. Paul's Hospital. John Ash, the vice-president of Integrated Health Services for Saskatoon, joins Evan to discuss the steps that are being taken in an attempt to improve the situation.
Paul Sloan, co-owner and winemaker at Small Vines, started his journey in wine as a bus-boy in high school. He eventually worked his way up to the assistant wine buyer position at John Ash and Company. As a very young wine steward, he was given many opportunities to taste both California classic wines as well as wines from all over the world. One night, his life would change forever when a person dining alone offered him a taste of a very rare Burgundy. This ethereal experience sent him on a quest for more knowledge and forever fueled his drive to make captivating wines. He launched into self-study, and soon discovered that some of the greatest Pinot Noirs in the world come from mature, small vines. Paul eventually returned to college to get his Viticulture degree, and simultaneously went to work for one of the most respected winegrowers in the county, Warren Dutton of Dutton Ranches. It was Warren himself, who encouraged Paul to follow his innovative, pioneering spirit and to start planting vineyards his own way, so Paul and his wife Kathryn launched Small Vines. Today, Paul and Kathryn are dedicated to achieving smaller yields from higher-density European style spacing of the vines in order to grow only the highest-quality wine grapes. They have worked hard to consistently grow grapes and produce inspiring “wines of authenticity.” I invite you to drink in this very educational episode with the dedicated Paul Sloan.
Paul Sloan, co-owner and winemaker at Small Vines, started his journey in wine as a bus-boy in high school. He eventually worked his way up to the assistant wine buyer position at John Ash and Company. As a very young wine steward, he was given many opportunities to taste both California classic wines as well as wines from all over the world. One night, his life would change forever when a person dining alone offered him a taste of a very rare Burgundy. This ethereal experience sent him on a quest for more knowledge and forever fueled his drive to make captivating wines. He launched into self-study, and soon discovered that some of the greatest Pinot Noirs in the world come from mature, small vines.Paul eventually returned to college to get his Viticulture degree, and simultaneously went to work for one of the most respected winegrowers in the county, Warren Dutton of Dutton Ranches. It was Warren himself, who encouraged Paul to follow his innovative, pioneering spirit and to start planting vineyards his own way, so Paul and his wife Kathryn launched Small Vines.Today, Paul and Kathryn are dedicated to achieving smaller yields from higher-density European style spacing of the vines in order to grow only the highest-quality wine grapes. They have worked hard to consistently grow grapes and produce inspiring “wines of authenticity.” I invite you to drink in this very educational episode with the dedicated Paul Sloan. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoicesSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
The question of the promise and peril of AI is a proper one for our long-running Love the System series, but we thought it deserved its own spot as a sub-series due to the rapid development and proliferation of Large Language Models and other ground-breaking AI technologies over the past six months. It may be too early to tell yet, but with the clear power of this emergent technology, its potential to take over many of the tasks we used to regard as exclusively human, and its rapid public uptake, it feels like we are on the cusp of an epochal change. How are we to secure the psychological and spiritual health of human beings in the face of such developments? How do we ethically and wisely merge living and non-living intelligences? What wisdom from this corner of the internet -- from our respective integral, metamodern, and spiritual communities -- can help us navigate the monumental challenges and opportunities ahead? For the tenth episode of The Soul of AI, Layman meets with musician and systems change thinker and advocate, Speaker John Ash, to discuss the limitations and misperceptions common to popular discourse about AI; the morally questionable, implicit goals behind the development of artificially intelligent agents; AI and art; possibilities for better and more transparently linking AI output to its sources in training data; revolutions in voting and governance systems that AI may facilitate, and much more.
Hi there. First today: We're remembering beloved photographer Aubrie Pick, who tragically passed away last week after a battle with cancer. Aubrie's work was stunning and personal, and she was a visionary creative force in the Bay Area. Elana Kadvany writes in the San Francisco Chronicle: Pick's images — vibrant and charismatic, like the photographer herself, collaborators said — have left an indelible mark on the national food scene, and particularly in the Bay Area. Pick photographed numerous high-profile cookbooks, from celebrity chef Chrissy Teigen's “Cravings” and Bay Area chef Tanya Holland's “California Soul” to Andrea Nguyen's “Vietnamese Food Any Day.” Her photos were featured on the covers of Bon Appetit and Food & Wine magazines. She captured Chez Panisse owner Alice Waters in her Berkeley backyard, and caught the light falling just so across a set restaurant table. There is an ongoing GoFundMe to support Aubrie's husband Erik and 2-year-old daughter Romy here.
This episode features a conversation with Chef John Ash, who for the past 40 years has been known in Sonoma and Napa as the Godfather of Wine Country Cuisine. His restaurant, John Ash & Company, helped to define what became known as California Cuisine back in the 1980's and 1990's. John, along with chefs like Alice Waters, Jeremiah Tower, Joyce Goldstein, and Michael McCarty, changed the way people cooked and ate across the entire country. Chef Ash has also written a number of award winning books, including the 1996 IACP Cookbook of the Year, From the Earth to the Table, and has just published a beautiful new book called The Hog Island Book of Fish & Seafood.On a personal note, John was the first important chef to serve Peter's bread in his famous restaurant, way back in 1988, which helped launch Brother Juniper's Bakery's successful run and paved the way for Peter's own writing career. He owes a deep debt of gratitude to John, not only for his early support and friendship, but for some of the most memorable meals Peter and his wife ever ate at John Ash & Company. You'll learn even more about this remarkable culinary influencer as he and I reconnect and reminisce in this very enjoyable conversation, here on Pizza Quest.Click here for the video versions of Pizza Quest. If you count on HRN content, become a monthly sustaining donor at heritageradionetwork.org/donate.Pizza Quest is Powered by Simplecast.
Recent Ventures: Taste of Asia by Karrie Hung at the Suncoast Hotel & Casino: UH-mazing The UnCommons at The Sundry Food Hall: B.S. Taqueria by Ray Garcia, Bar Oysterette, & Mizunara Ash's 1228 Main adventure with Amanda Signorelli from The Golden Steer Steakhouse Rapid Fire Q&A Spots Mentioned: Other Mama Estiatorio Milos Naxos Taverna & Kallisto Oyster Bar at Red Rock Casino Aburiya Raku Cleaver Restaurant Las Vegas Herbs and Rye Lamoon The Patio Wine Garden IZAKAYA GO Krung Thai Restaurant 138 Restaurant Harlo | Steakhouse and Bar District One Kitchen and Bar Viet Noodle Bar Sparrow + Wolf Main St Provisions Vetri Cucina Osteria Fiorella Life's A Bagel New York Bagel N Bakery Johnny Mac's Sports Bar & Grill Trattoria NAKAMURA-YA Matteo's Ristorante Italiano SAHARA Las Vegas - Balla Italian Soul YU-OR-MI SUSHI Curryzen Yukon Pizza Good Pie Edo Gastro Tapas & Wine Thanks for tuning into today's episode! If you enjoyed this episode, subscribe to the show, & make sure you leave us a 5-star review. Visit us at Eating Las Vegas & Eat. Talk. Repeat. TWITTER: @EatTalkRepeat, @EatingLasVegas, @WhatsRightSam, & @AshTheAttorney INSTAGRAM: @EatTalkRepeatLV, @JohnCurtas, @WhatsRightSam, & @AshTheAttorney
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Breathe Pictures Photography Podcast: Documentaries and Interviews
Is ai really coming to get us? Maybe not yet. Maybe not at all. This week is a show about the majesty of music, the beauty of emotion, the tactile nature of bookmaking, finding your why, celebrating our mistakes, just being human. We hear from Paul Gotts and John Ash who believe in giving a voice to unpublished photographers and Extra Miler Lynn Fraser who is part of their new project called Littoral. Letters to the show about rekindling a love for photography post-pandemic, why the moon seems to be sharper and more detailed on some smartphones, and the realisation that your why may be a lot closer to home than you think. There are stories on chasing the moon's shadow from a 737 and finding dust in your wonderfully soft-centred eye. See the SHOW PAGE for reference pictures and films. Our thanks to the Extra Milers and mpb.com.
In this week's episode, we explore the concept of presidential body counts from two unique perspectives - scandalous affairs and mysterious deaths. Join us as we delve into the recent allegations surrounding Donald Trump's indictment over his financial ties to Stormy Daniels and the impact it could have on his legacy. We'll discuss the details, speculate on the future, and share our thoughts on the probability of the indictment coming to fruition. But we won't stop there. Prepare for an even more thrilling exploration as we uncover the long-standing rumors and conspiracy theories surrounding the Clintons and their alleged connection to dozens of mysterious deaths. From high-profile accidents to untimely demises, we'll examine the facts and conjectures that have fueled these controversial claims. Follow us on social media & Subscribe to our newsletter: https://linktr.ee/theaustinjadams Full Transcription: Hello, you be to full people and welcome to the Adams Archive. Today is going to be a fun one. This week's episode is all about presidential body counts. You heard me write Presidential Body Council, and for some presidents that means something a little bit different than for other presidents, but we're going to explore both of them. From Donald Trump's recent alleged indictment, which is yet to happen over his financial woes payoff of Stormy Daniels, a porn star who allegedly he had an affair with. We'll get into the details, but that's one way of looking at a body count, , and then another way of looking at it is when it comes to, I don't know, Multiple, multiple dozens of bodies that surround the Clinton family. So I thought that would be a fun way to approach this. A little bit different than what everybody else is talking about. So we are going to jump into it all. Why is President Trump being indicted? What is going on with it? Why is it not seemingly happened yet? Is it even going to happen? I have some opinions about that. And then we'll get into the history of the Clinton family's body count. Stick around. It's gonna be a fun one. All right. But before we do that, go ahead and hit that subscribe button. Just takes about two seconds of your time, but it'll make you feel all fuzzy inside knowing that you are now a part of the Adams Archive Movement. That's right. All right. Hit that subscribe button. I would appreciate it from the bottom of my heart. Leave a five star review if you are already subscribed. Uh, if you've already left a. And if you haven't, head over to the austin adams.subs.com and, uh, you'll be able to get the podcast companion, all the links, all the articles from this week's, uh, podcast, all the fun stuff. So head over there right now, austin adams.subs.com. And that's all I got for you for right now. All right, let's jump into it. The Adams archive. All right. Now there is one reason that Trump hasn't been arrested. One reason there's only one. And you wanna know why? Because it's all bullshit. . It's all bullshit. The whole thing. The entire indictment. Okay. I, it's, it's crazy that this has even made headlines with how silly this entire legal situation is. Right. It's an obvious play by the judicial system. It's an obvious play, uh, by the left to kind of keep the smear campaign rolling. . So let's, let's talk about it. So the reason that Trump is being indicted right now is not because he paid, like every single article that you find about this says hush money, he paid hush money, and that's not even, that's not the reason. Right. The, the paying somebody hush money is not in the way that it was done illegal itself. And, and essentially it wasn't hush money, it was an nda. He essentially paid a porn star, stormy Daniels, an n d a, to not come out with some type of expose in 2000 and sixteens, right around his presidential run. So he basically paid her to sign an NDA and say, we're not gonna talk about this, we're not even gonna address this. Now, I'm not saying Trump didn. Get into it with Stormy Daniels. Um, and we can't add that one ding ding to his body count. Um, but that's, that's not the conversation at hand, it's not, I guess, illegal to have sex with a porn star even when you're married. . It might be morally, ethically wrong to do so, but it's not something. President is going to go to jail over, there's all these talks, like, oh, is he gonna be in handcuffs? Is he gonna be like, put into general population in, in the county jail prison system? Could you imagine what that would look like? A apparently there, there's everybody's saying that there's gonna be, like, the Secret Service is gonna be the one to get him, is it gonna be the secret service? Is it gonna be, you know, the, the local municipality, uh, police force? Right. Um, Who knows. And, and again, I don't think this is gonna happen. I do not think this will happen I think it's all bs. I don't think anybody's going to indict him. I don't think a jury would ever rule in favor of this, like silly, like basically, essentially what they're trying to charge him for is not the fact that he. Screwed a porn star when he was married. It's the fact that he paid her this NDA money through some type of, uh, some type of home equity line. That's what it's about. Basically, he, he mismarked where the money came from through his lawyer and then paid his lawyer back through monthly fees, is what they're alleging. Right. So it's like a, a movement of money ploy. It's, it's a financial misdemeanor. It's not even a felony. It's not even a felony that they're trying to charge with him with. It's a, it's a misdemeanor that they're trying to charge him with and they're making this huge fuss over. If you or I. First of all, I would never, nobody would ever care. Right. But. You'd probably get a letter from the irs. Nobody's showing up at your house. They're not commissioning thousands of police officers to shut down the road so that they can put you in handcuffs and get a little video of you walking to the police car and saying your Miranda rights. This is all a little show. This is all a little facade, and we're gonna talk about maybe some things that I think that it's covering up for, but that's what I think about it it it, the, the crimes that they're accusing him of committing, first of all, even if they're accurate. And even if he did do these things, they're silly. They're silly. You're not, you're not, you're, you're, you're, it's a smear campaign. It's not an actual movement to get him arrested. It's not an, it's, it's a weaponization of our judicial system to the, one of the worst, most like, egregious ways that we've ever seen that happen in the United States. He's a former president, whatever you think about Trump, he's a former p. Right. Even Nixon was pardoned, like obviously, I, I don't think Biden's gonna pardon Trump even if he gets, you know, not that he would need to based on a misdemeanor charge, but this whole thing is silly. It's, it's all bs. So. Let's, let's read this article here. It says, as the political landscape continues to heat up in the anticipation of the upcoming election, former President Trump finds himself at the center of a controversial case in Manhattan that has yet to result in an indictment. This case, which resolve revolves around a 2016 payment to adult film star Stormy Daniels, has sparked heated debates on whether the judicial system is being weaponized against Trump to hinder his chances of winning an. The fact that no former US president has faced an indictment begs the question, is the current political landscape going too far in pursuing charges against Trump? His historical accounts of presidents accused of felonious activities such as Richard Nixon and Bill Clinton revealed that these cases were pardoned or settled without charges. Howing a stark difference in the treatment of Trump's. Right, and that's not even to talk about Bill Clinton was literally getting one off under the desk. Under the desk in the Oval Office, talk about salacious acts and, and he was not being charged for it, he, he like literally left office on that note and, and did not get charged, never went to jail. There was nobody, there was no rogue da like going out on a limb trying to go after him. I don't think that's what's happening. Obviously, this, he's, he's going after him specifically because of this payment. It's, it's, it's so ridiculous, the entire reasoning. So let, let's keep going. It says, furthermore, the crime in question seems to be a mere misdemeanor relating to the use of funds, which has already been disproven in the email released by Michael Cohen's counsel. The letter clearly states that Mr. Cohen used his personal funds to facilitate the payment that neither the Trump organization nor the Trump campaign reimbursed him directly or indirectly. It also argues that the payment does not constitute a campaign contribution or expenditure, and therefore the f e c of lecture jurisdiction over the matter, and so, so Trump. Truth doubt. This is such a stupid term truth. Trump sent out a message on truth social with a letter that everybody is saying basically that they've already written this off. This has already been proven that it was not his money that was being paid out. Right. And whether it was a slight of hand or whatever, it's all still silly. But it goes on to say that amidst the fren he created by Trump's declaration of his potential arrest and a speculation of an imminent indictment, it is crucial to examine the facts and the broader implications of this. Well, it may seem like a mere misdemeanor. The unprecedented nature of his legal battle against a former president raises concerns about the potential weaponization of the JU judicial system for political game. And we saw this at Mar-a-Lago with documents that nothing ever came out of. Right. We saw this with the Russia, Russia, Russia, uh, hoax as the people would call it. We saw this with, with it, it, we saw those so many times by now. The fact that any news station is even like, or, or maybe you can see the news stations and why they would give this samari, but the fact that any people in the political sphere, or even in the common. Civilian world is giving two shits about this. The fact that this is every headline on every news station across the country right now is silly. There's been so many attempts at arresting Donald Trump, and we know by now that absolutely nothing is gonna come of it. Absolutely nothing is gonna come. No. If, if they would've had some great way of arresting Donald Trump, don't you think that it would've came out by now? Don't you think that during, you know, 2020, don't you think after Januarys. Sex, which, you know, he still hasn't been charged for anything there. Right. How many times have they tried to come after Trump and how many times has something actually come out of it? Zero. None. There has not been a single case where they, out of the multiple, multiple times that they've gone after Donald Trump, where anything at all has actually. Come of it, this goes on to say that as the grand jury's decision remains uncertain, the public must remain vigilant and question the motivations behind the case. Is it the genuine pursuit of justice or is it merely a political tactic? Aim at discrediting Trump and diminishing his chances. In the upcoming election, history has shown that similar cases involving former presidents were treated with mere lenient, more leniency, and it is up to the citizens to ensure that the judicial system remains impartial and unbiased in its pursuit of justice. Now let's talk about that. What I think out of this, and what I've heard several, several times by now, is that this is going to do nothing but help Donald Trump. This is going to do nothing but incite his followers to know. That exactly what he said all along is what's happening, the swamp, the, the gators out there lurking beneath the surface. The murky political surface are just coming after Donald Trump once again with some, you know, and, and, and maybe it's not even the, the, the whole swamp. Maybe it's one guy trying to make his name off of some bs, it, it, it's just the. So many negative things that come out of this for the left and so many positive things that come out of this for the right. Again, if nothing happens out of this, what do you think is gonna happen for his followers? What do you think is gonna happen when, when everybody realizes if they haven't already, which is be kind of silly on their part, that this is nothing but like a political game, all this is gonna do is, is get his crowd, his followers, to further be motivated to go out and vote and to keep the narrative going. I, I do not think, I do not think that this is the, this will be the end of Trump, and I don't think literally anybody who even believes that this is gonna go to a trial or he's gonna actually be arrested, think that either, so if this is not going to hurt Trump in any way, all it's gonna do is. All it's gonna do is, is bring mo more voters out in 2024. And it's done nothing too. But like the Trump first DeSantis situation here is, is pretty interesting. DeSantis has come out and, and said that, well, I'm, I'm not gonna actively pursue Donald Trump because Trump basically went to Mar-a-Lago, um, during all of this. In Florida, and DeSantis said that, well, I, I'm not gonna go after Trump. I'm not gonna allow them to come in here and, and do that. I'm not gonna play the game. Now, I don't know what that actual division of power actually looks like. Like does he have the power to stop them from coming in there? I don't believe so. If it's a federal government, but it is New York going for him. Right. He, he's not gonna, um, they're, they're not gonna go. I don't know. It'll be interesting to see how it plays out and, . I just think nothing's gonna come of it. That's my personal opinion. And then maybe I'll be wrong and, and maybe we'll see a big huge, uh, headline tomorrow of, of Trump in, uh, Trump in, in handcuffs being walked into a jail cell right now. Could you imagine like, there, there's gotta be somebody who can make a car, at least a cartoon of Trump getting arrested, going into general population, and then just like getting swarmed by people. And, uh, you know, all, all of the. People in the jail cells around him in general population and just . Like there's, there's gotta be a somebody who can make a cartoon of him just like beating the shit out of all of these inmates that are trying to attack him. But imagine how many people would be motivated in a jail cell to try to attack Donald Trump. I don't know. It's it, there's, there's a funny cartoon there somewhere that somebody could make. Um, alright, so let's keep moving on right there. There's far more people who should be being arrest. Then Donald Trump right now, maybe it's Hunter Biden for one, maybe we talk about Hunter Biden. Maybe it's the, I don't know, underage pictures of his niece that were found on his laptop, allegedly, maybe it's the, uh, the, the, the text messages were he's basically grooming that same niece of his to meet up with him in a bathroom in some store, alleged. Maybe it's the, the, the $10,000 he asked his father for to pay off Russian prostitutes. Allegedly. Maybe it's the facilitation of his father's, uh, political power to the Chinese or to. Barisma in or to Ukrainian companies that have to do with Biolabs, allegedly . I'm sure there's a few things that we could point to that Hunter Biden could be arrested for. Maybe it's the crack pipe in his mouth, like if there was a picture of Donald Trump with a crack pipe in his mouth, sucking on Stormy Daniel's toes. That would be something that everybody could rally around him being arrested for, but there's not. But you know who there is a picture of that is Hunter Biden and nobody's going to arrest him. There's, there's far better reasons. Maybe we should go after George Bush for, you know, getting us involved in a 20 year war over false pretenses, may, maybe there's something there, maybe there's something for him making billions and trillions of dollars for the military industrial complex, maybe there's something around the Clintons, maybe that, we'll, we'll get to in a minute. Maybe there's, I don't know, maybe go after Sam Hunt for, for. doing demo. Seances during the Oscars or, or wearing clothes that make him look like a tightly wrapped skirt steak? I don't know. May, maybe there's some other people that we should talk about here that should be arrested Not, uh, not Donald Trump. And his payment. Oh, did I mention that this was all six years ago, this wasn't even a recent hush money scandal. Right. This was, this was almost more than half of a decade ago that this happened. . Right. Speaking of George Bush, I saw this on Reddit a little bit ago, but like speaking of George Bush, where did all the terrorists go? Right. Has anybody else noticed that since the onset, like after the pandemic and everything and the US has withdrawal from Afghanistan, terrorists worldwide have just hit the snooze button on going after the, the, the, the west , they're just, they're just off sleep and in some cave somewhere. Right. That they just didn't realize the pandemic's over and are still quarantining. Right. It's it, they took a gap. From, from their terrorist activities, for, for 20 years, terrorism topped the charts as the, the main conversation in every mainstream media, every mainstream media platform from Fox News, cnn, anywhere that you would look, they were talking about the Taliban, they were talking about Al-Qaeda. Where, where'd they go? Where are they? Where, where, where are they? What, what's going on there? Like, just. , well ex, you know, except for those pesky little January 6th terrorists who only, who only happened to show their faces just in time for the government's political narratives. Right. Just in time for, uh, a o c to hide under a desk and take a selfie video. Yeah. The only terrorists we've seen in the wild just so happened to be wearing American flags, on, on their shirt, or hanging from their trucks. . Right. Quite convenient. Right. And, and, and this is another thing that I saw this Reddit thread allude to is the fact that you would think during lockdowns terrorism would've been at its worst, there was already a massive amount of public fear, there was already so much fear in the public psyche, right. Were were terrorists more scared of covid than they were of the United States military? No Taliban, no Al-Qaeda, they, they swapped their, you know, tightly laced combat boots out for some Crocs, and they're just playing Call of Duty all day instead of, you know, crashing planes into large buildings, allegedly uh, right. Seems pretty weird, there's, there's still no more terrorists attacks going. anyways, even North Korea seems to have like calmed down a little bit. Although I guess I saw something the other day that there was like 800,000 soldiers who happened to volunteer for North Korea and they were calling on the United States like being ready for some type of war with the us. Nothing to see there, at least nothing that the mainstream media wants you to talk about cuz I only saw it on real News. No bull. Um, if you don't, haven't heard me talk about them in a while, real news, no bullshit or real news, no bs uh, or online. Uh, that's their handle on like social media or real news. Not bs.com is their website. Their, their social media is a little bit better than their website. Their website I, I paid for, but I don't feel like I get much out of it. Um, but great way for, you know, actual individual journalism along with Atlas News is another good one anyway. Right. Like ever since Trump, there's been no terrorism whatsoever, no. Nobody's, you know, popping their head up. There's no, there's no new like, leader that we're allegedly going after, um, I don't think Trump completely wiped out Al-Qaeda, we basically just handed them the keys along with 80 billion worth of military equipment, and, you know, now we're just not hearing from them after massive deals for cobalt mining. in Afghanistan with China nonetheless. Mm. Kind of weird. I don't know what to think of that, but I did find it interesting. Right. Another thing that I find interesting that we no longer see in the news, like speaking of lost narratives, Trump has sex with some random porn star allegedly, and now there's no more aliens, it's magical how all the U f O conversations. gone. , there's nothing to be talked about in the news right now about, uh, uh, aliens, UFOs, spacecraft. Uh, you know, there, there's no conversations being had right now. Like all of a sudden the aliens went away just in time for Donald Trump to be indicted for, you know, paying off a porn star six years ago. Kind of bizarre, isn't it strange how the world of politics and media. Absolutely blindside us with information just to, just to hype us up, it's like this, this one month news cycle, one minute we're all on the edge of our seats waiting for the next congressional hearing on UFOs, and all of a sudden Trump pays off a porn star and all of our interests and, and aliens just takes a backseat. That's, that's an interesting concept to me is like how often. Like how, like how do we break that? How do we break the, the, the attention on the news cycle? Because if it's not aliens and literal motherships, like there was articles about a mothership releasing drones from space into our solar system. You want to talk about priming, if that's not actually happening, what are they priming us for? Cuz that's even far more concerning. But the fact that all of that news coverage, all of that news media like I did, you walk into work after fricking M S N BC comes out and says there's a mothership releasing drones into our world, And there. Nobody talking about it, steve's still being an asshole in sales, uh, Monica is still, you know, not, not getting you over the email when she should be like, George is still dropping the ball in hr, um, recruiting new people for your department. Like nobody's talking about alien motherships. What, what is it? What would it take for us to have a long standing attention on. Well, apparently it takes Donald Trump paying off a porn star. like that has gone far more into the human psyche for a longer period of time than alien motherships. Right. I I, I don't even know where to take that. It's, it's just so bizarre to me, right. How, how much programming is involved, right. Like you would think. Alien Motherships being released, you know, releasing drones into our atmosphere. And, and the, the, um, the collective unconscious would be on that, like Hunter Biden on the floor looking for a piece of Dr. Crack, like just sifting through the carpet, looking for crack. But no. Instead we're focusing on Trump's financial movements for a misdemeanor crime that he allegedly committed six years ago. It's all a little interesting to me right now on the backs of that. Now let's, let's actually talk about the Hunter Biden situation. Cause I think , I think there's some few things that you missed there. Like if you haven't dove deep into the Hunter Biden laptop, I did two full episodes on it. Two full deep dives into the conversations months and months and months ago now. You wanna talk about who should actually be being arrested, you want, you wanna. Who's on the right side of, of, of history? Look at who, the judicial system, who, who the mainstream media has been weaponized against. It's Trump, it's it's Covid. It's Ivermectin, it's Joe Rogan. It's, it's the conspiracy theorists. It's Robert Malone. You want to, you want to know who the people are, who are telling the truth. Look to who the government is trying. Actively silence. Look to who Snoop's next article was written about. Right. I've, I've been using probably too many good news sources recently, like Real News, no bullshit, like Atlas News, like some of these independent journalists like Matt Taibbi. I should probably just start going to Snoops with all of the conspiracy theories that have been proven to be true lately for my facts. Just, just assume everything on Snopes is. And that's where the best news stories are. Um, it seems like a better way of going about it, but if you actually go back to the Hunter Biden laptop, one of the most interesting cases that is not very much talked about, I gu I guess there's been some more recent con like pictures that came out showing potentially Lady Gaga. Like smoking next to Hunter Biden. Like I, I saw a meme about Hunter Biden with, it was like Hunter Biden about to have sex and it was him with like some military hat on with like 25 GoPros around his head. Uh, it seems like literally everybody that that man has ever had sex with, he felt the need to take a picture of um, one of them potentially being Lady Gaga allegedly. Cuz there was a very, very, very. Uh, similar looking woman in the picture with him with almost identical hair, nose, facial structure that he was standing next to, um, taking a, a selfie with. But another interesting one is, uh, what is her name? Gosh, Obama's daughter. Right. What is Obama's daughter's name? It's like millennia or it's not millennia. That sounds like a, what is her name? Let's see if we can find it here. Yeah. Not Natasha Malia. That's what it was. That was pretty close, malia Trump. Trump, Malia Obama . There was pictures when she was underage during the time where apparently Malia Obama was in a picture naked, allegedly with Hunter Biden, where she actually like had a debit or a credit card that somebody linked back to her because you could see a portion of her name on it with cocaine on. There's so much in that laptop and, and nothing's happened with that. That's why it's just so crazy to me that Trump is even being talked about. There's so many things that our judicial system, there's so many people that they should be going after, maybe, I don't know, maybe the woman who just left office, the speaker of the house. Uh, maybe you should be going after her for the 50 billion or whatever that Pelosi made from actively day trading. The very things that she was currently working on, writing legislation surrounding, you know, or her husband. Now there is one thing that I found, you know, another thing that came up, which was that there was additional footage about, uh, Pelosi's husband and the hammer situation and stuff. And it doesn't exactly appear as it initially came off when the story came out where it was like potentially his male lover, but I don't know, maybe it was who, who knows. Maybe I'll check Snopes to see if, if, uh, they have anything to say about that. All right. But as I said at the beginning of this, there's two ways to think about body counts. The first. Is Trump's body count in the sheets. The second way, is actual body bags. And when we're talking about pot, uh, potential body counts for presidents. There's really one name that sticks out and it's the Clintons. So we will jump into that in just a moment. But first, go ahead and hit that subscribe button. Leave a five star review, uh, write something in there. Nice. That always helps out the podcast. It helps us get up in the rankings. And again, head over to Austin Adams dot.com. It's the free podcast companion along with some articles that we write up on a weekly basis. And by we, I mean, and me when I have time. Um, Which is not very often, but I do try to get to it when I can. All right, so Austin Adams dot.com and thank you so much. One more time, please leave a five star review. It would mean the world, all you'll feel good about yourself. There's not too many things that you can do to get some good karma in this world. That is easy and passive, but you have an app up on your phone right now. And you are listening to this app, and one out of six of you, at least one out of seven of you that is listening to this right now, one outta 10, have not left a review, have not hit that five star button, and it would help tremendously. If you are still listening to this podcast, I know you know how easy it is to leave a five star review. So go ahead and click that button and then next time, next episode, when we're talking about these things, the craziness that is going on in this world, You'll know, you'll have that fuzzy feeling in your stomach. So I will raise this founder's dirty bastard, uh, scotch Ale to you as you leave a five star review. And I'll even give you 10 seconds to do it. 10 seconds. And I will drink during that time and then I'll toast you and then I'll take another sip. Here we go. Hear that. Thank you so much. I appreciate you. Now let's move on. Speaking of presidential body counts, why is there not an indictment about the former Clinton Aid who literally shot himself in the chest and then hung himself 30 miles from his house and the shotgun just so happened to be 30 feet from his body after he did so? Right. If anybody's going to be Indic. Right. Speaking of presidential body counts, if anybody's gonna be indicted, it should probably be the people who have the same last name and have, I don't know. 53 people around them who have in some way, shape, or form been connected to them that have unlived themselves, So for years, the Clinton family has been surrounded by a seemingly endless string of mysterious deaths, many of the deceased had ties to the Clintons and even some possessed potential damaging information. This says the coincidences are too numerous to ignore, and the intrigue only intensifies. Examine each case. I'm gonna go on to list an astonishing list. Over 50 people here who have been tied to the Clintons that have unlived themselves or been directly killed, that have been tied back to them in some way, shape, or form. But at first, Let's go ahead and pull up this, this audio here. There's a couple clips of some people that you might appreciate, uh, talking about the Clinton body count as we preempt this wonderful, beautiful list here together. All right, so the first one let's listen to is going to be from the two Bears one, uh, cave Podcast, , which is Tom Segura. Um, talking about this, which I find to be pretty funny. . All right. And here we go. Are insane. Yeah. That you just get so like everybody's just like you want in on this? Yeah. Also, would you like to give a speech? Yeah. It's 500 grand. Yeah. for you to talk about what, what it was like to be president? Yeah. Okay. Yeah. When I was president it was pretty wild. Yeah. Like it's fucking, that's, you get 500 grand for that shit. Big time. They do a series, write a book. 15 million advance, and they're not giving you that money to curry favor. They're doing it cuz they really wanna hear what you have to say. Yeah. They wanna hear what Hillary Hill, you know, we gotta regulate Wall Street. And then you look at her tour schedule, she's like, bear Stearns, JP Morgan , you're going. That's weird. Yeah, no, that's a fun one, by the way, when you talk about conspiracy theories. Yeah. The most fun. , I think is the Clinton family stuff. Like, and, and it's fun because there's a lot of, there are, it's like, uh, six degrees of separation, but six degrees of death with death. Clinton. Yeah. So many people that are like associated former employees, colleagues, they're like dead, dead, dead. Yeah. then, uh, what is it, Clinton Road, Epstein's playing like, I don't know, half a dozen times or more. He, I think he was the pilot of it at one point. Yeah, , I think he was driving it. He was always on that thing. He was fucking on that thing, dude. And they're like, ask him about ep. Yeah. I mean he was like a gold fire. We're talking about money . Yeah, that's it. He was like a gold medallion, like frequent flyer, frequent fly a lot of miles on that plane. What'd you do when you got to that island? Ah, we golfed the beach. It's a beach. Yeah. Golf. You've been to an island? Yeah. Great golf. Yeah, we golfed on that tiny little uh, uh, secret island. The amount of people that have died. That we're close to them. It is. It's like a have you look up Clinton body count. Yeah, it's a little weird. It is a little weird. It's a little weird. It is a fun one. I would get into . It's got his own Wikipedia , is it? Oh, it's a discredited conspiracy theory. Excuse. No, they pulled up Wikipedia and there is actually a Wikipedia page all around the Clinton body count that is the title of the Wikipedia. Clinton body count. There's so many, and then there's this creepy picture of both of them standing there with these murderous smiles on their face. next to the words Clinton body count. Like imagine there's, there's no Trump body count. There's no bush body count, although there should be for that one. Um, I wonder how big that ticker would look like. Um, but there is a Clinton body count, Wikipedia page, and then entire page dedicated to it. Excuse me, please. Sorry. I forget. Alleged victims. There's. , former finance co-chairman, uh, Victor Razor. Mary Mohan White House intern. Didn't wanna suck it. Dead. , uh, Vince Foster, of course, it was a big one. Big one that would be a White House. Uh, council found dead in Fort Marcy Park in Virginia, outside Washington. Autopsy determined he was shot in the. His death was ruled as suicide by five official investigations where remains the subject of conspiracy theories. Um, for knowing too much about the Clintons. Seth Rich, everybody knows Seth Rich. Mm-hmm. , uh, unsolved Murder still. Jeffrey Epstein. Um, we talked about him. Christopher Sign wrote the news of a meeting. Oh man, this was, this was huge. And was, um, thought. Greatly sway the election. Oh yeah. In 16, this is when, uh, Clinton met with then Attorney General Loretta Lynch. Um, and it was like, it was, so it was like, uh, we're on the tarmac. Hey, why don't you like pull that plane back up for a second. . I want to have a quick chat. Yeah. Um, and sign was found dead in his Alabama home. His death. Anyways. It, it is so crazy. There's a literal dedicated Wikipedia page, and, and how there's so many people that have talked about this. Now, Epstein's an interesting one, and, and, and let me preface this all with this. These are all just conspiracy theories, folks. It's very, very possible that the Clintons have never done anything wrong at all. They're just very nice people with the best interest of our, you know, nation at hand. And just everybody has these silly little thoughts about them. Like, I don't know, you killed a bunch of people. It's very, very, very real. I don't think the Clintons killed. I'm winking. I don't think that at all. Right. Um, so, you know, I like my life. I, I, I don't want to be found somewhere with a, a, you know, a, a beautifully written note in a field somewhere that is cursive. That, that looks nothing like mine stating how I am done with this world. So, you know, this is all conspiracy theories. This is all thought experiments folks. We're just messing around . Uh, so let's, let's move on here. But Epstein's an interesting one, the reason that people think Epstein now, now again, in this fun little world of conspiracies, I don't think Hillary Clinton is walking around with a knife in, in a, a. Six shooter in her pocket in a, a cowboy hat with a mustache killing all these people. I, I don't think that, I think they're probably. Allegedly hiring very, very high cost mercenaries that all of these people in these very elite societies have some sort of access to. You know, and, and this is something that you'll see next in the clip of, of Duncan Trussel and Joe Rogan talking about this. And by the way, Duncan Tru Duncan Trussel, of everybody that I listened to, even, even more than Joe Rogan even. He's top three for me, it's like Lex Friedman, um, Duncan Trestle. Those would be my top two, um, and I can throw some other people in there. Russell Branch or Rogan, like there's some, some, some great people out there that are Andrew Huberman that are doing great. Um, great work in the podcast, uh, scheme. But Duncan Trussell's conversations with Joe Rogan. If you do nothing else with podcasts besides listen to my entire library, , which I hope you do. Go listen to every Joe Rogan Duncan Trestle podcast, and then come back here and thank me. Uh, it's, it's just incredible, incredible conversations. He's such an interesting dude, and we'll listen to them, uh, here in just a moment. But, um, back to the conversation at hand, I don't think it's Hillary Clinton with a mustache and a cowboy hat and the six shooter and a knife walking around killing all these people. They're very, very highly paid Merc. all around the world. This is a real thing, uh, the cia, red Squad, the, the, um, right. All there's, there's all of these different, uh, teams that are go from being high, high up at the tip of the spear special missions units in, in the military, um, in, in whatever country that they're serving to going and making. And, and maybe I'm wrong, but it seems like it's a probably a pretty strong possibility that if you are in one of those extremely, extremely high positions, there's some real money to be made If you can get in and get outta somewhere and do a, a dirty deed done dirt cheap to quote ac d c , um, there's probably some money to be made and if there was money to be, Right. The book deals that they're talking about, the 14 million advances, even if just, you know, 250,000 goes to, uh, eliminating some random woman who a accuses your husband of grabbing her ass during a, a campaign that you don't need that negativity on, eh, quarter mill doesn't seem too bad. That's like. A fifth of a, a speech at JP Morgan Chase for the Clintons . So let's, let's listen to this next clip. This is Duncan Trestle and Joe Rogan talking about the Clinton body count. Now to preface this, they are sitting here in the revolutionary wartime wigs, uh, big white wigs with, uh, big coats. Um, it's, it's a site to be seen, but, um, this is, uh, Let's see if it even tells us which episode. Um, no, but here we go. It's, it's, it's good stuff. How many guys that have been killed or died rather, I should say, by suicide, accidental suicide through, uh, auto erotic asphyxiation when they have like a vibrator up their ass and they're wearing a fucking wetsuit. Yeah, and they're, they're hanging. How many of those guys were just. I What percentage? A lot. Half. How many of them work for the fucking Clinton's? There's your answer. Oh man. Did that Clinton, the last that, that's who? The last guy. Wow. Like they're not even trying. To make it secret , and we're gonna, we're gonna get to this one a, a bit too, but they talk about it in this, so it's, it's crazy. The most recent one that is like the most obvious Clinton, uh, with the mustache and, and a six shooter and the cowboy hat situation is, is, is this one that they're about to talk about. It's, it's so crazy that this is like, and Trump's getting indicted for moving money in the wrong place with a misdemeanor and it's this huge orde. That's, it's so crazy. It's like you saying there's a Clinton body count makes you a conspiracy theorist. Yeah. Like there's how many, but like I, you know, it's just a lot of coincidences dunking. You're not supposed to know that many people who've committed suicide. Like, you know what I mean? Like if I knew. 30. Like if 30 people that used to work for me had committed suicide and I didn't have something to do with it, like I would start going crazy , I would shut down my business. Yeah. I'd be like, you know, I don't know if it's me or it's something about me, but everyone who works for me, lots of people that work for me, they kill themselves. So I'm not doing it anymore. I'm gonna like get a little apartment. You know, just like, just ride out the rest of my life. I'm gonna get a cabin and start writing books, write books, whatever. Just know, I don't want, I don't want any more people to die. But yeah, that body count thing is really like, what's the number? What I, I don't know. I think it's, what's it up to, Jamie? Supposedly 39. 39, I think 39 people that you, that you've worked with. Died like in the gym, they have these accidents. It's like, imagine you have Putin's body count. It's only like 20. Like it's way higher. Yeah. If, uh, what is this? That's the guy. So Mark Middleton dead at 59. Clinton special advisor who let Epstein into the White House seven times dies. Um, this is a sun report, just so, oh, the sun. Of course. I'm reading how it's clarity. So scroll up a little bit. What's the, . It's like, uh, you know, a lot of celebrity news and a lot of salacious news, yeah. It's like, it's a little bit fun. It's like a fun newspaper. So sad, sad, fun stories that doesn't, wait, what are they saying? Just so that we, it doesn't show the weird parts about it. Just find the one where it shows it. Yeah. Find the, there's an article about his suicide. He, uh, hung himself with an extension cord and shot himself in the chest and shot simultaneous. Yeah, like Yo , I mean, this one is family, uh, of Bill Clinton advisor who admitted Jeffrey Epstein into White House seven times, has blocked release of files detailing the death scene after he was found hanging from a tree with a shotgun blast at a ranch 30 miles from his home. Kids, kids monsters are. Okay. Here's the problem with conspiracy theories. There's so many people that are willing to jump on so many of 'em. Yeah. So many dumb ones. Yeah. That it muddies the water and it makes the, the word a pejorative. Oh, you're a conspiracy theorist. Yeah. It's like you don't think that some people occasionally conspire Like, are we in denial? Yeah. Of one of the. Basic aspects of greedy people. Sure. To conspire people with power that control. No, they stopped giant swaths of the globe. They don't do anymore. They stopped a long time ago. They used to. A long time ago. That was a long time ago. Wealthy people, you know, Royal Quartz, royalty kings or whatever. Yeah. It was intrigue and they would poison people and kill them, but they stopped because wealthy people, you know, they've learned how to be. Kinder and Nice. And the pharmaceutical company said they're sorry and they paid the money. Yeah. Everything's fine now. No, it changed. The world changed. It used to be like that. Yeah. The world's beautiful now It's perfect. It's fine. No one would ever do that. No one's resort to that kind of murdering thing, like Yeah, nobody would. I mean, the, our armies do it, but aside from our armies, no. People who are in charge of the armies would do it when they're off work. . When they're off work. So let's, let's explore some of the lists here. So, so there's, there's a, the attack happened here early Sunday morning, 27 year old. Here's Seth Rich. Here's, here's, uh, one of the most, um, consistently talked about one. So let's, let's let this play for a minute, cuz it just comes right up after that one and we'll see if anything comes out of it. Seth Rich is one of the most famous cases about the Epsteins or about the Epstein, about the Clintons. Seth Rich seen here in his LinkedIn profile. Picture murdered as he walked in a neighborhood. He called home. Seth Rich was shot twice in the back in what police said. Looked like a botched robbery. He was taken to hospital, but died two hours later, just one of 139 murders in the DC area. Last. Still, the death of somebody linked to Hillary Clinton's campaign was enough to set the internet, a light with theories about what might have really happened. In August, WikiLeaks offered a $20,000 reward. And then on Dutch television, WikiLeaks found in Julian Assange suggested that Rich was his source for the Democrats emails. I'm suggesting that our sources, uh, take risks and they are, they become concern. Uh, to see things occurring, uh, like that. But was he one of your sources then? I mean, we don't comment on who our sources are, but why make the suggestion about a young guy being shot in the streets of Washington? Because, uh, we have to understand, uh, how high the states are, uh, in the United States whoa. I didn't know that the WikiLeaks leaker of the DNC emails with Hillary Clinton's emails was Seth Rich. I, I hadn't gotten that far in this reading yet. . Whoa, that's crazy. And that was Julian Assange, the man himself commenting in that video, talking about it. Um, and you think he randomly got shot in the street. No way. As, as Joe Rogan put it, you'll think people sometimes conspire , like you think that's a coincidence. Absolutely. No way. They, he leaks the Hillary Clinton emails and all of a sudden he gets shot in the back twice in New York for, no, in a, in a robbery, you shoot somebody in a back, in a robbery. So let's go through some of this list here. Here's an astonishing list of individuals connected to the Clintons who met untimely ends, to say the least. All right, we'll go through some of these. I don't know if we'll go through all of them, but obviously that's a pretty damn good intro into it. Let's talk about Epstein Seth Rich, those are some pretty serious names tied to the Clintons, but let's go on, james McDougal was a key witness in Ken Starr's investigation. In Clinton's conviction or convicted whitewater partner found dead in solitary confine confinement from an apparent heart attack. Mary Mahoney former White House intern, planning to expose her story of sexual harassment was murdered in a Georgetown Starbucks. Vince Foster, former White House counselor in Hillary Clinton's colleague at Rose Law Firm ruled a suicide by gunshot wound to the head. Ron Brown, secretary of Commerce, former D N c Chairman and potential whistleblower died in a plane crash with his suspicious gunshot like hole in his skull. Hmm. Now I will, That is very hard to find. You know, like they said about the sun, it's a, like this list didn't come from Fox News, if that's your source of correct information. So take some of this with a grain of salt, but the fact that you can probably reverse engineer almost any one of these names and find the correlation and then find that they're dead in a very similar fashion than what they're talking about here. It says Victor Riser in Montgomery Riser. Major Clinton fundraisers killed in a private praying cla praying plane crash. Paul Toley, democratic National Committee political director in Clinton, confidant, found dead in Little Rock Hotel room. Ed Willy Clinton fundraiser found dead with a gunshot wound to the head in the woods of Virginia, ruled a suicide, died the same day as his wife claimed. Bill Clinton groped. Jerry Parks head of Clinton's goober Notator security team gunned down in his car. His son Claim Parks was building a dossier on Clinton. James Bunch found dead from a gunshot suicide. Reportedly had a black book containing names of influential people visiting prostitutes in Texas and Arkansas. James Wilson tied to a whistle or, uh, tied to whitewater, found dead in May, 1993 from an apparent hanging suicide. I said whistleblower, probably because of Julian Assange at this point. Um, Kathy Ferguson, ex-wife of Arkansas, trooper Danny Ferguson was found dead in May, 1994 in her living room with a gunshot to her head. it was ruled a suicide even though there were several packed suitcases as if she were going somewhere. Danny Ferguson was a co-defendant along with Bill Clinton In the Paula Jones lawsuit, Kathy Ferguson was a possible corroborating witness for Paula Jones. That is 11 of them. We can keep going. Bill Shelton or uh, Arkansas State Trooper Gunshot wound ruled a suicide critical of the suicide ruling of his fiance who was found dead in. Gandy Baugh. Attorney for Clinton's friend died of jumping out of a window in 1994. His client was a convicted drug distributor, Florence Martin, accountant and subcontractor for the cia. Uh, Suzanne Coleman reportedly had an affair with Clinton when he was an Arkansas attorney, uh, died of a gunshot wound to the back of her head pregnant at the time of her death. Paula gr. Clinton's speech interpreter for the death from 1978 until her death December, 1992. She died in one car crash. Eh, that might be bullshit, people die of car crashes. Danny Castro in investigative reporter investigating Mina Airport and Arkansas Development Finance Authority slit his wrists apparently in the middle of his investigation into Clinton's, Paula Wichner, John Walker. Barbara Weiss says that, uh, commerce Department staffer worked closely with Ron Ba Brown and John Hong cause of death unknown. Charles Messer goes on and on and on. Dr. Stanley heard right, how many people had to die , how many people died around them before you start to ask questions, like I, I. I don't know that many people that have died. Like there's a, a small handful of people that I've ever run into, let alone people who have shot themselves. And maybe it's like sixth degree of SEP separation, but like, these aren't six degrees, this is like first, second degree, um, Kevin Ives and Don Henry, known as the Boys on the track case reports say the boys may have stumbled upon the Mena Arkansas's airport drug operation. The controversial case. The initial report of death said due to falling asleep on railroad tracks. Later reports claim the two boys had been slain before being placed on the tracks. Many linked the case, uh, linked to the case died before their testimony could come before a. Yeah. Get the point. And this even going all the way up to Hillary's 2016 presidential run, um, world renowned space economist Molly McCauley, brutally murdered in Baltimore as she, uh, had testified before Congress many times. She was vice president at Resource for the Future, and in the junk professor at John Hopkins University, she was stabbed to death while walking her dogs in Baltimore Park. Her name is on this list because of her ties in Washington as well as her death just days before the murder of Seth. Hmm, interesting. And then we get to Seth Rich, if, if none of these other ones even matter, like let's talk about the, I dunno, eight or nine bodyguards that were in there, , if none of those matter. You want to talk about Seth Rich? That is one of the craziest ones, and, and this, this article that I found to even talks about it being a possible connection. Julia Assange just. Told us everything. But the fact that sh, he was the one that gave them that information, right, gave them access to all of the emails. Crazy. And then it goes on to talk about John Ash, Victor Thorns, John Lucas, and the list goes on, so, so many people from whistleblowers to bodyguards. These deaths have, have, should at least raise some eyebrows. If you have 52 people around you that are in some way or shape or form associated with you, or were coming after you in some legal manner and they just so happen to die. And that's somehow always related to potentially suicides, gunshot wounds. Right. There's a fair amount of plane crashes. Right. And then Mark Middleton, the one that Joe Rogan and Duncan Trust were talking about. But as the body count climbs the likelihood of this, like the think of the likelihood, how, how many people do you know that have died? Now think of how many people you know that have died tragically. Now think of how many people you know that have died tragically, were coming after you legally and also so happened to commit suicide. Like the, the, the, the, the statistics aren't in their favor, . So as we talk about this, Donald Trump is being Indic. For moving money to pay off an NDA from a. Home equity line, that's what we're talking about here. for his body count with a porn star next to the 52 names that I just listed that have to do with the Clintons, and I'm sorry if I bored you with some of those names, but it's just pretty wild when you go through some of 'em. And again, I'm not claiming some of those or all of them, or even one of them has to do with the Clinton's in in Hillary with a mustache and a cowboy hat and a six shooter going off and killing all these people. But I am saying it's pretty damn weird. Maybe. Maybe the Manhattan District Attorney should be looking at that instead of Trump's payments to Stormy Daniels from a pote, a possible home equity line , like he mismarked his, his tax return. Right. Maybe just, maybe that's, that's something that should be considered, but I thought that was a fun way of going about this conversation. Right. The body. Compared to the body count, right, Trump's one body count was Stormy Daniels sexually compared to the 52 body counts of the Clinton's, uh, murdery sprees allegedly. Is, uh, an interesting comparison to say the least. So on that note, thank you so much for listening today. I appreciate it from the bottom of my heart. I truly do. I, I love doing this. I, it amazes me every day, um, that we have such an awesome community. Uh, follow me on Instagram, the Adams Archive, uh, truth, social, the Adams Archive. Everywhere you get your podcast, we have a YouTube channel, youTube. You can watch the video every single week. I post the video the very next day after the podcast, it gets released and you can actually watch the video. You can watch the videos that we're watching alongside of me, um, at the YouTube channel. Okay? Um, it's just the Adams archive search that you'll find me. See my, my face, um, and we'll go from there, but, all right. Thank you guys so much. I appreciate it from the bottom of my heart. I hope you have a wonderful, wonderful week, and I love you. I'll talk to you soon. Bye.
Jim talks with John Ash about his use of AI art tools and their implications for society. They discuss the basics of how the latest models work, using AI to communicate complexity, removing noise from noise, style transfer, pursuing knowledge for the sake of knowledge, expressing complex ideas through images, iterative de-noising in human conversation, stochastic gradient descent, receptivity to meaning, latent spaces, a high-order taxon of creative iteration, songwriting, finding the ideal number of iterations, stylistic interpolation, Cognicism, attribution & sourcing, citations in ChatGPT, the coming debates about ownership & permission, why the first court ruling will probably be about porn, the world as a giant interconnected neocortex, propaganda bots, owning our cognition, stochastic terrorism, future shock, solving internal alignment before we solve AI alignment, and much more. Episode Transcript Al Actress Performs a Mesmerizing Tale of Duality ("Atheus and the Golden Braid"), by Speaker John Ash - YouTube Play.ht The Congress (IMDb) Deep Reckonings, by Stephanie Lepp JRS EP129 - Stephanie Lepp on Deep Reckonings
Steve Garner and Chef John Ash talk about different recipes to use up those leftovers from the Thanksgiving meal. We also talk with Chef Marc Henri Jean Baptiste of Maison Porcella Artisinal Charcuterie in Windsor. And don't forget about Dining Out For Life, supporting Food For Thought. It is coming up on December 1st, 2022. Visit participating restaurants on that day and part of your bill will help Food For Thought.
Steve Garner and Chef John Ash talk about the best canned chili, as well as a new method to keep cucumbers fresh in the fridge for two weeks! We also chat with Jeff Berlin, co-owner of Piala Geogian Cuisine in Sebastopol. Jeff shares a few of the dishes on the menu as well as natural wines from the region served in earthenware bowls.
Wine Road: The Wine, When, and Where of Northern Sonoma County.
Wine Road Podcast Episode 157 Sponsored by Ron Rubin Winery Episode 157 | Julius Orth, Director of Hospitality and Tasting Room Manager (and Professional Consumer) from Ektimo Winery Julius regales us with stories from his fascinating life and tells us what to expect when visiting Ektimo for a tasting while we enjoy the 2019 Ektimo Estate Mount Eden Pinot Noir. Wine of the Day: 2019 Ektimo Estate Mt. Eden Pinot Noir. Fast Five Recipe: Salad Dressing by Richard Ross of Threshold Studios Podcast Sponsor: Ron Rubin Winery SHOW NOTES 1:00 Wine of the Day --2019 Ektimo Estate Mount Eden Pinot Noir. Winner of the North Coast Wine Competition –Best of Class. Made from vines planted in 2013 with four different clones. 2:27 Ektimo located on Ross Road near Iron Horse winery between Graton and Forestville. Located next to Ron Rubin Winery 3:07 The word Ektimo is an expression of appreciation or gratitude in Greek. 4:00 Tasting room open for tastings five days a week closed on Mondays and Tuesdays. Adjacent to the Joe Rodota trail. 6:00 The main focus of Ektimo is on pinot noir but also make some other varieties as the opportunity arises. All wines are small lots. 7:11 How Julius got his start in the wine industry. And a bit about his life rubbing elbows with rock stars! 10:36 Tasting room is appointment only and Julius will take you through the flights of the day. And unique to Ektimo –tableside barrel tasting! Check it out! 13:44 April, the owner of the winery, runs the behind the scenes operation the family is from China and looked far and wide for a place to open a winery and lucked upon the current location. Also on site are alpacas and chicken and goats! 15:40 Fast Five Recipe –Salad Dressing from Richard Ross, Owner of Threshold Studios where we record the podcast. Ingredients: Dijon mustard, honey, Capitol Hill Seasoning, olive oil, grand reserve balsamic vinegar. Directions: Combine all the ingredients in your whisk disc (!) and combine. That's it. Serve over radicchio and enjoy! 18:58 Bonus wine book suggested by Julius --The Grapes of Ralph. 19:25 Julius takes his out of town guests around to the local wine spots, and one of his favorites is Iron Horse Winery. For dining out he enjoys John Ash and Co. at the Vintners Inn. 22:19 ONE MORE THING – Tickets on sale now for Wine and Food Affair in November 5th and 6th details on the Wine Road website. Links Ektimo Wines Estate Mt. Eden Pinot Noir Iron Horse Winery John Ash and Co. The Grapes of Ralph by Ralph Steadman Wine And Food Affair Ron Rubin Winery Credits: The Wine Road podcast is mixed and mastered at Threshold Studios Sebastopol, CA. http://thresholdstudios.info/
On this very special Doomer Optimism interlude, we drop in on our intrepid hosts, Ashley Colby and Jason Snyder, as they mix it up with Michael Garfield and the folks at Future Fossils. It was such a tremendous conversation that we figured we should crosslist on both podcasts. So, enjoy, and be sure to subscribe to Future Fossils! Here are the show notes from Future Fossils: Be forewarned: This latest episode is some extremely heady stuff. But thankfully, it's also full of heart and soul... Back in February, Jonathan Rowson posted two clips from his latest in-progress writing to Twitter, where it succeeded in baiting a bunch of the folks with whom I regularly interact as members of the so-called "Liminal Web" into reflecting on the value of partitioning a global boil of loosely-associated "sensemakers," "meta-theorists," and "systems poets" into well-meaning but ultimately dubious cultural taxonomies. I had plenty to say about this from my awkwardly consistent stance of being both enthusiastic and skeptical about apparently everything. But so did numerous other brilliant and inspiring people, including Bonnitta Roy, Stephanie Lepp, Ashley Colby, and Jason Snyder – all of whom I've wanted on the show for a while (with the exception of Stephanie, with whom I had a great chat back on episode 154). So I took it upon myself to press for an on-the-record group discussion about the virtue and folly of putting labels on sociocultural processes and networks that are defined by their liminality: Is this ultimately a good thing, or does it just kill the magic in a foolish servility to economic pressures and the desire to be recognized as A Movement? When we finally met at the end of March for our call, the conversation turned to issues with more urgency and gravitas — namely: Is it even helpful to spend all of our time talking about crises and metacrises when there is so much work to be done? What transpired was easily one of the more profound and inspired conversations I've ever had the good fortune to host on this show, although it was also more beset with insane and infuriating technical problems that getting it ready for release took over thirty hours of excruciating editing. I am so immensely glad I am finally done and can get on with my damn life! But also that I get to share this with you and hear what the rest of our scene(s) have to contribute to this discourse. (Some of the people I'd especially love to hear from include folks we mentioned in this episode and/or were part of the original Twitter discussion, including John Vervaeke, Jeremy Johnson, Daniel Schmachtenberger, Kyle Kowalski, Jim Rutt, John Ash, and Joe Lightfoot, as well as people implied or indicted by Jonathan's prompts, including Nora Bateson and everyone involved with DAOs, GameB, cosmo-localism, meta-modernism, and The Dark Renaissance. So, like, half the people I talk and listen to...)
In the first segment, Steve Garner and Chef John Ash talk with Coinneach Macleod, author of the book The Hebridean Baker-Recipes and Wee Stories from the Scottish Islands. In the second half of the show, Steve and John talk with Judy Groverman Walker, event organizer for the California Artisan Cheese Festival which returns after a two-year hiatus. The event is back at the Sonoma County Fairgrounds on Saturday, May 7th, Tickets are available at artisancheesefestival.com
In this episode of Biblioscapes In Discussion I am joined by the photographers and curators behind the collaboration, New Beginnings.Joining me to discuss the collaboration and their favourite photobooks were Tim Allott, Susi Petherick, Valerie Dalling, Jan Beesley, Andy Holliman, John Ash and Paul Gotts. Unfortunately Andrew Atkinson was unable to join.Keep up to date with Biblioscapes by subscribing to Euan's Book Club.
John Ash rejoins There Is A River Podcast to continue the discussion on merriment, joy, and play.
Stephen Ash and John Ash discuss the abundance of life available in the deep truth of God's Word.
Helping Restaurants Get Through the Tough Times Episode 089 with Fred Langley of RestaurantSystemsPro.net Fred Langley is the CEO, and restaurant coach for RestaurantSystemsPro.net. He leads the company’s consulting services, coaching members, conducting seminars and overseeing the training and technical support team for the company’s restaurant management software, SMART Systems Pro. Fred has been with RestaurantSystemsPro.net since 2006. He became a restaurant coach for the company after seeing incredible success as a customer. He evolved his role from occasional coach to a key player in retention and operations. He brings his experience as a chef and restaurant owner to the team, helping members to literally revolutionize how they operate using the same systems and tools he learned as a member. Prior to owning his own restaurants, Fred was with John Ash & Co. Restaurant in California’s wine country for eight years, where he worked his way up to sous chef. Prior to John Ash, he spent three years as an unofficial apprentice to a classically trained French chef. Listen to this information-packed BizSoup Podcast Radio episode with Fred Langley about helping restaurants get through the tough times. Talking points include: ● How to get control of fixed and variable costs. ● Why increased sales doesn’t mean increased profits. ● How you should work towards a 45-cent gross margin. ● Why you should trust your team: delegate vs. abdicate. Connect with Fred Langley Website restaurantsystempro.net Facebook facebook.com/RestaurantSystemsPro LinkedIn linkedin.com/company/therestaurantexpert-com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
We had so much fun discussing some of the things we learned from our interview with Chef John Ask with our buddies Josh Martin and Lars Williamson of Blank Wines. In this special bonus episode, Meredith set up a taste experiment inspired by Chef John Ash -- which turned out to be pretty enlightening -- and we advanced our discussion of how much more fun it is to enjoy wine (and food) when you keep things simple! CONTACT US: If you have questions or comments for Meredith and Lou, and you're listening on the Anchor App, you can send them to us directly. If you're listening to this podcast on any other platform, and you want to reach out, you can email us at majorcrushpodcast@gmail.com // Follow us on Instagram: @majorcrushwinecast. // Be sure to check out all three seasons of Major Crush on Spotify, or wherever you access your favorite podcasts! Episodes of Season Three drop every Thursday but make sure to subscribe to our show so you never miss a thing!
We almost can't believe we landed an interview with THE Chef John Ash -- the Father of Wine Country Cuisine! But somehow, we did, and it turned out to be one of the most informative interviews we've done that brings the world of food and wine together in perfect harmony! In this episode, Meredith & Lou get to learn about Chef John's past experiences, but they also learn about one of the most fascinating topics for wine lovers: pairing wine and cheese! John was so generous to us as he walks us through some really valuable tips, and, he also provided some great connections for us -- and our listeners -- to source some incredible cheeses. To help out, we've provided the names and links to all of the places Chef John mentioned in this interview. For an INCREDIBLE cheese selection, look no further than Cowgirl Creamery! Chef John mentions how well they do seasonal cheeses — and, this is the kind of place that sources specialty cheeses you’re gonna want to try! Click here to visit the site. Gioia Cheese Company is the place where Chef John told Meredith to go for the best burrata cheese ever! Click here to visit the site. If you’re looking for vegan cheese and butter that tastes like the real thing, Meredith, Lou and Chef John can all testify that Miyokos absolutely delivers the goods! Click here to visit the site. Chef John gave us a great tip for the upcoming holidays: Keep things simple by ordering beautiful favorites online. And for Chef John, Zingerman’s is a great place to get the ball rolling! Click here to visit the site. For more information on Chef John Ash and all of the many ways he keeps adding beautiful things to the world of food and wine, visit his website www.chefjohnash.com CONTACT US: If you have questions or comments for Meredith and Lou, and you're listening on the Anchor App, you can send them to us directly. If you're listening to this podcast on any other platform, and you want to reach out, you can email us at majorcrushpodcast@gmail.com // Follow us on Instagram: @majorcrushwinecast. // Be sure to check out all three seasons of Major Crush on Spotify, or wherever you access your favorite podcasts! Episodes of Season Three drop every Thursday but make sure to subscribe to our show so you never miss a thing! —
Today's show features: Carrie Severino, President of the Judicial Crisis Network, on President Trump's judicial record vs. Joe Biden's expected Supreme Court nominee list; John Ash, retired Nassau County police detective of 27 years, men's ministry
Hosts Steve Garner and Chef John Ash celebrate National Beef Jerky Day (June 12 each year!) on Good Food Hour by talking to some of our butchers here in Sonoma County. We chat with Angelo Ibleto of Angelo's Smokehouse in the town of Sonoma. Angelo works with his daughter Angela to create delectable jerky. We head over to Penngrove to talk with Matt Gamba of Bud's Custom Meats. Bud's opened in 1975, and his son Matt has been crafting exotic jerky for over 40 years. Finally, we talk with Riann Rinn, who opened Sonoma County Meat Company in Santa Rosa in 2014. Riann talks about his background as a 4-H student in Healdsburg, attending culinary school, and finding his calling as a butcher.
Hosts Steve Garner and Chef John Ash talk with Percy Brandon, GM for Vintners Resort about the protocols and challenges of reopening one of the most highly acclaimed resort/restaurant properties in California. Steve and John also chat with Kathleen Stewart, one of the founders of the award winning Downtown Bakery in Healdsburg, California about how she's been able to stay the course during these difficult times. Finally, John and Steve journey to the Outer Hebridean island of South Uist off the Scottish mainland for an audio postcard from Fiona Bird, the delightful author of 'Seaweed in the Kitchen.' Fiona is a avid forager and she recorded a family conversation with insightful comments on how cooking and foraging has brought them together during these unstable times.
Hosts Steve Garner and Chef John Ash talk with Washington State horticulturalist Bruce Barritt about the Cosmic Crisp apple, which Bruce spent 20 years and 10 million dollars developing with his team at Washington State University. Steve and John tried the apple on air with Bruce in January 2020. During the tasting Bruce mentioned that the apple was developed to remain fresh for 10 months...We've kept our sample 'Cosmics' refrigerated and now we've reached the 5 month point, and it's time to retaste! As a kid Chef John Ash grew up grilling trout with his grandparents. In this next segment he introduces us to the techniques of both grilling and barbecuing: from grilled fresh spring fava beans(really!), cider-brined pork tenderloin, to grilled fruits with ginger custard sauce. His summer menu will have you primed to get outside and start the weekend! Click here to view the recipes. June 9 is National Strawberry Rhubarb Pie Day! To celebrate we invited New England writer/chanteuse and doctorate in American studies 'Tinky' Weisblat to the show. Her new book is 'Love, Laughter, and Rhubarb' ...filled with witty historical essays... this wildly enthusiastic book (she named her cat Rhubarb!) features over 60 delicious recipes.
Hosts Steve Garner and Chef John Ash talk with Bruce Aidells and Chef Douglas Keane about summer dishes and grilling during Good Food Hour. Check out these recipes from our conversation with these talented chefs! Bruce Aidells: Bacon Burger Sliders with Bacon Mayonnaise Spicy Yogurt Marinated Lamb Kebabs Chef Douglas Keane: Chilled Cucumber Avocado and Buttermilk Soup with Mint Grilled Asparagus with Shaved Fennel and Feta, Arugula Tri-Tip of Beef with Sweet Corn and Arugula
John Ash invites DC staff to take a moment now to reflect on the things which matter most. Reading from Psalm 1.
Andy Hooper, brew master at Seismic Brewing Company, is our guest today on Brew Ha Ha with Steve Jaxon and Mark Carpenter. Karen Bianchi is also in, representing the 14th annual California Artisan Cheese Festival and also the Valley Ford Cheese & Creamery. Herlinda Heras is back to tell about her latest European trip. The Artisan Cheese Festival has a full schedule of seminars and practical exhibits in different locations, plus "Bites & Booze" which will be held in an airplane hangar. March 27, 28 & 29, the full schedule is at their website, here: https://www.artisancheesefestival.com/event. It has grown in size and this year the tours are happening on Friday and there are seminars at the Flamingo in Santa Rosa. Sunday is the big marketplace, starting with Bubbles & Brunch. Chef John Ash is going to be paired with Valley Ford Cheese & Creamery. Seismic Brewing sold their first keg in the Summer of 2017. They are located at 6700 Sebastopol Ave, in Sebastopol, in the Barlow. They brought several Seismic beers, mostly in cans. Shattercone IPA is the first beer tasted. A shattercone is formed when a meteor hits the ground, leaving a shattered cone shape. It uses hops from Idaho, Washington and from Germany. Visit our sponsor The Beverage People on 1845 Piner Road in Santa Rosa, for the best equipment, supplies and instructions for all your home brew and fermented food projects. Herlinda has brought back some beverages from her trip to Italy and Switzerland including a beer flavored liqueur. Karen Bianchi tells how Valley Ford Cheese & Creamery is now open on Hwy 1 in Valley Ford. They make three types of cheese, each one based on a traditional Italian type, so there is one based on Montasio (from the north-east Friuli region), one based on Fontina (from Piedmont, the north-west) and one that is like a Gorgonzola, which comes originally from a town called Gorgonzola in the middle of Lombardia, in north-central Italy. (It's the third-to-last stop on the green metro line, outside Milan.) She also brought an aged Estero Gold that is a lot like a Parmigiano, which literally means "from Parma" in Italian. Their Gorgonzola won 3rd place in the US Cheese Championships last Spring, and the plaque arrived the day that they opened their new shop. Finally, Herlinda tells a bit about her travels, she was just in Italy judging their national beer competition. Since the Coronavirus covid-19 has been spreading in Italy, she had some issues getting through airports but she made it.
EP7: Chef John Ash visits with Sondra & Brian to talk about his journey from Fine Arts to being the iconic Chef considered to be the Father of Wine Country Food. Chef Ash, a veteran of the restaurant business, culinary instruction and award-winning author shares his wisdom on his life of a Chef both in the private and public sector. Chef John Ash also hosts the Good Food Hour with Steve Garner on their weekly Radio Program on KSRO FM Radio on Saturdays from 11am - 12pm. https://chefjohnash.com https://www.facebook.com/Chef-John-Ash-83742237302 http://www.ksro.com/show/good-food-hour/
In our final show of 2018, co-hosts Juliet and Tom discuss literature, films, theatre and exhibitions that made an impact on them throughout the year, as well as what they anticipate in 2019. SELECTED REFERENCES 120 BPM (dir. Robin Campillo, 2017) - https://www.imdb.com/title/tt6135348/ John Ash - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Ash_(writer) KEVIN BREATHNACH, Tunnel Vision (2019) - http://kbreathnach.tumblr.com/post/162864960815/tunnel-vision SAM BYERS, Perfidious Albion (2018) - https://www.3ammagazine.com/3am/hysterical-realism-a-review-of-perfidious-albion-by-sam-byers/ Cold War (dir. Pawel Pawlikowski, 2018) - https://www.imdb.com/title/tt6543652/ Jean-Baptiste Del Amo The Encounter (Complicité) - http://www.complicite.org/productions/theencounter ANNIE ERNAUX, The Years (2018) - https://www.theguardian.com/books/2018/jun/22/the-years-annie-ernaux-review Faces, Places (dir. Agnès Varda & J.R., 2018) - https://www.theguardian.com/film/2018/sep/20/faces-places-review-agnes-varda-jr-road-movie-documentary Zoya Falkova - http://romovayababa.com/en/ The Film of Kyiv (dir. Oleksiy Radynski, 2017-18) - https://www.ica.art/on/learning/oleksiy-radynski-film-kyiv Gare St. Lazare Players - http://garestlazareireland.com/home/ HEIKE GEISSLER, Seasonal Associate (2018) - https://mitpress.mit.edu/books/seasonal-associate Gran Fury - https://tankmagazine.com/tank/2018/10/gran-fury/ In the Intense Now (dir. João Moreira Salles, 2017) Joan Jonas - https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2018/mar/13/joan-jonas-review-tate-modern JOE KENNEDY, Authentocrats (2018) ANDREA LAWLER, Paul Takes the Form of a Mortal Girl (2017) - https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/gender-bending-the-body-on-andrea-lawlors-paul-takes-the-form-of-a-mortal-girl/ Fernand Léger - https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2018/nov/25/fernand-leger-new-times-new-pleasures-tate-liverpool-adrian-searle VICTORIA LOMASKO, Other Russias (2017) - https://www.newyorker.com/books/page-turner/listening-to-ordinary-russians-by-drawing-them-one-by-one Daria Martin - https://vimeo.com/287699189 Raymond Mason - https://www.studiointernational.com/index.php/obituary-raymond-mason McDermott & McGough, Oscar Wilde Temple - https://www.oscarwildetemple.org/ Metahaven - https://www.itsnicethat.com/features/metahaven-version-history-exhibition-world-mental-health-day-101018 Jean Mohr - https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2018/nov/15/jean-mohr-obituary More of an Avalanche (Wysing) - http://www.wysingartscentre.org/archive/exhibitions/more_of_an_avalanche/2018 NADA: Act 3 - The Exhibition (dir. Jasmina Cibic, 2017) - http://jasminacibic.org/projects/nada-act-iii-the-exhibition/ Penalty (dir. Kiriil Protsenko, 2005) - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZpZxjXU5taE Phantom Thread (dir. Paul Thomas Anderson, 2017) - https://www.lrb.co.uk/v40/n04/michael-wood/at-the-movies Sophie Podolski - https://frieze.com/article/everything-permitted-sophie-podolskis-poetic-exuberance RICHARD POWER SAYEED, 1997: The Future That Never Happened (2017) - https://novaramedia.com/2017/11/03/the-future-that-never-was-1997-and-after/ Primas (dir. Laura Bari, 2017) - https://womenandhollywood.com/hot-docs-2018-women-directors-meet-laura-bari-primas-c62bc551f3f/ Charlotte Prodger - https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2018/dec/04/iphone-film-maker-charlotte-prodger-wins-2018-turner-prize Ann Quin JORDY ROSENBERG, Confessions of the Fox (2018) - https://lithub.com/confessions-of-the-fox/ Oxana Shachko ADELLE STRIPE, Black Teeth and a Brilliant Smile (2017) - https://www.theguardian.com/books/2017/aug/18/black-teeth-brilliant-smile-adelle-stripe-review That Rush! (dir. Isaac Julien, 1995) Anne-Mie van Kerckhoven - http://www.amvk.be/ The Work (dir. Gethin Aldous & Jairus McLeary, 2017) - https://www.theguardian.com/film/2017/sep/10/the-work-review-folsom-prison Hamlet Zinkovsky - https://tinyletter.com/zinovievletter/letters/what-are-we-looking-for-here-or-an-afternoon-in-pripyat
Ros talks to John Ash, chaplain of four schools in Cheltenham, and Dave Howarth, curate in Bromley, about ordination, jobs, and the future of the Church of England.
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Check, Please! Bay Area reviews a California-casual spot in Vacaville, a San Francisco hole-in-the-wall eatery serving up tongue-burning, steaming dumplings and a Santa Rosa restaurant serving seasonal wine country cuisine.
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We've Moved! Update your Reader Now.This feed has moved to: https://media.krcb.org/podcast/mouthful/feed/podcast/Update your reader now with this changed subscription address to get your latest updates from us.
We've Moved! Update your Reader Now.This feed has moved to: https://media.krcb.org/podcast/mouthful/feed/podcast/Update your reader now with this changed subscription address to get your latest updates from us.
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In this episode, Gary Benton, James Pellow, Dallas Reedy, and John Ash, of K3 Integrations, talk about experiences working outside the country, communication tools, and keys to getting hired if...