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In this weekend's episode, three segments from this past week's Washington Journal. First, a discussion with Brookings Institution's Elaine Kamarck (KAY-mark), in which she compares the Trump Administration's efforts to reduce the size of the federal government, to a similar effort she made in the Clinton Administration. Then, Run GenZ Founder and President Joseph Mitchell discusses his organization's effort into recruiting and training young conservatives into political office. Finally, Breaking Defense Editor in Chief Aaron Mehta (MEH-tuh) discusses President Trump's firings of Pentagon leaders, his nomination of retired Lt. Gen. Dan Caine to be the new chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and potential budget cuts at the department. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
durée : 00:03:44 - Le Regard culturel - par : Lucile Commeaux - Les éditions du Sous-sol font paraître six textes du journaliste et écrivain américain Joseph Mitchell : de la grande non-fiction, ancrée dans les quartiers populaires du sud new-yorkais et leur activité portuaire.
Kathryn Scanlan (winner of a 2024 Windham Campbell Prize for Fiction) talks with Prize Director Michael Kelleher about legendary New Yorker journalist Joseph Mitchell's famous double-profile of New York fixture Joe Gould, the perils of running out of ideas, and the blurry line between fiction and reality. Reading list: Joe Gould's Secret by Joseph Mitchell • "Joe Gould's Teeth" by Jill Lepore • Bright Lights Big City by Jay McInerney • Old Mr. Flood by Joseph Mitchell Kathryn Scanlan is the author of two novels (Aug 9—Fog and Kick the Latch) and one collection of short stories (The Dominant Animal). She won a 2021 Literature Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters and her work has appeared in Egress, Granta, and NOON, among other places, and her short story “The Old Mill” was selected by Michael Cunningham for the 2010 Iowa Review Fiction Prize. A graduate of the University of Iowa and the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, she currently lives in Los Angeles.
Em maio de 2008, o repórter Roberto Kaz foi vítima de um assalto ao sair da redação da revista Piauí no bairro da Glória, no Rio de Janeiro. Como Roberto ficou com a visão comprometida por um tempo depois do incidente, seus colegas de redação bolaram um jeito de ele ter acesso à edição de junho da revista, que ia sair nas semanas seguintes: gravaram a revista inteira, do começo ao fim, num CD, para que ele pudesse ouvi-la. Além dos editores e dos repórteres, outros convivas da redação acabaram entrando no projeto – inclusive um personagem que merece todo um capítulo à parte dessa história: Heber Trinta Filho, o perfilado da primeira grande reportagem que Roberto publicou na revista, em 2007. Garanta sua plaquete do Rádio Novelo Apresenta: https://radionovelo.com.br/plaquetes Siga o perfil da Rádio Novelo no Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/radionovelo/ Siga o canal da Rádio Novelo no WhatsApp: https://radionovelo.com.br/whatsapp Inscreva-se na nossa newsletter e receba o link para o episódio, dicas culturais da nossa equipe e mais direto na sua caixa de e-mail https://bit.ly/newsletterna Acesse o site filmicca.com.br para aproveitar a promoção do passe anual por R$ 84 Palavras-chave: Revista Piauí, Roberto Kaz, Raquel Zangrandi, Eduardo Coutinho, João Moreira Salles, Luiz Maklouf Carvalho, Dorrit Harazim, Cassiano Elek Machado, César Cielo, Jair Bolsonaro, Heber Trinta Filho, assalto, facada, olho, gravação, jornalismo, reportagem, Joseph Mitchell, The New Yorker, Joe Gould Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Kate Slotover, host of The Book Club Review podcast, joins me in the Damn Library all the way from London! Drinks are had, New York is discussed, along with two different worlds of New York reportage, Helene Hanff's Letter from New York, and Joseph Mitchell's Up in the Old Hotel. Such a joy!contribute! https://patreon.com/smdbfor drink recipes, book lists, and more, visit: somanydamnbooks.commusic: Disaster Magic(https://soundcloud.com/disaster-magic) Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The Spirit of Place Tim Gilmore is a prolific local history author who has written extensively about Jacksonville. As the writer and creator of www.jaxpsychogeo.com, a project that explores place and catalogs the Southern Gothic, he has told more than 700 stories of strange and historic locations in and around Jacksonville, Florida. He has also published 22 books. "Ever since UNF English Professor Alex Menocal introduced me to the concept of psychogeography years ago, I've been enthralled with it," Gilmore says. "It's a portmanteau word, the psychology of geography, [meaning] something like the spirit of place. It's where the name for my website, jaxpsychogeo, comes from." Gilmore seems equally fascinated with Jacksonville and its people. He is also the founder of JaxbyJax. A literary arts festival, now in its 10th year, JaxbyJax was built on the theme of “Jacksonville Writers Writing Jacksonville.” Few writers have written about Jacksonville more than Gilmore. He joined us last November to talk about his latest book, The Culture Wars of Warren Folks. Tim Gilmore has written 22 books including Box Broken Open: The Architecture of Ted Pappas; Murder Capital: Eight Stories, 1890s-1980s; Channeling Anna Fletcher; Repossessions: Mass Shooting in Baymeadows; The Book of Isaiah: A Vision of the Founder of a City, illustrated by Shep Shepard; Devil in the Baptist Church: Bob Gray's Unholy Trinity; and The Mad Atlas of Virginia King. Four of the works he's written for the stage have been produced by Florida State College at Jacksonville DramaWorks and his writing has appeared in numerous publications both locally and nationally. JaxPsychoGeo has received mention in publications including The Miami Herald, The Washington Post and The New Yorker and was featured in the A24 book Florida! A Hyper-Local Guide to the Flora, Fauna and Fantasy of the Most Far-Out State in America. Gilmore teaches Literature and Writing at Florida State College at Jacksonville. He's received awards from FSCJ, the Cultural Council of Greater Jacksonville and Jacksonville City Council. He holds a Ph.D. in English from the University of Florida. You can also read his twice-weekly newsletter, Tim Gilmore's deadpaper, at timgilmore.substack.com. Interviewer Shep Shepard is a professor of English at FSCJ's Nassau Center. He received his Ph.D. in English from the University of Florida and has worked as a full-time instructor at FSCJ for twenty years. In his spare time, he produces music under various monikers, edits fiction and nonfiction prose, creates digital art, and enjoys time with his wife Ana and their dogs Meka and Moxie. READ Check out Tim's work from the Library Catalog: https://jkpl.ent.sirsi.net/client/en_US/default/search/results?qu=AUTHOR%3D%22tim+gilmore%22&te= Tim Recommends: Pyschogeographical Works I've long been a huge Cormac McCarthy fan. I've assigned The Road to numerous classes over the years. Of all the McCarthy I've read, I most highly recommend The Road and two of his earlier novels: First, there's the 1973 novel Child of God, which somehow manages to be one of the most horrifying things I've ever read and one of the most beautiful. Few writers could achieve that strange incongruous feat, perhaps none better than McCarthy. Meanwhile, his 1979 novel Suttree paints as detailed a picture of down-and-out Knoxville, Tennessee, as Joyce ever painted of Dublin. It's perhaps the greatest American psychogeographical work. When I recently read John Oliver Killens' 1954 novel Youngblood, I couldn't believe I'd not read him already. This novel, alongside Harry Crews' newly reissued 1978 memoir A Childhood, has to be among the best writings ever to come out of Georgia. The two of them work like split-screen, a Black childhood and a white childhood, both so different and so similar. Both writers had ties to Jacksonville. Crews said mid-20th century Jax was the place poor Georgia farmers went when the crops failed. Various artists and writers have used psychogeography in different ways. I've returned time and again to my favorite such writings, which I can't recommend enough – novels like Peter Ackroyd's Chatterton and Hawksmoor and Toni Morrison's Beloved. On the face of it, Ackroyd and Morrison couldn't be more different, but they both explore how culture is haunted by history and how patterns of history present themselves as ghostly. Then there's Joseph Mitchell's Joe Gould's Secret, a nonfiction account of a homeless Greenwich Village icon who claimed to have written the longest book in the world. Tim Recommends: Other Jax Authors I'd be negligent if I didn't give a shout-out to our local literary community, which runs so much deeper and wider than most locals realize and includes works like Julie Delegal's Seen and Andres Rojas's Third Winter in Our Second Country and Johnny Masiulewicz's Happy Tapir zine series. I could name dozens of other writers I admire and their works, but as soon as I attempt a long list, I'll foolishly omit someone and lose a few nights' sleep. (I already see 15 or 20 people in my mind's eye whose names I didn't mention, but could have, just now.) Anyone who wants an extensive list of writers participating in the Jax community, just look at the archives for the last nine festivals at jaxbyjax.com. I'll just say this is the 10th year of JaxbyJax Literary Arts Festival, which my wife Jo Carlisle and I founded and then relinquished to the more capable hands of Darlyn and Brad Kuhn. --- Never miss an event! Sign up for email newsletters at https://bit.ly/JaxLibraryUpdates Jacksonville Public LibraryWebsite: https://jaxpubliclibrary.org/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/jaxlibrary Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/JaxLibrary/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jaxlibrary/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/jaxpubliclibraryfl Contact Us: jplpromotions@coj.net
Historically Thinking: Conversations about historical knowledge and how we achieve it
From its opening in 1822, the Fulton Market was an essential part of life in old New York, selling vegetables grown on Long Island, fruit harvested in Cuba, lobsters taken from the waters of Maine, chickens raised in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, and oysters–and fish–hauled forth from New York harbor itself. Over the decades Fulton Market became known as Fulton Fish Market, dominated by wholesale dealers in fish that came not only from New York Harbor, but from all over the world. What Chicago became for beef, New York became for fish. “A business that specializes in fish,” writes my guest Jonathan Rees, “has to regularize an inevitably uneven supply through a mixture of knowledge and technology.” Rees's book The Fulton Fish Market: A History is therefore not simply the story of the creation, life, and decline of a New York place, but a description of that place where community, politics, economy, nature, and culture all came together on the New York waterfront. Jonathan Rees is Professor of History at Colorado State University-Pueblo. This is his third appearance on the podcast; he was last on in episode 222 to describe the strange career of Harvey Wiley. For Further Information Previous conversations with Jonathan were about refrigeration, and the purity and nutritional value of mass-produced food. It doesn't take too much of a guess to figure out why he's now writing about fish markets. Jonathan Rees and I talked briefly about Joseph Mitchell, a legendary New Yorker columnist not least because he eventually had a case of writer's block so massive that it transcended the metaphor "block". Here is Mitchell's book Up in the Old Hotel, in which the Fulton Fish Market is essentially a supporting character, if not primary character, and more on those thirty years without writing.
Headlines Grace speaks with Australian Council Trade Union's assistant secretary, Joseph Mitchell, discussing their upcoming price gouging inquiry, a chance to see if big business are artificially inflating their prices & taking advantage of the cost of living crisis. Claudia speaks with Professor Igarashi from Vanderbuilt University, Nashville, Tennessee. Professor Igarashi is a specialist in modern Japanese cultural studies and war memory, particularly the post-war period and is the author of two books: Bodies of Memory: Narratives of War in Postwar Japanese Culture, 1945–1970, and Homecomings: The Belated Return of Japan's Lost Soldiers. He speaks to us on the 78th anniversary of the atomic bombing of Nagasaki - at a time when nuclear power as both a source of energy and war weaponry is hotly contested in political, humanitarian and environmental spaces, and a major cinematic biopic about 'the father of the bomb' J. Robert Oppenheimer has just been released. We dive into a conversation with Australian Financial Complaints Authority's Deputy Chief Ombudsman, Dr June Smith, where we discuss the financial complaints received this year, and the complications and implications of BNPL and delay in insurance claims. Patrick speaks to Australian Federation of Deccan Association volunteer Khalid Mohammed, regarding the lastest round of religious violence in India and how the group is helping and how Australia has a role to play in the situation.Songs Music for Iran- Volume-2 Burnin' - Queasy PiecesThe Night is Dark - Soo LingMono Bar - The Black TambourinesDragonfly – Shangri-Lass
Agile methodologies have been used in software development for years. But how can we bring the same concepts of Agile software development to all aspects of government management? Joseph Mitchell, Director of Strategic Initiatives & International Programs at the National Academy of Public Administration and Ed DeSeve, Executive Visiting Fellow at the IBM Center for the Business of Government, Coordinator for the Agile Government Center (and Senior Advisor at GovNavigators!) join the program to talk about the work they help lead at the Agile Government Center trying to answer that very question. Show Notes:GSA Instructional Letter on AIGSA IT Modernization Centers of Excellence: AI Guide for GovernmentGSA Announces News TMF New Targeted Investments
Respecto a la obra “Memorias de un vagabundo” hay una serie de elementos que influenciaron su creación. El primero de ellos es la migración de una parte de la familia desde Italia a la Argentina, a mediados de la década del cincuenta, y obviamente ciertas labores que realizaron iniciando por el bobinado de motores que los llevaría a descubrir Océano o Balneario Reta, hasta el taller mismo que aparece en la novela, el padre criando a sus hijos, los dos tomos rojos utilizados por la mujer que sería mi abuela (estos tienen una dedicatoria: “A tutti i miei nipoti” – “A todos mis nietos”) y obviamente algunas otras cuestiones de la vida familiar. Los personajes, tanto Amerigo como Marco, guardan relación con familiares, afectos, en tanto que Julio es una creación artificial (tiene algunos elementos en común con el autor pero no deja de ser un personaje ficticio). El otro elemento que influye en esta composición es un viaje, concretamente hacia Buenos Aires, iba leyendo un libro llamado el Secreto de Joe Gould de Joseph Mitchell él cual devoré durante el mencionado trayecto y me quedó la idea ya del vagabundo (siendo que Joe Gould es un vagabundo). La diferencia es que en los términos de Mitchell él ha existido. El otro elemento viene como consecuencia del mencionado viaje de Buenos Aires a Ciudad de México, al trasladarme del Aeropuerto Juárez hacia la Zona Rosa visualicé una serie de publicidades en un área gris que contrastaba con su par turística que era a color y uno de los carteles tenía una publicidad sobre papeles, impresoras, informática. Entonces ahí se me ocurrió la idea: “Una resma de hojas comprada con los últimos ahorros, luego se haría a la mar” o algo así. Vino y lo escribí, estábamos en noviembre de 2018 habiendo completado la obra a mediados de 2019. Hay otro elemento más, los vagabundos leen y escriben siendo que en dicha época escuchaba un programa (que le gusta a mi suegro) de Jorge Fernández Díaz y éste describía un viaje a Francia en donde todo el mundo leía (hasta los vagabundos). La lectura tiene una importancia fundamental en la cultura, sin lectura no hay escritura ni pensamiento y esto lleva a que las personas sean más fáciles de influenciar. Otras cuestiones en la novela tienen que ver con elementos actuales como es el caso del consumismo, esa vorágine de tener lo último de lo último que hace que al final no tengamos nada y ello ha sido trasladado a la obra. Puntualmente la forma en la que las personas requieren bienes y siempre están vacías, existiendo diferentes clases sociales. Ello se refleja ya cerca del epílogo. Sin embargo necesitaba una vuelta de tuerca, salirme de la estructura en la que venía dado que ello me termina aburriendo y así surgió la idea del otro planeta. La humanidad está en pos de ello, no cuida éste planeta y pretende irse a otro para seguir haciendo lo mismo (lo cual es una contradicción). Demás elementos como las ratas aparecen en varios escritos como forma de homenaje o cliché, necesariamente deben aparecer como el caso de los lunáticos o bien aquellos que están por encima de los demás (ignorado por estos hasta que el mar crece y es demasiado tarde). De allí la necesidad de ocultar lo qué ocurre hasta que las naves despegan y los bienaventurados se largan hacia las estrellas. Pasa que el ego humano debe ser televisado por cualquiera de las pantallas que tenemos ahora, esto hace que no estemos prestando atención a lo qué ocurre a nuestro alrededor y eso es malo. La novela en sí es una metáfora sobre esto, la forma en la que vivimos anestesiados y ocurren una serie de eventos que ya dejan de asombrarnos. Cuando precisamente perdemos la capacidad de asombro es cuando estamos condenados a creer cualquier cosa o bien que esto pase y simplemente no nos demos cuenta.
En el programa de hoy repasamos con Mary Carmen Rodríguez (también editora del podcast) la carrera de Stephen Frears que estrena esta semana “The lost king” y que sigue siendo uno de esos directores británicos que mejor han sabido conectar con el público en las últimas décadas. In Memoriam dedicado a Harry Belafonte, más que un actor y un cantante siendo todo un artista y un hombre comprometido. En Leer cine, la biblioteca sonora de Carlos López-Tapia, “El fondo del puerto” de Joseph Mitchell. Completa el menú los estrenos, las apuestas de Colgados de la plataforma y la crítica de las favoritas “La impaciencia del corazón” y “Plan 75”. ¡Muchas gracias por escucharnos!
Ganhámos os três, e bem podem dizer que já andamos a pedi-las. Porta atrás, porta pelo corredor, metemos a cabeça nos quartos e damos um berro, desenhamos uma gaifona e esperamos cá fora, diante da serenata dos cães da vizinhança, batendo com os nós dos dedos nas paredes a chamar para virem dançar as amiguinhas, depois pisamo-las todas. Na verdade, o que mais queremos é arrepiar caminho. O Musil está para ali a resmonear que "o mundo dos que escrevem (...) está cheio de grandes palavras e conceitos que perderam a substância". Temos de refazer as nossas cidades, começar por uma mesa, uma conversa noite fora. Ganhar ânimo, retirar o mundo da sua dormência. Apalpá-lo, mexer-lhe nas partes. O Musil continua a puxar-nos a manga, quer ainda acrescentar que “hoje, numa época em que se misturam todos os discursos, em que profetas e charlatães usam as mesmas fórmulas com mínimas diferenças, cujo percurso nenhuma pessoa ocupada tem tempo de investigar, num tempo em que as redacções dos jornais são constantemente incomodadas por gente que acha que é um génio, é muito difícil ajuizar do valor de um homem ou de uma ideia. Temos de nos deixar guiar pelo ouvido para podermos perceber se os rumores, os sussurros e o raspar de pés diante da porta da redacção são suficientemente fortes para poderem ser admitidos como voz da «polis»." Uma vez que não temos já direito aos cafés, às nossas margens divagantes, façamos aqui um enredo de escutas para ver se afinamos os instrumentos, treinando o coração para os sobressaltos que se avizinham. Errata: Às tantas, Stephen Jay Gould, um biólogo evolucionista e popular escritor de divulgação científica, faz aqui um cameo, completamente a despropósito. Na verdade, o título que buscava era "O Segredo de Joe Gould", de Joseph Mitchell, editado por cá pela Dom Quixote.
"“In the old days they didn't even use tables and chairs. They sat on beer crates and ate off the tops of beer barrels. You'd be surprised how much fun that was. Somehow it made old men feel young again. And they'd drink beer out of cans or growlers. Those beefsteaks were run in halls or the cellars or back rooms of big saloons. There was always sawdust on the floor. Sometimes they had one in a bowling alley. They would cover the alleys with tarpaulin and set the boxes and barrels in the aisles. The men ate with their fingers. They never served potatoes in those days. Too filling. They take up room that rightfully belongs to meat and beer." Have you ever been to a TRUE beefsteak, do you even know what one is? AwaySlice throws the most epic of beefsteaks and there is one coming very soon in Miami around the Bitcoin2023 conference. Stay tuned and if he sharees the link with me, I will have it here in the show notes, so don't forget to check back. But today we dive into the article he shares on the tradition, the origins, and the heart of where the beefsteak began. Written in 1939, it is both fascinating and hilarious merely as a representation of the times, and is equal parts mouth watering in its description of the food and festivities. If you don't walk away dreaming of steak and beer, then you weren't paying attention. Stay to the end for one of my favorite quotes that needed a fitting read, and this one felt like it. Guy's Nostr Pubkey: npub1h8nk2346qezka5cpm8jjh3yl5j88pf4ly2ptu7s6uu55wcfqy0wq36rpev Code BITCOINAUDIBLE gets 10% off your Bitcoin2023 tickets! Link to the Beefsteak Event will be here: __________ Don't forget to check out our amazing sponsors: • The Swan IRA is live! Follow the link to find out how to get your tax free retirement funds, securely allocated to Bitcoin! The best place to onboard a true Bitcoiner - Stack sats automatically, withdraw automatically, and learn or get help from the best team of Bitcoiners out there with Swan Bitcoin. (https://swanbitcoin.com/guy) • Gets sats back every time you dump fiat at a store, to pay your bills, everything in your fiat life pays you sats with the Fold Debit Card and FoldApp. 20,000 FREE SATS! at (https://bitcoinaudible.com/fold) • Dive into the Bitcoin only wallet, the cypherpunk calculator, with the NEW Coldcard Q1! A company that has built secure Bitcoin products for nearly a decade. Code BITCOINAUDIBLE gets 9% off the ColdCard! (https://bitcoinaudible.com/coldcard) ------------------------------- "Life should not be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a pretty and well preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside in a cloud of smoke, thoroughly used up, totally worn out, and loudly proclaiming "Wow! What a Ride!" — Hunter S. Thompson Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
"“In the old days they didn't even use tables and chairs. They sat on beer crates and ate off the tops of beer barrels. You'd be surprised how much fun that was. Somehow it made old men feel young again. And they'd drink beer out of cans or growlers. Those beefsteaks were run in halls or the cellars or back rooms of big saloons. There was always sawdust on the floor. Sometimes they had one in a bowling alley. They would cover the alleys with tarpaulin and set the boxes and barrels in the aisles. The men ate with their fingers. They never served potatoes in those days. Too filling. They take up room that rightfully belongs to meat and beer." Have you ever been to a TRUE beefsteak, do you even know what one is? AwaySlice throws the most epic of beefsteaks and there is one coming very soon in Miami around the Bitcoin2023 conference. Stay tuned and if he sharees the link with me, I will have it here in the show notes, so don't forget to check back. But today we dive into the article he shares on the tradition, the origins, and the heart of where the beefsteak began. Written in 1939, it is both fascinating and hilarious merely as a representation of the times, and is equal parts mouth watering in its description of the food and festivities. If you don't walk away dreaming of steak and beer, then you weren't paying attention. Stay to the end for one of my favorite quotes that needed a fitting read, and this one felt like it. Guy's Nostr Pubkey: npub1h8nk2346qezka5cpm8jjh3yl5j88pf4ly2ptu7s6uu55wcfqy0wq36rpev Code BITCOINAUDIBLE gets 10% off your Bitcoin2023 tickets! Link to the Beefsteak Event will be here: __________ Don't forget to check out our amazing sponsors: • The Swan IRA is live! Follow the link to find out how to get your tax free retirement funds, securely allocated to Bitcoin! The best place to onboard a true Bitcoiner - Stack sats automatically, withdraw automatically, and learn or get help from the best team of Bitcoiners out there with Swan Bitcoin. (https://swanbitcoin.com/guy) • Gets sats back every time you dump fiat at a store, to pay your bills, everything in your fiat life pays you sats with the Fold Debit Card and FoldApp. 20,000 FREE SATS! at (https://bitcoinaudible.com/fold) • Dive into the Bitcoin only wallet, the cypherpunk calculator, with the NEW Coldcard Q1! A company that has built secure Bitcoin products for nearly a decade. Code BITCOINAUDIBLE gets 9% off the ColdCard! (https://bitcoinaudible.com/coldcard) ------------------------------- "Life should not be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a pretty and well preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside in a cloud of smoke, thoroughly used up, totally worn out, and loudly proclaiming "Wow! What a Ride!" — Hunter S. Thompson Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/bitcoinaudible/message
"El periodista i l'assass
"El periodista i l'assass
This episode is also available as a blog post: https://thecitylife.org/2022/10/12/south-street-seaport-museum-in-partnership-with-mcnally-jackson-books-announces-october-book-club-up-in-the-old-hotel-by-joseph-mitchell-10-24/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/citylifeorg/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/citylifeorg/support
WRITER'S BLOCK. Is it a myth or a silent saboteur that can slow you down and even ruin your writing dreams? In this solo episode, Caryl dives deep into EFT Tapping (Emotional Freedom Techniques), answering the questions:What is EFT?How does it work?How can it help you heal the root causes of Writer's Block and set you free creatively?The entire episode is taken from a presentation entitled Bye Bye Writer's Block, Hello Creative Genius in which Caryl takes listeners through the A to Z of the Tapping process and explains why EFT Tapping is at the forefront of body-based therapy today.Caryl recounts a horrifying but true story about writer's block. Joseph Mitchell, a respected journalist on the New Yorker in the 1950s, dried up creatively at age 57 and never published another word for the next 30 years.Writer's Block is not a myth. It cripples creativity and flow for writers. This is based on Caryl's own therapy practice, helping countless of her own clients break free from its clutches to write their books, poetry, movie scripts or take an enormous leap towards their dreams."The good news is that EFT Tapping is the approach I have found most effective in resolving writer's block in any shape or form. Who am I to tell you this? Well, first, I'm an expert trainer in EFT- Matrix Reimprinting and Matrix Goals Reimprinting, which I pioneered. As a former journalist, multi published nonfiction author and the world's first Tapping Book Coach, I combine the inner game with the expertise to help you write, publish, and promote your book."By the end of the episode, you will have a full understanding of why and how EFT Tapping can help resolve writer's block and transform both your life - and writing life.Caryl's book Bye Bye Writer's Block sponsors this episode . The book is due out in October 2022 and will soon be available on Amazon for pre-order. ✅ Recommended - get my FREE CHECKLIST:5 Book Hooks you must have to Captivate non-fiction Readers: Checklist (Free): https://www.writethebookinsideyou.com/freegift ✅ Connect with Caryl Westmore on social media! https://www.facebook.com/carylwestmoreauthorhttps://www.facebook.com/groups/bookinsideyouhttps://twitter.com/carylwestmoreukShow Sponsors: Books for Writers by Caryl Westmore: Bust Writer's Block Forever www.bustwritersblock.com and The Inner Path of Writing, Make Love not War to the Writer Within . Details here: https://www.ipwbook.com
This is the second time we have had the James Booth Foundation and the Oklahoma Center for Poison and Drug Information on the program, but there is always more to learn! Laura Brennan, the State Education Coordinator along with Kristie Edlen, the Assistant Managing Director from the Oklahoma Center for Poison and Drug information share some valuable information! In the second segment. Willie Edwards, Director of Community Assessment for Feed the Children explains his connection to James Booth. Jalisha Booth, founder of the James Booth Foundation.org is on hand, as well as Joseph Mitchell, a current student at Putnam City Original.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
A moça que a Ana Cristina Pereira foi, a que entrevistava as primas com um microfone feito de um garfo espetado numa batata, não sonhava que ia entrevistar centenas de pessoas para o seu mais recente livro, “Mulheres da minha ilha, mulheres do meu país”, que faz um retrato das mulheres madeirenses, das suas lutas e vidas. A jornalista fala-nos da luta feminista, que deve ser de todos, e de um trio de livros: “O segredo de Joe Gould, de Joseph Mitchell; “Os sensos incomuns”, de Maria Isabel Barreno, a sua preferida das 3 Marias; e “Who cooked the last supper? The women's history of the world”; de Rosalind Miles. Ler e assinar a newsletter do podcast: www.getrevue.co/profile/magdacruz Considera contribuir no Patreon: patreon.com/pontofinalparagrafo Segue o Ponto Final, Parágrafo nas redes sociais: Instagram, Twitter e Facebook Produção, apresentação e edição: Magda Cruz Design: Ana Lopes Genérico: Nuno Viegas
Howard A. Rodman is a screenwriter, author and educator. His novels include The Great Eastern and Destiny Express. As a screenwriter, Rodman wrote Savage Grace, with Julianne Moore and Eddie Redmayne, nominated for Best Screenplay at the 2009 Spirit Awards, and AUGUST, starring Josh Hartnett and David Bowie. He also wrote Joe Gould's Secret, the opening night film of the Sundance Film Festival, based on the memoir by iconic New Yorker writer Joseph Mitchell. He is the past president of the Writers Guild of America West; professor of screenwriting at USC's School of Cinematic Arts; a member of the National Film Preservation Board; and an artistic director of the Sundance Screenwriting Labs. howardrodman.com/www.creativeprocess.info
The Creative Process · Seasons 1 2 3 · Arts, Culture & Society
Howard A. Rodman is a screenwriter, author and educator. His novels include The Great Eastern and Destiny Express. As a screenwriter, Rodman wrote Savage Grace, with Julianne Moore and Eddie Redmayne, nominated for Best Screenplay at the 2009 Spirit Awards, and AUGUST, starring Josh Hartnett and David Bowie. He also wrote Joe Gould's Secret, the opening night film of the Sundance Film Festival, based on the memoir by iconic New Yorker writer Joseph Mitchell. He is the past president of the Writers Guild of America West; professor of screenwriting at USC's School of Cinematic Arts; a member of the National Film Preservation Board; and an artistic director of the Sundance Screenwriting Labs. howardrodman.com/www.creativeprocess.info
Many young adults are intimidated by running for office, even on the local level. But, Joseph Mitchell is working to change that, his group, Run GenZ, works to recruit, empower, and mentor conservative trailblazers from Generation Z to pursue election to public office and win, leading state and local chambers and councils toward a more […]
Many young adults are intimidated by running for office, even on the local level. But, Joseph Mitchell is working to change that, his group, Run GenZ, works to recruit, empower, and mentor conservative trailblazers from Generation Z to pursue election to public office and win, leading state and local chambers and councils toward a more constitutionally-focused government.works to recruit, empower... Source
En forma de genis populars, de poetes solitaris, d'impostors o d'artistes male
En forma de genis populars, de poetes solitaris, d'impostors o d'artistes male
En forma de genis populars, de poetes solitaris, d'impostors o d'artistes male
With the conclusion of the 2021 Los Angeles Auto Show, let's revisit it and review the electric side of things. Included in this two-part episode is an interview with Phoenix Motors and Edison Future's CEO, Joseph Mitchell, and their CTO, Ron Iacobelli. In the second part of the episode, Dennis compares the EV production timelines and expected delivery dates to the macro economy at large. The electric mobility space is ripe for big winners but there is a looming question that has not been solved yet. Tune in to episode #197. ***** Wisco Weekly is an automotive business podcast, and is part of the 'Not Your Father's Economy' podcast channel on Apple Podcasts. Host, Dennis Wisco, shares weekly insights into current economic conditions like navigating this post-COVID economy. For bonus, ad-free episodes that deliver actionable insights, become a paid-NYFE subscriber for $8.49 a month or $93.99 a year on Apple Podcasts. Start with a 3-day trial and cancel anytime. Our subscriber-only content will jack you up to work, generate new ideas, and add perspective to consistently produce. ***** Wisco Weekly is proudly supported by automotiveMastermind. Visit automotivemastermind.com to learn more about predictive analytics and marketing automation. Have a listen to 'Predicting the Next Paycheck' a podcast mini series assessing the behaviors of car dealers, and their data-inspired decisions. Available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and other popular apps. ***** For more content, follow Dennis Wisco on Instagram (@wisco_dennis), Youtube (@wiscoweekly), and LinkedIn (@wiscoweekly).
With the conclusion of the 2021 Los Angeles Auto Show, let's revisit it and review the electric side of things. Included in this two-part episode is an interview with Phoenix Motors and Edison Future's CEO, Joseph Mitchell, and their CTO, Ron Iacobelli. In the second part of the episode, Dennis compares the EV production timelines and expected delivery dates to the macro economy at large. The electric mobility space is ripe for big winners but there is a looming question that has not been solved yet. Tune in to episode #197. ***** Wisco Weekly is an automotive business podcast, and is part of the 'Not Your Father's Economy' podcast channel on Apple Podcasts. Host, Dennis Wisco, shares weekly insights into current economic conditions like navigating this post-COVID economy. For bonus, ad-free episodes that deliver actionable insights, become a paid-NYFE subscriber for $8.49 a month or $93.99 a year on Apple Podcasts. Start with a 3-day trial and cancel anytime. Our subscriber-only content will jack you up to work, generate new ideas, and add perspective to consistently produce. ***** Wisco Weekly is proudly supported by automotiveMastermind. Visit automotivemastermind.com to learn more about predictive analytics and marketing automation. Have a listen to 'Predicting the Next Paycheck' a podcast mini series assessing the behaviors of car dealers, and their data-inspired decisions. Available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and other popular apps. ***** For more content, follow Dennis Wisco on Instagram (@wisco_dennis), Youtube (@wiscoweekly), and LinkedIn (@wiscoweekly).
The first of the final two episodes of the podcast. In this episode YNALAYT is joined by long time friend, community activist, Virginia Commonwealth University graduate, Joseph Mitchell. Join them as they discuss community building, the struggle of holding leaders accountable, the difference between reform and revolution, and so much more! Please be sure to like and subscribe for more episodes. Enjoy! To hear more from Joseph reach out on Instagram (@josephem_). The podcast is NOW on (YOUTUBE) Please Subscribe! Also follow (@aftersunsetpdx) on (Instagram) for more content! You have heard the Official "After Sunset" theme song produced by Spades. For business inquiries or beats please email Spades at (spadesofficalsc@gmail.com). You may also follow him on Soundcloud at (spadessc) or on Instagram (@cmh.031). We really hope you enjoy, more content to come! Much Love, YNALAYT
Wes Anderson's new film, “The French Dispatch,” is about a magazine, and it was inspired by Anderson's long-standing love of The New Yorker. In this special episode, introduced by the articles editor Susan Morrison, cast members read excerpts from classic works associated with the magazine. Bill Murray reads a letter from the editor Harold Ross to an angry writer, Steve Park reads James Thurber, and Elisabeth Moss reads E. B. White. Owen Wilson reads Joseph Mitchell's piece on rats; Frances McDormand reads Mavis Gallant's record of the 1968 student uprising in Paris; Tilda Swinton reads a Calvin Tomkins art-world profile; and Jeffrey Wright reads James Baldwin's “Equal in Paris,” a remarkable indictment of French institutions.
On this week's show we will explore how some of America's great authors thought of and portrayed New York City in their writing. My solo guest will be Rediscovering New York regular and the show's Special Consultant, David Griffin, Founder and CEO of Landmark Branding. Tune in for this fascinating conversation at TalkRadio.nyc or watch the Facebook Livestream by Clicking Here.Segment 1Jeff introduces the topic of today's episode about portrayals of New York by authors, as well as introduces the guest for today's episode David Griffin, the Founder and CEO of Landmark Branding. David retells how he became interested in architecture history, as well as what drew him to New York architecture history specifically. David brings up how living history can be experienced through architecture and buildings. Jeff outlines how the two have picked out five specific authors and their depictions of New York, and that this might be part one of two depending on how many authors they get through in today's episode. The two start off with F. Scott Fitzgerald and his most well known novel The Great Gatsby. David explains what about The Great Gatsby makes it a quintessential New York book. He continues to explain how New York City is not described in concrete terms within the novel, in part as the book is a Long Island book rather than a New York City, but it is still a quintessential New York book, for the themes of the book. Throughout the book Fitzgerald focuses on how those who live in the suburbs on Long Island interact with the city. David continues to explain how the Plaza Hotel is the New York Landmark that Fitzgerald makes use of the most. The two discuss other New York landmarks that can be found throughout The Great Gatsby.Segment 2Jeff and David discuss the valley of ashes within The Great Gatsby, and why Fitzgerald might have included it as much as he did within the novel. David explains the different motifs and symbols found within the valley of ashes, and how this scene is written poetically. The two continue to talk about the real life version of the valley of ashes, which is an ash dump in Corona, NY. Jeff and David continue on to discuss other aspects of New York that Fitzgerald portrays in The Great Gatsby, including what is now considered Washington Heights where the character Mabel lived in. David brings up the original cover of the novel that depicted Coney Island, which Fitzgerald wasn't happy with as he removed the section of the novel that included Coney Island, and the history behind the cover that lead to Fitzgerlad keeping that cover.Segment 3Jeff starts off the segment by thanking the sponsors, as well as requesting the listeners to feel free to reach out to him about the show. Jeff and David discuss David's recent articles that he has had published in different publications. The two then begin discussing the second author they had picked out, Joseph Mitchell. David explains that Joseph Mitchell was an important figure in New York writing and journalism, as he was one of the first writers for the New Yorker. Mitchell was an important figure in the change of how journalism was written through the school of writing that diverged from how the high end newspapers of London wrote their articles. David explains Mitchell's journey through journalism and how he worked for the New Yorker up until his death. Jeff and David discuss the kinds of things that Mitchell wrote, and how he was most interested in the outcasts of New York rather than the glitz and glam other journalists focused on. They also discuss Mitchell's later years of writingSegment 4The two discuss the other aspects of Mitchell's life, including the play he wrote for Broadway and the different societies he was a part of. David goes in depth about the racist slur for the Roma people, who Mitchell was sympathetic for but continued to use that slur. The two also discuss Mitchell's love for the waterfront, and his time spent there and how much effort he put towards the preservation of the waterfront and the architecture there. The two end the episode with discussing how Mitchell's love of New York City impacted his writing style.
Howard A. Rodman is a screenwriter, author and educator. His novels include The Great Eastern and Destiny Express. As a screenwriter, Rodman wrote Savage Grace, with Julianne Moore and Eddie Redmayne, nominated for Best Screenplay at the 2009 Spirit Awards, and AUGUST, starring Josh Hartnett and David Bowie. He also wrote Joe Gould's Secret, the opening night film of the Sundance Film Festival, based on the memoir by iconic New Yorker writer Joseph Mitchell. He is the past president of the Writers Guild of America West; professor of screenwriting at USC's School of Cinematic Arts; a member of the National Film Preservation Board; and an artistic director of the Sundance Screenwriting Labs. howardrodman.com/ www.creativeprocess.info
Howard A. Rodman is a screenwriter, author and educator. His novels include The Great Eastern and Destiny Express. As a screenwriter, Rodman wrote Savage Grace, with Julianne Moore and Eddie Redmayne, nominated for Best Screenplay at the 2009 Spirit Awards, and AUGUST, starring Josh Hartnett and David Bowie. He also wrote Joe Gould's Secret, the opening night film of the Sundance Film Festival, based on the memoir by iconic New Yorker writer Joseph Mitchell. He is the past president of the Writers Guild of America West; professor of screenwriting at USC's School of Cinematic Arts; a member of the National Film Preservation Board; and an artistic director of the Sundance Screenwriting Labs. howardrodman.com/ www.creativeprocess.info
Are "BOHEMIANS" people from the Bahamas. Spoiler - no. No, they're not. But who exactly are the Bohemians and how did the moniker pass on to artists, writers, and the Kravitz family? We're getting to the bottom of the term BOHO, and (surprise!) its origins are pseudo-intellectual, semi-racist. After our theme of the week discussion, we'll get into the nonfiction story of a writer, his subject, and the singular truth that both of them are hiding from the world. It is as much about an eccentric bohemian flophouse frequenter, as it is about a writer for the New York Magazine who's battling with doubt and depression. In the end, one will expose the other and, by doing so, perhaps free them both. The writer? Joseph Mitchell. The book? Joe Gould's Secret. Let's get LIT! Find Alexis and Kari online: Instagram — www.instagram.com/litsocietypod; Twitter — www.twitter.com/litsocietypod; Facebook — www.facebook.com/LitSocietyPod; Website — www.LitSocietyPod.com
This week we're taking it back, way back. Before we were on YouTube, when we were still recording in Kari's dining room and taking pizza breaks midway through each episode, we cut one of our favorite shows – Animal Farm by George Orwell, and Compliance and Power of Authority. This book prompted a discussion about conformity that listeners still reference to this day. While we're on break this week, we're thrilled to revisit this episode with you during our extended weekend. We've even added a convo to the beginning that we know you'll love. Enjoy, and we look forward to seeing you again on June 8th with a new episode: Joe Gould's Secret by Joseph Mitchell and Are Bohemians People from the Bahamas. See you next week! Find Alexis and Kari online: Instagram — www.instagram.com/litsocietypod/; Twitter — twitter.com/litsocietypod; Facebook — www.facebook.com/LitSocietyPod/; and our website www.LitSocietyPod.com. Get in on the conversation by using #booksanddrama.
(00:00:41) Andreas Lehner ist Geschäftsführer der Aids-Hilfe Schweiz. Diese engagiert sich für Menschen mit HIV und fungiert auch als Meldestelle für Diskriminierungen im Bereich HIV/Aids. Wir sprechen mit ihm über den Umgang mit der HIV-Pandemie und ob es Parallelen gibt zur Corona-Pandemie. Weitere Themen: (00:11:33) Schweizer Grand Prix Design: drei Preisträger:innen, drei Design-Welten. (00:17:06) Stadtwanderer: «Street Life. Erinnerungen aus der Stadt meines Lebens» von Joseph Mitchell. (00:21:02) Kunstmuseum Ascona: Auf Wahrheitssuche mit dem italienischen Künstler Michelangelo Pistoletto. (00:24:28) «Feuerland»: Michael Hugentobler hat die bewegte Biografie eines Wörterbuchs geschrieben.
"Zwischen den Flüssen" versammelt sechs lange New Yorker Hafengeschichten, die der amerikanische Starreporter Joseph Mitchell 1944-1959 für das Magazin "The New Yorker" schrieb. Mitchell interviewt den Kapitän der größten Fischereiflotte, folgt den Hafenratten und lüftet das Geheimnis eines leerstehenden Hotels. Rezension von Claudia Fuchs. Aus dem amerikanischen Englisch von Sven Koch und Andrea Stumpf Diaphanes Verlag, 265 Seiten, 16 Euro ISBN 978-3-037-34183-4
From 25 years of Criminal & Personal Injury Attorney to High-Performance Business Coach, In this episode Joseph Mitchell Esq. AKA “Coach Joe” shares his recipe on: How you can “Activate Your Greatness” The 3 fundamentals for loving your life Why he started to work for himself and crafted a way to do so Why he became a Monk for 5 Years The importance of following your heart How to survive “hiccups” in your life and more! This episode gets deep and should not be missed! Class is in session!
Dr. David Stebenne teaches at Ohio State University in the history department and their law school. David has authored two academic books, Arthur J. Goldberg: New Deal Liberal and Modern Republican: Arthur Larson and the Eisenhower Years. He and Joseph Mitchell co-authored New City Upon A Hill: A History of Columbia, Maryland. Today, we'll be looking at his most recent book, which is aimed a general audience, Promised Land: How the Rise of the Middle Class Transformed America, 1929-1968.
Howard A. Rodman is a screenwriter, author and educator. His novels include The Great Eastern and Destiny Express. As a screenwriter, Rodman wrote Savage Grace, with Julianne Moore and Eddie Redmayne, nominated for Best Screenplay at the 2009 Spirit Awards, and AUGUST, starring Josh Hartnett and David Bowie. He also wrote Joe Gould's Secret, the opening night film of the Sundance Film Festival, based on the memoir by iconic New Yorker writer Joseph Mitchell. He is the past president of the Writers Guild of America West; professor of screenwriting at USC's School of Cinematic Arts; a member of the National Film Preservation Board; and an artistic director of the Sundance Screenwriting Labs. howardrodman.com/ www.creativeprocess.info
Howard A. Rodman is a screenwriter, author and educator. His novels include The Great Eastern and Destiny Express. As a screenwriter, Rodman wrote Savage Grace, with Julianne Moore and Eddie Redmayne, nominated for Best Screenplay at the 2009 Spirit Awards, and AUGUST, starring Josh Hartnett and David Bowie. He also wrote Joe Gould's Secret, the opening night film of the Sundance Film Festival, based on the memoir by iconic New Yorker writer Joseph Mitchell. He is the past president of the Writers Guild of America West; professor of screenwriting at USC's School of Cinematic Arts; a member of the National Film Preservation Board; and an artistic director of the Sundance Screenwriting Labs. howardrodman.com/ www.creativeprocess.info
Howard A. Rodman is a screenwriter, author and educator. His novels include The Great Eastern and Destiny Express. As a screenwriter, Rodman wrote Savage Grace, with Julianne Moore and Eddie Redmayne, nominated for Best Screenplay at the 2009 Spirit Awards, and AUGUST, starring Josh Hartnett and David Bowie. He also wrote Joe Gould's Secret, the opening night film of the Sundance Film Festival, based on the memoir by iconic New Yorker writer Joseph Mitchell. He is the past president of the Writers Guild of America West; professor of screenwriting at USC's School of Cinematic Arts; a member of the National Film Preservation Board; and an artistic director of the Sundance Screenwriting Labs. howardrodman.com/ www.creativeprocess.info
Howard A. Rodman is a screenwriter, author and educator. His novels include The Great Eastern and Destiny Express. As a screenwriter, Rodman wrote Savage Grace, with Julianne Moore and Eddie Redmayne, nominated for Best Screenplay at the 2009 Spirit Awards, and AUGUST, starring Josh Hartnett and David Bowie. He also wrote Joe Gould's Secret, the opening night film of the Sundance Film Festival, based on the memoir by iconic New Yorker writer Joseph Mitchell. He is the past president of the Writers Guild of America West; professor of screenwriting at USC's School of Cinematic Arts; a member of the National Film Preservation Board; and an artistic director of the Sundance Screenwriting Labs. howardrodman.com/ www.creativeprocess.info
Howard A. Rodman is a screenwriter, author and educator. His novels include The Great Eastern and Destiny Express. As a screenwriter, Rodman wrote Savage Grace, with Julianne Moore and Eddie Redmayne, nominated for Best Screenplay at the 2009 Spirit Awards, and AUGUST, starring Josh Hartnett and David Bowie. He also wrote Joe Gould's Secret, the opening night film of the Sundance Film Festival, based on the memoir by iconic New Yorker writer Joseph Mitchell. He is the past president of the Writers Guild of America West; professor of screenwriting at USC's School of Cinematic Arts; a member of the National Film Preservation Board; and an artistic director of the Sundance Screenwriting Labs. howardrodman.com/ www.creativeprocess.info
Musician and voracious reader Matt Sweeney talks with Apology editor Jesse Pearson about everything from Comanches to his medievalist father to Joseph Mitchell.
Dani brings us a few stories of homicidal sleepwalking, some including Albert Tirrel, Joseph Mitchell, and the more infamous Kenneth Parks, while Whitney leaves us asking ourselves if the bizarre death of Olivia Mabel is really fact or fiction. Story Links:4 Grisly Killers Who Successfully Used Sleepwalking As A Criminal Defense:https://bit.ly/2kBzcL27 Criminal Cases That Invoked the 'Sleepwalking Defense':https://bit.ly/2m7r9G6Olivia Mabel Info:https://oliviamabel.com Don't forget to subscribe and join us each Sunday! If you’re interested in sharing your creepy stories, email us at creepycaffeine@gmail.com For more about us and links to all our social media, visit our podcast page at www.creepycaffeine.podbean.com To reach us by snail mail: Creepy Caffeine PO Box 12665 Oklahoma City, OK 73157
The Adelaide Festival Centre has released a sneak peek of its 2019 OzAsia Festival program, including immersive and physical theatre, world-leading contemporary dance and internationally acclaimed music stars. Artistic director Joseph Mitchell spoke to Zoe and Tom on Breakfast.Support the show.
Showtime's 16 Shots looks at the murder of Laquan McDonald in 2014, and why this police-involved shooting galvanized Chicago. Kevin and I talk about the excellent access filmmaker Richard Rowley gets on both sides of the issue; give suggestions for police procedural manuals; and wonder when the "a few bad apples" line of rationalizing will stop getting trotted out. Another police-involved shooting, of a police officer, and the injustices that rolled downhill from it are the topic of Errol Morris's legendary The Thin Blue Line. Does it hold up, more than three decades after its release? Or does it mostly feel relevant because of the dozens of instances of misconduct and false confessions we've seen (and heard) laid bare in the meantime? The police, the public('s) trust, and the power of testimony in The Blotter Presents, Episode 102. Get even more true-crime content reviewed: support the pod/site on Patreon, and sign up for the newsletter, Best Evidence! SHOW NOTES 16 Shots: https://www.sho.com/titles/3466069/16-shots Vic Mensa's “16 Shots”: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KPWXOAYlgOc Bill James's Popular Crime: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0043RSK9Y/ Local 5-0 confiscate discipline records at Summit, NJ schools: https://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/1984/02/22/05340018.h03.html The Thin Blue Line: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oEb_2mj1V8w Jill Lepore on Joe Gould and Joseph Mitchell: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/07/27/joe-goulds-teeth Special Guest: Kevin Smokler.
Hail Paimon! After much teasing, Christin and Chris finally discuss Hereditary, the scariest movie of 2018! Probing questions include 1) What is the plot of Hereditary? 2) What are primary colors? (Chris only) and 3) Gabriel Byrne? Your hosts then award all 2019 Academy Awards to Toni Collette. Finally, Christin terrifies Chris with a true story of sleepwalking gone wrong in the trial against Joseph Mitchell from 2010. It may go without saying, but listeners be warned, this is a disturbing movie and Christin brings up some disturbing true cases that the movie made her think of. Theme song by Gabbie Watts follow Gabbie on Instagram on @gabbierotts Follow us! Twitter: @sometimesdead4 Instagram: @sometimesdeadpodcast email: sometimesdeadpodcast@gmail.com Music: Carnival of Tears 2: Into the Light by Matt Oakly http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Matt_Oakley/Horror_Soundtrack_1/Carnival_of_Tears_2_-_Into_The_Light Parade by Nctrnm http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Nctrnm/Parade_-_Single/NctrnmParade66Em Sources: http://listverse.com/2018/03/31/10-dark-facts-about-the-vampire-cult-killer-rod-ferrell/ http://www.viralnova.com/rod-ferrell/
In this episode, we talk about a case that took place on September 21, 2010. Joseph Mitchell, father of 3 children, attacked his two oldest children and then killed his youngest son, 4 year old Blake. His defense? Joseph claims he was sleepwalking. We delve into this case and give our thoughts on this "sleepwalking" defense. If you would like to support our show, please consider becoming a patreon member at Patreon.com/iadcpodcast or you can visit our website for other options.Website- ItsAboutDamnCrime.com Facebook, Facebook Group, & Instagram- It's About Damn CrimeTwitter & Snapchat- IADCpodcast
Featuring senior wide receiver and new career receiving yards holder, Joseph Mitchell
June 26, 2017 - This week, our time machine visits New York City's oldest bar, McSorley's Old Ale House. Our theme song, "New York Ain't New York Anymore," laments the loss of places where "the sawdust is gone from the floor." Well in this East Village landmark, where the clock has literally stopped, and that means still spreading the sawdust every morning -- and that they refused to admit women until a federal court forced them to in 1970 (or build them their own bathroom until 1986). Founded in 1854 by John McSorley and carried on by his son Bill, this saloon serves only two kinds of ale -- light or dark -- and always by the pair. Our guest this week, author Rafe Bartholomew, grew up in the bar like Old Bill before him. Rafe's father is Geoffrey "Bart" Bartholomew, who has spent half a century behind the taps and had thousands of New York Moments, from serving the New York Rangers ale out of the Stanley Cup in 1994, to bringing U2's Bono down to earth with a curt, "Boner who?" Rafe's book is titled: Two and Two: McSorley’s, My Dad, and Me, and it's as an heir to Joseph Mitchell's famous 1940 piece in the New Yorker: "The Old House at Home." Rafe is also the author of Pacific Rims: Beermen Ballin' in Flip-Flops and the Philippines' Unlikely Love Affair with Basketball, and was one of the original editors of Grantland. Find Rafe at Rafeboogs on Twitter or RafeBartholomew.com, and check out Bart's works of saloon-inspired verse in The McSorley Poems: Voices from New York City's Oldest Pub, as well as Volume 2: Light or Dark, at TheMcSorleyPoems.net.
Rooster Radio - Stories & Insights from Entrepreneurs and Leaders in Business, Health, Tech & More
Asian culture is firmly entrenched in Australia, particularly in business, education and food industries. And yet Asian art is yet to have much of an impact in our country. Joseph Mitchell, Director of OzAsia Festival, Australia's largest Asian culture event, says we lack diversity in this area and suggests that perhaps unknown prejudices see us favour European and American art. Europe and America have been our biggest influences in the last two centuries, but the Asian century is now upon us and understanding and appreciating art from the region could help us unlock the benefits. Joseph says art teaches us cultural lessons and breaks down important barriers that will help us foster the key relationships that will drive Australia's economic growth through Asian countries such as Indonesia, China, India and beyond. OzAsia Festival, on it's tenth anniversary, is big and ambitious. It features a host of world class acts across dance, theatre, film, visual arts and numerous free public events, including a nightly food market. It takes a detailed plan and a large, collaborative team to pull it off. Joseph is acutely aware of the fact that many festivals fail, and interestingly breaks down the risk profile for OzAsia and festivals in general. Personally, Joseph's pathway to art was unusual. He was an Olympic swimmer as a teenager, completed three university degrees and expected to pursue journalism before being struck by art. The OzAsia Festival is on in Adelaide from 17 September to October 2 2016. For more information visit http://www.ozasiafestival.com.au/ Rooster Radio is hosted by Andrew Montesi and James Begley. Connect with Rooster Radio - sign up to our mailing list and join our Facebook community: http://roosterradio.biz http://facebook.com/roosterradioHQ For media, content and marketing services, visit: apiroconsulting.com (Andrew Montesi) For leadership and and high performance services, visit: jamesbegley.com.au (James Begley)
Joseph Mitchell is a Ohio born and bred musician. His current projects include Einermusikgruppe and The Mitchells who currently have a self titled album available. We sit down to discuss the 1995 album The Bands by Radiohead. As always go listen to the record!!
This week's book is actually two New Yorker profiles of a famous bohemian, writer, poet and all-around Greenwich Village eccentric. Mitchell first wrote about Gould in 1942, then wrote a much longer follow-up in the early 60's about his further dealings with Gould and his growing suspicion that the long book Gould had been working on for years didn't, in fact, exist. We debate the ethical dimensions of the writer-subject relationship, and whether Mitchell was fair in his treatment of Gould, who clearly suffered from mental illness. We've also got an installment of South Philly News, about an aggrieved parent in a hipster coffee shop. For more, visit us online at bookfightpod.com
Food Writer C. Simon Davidson's passion for food began young, ordering an extra appetizer at dinner when the rest of the family was ordering dessert. His website, The Charlottesville 29, is a hall of fame of sorts for restaurants in our area. Named after the road slicing through our community, it names the top 29 restaurants in our area - an impossible task given the circumstances, and one Simon is happy to tackle. In this discussion we talk about the challenges and rewards of being a food writer in Charlottesville, and the changes and growing pains the food writing industry is encountering because of the explosion of interest in recent years. An engaging discussion for anyone who loves restaurants! What do famous restaurant reviewers like Tom Sietsema do to ensure chefs don't recognize them? How does Simon's "Five Finds on Friday" column promote community and conversations around food in Charlottesville? How did a lawyer find a passion for food and turn it into a rewarding side career as a food writer? What's the reasoning behind Simon's belief that "...a rising tide lifts all boats?" Is a favorite restaurant in town about to close? And may have closed by the time this airs? Listen now to find out! Food Writing Discussed During the Episode: A Moveable Feast - Ernest Hemingway eats his way through Paris. A food writing classic. Chicken of the Trees by Mike Sula - Award-winning piece about why eating the urban squirrel makes perfect sense. Consider the Food Writer by Josh Ozersky - Was MFK Fischer a hack? Does food writing need to undergo a major shift? You decide. Food for the Thoughtless - one of my favorite food writers, Michael Procopio How Food Journalism Got as Stale as Day-Old Bread - Chef Marc Vetri of Philadelphia's Vetri, Osteria, and numerous other restaurants laments the state of food writing. On Food Writing - A Response to Marc Vetri by C. Simon Davidson - Charlottesville food writer and star of Episode 7 responds, wondering if the state of food writing is as bad as all that. Great read! Plated Stories - Jamie Schler and Ilva Beretta create gorgeous words and photographs that revolve around a single theme. Remembrance of Things Lost - Is recording every minute of our lives on a device affecting the way we remember things? Walter Kirn thinks so. Thought-provoking and timely. The Soul of a Chef - The one that started it all for me. I read this book and thought, "I could do that." Michael Ruhlman presents three stories, about Chef Thomas Keller, Chef Michael Symon, and his own journey through cooking school. A fascinating look behind the scenes. Ruhlman is the most talented food writer working today. The Extraordinary Science of Addictive Junk Food by Michael Moss - Why Cheetos rock. Hard. The Fantastic Mr. Fox by Rachel Khong - The life and times of Chef Jeremy Fox. Published in Lucky Peach, my personal favorite food publication. Up at the Old Hotel - If there's one writer in this world I dream of being, it's Joseph Mitchell. His collection of essays from his 50+ years at The New Yorker is stunning. And his food pieces bring to life a time long past. They never fail to amaze me. Read them. This episode is sponsored by In A Flash Laser.
Alec Wilkinson is a staff writer for The New Yorker. “My hero was Joseph Mitchell, that was how you did reporting. There was nothing conniving about it or cunning — you just simply kept returning and kept returning.” Thanks to TinyLetter for sponsoring this week's episode. Show Notes: Wilkinson on Longform [2:00] "The Protest Singer" (New Yorker • Apr 2006) [6:00] Midnights: A Year With the Welfleet Police (Random House • 1982) [9:00] My Mentor (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt • 2002) [9:00] Across the River and into the Trees (Ernest Hemingway • 1950) [24:00] Moonshine: A Life in Pursuit of White Liquor (Knopf • 1985) [25:00] Big Sugar (Knopf • 1989) [27:00] The Happiest Man in the World (Random House • 2007) [34:00] "New York Is Killing Me" (New Yorker • Aug 2010) [42:00] "Sam and Other Reflections on Being a Father" (Esquire • Jun 2000) [47:00] The Ice Balloon (Knopf • 2012)
"Lincoln blames the Free Blacks for the war," Holzer explains. "[He] says, if it wasn't for your presence here this wouldn't be happening. Go where the ban is not upon you, he tells them. Go to the Caribbean, go to Africa." Watch the Video On Aug. 14 1862, Abraham Lincoln hosted a “Deputation of Free Negroes” at the White House, led by the Rev. Joseph Mitchell, commissioner of emigration for the Interior Department. It was the first time African Americans had been invited to the White House on a policy matter. The five men were there to discuss a scheme that even a contemporary described as a “simply absurd” piece of “charlatanism”: resettling emancipated slaves on a 10,000-acre parcel of land in present-day Panama. Edward M. Thomas, John F. Cook, Cornelius C. Clark, John T. Costin, and Benjamin McCoy—met with Lincoln in August 1862 to debate his proposal for a black colony in Central America Cook, Costin, and Clark were members of the Social Civil and Statistical Association, A black city-based organization. The SCSA had sought to "banish several emigration promoters from Washington" weeks before the delegation met with Lincoln. Many of the SCSA's members were connected with the prestigious Fifteenth Street Presbyterian Church.
Summary of today's show: Our usual Thursday panel of Scot Landry, Susan Abbott, Fr. Roger Landry, and Gregory Tracy looked at the news headlines of the week, including Cardinal Timothy Dolan being asked to give the benediction at the Republican National Convention; Presidential candidate Mitt Romney agreeing to an interview with EWTN's The World Over program; the Archdiocese of Atlanta receiving Gone with the Wind as a bequest; the Carmelite Sisters for the Aged and Infirm showing the alternative to assisted suicide; and Fr. Roger writing on the call to martyrdom as a witness to our culture. Listen to the show: Today's host(s): Scot Landry and Susan Abbott Today's guest(s): Gregory Tracy, managing editor of the Pilot, the newspaper of the Archdiocese of Boston, and Fr. Roger Landry, pastor of St. Bernadette Parish in Fall River Links from today's show: Some of the stories discussed on this show will be available on The Pilot's and The Anchor's websites on Friday morning. Please check those sites for the latest links. Today's topics: Cardinal Dolan at the GOP convention; Mitt Romney on EWTN; Gone with the Wind in Atlanta; Carmelite serving the infirm 1st segment: Scot Landry welcomed the four Thursday regulars back to the show after a long time apart. Scot said that soon we will start making a live video stream of the show available for many shows. Susan said she is preparing for the new catechetical school year. She said August feels like the shortest month of the year sometimes because they're so busy getting ready. Scot welcomed Gregory Tracy and Fr. Roger Landry back to the show. At the top of the news was the invitation by Mitt Romney to Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York to give the benediction at the Republican National Convention. Scot wondered if people will criticize the cardinal as being partisan. Susan said the move by the Republicans is brilliant. Cardinal Dolan is very articulate and will use the time to call down blessings on our country without being partisan. Susan then told the story of being at dinner with Cardinal Dolan during Bishop Richard Malone's installation celebrations in Buffalo, New York. Scot asked Greg why would a Catholic prelate say yes to such an invitation. Greg recalled the discussion about the invitation to the President Barack Obama to participate in New York's Al Smith dinner to benefit Catholic Charities. He said it's interesting that the Cardinal is blasted for inviting Obama and he'll be criticized for praying at the convention. Scot asked Fr. Roger about the involvement of the Catholic Church in the political sphere. Fr. Roger said the first thing to recognize is that Cardinal Dolan said he would be willing to speak at both conventions and that the principle is that we should start something so important with prayer to call upon God's authority and wisdom as we undertake such actions. He added that there are some people who think that the Catholic Church's business is to be in church on Sunday, not to be salt and light for the world. We're trying to lift everything up for the common good. It is a great sign that we begin so much of our public life with prayer because we can't evict God from our society. Cardinal Dolan has been trying to chart the path by which the faith will purify all political reason. This is the same goal of Pope Benedict XVI, who said during his visit to the United Kingdom that the political sphere has nothing to fear from the Church. The Church is trying to articulate the moral principles which aren't just for Christians, but apply to the dignity of every human person as part of natural law. Scot noted that Mitt Romney will be appearing on EWTN tonight in a significant interview. He said it's clearly an attempt to reach out to Catholics from the Romney campaign. Susan said the whole issue of the candidate's religion has come up before, but the issue of Mormonism is new today and should make for an interesting conversation. Scot said these are the sorts of interviews that frame lots of issues going forward. Greg said this looks like evidence that the Romney campaign is reaching for the Catholic vote. Greg said he's not sure that there is a Catholic vote, as if all Catholics vote the same. Traditionally Catholics did vote Democrat, but there seems to be a split between generations where older Catholics still tend to Democrats while younger Catholics often tend to be Republican for pro-life reasons. He thinks President Obama should take the opportunity to make his case to the Catholic voters like Romney is. Fr. Roger said he hopes Arroyo asks Romney about his conversions with regard tho the life issue. Early in Romney's life was pro-life, then was later pro-abortion running for governor, and then came back to a pro-life position. Catholics need to be able to get beyond the typical frame on Romney as a flip-flopper who switches for political expediency. Fr. Roger said he's heard that Romney's switch came when Fr. Tad Pacholczyk explained to him about what's going on in embryonic stem cell research. He'd also love to see what he likes about Paul Ryan in terms of Ryan's understanding of the Catholic faith as well as what Ryan has written with regard to Catholic teaching and public policy. Fr. Roger thinks Ryan's writings on the subject are the best attempt to apply the principles by any public elected official. Fr. Roger also always wants to see if candidates are men of personal faith and personal principle. Scot said he'd ask Romney how things would be different in a Romney administration with regard to religious liberty and how the HHS mandate might be reversed. Susan would ask him about his faith and why it's important to him and about his Mormon missionary commitment. Greg said he would ask him to speak a little about how Catholics can somehow relate to him in his Mormon faith. At the Pilot they've seen a lot of reluctance to support Romney because they're afraid of his Mormonism in the feedback they've received in letters to the editor and elsewhere. Scot said there is a deep connection between “Gone with the Wind” and the Archdiocese of Atlanta, because one of Margaret Mitchell's heirs has willed it to the archdiocese. From the Joseph Mitchell estate, Archbishop Gregory has designated that $7.5 million be given to the Cathedral of Christ the King for its building fund. He also has assigned $1.5 million to Catholic Charities Atlanta for its immediate use and an additional $2 million to create an endowment fund for the social services agency to address its long-term need for sustaining income. The archbishop also has asked the Catholic Foundation of North Georgia to create an endowment fund for each parish, mission and Catholic school of the archdiocese with a $10,000 gift apiece from the Joseph Mitchell estate, totaling more than $1 million. He also has assigned $150,000 to the Deacons' Assistance Fund, $100,000 of which will be a challenge grant that is in place until May 31,2013, to match any charitable contributions made to the fund during that time. The remainder of the Mitchell bequest will be held in reserve and used by the archdiocese for general religious purposes as requested in Joseph Mitchell's will, Deacon Swope said. Plans call for the cathedral parish, which has limited space on its Peachtree Road site, to use part of the bequest to purchase the nearby archbishop's residence on West Wesley and renovate it as a rectory. A new residence is planned for Archbishop Gregory and future archbishops of Atlanta on the property given to the archdiocese by Joseph Mitchell. Scot said he loves to highlight the living legacy that generous people leave to the Church. Susan said she didn't realize many of the details about Gone with the Wind in the story, like the language translations and how the estate had many artifacts from other authors, which they hope to put on public display. Scot said when an estate gives half or more to the Church, it shows the Catholic faith was central to the donor's life. Greg said it also provides a massive cultural icon. He also finds it shows how much the South is changing and growing and becoming so much more Catholic. He also noted that it's an ongoing gift that will benefit the archdiocese with future profits. Scot said he was surprised the Church didn't sell the rights and various art, rather than seek to maintain it. Fr. Roger has been writing recently on the importance of art and beauty to the soul. Fr. Roger said the Church has been preserving cultural treasures from the beginning because they are created through the genius of human beings that God has implanted in them. The second consideration is that if the Church tried to sell it, it would have been impossible for the other half-owner to buy it and could have damaged the cultural legacy they'd been endowed with. Fr. Roger's first thought was about the scandal years ago when Bob Dylan performed before Pope John Paul II and John Paul preached extemperaneously on what it means to be “blowing with the wind” and in similar way the Mitchell family has blown with the Wind of the Holy Spirit. 2nd segment: Scot called attention to a lengthy article in the Pilot this week about the Carmelite Sisters for the Aged and Infirm in Massachusetts who run two homes for the elderly and infirm in Framingham and South Boston. They show that there's a better way than assisted suicide, which is to love. Susan said the dignity of the human person has been their stock in trade since the beginning. They address the fear people have about end of life issues and they have assembled a good staff to meet the needs and fears of the dying. They say that people don't come to them to die but to live, which is such an opposite attitude from the assisted suicide proponents. Scot said the founder of the Carmelite Sisters used to be one of the Little Sisters of the Poor, who focus mainly on the poorest at the end of life, but she wanted to offer the same care to everyone regardless of wealth or class. Scot noted how one of the sisters said with regard to assisted suicide that it not only could disrupt otherwise dignified lives, but also the peace of families that help someone end their own life. There will never be peace in that family again, she said. It will make everyone wonder what will happen to them if they get ill. The mission of the facility is to care our elders and to talk with them in this final stage of life so they don't feel alone. Scot and Fr. Roger said that this is how our whole society should treat every sick person, and it shouldn't be unique to the Carmelite Sisters. Fr. Roger said our culture is starting to look at people as disposable, as an economic burden. Instead we are a brother or sister and we are looked at with love. Mother Mark of the Sisters said “Somebody has to advocate for the elderly.” That should be all of us. Scot said people who contemplate suicide need help, no matter whether they are terminally ill. Susan said many years ago the Church started a program called “In Support of Life” and a priest told a gathering a story about interviews of families of elderly and terminally ill patients who said overwhelmingly that they should have the right to take their own life, but the elderly and terminally ill themselves said overwhelmingly that they shouldn't have that right. Scot said people can go to the Suicide is Always a Tragedy website and click through to stopassistedsuicide.org to donate, to get educated, and to learn how to talk to others about voting No on Question 2. Scot said in other news, EWTN host Johnette Benkovic will be speaking this weekend at the St. Francis Xavier Parish in Acushnet, Mass. Call 508–995–7600. Fr. Roger has also restarted his Putting Into the Deep column in The Anchor newspaper. He has most recently written about the installation Mass homily by Bishop Richard Malone upon his arrival in Buffalo. He said the bishop preached about martyrdom, partly because he recognized that carrying out the New Evangelization today in a culture hostile to our faith, we need to have the grit of the martyrs to do what Christ has asked us to do. He said what our culture needs most today is the courage of the martyrs. The word martyr means witness in Greek and we are called to witness with our words and lives. Fr. Roger said we can't proclaim the Gospel if we have a watered-down cowardly vision of the faith. Too often people are afraid to engage their faith in politics or public affairs. The blood of the martyrs is the seed of the Church. Scot said Fr. Charles Sheehy died at 94 years old on August 10, which was the 68th anniversary of his ordination. He served in 10 different towns in his time as a priest. Meanwhile, Fr. John Farrell, who just received Senior Priest status, served in only two different parishes, as well as teaching in the seminary. They also discussed how Fr. Farrell told his mother at his First Communion that he felt called to the priesthood.
Poet James Fenton; John Morton, creator of the TV comedy Twenty Twelve; Jazz trumpeter Wynton Marsalis; author Nicola Barker; William Fiennes on Joseph Mitchell; crime writer Andrea Camilleri.
With Kirsty Lang. Singers Amy Winehouse and Katy Perry are the focus of two new documentaries. Katy Perry: Part of Me follows the American performer on tour, as her marriage to Russell Brand was ending. Amy Winehouse - the Day She Came to Dingle includes footage of the late singer performing in a small Irish church in 2006. Mark Frith reviews. Singer Sam Lee gave up being a visual artist, a teacher of wilderness survival skills and a burlesque dancer, to learn folk songs. He talks about collecting material from gypsy and traveller communities for his CD, Ground of its Own, and the sounds - including birdsong and drones - that he has added to his interpretations. As Damien Hirst announces plans to erect a 20-metre statue of a pregnant woman in Ilfracombe, and London City Airport unveils what is claimed to be the UK's tallest bronze sculpture, art critic Rachel Campbell-Johnston considers the continuing appeal of large-scale art. Salman Rushdie has described the American writer Joseph Mitchell as a 'buried treasure'. Working on the New Yorker from 1938 until his death in 1996, he specialized in portraits of eccentrics, workers, bohemians and their haunts. As a new edition of Mitchell's writings is published, writer William Fiennes and Janet Groth, receptionist at the New Yorker and a long-standing friend, reflect on why his work deserves a wider audience. Producer Philippa Ritchie.
Embedded below you'll find the archive of this afternoon's broadcast, which has been dedicated to our former school cook and dear friend, Rudy DeCaminada. As most of you know, Rudy passed away this week at the age of 59. A photo of Rudy is included with this post.Thanks to all of our listeners and our music guests, Joseph Mitchell, Leila Milki, and Ben McNaboe, who joined us from Maine via Skype to talk about his internet radio project.We'll be back again next Friday, December 10th at 2:50 pm pacific with another live broadcast from the Gator Radio Experience World Headquarters here in Palo Alto, California, USA.
A Way with Words — language, linguistics, and callers from all over
[This episode first aired November 21, 2010.]This week, 'McGimpers,' 'geetus,' and other underworld lingo from the 1930s. Crime novelist James Ellroy stops by to talk slang terms and reveals his own favorite. Also, is the expression 'Hear, hear!' or 'Here, here!'? Is it 'bran-new' or 'brand-new'? The spooky, creepy story behind the flat hat called a 'tam.' And what does it mean to 'keep your tail over the dashboard'?Grant talks about the lingo of criminals from 1930s. Here are more examples from police reporter Ben Kendall's 1931 Los Angeles Times article, 'Underworld 'Lingo' Brought Up-to-Date': Apple-knocker: A yokel; a blunderer. 'That big apple-knocker slipped on the top step with a five gallon can of alky.'Creeper (creep joint): A bawdy house. 'Them McGimpers around those creepers will take you every time.'Goldfish: Third degree; a police beating. 'They took him up and showed him the goldfish, but he never squawked.'Gow: To catch; to jail. 'Be careful when you drive because they gow you in this town if you have booze on your breath.' (Grant's note: probably a shortened form of hoosegow http://www.wordnik.com/words/hoosegow.)Meat-wagon: Ambulance. 'If any of those mugs get tough in my join they'll take a trip in the meat wagon.'Wing-ding: A fit; berserk. 'The sailor pulled a wing ding after the first drink and they called the meat-wagon.'Ask a Roman! A theater student from Texas is having an argument with a friend about the word 'vomitorium.' He says that in ancient Rome, a vomitorium was a room where revelers went to purge after overindulging at the banquet table. True?How did the term 'bisque' come to mean 'an unglazed piece of ceramic work'? Does it have anything to do with the kind of bisque that might be served in a ceramic bowl?Martha tells the story of the creepy, spooky, surreal, and downright weird Robert Burns poem behind the name for that flat hat called a 'tam.' Read it in translation here http://www.robertburns.org.uk/Assets/Poems_Songs/tamoshanter.htm.Quiz Guy John Chaneski puzzle this week is called 'Three and a Match.' The challenge is to figure out three words from a common category -- say, nationalities -- that go with each of the three clues he mentions. If, for example, three clues are 'coat,' 'court,' and 'ear,' then answers are 'pea,' 'squash,' and 'cauliflower,' and the category is 'vegetables.' Now try this one: 'muffin,' 'cheese,' 'fries.'In L. Frank Baum's 'The Wizard of Oz,' the scarecrow gets what he calls a 'bran-new brain.' A caller wonders: Is the correct term bran-new or brand-new? A former naval flight officer wonders how the term 'cockpit' ever came to mean the part of the aircraft where pilots sit.You're at a wedding and all the guests raise their glasses in unison and say 'Here, here!' Or is it 'Hear, hear'?Grant answers a caller's question about the origin of 'griage,' a word used increasingly in clinics where flu shots are dispensed. Crime novelist James Ellroy, author of The Black Dahlia http://www.amazon.com/Black-Dahlia-James-Ellroy/dp/B000LP66W0/ and most recently, Blood's a Rover http://www.amazon.com/Bloods-Rover-James-Ellroy/dp/0679403930/, tries his hand at a slang quiz. He reveals his favorite slang term, then tries to guess the meaning of the slang words buzzer, sheetwriter, and geetus, and the phrase working the paper.An Indianapolis woman vaguely remembers that there was a term for the Mohawk Indians who worked on the high beams and girders of some of this country's most famous construction projects. The word she wants: 'skywalkers.' This is the documentary http://www.nfb.ca/film/high_steel/ Grant mentions about these construction workers, http://www.npr.org/programs/lnfsound/stories/020701.steel.html this is the 'Lost and Found Sound' piece, and this is the New Yorker article by Joseph Mitchell http://books.google.com/books?id=fne1LZ4iZxwC&pg=RA1-PA167&dq=%22mohawks+in+high+steel%22&lr=&num=100&as_brr=3&ei=uhgIS4ycDozSkwTLqeTdCQ#v=onepage&q=%22mohawks%20in%20high%20steel%22&f=false, collected into the book 'Up in the Old Hotel.' What does it mean to have your 'tail over the dashboard'?A caller wonders if the Spanish and Arabic articles 'el' and 'al' spring from the same linguistic root.--A Way with Words is funded by its listeners: http://waywordradio.org/donateGet your language question answered on the air! Call or write with your questions at any time:Email: words@waywordradio.orgPhone: United States and Canada toll-free (877) WAY-WORD/(877) 929-9673London +44 20 7193 2113Mexico City +52 55 8421 9771Donate: http://waywordradio.org/donateSite: http://waywordradio.org/Podcast: http://waywordradio.org/podcast/Forums: http://waywordradio.org/discussion/Newsletter: http://waywordradio.org/newsletter/Twitter: http://twitter.com/wayword/Skype: skype://waywordradio Copyright 2010, Wayword LLC.