1975 film by Norman Jewison
POPULARITY
Avec Patrick K. Dewdney, Louise Carey, Benjamin Bolchegeek et Léo HenryTraduction : Natacha Bardi.Animation : Anne Canoville Dans la seconde moitié du XIXe siècle, où religion et transcendance tendent à s'effacer et où le sport accroît son influence, ce dernier propose un nouveau miroir idéal aux sociétés occidentales, et un héros moderne en la figure de l'athlète. On retrouve des avatars de cette figure tout au long du XXe siècle, et notamment dans la science-fiction, souvent sous le prisme de la dystopie, à l'image de Jonathan E. dans Rollerball, du “Saint” dans Suiciders, ou du coureur Dan Davis dans “World Record” (Animatrix) : la compétition sportive et les jeux y apparaissent comme un instrument d'aliénation des masses tout en promettant une ascension sociale fulgurante, via une compétition prétendument méritocratique où seuls les meilleurs seront élus. À ce titre, elle révèle les rouages d'un système illusoire et injuste, prompt à défaire ses champions aussi vite qu'il les a hissés au nues. Pourtant, qu'il soit victorieux ou déchu, souvent le héros demeure : le mythe états-unien qui voit dans l'effort physique et la compétitivité les clefs d'une émancipation à le cuir solide, et même dans des œuvres à portée critique telles que l'emblématique Rollerball, le protagoniste principal tend cristalliser à lui seul, la révolte contre le système. Il nous faudra donc discuter de l'héroïsme dans nos mythologies contemporaines et de la manière dont la SF et l'imaginaire peuvent s'en emparer. Table ronde dans le cadre de la 12e édition du festival Les Intergalactiques "Du Pain et des Jeux" le samedi 20 avril 2024.
We continue Sci-HIGH-ence Theater Month. The Month where we ask "What the hell were they on?"
This content has been developed for healthcare professionals only. Patients who seek health information should consult with their physician or relevant patient advocacy groups.For the full presentation, downloadable Practice Aids, slides, and complete CME/AAPA information, and to apply for credit, please visit us at PeerView.com/WQE865. CME/AAPA credit will be available until June 15, 2025.Applying Advances in PET Imaging to Facilitate the Early Diagnosis of Alzheimer's Disease: Preparing Nuclear Medicine and Radiology Specialists for New Diagnostic Workflows In support of improving patient care, PVI, PeerView Institute for Medical Education, is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.SupportThis activity is supported by an educational grant from Lilly.Disclosure information is available at the beginning of the video presentation.
PeerView Neuroscience & Psychiatry CME/CNE/CPE Audio Podcast
This content has been developed for healthcare professionals only. Patients who seek health information should consult with their physician or relevant patient advocacy groups.For the full presentation, downloadable Practice Aids, slides, and complete CME/AAPA information, and to apply for credit, please visit us at PeerView.com/WQE865. CME/AAPA credit will be available until June 15, 2025.Applying Advances in PET Imaging to Facilitate the Early Diagnosis of Alzheimer's Disease: Preparing Nuclear Medicine and Radiology Specialists for New Diagnostic Workflows In support of improving patient care, PVI, PeerView Institute for Medical Education, is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.SupportThis activity is supported by an educational grant from Lilly.Disclosure information is available at the beginning of the video presentation.
PeerView Neuroscience & Psychiatry CME/CNE/CPE Video Podcast
This content has been developed for healthcare professionals only. Patients who seek health information should consult with their physician or relevant patient advocacy groups.For the full presentation, downloadable Practice Aids, slides, and complete CME/AAPA information, and to apply for credit, please visit us at PeerView.com/WQE865. CME/AAPA credit will be available until June 15, 2025.Applying Advances in PET Imaging to Facilitate the Early Diagnosis of Alzheimer's Disease: Preparing Nuclear Medicine and Radiology Specialists for New Diagnostic Workflows In support of improving patient care, PVI, PeerView Institute for Medical Education, is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.SupportThis activity is supported by an educational grant from Lilly.Disclosure information is available at the beginning of the video presentation.
This content has been developed for healthcare professionals only. Patients who seek health information should consult with their physician or relevant patient advocacy groups.For the full presentation, downloadable Practice Aids, slides, and complete CME/AAPA information, and to apply for credit, please visit us at PeerView.com/WQE865. CME/AAPA credit will be available until June 15, 2025.Applying Advances in PET Imaging to Facilitate the Early Diagnosis of Alzheimer's Disease: Preparing Nuclear Medicine and Radiology Specialists for New Diagnostic Workflows In support of improving patient care, PVI, PeerView Institute for Medical Education, is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.SupportThis activity is supported by an educational grant from Lilly.Disclosure information is available at the beginning of the video presentation.
Drs. Rosenberg and Morgans share their insights into some late-breaker abstracts presented at the 2024 ASCO GU symposium in San Francisco. The first is a subgroup analysis from EV‑302 with enfortumab vedotin and pembrolizumab, and the other is AMBASSADOR, which looks at adjuvant pembrolizumab in locally advanced and muscle invasive urothelial cancer.
“Game? This wasn't meant to be a game. Never!”James Caan stars as Jonathan E., a legendary athlete in the brutal sport of Rollerball in Norman Jewison's 1975 dystopian sci-fi thriller. With a screenplay by William Harrison based on his short story, Jewison intended the film as a critique of exploitative sports and their dehumanizing effects. However, audiences were enthralled by the violent future sport depicted. Rollerball entered a crowded field of 1970s dystopian sci-fi, alongside classics like A Clockwork Orange. Join us – Pete Wright and Andy Nelson – as we continue the 1976 Hugo Awards Best Dramatic Presentation Nominees series with a conversation about Rollerball.Here's a hint at what we talk about:We discuss Rollerball as an early example of dystopian sports cinema, designed to make a point about authoritative control. Though we find flaws, like some pacing issues, we agree that Rollerball was prescient in its corporate allegory. We also touch on the fascinating real-world attempts to turn the fictional sport of Rollerball into a reality.Here are a few other points in our discussion: The minimalist performance of a subdued James Caan – does it work? John Houseman as the chilling corporate overlord Appreciation for the practical stunt work (and that they recognized it in the credits!) How audiences often miss the point of satirical films The abysmal 2002 remake In the end, we find Rollerball an imperfect but thought-provoking 1970s sci-fi film. Despite its uneven pacing, we have a great time talking about it, so check it out then tune in. The Next Reel – when the movie ends, our conversation begins!Film Sundries Watch this on Apple or Amazon, or find other places at JustWatch Script Options Theatrical trailer Original Short Story Roller Ball Murder by William Harrison Letterboxd Visit our ORIGINALS PAGE to find source material that movies we've talked about on the shows that are part of The Next Reel's family of podcasts were based on. Books, plays, video games, even other movies and TV series! By doing so, you can find a great read or something to watch, and help us out in the process as a portion comes back our way. Enjoy! Start your own podcast journey with the best host in the business. Try TRANSISTOR today! Want to upgrade your LETTERBOXD account? Use our PROMO CODE to get a DISCOUNT and help us out in the process! Join the conversation with movie lovers from around the world on The Next Reel's DISCORD channel! Here's where you can find us around the internet: The Web Letterboxd Facebook Instagram X YouTube Flickchart Check out poster artwork for movies we've discussed on our Pinterest page Pete Andy We spend hours every week putting this show together for you, our dear listener, and it would sure mean a lot to us if you considered becoming a member. When you do, you get early access to shows, ad-free episodes, and a TON of bonus content. To those who already support the show, thank you. To those who don't yet: what are you waiting for?Become a Member here: $5 monthly or $55 annuallyWhat are some other ways you can support us and show your love? Glad you asked! You can buy TNR apparel, stickers, mugs and more from our MERCH PAGE. Or buy or rent movies we've discussed on the show from our WATCH PAGE. Or sign up for AUDIBLE.
“Game? This wasn't meant to be a game. Never!”James Caan stars as Jonathan E., a legendary athlete in the brutal sport of Rollerball in Norman Jewison's 1975 dystopian sci-fi thriller. With a screenplay by William Harrison based on his short story, Jewison intended the film as a critique of exploitative sports and their dehumanizing effects. However, audiences were enthralled by the violent future sport depicted. Rollerball entered a crowded field of 1970s dystopian sci-fi, alongside classics like A Clockwork Orange. Join us – Pete Wright and Andy Nelson – as we continue the 1976 Hugo Awards Best Dramatic Presentation Nominees series with a conversation about Rollerball.Here's a hint at what we talk about:We discuss Rollerball as an early example of dystopian sports cinema, designed to make a point about authoritative control. Though we find flaws, like some pacing issues, we agree that Rollerball was prescient in its corporate allegory. We also touch on the fascinating real-world attempts to turn the fictional sport of Rollerball into a reality.Here are a few other points in our discussion: The minimalist performance of a subdued James Caan – does it work? John Houseman as the chilling corporate overlord Appreciation for the practical stunt work (and that they recognized it in the credits!) How audiences often miss the point of satirical films The abysmal 2002 remake In the end, we find Rollerball an imperfect but thought-provoking 1970s sci-fi film. Despite its uneven pacing, we have a great time talking about it, so check it out then tune in. The Next Reel – when the movie ends, our conversation begins!Film Sundries Watch this on Apple or Amazon, or find other places at JustWatch Script Options Theatrical trailer Original Short Story Roller Ball Murder by William Harrison Letterboxd Visit our ORIGINALS PAGE to find source material that movies we've talked about on the shows that are part of The Next Reel's family of podcasts were based on. Books, plays, video games, even other movies and TV series! By doing so, you can find a great read or something to watch, and help us out in the process as a portion comes back our way. Enjoy! Start your own podcast journey with the best host in the business. Try TRANSISTOR today! Want to upgrade your LETTERBOXD account? Use our PROMO CODE to get a DISCOUNT and help us out in the process! Join the conversation with movie lovers from around the world on The Next Reel's DISCORD channel! Here's where you can find us around the internet: The Web Letterboxd Facebook Instagram X YouTube Flickchart Check out poster artwork for movies we've discussed on our Pinterest page Pete Andy We spend hours every week putting this show together for you, our dear listener, and it would sure mean a lot to us if you considered becoming a member. When you do, you get early access to shows, ad-free episodes, and a TON of bonus content. To those who already support the show, thank you. To those who don't yet: what are you waiting for?Become a Member here: $5 monthly or $55 annuallyWhat are some other ways you can support us and show your love? Glad you asked! You can buy TNR apparel, stickers, mugs and more from our MERCH PAGE. Or buy or rent movies we've discussed on the show from our WATCH PAGE. Or sign up for AUDIBLE.
É a Minha Vez! é o podcast onde converso com alunos do Viver de Jogo que criaram um negócio com jogos de tabuleiro. Eles contam suas dúvidas, dificuldades e damos dicas para que você também possa alcançar esse feito. Neste episódio a conversa é com Jonathan e Dgenys da Banca do Lume (@banca_lume) de Telêmaco Borba - Paraná.
We are in the book of James chapter 1 this morning. A few years ago I was looking for some lumber for a project I was working on and ran across an online auction that had this giant lot of goods plus the exact lumber I was looking for. But in order to get the lumber I had to buy everything. Even with buying everything, it was still way cheaper than buying the lumber new, so I went for it. And believe me, it was random. A microwave, a few dolls, a curling iron, some potting soil. Toward the end of rummaging through this junk there was a little box and I opened it up and I couldn't believe my eyes. There was a little bar of gold inside. So I was so excited so I brought it to this gold and silver store and I said, “Hey, I'd like to trade this bar of gold for some cash.” And he looked at it for one second and said, “That's not real.” And I said, “How do you know?” When you've been around the real thing long enough, you just know. I said, can you prove it to me. He said sure, but it will destroy it. I said, I don't care. So he did three tests. He pulled out a scale and weighed it. Now it actually passed that test. And I started getting all excited. He said, "Don't get your hopes up." Then he scratched it with this tool and it looked like it was a coating of some sort. And just to confirm he pulled out some acid and poured it on the gold and sure enough, the coating just boiled right off. Now here's the point. I was trying to test for genuine gold. And no one test is perfect. It passed the first test. If I had left after having just weighed it, I would have been falsely assured. But in order for it to be genuine, it has to pass not just one test but all the tests. If it failed any of the tests it wasn't genuine. Well when it comes to examining faith, it's a similar process. James is going to give us not one test but a series of tests that will help us differentiate between a genuine faith and a counterfeit faith. James is deeply concerned about making sure that the faith you hold is in fact true, genuine saving faith. He's calling for self-examination. But just like that gold bar, there's not a single test that's a slam dunk. Rather, we are given a series of tests. And in order for the faith to be genuine it has to pass not just one test, but all the tests. So let's look at how this unfolds. Here's the first test. So we will pick up from last week where JP so helpfully led us. Now this is not the test. This is setup for the test. James begins by calling out unrighteous behavior in our speech. Now, lest we miss a very key and important point, both genuine saving faith and counterfeit faith will exhibit unrighteous behavior. It's not as if genuine faith doesn't struggle and counterfeit faith does. No. Everyone struggles. Genuine faith does not mean the extinction of anger. Genuine faith doesn't mean the extinction of bad listening habits. He gives this admonition to EVERY PERSON, which implies, every person struggles with this. So how do I not be angry? How do I become a good listener? There's an answer and we can see it in the next verse. Just walk over this bridge word, THEREFORE and see it. How do you be quick to listen and slow to speak and slow to anger? Well, he says: You have to put away all that bad behavior and RECEIVE the implanted word. SO THE TEST OF GENUINE FAITH IS WHAT YOU DO WHEN THE BAD BEHAVIOR IS POINTED OUT. There is a willingness to receive the word. There's a willingness to abandon your current mode of behavior and receive the implanted word? That's the test. There is a disposition of a person of true saving faith regarding where he or she finds answers. Do you instinctively go to the word of God as the answer book. Or do you go to your friend group. Or do you don't seek out pop psychology. Or do you read endless internet articles. Now the reason we talk about this in terms of a disposition is because of the word that modifies how we are to receive. Notice the attitude associated with the reception. Meekness. That word has the idea of gentleness. So in this context the idea is that our hearts are usually hard and resistant to receiving feedback. We are prideful. We don't like others telling us that we are wrong. So to receive with meekness is to receive with softness. In other words: teachable. To have a genuine interest. There's a genuine leaning in. For example, let's say you are trying to learn piano. And you kind of plateau in your learning. And then you have a chance to spend four hours with the hall of fame prodigy, Stevie Wonder, one of the most famous blues and jazz piano players of all time. You have a posture toward that, right? You respect him. You would hang on his words? Your attitude would be one of rapt attention and respect. There would be a meekness. I don't have the answers. He does. So it starts with that. Humble reception. That's the first test. But notice something. It's not enough. Because let's observe that he doesn't say that by receiving the implanted word with meekness it WILL save your soul. He simply says it's merely ABLE to save your soul. There's still more to do. There's potential, but it's not guaranteed. You've made it past test #1, but there are still two more tests that have to be passed. Here's the second test. So in order to have true genuine saving faith you have to receive AND agree with the word of God. Now you might think these are one and the same, but they are very distinct. You can imagine a situation in which you think you want the word, but then when the word is heard and understood, it's offensive and ultimately not agreed with. How many people do you know who say they read the Bible and want to obey it but ultimately just pick and choose what parts they like. We've all read the passage to love our enemy and pray for those who persecute you and kind of just ignored that part. That's receiving the word but not agreeing with it. Go back to the Stevie Wonder example. Let's say you are super humble, super meek, super excited to meet this iconic piano player. You can't wait to hear what kind of advice he gives you. And he listens to you play for a few minutes and he says. Tell you what. Here's what you need to do. You need to go home and learn your scales. That's not profound. That's not what I was expecting him to say. That's so uninspiring. That's what my piano teacher has been saying for years. And you get angry and leave. Do you see how these are two distinct steps? The first step is a step that acknowledges authority. The second step is a step that agrees with the assessment of that authority that you claimed to acknowledge. Genuine faith hears the word AND agrees with the word. Genuine faith is willing to go to the word with the attitude that yes, it has the source of answers and yes, it's judgment over me is true, no matter how offensive it is. You see as Christians we have to be willing to accept the judgments of God's Word on our life no matter how unflattering they are. We have to be willing to allow it to examine and evaluate. We have to be weighed by it. Poked and prodded. We have to allow it to cast its verdict upon us. We have to let it scratch off that coating and let the acid bubble off whatever veneer we project and claim, “that part of you is fake.” Yes we need to receive. But we also need to agree. It takes humility to do that. If you don't have the humility, then it's over. It all breaks down on step two. This week I was reading a book by Johnathan Edwards on the New England Revival. Jonathan E. served in the mid part of the 18th century. One of the things that most frustrated him is he saw revivals start up, he saw great church growth, he saw people coming to faith in Christ, he saw communities begin to get transformed, and then he noticed how often, usually, the revival stopped. They stagnated. They petered out. Being the analytical person he was, he tried to figure this out. Why was this happening with such regularity. He studied all the cases, and he decided that it was pride that killed revivals. It's pride that kills spiritual growth. It's pride. No shocking revelation there. Now here is something shocking. Even if you have enough humility to pass the first two tests. You pass test #1. Receive the Word of God. Then you pass test #2. to accept the judgments of the Word of God, the text is shocking. That's still not enough. Why? Because you still have to do something about it. You see, you could imagine this aspiring piano student who desires to break through that plateau, he's ready to receive with meekness any word that Stevie Wonder has to say, he even agrees with his assessment and judgment of him. You're right, Stevie, I reek at scales. If I have any hope of ever being proficient, I need to practice my scales. But then he goes home and does nothing. He sits down and watches TV. That person is toast. He'll never be anything. You see as Christians we are guilty of this. Often times we sit beneath the conviction of God's Word and we agree with the assessment but we do this one fatal mistake. We equate conviction with change. Admission is good. Confession is good. Those are incredible steps. But they are not the same things as Change. Change is what God is after. Until confession produces change, confession is not complete. We have deceived ourselves. We have become SELF-DECEIVED. Self-deception is a VERY strange concept. It's strange on two fronts: First, it's strange in terms of motive: Why would I trick myself? Why would I tell myself a lie? Why would I tell myself something I know isn't true and serve it up in such a way that I would hope that it could be believed? Normally you deceive an enemy. You deceive someone you are about to take advantage of. Why would we deceive and take advantage of ourselves? So it's strange in terms of motive. But it's also strange in terms of feasibility. How is deceiving self even possible? How can the one deceiving be deceived. Isn't that kind of like playing hide and seek with yourself. If you are the one whose serving up the lie, won't you know it's a lie? Well, it is possible. The motive in self-deception is fear of truth and love of self. We deceive ourselves only when we a scared of the truth and are trying to preserve our image. And of course the behavior will never change because change in behavior is admission of guilt. The more we listen without being changed by it the less likely we will ever be changed by it because listening without change produces harder and harder hearts. The ultimate evidence of something touching down in the heart and mind is a change of behavior. Genuine faith will produce genuine change. Genuine faith must pass all three tests. So let's see how receiving, agreeing and obeying the word are related as found in the text. The third test is introduced here. Does the man act on what the word reveals? Now the metaphor here is masterful. No surprise here, since God made the metaphor. He begins with the concept of looking. He begins with the concept of seeing and SIGHT. Now the organ of sight is amazing. It helps us to look at the world and absorb a tremendous amount of information. And because we can see and evaluate, we are always making judgments of other people on the basis of that sight. That person missed a spot when he tried to shave. Her hair is falling out of her bun. She's gained a little weight. His little bald spot is growing. He's got a smudge of cream cheese stuck in his beard And then all of the sudden a horrible thought descends upon us. I wonder if I am like that? But we can't see. Of course it's not our fault that we can't see ourselves. The way our body is constructed, the entire seeing system is outward facing. It points away from us. So in order for us to see ourselves accurately we need a device that can reflect our image back to our eyes so we can evaluate ourselves the way we evaluate everyone else. We need a mirror. This metaphor of a mirror would have been especially powerful in James' day since mirrors were very rare. They were very expensive and very hard to make and usually very small. So you can imagine the anticipation of stepping in front of a large polished mirror for the first time. What do I actually look like? What happens when that image is not what you expect? You pictured yourself beautiful like that girl next door. Handsome like that guy at the gym. But instead, you've got splotchy skin, your teeth are all crooked and yellow, your nose is bent. You have a big zit. You're double chinned. The mirror allows you to objectively evaluate self the way you've so carelessly evaluated others. Can you imagine that feeling? Here's the meaning of the metaphor. The Word of God is that mirror. If we look at it carefully, we can see our own reflection. It will tell you if you are pridefully, greedy, angry, unloving, unkind, selfish. It will give you a perfect, undistorted reflection of self. We have huge blind spots where we cannot see ourselves accurately. Everyone else can see us. Everyone else is seeing it. It's the giant glob of cream cheese off the corner of the mouth. But we are perfectly ignorant. So spiritually speaking we need the mirror of God's Word to SEE what we can't otherwise see. That's what the word of God does. It reflects our image back so we can begin judging ourselves the way we so casually judge others. And that first glimpse is a doozie. There's a moment where you just stare. You just look and you think, is that really me? Is that really what other people see? Is that really what I look like? And for a moment you just absorb that image, knowing it's true, and shutter in horror. So it's that moment of STARTING, that exact moment where we find ourselves in the text. We have, “a man who looks intently at his natural face in a mirror.” He's looking with intensity, begging that what he is seeing isn't true. Oh my word. That's a million times worse than I feared. He's looking intently. What is he going to do? He's at a fork in the rode. What is he going to do with this nightmare? Normally, we might try to wiggle our way out of it through our charm or social skills. But here's the problem with mirrors. You can't argue with them. You can't negotiate with them. You can't say, “Come on, that's a little over the top don't you think? Can't you photoshop a bit of that away? You can't do that.” Why? *Because a mirror is just serving up reality. It's just a reflector of truth. It's a mirror. It doesn't lie. So because you can't argue or negotiate with it, you only have two options. Here's the fork: You can either accept its verdict or you can do what this guy does. What do you mean he forgets? We don't forget things that are important. Everyone remembers where they were during 9/11. You don't forget that. Everyone remembers their wedding day. You remember things that are important. You see this is not a forgetfulness, as in, I forgot to take out the trash. That's not forgetfulness in the sense of, "Oh, I forgot my address from three houses ago." This is a willful forgetfulness. This is an intentional decision to look the other way. He doesn't like what he sees and he banishes that image from his mind and turns away and distracts himself with other thoughts. It's deliberate. And this forgetfulness evidences itself in unchanged behavior. The mirror, the law of God, told him he was a sinner. But he didn't change. Now there's a contrast presented. Now here's where it's so easy to get this wrong. It's such the tendency of our heart at this very point to veer off into the weeds, crash burn and self-destruct. Here's how this theological meltdown goes goes. Okay, I don't want to be that self-deceived hearer. I want to be a hearer who then becomes a doer of the word. So that means that if the mirror shows me something ugly about myself, I need to work really hard to fix that ugly thing. I don't want to live in denial. If the mirror shows me something that just horrifies me and appalls and disgusts me, the last thing I want to do is pretend that it doesn't exist. I don't want to be a hearer only who deceives himself. I'm going to be a doer. I'm going to WORK MY TAIL off to change what I see wrong with me. I need to WORK super, super hard, harder than I've ever WORKED to get rid of that ugly thing in me. I need to discipline myself to get up earlier; I need increased accountability. I need to WORK, WORK, WORK, WORK. DO. DO. DO. DO. Is that what James is encouraging here? Is that the appropriate application of what we are reading. If the prophet Jeremiah were here, he would laugh at us. Jeremiah was speaking to the nation of Israel during a period of her history when God's Word reflected back to them their heart-hearted rebellion. And Jeremiah is holding up the mirror of God's Word. He's pointing out their sin. Notice what he says: Jeremiah 13 In other words, the kinds of things the mirror reveals are not things our human effort can change. These problems are not your garden variety uncombed hair. You need different color skinned. You need to grow new teeth. You need to grow an eye. No amount of human effort can change that. The mirror reveals things about your soul you cannot change. It reveals not just that you do evil things, but that you are an evil person. That those evil things come from a heart that itself is evil. Out of the overflow of the heart, the mouth speaks. The mirror reveals not just that your act in angry and jealous ways, but that you are an angry and jealous person, that those actions come from a mind that is totally self-centered and wicked. The rotten breath comes from a rotten stomach and no amount of toothpaste will solve that problem. That's a terrifying thought. We will do almost anything but accept that reflection. I mean if we even catch a wiff of our soul's stench we panic. We run to the bathroom and try to brush; we get new toothpaste; we get a new brand of flosser, an electric toothbrush. Brush, brush, brush. Listen, your dying of stomach cancer and living in denial. The greatest evidence of our denial is our excuses. When confronted with sin we are excuse factories. We just pump out excuses. When we are sinfully lazy we make the excuse, “I am not feeling well; I had a really long day.” When we sinfully and rudely interrupt we make the excuse, “You interrupted first.” When we sinfully blow up in anger, we make the excuse, “You expect me to be happy?” When we verbally retaliate with every intention to hurt, we say, “I didn't mean to hurt you; I was just trying to help you see what I was seeing.” When we feel superior to others and they sense it, we make the excuse, “I didn't realize I was coming across like that.” When we come home late because we haven't made home a priority we make the excuse, “Man, traffic was a nightmare.” Why can't we admit the truth? Why can't we say it? Because the truth is horribly embarrassing. It shatters our beloved self-image. It hurts. The mirror shocks us. We can't handle the truth. The truth is, we are far, far worse that we fear. The truth is that we are deeply angry people, horribly self-righteous and wickedly jealous. The truth is we are deeply insecure, grevously frightened, abominably lustful, greedy and petty. We are self-centered children. We are far worse that even our deepest fears. How can you receive that horrible image that the mirror is serving up? The text has something to say about that. Look carefully. The law initially condemns. And when it does, every instinct of your heart is to turn away. Every instinct of your heart is to run and willfully forget the horrible image that mirror serves up. Every stroke of the law is a verdict on just how imperfect you really are. Every sentence of the law so innocently written on the page, impersonally reflects back to your true spiritual condition. But here's the admonition: in that moment of difficulty, don't stop looking. You have to keep looking. You have to keep staring. You have to see. You have to PERSERVERE. Isn't that an interesting word? If you want freedom, true freedom from everything you are feeling, what you have to do is gaze into that mirror and PERSEVERE. Which implies that looking at the image hurts. It's pains you. It injures your soul, it slices at your pride. But when you do, you will realize that this law that appeared to be death and slavery and chains is in fact the law of liberty. It's the law that brings life. How can the law which exposes my guilt and condemns me as a sinner, be for me a vehicle to life? How can perseverance in painfully staring at this mirror of truth produce life? Communion You know where we can see this most clearly. We see it in the cross. The law of liberty is most clearly seen in the cross. It's not easy to look at the cross, is it. We want to turn away. It's a terrible sight. What is the theological meaning of this? Why is this person hanging there? Why all the blood? Why the brutality? How do we RECEIVE this? How do we AGREE with this? We are going to have to persevere because this is not easy. Here's what you have to RECEIVE. Your sin is deserving of this. You know that angry speech that came out of your mouth this week? It deserves this. THAT IS WHAT THE LAW SAYS. You know your lustful thinking, your unforgiving heart, your bitterness, your greediness, your love of this world, all of that is deserving of this. That's what the cross communicates. Do you AGREE with this? The ruthless law, the ruthless unbendable law, demand that our sin ends in death. Jesus is not hanging there without reason. He's here for a reason. Do you RECEIVE AND AGREE? Oh that hurts. We so want to turn away. But keep looking. Keep looking. Persevere in your looking. Because if you keep looking you'll see something else that you have to RECEIVE and AGREE with. Jesus died that death for a reason. You have to realize that it's not him that deserved that death. It's you that did. So why is HE there? What is HE doing up there on that cross bleeding and suffering and in deep anguish? He's there because he loves you? He's there because he has forgiven you. He is there because he wants to abolish sin, to destroy death, and to welcome you into his kingdom. Can you receive that? The sentence has been served. The debt has been paid. The law has been fulfilled. Jesus came not to abolish the law but to fulfill it. He lived a perfect life and died a perfect death why? In order that he might give his life to you? In order that your rags of sin would be placed on him and that his robes of righteousness would be given to you. Do you RECEIVE that? Do you see that he loves you. Do you AGREE that you have been forgiven? Do you AGREE that your sins have been removed as far as the East is from the West and that he will remember your sins no more? Do you agree that you have been given new robes, bright white robes? Do you RECEIVE AND AGREE? You see when that moment happens, you WILL BE TRANSFORMED. There's nothing You MUST DO to receive it, but there is most certianly something you will WANT TO Do when you have. Because a new heart has been give to you, you will want to be for others what he has been for you. What has the gospel done for us? Have you received and agree? COMMUNION You'll know the gospel has changed you when new fruit comes pouring out. When the righteousness of Jesus, not a righteousness of your own, comes pouring out of you. That's when you will know. Now what he's doing here at the end is returning back to verse 19 where he spoke about controlling the tongue. He says, “If your religion doesn't change you, you haven't passed the test.” You don't have genuine faith. You know what he's saying, "The real test if you have received the grace of God and believed the grace of God is that it transforms you and evidences itself in the most unglamorous normal ways in which you live your life." Hearts that have been transformed can't help but issue forth transformed living. It's unstoppable. James says, I don't look for that evidence of transformed living in your public image on Sunday morning or your controlled outward facing image that you put forward at work or online. I look for the evidence in your speech. I look for it in the way you care for the orphans and the widows, you know the ones who can't repay you. I look for it in the way you talk to your wife or husband and kids, the way you share your faith, the way you do dishes, clean the house, change diapers, help your neighbor with joy. I look for it in the normal. Do people look at you and say, “That man has been changed by grace. That woman wears grace upon her sleeve. That woman is mercy embodied.” If you don't do that, then what does James say about you? Your self deceived
Aaron Rodgers is the new Jonathan E from Rollerball. He's poised to take on the system after his summer journey to Peru and the world of ayahuasca.
The guys always enjoy the new model and concept release cycle, and discuss the flavors from Dodge. Debate #1 is from Andrei S. who wonders what grand tourers he should consider. Debate #2 is from Jonathan E. in TX, who wants cars his MoF doesn't get sick in. Social media questions ask if Aptera has solved the electric car problem, should all car companies adopt the ‘gigapress' die-cast manufacturing technology like Tesla has, and how do travel and documentary series make connections for fixers overseas? Seasons 1-10 are available on Amazon Prime and Vimeo worldwide. Please rate and review us on iTunes, and the TV show on IMDB and Amazon. Write to us with your Car Debates, Car Conclusions, and Topic Tuesdays at everydaydrivertv@gmail.com or everydaydriver.com. Share the podcast with your car enthusiast friends!
Tivemos a grande honra de receber nossos amigos Jonathan e Junior aqui no HUB! Com esses caras o “worship” é meio diferente
En este episodio continuamos la entrevista con los pastores Jonathan e Itsia enfocandonos mas en la iglesia y sus bases
Con el especial de el aniversario de la iglesia Casa De la Tribu Del Leon De Juda acercandose quizimos traerles a los pastores de la casa para que conocieran un poco mas de ellos y su vida personal
Junto a nuestros invitados, un diplomático y una profesora universitaria, vamos a analizar si el mundo es tan pequeño que cabe dentro de una cancha de futbol. Apuestas, chistes malos y teorías de RI en #LL4. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/la-linea-de-cuatro/message
Acesse todos os meus links: https://formuladelancamento.com.br/linkinbioMe siga no Instagram: @rochaerico #empreendertransforma
Os convidados de Paula Weber no programa dessa semana vão representar o projeto social Open Taste Brasil (@opentaste.br) que acolhe refugiados e imigrantes, capacitando-os para se tornarem os chefs de cozinha do restaurante O projeto visa gerar emprego e renda para essa população, a fim de propiciar uma vida digna no Brasil ao mesmo tempo em que oferece aos seus clientes uma experiência cultural sem igual, dedicando, todos os dias, o cardápio para uma nacionalidade diferente com pratos típicos em alta qualidade. E para contar um pouco mais a respeito da iniciativa por trás do projeto, o Pitadas & Palpites dessa semana vai receber seus fundadores: Jonathan e Joanna. Jonathan é o único brasileiro do projeto, que entrou para dar uma força, mas logo se apaixonou. Ele é cozinheiro - comida é sua paixão - consultor e sempre acreditou no projeto. Joanna sempre sonhou e se dedicou para trazer um impacto positivo no meio da comunidade de pessoas em situação de refúgio, uma vez que ela também faz parte desse grupo. Ela sempre busca as melhores maneiras de ajudar o próximo e é apaixonada por comida e diferentes culturas. . O programa Pitadas e Palpites é apresentado pela chef Paula Weber todas as sextas, às 10h, com reapresentações aos sábados, ao meio dia, e aos domingos, também ao meio dia, na Rádio Mega Brasil Online. E também é disponibilizado, simultaneamente com a exibição de estreia em imagens, na TV Mega Brasil
Movie of the Year: 1975Rollerball The 1975 bonus episodes continue with Norman Jewison's Rollerball, starring James Caan! On an all-new bonus episode of the 1975 season, the Taste Buds turn their sights to that infamous look at the future of sports, Rollerball! In the not-so-distant future, sports will be played on 2x2 roller skates, they will be played internationally, and they will be played to the death! Rollerball, as silly as it may seem now, actually predicted a lot of what would happen with professional sports between '75 and today, including the uptick in violence, and the corporations moving in and taking over. James Caan plays Jonathan E., the best rollerballer in the sport's history. But his time has come, and the rich people that run the league want him out. They've already taken his wife...next, they'll take his life! Will he step down, or will he kill Japanese people to get back at his owners? Host Mike, along with Movie of the Year mainstays Greg and Ryan, along with The Unnatural 20's Katelynn, try to look at this '75 cult classic from a 2021 perspective. Does the predictive nature of the film help cover up some of its flaws? Will the pacing turn off these '21 kids and their addled attention spans? And how does Norman Jewison, a director not known for sports movies, do with the Rollerball scenes. Tune in to this all-new episode to find out the answers to these questions, and so much more! Make sure to also: Check out the 1975 bracket Visit our website Use our Amazon page! Join our Patreon team! (to get the show early and hear bonus segments!) Like us! Follow us! Write to Us! — contact@yourpopfilter.com https://www.patreon.com/yourpopfilter (Support the show) (https://www.patreon.com/yourpopfilter)
Jonathan E. Alpert, MD, PhD PSYCHPEARLS PODCAST June is National Men's Health Month, a good time to consider the unique mental health needs of men. In this edition of PsychPearls, Jonathan E. Alpert, MD, PhD discusses mood disorders and the surprising symptoms that male patients may present. In this conversation, Alpert also covers: 1. The etiology of major depressive disorder in men and women 2. Common comorbidities to depression among men 3. How to build a therapeutic alliance with men and encourage adherence 4. Effective pharmacological and psychotherapeutic interventions for men and women 5. Future directions for scientific research on mood disorders, including their connections to autoimmune, cardiac, and thyroid conditions. Dr Alpert is the Dorothy and Marty Silverman Chair in in the department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science, and professor of psychiatry, neuroscience, and pediatrics at Montefiore Medical Center and Albert Einstein College of Medicine.
Power Perfected In Weakness sermon by Rev. Dr. Jonathan E. Mitchell on July 8, 2018.Wayfarers Chapel is an Ecumenical Ministry of the Swedenborgian Church and the National Memorial to Emanuel Swedenborg located In Rancho Palos Verdes, CA. The podcast is the audio portion of weekly sermons posted on YouTube. For more Information please visit wayfarerschapel.org.Support the show (https://www.wayfarerschapel.org/donate/donate-online/)
Five Smooth Stones sermon by Rev. Dr. Jonathan E. Mitchell on June 24, 2018.Wayfarers Chapel is an Ecumenical Ministry of the Swedenborgian Church and the National Memorial to Emanuel Swedenborg located In Rancho Palos Verdes, CA. The podcast is the audio portion of weekly sermons posted on YouTube. For more Information please visit wayfarerschapel.org.Support the show (https://www.wayfarerschapel.org/donate/donate-online/)
Out of the Depths sermon by Rev. Dr. Jonathan E. Mitchell on June 10, 2018.Wayfarers Chapel is an Ecumenical Ministry of the Swedenborgian Church and the National Memorial to Emanuel Swedenborg located In Rancho Palos Verdes, CA. The podcast is the audio portion of weekly sermons posted on YouTube. For more Information please visit wayfarerschapel.org.Support the show (https://www.wayfarerschapel.org/donate/donate-online/)
Jonathan è un venticinquenne di Locarno; dopo un grave incidente che gli ha cambiato la vita, ha deciso di viaggiare a bordo di un fuoristrada con un compagno particolare: il suo gatto Jek. Svizzera, Italia, Francia e Africa, i due hanno macinato chilometri insieme. Le loro avventure, documentate su Instagram e Facebook, hanno ottenuto un discreto successo: Jek sta diventando una piccola star sui social. In questo momento in cui viaggiare è praticamente impossibile, possiamo sognare un po' con le loro avventure. A cura di Angelica Arbasini.
Jonathan E. (Rollerball, 1975) vs. Johnathan Cross (Rollerball, 2002) [Rollerball Match] | Mega Man vs. Samus (Metroid) [No DQ Match] | Din Djarin & Grogu (The Mandolorian) vs. Rocket Raccoon & Baby Groot (Guardians of the Galaxy 2) [Tag Team Match]
In this episode, Petros Grivas, MD, PhD, and Jonathan E. Rosenberg, MD, discuss key data on immune checkpoint inhibitors for urothelial carcinoma informing their clinical practice in the United States. Topics include:Guideline changes for first-line UC based on data from JAVELIN Bladder 100 trial on avelumab maintenance after chemotherapyResults from IMvigor130 and KEYNOTE-361 trials on concurrent immune checkpoint inhibition plus chemotherapyWhen to consider first-line treatment with immune checkpoint inhibitor monotherapyUtility of PD-L1 as biomarker for immune checkpoint inhibitor–based therapyMonitoring for and managing immune-related adverse events during the COVID-19 pandemic Presenters:Petros Grivas, MD, PhDAssociate ProfessorClinical Director, Genitourinary Cancers ProgramDivision of Medical OncologyDepartment of MedicineUniversity of WashingtonSeattle Cancer Care AllianceSeattle, Washington, USAJonathan E. Rosenberg MDAttending PhysicianChief, Genitourinary Oncology ServiceDivision of Solid Tumor OncologyDepartment of MedicineMemorial Sloan Kettering Cancer CenterNew York, New York, USAContent based on an online IME program supported by educational grants from Pfizer and EMD Serono, Inc.Link to full program, including associated downloadable slidesets and on-demand Webcast:http://bit.ly/3kJC5SL
L'entrepreneur a une vision sur 10 ans mais le marché va évoluer, saura-t-il adapter sa vision ? Les entrepreneurs doivent s'assurer d'avoir la bonne vision tout au long de leur avancement. Et en même temps ils ne doivent pas être des girouettes, alors comment détecter la bonne balance ? Aujourd'hui on voit 3 comportements à succès : la curiosité, l'adaptabilité et la capacité à prendre des décisions rapides. Plus d'infos sur comment Elveo accompagne investisseurs et entrepreneurs dans l'analyse du potentiel entrepreneurial > elveo.co
The three recipients of the Asia Pacific Social Innovation Partnership Award (APSIPA) for Social Prosperity, Jonathan E. Chua of BeamAndGo, Illac Diaz of Liter of Light, and Kei Kawashima of Wonderlab, discuss their successful enterprises, sharing insights into addressing people's needs and ensuring their prosperity.
Steve Garvey joins the podcast to talk about #6, his time as a Dodgers batboy, his guest shot on Fantasy Island and more. We've also got our fathers' favorite players, plus Screen Stars, the Hall of Shame, the Heat Check and more. It's the joy of six!Our GuestSteve Garvey played 19-years in the big leagues for the Dodgers and Padres in the 70s & 80s. He's a 10X All-Star, 4X Gold Glove winner, was National League MVP in 1974 and won a World Series in 1981. His number 6 is retired in San Diego where his dramatic home run in the 1984 NLCS propelled the Padres to their first World Series appearance (take that, Cubbies!) Since he retired in 1987 he's become a highly sought-after speaker and marketing executive as well as serving on the board of the Baseball Assistance Team, a non-profit that helps former players through medical and financial hardships.0:55 – “Actually it broke in 1916.”Rudy tests the limits of the term “late breaking number news” with a treatise on the history of both uniform numbers and names on the back of jerseys.5:32 – “Oh, you kids grow up. I'm tellin' you . . .”We absolutely geek out on meeting Steve Garvey, a boyhood hero.19:06 – “Let's get into the contenders.”Name checks of the baseball also-rans for the #6. Guys like Sal Bando, Roy White, Paul Blair and more make the list.21:04 – “Appropriately we have six.”Rudy runs through our six baseball contenders for the Hall of Fame. Joe Torre, Stan Musial, Al Kaline, Steve Garvey, Ryan Howard and Tony Oliva.27:05 – “Since we don't have really any contenders . . . ”Football #6's is a rogues gallery. Jay Cutler, Bubby Brister, Marc Wilson, Robbie Bosco, Mark Sanchez, Rolf Benirschke, etc. etc.29:44 – “Let's do it.”Sentimental favorites and honorable mentions in baseball include a host of Hall of Famers who played forever ago as well as Patrick Ewing, Alfrederick “The Great” Hughes and Bonzi Wells. 30:49 – “I'm gonna tip off with Bill Russell.”The basketball contenders list is stacked. Walter Davis, Tyson Chandler, Walter Berry, Eddie Jones, LeBron James (in Miami), Julius Erving and Bill Russell.34:24 – “We'll do hockey real quick.”We also hit hockey – Toe Blake and Phil Housley and Mark Martin in NASCAR.35:56 – “It's time for Screen Stars."Screen Stars wearing #6 on the silver screen:James Caan as Jonathan E in Rollerball (1975)Pete Vuckovich as Clu Haywood in Major League (1989)Elvis Presley (car) as Steve Grayson in Speedway (1968)Scott Porter as Jason Street in Friday Night Lights (TV Series 2006-11)Mario Lopez as AC Slater in Saved By The Bell (TV Series 1989-92)Arian Foster as Ray Jennings in Draft Day (2014)40:24 – “And his name is Luis Pujols.”The Hall of Shame includes Luis “-5.14 WAR” Pujols. An all-field, no-hit catcher with the Astros among others.41:34 – “We've got Ace Bailey. Great name.”The Derrick Rose Award for #6 includes the sad story of Ace Bailey, the first NHL player to have his number retired and Bill Buckner, who had a great career tarnished by an error.43:32 – “We've got some Heat Check guys.”Listen to the pod for the honorable mentions, but here's the Heat Check list for #6:Baker MayfieldKristaps PorzingisDeAndre JordanAnthony RendonJohnny HekkerEric Bledsoe47:30 – “But what is even more awesome is we have our Hall of Fame.”Hall of Fame list for #6:Bill RussellStan MusialDr. JAl KalinePhil HousleySteve GarveyHat tip to Jorge Martin for helping us land Steve Garvey. Listen to Jorge's podcast here: http://familiaffb.com
21st century high schools teach different subjects in different ways integrating entirely different standards, guidelines, and technology. So why do they still use a 19th century grading system? Amy and Mike invited educator and author Jonathan E. Martin to learn about models of reinventing the high school transcript. What are five things you will learn in this episode? Why and how is the current HS transcript broken? Why now, why is now the time to reinvent the HS transcript, when it has been unchanged in over a century? What would be the features of a new transcript model? Are there working examples of such an alternative transcript? Who in the public or private sphere should drive implementation of this model? MEET OUR GUEST Jonathan E. Martin is the author of the recently published book, Reinventing Crediting for Competency-Based Education: The Mastery Transcript Consortium Model and Beyond (Routledge Press). A former high school teacher and long-time principal, he is an expert in Deeper Learning and innovative forms of assessing student learning. A consultant to schools since 2012, he currently is the Director of Professional Learning and the ACT Certified Educator (ACE) program for the testing organization ACT. Jonathan consulted extensively to the Mastery Transcript Consortium during its first two years of development, 2016-17, but has no current affiliation with the MTC. He holds a BA from Harvard University and an MA from the University of San Francisco. Find Jonathan at @jonathanemartin. LINKS Reinventing Crediting for Competency-Based Education: The Mastery Transcript Consortium Model and Beyond 21k12 Blog Mastery Transcript Consortium RELATED EPISODES COLLEGE DECLASSIFIED: WHAT HIGH SCHOOLERS SHOULD KNOW ABOUT THE NEXT LEVEL PATHWAY PLANNING FOR HIGH SCHOOLERS IN DEFENSE OF STATE TESTS ABOUT THIS PODCAST Tests and the Rest is THE college admissions industry podcast. Explore all of our episodes on the show page.
There has been substantial discussion of enhanced antitrust enforcement by what has been referred to as the “new” Brandeis School of Antitrust; but that implies that there was an original Brandeis School of Antitrust. What can we learn from this original school? Storied antitrust enforcer, academic and practitioner Tim Muris joins John Roberti and Christina Ma for a discussion of the last great effort to enhance antitrust enforcement and how it developed. Listen to this episode to learn more about the past and whether it may repeat itself. Related Links: Timothy J. Muris and J. Howard Beales III, FTC Consumer Protection at 100: 1970s Redux or Protecting Markets To Protect Consumers, 83 George Washington Law Review 2157 Timothy J. Muris and Jonathan E. Nuechterlein, Chicago and Its Discontents (with) (Forthcoming University of Chicago Law Review) Timothy J. Muris , Will the FTC’s Success Continue? Timothy J. Muris and Jonathan E. Nuechterlein, Antitrust in the Internet Era: The Legacy of United States v. A&P, 54 Rev. of Industrial Org. 651 (2019) Hosted by: Christina C. Ma, Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz and John Roberti, Allen & Overy LLP
Matt and Ian get together to watch a forgotten classic, 1975’s Rollerball starring James Caan. Set in a near-future dystopia run by brutal megacorporations, Jonathan E. fights the powers that be, and wins. This movie is so, so good. Please watch it.
The Current and Future Role of Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors and Other Novel Therapies in Urothelial Bladder Cancer — Faculty Presentation #4: Current and Future Role of Recently Approved Novel Therapies in the Management of Urothelial Bladder Carcinoma — Dr Rosenberg CME information and select publications
Dear Friends & Colleagues,Last week, I launched a limited podcast series addressing how the COVID-19 pandemic is reframing American healthcare. You can find the introduction episode here. In this series, I’ll be interviewing future-facing healthcare leaders and entrepreneurs - to ask two questions: (1) How is the COVID-19 pandemic immediately changing the way you are delivering healthcare? (2) How will COVID-19 reframe American healthcare for years to come? In this episode, we’ll be interviewing Dr. Paul Offit, an internationally recognized expert and scientific pioneer in the field of virology and immunology; and the leading virology expert in the U.S. He is the co-inventor of the rotavirus vaccine recommended for universal use in infants by the CDC, which is credited with saving hundreds of childrens’ lives each day. He is a professor in the division of Infectious Diseases at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, and a professor of Vaccinology at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine (See abbreviated Bio below).My dialogue with Dr. Offit was incredibly hopeful, hugely informative and beyond inspiring. He is clearly a brilliant medical scientist and a courageous humanitarian.We covered a range of topics including:His perspective on the COVID-19 surge curve and social distancingThe 3 major lessons (reframes) he believes we need to learn from this current pandemicHis expert thoughts regarding the amount of time it will take to develop a COVID-19 vaccineHis views regarding the impact of our public health response on the social determinants of healthThese are unprecedented times, so I hope you find valuable information, guidance, and inspiration in listening to these experts and entrepreneurs share how they are adapting to this pandemic (in real time); and how they’re thinking about and planning for the future.Until next time, be safe and be well,Zeev Neuwirth MD Paul A. Offit, MD, is Director of the Vaccine Education Center and professor of pediatrics in the Division of Infectious Diseases at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. He is the Maurice R. Hilleman Professor of Vaccinology at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. Dr. Offit has published more than 150 papers in medical and scientific journals in the areas of rotavirus-specific immune responses and vaccine safety. He is also the co-inventor of the rotavirus vaccine, RotaTeq®, recommended for universal use in infants by the CDC. For this achievement, Dr. Offit received the Luigi Mastroianni and William Osler Awards from the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, the Charles Mérieux Award from the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases, and was honored by Bill and Melinda Gates during the launch of their Foundation’s Living Proof Project for global health.In 2009, Dr. Offit received the President’s Certificate for Outstanding Service from the American Academy of Pediatrics. In 2011, he received the David E. Rogers Award from the American Association of Medical Colleges, the Odyssey Award from the Center for Medicine in the Public Interest, and was elected to the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences. In 2012, Dr. Offit received the Distinguished Medical Achievement Award from the College of Physicians of Philadelphia and the Drexel Medicine Prize in Translational Medicine from the Drexel University College of Medicine. In 2013, he received the Maxwell Finland award for Outstanding Scientific Achievement from the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases, the Distinguished Alumnus award from the University of Maryland School of Medicine, and the Innovators in Health Award from the Group Health Foundation. In 2014, he was elected to the board of trustees at the College of Physicians in Philadelphia, and in 2015, he was elected to the American Association of Physicians and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences as well as being named as a Fellow for the Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society and the American Academy for the Advancement of Science. In 2016, Dr. Offit received the Franklin Founder Award by the City of Philadelphia, The Porter Prize from the University of Pittsburgh School of Public Health, and the Jonathan E. Rhoads Medal for Distinguished Service to Medicine from The American Philosophical Society. In 2017, he received the Defensor Scientiae Award and an Honorary Doctor of Science degree from The University of the Sciences in Philadelphia.
THE DOOMED & STONED SHOW Patron Preview Here's a preview of what Doomed & Stoned patrons get when they become 'High on Fiver' supporters. Exclusive, multi hour patreon shows come out 3-4 times a month, featuring a playlist of new and recent tracks from the heavy underground, curated by Billy Goate (editor in chief of www.DoomedandStoned.com). Join now by visiting: https://www.patreon.com/doomedandstoned Thank you for your ongoing support of The Doomed & Stoned Show! Together, we make it possible to share the music and the stories of the heavy underground. PLAYLIST INTRO (00:00) 1. Black Sabbath & Led Zeppelin - "Whole Lotta Sabbath" (Wax Audio mashup) (00:26) HOST SEGMENT (03:41) 2. Rollerball - "Jonathan E." (06:03) 3. Ice Howl - "Merchant of Darkness" (10:14) 4. Salem's Bend - "Show Me The Witch" (13:36) 5. Black Mountain - "Boogie Lover" (18:29) 6. Wizard Rifle - "Rocket To Hell" (24:51) 7. Bones of the Earth - "Roots in Agony" (32:09) 8. The Mothercrow - "Stone" (37:13) 9. Sonic Sloth - "D.a.S." (42:22) 10. Destroyer of Light - "Dissolution" (53:52) 11. Thermate - "Soliloquy" (1:01:35) 12. Storm - "Eclipse" (1:08:38) 13. Saint Vitus - "A Prelude" (1:16:15) 14. Yung Druid - "Lung" (1:19:36) 15. Dead Sacrament - "Stars Fall, Stars Rise" (1:24:22) 16. 1782 - "Celestial Voices" (Pink Floyd cover)(1:36:49) 17. Zig Zags - "Godsized" (1:41:30) 18. Summoner's Circle - "Temple of Suffering" (1:48:22) 19. Eartheater - "Night Flight" (1:59:52) 20. Deerslayer - "Wormwood" (2:05:13) 21. Grizzlycult - "Stone Circles" (2:10:13) 22. Tumanduumband - "Mask of Satan" (2:16:36) 23. FOREBODE - "Firebrand" (2:21:39) 24. Primitive Man - "Oily Tears" (2:27:52) 25. Cthuluminati - "A Thin Line" (2:34:19) 26. Big Brave - "Sibling"(2:41:12) 27. Witch Ritual - "Those I Haunt" (2:48:29) 28. Hexenbrett - "Hexen (bis aufs Blut gequält)" (2:53:23) 29. DIYU - "DIYU" (2:58:43) OUTRO (3:07:23) thumbnail by Ze Burnay
Ouça e se atualize sobre o novo Coronavírus com o TdC! O episódio foi dividido em duas partes, essa discute o manejo do paciente com suspeita de COVID-19. MINUTAGEM Abordagem dos Casos Suspeitos - Parte 1 [01:15]. Apresentação do Episódio [04:00]. Definição de Caso Suspeito [09:25]. Quadro Clínico [13:00]. Atendimento inicial ao Caso Suspeito [15:00]. Tipos de máscaras [19:30]. Alterações Laboratoriais e de Imagem [21:30]. Estratificação e Manejo pela OMS [27:00]. Medicamentos em estudo atualmente [32:00]. Vacina [34:40]. REFERÊNCIAS: 1. NI, Yue-Nan et al. The effect of corticosteroids on mortality of patients with influenza pneumonia: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Critical Care, v. 23, n. 1, p. 99, 2019. 2. RUSSELL, Clark D.; MILLAR, Jonathan E.; BAILLIE, J. Kenneth. Clinical evidence does not support corticosteroid treatment for 2019-nCoV lung injury. The Lancet, v. 395, n. 10223, p. 473-475, 2020. FANG, Lei; 3. KARAKIULAKIS, George; ROTH, Michael. Are patients with hypertension and diabetes mellitus at increased risk for COVID-19 infection?. The Lancet Respiratory Medicine, 2020. 4. LIU, Weiyong et al. Detection of Covid-19 in Children in Early January 2020 in Wuhan, China. New England Journal of Medicine, 2020. 5. Sociedade internacional de ultrassom em GO ISUOG Interim Guidance on 2019 novel coronavirus infection during pregnancy and puerperium: information for healthcare professionals. Ultrasound Obstet Gynecol. 2020 Mar 11. doi: 10.1002/uog.22013. 6. FAVRE, Guillaume et al. Guidelines for pregnant women with suspected SARS-CoV-2 infection. The Lancet Infectious Diseases, 2020. 7. CHEN, Huijun et al. Clinical characteristics and intrauterine vertical transmission potential of COVID-19 infection in nine pregnant women: a retrospective review of medical records. The Lancet, 2020. 8. Casadevall A, Pirofski LA. The convalescent sera option for containing COVID-19. J Clin Invest. 2020 Mar 13. pii: 138003. doi: 10.1172/JCI138003. 9. Advice on the use of masks in the community, during home care and in health care settings in the context of the novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) outbreak Interim guidance 29 January 2020 - World Health Organization. 10. Clinical management of severe acute respiratory infection (SARI) when COVID-19 disease is suspected: Interim guidance V 1.2. 11. “Field Briefing: Diamond Princess COVID-19 Cases, 20 Feb Update” Acessado em: https://www.niid.go.jp/niid/en/2019-ncov-e/9407-covid-dp-fe-01.html. 12. https://www.cdc.gov/niosh/topics/hcwcontrols/recommendedguidanceextuse.html 12. https://saude.rs.gov.br/upload/arquivos/202002/12090034-coronavirus-isolamento-domiciliar-1.pdf. 13. Markel, Howard, et al. "Nonpharmaceutical interventions implemented by US cities during the 1918-1919 influenza pandemic." Jama 298.6 (2007): 644-654. 14. Wang, Wenling, et al. "Detection of SARS-CoV-2 in Different Types of Clinical Specimens." JAMA (2020). 15. Lai, Shengjie, et al. "Effect of non-pharmaceutical interventions for containing the COVID-19 outbreak: an observational and modelling study." medRxiv (2020). 16. YAN, Gabriel et al. Covert COVID-19 and false-positive dengue serology in Singapore. The Lancet Infectious Diseases, 2020. 17. WANG, Dawei et al. Clinical characteristics of 138 hospitalized patients with 2019 novel coronavirus–infected pneumonia in Wuhan, China. Jama, 2020. 18. ZHOU, Fei et al. Clinical course and risk factors for mortality of adult inpatients with COVID-19 in Wuhan, China: a retrospective cohort study. The Lancet, 2020.
Ouça e se atualize sobre o novo Coronavírus com o TdC! O episódio foi dividido em duas partes, essa discute como está ocorrendo a pandemia e as medidas que podemos utilizar para o seu controle. MINUTAGEM [0:30] Situação Atual [02:20] Letalidade [06:00] Brasil vs Itália [09:30] Quarentena e Isolamento [15:00] Transmissão assintomática [17:40] Medidas Não Farmacológicas [28:00] Persistência do COVID-19 nas superfícies [30:30] IECA/BRA/Ibuprofeno [33:00] Crianças [34:10] Salves REFERÊNCIAS: 1. Wu Z, McGoogan JM. Characteristics of and Important Lessons From the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) Outbreak in China: Summary of a Report of 72 314 Cases From the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention. JAMA. Published online February 24, 2020. doi:10.1001/jama.2020.2648 2. RUSSELL, Clark D.; MILLAR, Jonathan E.; BAILLIE, J. Kenneth. Clinical evidence does not support corticosteroid treatment for 2019-nCoV lung injury. The Lancet, v. 395, n. 10223, p. 473-475, 2020. FANG, Lei; 3. KARAKIULAKIS, George; ROTH, Michael. Are patients with hypertension and diabetes mellitus at increased risk for COVID-19 infection?. The Lancet Respiratory Medicine, 2020. 4. LIU, Weiyong et al. Detection of Covid-19 in Children in Early January 2020 in Wuhan, China. New England Journal of Medicine, 2020. 5. Sociedade internacional de ultrassom em GO ISUOG Interim Guidance on 2019 novel coronavirus infection during pregnancy and puerperium: information for healthcare professionals. Ultrasound Obstet Gynecol. 2020 Mar 11. doi: 10.1002/uog.22013. 6. FAVRE, Guillaume et al. Guidelines for pregnant women with suspected SARS-CoV-2 infection. The Lancet Infectious Diseases, 2020. 7. CHEN, Huijun et al. Clinical characteristics and intrauterine vertical transmission potential of COVID-19 infection in nine pregnant women: a retrospective review of medical records. The Lancet, 2020. 8. Casadevall A, Pirofski LA. The convalescent sera option for containing COVID-19. J Clin Invest. 2020 Mar 13. pii: 138003. doi: 10.1172/JCI138003. 9. Advice on the use of masks in the community, during home care and in health care settings in the context of the novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) outbreak Interim guidance 29 January 2020 - World Health Organization. 10. Advice on the use of masks in the community, during home care and in health care settings in the context of the novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) outbreak. Interim guidance 29 January 2020. WHO reference number: WHO/nCov/IPC_Masks/2020. 11. Home care for patients with COVID-19 presenting with mild symptoms and management of their contacts. Interim guidance 17 March 2020. WHO reference number: WHO/nCov/IPC/HomeCare/2020.3 12. https://saude.rs.gov.br/upload/arquivos/202002/12090034-coronavirus-isolamento-domiciliar-1.pdf. 13. Markel, Howard, et al. "Nonpharmaceutical interventions implemented by US cities during the 1918-1919 influenza pandemic." Jama 298.6 (2007): 644-654. 14. Wang, Wenling, et al. "Detection of SARS-CoV-2 in Different Types of Clinical Specimens." JAMA (2020). 15. Lai, Shengjie, et al. "Effect of non-pharmaceutical interventions for containing the COVID-19 outbreak: an observational and modelling study." medRxiv (2020). 16. NI, Yue-Nan et al. The effect of corticosteroids on mortality of patients with influenza pneumonia: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Critical Care, v. 23, n. 1, p. 99, 2019.
*MOODS* by Lara PotthoffzenFM, Gent/Belgium - 12.03.2020104,5 FM and digital onlineplaylist:Flux - Ross ChristopherMy Prince - Deep Dive Corp feat. Coppe Sweetrice & Hellmut HattlerRemember The Smell - Art of LifeAlaska 05 - Jonathan E. BlakeOpen Seas - Jane MaximovaD.U.L.M - CooutFloatation (Prins Thomas Miks) - The GridAlright - TychoNoah - Christian LöfflerFiliance - Deep Dive Corp feat Hellmut HattlerIn Secret - DesolateMemories of Love - Synkro
Rui Zhong, Kissinger Institute on China and the United States at the Wilson Center, on Hong Kong. Adam Durfee from YDigital on social media political advertising. Jonathan E. Nichols of Columbia University on the uses of peat. Author Nina Willner, "Forty Autumns," on the story of her family's lives on both sides of the Berlin Wall. Sherri Melrose, professor of Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing, Athabasca University, on listener's questions about seasonal depression.
Is it possible for preclinical researchers to improve the quality of their cardiac and metabolic animal studies by incorporating protocols and strategies aimed at reducing bias? Listen as Deputy Editor Merry L. Lindsey (University of Nebraska Medical Center) interviews lead author Julie R. McMullen (Baker Heart & Diabetes Institute) and content expert Lisandra de Castro Brás (East Carolina University) about the study by Weeks et al., the latest article in the AJP-Heart and Circulatory Physiology Cores of Reproducibility in Physiology series. McMullen and co-authors conducted a short survey of preclinical research colleagues about how animal studies were being performed, with a focus on blinding, randomization and allocation concealment. The survey was followed by skills training aimed at improving practices, such as computer-generated methods for randomization and de-identifying drugs and interventions. Why take on this project? By providing basic scientists with tools to correctly randomize animals, and rationale to pre-specify inclusion and exclusion criteria, pre-specify endpoints, and appropriately address negative data, McMullen and collaborators hope to equip investigators with tools and knowledge to remove unconscious bias. This includes the encouragement of team science among smaller labs to allow for improvements in experimental design such as allocation concealment, which requires more personnel. Listen now to learn more. Kate L. Weeks, Darren C. Henstridge, Agus Salim, Jonathan E. Shaw, Thomas H. Marwick, Julie R. McMullen CORP: Practical Tools for Improving Experimental Design and Reporting of Laboratory Studies of Cardiovascular Physiology and Metabolism Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol, published July 26, 2019. DOI: doi.org/10.1152/ajpheart.00327.2019
6/30/19: Sermon by the Reverend Dr. Jonathan E. Soyars
St. Martin's Episcopal Church Sunday, June 16, 2019 Trinity Sunday Rev. Jonathan E. Soyars, PhD preaching
Episode 18: On the season 3 premiere We look at 1975's film "Rollerball" which stars James Caan, John Houseman and is Directed by Norman Jewison. Our Special guest is Joshua Chitty Thursday April 25, 2019 https://www.facebook.com/CinemaduFromage Hosts KingPengvin aka Terry Anstey @Kingpengvin https://twitter.com/Kingpengvin J Corina Francis @FollowingBliss1 https://twitter.com/FollowingBliss1 http://criticallaughs.com/ Kinte @KinteF https://twitter.com/KinteF Facebook Event: https://www.facebook.com/events/2156853911293332/ Previous: Episode 17. CDF Season 2 Finale Next: Episode 19. The Car 1977 Special Guest: Joshua Chitty https://twitter.com/SemiCoreJosh https://www.instagram.com/chittyjoshua/ Rollerball R 1975 ‧ Sport/Action ‧ 2h 9m Description The year is 2018 in a futuristic society where corporations have replaced countries. A violent futuristic game known as Rollerball is the recreational sport of the world, with teams representing various areas. One player, Jonathan E., fights for his personal freedom and threatens the corporate control. Release date: June 25, 1975 (USA) Director: Norman Jewison Screenplay: William Harrison Music composed by: André Previn Box office: 30 million USD
This episode is a showcase for some of the lawyers who are pushing back on the Trump Administration in courts everyday -- like Jonathan E. Taylor who helped bring the emoluments cases against Trump. And retired superior court judge LaDoris Cordell is back to share her story and the chance encounter that lead her to the law. Today's song is a cover of Warren Zevon’s, Lawyers Guns & Money. Peace of Mind the album: https://lnk.to/peaceofmindalbum Tour dates, vinyl & more: https://www.peaceofmindpod.co Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Dr. Jonathan E. Sobel, PA-C, MBA, DFAAPA, FAPACVS, President and Chair of the American Academy of PAs (AAPA), stopped by the Dermcast studios during the SDPA’s 16th Annual Fall Dermatology Conference 2018, held in Orlando, Florida, to discuss Optimal Team Practice (OTP).
Analog Jones tries to survive this full-tilt action sports film in our Rollerball (2002) VHS Movie Review starring Chris Klein, Jean Reno, LL Cool J, and Rebecca Romijn-Stamos! Rollerball (2002) is a Sci-Fi action film that was released into US theaters on February 8, 2002, from MGM and Columbia Pictures. Rollerball had a budget of $70 million and had a box office return of $25.9 million. Rollerball was competing against Collateral Damage, Big Fat Liar, Black Hawk Down, Snow Dogs, The Count of Monte Cristo, A Beautiful Mind, I am Sam and The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring. Rollerball finished 3rd in its first weekend at $9 million, trailing Collateral Damage at $15.1 million and Big Fat Liar at $11.5 million. Rollerball (2002) is a remake of Rollerball (1975) starring James Caan as Jonathan E., team captain and veteran star of the Houston rollerball team in a future dystopian society. Directed by: John McTiernan (Predator, Die Hard and The Hunt for Red October)Produced by: John McTiernan, Beau St. Clair, and Charles Roven (American film producer and the president and co-founder of Atlas Entertainment. He is known for producing the superhero films The Dark Knight Trilogy, Suicide Squad, Man of Steel, Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice and more.)Screenplay by: Larry Ferguson (Beverly Hills Cop II) and John Pogue (US Marshals)Based on: "Roller Ball Murder" by William Harrison and the 1975 screenplay Rollerball by William Harrison Starring: Chris Klein as Jonathan Cross Jean Reno as Alexi Petrovich LL Cool J as Marcus Ridley Rebecca Romijn as Aurora "the Black Widow" Naveen Andrews as Sanjay Mike Dopud as Michael "the Assassin" Kata Dobó as Katya Dobolakova Lucia Rijker as Lucia Ryjker Oleg Taktarov as Oleg Denekin Paul Heyman as Sports Announcer Janet Wright as Coach Olga The film features cameo appearances by Pink, Slipknot, Carroll Shelby, and Shane McMahon. TrailersMGM "Means Great Movies" PromoMGM.com promo "Come See What the Roar is About"Stargate SG-1 TV Series and Jeremiah TV Series PromoPumpkin with Christina RicciA Rumor of AngelsHart's War with Bruce WillisNo Such Thing with Helen Mirren Rollerball Back of the box descriptionFrom the director of Die hard comes this high-octane thriller that "roars along at a...breakneck pace" (Los Angeles Times)! Starring Chris Klein (American Pie), Jean Reno (Ronin), LL Cool J (Charlie's Angels) and Rebecca Romijn-Stamos (X-Men), Rollerball goes full throttle with excitement from its death-defying opening until its explosive end! Jonathan Cross (Klein) is the newest recruit in the most extreme sport of all time...where his fast moves and killer looks make him an instant superstar. But Cross' life in the fast lane collides with reality when he learns that league's owner (Reno) is orchestrating serious on-court "accidents" to boast ratings. Now Cross plans to take down the owner and his ruthless sport...before the game puts an end to him! Box Quotes"Turbo Charged! Body-slamming action!" -The Washington Post "Full-tilt action!" -Houston Chronicle Trivia-Although the first draft of the script was considered by many to be very good and even superior to the original film, director John McTiernan didn't like it because it focused more on social commentary, while he thought that the audience would like to see more of the Rollerball scenes. The social commentary is why he had the original script completely re-written several times and made sure that it focused more on WWE-like showmanship, including crazy costumes and stunts. -McTiernan's first cut, which was over two hours long, was test screened in Las Vegas around April or May 2001 and got a very negative response from test audiences. The release date was then pushed back from May to 13 July 2001 by MGM to test the movie again, hoping that they would find the right audience for it. -On orders from the studio, around 30 minutes were cut out of the original rough cut of the film and the entire ending was re-shot and changed. Some of the cuts were made because MGM thought that the movie was "too Asian." In the original ending, Petrovich gets killed by Sanjay and Jonathan and Aurora fly back to the US, during which Jonathan says that he will continue playing the Rollerball game in the US, and how he is now part owner of the game. -The original score by Brian Transeau was also removed, purportedly because it sounded "too Arabic," and was replaced with a new score by Éric Serra. Also, some of the other music was changed or removed from the first cut of the film. -Rebecca Romijn was nominated for a Golden Raspberry Award as Worst Supporting Actress, where she lost to Madonna for her cameo in Die Another Day. -The creator of Rollerball, science fiction author William Harrison said: "I've never watched the 2002 incarnation of Rollerball, and have no interest in it." Come back next week for another sports-related VHS Movie Review. Discuss these movies and more on our Facebook page. You can also listen to us on iTunes, Podbean, and Youtube! Email us at analogjonestof@gmail.com with any comments or questions!
Diminishing Returns: The Movie Podcast About Sequels, Prequels, Spin-offs and Reboots
Allen and Chris strap on the studded gloves….. 1975’s Rollerball, directed by Norman Jewison and starring James Caan as the fictional sport’s superstar player Jonathan E, delivered not only action but a thoughtful examination of individuality and freedom. Cut to 2002 and John McTiernan, director of Die Hard and Predator, two of the greatest action flicks ever, helms the remake. Surely this will, at the very least, deliver on visceral thrills….right? In this episode -the dumbest criticism of old movies -James Caan: a manly man -LL Cool J and American Pie: the college years -The shadowy Rebecca Romijn–Stamos -Jean Reno: the man behind the man, or something -Nielson? BARB? Meet the new rating system that blows them out the water. Remind yourself of the films here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rollerball_(1975_film) and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rollerball_(2002_film) We are an independent podcast, so remember and subscribe, rate and review the show wherever you get your podcasts. Have friends that like cult films and can understand Scottish accents? Send them a link to the show. EPISODE POSTERS AT https://www.facebook.com/pg/DiminishingReturnsPod/photos/ CONTACT LINKS Email us at: diminishingpod@gmail.com Find us at https://www.facebook.com/DiminishingReturnsPod https://twitter.com/diminishingpod (@diminishingpod) https://diminishingpod.wordpress.com/ https://www.instagram.com/diminishingpod/ YouTube: Diminishing Returns (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTkdqFm2OiLVwGhjVHEtaFw_) COMING SOON ON DIMINISHING RETURNS: Frankenstein (1931) and Bride Of Frankenstein DIMINISHING RETURNS: A comedy podcast about movie sequels, prequels, spin-offs and reboots. Hosted by Allen and Chris. WARNING: Contains Scottish accents and spoilers.
In this classic show, Rob McNealy and Tyson Holbrook interview Jonathan Johnson, President of Medici Ventures on cryptocurrency and blockchain technology. About Jonathan Johnson Mr. Jonathan E. Johnson, III, has been the President of Medici Ventures, Inc, a subsidiary of Overstock.com Inc. since August 2016. Mr. Johnson joined Overstock in 2002. He served as an...
DKA: It’s Not About the Fluids! - Episode 7 Hot of the presses! We are thrilled to speak with the amazing husband and wife research team of Dr. Nate Kuppermann and Dr. Nicole Glaser, on their practice changing paper that was just, and we mean JUST, published in the New England Journal of Medicine. DKA (diabetic ketoacidosis) is a potentially life threatening condition that can be complicated to treat, especially in children. First, we’ll hear from 9-year-old Whitley and her mom, Amanda, about what it’s like to be a kid living with diabetes, and what it feels like to have the dreaded DKA. Then we’ll dive into the research with Drs. Kuppermann and Glaser and learn how their findings revolutionize the way we treat DKA in kids. How does this paper change the way you approach children with DKA in your practice? Continue the conversation on social media @empulsepodcast or at ucdavisem.com. Hosts: Dr. Sarah Medeiros, Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine at UC Davis Dr. Julia Magaña, Assistant Professor of Pediatric Emergency Medicine at UC Davis Guests: Whitley and Amanda, a mother and daughter team living with diabetes Dr. Nate Kuppermann, Pediatric Emergency Physician, Professor and Chair of the UC Davis Department of Emergency Medicine, Founding Chair of the PECARN Steering Committee Dr. Nicole Glaser, Professor of Pediatric Endocrinology at UC Davis Resources: Clinical Trial of Fluid Infusion Rates for Pediatric Diabetic Ketoacidosis Nathan Kuppermann, M.D., M.P.H., Simona Ghetti, Ph.D., Jeff E. Schunk, M.D., Michael J. Stoner, M.D., Arleta Rewers, M.D., Ph.D., Julie K. McManemy, M.D., M.P.H., Sage R. Myers, M.D., M.S.C.E., Lise E. Nigrovic, M.D., M.P.H., Aris Garro, M.D., M.P.H., Kathleen M. Brown, M.D., Kimberly S. Quayle, M.D., Jennifer L. Trainor, M.D., Leah Tzimenatos, M.D., Jonathan E. Bennett, M.D., Andrew D. DePiero, M.D., Maria Y. Kwok, M.D., M.P.H., Clinton S. Perry, III, Ph.D., Cody S. Olsen, M.S., T. Charles Casper, Ph.D., J. Michael Dean, M.D., and Nicole S. Glaser, M.D. for the PECARN DKA FLUID Study Group. N Engl J Med. 2018 June 14, 378:2275-2287 Risk factors for cerebral edema in children with diabetic ketoacidosis. The Pediatric Emergency Medicine Collaborative Research Committee of the American Academy of Pediatrics. Glaser N, Barnett P, McCaslin I, Nelson D, Trainor J, Louie J, Kaufman F, Quayle K, Roback M, Malley R, Kuppermann N; Pediatric Emergency Medicine Collaborative Research Committee of the American Academy of Pediatrics. N Engl J Med. 2001 Jan 25;344(4):264-9. PMID: 11172153 PECARN (Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network) For those of you who want more, here is the unedited interview: Drs. Kuppermann and Glaser **************************************************************************************** Join us in Maui for Emergency Medicine Hot Topics! November 6-10, 2018. Registration is now open at www.cevs.ucdavis.edu/confreg/?confid=960 Thank you to the UC Davis Department of Emergency Medicine for supporting this podcast and to Orlando Magaña at OM Audio Productions for audio production services.
We sit down to discuss the future of blockchain with Jonathan Johnson: Board Member, Overstock.com Previous: Overstock.com, TenFold Corporation
Rollerball (1975) is a deadly sport on rollerskates. Competitors take to the track trying to score, spilling blood to entertain the masses. But one player Jonathan E. rises above the rest as the sport's most popular player. A conspiracy begins to take Jonathan off the track one way, or another. Norman Jewison brings the William Harrison story to the big screen starring James Caan, John Houseman, and Maud Adams. This sci-fi bloodsport has become a cult hit spawning a disastrous 2002 remake by Die Hard director John McTiernan starring Chris Klein, Jean Reno, LL Cool J, and Rebecca Romijn. Could this be one of the worst remakes ever? Join Invasion of the Remake as we explore the dark world of Rollerball! Support independent podcasts like ours by telling your friends and family how to find us at places like iTunes, Google Play Music, Stitcher, PlayerFM, Tune In Radio, Audioboom, BluBrry, Libsyn, YouTube and all the best podcast providers. Spread the love! Like, share and subscribe! You can also help out the show with a positive review and a 5-star rating over on iTunes. We want to hear from you and your opinions will help shape the future of the show. Your ratings and reviews also help others find the show. Their "earballs" will thank you. Follow us on Twitter: @InvasionRemake Like and share us on Facebook & Instagram: Invasion of the Remake Email us your questions, suggestions, corrections, challenges and comments: invasionoftheremake@gmail.com
Everyone's favourite fungus is the topic of this week’s episode – Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis, otherwise known as Bd or Chytrid. We discuss some of the ways it spreads and a little about the frogs it affects. Species of the Bi-week is back and this time coming out of Amazonia. FULL REFERENCE LIST AVAILABLE AT: herphighlights.podbean.com Main Paper References: Kolby, Jonathan E., Sara D. Ramirez, Lee Berger, Kathryn L. Richards-Hrdlicka, Merlijn Jocque, and Lee F. Skerratt. 2015. “Terrestrial Dispersal and Potential Environmental Transmission of the Amphibian Chytrid Fungus (Batrachochytrium Dendrobatidis).” PLoS ONE 10 (4): 1–13. Barrio-Amorós, César L., Christoph I. Grünwald, Héctor Franz-Chávez, Ángela María Mendoza, and Brandon Thomas La Forest. 2016. “Notes on Natural History and Call Description of the Critically Endangered Plectrohyla Avia (Anura: Hylidae) from Chiapas , Mexico.” Amphibian and Reptile Conservation 10 (2): 11–17. Species of the Bi-Week: Peloso, Pedro L.V., Victor G.D. Orrico, Célio F.B. Haddad, Geraldo R. Lima-Filho, and Marcelo J. Sturaro. 2016. “A New Species of Clown Tree Frog, Dendropsophus Leucophyllatus Species Group, from Amazonia (Anura, Hylidae).” South American Journal of Herpetology 11 (1): 66–80. Other Mentioned Papers/Studies: Arnold, S.J., 1976. "Sexual behavior, sexual interference and sexual defense in the salamanders Ambystoma maculatum, Ambystoma tigrinum and Plethodon jordani." Ethology, 42(3): 247-300. Blooi, Mark, An Martel, Francis Vercammen, and Frank Pasmans. 2013. “Combining Ethidium Monoazide Treatment with Real-Time PCR Selectively Quantifies Viable Batrachochytrium Dendrobatidis Cells.” Fungal Biology 117 (2): 156–62. Gower, D.J., Doherty-Bone, T., Loader, S.P., Wilkinson, M., Kouete, M.T., Tapley, B., Orton, F., Daniel, O.Z., Wynne, F., Flach, E. and Müller, H., 2013. "Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis infection and lethal chytridiomycosis in caecilian amphibians (Gymnophiona)." EcoHealth, 10(2):173-183. Iwai, N., 2013. "Morphology, function and evolution of the pseudothumb in the Otton frog." Journal of Zoology, 289(2): 127-133. Kolby, Jonathan E., Sara D. Ramirez, Lee Berger, Dale W. Griffin, Merlijn Jocque, and Lee F. Skerratt. 2015. “Presence of Amphibian Chytrid Fungus (Batrachochytrium Dendrobatidis) in Rainwater Suggests Aerial Dispersal Is Possible.” Aerobiologia 31 (3): 411–19. doi:10.1007/s10453-015-9374-6. Liew, Nicole, Maria J. Mazon Moya, Claudia J. Wierzbicki, Michael Hollinshead, Michael J. Dillon, Christopher R. Thornton, Amy Ellison, Jo Cable, Matthew C. Fisher, and Serge Mostowy. 2017. “Chytrid Fungus Infection in Zebrafish Demonstrates That the Pathogen Can Parasitize Non-Amphibian Vertebrate Hosts.” Nature Communications 8 (April). Nature Publishing Group: 15048. Lips, Karen R. 2016. “Overview of Chytrid Emergence and Impacts on Amphibians.” Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 371 (1709): 20150465. Longcore, J.E., Pessier, A.P. and Nichols, D.K., 1999. "Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis gen. et sp. nov., a chytrid pathogenic to amphibians." Mycologia: 219-227. Olson, Deanna H., David M. Aanensen, Kathryn L. Ronnenberg, Christopher I. Powell, Susan F. Walker, Jon Bielby, Trenton W.J. Garner, George Weaver, and Matthew C. Fisher. 2013. “Mapping the Global Emergence of Batrachochytrium Dendrobatidis, the Amphibian Chytrid Fungus.” PLoS ONE 8 (2). Van Rooij, Pascale, Frank Pasmans, Yanaika Coen, and An Martel. 2017. “Efficacy of Chemical Disinfectants for the Containment of the Salamander Chytrid Fungus Batrachochytrium Salamandrivorans.” PloS One 12 (10): e0186269. Other Links/Mentions: Video of Plectrohyla Avia from Barrio-Amorós et al. (2016) - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aa2O-BguqOY&feature=youtu.be Salamander courtship with pheromone transmission - http://plethodon.science.oregonstate.edu/video/shermani%20slapping.avi HARCC are mid fundraiser - go to frogrescue.com Music – Treehouse by Ed Nelson
This week on Mom Talk Radio, Spotlight on Moms features Staci Gerardi of NovemberSunflower.com. Allen Klein, author of Secrets Kids Know…That Adults Oughta Learn: Enrich Your Life by Viewing It Through the Eyes of a Child, shares some secrets from the book. Margaret Reilly McDonnell, Director of the United Nations Foundation’s Nothing But Nets campaign, shares how families can get involved. Dr. Jonathan E. Romain, board-certified clinical neuropsychologist, shares tips to manage test-taking anxiety. Sheryl O’Loughlin, CEO of REBBL, and author of Killing It! An Entrepreneur’s Guide to Keeping Your Head Without Losing Your Heart, shares tips for flourishing in business.
In this beta episode, Jonathan E. Jacobs interviews Kyle Jarrow, book writer of Broadway-bound SpongeBob SquarePants the Musical. Here, Kyle shares an original vignette inspired by The Girl With The Light Blue Hair by the Raymond Scott Quintette. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In a world…where a gruesome blood sport placates a docile public…That's the milieu of Rollerball, a Norman Jewison-directed, James Caan-starring 70s dystopian hit. Houston is the best team on the planet, led by crafty veteran uh, “rollerballer” Jonathan E (played by Caan). Globalism is the order of the day, and the New World Order includes … Continue reading Really Awful Movies: Ep 180 – Rollerball →
Aaron & Pete try to please our corporate overlords with another FUTURESPORTS! entry, ROLLERBALL. James Caan stars as Jonathan E. What does that E stand for? Tune in if you want no more information on that topic! We're joined by returning Watchboy/friend of the show, Joseph Finn. He hosts a podcast called Try It, You'll Like It that we think if you try it you'll like it. You can find us on Soundcloud, iTunes, and your podcatcher of choice.
This week on Fathoms Deep, we have an extra special treat. A peek behind the curtain with Jon Steinberg, 1/2 of the Black Sails Creators. We discuss the writing process, character backstories, when Jack Rackham is most fun to write, and yet again, staring into Flint....
If you can’t tell by the headline, we’re talking grading and assessing online student work with Jonathan E. Martin, of , in episode 21 of Blackbaud K-12’s Get Connected podcast. Earlier this fall, we published Jonathan’s new e-book, (you can get ). He explores the core concepts and key strategies that you can use today. In it, Jonathan shares fourteen methods for effective online assessment and grading to help teachers broaden their thinking and consider new opportunities. In a return appearance on the show, Jonathan shares his top five methods (you’ll see an outline of what we covered in the show notes below) and talks about some of the things that surprised him the most as he researched and wrote the book.
Es ist ärgerlich! Gerade einmal zwei Stundenkilometer schnell kommt Jonathan E. bei seiner regelmäßigen Runde am Neckar voran. Der Grund für die Langsamkeit des 26-Jährigen, der vor drei Wochen mit dem Joggen angefangen hat: Bis jetzt hat er sich noch keine hautenge Hose gekauft, wie sie jeder professionelle Läufer besitzt.
Dr Jonathan E. Rosenberg - Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, USA Dr Rosenberg discusses data he presented at ECC 2015 demonstrating that the investigational immunotherapy atezolizumab may prevent progression of metastatic urothelial bladder cancer in all age groups by 2.1 months. This phase II, open-label study (IMvigor 210) is the first trial of its kind in metastatic bladder cancer to show that inhibiting PD-L1 increases the activity of the immune system to prevent disease progression and may improve patient survival in a heavily pre-treated population.
For Jonathan E. Martin, his career as an educator didn't peak after becoming a head of school, in fact, it only accelerated. While head, that drew a large audience of educators interested in what he had to say about education. This successful run at blogging ultimately encouraged Jonathan to embark on a new career as a consultant () — one that allows him to share his ideas and direction with a much larger group of schools. Jonathan & I explored this topic in episode 16 of Blackbaud K-12’s Get Connected Podcast.