American psychologist and columnist
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SYNOPSIS:Maddie and David have been together for a month, and she is wondering where their relationship is going. David tries to resolve the situation by taking her out on a proper date. They get a late start on the evening and end up at a laundromat, where they discuss their relationship, dance to the Muzak, and express their love for each other, but she still doesn't know what she wants. Maddie leaves David in the laundromat saying she needs to be alone and think. She goes home, and the next thing you know, she's on a plane, flying off into the sunset.There are three fantasy sequences in this episode. Maddie receives relationship advice from Dr. Joyce Brothers. David gets relationship advice from none other than Ray Charles while he sings and plays the piano in David's living room. And the third is an homage to The Honeymooners filmed in black and white, in which Cybill, Bruce, Allyce, and Charles Rocket play the leads from the classic Jackie Gleason 1950's series.GUEST STARS:Charles RocketDr. Joyce BrothersRay Charles & The RaelettesHarold J. SurrattStephanie ShroyerMOONLIGHTING THE TV SHOWThe show is all about the hit TV Show Moonlighting which aired from 1985 to 1989 starring Bruce Willis and Cybill Shepherd.Grace Chivell and Shawna Saari take a look at each episode in chronological order from the Pilot to the end of the fifth and final season.They discuss the direction, the production, the outfits, the lighting, the car chases, and the tumultuous relationship between Maddie Hayes and David Addison.FOR MORE INFORMATION:https://moonlightingthepodcast.comMOONLIGHTING COMMUNITY:Join Our Facebook Group:Follow Our Facebook Page:Join Our Instagram Community:Follow us on Twitter/XPURCHASE:Moonlighting: An Episode Guide Bookon TuckerDS PressOR on Amazon:Moonlighting MerchandiseMoonlighting The Podcast YouTube Channel Learn more about Grace here:Learn more about Shawna here:Donate at Ko-fi.comPersonal Instagram:https://instagram.com/grace_chivellhttps://instagram.com/saari_not.saari Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In today's episode we look at mirroring, also called mimicry. This behavior often start in our infancy and can become an unconscious aspect of our behavior. But, too often in recovery a pattern of conscious imitation becomes a tool of manipulation used to maintain control of people, conversations and situations. American psychologist Joyce Brothers once said "Listening, not imitation, may be the sincerest form of flattery."
SYNOPSIS:Maddie and David have been together for a month, and she is wondering where their relationship is going. David tries to resolve the situation by taking her out on a proper date. They get a late start on the evening and end up at a laundromat, where they discuss their relationship, dance to the Muzak, and express their love for each other, but she still doesn't know what she wants. Maddie leaves David in the laundromat saying she needs to be alone and think. She goes home, and the next thing you know, she's on a plane, flying off into the sunset.There are three fantasy sequences in this episode. Maddie receives relationship advice from Dr. Joyce Brothers. David gets relationship advice from none other than Ray Charles while he sings and plays the piano in David's living room. And the third is an homage to The Honeymooners filmed in black and white, in which Cybill, Bruce, Allyce, and Charles Rocket play the leads from the classic Jackie Gleason 1950's series.GUEST STARS:Charles RocketDr. Joyce BrothersRay Charles & The RaelettesHarold J. SurrattStephanie ShroyerMOONLIGHTING THE TV SHOWThe show is all about the hit TV Show Moonlighting which aired from 1985 to 1989 starring Bruce Willis and Cybill Shepherd.Grace Chivell and Shawna Saari take a look at each episode in chronological order from the Pilot to the end of the fifth and final season.They discuss the direction, the production, the outfits, the lighting, the car chases, and the tumultuous relationship between Maddie Hayes and David Addison.FOR MORE INFORMATION:https://moonlightingthepodcast.comMOONLIGHTING COMMUNITY:Join Our Facebook Group:Follow Our Facebook Page:Join Our Instagram Community:Follow us on Twitter/XPURCHASE:Moonlighting: An Episode Guide Bookon TuckerDS PressOR on Amazon:Moonlighting MerchandiseMoonlighting The Podcast YouTube Channel Learn more about Grace here:Learn more about Shawna here:Donate at Ko-fi.comPersonal Instagram:https://instagram.com/grace_chivellhttps://instagram.com/saari_not.saari Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Is Hilary Woodward trying to stop Hilary Woodward from enjoying Police Squad!? This episode would be a great way to find out.
SYNOPSIS:Maddie and David have been together for a month, and she is wondering where their relationship is going. David tries to resolve the situation by taking her out on a proper date. They get a late start on the evening and end up at a laundromat, where they discuss their relationship, dance to the Muzak, and express their love for each other, but she still doesn't know what she wants. Maddie leaves David in the laundromat saying she needs to be alone and think. She goes home, and the next thing you know, she's on a plane, flying off into the sunset.There are three fantasy sequences in this episode. Maddie receives relationship advice from Dr. Joyce Brothers. David gets relationship advice from none other than Ray Charles while he sings and plays the piano in David's living room. And the third is an homage to The Honeymooners filmed in black and white, in which Cybill, Bruce, Allyce, and Charles Rocket play the leads from the classic Jackie Gleason series.GUEST STARS:Charles RocketDr. Joyce BrothersRay Charles & The RaelettesHarold J. SurrattStephanie ShroyerMOONLIGHTING THE TV SHOWThe show is all about the hit TV Show Moonlighting which aired from 1985 to 1989 starring Bruce Willis and Cybill Shepherd.Grace Chivell and Shawna Saari take a look at each episode in chronological order from the Pilot to the end of the fifth and final season.They discuss the direction, the production, the outfits, the lighting, the car chases, and the tumultuous relationship between Maddie Hayes and David Addison.FOR MORE INFORMATION:https://moonlightingthepodcast.comMOONLIGHTING COMMUNITY:Join Our Facebook Group:Follow Our Facebook Page:Join Our Instagram Community:Follow us on Twitter/XPURCHASE:Moonlighting: An Episode Guide Bookon TuckerDS PressOR on Amazon:Moonlighting MerchandiseMoonlighting The Podcast YouTube Channel Learn more about Grace here:Learn more about Shawna here:Donate at Ko-fi.comPersonal Instagram:https://instagram.com/grace_chivellhttps://instagram.com/saari_not.saari Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
For five decades, Dr. Joyce Brothers was America's premier pop psychologist. In this 1988 interview she discusses her book The Successful Woman, and she emphasizes that does not mean “Superwoman.” Get your copy of The Successful Woman by Joyce Brothers As an Amazon Associate, Now I've Heard Everything earns from qualifying purchases.You may also enjoy my interviews with Dolly Parton and Gloria Steinem For more vintage interviews with celebrities, leaders, and influencers, subscribe to Now I've Heard Everything on Spotify, Apple Podcasts. and now on YouTube Photo by Kenneth C. Zirkel #women #success #family #marriage
Rerun: A female contestant had never scooped the jackpot on an American TV quiz show before New York psychologist Dr Joyce Brothers won $64,000 on 6th December, 1955. Her specialist subject was boxing - a topic about which she knew little, until she devoted herself to studying the annals of the sport in preparation for multiple appearances on the show. Despite the best efforts of sponsors Revlon to catch her out, she claimed the top prize on ‘The $64,000 Question' AND its subsequent spin-off, ‘The $64,000 Challenge'. In this episode, Arion, Rebecca and Olly reveal how Brothers combatted sexism on many prior occasions; explain how she swerved ‘the Quiz Show scandals'; and celebrate her ability to leverage her celebrity and academic qualifications to become America's first pop psychologist… Further Reading: • ‘Dr. Joyce Brothers on The $64,000 Question' (CBS, 1955): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WqhxN9a8OCg • ‘Obituary: Popular TV psychologist Dr. Joyce Brothers dies at 85' (Los Angeles Times, 2013): https://www.latimes.com/local/obituaries/la-me-joyce-brothers-20130514-story.html • ‘Joyce Brothers: She overcame sexism to become the first woman to win US quiz show' (Honey, 2021): https://honey.nine.com.au/latest/joyce-brothers-first-woman-to-win-us-quiz-show-64000-question-women-in-history/dd9f0dd2-0815-47e5-b84b-8f13edeb688f ‘Why am I hearing a rerun?' Each Thursday and Friday we repeat stories from our archive of 800+ episodes, so we can maintain the quality of our independent podcast and bring you fresh, free content every Monday-Wednesday… … But
Welcome to the Instant Trivia podcast episode 1156, where we ask the best trivia on the Internet. Round 1. Category: That Old Time Television 1: This 1950s Nelson family sitcom ran for 14 years. Ozzie and Harriet. 2: 2 of the 3 full-time "Tonight Show" hosts before Jay Leno. (2 of 3) Steve Allen, Jack Paar and Johnny Carson. 3: This actress' TV character Alexis Carrington was once described as "starts with B, rhymes with rich". Joan Collins. 4: With boxing as her category, Dr. Joyce Brothers won the top prize on this TV quiz show. The $64,000 Question. 5: Jeepers, Dr. Smith! On TV's "Lost in Space", this actor played the youngest Robinson. Billy Mumy. Round 2. Category: Soccer 1: At the beginning of a game, the choice of goal and kickoff is decided by this. a toss of a coin. 2: =. =. 3: Like a castle, a soccer field in Rio is surrounded by this to keep out overzealous fans. a moat. 4: First held in Uruguay in 1930, it's the largest single-sport tournament in the world. the World Cup. 5: International competition for this trophy began in 1930. World Cup. Round 3. Category: African-American Biography 1: "The Road to Freedom" is the subtitle of Catherine Clinton's bio of this 19th century woman. Harriet Tubman. 2: Jonathan Eig's bio of this champ who passed away in 2016 is one of the "Greatest" sports biographies. Ali. 3: "The New Negro" is "The Life of Alain Locke", the first African American to earn this honor that sent him to Oxford. a Rhodes Scholarship. 4: "Talking at the Gates" is "A Life of" this "If Beale Street Could Talk" novelist. James Baldwin. 5: Published in 2007, "Supreme Discomfort" is a portrait of this jurist. Clarence Thomas. Round 4. Category: Country Groups 1: The "Lady" in this group that won 5 2010 ACM Awards is Hillary Scott, daughter of country singer Linda Davis. Lady Antebellum. 2: Randy Owen fronted this "stately" group whose hits include "Christmas in Dixie" and "Born Country". Alabama. 3: This organization was formed in April 1949 to counter the Soviet Union. NATO. 4: This country group stays in motion with hits like "I'm Movin' On" and "Life Is A Highway". Rascal Flatts. 5: In 1981 they burned up the pop and country charts singing, "My heart's on fire, Elvira". The Oak Ridge Boys. Round 5. Category: Where It'S At. With At in quotation marks 1: Goldthwait's moniker. Bobcat. 2: It's his political party. Democrat. 3: Omar Khayyam's handiwork. "The Rubaiyat". 4: This neck scarf is named for its resemblance to one worn by Croatian soldiers. Cravat. 5: The Captain and Tennille sang of this kind of beastly love. "Muskrat Love". Thanks for listening! Come back tomorrow for more exciting trivia!Special thanks to https://blog.feedspot.com/trivia_podcasts/ AI Voices used
The 20th Century presented the perfect moment for the rise is Trivia, and the games that go with it. Maybe that window is beginning to close. In today's episode we explore the Han Dynasty, WW2, Merv Griffin, Charles Van Doren, NBC, College Bowl, Trivial Pursuit, Jeopardy, Alex Trebek, Radio Quiz Bowls, Information Please, the $64K Question, Columbia University and Dr. Joyce Brothers.
--Charch is joined by Cy Amundson to talk Vikings and comedy, and Charch tells the story of Dr Joyce Brothers.
Psychologist and T V personality --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/rocky-seale7/message
Things are just getting wilder and wilder. And we're not just referring to the actor who played Reed Carter / Adam Louder! Amanda is standing vigil at Jack's bedside, reasonably confusing the nurse into believing that Amanda is praying for a speedy recovery. Instead, Amanda whispers death threats in his ear, considers pulling the plug, and beats Jack until he dies, leaving Sydney in the doorway to make it clear that she's here to enter the main event plot and blackmail Amanda, while wearing a stunning hat. The in-law relationships continue to be messed up. Jake sleeps with Shelly while Jo walks in at the same time Alison continues to sleep with Billy's father-in-law. They've moved in, as you'll remember, and Alison sneaks into a shrine room to Haley's ex-wife. It makes no sense, so let's just move on. But not before we relish the line delivery of Kristen Davis to Alison: "I'd like a progress report on my father's account." "How do you like living in my house?" Kimberly is now FULLY sane. Nothing to worry about there. Nothing to see here. She just numbs her hand with a bucket of ice, takes a shot of whiskey, and CRUSHES HER HAND IN A WAFFLE IRON to get her bracelet off. When she later is asked by none other than DOCTOR JOYCE BROTHERS, she explains she had an ironing accident. Also, this crushed hand is being treated only by an ace bandage. Okay. Matt is back to his social causes t-shirt, this time celebrating the Tanqueray AIDS ride. He's back in medical school, which remains a terrible plot hole, but didn't pass his test. Except Dr. Michael Mancini returns the falsified records favor and changes Matt's failing 498 into a passing 502. There's some shenanigans happening with Richard. He is taking Jane and Jo to Hawaii, then ships Jane off to New York, and tells Jo that he wouldn't mind a little romance. Bad boss. Jo tells him off, and goes to reunite with Jake, who doesn't stop from sleeping with his dead brother's wife just because his girlfriend walks in. And that, my friends, is Melrose Place. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/melroseplacecast/message
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit smokeempodcast.substack.comNancy is transmitting from the Mojave Desert, Sarah is staring at the same old closet wall, and they're glad to be reunited to talk about the other pizzagate, this one between the Washington Post and Dave Portnoy, certified douche-bro of Barstool Sports who nonetheless came out the winner in this week's viral standoff. Other topics discussed:* The way the desert smalls you* The cringe factor of Portnoy's phone call* The response piece the Washington Post SHOULD have written* Did Sarah dump a drink on Nora Ephron's head?* Is it better to get married, and other unanswerable questions* What Dr. Joyce Brothers told Nancy* Single mothers, single women: the discomfort of being someone's poster child* Gamify biology? How's that working out?* Holy smokes, the cost of egg freezing* Sonic bad-assery
Set sail on Episode 43, Season 2 of the Love Boat, the worlds greatest romantic comedy drama television series of all time! In this episode we follow an all star cast that includes Richard Anderson, Dr Joyce Brothers, Hans Conried, Carol Lynley, Diana Mildaur, Ben Murphy and Donna Pescow as they deal with mean mentors, problematic propositions, philandering fiances, awful addictions, difficult decisions, beautiful best friends and Deazapan! So slip on a black glove over your plastic hand and set sail on this addicting episode. We also encourage everyone to find our Instagram page Lovin' The Love Boat to enjoy the super cool video messages from Isaac himself Mr. Ted Lange! And much more. Thanks for listening to the podcast and joining us on this voyage and by all means consider subscribing to the show as well as Paramount+ so you can watch the episode with us. We promise you'll be glad that you did. * Attention passengers! If you'd like to see the show continue please consider contributing to our GoFundMe so we can stay afloat and allow us to make good on our promise to have exciting new guests join us on future episodes. It means a lot and will also allow us to keep the show commercial free. Visit our page HERE and give whatever you can. Give any amount and help put us over the top.
Kimberly is the main character this week, and we couldn't be happier. She manages to be the central argument for all three of Mary's points this week. She confronts fake Henry, fights with Michael on Dr. Joyce Brothers' radio show, and gets called a poor, deluded psycho by Sydney. Meanwhile, Richard tells Jo he is Ricardo, Designer of Clothes, Ravager of Women. Some ethnic stereotypes coming in a bit too strong there, but we see what's happening. Jo and Richard are working closer together just as Jane pushed herself away and Jake feels that Jo is too busy for him. Okay, we get it Melrose Place, let's hurry up and get there. Alison is now IN LOVE with Haley Armstrong, and tells Brooke, "I'm moving in with your father." So, that was fast. Amanda deals with Jack Parezi the same way Linda dealt with Chris on Models, Inc. - she tumbles him down the stairs. This time though, Jack goes over the railing, through the chandelier, and then woopsy doopsy, off to the ground. Peter covers for Amanda, and even Michael won't scheme his way into this. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/melroseplacecast/message
Welcome to the Instant Trivia podcast episode 835, where we ask the best trivia on the Internet. Round 1. Category: sporting words 1: In golf, it denotes a tournament which can be entered by both amateur and professional players. open. 2: For a football team, it's being sent back 5 yards, for a hockey player, being put in a box. penalty. 3: A 40-40 tie in tennis. deuce. 4: Unless he's up 1st in an inning a baseball player is usually here just before he's "at bat". on deck. 5: Goalposts and bedposts are different nicknames for this in bowling. 7-10 split. Round 2. Category: advice from dr. joyce brothers 1: (Dr. Joyce Brothers reads the clue.) Your daughter who's exhibiting this type of kleptomania at Wal-Mart may be trying to get attention. shoplifting. 2: (Dr. Joyce Brothers reads the clue.) Many have overcome their fear of this; you can always start with the cliche, "unaccustomed as I am" to it. speaking in public. 3: (Dr. Joyce Brothers reads the clue.) Make sure your kids know that this euphoria-inducing drug, also called MDMA, can do serious damage. ecstasy. 4: (Dr. Joyce Brothers reads the clue.) Don't fear non-traditional gender roles, like a man keeping house as in this Michael Keaton film. Mr. Mom. 5: (Dr. Joyce Brothers reads the clue.) There's no need to be ashamed of this common mental illness, even if it's alternating with mania. depression. Round 3. Category: let's fool around! 1: "Fool to Cry" was a Top 10 hit for this group in '76, which must have given them "Satisfaction". The Rolling Stones. 2: This swivel-hipped legend released "A Fool Such as I" in 1959 and just plain "Fool" in '73. Elvis Presley. 3: "Foolish Pride" gave him a Top 40 hit in 1986, without any help from John Oates. Daryl Hall. 4: In 1991 this sexy Welshman sang "Fool For Rock 'N' Roll" on his "Carrying a Torch" album. Tom Jones. 5: "A Fool in Love" was the first big hit for this couple known for their stormy marriage and their "Revue". Ike and Tina Turner. Round 4. Category: tv catchphrases 1: "Yabba Dabba Do!". The Flintstones. 2: "This tape will self-destruct in five seconds". Mission: Impossible. 3: "You bet your sweet bippy!". Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In. 4: "This is the big one, Elizabeth! I'm coming to join you, honey!". Sanford and Son. 5: "Say Kids, what time is it?". Howdy Doody. Round 5. Category: "ck" 1: The "culture" type is emotional disruption caused by living in a society not one's own. Shock. 2: Edmund Bergler, credited with inventing the term "writer's" this, must not have felt it -- he wrote several books. Block. 3: A metal measuring rod that's poked into a car's crankcase. Dipstick. 4: They're barrel's 2 partners in an expression meaning "the whole thing". Lock and stock. 5: Athletic position in which the thighs are against the chest and the arms wrap around the shins. Tuck. Thanks for listening! Come back tomorrow for more exciting trivia! Special thanks to https://blog.feedspot.com/trivia_podcasts/
On tonight's edition of The Other Side of Midnight: Frank begins the week by discussing his theory on the Chinese balloon that was shot down in the U.S. After, he talks about Joyce Brothers and the game show The $64,000 Question. Then, Frank does his Commendation. Later, Frank discusses gestational whole body donation, and much more. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Mike, Chris, and Mark tackle episode four, "Revenge and Remorse," aka, "The Guilty Alibi." William Shatner doesn't make it past the credits, and Dr. Joyce Brothers hits Johnny up for advice on the Cinderell Complex. This episode is rife with literalisms, visual gags, and weird touches, and may be the last really strong episode of the series.This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/5652799/advertisement
National Polygamy Advocate ™ Mark Henkel was interviewed by Elizabeth Ranz for UCSD, on May 28, 2009, Part 12, for an essay she was writing, "Polygamy in Contradistinction to Gay Marriage." The student writer from University of California San Diego was seeking to learn how and why polygamy was not having the same level of political popularity as same sex marriage. In this Part 12 segment, Mark Henkel returned to make sure that one crucially important point was understood about UCAP, Unrelated Consenting Adult Polygamy. Marki Henkel explained that any man who wants to be a polygamist can only successfully do so as a caring, nurturing husband. After making the writer chuckle with the good logic of his argument, Mark Henkel concluded, "Dr. Joyce Brothers said in '94 [Dec. 22, 1994], ‘I would rather be the third wife of a good man than the only wife of a jerk.'" The writer positively affirmed, “No, that's just good sense right there.” The remaining parts of this interview will be aired in the next coming episodes of this podcast. http://www.NationalPolygamyAdvocate.com --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/nationalpolygamyadvocate/support
Fred discusses Psychologist and and TV personality Joyce Brothers, who first achieved notice by winning the game show "The $64,000 Question" on this day in 1957. www.rockysealemusic.com https://rockysealemusic.com/wow-i-didn-t-know-that-or-maybe-i-just-forgot https://www.facebook.com/150wordspodcast --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/rocky-seale7/message
An exercise in ingratitude. An apple cider explosion makes Marci examine her marriage. Dr. Joyce Brothers gave the best first-world problem solutions. A squirrel for a spouse. The people who are SUPPOSED to be hoarding, are letting us down. Turi's grandmother's cures for vermin. Our listener has a question.
We discuss the negative review we got from a male listener, and share why he wasn't entirely wrong, but we're still mad. Sarah is literally falling apart after her slip-n-slide disaster, and she might have to avoid the powder this winter. We learn why narcissists are prone to conspiracy theories, and it's all sounding very familiar (because there's more than a few fellas on the Challenge who fit the bill). We hear why owning a cat is good for your health and for some reason we want to know if lesbians (and Brainiacs in general) prefer dogs or cats. Sarah had a poop disaster at her house. And we learn why famed psychologist, Joyce Brothers, is a badass bitch. Join our book club, shop our merch, sign-up for our free newsletter, & more by visiting The Brain Candy Podcast website: Connect with us on social media: BCP Instagram: Susie's Instagram: Sarah's Instagram: BCP Twitter: Susie's Twitter: Sarah's Twitter: Get 20% off an at-home lab test at Get 50% off your first month plus FREE shipping on ANY crate line with code: BRAINCANDY at Get 15% off your first order at More podcasts at WAVE:
Mailing children, sinister quiz shows, and a wrathful makeup company are just a few of the things we're covering in this week's episode! First, Kelley covers Mary Tape who emigrated to the United States alone at 11-years-old to realize the American dream. But when the local school board felt she and her family weren't American enough for that dream, she went to war. Then, Emily covers Dr. Joyce Brothers, a nerd who appeared on The $64,000 Question to help her family, but when she wasn't feminine enough, the show tried to take her down. Pin the postage to your shirt and be wary of your local mail carrier, because it's time to wine about herstory!Support the show
Mr. Sheffield has a mid-life crises after his latest play is a flop. Show Notes: Watch Dr. Joyce Brothers on the 64,000 Question here (skip to 12:11): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WqhxN9a8OCg Find Oh Mr Sheffield on social media: Twitter - OhMrSheffPod Instagram - OhMrSheffPod Podcast Art by: jaymiescoutgallery --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thenannypod/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thenannypod/support
Welcome to the Instant Trivia podcast episode 539, where we ask the best trivia on the Internet. Round 1. Category: Actor-Directors 1: He directed himself, dad Lloyd and brother Jeff in the TV movie "The Thanksgiving Promise". Beau Bridges. 2: He cast Debbie Reynolds as his "mother" in a 1996 film. Albert Brooks. 3: "The Great Dictator" (1940). Charlie Chaplin. 4: "The Great Dictator" (1940). Charlie Chaplin. 5: As a divorce attorney, director Danny DeVito narrated this 1989 comedy. The War of the Roses. Round 2. Category: We Love Broadway 1: (Before the clue is given, Kate Reinders from the Broadway play Wicked helps with the clue.)"Popular /You're gonna be pop-u-lar /I'll teach you the proper ploys /When you talk to boys /Little ways to flirt and flounce--woww! /I'll show you what shoes to wear /How to fix your hair /Everything that really counts to be /Popular /I'll help you be pop-u-lar /You'll hang with the right cohorts /You'll be good at sports /Know the slang you gotta know /So let's start /'Cause you've got an awfully long way to go""Wicked" is based on a modern novel inspired by this classic L. Frank Baum book that took us "over the rainbow". The Wizard of Oz. 2: Alfre Woodard winged onto B'way in "Drowning Crow", an African-American version of this Chekhov classic. The Seagull. 3: Well, chim chim cher-ee! This musical about a flying nanny is flying onto Broadway. Mary Poppins. 4: In 2003 he was "dirty dancing" in "Chicago" on Broadway before embarking on the show's national tour. Patrick Swayze. 5: Hey, hey! This member of the Monkees took over the role of Zoser in "Aida" in 2004. Micky Dolenz. Round 3. Category: G Is For Grafton 1: Not guilty,"I is for...". Innocent. 2: It's murder,"H is for...". Homicide. 3: The deceased, "C is for...". Corpse. 4: It can be direct or circumstantial,"E is for...". Evidence. 5: One on the run,"F is for...". Fugitive. Round 4. Category: Advice From Dr. Joyce Brothers 1: (Dr. Joyce Brothers reads the clue.) Your daughter who's exhibiting this type of kleptomania at Wal-Mart may be trying to get attention. shoplifting. 2: (Dr. Joyce Brothers reads the clue.) Many have overcome their fear of this; you can always start with the cliche, "unaccustomed as I am" to it. speaking in public. 3: (Dr. Joyce Brothers reads the clue.) Make sure your kids know that this euphoria-inducing drug, also called MDMA, can do serious damage. ecstasy. 4: (Dr. Joyce Brothers reads the clue.) Don't fear non-traditional gender roles, like a man keeping house as in this Michael Keaton film. Mr. Mom. 5: (Dr. Joyce Brothers reads the clue.) There's no need to be ashamed of this common mental illness, even if it's alternating with mania. depression. Round 5. Category: Tape 1: For protection, these athletes tape both hands under their 6- to 12-ounce gloves. Boxers. 2: This type of tape is applied to bicycles and to children's clothing as a safety device. Reflective tape. 3: A popular calendar is titled "365 Days of" this often gray cloth tape. Duct tape. 4: As its name indicates, it's used especially to cover surfaces during painting. Masking tape. 5: Used to insulate electrical wires, it's named for the force that resists sliding objects. Friction tape. Thanks for listening! Come back tomorrow for more exciting trivia!
Producer-Director, Jose Escamilla has been editing film and video for over 20 years. Video productions in release nationwide include; L.A. Gang Violence - a documentary about LA Gangs and Donny - The Educational Dinosaur, a cartoon series starring; RUTH BUZZI, RICHARD MOLL, SWOOSIE KURTZ, BRENDA VACCARO, KATHY IRELAND, ED BEGLEY, JR., DR. JOYCE BROTHERS, TOM BOSLEY, CARLOS PALOMINO, and NEL CARTER. In 1985 he put together a world event entitled: ONE MINUTE OF PEACE, where he asked everyone in the world to stop what they were doing all together for "one minute" in honor of Samantha Smith and the children of the world. He performed the title song at The Hollywood Bowl and via satellite world wide and the One Minute of Peace project was underway. He produced, arranged and performed all the background music for TITO GUIZAR in 1990, as he helped Tito make a comeback with his music in an album and home video which Jose produced. Tito has starred in Mari Mar, the latest hot "novella" now airing in Mexico and the US and is now starring in his third soap opera in Mexico at age 88! Tito Guizar, best known as the Mexican Troubadour, making famous such songs as, Alla En El Rancho Grande, Cielito Lindo, Maria Elena, Guadalajara, Jalisco, South of The Border, What a Difference a Day Makes , and many more songs that are standards today all over the world. Jose's work with Tito is an experience that he will never forget. "Tito is the last living legend from Mexico and the Golden Era of Hollywood." Aside from Jose's work with many artists and celebrities, Jose's UFO experiences that occurred at Midway, New Mexico on March 5,1994, have put him on a variety of lectures and television and radio programs talking about the subject. He has appeared on television shows such as The Learning Channel, Geraldo Rivera, Hard Copy, Sightings, Encounters, The Other Side, Inside Edition, the BBC in London, Spanish Language programs, (Sabado Gigante-"EL Y ELLA"), and on many Network News broadcasts, ABC, NBC, CBS NEWS. He has appeared in many UFO related magazines, America On-line, The Internet, CompuServe, Newspapers and radio talk shows. He has lectured at many conventions on the subject including, New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, Colorado, and Mexico City. His first hand experiences with the phenomena and background in the Entertainment Industry, lend a unique quality in presenting UFOs to the public. - www.skyfishrods.com
Producer-Director, Jose Escamilla has been editing film and video for over 20 years. Video productions in release nationwide include; L.A. Gang Violence - a documentary about LA Gangs and Donny - The Educational Dinosaur, a cartoon series starring; RUTH BUZZI, RICHARD MOLL, SWOOSIE KURTZ, BRENDA VACCARO, KATHY IRELAND, ED BEGLEY, JR., DR. JOYCE BROTHERS, TOM BOSLEY, CARLOS PALOMINO, and NEL CARTER. In 1985 he put together a world event entitled: ONE MINUTE OF PEACE, where he asked everyone in the world to stop what they were doing all together for "one minute" in honor of Samantha Smith and the children of the world. He performed the title song at The Hollywood Bowl and via satellite world wide and the One Minute of Peace project was underway. He produced, arranged and performed all the background music for TITO GUIZAR in 1990, as he helped Tito make a comeback with his music in an album and home video which Jose produced. Tito has starred in Mari Mar, the latest hot "novella" now airing in Mexico and the US and is now starring in his third soap opera in Mexico at age 88! Tito Guizar, best known as the Mexican Troubadour, making famous such songs as, Alla En El Rancho Grande, Cielito Lindo, Maria Elena, Guadalajara, Jalisco, South of The Border, What a Difference a Day Makes , and many more songs that are standards today all over the world. Jose's work with Tito is an experience that he will never forget. "Tito is the last living legend from Mexico and the Golden Era of Hollywood." Aside from Jose's work with many artists and celebrities, Jose's UFO experiences that occurred at Midway, New Mexico on March 5,1994, have put him on a variety of lectures and television and radio programs talking about the subject. He has appeared on television shows such as The Learning Channel, Geraldo Rivera, Hard Copy, Sightings, Encounters, The Other Side, Inside Edition, the BBC in London, Spanish Language programs, (Sabado Gigante-"EL Y ELLA"), and on many Network News broadcasts, ABC, NBC, CBS NEWS. He has appeared in many UFO related magazines, America On-line, The Internet, CompuServe, Newspapers and radio talk shows. He has lectured at many conventions on the subject including, New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, Colorado, and Mexico City. His first hand experiences with the phenomena and background in the Entertainment Industry, lend a unique quality in presenting UFOs to the public. - www.tblnfilms.comWatch the entire TV episode at - https://youtu.be/ztYQLqfoOzw
Episode 186: American Timelines 1955, Part 7: Jack Graham Bombs A Plane and Rosa Parks Sparks A Bus Boycott Joe & Amy talk about November and December of 1955, when there was an airplane bombing, Rosa Parks took a stand, Joyce Brothers was on a game show, Whoopi Goldberg was born and more! Season 5, Episode 61, of American Timelines. Also, get 40% off your subscription of Magic Mind at: https://www.magicmind.co/ATL With discount code ATL
The Dr. Joyce Brothers for children spreads his TV message.
Producer-Director, Jose Escamilla has been editing film and video for over 20 years. Video productions in release nationwide include; L.A. Gang Violence - a documentary about LA Gangs and Donny - The Educational Dinosaur, a cartoon series starring; RUTH BUZZI, RICHARD MOLL, SWOOSIE KURTZ, BRENDA VACCARO, KATHY IRELAND, ED BEGLEY, JR., DR. JOYCE BROTHERS, TOM BOSLEY, CARLOS PALOMINO, and NEL CARTER. In 1985 he put together a world event entitled: ONE MINUTE OF PEACE, where he asked everyone in the world to stop what they were doing all together for "one minute" in honor of Samantha Smith and the children of the world. He performed the title song at The Hollywood Bowl and via satellite world wide and the One Minute of Peace project was underway. He produced, arranged and performed all the background music for TITO GUIZAR in 1990, as he helped Tito make a comeback with his music in an album and home video which Jose produced. Tito has starred in Mari Mar, the latest hot "novella" now airing in Mexico and the US and is now starring in his third soap opera in Mexico at age 88! Tito Guizar, best known as the Mexican Troubadour, making famous such songs as, Alla En El Rancho Grande, Cielito Lindo, Maria Elena, Guadalajara, Jalisco, South of The Border, What a Difference a Day Makes , and many more songs that are standards today all over the world. Jose's work with Tito is an experience that he will never forget. "Tito is the last living legend from Mexico and the Golden Era of Hollywood." Aside from Jose's work with many artists and celebrities, Jose's UFO experiences that occurred at Midway, New Mexico on March 5,1994, have put him on a variety of lectures and television and radio programs talking about the subject. He has appeared on television shows such as The Learning Channel, Geraldo Rivera, Hard Copy, Sightings, Encounters, The Other Side, Inside Edition, the BBC in London, Spanish Language programs, (Sabado Gigante-"EL Y ELLA"), and on many Network News broadcasts, ABC, NBC, CBS NEWS. He has appeared in many UFO related magazines, America On-line, The Internet, CompuServe, Newspapers and radio talk shows. He has lectured at many conventions on the subject including, New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, Colorado, and Mexico City. His first hand experiences with the phenomena and background in the Entertainment Industry, lend a unique quality in presenting UFOs to the public. - www.tblnfilms.comWatch the entire TV episode at - https://youtu.be/ztYQLqfoOzwFor Your Listening Pleasure for these Lockdown / Stay-At-Home COVID and Variants Times - For all the radio shows available on The 'X' Zone Broadcast Network visit - https://www.spreaker.com/user/xzoneradiotv.Our radio shows archives and programming include: A Different Perspective with Kevin Randle; Alien Cosmic Expo Lecture Series; Alien Worlds Radio Show; America's Soul Doctor with Ken Unger; Back in Control Radio Show with Dr. David Hanscom, MD; Connecting with Coincidence with Dr. Bernard Beitman, MD; Dick Tracy; Dimension X; Exploring Tomorrow Radio Show; Flash Gordon; Imagine More Success Radio Show with Syndee Hendricks and Thomas Hydes; Jet Jungle Radio Show; Journey Into Space; Know the Name with Sharon Lynn Wyeth; Lux Radio Theatre - Classic Old Time Radio; Mission Evolution with Gwilda Wiyaka; Paranormal StakeOut with Larry Lawson; Ray Bradbury - Tales Of The Bizarre; Sci Fi Radio Show; Seek Reality with Roberta Grimes; Space Patrol; Stairway to Heaven with Gwilda Wiyaka; The 'X' Zone Radio Show with Rob McConnell; Two Good To Be True with Justina Marsh and Peter Marsh; and many other!That's The ‘X' Zone Broadcast Network Shows and Archives - https://www.spreaker.com/user/xzoneradiotv
Producer-Director, Jose Escamilla has been editing film and video for over 20 years. Video productions in release nationwide include; L.A. Gang Violence - a documentary about LA Gangs and Donny - The Educational Dinosaur, a cartoon series starring; RUTH BUZZI, RICHARD MOLL, SWOOSIE KURTZ, BRENDA VACCARO, KATHY IRELAND, ED BEGLEY, JR., DR. JOYCE BROTHERS, TOM BOSLEY, CARLOS PALOMINO, and NEL CARTER. In 1985 he put together a world event entitled: ONE MINUTE OF PEACE, where he asked everyone in the world to stop what they were doing all together for "one minute" in honor of Samantha Smith and the children of the world. He performed the title song at The Hollywood Bowl and via satellite world wide and the One Minute of Peace project was underway. He produced, arranged and performed all the background music for TITO GUIZAR in 1990, as he helped Tito make a comeback with his music in an album and home video which Jose produced. Tito has starred in Mari Mar, the latest hot "novella" now airing in Mexico and the US and is now starring in his third soap opera in Mexico at age 88! Tito Guizar, best known as the Mexican Troubadour, making famous such songs as, Alla En El Rancho Grande, Cielito Lindo, Maria Elena, Guadalajara, Jalisco, South of The Border, What a Difference a Day Makes , and many more songs that are standards today all over the world. Jose's work with Tito is an experience that he will never forget. "Tito is the last living legend from Mexico and the Golden Era of Hollywood." Aside from Jose's work with many artists and celebrities, Jose's UFO experiences that occurred at Midway, New Mexico on March 5,1994, have put him on a variety of lectures and television and radio programs talking about the subject. He has appeared on television shows such as The Learning Channel, Geraldo Rivera, Hard Copy, Sightings, Encounters, The Other Side, Inside Edition, the BBC in London, Spanish Language programs, (Sabado Gigante-"EL Y ELLA"), and on many Network News broadcasts, ABC, NBC, CBS NEWS. He has appeared in many UFO related magazines, America On-line, The Internet, CompuServe, Newspapers and radio talk shows. He has lectured at many conventions on the subject including, New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, Colorado, and Mexico City. His first hand experiences with the phenomena and background in the Entertainment Industry, lend a unique quality in presenting UFOs to the public. - www.tblnfilms.comWatch the entire TV episode at - https://youtu.be/ztYQLqfoOzwFor Your Listening Pleasure for these Lockdown / Stay-At-Home COVID and Variants Times - For all the radio shows available on The 'X' Zone Broadcast Network visit - https://www.spreaker.com/user/xzoneradiotv.Our radio shows archives and programming include: A Different Perspective with Kevin Randle; Alien Cosmic Expo Lecture Series; Alien Worlds Radio Show; America's Soul Doctor with Ken Unger; Back in Control Radio Show with Dr. David Hanscom, MD; Connecting with Coincidence with Dr. Bernard Beitman, MD; Dick Tracy; Dimension X; Exploring Tomorrow Radio Show; Flash Gordon; Imagine More Success Radio Show with Syndee Hendricks and Thomas Hydes; Jet Jungle Radio Show; Journey Into Space; Know the Name with Sharon Lynn Wyeth; Lux Radio Theatre - Classic Old Time Radio; Mission Evolution with Gwilda Wiyaka; Paranormal StakeOut with Larry Lawson; Ray Bradbury - Tales Of The Bizarre; Sci Fi Radio Show; Seek Reality with Roberta Grimes; Space Patrol; Stairway to Heaven with Gwilda Wiyaka; The 'X' Zone Radio Show with Rob McConnell; Two Good To Be True with Justina Marsh and Peter Marsh; and many other!That's The ‘X' Zone Broadcast Network Shows and Archives - https://www.spreaker.com/user/xzoneradiotv
Author Andrew Stoner describes how advice columnists, such as Ann Landers, Dear Abby and Dr. Joyce Brothers, affected public opinion on homosexuality. Show transcripts are available at https://journalism-history.org/podcast/. Editor's Note: Stoner passed away after the recording of this podcast. We dedicate this episode to his legacy.
Influencer Kourtney is back with a new season! I touch on my 6 month bid in Florida, the best legal bud I've had so far, beauty routines and a bunch of bullshit in between. Sit down, put your feet up, roll a joint and listen to me bullshit from my closet in Bushwick. You don't have to tell me, I already know the sound sucks. I'm a one man band, what do you expect? And Shout Out “Hey Babe Pod” along with the rest of you bitches. Yall got me off the couch and into the closet. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
A female contestant had never scooped the jackpot on an American TV quiz show before New York psychologist Dr Joyce Brothers won $64,000 on 6th December, 1955.Her specialist subject was boxing - a topic about which she knew little, until she devoted herself to studying the annals of the sport in preparation for multiple appearances on the show. Despite the best efforts of sponsors Revlon to catch her out, she claimed the top prize on ‘The $64,000 Question' AND its subsequent spin-off, ‘The $64,000 Challenge'.In this episode, Arion, Rebecca and Olly reveal how Brothers combatted sexism on many prior occasions; explain how she swerved ‘the Quiz Show scandals'; and celebrate her ability to leverage her celebrity and academic qualifications to become America's first pop psychologist…Further Reading:• ‘Dr. Joyce Brothers on The $64,000 Question' (CBS, 1955): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WqhxN9a8OCg• ‘Obituary: Popular TV psychologist Dr. Joyce Brothers dies at 85' (Los Angeles Times, 2013): https://www.latimes.com/local/obituaries/la-me-joyce-brothers-20130514-story.html• ‘Joyce Brothers: She overcame sexism to become the first woman to win US quiz show' (Honey, 2021): https://honey.nine.com.au/latest/joyce-brothers-first-woman-to-win-us-quiz-show-64000-question-women-in-history/dd9f0dd2-0815-47e5-b84b-8f13edeb688fFor bonus material and to support the show, visit Patreon.com/RetrospectorsWe'll be back tomorrow! Follow us wherever you get your podcasts: podfollow.com/RetrospectorsThe Retrospectors are Olly Mann, Rebecca Messina & Arion McNicoll, with Matt Hill.Theme Music: Pass The Peas. Announcer: Bob Ravelli. Graphic Design: Terry Saunders. Edit Producer: Emma Corsham.Copyright: Rethink Audio / Olly Mann 2021. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Astroworld Fest 2021 turned tragic just in time for Kris Jenner's 66th birthday. Chris Pratt's ghoulish Instagram caption got some REALLY strong reactions. Dave Portnoy gets cancelled again, this time for sexual assault and abusing power dynamics with barely legal women. Swifties are in for the biggest week of their lives... and TayTay might have a foot fetish? CHECK OUT OUR MERCH, BABY!!! Links: Taylor Swift's Feet Tikmero_'s TikTok about Taylor Swift/foot fetishes “I think it's about time that we Swifties just acknowledge… that there've been too many instances, over the many, many years of Taylor Swift having a social media presence in which her feet are like, a huuuuge part of it. At this point, it is literally impossible that she doesn't know about posting your bare feet on the Internet. All Too Well 10 minute version is going to be a short film Chris Pratt “the culture of "my wife moves mountains for me, sacrifices her personal happiness for mine, is way out of my league in every way, and I am..a man who does nothing for her in return haha
Welcome to the Instant Trivia podcast episode 263, where we ask the best trivia on the Internet. Round 1. Category: The "Meth"Od 1: This word begins a rhyme about what a bride needs on her wedding day. something. 2: Rice paddies release this greenhouse gas. methane. 3: Term originally applied to a mid-18th century religious society founded at Oxford. the Methodists. 4: His group won a Grammy in 1998 for "Imaginary Day". Pat Metheny. 5: In mythology, the husband of Pandora and brother of Prometheus; in astronomy, a moon of Saturn. Epimetheus. Round 2. Category: Anatomy 1: The layers of the skin are the epi-this, the this and the hypo-this. the dermis. 2: The lowest 4 ribs, attached only to the backbone, are called by this buoyant name. floating ribs. 3: Name of the flap which closes over the trachea when you swallow. the epiglottis. 4: These blood vessels are so tiny that only 1 blood cell can pass through at a time. capillaries. 5: The name of this narrowest bone of the leg is Latin for "clasp". the fibula. Round 3. Category: Rhyme Quest 1: A final, as in a final exam. a test. 2: Better than better. best. 3: Repose. rest. 4: A soiree invitee (if he shows up). a guest. 5: Gusto. zest. Round 4. Category: Books Of The Bible 1: You'll find the quotation "To every thing there is a season" in Chapter 3 of this book. Ecclesiastes. 2: The flood and the birth of Isaac are covered in this book. Genesis. 3: "And God blessed them, saying, be fruitful, and multiply...". Genesis. 4: "And Moses said unto the people, remember this day in which ye came out from Egypt, out of the house of bondage...". Exodus. 5: "He only is my rock and my salvation; he is my defence; I shall not be greatly moved". Psalms. Round 5. Category: A Session With Dr. Joyce Brothers 1: So he wants a divorce. Suggest a "trial" one of these -- maybe you'll find life better without the bum. Separation. 2: You make your boyfriend feel inadequate because no man ever loses his awe of this woman. His mother. 3: Hmm. You get to your job early, stay late, won't delegate and have no friends -- you may be this type of "holic". Workaholic. 4: My feeling is your boyfriend has this fetish called retifism - so see if you're missing any Ferragamos or Guccis. Shoe fetish. 5: One little change affects the rest of your life like a stone dropped in a pond - I call that this "effect". Ripple effect. Thanks for listening! Come back tomorrow for more exciting trivia!
Do you know the best possible preparation for Success in Life? Diane shares insightful inspiration from the world renowned psychologist, Dr. Joyce Brothers - a pioneer and leader in the field. "An individual's self-concept is at the core of his/her personality. It affects every aspect of human behaviour." Dr. Joyce Brothers Take 5 minutes for yourself today to watch or listen in on an uplifting concept for a positive mindset in a simple way. "Every morning is a gift for all of us" Diane Planidin Live an Inspired Life #SelfImage #Flourish #DrJoyceBrothers CONNECT: Website: https://www.Flourish.Mom Twitter: https://www.Twitter.Com/FlourishMom Facebook https://www.Facebook.Com/Flourish.Mom Insta: https://www.Instagram.com/FlourishMom Pinterest: https://www.Pinterest.ca/WowFlourishMom Watch on YouTube
Welcome to the Instant Trivia podcast episode 222, where we ask the best trivia on the Internet. Round 1. Category: "Six" Pack 1: Slang name for a revolver. "Six-Shooter". 2: TV's Fisher family knows this slang phrase for dead and buried refers to the traditional depth of a grave. six feet under. 3: A straight six and a V-6 both refer to this type of car engine. six-cylinder. 4: A 2-inch-long nail. six-penny. 5: A 2-inch-long nail. six-penny. Round 2. Category: Style 1: For women's health, Cosmopolitan Magazine recommends wearing 4" ones for only an hour. Heels. 2: This rhyming term refers to a short shirt that may show off a toned tummy. Crop top. 3: These baggy knickers worn by golfers were popularized by the Prince of Wales in the 1920s. Plus fours. 4: A horizontal blade on the back of a car, or a back-of-the-pack competitor who affects the outcome. Spoiler. 5: Bags and shoes from Gucci feature a GG symbol; those from this designer are marked with a V. Valentino. Round 3. Category: Kids In Books 1: "The Sword in the Stone" is a book about a kid who grows up to be this king. King Arthur. 2: Based on a real child, a kid named Christopher Robin hangs out with this literary bear. Winnie the Pooh. 3: This collie was the faithful friend of a kid named Joe in a book by British novelist Eric Knight. Lassie. 4: Mowgli is the human kid hanging out in the woods with wolves and tigers in this Rudyard Kipling "Book". "The Jungle Book". 5: She's Beezus Quimby's pesky young sister. Ramona. Round 4. Category: Rearranging Words 1: Rearrange the letters in "skate" to come up with this surname of a Romantic poet. Keats. 2: Rearrange the letters in "listen" to get this not-so-audible word. silent. 3: An earthquake on "Crete" might find its buildings no longer this. erect. 4: Rearrange the letters in "late" to get this color. teal. 5: Rearrange the letters in "supersonic" to get this orchestra section. percussion. Round 5. Category: Couples Therapy 1: One partner may have "fear of" this type of closeness, from Latin for "a close friend". Intimacy. 2: Couples shouldn't play this, the rhyming name of an MTV show about "When Love Goes Wrong". The Blame Game. 3: (Dr. Joyce Brothers speaking) This is what you're really fighting about -- it's "the root of" most quarrels throughout marriage. Money. 4: Gordon Clanton calls it a reaction to a perceived threat to a relationship; it's also a green-eyed monster. Jealousy. 5: You may test the marital waters as what the Census Bureau calls POSSLQ, persons of the opposite sex sharing these. Living quarters. Thanks for listening! Come back tomorrow for more exciting trivia!
S2E30 -- Join us we dive into the mind of the great Larry Hankin as he takes us on his journey from Escape from Alcatraz to Friends. ————————————————— This episode is sponsored by Deadly Grounds Coffee "Its good to get a little Deadly" https://deadlygroundscoffee.com ————————————————— Check out Toking with the Dead Episode 1 https://vimeo.com/ondemand/twtde1 Buy awesome Merchandise! https://www.stilltoking.com/ https://teespring.com/stores/still-toking-with ————————————— Follow The Prospect Theater https://www.prospectortheater.org/ Facebook – www.facebook.com/prospectortheater YouTube – www.youtube.com/prospectortheater Follow Kenny https://thereallarryhankin.com/ https://twitter.com/hankinstories?lang=en https://www.facebook.com/larry.hankin.9 https://www.teepublic.com/stores/larryhankin https://vimeo.com/larryhankin Still Toking With https://www.stilltoking.com/ https://www.facebook.com/TokingwiththeDead/ https://www.instagram.com/stilltokingwith/ http://www.youtube.com/c/THETOKINGDEAD https://www.twitch.tv/stilltokingwith Support Still Toking Enterprises https://www.paypal.me/thetokingdead https://www.facebook.com/groups/2658329444181663/?ref=br_rs https://www.facebook.com/groups/stilltokingcomics/ Produced by: The Dorkening Podcast Network https://TheDorkening.com Facebook.com/TheDorkening Youtube.com/TheDorkening Twitter.com/TheDorkening Hellfire Radio https://www.hellfireradio.com/ https://www.facebook.com/scoopsandmischief/ https://www.instagram.com/scoopsandmischief/ https://www.facebook.com/HellfireRadio666/ https://www.instagram.com/hellfire_radio_666/ Check out Green Matters: https://www.facebook.com/GreenMattersMiddleboro/ His first notable supporting role was as Pt. Romero in Viva Max! in 1969. Hankin is known for his roles in TV shows Breaking Bad, Matlock, Friends (as Mr. Heckles) and Seinfeld (as Tom Pepper), as well as for his major role in Escape from Alcatraz (1979) with Clint Eastwood.[1] He also acted in How Sweet It Is! (1968) with Debbie Reynolds and James Garner and the Adam Sandler movie Billy Madison (1995). He had cameo appearances in three John Hughes films, Planes, Trains and Automobiles (1987); She's Having a Baby (1988); and Home Alone (1990); which coincidentally featured Roberts Blossom (playing Old Man Marley), whom he co-starred with in Escape from Alcatraz. He had brief appearances in Pretty Woman as the landlord (1990), as well as minor roles in Loose Shoes (1980), The Sure Thing (1985), and Running Scared (1986). Hankin also appeared in Married... with Children, as well as one of the Halloween specials of Home Improvement. Hankin also appeared in three episodes of Star Trek: Voyager as Gaunt Gary and one episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation. Hankin and Curtis Armstrong played the hippie entrepreneurs who purchased "Buy the Book" (the bookstore where the titular character works at) on Ellen. On Seinfeld, Hankin portrayed Tom Pepper, the actor cast as Kramer on the pilot-within-a-TV-show Jerry. He portrayed a homeless man in season 5 of Malcolm in the Middle. He then appeared again with Bryan Cranston in seasons three and five of Breaking Bad as junkyard owner Old Joe. He reprised his old role from Breaking Bad in the Netflix sequel film El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie. One of Hankin's earliest roles was playing the lead character of Farley in the 1964 educational film Too Tough to Care. In 1977, Hankin appeared in the episode "The Bums vs. the Reds" of the situation comedy The San Pedro Beach Bums. He also played Mickey the Bartender in a WKRP in Cincinnati episode called "Hotel Oceanview" that also has a cameo appearance by Dr. Joyce Brothers as "Vicky Von Vicky". In 1982, he played the dog catcher that tries to take Sandy in Annie. In 1980, Hankin's short film Solly's Diner earned him and the film's producers a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film. Hankin was a founding member of the commedia dell'arte improvisation group The Committee in 1963, located at an indoor bocce ball court in San Francisco's North Beach district. He appeared in the Janet Jackson music video for her 1986 hit single "What Have You Done for Me Lately" as a cook/waiter. He recently portrayed a depressed Chechen hitman in the HBO series Barry in 2018. Find out more at https://still-toking-with.pinecast.co This podcast is powered by Pinecast.
Welcome to the Instant Trivia podcast episode 197, where we ask the best trivia on the Internet. Round 1. Category: Double Meanings 1: I stared down into my blank of latte so I wouldn't have to look at his ugly jowly blank . mug. 2: Swift, or the largest organized unit of naval ships. fleet. 3: You always fall for my blank sacrifice; too bad I'm so broke my chess set is in blank . pawn. 4: Just because you blank my cafe doesn't give you the right to blank me with your haughty tone. patronize. 5: Everyone knows the word "ballerina," but may not know her male counterpart is sometimes called this, meaning a rider, or someone who gallantly escorts a lady. a cavalier. Round 2. Category: California 1: The oldest art museum in the western U.S., the Crocker Art Museum, opened in this state capital in 1885. Sacramento. 2: The original name of California's biggest metropolis translates as "the village of the queen of" these beings. angels. 3: On the Avenue of the Giants in Humboldt County, the giants are these amazing organisms. trees. 4: The original name of California's biggest metropolis translates as "the village of the queen of" these beings. angels. 5: One of the state's landmarks is Half Dome, located at the head of this valley in the same-named national park. Yosemite. Round 3. Category: Ordinal Number, Please 1: (AUDIO DAILY DOUBLE):Street in the title of the following: (audio clue - instrumental). "42nd Street". 2: It's where Washington was in war, in peace and in the hearts of his countrymen. First. 3: "Nervous Breakdown" the Rolling Stones suffered in the '60s. Nineteenth. 4: Shakespeare's "night" to remember. Twelfth. 5: In "The Music Man", the penultimate trombonist in "The Big Parade". 75th. Round 4. Category: Black History 1: Harry Truman ended it in the Army in 1948; the Supreme Court ended it in public schools in 1954. Segregation. 2: The black population of these U.S. areas, the destination of "white flight", doubled in the '70s and '80s. Suburbs. 3: In 1829 journalist John Russwurm gave up on abolitionism and left the U.S. for this independent African nation. Liberia. 4: This "conductor" usually carried a gun, not a whistle. Harriet Tubman. 5: An Alabama city gave its name to this group of 9 youths falsely accused of rape in 1931. "The Scottsboro Boys". Round 5. Category: A Session With Dr. Joyce Brothers 1: So he wants a divorce. Suggest a "trial" one of these -- maybe you'll find life better without the bum. Separation. 2: You make your boyfriend feel inadequate because no man ever loses his awe of this woman. His mother. 3: Hmm. You get to your job early, stay late, won't delegate and have no friends -- you may be this type of "holic". Workaholic. 4: My feeling is your boyfriend has this fetish called retifism - so see if you're missing any Ferragamos or Guccis. Shoe fetish. 5: One little change affects the rest of your life like a stone dropped in a pond - I call that this "effect". Ripple effect. Thanks for listening! Come back tomorrow for more exciting trivia!
“A strong, positive self-image is the best possible preparation for success.” - Joyce Brothers. Happy Wednesday QualityFam! We're this close from season 2's finale. I can't believe it! If you have poor self-image then this episode is for you. It's time to elevate yourself in all ramifications of your life and it all starts from the inside. It all starts with how you see yourself. https://linktr.ee/Qt_withfortune
Dr Joyce Brothers once joked, ‘My husband and I have never considered divorce…sometimes murder, but never divorce!' Getting married is easy; living together successfully is hard. So how do you do it? By identifying issues that must be resolved, working on them, and learning to live with the rest! Snoring, endless hours of watching TV sports, not communicating, dirty socks on the floor, unmade beds – your partner's habits can drive you crazy. And since Jesus said, ‘Let no one split apart what God has joined together' (v. 6 NLT), how should you handle conflicts when they arise? 1) Attack the problem instead of each other. 2) Keep your voice low, stay calm, and your partner is more likely to pay attention. 3) Choose the best time to address the issue, not when the kids are hungry or you're both tired. 4) Remember, men and women see things differently. So, when your spouse expresses their point of view, don't sigh and roll your eyes. What marriage therapists refer to as ‘active listening', calls for affirming your spouse through paraphrasing, validation, and positive feedback. 5) There'll be times when each of you will have to compromise. 6) Choose your words carefully. ‘Do not let any unwholesome talk come out of your mouths, but only what is helpful for building others up' (Ephesians 4:29 NIV). ‘Encourage one another' (1 Thessalonians 5:11 NIV). ‘Forgiving one another' (Ephesians 4:32 NLT). ‘Pray for each other' (James 5:16 NIV). ‘Spur one another on towards love and good deeds' (Hebrews 10:24 NIVUK). ‘Carry each other's burdens' (Galatians 6:2 NIV). ‘Giving preference to one another' (Romans 12:10 NKJV). Now work on your marriage!
We pick back up where we left off with the last episode: Amanda and Jack, tussling at his house. In the process, Jack ends up flying off a third-story balcony onto the hard floor of the foyer, and since Amanda doesn't think she can call the authorities, she enlists Peter to help her deal with the situation. His scheme to get Jack admitted to the hospital with a minimum of questions from other personnel seems to work, until Michael sees Peter and Amanda leaving Jack's room together and inserts himself. At the same time, Fake Henry keeps pestering Kimberly, while Kimberly keeps pestering Dr. Joyce Brothers on her apparently 24-hour-a-day radio show. Jake can't stop being jealous of the time Jo is spending with Richard, nor Jo of Shelly still hanging around. Hayley and Alison make their relationship official by telling Brooke and Billy they're in love -- but there's yet another level to which Hayley wants to take it. Finally (...in every sense of the word), Matt and his mother bury his dad, leaving them both to ponder what may be next for them. Grab your phone and give a listen to our podcast on "Dial M For Melrose"! JOIN THE AWT CLUB
We pick back up where we left off with the last episode: Amanda and Jack, tussling at his house. In the process, Jack ends up flying off a third-story balcony onto the hard floor of the foyer, and since Amanda doesn't think she can call the authorities, she enlists Peter to help her deal with the situation. His scheme to get Jack admitted to the hospital with a minimum of questions from other personnel seems to work, until Michael sees Peter and Amanda leaving Jack's room together and inserts himself. At the same time, Fake Henry keeps pestering Kimberly, while Kimberly keeps pestering Dr. Joyce Brothers on her apparently 24-hour-a-day radio show. Jake can't stop being jealous of the time Jo is spending with Richard, nor Jo of Shelly still hanging around. Hayley and Alison make their relationship official by telling Brooke and Billy they're in love -- but there's yet another level to which Hayley wants to take it. Finally (...in every sense of the word), Matt and his mother bury his dad, leaving them both to ponder what may be next for them. Grab your phone and give a listen to our podcast on "Dial M For Melrose"!Visual AidsVisual Aids S04.E08Support AWT On PatreonThank you to all our supporters! You can support the podcast directly on Patreon and get access to bonus episodes of “Again With Again With This” as a thank you from us! Check out AWT's Patreon page today.Support AWT With A Personal MessageWish your friend a happy birthday or just call them a squeef with a AWT Personal Message. It's $50 and helps keep us going. Start on our ad page now!Buy our book"A Very Special 90210 Book" (Abrams, $24.99) can be yours RIGHT NOW! Here's ordering info via our publisher, Abrams or find it anywhere else books are sold! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Howard Gewirtz joined me to talk about his name; Oliver Beene; growing up in Rego Park, NY; working for the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi's television station; writing a spec script for a George Carlin sitcom; writing for Busting Loose; We're on Our Own; Co-Ed Fever; writing a spec script for Taxi and getting hired; Taxi episode "Shut it Down Part I & II"; writing a Three's Company; writing for Latka; Mr. Personalities; using a UCLA psychologist for research and getting Dr. Joyce Brothers to play the psychologist; casting his and Ian Praiser's mothers in "Sceneskees from a Marriage"; his favorite Latka episode "Latka the Revolutionary"; Carol Kane as Simka; working with Tom Hanks on the episode "The Road Not Taken" and Martin Short on The Associates and "Jim Joins the Network"; J. Alan Thomas; him guest starring in "Of Mice and Tony"; creating Domestic Life with Ian Praiser, Steve Martin & Martin Mull; working with Sylvia Sidney; Down and Out in Beverly Hills; his Simpsons episode "Homer Defined"; Sibs; The Larry Sanders Show; Wings; and his upcoming novel. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
This week we are discussing the 2006 sequel "National Lampoon's Dorm Daze 2" which had a lot of familiar faces in it like Jennifer Lyons, Danielle Fishel (Topanga from Boy Meets World), Jasmine St Claire, Vida Guerra, Sherminator, Mr. Sheffield from "The Nanny" and lots more. We discussed the many subplots, smoking a monkey to get high, lots about Rusty, the lack of students, Dr. Joyce Brothers, the American Pie similarities, Sherminator getting all the ladies, and so much more. This a video review that you can watch at sequelsonly.com/dormdaze2 The next sequel we are reviewing is “Under Siege 2”, which is our 1st Steven Seagal movie and one of the rare sequels that he is in. It also has a young Katherine Heigl and next week's guest Patrick Kilpatrick who has the role of "Henchman #2", but you know him as the Sandman who was the main villain against Van Damme in "Death Warrant", he was in "Best of the Best 2", "3 Ninjas Knuckle Up", "Eraser", "Public Enemies", "Minority Report", and more. Follow us on all social media @sequelsonly and our website is sequelsonly.com
Les, Kurt, and Jason are ready for the latest and final(?) chapter in Hallmark's “One” trilogy of One Winter Weekend and One Winter Proposal with One Perfect Wedding. Despite having recapped the first 2 movies for this very podcast, Kurt still has no recollection of who these people are. Before we get an answer to “why is the lead of this movie bald now (a popular query on Google), we get an answer to “How has Blac Chyna navigated the pandemic?” Then Les and Jason concur that Kurt, as a background actor in The Trial of the Chicago 7, should technically get to share in that movie's win at the SAG Awards. Kurt may be a SAG Award Winner, but he is (admittedly) no Dr. Joyce Brothers. Jason ponders if the new Hallmark will eventually mean creatively bleeped F-bombs, and Les offers some sage advice (via Jackee, obviously). Plus, Jason and Les offer some controversial opinions about Brokeback Mountain and Call Me By Your Name even as they wonder if there is squirrel feces in your pinecones. Facebook : alifetimeofhallmark Instagram : lifetimeofhallmarkpodcast Theme song generously donated by purple-planet.com
Advice for the Fearful (An excerpt from the besting series How to Completely Change Your Life in 30 Seconds, based on talks by Earl Nightingale) Dr. Joyce Brothers has some good advice for the fearful. She points out that everyone is familiar with fear. Normal fear protects us and provides a warning signal indicating the […] The post Advice For the Fearful – Earl Nightingale – Change Your Life appeared first on Living Sensical.
Notable film and television rolesHis first notable supporting role was as Pt. Romero in Viva Max! in 1969.Hankin is known for his roles in TV shows Breaking Bad, Matlock, Friends (as Mr. Heckles) and Seinfeld (as Tom Pepper), as well as for his major role in Escape from Alcatraz (1979) with Clint Eastwood. He also acted in How Sweet It Is! (1968) with Debbie Reynolds and James Garner and the Adam Sandler movie Billy Madison (1995). He had cameo appearances in three John Hughes films, Planes, Trains and Automobiles (1987); She's Having a Baby (1988); and Home Alone (1990); which coincidently featured Roberts Blossom (playing Old Man Marley), whom he co-starred with in Escape from Alcatraz. He had brief appearances in Pretty Woman as the landlord (1990), as well as minor roles in Loose Shoes (1980), The Sure Thing (1985), and Running Scared (1986). Hankin also appeared in Married... with Children, as well as one of the Halloween specials of Home Improvement. Hankin also appeared in three episodes of Star Trek: Voyager as Gaunt Gary and one episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation. Hankin and Curtis Armstrong played the hippie entrepreneurs who purchased "Buy the Book" (the bookstore where the titular character works at) on Ellen.On Seinfeld, Hankin portrayed Tom Pepper, the actor cast as Kramer on the pilot-within-a-TV-show Jerry. He portrayed a homeless man in season 5 of Malcolm in the Middle. He then appeared again with Bryan Cranston in seasons three and five of Breaking Bad as junkyard owner Old Joe. He reprised his old role from Breaking Bad in the Netflix sequel film El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie.Other workIn 1977, Hankin appeared in the episode "The Bums vs. the Reds" of the situation comedy The San Pedro Beach Bums. He also played Mickey the Bartender in a WKRP in Cincinnati episode called "Hotel Oceanview" that also has a cameo appearance by Dr. Joyce Brothers as "Vicky Von Vicky".In 1982, he played the dog catcher that tries to take Sandy in Annie.In 1980, Hankin's short film Solly's Diner earned him and the film's producers a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film.Hankin was a founding member of the commedia dell'arte improvisation group The Committee in 1963, located at an indoor bocce ball court in San Francisco's North Beach district.He appeared in the Janet Jackson music video for her 1986 hit single "What Have You Done for Me Lately" as a cook/waiter.He recently portrayed a depressed Chechen hitman in the HBO series Barry in 2018.
Jolie is joined by Dr. Lucy Long, director of the independent Center for Food and Culture and an instructor of American studies, ethnic studies, folklore, and nutrition at BGSU, and Jerry Reed, a recent graduate from the MA program in popular cultures studies at BGSU. They discuss their “Finding Comfort/Discomfort Through Foodways” project that examines how comfort food can be meaningful and create meaningfulness in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic. Announcer: From Bowling Green State University and the Institute for the Study of Culture and Society, this is BG Ideas. Musical Intro: I'm going to show you this with a wonderful experiment. Jolie: Welcome back to the BiG Ideas podcast, a collaboration between the Institute for the Study of Culture and Society and the School of Media and Communication at Bowling Green State University. I'm Jolie Sheffer, Associate Professor of English and American Culture Studies, and the Director of ICS. Due to the ongoing pandemic, we are not recording in the studio, but remotely via phone and computer. As always, the opinions expressed on this podcast are those of the individuals involved and do not necessarily represent those of BGSU or its employees. Jolie: Bowling Green State University is located in the Great Black Swamp, long a meeting place of the Wyandot, Shawnee, Lenape, Ottawa, Kickapoo, Fox, Pottawatomie, Erie, Miami, Peoria, Chippewa, and Seneca Indian tribes. We honor the rich history of this land and its indigenous inhabitants, past and present. Today we're joined by two guests, Dr. Lucy Long and Jerry Reed. Lucy directs the Independent Center for Food and Culture and teaches in American studies, ethnic studies, folklore and nutrition at BGSU. Her research focuses on food, music, and dance as mediums for meaning and community. Jolie: Lucy served as the Director of "Finding Comfort/Discomfort Through Food Ways," a project that examines how people are living and eating in these difficult pandemic times. Jerry Reed earned a BS in Education and an MA in Popular Culture Studies from BGSU. He completed an internship with the Center for Food and Culture, working to develop a curriculum that uses food to help children understand cultural conflict. Jerry worked as the Assistant Director of the Food Ways Project. Thanks both for being with me today, I'm really excited to talk about this with you. To get us started, could you tell us a little bit about the Food Ways Project and how it came about? Will you start us off, Lucy? Lucy : Okay. When the pandemic first hit, I started noticing that food media was publishing recipes for comfort food. And this is a stressful time for comfort food. So I actually edited a volume and published some articles in 2017 on comfort food, so that automatically grabbed me. And my initial response to some of these publications, particularly-there was one for the New York Times, and it was comfort foods of famous chefs. And it was all these specialty ingredients and things that, probably, the average American would not have in their pantry. And I realized, first of all, these foods are not things that I relate to, personally, as a comfort food. And they probably are not relevant to many people who are reading this. But also, the idea of having to go out and find these ingredients, some of which are very expensive, but many of which, you would have to go to different grocery stores or try to find them. Lucy : And I realized, that's going to cause a lot of discomfort. So that got me thinking a little bit more about at how, during this time, it's not a simple thing to say, "Here, eat some comfort food and calm down." And then also, comfort food itself as a very American concept. Every culture has food that is comforting, that reminds people of their childhood, and things like that. But it's uniquely American in that there is a particular sort of morality attached to food in America. That different foods are good and bad, depending on what they do to your body, physically. And we're not even talking about health, we're talking about whether or not those foods make you fat or whether they make you kind of sluggish or whatever. Lucy : So, so much of our morality around food is tied to how that food impacts your body, your body image, and whether or not you have the proper type of body. So therefore, Americans talk about good foods and bad foods in terms of, good foods are ones that are healthy for us, will keep us nice, fit and slim. Bad foods are the ones that really tastes good, lots of fat, lots of sugar, salt, but we all know that they're bad for us. That they have negative impacts on our weight, on our body shape, and on our energy levels. Lucy : So that grows out of a very distinctive, American attitude towards food. And the phrase, "comfort food," was invented in the US. Dr. Joyce Brothers used it in the 1960s as an explanation for why so many Americans were starting to be obese, said that people are turning to comfort foods. They have stress in their lives or they need comfort for some reason, so they're using that as an excuse to eat these fattening foods. And then the food industry picked up on that and said, "Oh, okay, here are some comfort food dishes," and they started using that concept to market these dishes. Saying that, "Oh, everybody needs comfort, so here, eat some macaroni and cheese." So it turned into a marketing category. Jolie: Yeah, it's so interesting because, two thoughts. One is that, the opposite of comfort food is discomfort food. The things we're supposed to like are the things we're not supposed to enjoy. That there really is this idea of, maybe that is also a very American thing, that Protestant work ethic, that we're suspicious of pleasure, in some ways. Jerry, what was your particular interest in some of these issues in this Food Ways Project? Jerry: Especially as we dug deeper into the interviews that were conducted, I think one of the most surprising and interesting aspects for me was this idea of food of discomfort. Because we focus so much on this idea of comfort food as this a very individual experience to help one self feel better. Which is incredibly relevant during the time of pandemic or even during a time of stressful elections. So when people start talking about foods of discomfort, there's two major things that I've noticed. One is there are foods of actual physical discomfort, foods that you just can't eat for dietary reasons. Whether you're lactose intolerant, PKU, et cetera, that your diet is limited. Jerry: And then there's also foods that, it's not so much that the food itself causes discomfort in some way, it's the concept of food as a whole. Some people have turned their minds now to that ... Let me redo that. A number of people have realized that, "Oh, now I happen to work at home or not work for a while. I'm living well within my needs." And they can see that, now that they've stepped a little bit outside of that daily work that they do from 8:00 to 5:00. So to be able to realize that, oh, there's got to be a number of people who are not able to live within their means. Especially during a time like this, where even as I'm struggling, I'm surviving. And so that's brought a number of weird pieces of discomfort, just conceptual discomfort, to people. And that has caused some to act, some to not act, at different levels. Jolie: I'm curious, in terms of this project, because of the pandemic you had to really work remotely. Entirely, I imagine, including with the number of international collaborators. So how did that affect the way you collaborate and conduct research? Lucy : We were able to actually extend this project much further than most oral history projects. We frequently did not even know where people were when they were responding, initially. And then it does kind of happen, I also was using social media, LinkedIn and the Center for Food and Culture has a website. And that goes out to anyone who's interested, anywhere in the world. And then I was also using Facebook. And so when I was sending out information about this, and people were responding, and then they would tell their friends about it. So I also do a lot of work internationally, especially on culinary tourism, so a lot of my international connections were seeing this, "Oh yeah, this is really interesting." And so they were sending me things. Lucy : Some of those people would just send me a little paragraph, this is what's happening here. Other times, there are people who are using this ... I developed it first as an assignment for an undergraduate class, and then realized, oh, this would actually be very useful to do on a larger scale. I should mention here, too, I did get a little bit of funding that helped to cover honoraria for the researchers. Minimal honoraria, I should say, from the Association for the Study of Food and Society. And then also humanities, the Ohio Humanities. Formally the Ohio Humanities Council, now it's just called the Ohio Humanities, and then also from the Elliot Torium Foundation, a private foundation. Lucy : So when this started, it was just like, oh, this is interesting. Let's see where we can go with it. And then, because of my international work, various colleagues in different places were picking up on it and extending it. And then the researchers themselves, one of them, who also happens to be my daughter, she teaches in Ireland at a university. So she's having some of her students do the project. And she was interviewing some of her colleagues and friends, who tended to be very international. So we're hearing from people who lived in Israel or who had parents in Israel, Norway. And then another one of the researchers is Chinese studying in the US. So he has access to a different group of people. Lucy : So, it's not a model for a social science ethnography. A lot of it was serendipity, but everything was so sudden and unexpected, we just took whatever opportunities there were. I had worked previously with Jerry and so when I started getting this idea, I approached him. I said, "I don't know if there's going to be any funding, would you like to sign on to be the assistant director of this? There's a lot of administrative stuff that I'm going to need." And he said, "Sure." I said, "Now, I don't know about funding, but ..." So I know that Jerry was committed regardless of funding. So he's been a tremendous help through this. Jolie: And Jerry, could you talk a little bit about some of the tasks that you were working on and how the pandemic may have changed the way you had previously worked on projects or worked specifically with Lucy and your relationship prior. Jerry: I guess, for my tasks, there's two halves of it. There's the largely administrative half that, it was at home or not at home. It didn't really make too much of a difference, really, just depended on which wall I was staring at. But then came the other half of it, which was doing interviews and conducting these interviews with all of these participants. Which was a very different way than I'm used to doing field work. My field work that I did for my thesis, I did at a middle school in the area. And I was there with the students for a large portion of the day, and that's what I was used to, is just being around the people. So now all of a sudden, doing these cold calls to people I don't know to say, "Hey, I want to talk about food for awhile," was a very different setting. Jerry: But because people were already isolated and wanted that contact, they were happy to talk with any stranger about anything. Just that piece of human contact was so valuable to everybody that we talked to, and it made some of the conversations we've had absolutely fantastic. And yet my work with Lucy prior, because of the nature of building curriculum, the only real thing that changed was that we couldn't really meet face to face. Which can be, I guess, somewhat solved via Zoom, WebEx, whatever your medium is. Jolie: I think it's interesting that you're talking about, in addition to comfort food, the comfort of community. And even having the occasion to talk about these things is also a real balm in these challenging times. Can you talk a little bit, each of you, about how this project created or changed your sense of community? Lucy : I think for me, I really enjoyed getting to know the different people who were working with me. They're all either master's students, PhD students, or they had recently completed masters. I was able to learn things from them, and that was really nice. I was given a whole different perspective on things from them. And then a lot of people were sending me emails with just brief snippets of their thoughts about comfort food. And some of those really challenged the assumptions that we all have. One of them that I always point out, a woman contacted me and said, "I just wanted you to let you know that my husband and I are both disabled. We've had to live off of food stamps for the last 20 years. We are eating better now than we ever have because the food stamps were expanded," and they were able to go to the farmer's market. Lucy : They were able to use them for fresh produce. And she said, "This is wonderful. I'm healthier now than I ever have been." And that was completely the opposite of what we expected. That's not to paint a rosy picture of this all either, but it automatically challenged some of my assumptions about class in America, and how class is then tied to community. Similarly, someone else, they actually came from an upper middle class background and they lived out in the suburbs. And they said that in order to go shopping, they had to drive to a supermarket. People didn't usually go out walking in their neighborhoods. They had all this money, but they didn't have that kind of casual contact that you could get in a city or in a very small town. Lucy : And they said getting food meant they either had to drive somewhere or have it delivered, and they could afford to do that, and they recognized they had a lot of privilege in being able to do that. But she said, "It's very, very lonely. We don't have the usual kinds of contacts." She didn't realize that going to the grocery store had been a way for her to connect with people. Before, it was just a chore and now suddenly, she recognized that it had been a routine that had provided connection for her. That she didn't recognize that. So two things there, having money definitely made things a lot easier for people, but it didn't automatically give them a sense of community. Lucy : And it did not give them people that they felt that they had a sense of belonging with. And then also, being partly because of the pandemic, people were starting to recognize that these activities around food that we think of as just chores, that they were actually opportunities for very meaningful connections with other people. And suddenly we were missing those. Jolie: What about you, Jerry? Any observations either through the research or your own experience, in these last seven, eight months around community that have caused you to think a little differently? Jerry: Especially in thinking about the interviews, it's surprising how much, when you would start to ask somebody what their comfort food is, how little they would talk about the food. And what the conversation would turn to is about the meals that they would share with people, or the origin of the recipe that they got the recipe for their comfort food from. And then they would bring off into a different story about that, about their grandmother, so on, so forth. And so, I think it goes to show so much of comfort food is tied up in identity and community. Who we decide our tribe is. And so it's really fascinating to hear somebody start to talk about how much they really, really have been going to carbs during this time, and then all of a sudden they're talking about how much they miss their grandchildren or friends, so it really is a lot of focus on the comfort that we get from community. Rather than the comfort that we get from food. Jolie: We're going to take a quick break. Thanks for listening to the Big Ideas podcast. Musical Interlude: Question. Answer. Discussion. Announcer: If you are passionate about Big Ideas, consider sponsoring this program. To have your name or organization mentioned here, please contact us at ics@bgsu.edu. Jolie: Hello and welcome to the Big Ideas podcast. Today I'm talking to Dr. Lucy Long and Jerry Reed, about their research on comfort food ways and how the network and practices around food provide opportunities for connection. One of the things that also strikes me in the discussion about comfort foods and how they come from traditions, from rituals, whether those are religious or cultural, familial, regional, things like that. I'm wondering, are you seeing in your research, new traditions being formed out of these pandemic times? Or revisions of traditions due to these particular circumstances? And if so, can you give us some of those stories? Lucy : I think new traditions are definitely being created, being rediscovered. One of the definitions of comfort food, Julie Loker was a medical sociologist who first started studying comfort food, and she published an article in 2002 and then in 2004 that established comfort food as a scholarly topic. And she identified four different needs that were being fulfilled through comfort food, that then helped people relieve their stress. And one of those was nostalgia, one of them was convenience, and we don't always think of convenience and fast food can be comfort food, because it's very convenient. Foods that offer physical comfort, the hot chocolate on a cold day, and then indulgence, which is what we usually think of. And then about 10 years later, another researcher identified belonging as a need that was being fulfilled. Lucy : So people wanted to eat the foods that other people were eating, because it gave them a sense of belonging to that community. So that gave us a baseline for studying comfort food. And part of what we started finding, the definition of comfort food is foods that help relieve stress. That's the accepted, American definition. What we started finding is that the kinds of stresses that people were dealing with during the pandemic, I think are more of an existential nature. We don't have control over our lives anymore. All of a sudden you have to recognize that nature really is more powerful than humans. So all these myths that, Americans in particular have grown up with, were suddenly being challenged. Lucy : And so, what I started noticing was that comfort food was fulfilling some of these more excess existential needs. Baking bread, I find it amazing that that so many Americans had gluten sensitivities, that bread purchasing was what was dropping. And then all of a sudden, they're all trying to make bread during the pandemic. And I felt like a lot of what that was showing was, people had a sense of control by cooking in general. And they could control the whole process and they could control the outcome. And having that sense of control is very important during the pandemic, when we can't control anything else. Lucy : It also gives people a sense of agency or efficacy. We can actually do something, it's not just control, but we can actually do something to change the outcome of things later. So we can organize our freezer so that we know that we can now make dinners for at least another 30 days. And that makes the individual feel like, oh, okay, I can do something to change the outcome of my future. And then also, one of the things that was fascinating, that the researchers who are doing most of the interviews pointed out to me, a lot of people were finding comfort by giving comfort to other people. Working with food banks, making food for their neighbors, doing things like ... something as simple as going shopping and checking with all their elderly neighbors and friends to see if anyone needed things picked up. Lucy : And that was being nice, but it also fulfilled this existential need to feel like, as an individual, we have significance in life. We can matter. And we can matter to these other people. So we started seeing these other needs, rather than belonging, I like to think about connectedness. Because part of what we were seeing with food was people were connecting, not just to a community. They were connecting to nature, to the seasons. So many people started gardening. I know for the first time I was able to do a CSA because usually I'm not in Bowling Green during the summer. Lucy : So suddenly I was, and I discovered that, oh, okay, now I'm eating zucchini and tomatoes and nothing else for the next three weeks. So now I'm eating butternut squash and potatoes and that connects me to the seasons. It connects me to nature. It connects me to these larger things that help to give a sense of continuity of life. So that kind of connectedness is on an existential level. And it's a much deeper kind of stress than simply, I had a bad day. So some of that was very exciting to me, the idea that people were finding comfort by giving comfort. I find that very optimistic and it gives me a lot of hope. Jolie: Yeah, and I think that's one of the ongoing questions, of what of these changes will stick around after there is a vaccine, after the immediate pandemic crisis has passed. Jerry, are there any other new traditions or observations that you were struck by in some of the interviews you've done that you want to share? Jerry: I guess I can categorize them in three different ways. There's the new traditions, one of the examples I can think of is somebody who has specifically taken time out of their day to have their tea time, specific time, and they specifically have their tea with condensed milk. Which is very popular in Newfoundland. Then there's also traditions that have changed. So one interview we talked about how do you have a Seder dinner online and the guides that have been sent out by the community and recipes that have been sent out. Sadly, people can only have a Seder dinner, but have a Seder dinner for a smaller group, rather than the large portions that are usually served because you have so many people. Jerry: And then there's also this, it's a slight abandonment of tradition, and one of the best examples that I have for this from an interview, would be a couple that ... Their new date night routine was to go to this very fancy Italian restaurant. Well, you can't eat in, so they would get the takeout and eat this very nice, expensive Italian food, in their car out of styrofoam boxes. So it's this, going away from being around all these people ,and it speaks the same idea of it, but it's not really the same thing anymore. And it's also an excuse to get out of the house. It has a new meaning just beyond that. And so that's three different ways that I think about it. Jolie: What possibilities do you see in bringing food into classrooms more often and more directly, whether at the K-12 level or in college. Could you talk a little bit about that? The role of education around food? Jerry: Well, I steal this concept from a botanist I met in Costa Rica. He became a botanist, and then later a tour guide, and said that he studied botany because there's plants everywhere, so you always have something to talk about. And the same is true with food as a human need, you just need food, so there's always something there to talk about. And food is so intrinsically tied into identity, and often in ways that we don't realize, which circles through back to the appropriation piece. When we talk about Southern food, for instance, and even Appalachian food, these two very different categories that both get a lot of their food histories from historically Black cooking and slave cooking. Jerry: And so when we talk about food, at any level within education, all of a sudden we're able to talk about individual identities without even having to bring up ethnicity, race, gender. One of the easiest questions to ask, to start talking about what your identity is without really even talking about identity, but talking about food, is to ask how your family prepares rice. Because most families eat rice, and if you don't eat rice, that says something when it comes to identity. And rice is this really recognizable and very versatile food. And so what you do with it says a lot. And then you can start talking about, when it comes to cultural differences, this aesthetic piece, that your enjoyment of this specific rice dish comes from your history and your family and how grandma makes it. Cultural history. Jerry: So food is this vital piece of connection. And my previous research for my thesis focused on how children use food as a means of creating connection and community amongst themselves. And they're very active in doing this, and examining food, and trading food, and trying to engage each other with food. It's a human need. And so to be able to bring this human need to the forefront of education, to use it as a background for conversations in the humanities, conversations in the sciences, is easy and beneficial because it's very easy to understand. Jolie: I'd like us to conclude by asking you each to reflect on our current moment and what you think might be the broader implications on how we regard food ways. And in particular, what lessons do you hope we learn from this moment about food and connection that we can take forward with us in the after times, whenever they do eventually arrive. Jerry, would you go first? Jerry: So much of how we decide who we are as individuals comes back to food. Not necessarily the individual dishes, but the people we eat with, the people we choose not to eat with, and how we share those meals. And what this time has done has changed that in very significant ways. But I think people are also finding ways to overcome that and rebuild their community, and rebuild the communication that they once had through food, through a variety of other means. And so I think one of these overarching pieces that you should begin to look at next is, we compare the inequalities between these two new systems, because it's easy to see one problem in just one system. But once that changes, it reveals new problems that may even say, the problem that we thought we had? It doesn't exist. That's not even the thing because it's actually this thing. So now is the time to really solidify all of these major problems that then can be focused on. Jolie: What about for you, Lucy? What would you hope we take away from this period in history in thinking differently about food and culture? Lucy : First, I should mention, that listeners can go to the website and actually see ... We have an online exhibit from text and photographs from the interviews. So people can go to www.foodandculture.org, and that website takes them to the exhibit and to the whole project. And they can read the questionnaire and actually respond. And they can also see on that website, the curriculum project, doing it. But I think the thing that I take away from this is the significance of food. That we tend to overlook the power that it has to create connections for us. And those connections both take us inwards and outwards, so that we can connect with our own histories, our own past. It can be something that's very personal, but it also connects us outwardly with larger society, with our larger culture, and internationally. So I think what the pandemic is doing is making us recognize the significance of small things, of everyday things that we normally take for granted. Jolie: Thank you both so much for joining me. I really loved this conversation. Listeners can keep up with ICS by following us on social media at @icsbgsu. You can listen to BiG Ideas wherever you find your favorite podcasts. Please subscribe and rate us on your preferred platform. Our producers are Chris Cavera and Marco Mendoza, with sound editing by Marco Mendoza. Research assistance was provided by Kari Hanlin. Musical Outro: Discussion.
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Happy Valentine's Day! This is Entrepreneurs of Faith, a Sunday episode of Monetization Nation. I'm Nathan Gwilliam, your host. Creating and running businesses isn't easy. However, being the spouse of an entrepreneur or CEO isn't easy either. One of the primary reasons we are creating our businesses is so we can have the time and resources for the people and things that matter most. This especially includes our spouse, the person who should matter most to us. We need to be sure we don't let the stress and business at work be an excuse for not sharing our love and being there with our loved one this Valentine's Day and the rest of the year. There is nothing we're working on at work that is more important than the people we love. But, unfortunately, approximately 50% of marriages end in divorce. So, in today's episode, we're going to discuss some of the most successful strategies entrepreneurs and CEOs use to destroy their marriages and some alternative strategies for those of us who are trying to nurture more loving and connected marriages. Strategy 1 - Don't invest time to re-connect daily. “Every successful marriage is the result of two people working diligently and skillfully to cultivate their love.” - Henry Beecher, Minister Sometimes entrepreneurs and CEOs don't prioritize daily connection with their spouse. Instead of making this mistake, maybe we can schedule opportunities for daily connection. Some ideas might be a regular date night, regular walks together, or lunch dates together. If we're traveling or away from home we can schedule reminders to send regular texts or to make regular video calls. Marriage is a daily decision that we must invest in every day. Sometimes couples quit dating each other. Don't ever quit dating. Dating and regular connection are probably how you and your spouse fell in love initially, and something we need to keep doing to continue nurturing a loving marriage. One of the business tectonic shifts we talk about a lot at Monetization Nation is “Connecting through Passion.” This doesn't just work in business, but it can also be very effective in our relationships. We should try to identify our spouse's level-10 passions and strive to connect with our spouse through what he or she is crazy-passionate about. As an example, a study found that couples who watch romantic movies and discussed the relationships in them afterward had a 50% lower divorce rate. Sorry guys. Just watch the romantic movies with her. Strategy 2 - “Outsource” sacred parts of the marriage. As entrepreneurs, we often learn the importance of outsourcing in order to get everything done. However, some of us make the mistake of outsourcing parts of our marriage. Sometimes couples outsource sacred elements of the marriage, such as emotional connection, companionship, and sometimes even sex, to people other than their spouse. Sometimes people outsource to porn and romance novels. When this happens, the spouse is escaping and finding fulfillment with other people and things. A study at the University of Oklahoma found that the chances of divorce double when pornography is viewed (Source: Marripedia). Dr. John Gottman, a world-renowned therapist who has 40 years of experience studying relationships, explains in an open and honest letter that pornography should never be viewed because of the unrealistic expectations it creates. Men and women who find fulfillment through explicit images and videos almost always find they have trouble finding fulfillment with an actual partner. Dr. Gottman states that “even non-compulsive use of [pornographic] images can damage a committed relationship.” In a similar manner, romance novels can have a similar effect. These books are full of unrealistic people, relationships, and sexual experiences. When a spouse gets too caught up in romance novels, they begin to believe that their partner should be more like the character in their novel. They can also begin to turn to these novels for feelings of romance, love, and desire instead of to their spouse, which decreases their connection. We should be committed to nurturing those sacred parts of our marriages only with our spouse. This commitment will help ensure that we keep our marriages strong and our intimate, sacred moments special and wonderful. Strategy 3 - Focus on digital devices and entertainment instead of your spouse. When was the last time we checked our phone while our spouses were trying to talk to us? A recent study found that mobile phones can have a negative impact on closeness, connection, and quality of conversation in human relationships (Source: University of Essex). Do we neglect our spouse because we spend too much time glued to digital entertainment, such as TV, social media, or video games? I recently spoke with a church leader who told me video game addiction is one of the top reasons couples in his congregation are getting divorced. Instead, maybe we commit to ourselves to put our phones away when we're having meals with or talking to our spouse. If the phone rings or we receive a text, and our spouse encourages us to take the call or check the text, maybe we can say, “I'm sure it's not as important as you.” Instead of watching too much TV or playing too many video games, maybe we make a commitment to ourselves that we only consume digital entertainment after we have made a meaningful connection that day with our spouse. This habit might help us to put first things first, as Steven Covey taught. Strategy 4 - Don't be responsible with money. Fights about money are the second leading cause of divorce, right behind infidelity (Source: Ramsey Solutions). Many couples don't have a budget or don't stick to it if they do. My wife is so much better at this than I am. Some couples buy the biggest house the bank will let them buy and drive the nicest cars they can. One study from researchers at Brigham Young University found that married individuals with higher levels of materialism had less satisfying marriages. Some couples keep their finances separate and don't communicate with their spouses about financial issues. Money issues are cited as a cause of 36% of divorces. If you haven't before, I would highly recommend taking a financial course with your spouse. My wife and I took the Dave Ramsey course and it helped a lot. A good financial course forces spouses to talk through and come to a consensus on important financial decisions. For example, do you and your spouse both know what your next big purchase will be and how fast you're saving to earn it? What do you picture for your future retirement and how much money do you need to be putting away now to achieve that? Are you both comfortable with how much money is being spent every month versus how much is being put away for future plans? Having these discussions and learning about financials together can help avoid money problems and create open and honest communication about our financials. Strategy 5 - Don't make intimacy a priority. “When couples stop having sex, their relationships become vulnerable to anger, detachment, infidelity and, ultimately, divorce.” - Dr. Ian Kerner, Counselor Sometimes spouses don't make regular sex and intimacy a priority. Sometimes touch is eliminated outside of sex. Regular sex and other intimacy can be a powerful glue that binds together spouses with a stronger connection. For many people, touch is their primary love language. For most couples, touch and sex can be a powerful way to reconnect and communicate love. Relationship expert Dr. Lurve believes that one of the most essential ingredients to any long-lasting marriage is daily hugs. She prescribes a 10-second hug every day to her clients who are struggling to reconnect with their spouses. This daily hug releases oxytocin, promotes sexual desire, helps us resolve issues more quickly, and can alleviate stress (Source: Body and Soul). Strategy 6 - Have Intimate, opposite-sex friendships. “Happy is the man who finds a true friend, and far happier is he who finds that true friend in his wife.” - Franz Schubert, Composer Sometimes we don't recognize that emotional relationships with someone of the opposite sex can be deadly to our marriages. These relationships often start innocently, as just lunch, advice, or lending a listening ear. These relationships can sometimes lead to emotional intimacy. Our spouses should be the first person to which we turn to share our joys and our sorrows. When we have our own safeguards in place and don't make justifications to break them, we're much less likely to find ourselves in inappropriate relationships. Keep in mind that most affairs don't begin because someone wanted to cheat. Actually, 80% of affairs began as “just friends” (Source: Shirley Glass). "The new infidelity is between people who unwittingly form deep, passionate connections before realizing that they've crossed the line from platonic friendship into romantic love," explains Shirley Glass, Author of Not “Just Friends.” Strategy 7 - Don't help out. Marriage is not just spiritual communion, it is also remembering to take out the trash. – Joyce Brothers, Psychologist and Author Our spouses are probably carrying heavy loads, and so are most entrepreneurs. It's very common for us to focus on our own heavy loads we are carrying and to be resentful or put out when our spouse asks us to help. Doesn't our spouse realize how busy we are? Instead, maybe we identify a job that our spouse most dislikes doing. Maybe it's cleaning toilets, doing dishes, or cleaning up dog poop. If we don't know which tasks our spouse dislikes the most, ask. Then, maybe we proactively start doing that task every day without being asked or saying anything about it. Early in my marriage, a counselor taught me that when my wife asks me to do something, I should look at it as a gift because she is telling me what she needs. This way I know what I can best do to help her. Strategy 8 - Point out all your spouse's weaknesses. “Instead of nagging about your spouse, try bragging about your spouse.” - Dave Willis, Pastor and Author When you were dating, how often did you point out the faults in the person you were dating? How often do you do it now? Maybe, instead of focusing on his or her faults, we should strive to find everything we love about our spouse and everything we're grateful for, and strive to build him or her up with love and gratitude every day. It's especially important that we don't speak badly about our spouses to others. Media is filled with spouses making jokes about each other such as: “I have four kids. Three, if you don't count my husband.” TV shows and movies can make these lines seem innocent enough but in reality, speaking about our spouses in any kind of derogatory manner will only hurt our marriages. Just as we're aware of our own weaknesses, our spouses are aware of theirs. We're not here to point them out, or even worse shout them out to our friends and family. We're there to love and support them as they strive to change for the better, just as we'll be doing. Leslie Vernick, a well-known author and speaker shared that “regularly thinking negatively about your [spouse] increases your dissatisfaction with [them] and your marriage.” The more we focus on the things we love about our spouses, the more in love we'll be with them and our marriage. Strategy 9 - Make other people a priority over your spouse. Often parents prioritize their children above their spouse. A relationship expert named David Pisarra said, “... the most frequent issue I hear from men I represent is that the focus of the wife turned to the child, and never returned to the relationship with the man.” Sometimes we allow parents, friends, or a boss to be a higher priority. Instead, maybe we need to listen when our spouse says he or she is having issues with our parents and set better boundaries. Maybe we need to plan scheduled alone time each day, a scheduled date night each week, and quarterly getaways with only our spouse. Maybe we commit that whenever our spouse calls or texts we do everything we can to immediately take the call or respond to the text so that our spouse can feel they are our priority. We need to make sure that our spouse always comes first. Strategy 10 - Be harsh or abusive to your spouse. “Family is supposed to be our safe haven. Very often, it's the place where we find the deepest heartache.” - Iyanla Vanzant It doesn't matter how bad of a day we're having. There is never an excuse for being harsh with or yelling at our spouse, calling him or her names, or abusing our spouse in any way that can take a long time to heal. Abusing our spouse is never ok. Yelling at our spouse is never ok (unless maybe the house is on fire). Calling our spouse names is never ok. Our spouse should know without a doubt that we will be loyal and never speak badly about them in front of another person. Jonathan Bennett, a relationship expert said, “If you're having a fight or [are] annoyed by your partner, the appropriate course of action is to address it directly. By airing your dirty laundry for everyone to see, you're showing a lack of respect for your partner and the relationship.” Strategy 11 - Threaten divorce. “In every marriage more than a week old, there are grounds for divorce. The trick is to find and continue to find grounds for marriage.” - Robert Anderson, Playwright Some people threaten divorce to get leverage so that their spouse will make the desired change. However, this threat can often have the opposite effect and create long-lasting rifts and disconnection in the marriage. When we threaten divorce that could be the nuclear bomb that destroys everything else around it. In 1519, a Spanish conquistador named Hernán Cortés arrived in the new world with six hundred men. Soon after arrival, he burned all his ships, sending the message to his men that there would be no turning back. Within two years he had conquered the Aztec empire. I realize there are situations, such as serious abuse, where divorce may be the right decision. However, if we are not in one of those situations, we should probably burn our ships, commit to improving the marriage, and not threaten divorce as the backup. We should let our spouse know that this may be a really hard situation, but we love them so much that we're committed to doing everything we can to work through this. Join Entrepreneurs of Faith If this episode of Entrepreneurs of Faith resonated with you, please subscribe for FREE to Monetization Nation so you can receive an episode of Entrepreneurs of Faith each Sunday. Subscribe to the Monetization eMagazine. Subscribe to the Monetization Nation YouTube channel. Subscribe to the Monetization Nation podcast on Apple Podcast, Google Podcasts, Spotify, or Stitcher. 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FamilyLife Today® Radio TranscriptReferences to conferences, resources, or other special promotions may be obsolete. Creating A More Romantic Marriage Day 6 of 8 Guest: Dennis Rainey From the Series: A Man's View of Romance________________________________________________________________ (Music: "As Time Goes By") Bob: This is FamilyLife Today. Our host is the Executive Director of FamilyLife, Dennis Rainey, and I'm Bob Lepine. Stay with us as we talk about how men view romance today on FamilyLife Today. (Music: "As Time Goes By") And welcome to FamilyLife Today, thanks for joining us on the broadcast today, as we continue to talk about romance on the program today, and today we're going to talk to wives, right, Dennis? Dennis: And I've got what one man wants me to do on this broadcast. He wrote me, "Help my wife understand how I think as a man." Bob: And you're going to do that in one broadcast? Dennis: Well, maybe two, but we're goin' for it. You know, we're talking about how you can build romance into your marriage here in anticipation of Valentine's Day, and there are undoubtedly a number of marriages who are listening into this broadcasts right now, who are much like the sailors of old, who used to be afraid of an area of the ocean called "The Doldrums." Bob: The Doldrums? Dennis: The Doldrums – they were near the Equator. It's an actual spot, and it was a place where there was no current, there were no winds, and so a sailor could happen into this area and, literally, their boat could be stalled out in the middle of the ocean for days, even weeks, because there would be no wind to pull them out of The Doldrums, and I think that's what happens in a lot of marriages. And, you know, that's really why we're doing this series. We want to help marriages not just merely experience romance, because He wants us to have marriages that are alive, that are thriving, that are contagious – Christian marriages – so that we can tell the world about why our marriage is exciting – and that's Jesus Christ. And I think Jesus Christ wants us to have a romantic relationship. He doesn't want us to have our marriage be adrift in The Doldrums. Bob: We've talked over the last couple of days about how a man can romance his wife. It's a different process for a woman to romance her husband? Dennis: It sure is. A woman looks at romance, and she spells romance "relationship." A man evidently doesn't need that many letters to spell romance, because he spells it very simply – s-e-x, sex. And what we did was, we surveyed over 800 people at our FamilyLife Marriage Conferences, and it was really quite interesting to see what communicated romance to the men and what communicated romance to the women, and a lot of women are very good students of their husbands, and they are becoming very astute at learning how to communicate romantically in the love language of their husbands so that they have that romance as part of their relationship. Bob: You know, I've got to believe there are some wives who, right off the bat, though, almost resent you saying that. They almost resent you saying that romance and sex are synonymous for a husband because maybe it puts pressure on them, or maybe they just don't want that to be all there is to romance with their husbands. Dennis: Well, there are a lot of women who have an aversion to that, because they are so relationally bent, but whether you resent it or your embrace it, I think you need to listen carefully what we're about to talk about, because it is of vital importance to any marriage that wants to be all that God intended. I ran across this little piece by Dr. Joyce Brothers, and Barbara and I included it in our book, "Building Your Mate's Self Esteem," and Dr. Brothers really points out that boredom in the bedroom can really be the demise of a marriage relationship. She writes, "Sexual boredom is a major element in the 20-year fractures in marriage. Too many women" – now listen to this carefully – "too many women accept their husband's decreasing interest in sex without stopping to think what might be causing it." I think what we've got to do over the next couple of days is talk straight to women about this subject of sex with their husbands, because it's my personal belief that there are a lot of men who are very, very frustrated with what is taking place in the Christian bedrooms of America – notice I said the "Christian bedrooms." I'm talkin' about the marriages that are attempting to love each other with the sacrificial love that Christ spoke of in Ephesians, chapter 5. There are women who are committed to their husbands but somehow, in the Christian community, I don't sense the sparkle and the sizzle that ought to be a part of Christian marriage. And for that reason, I'm going to risk it. I really want to talk honestly and straight about the sexual needs of men today. Now, as I do that, I really feel like, at this point, I need a little bit of a disclaimer here, because there is no doubt about it that men are selfish, and there are a lot of women who are listening to our broadcast who are married to men who really ought to be lined up on the 30-yard line in the Rose Bowl and kicked through the goalpost, because they are self-absorbed, they treat their wives like they're an object and, personally, I'd like to work 'em over, because they are either quoting verses, they're goin' to church and, in the meantime, they really do not give women the dignity that they ought to have. We talked on the previous broadcast about how men need to romance their wives, and so I want the women listeners to know that I've been careful to talk about how women need to be treated by their husbands first. But men are selfish. A second disclaimer I want to say is that a lot of men have damaged women emotionally. I mean, they've neglected them, they've not made them a part of their lives, they have become apathetic. There is no excuse for a man treating a woman with anything other than the love which Christ commands us to treat our wives. And the third disclaimer I've got to say about men is some men have really not assumed responsibility in just the most fundamental sense of their families – to lead it spiritually, to pray, to take their wife's hand and show tenderness, and I want you to know that as we move off in this area of understanding men, that I'm a real-world person here; I know a little bit about what's going on in marriages across the country. But there's a side of men today that I think is being bashed, that is being neglected by some Christian wives, and I think somebody's got to stand up and say, "Could I take a few moments and just talk with you straight about how a man really thinks and really feels?" Bob: As you describe the selfishness of men or their failure to be involved, I know you know, because we get letters from listeners. For a woman to give herself physically, sexually, to a man who is not connected with her emotionally, or who is disengaged from the relationship otherwise – it feels demeaning. She feels like a prostitute. Dennis: You know, my heart goes out to those women in those situations, because that's not right, and that's not what Christian marriage was meant to be, and, you know, the Bible states it clearly that we're not going to receive all the rewards that are really due to us on this side of eternity, and all I could say at that point is I pray that you might get a chance for you and your husband to experience a FamilyLife Marriage Conference, where he could hear from some men who are real men, who would really challenge him to be a spiritual leader, to be a godly leader of his family and challenge him out of his spiritual apathy, perhaps out of his spiritual deadness. He may not even be a Christian. He may be going to church, but he may have never had a life-changing experience with the Savior. And we see that occurring over and over again in our FamilyLife Marriage Conferences, where men come to the conference and at the conference they really become husbands. Bob: In the meantime, though, Dennis, are you saying that these wives need to be romantically involved, sexually involved, with their husbands, even in the midst of some of the selfishness and the spiritual apathy that you've described? Dennis: Certainly in a situation that is damaging, I would not encourage a woman to continue to submit herself where a husband is damaging her physically, emotionally – but she needs protection in those situations, and that's why we have legal authorities. Romans, chapter 13 talks about how God has put authority to protect us in the law of the land. That's why the local church is there to come alongside you and coach you in those situations. But to the rest – and, Bob, this is the larger group that I want to speak to right now – to the rest of the Christian women who are listening in today – I want to ask you, have you somehow become self-seeking in your own rights, even in a self-righteous sense? Do you feel justified in not responding to your husband and not paying attention to him in a vital area of your marriage relationship? Now, those are hard words to hear from a man, and I almost feel like apologizing on this broadcast for being a man. That's how strong, Bob, I feel like the current is in this culture of what the women's movement has done. It has not made it something to be proud of to be a man. But you know what? The feelings that I have as a man and other men that have shared with me in counseling and interaction with them at FamilyLife conferences over the past 18 years, I'm tellin' ya, what I'm about to share is real, and there aren't just a few men who feel this, there are a lot of men who feel this. I wonder today, in the Christian community, why has there been such an increase in women who have seemed to resist their husband's sexual advances? Why does there seem to be such a pushback of a woman – a Christian woman – who doesn't want to do everything she can to please her husband? Now, I'm not talkin' about doin' weird stuff and feeling used by him, but I'm just talking about going to school on your husband and being the maximum lover that God, the Creator of the universe, the Creator of the sex act, would want you to be in that marriage relationship. And I look back, and I look beyond the activity or the lack of activity in that situation, and I've got to ask a fundamental question – is it selfishness? Is it deceit? Has the enemy tricked us? And I think he has. I honestly believe that in the Christian community today we're afraid to approach this subject in an honest, forthright manner and have a heart-to-heart discussion. In the meantime, what we're doing is, I think we're blaming a lot of men for where they have failed, and they have failed, I have failed in properly loving my wife. But what man is there that can stand up and say that he has done it right? Because if you're waiting for your husband to do it perfectly, before you respond or before you begin to please him, then, my friend, you're holding your husband under a performance basis. You've got a gun to his head, and I'm going to tell you what that's going to do to him – that's going to make him mad. And that's why I think we have some men today who are swapping out their wife of 15 to 20 years for a woman who appears to be responsive, because men want to be affirmed in who they are as a man. Bob: Now, you're not saying that a man is justified in doing that. Dennis: Oh, absolutely not. That's adultery. It's emotional adultery beforehand, and that's wrong, and it's physical adultery if they consummate that relationship outside of marriage. That man would be absolutely blatantly and flagrantly in disobedience to the law of God, and I'm not justifying that activity, but I'm telling you, a man in that circumstance, who is not married to a woman who is a magnet at home, who draws him back to that home, I'm tellin' ya, that man is susceptible. He is more open to temptation and evil than the man who is loved at home by a wife who is a real student. Let me just say this at this point – there are some women listening who have done this and you know what? You don't need to get uptight that you're not doing enough. If you have really met your husband at his point of need, then you know what? You need to celebrate that. And you husbands who are listening who have a wife like that, go home and put your arm around her and say, "Thank God for this woman who meets my every need. You are a great woman, you're blessed of God. Thank you for being a great lover with me as your husband." But I think in the Christian community, I think there are some men, and not just a few men, who are angry right now, and they've been wounded by their wife's lack of interest, her neglect, her apathy towards the act of intercourse and wanting to meet her husband's sexual needs. Bob: I was with a group of couples recently. We were talking frankly about how men and women are different and how men view sex, and as we talked about it, I had a woman look at me, and she said, "You know what? Men are just weird. If they're thinkin' about it that much, if it's that much on their mind, they're just weird. I don't understand that at all." Dennis: Well, and we've already talked about this on the previous broadcasts – God made us different. Bob: Right. Dennis: Now, why'd he do that? Is He cruel? I know one woman who said in a counseling situation, she said, "I just don't know why God didn't make me more like a man." And, you know, that's not the solution here. Your husband doesn't want you to be like a man. Now, you may say, "Huh-uh, huh-uh, I know different than that." No, he doesn't want you to be like him, he just wants you to be the receiver of his love in a way that communicates affection and warmth to him, and you need to do that within the full-blown perspective of being a woman, being feminine – not becoming masculine, but being the affirming arms of love of God for your husband. Bob: You know, even in those differences, though, and as we talk about the sexual relationship in marriage, men are thinking about sex, but this isn't just about sex, is it? Dennis: No, it has to do with who he is as a man. A woman is commanded to respect her husband. Ephesians 5:33 says, "Let the wife see to it that she respects her husband." I really like, Bob, the way the Amplified Bible reads in this verse -- "And let the wife see to it that she respects and reverences her husband; that she notices him, regards him, honors him, prefers him, venerates and esteems him, and that she defers to him, praises him, loves and admires him exceedingly." Bob: I know some men who are going to go buy the Amplified version and take it home and just read it for that. Dennis: You know, the best illustration I've ever seen from this came from a woman who was married, I believe, almost 40 years. She works here at FamilyLife, and her name is Pat Orten [sp], and I'll never forget this. I was walking out of the office one day – and Pat is a grandma and a great lady. Her husband died a number of years ago. And I asked her, I said, "Pat, as an older woman who has mentored some younger women, what do you think is one of the most important things you could share with a young wife as she starts out her marriage?" And Pat got a sly grin on her face, and she looked back at me, and she said, "Dennis, I would tell women if they want to be treated like a queen, then they need to crown him king." And she said, "I always sought to crown my husband king about halfway between his car and the front door when he arrived home," and she had a twinkle in her eye like no grandma I've ever seen when she said that. And, you know, Bob, I listened to her, and I said, "That's it. That's what God wants. He wants a mature love that has a sparkle to it." Not a love that becomes mature and has cobwebs all over it. You know, that's rusty and decayed. No, it's a love that's excited, and it's a love that is preferring another person, and a part of that preferring moves, I believe, into the bedroom, especially for men today. Bob: That's what I was going to ask you – respecting is one thing, but what does that have to do with sex? Dennis: The Proverbs says a wise woman builds up her house. The foolish woman is the one who destroys it and tears it down. It's a wise woman, I think, who wants to understand her husband's sex drive. It's a woman who says, "I want to know my husband, and I want to know his fears, his anxieties. I want to know what's really behind this thing called man," because I think today a lot of men don't even understand that as well. Bob: You're saying that there's more being communicated during the sex act than just the pleasure that's associated with it? Dennis: Well, we're going to have to talk more about this tomorrow, but I'm saying that, for a man, the sex act represents risk, and for the woman who understands how vulnerable, how risky, how he can feel rejected at this point, it is that woman who becomes the very wise and astute wife, because she realizes that her responsiveness, her love for him, her respecting him at that point – she is esteeming and respecting that man as God's creation, and she's not rejecting what God said was very good. Bob: You know, you've spent a lot of time on the broadcast today, Dennis, talking about sexual intimacy in marriage and how important that is for a husband, but the bigger objective here is not just to improve a couple's sex life, is it? Dennis: No, it really isn't, and I just want you women to know what we're going to do is really help you romance your spouse, because that is a bedrock issue in marital love. No, it's not the whole issue, it is merely a part, but I'm going to tell you something, when we ignore this part that God created, we're making a tactical error that is going to cost our marriage dearly. Bob: Well, I hope you can join us Monday as we continue to look at this important subject for every marriage relationship. Our engineer is Mark Whitlock. Dennis Rainey is our host, and I'm Bob Lepine, and we'll see you Monday for another edition of FamilyLife Today. (Music: "As Time Goes By") FamilyLife Today is a production of FamilyLife of Little Rock, Arkansas, a ministry of Campus Crusade for Christ. ______________________________________________________________We are so happy to provide these transcripts to you. However, there is a cost to transcribe, create, and produce them for our website. If you've benefited from the broadcast transcripts, could you consider donating today to help defray the costs? Copyright © FamilyLife. All rights reserved.www.FamilyLife.com
Dr. Joyce Brothers joins PeachMachine and Dabbledob for a panel discussion in this weeks episode of Eye on Springfield... or whatever this show is called. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/simpsonswatchalong/support
Joyce Diane Brothers (October 20, 1927 – May 13, 2013) was an American psychologist, television personality, advice columnist, and writer. She first became famous in 1955 for winning the top prize on the American game show The $64,000 Question. [1] Her fame from the game show allowed her to go on to host various advice columns and television shows, which established her as a pioneer in the field of "pop (popular) psychology". Brothers is often credited as the first to normalize psychological concepts to the American mainstream.[1] Her syndicated columns were featured in newspapers and magazines, including a monthly column for Good Housekeeping, in which she contributed for nearly 40 years.[2] As Brothers quickly became the "face of psychology" for American audiences, she often appeared in various television roles, usually as herself.[3] From the 1970s onward, she also began to accept fictional roles that parodied her "woman psychologist" persona.[4] She is noted for working continuously for five decades across various genres.[1] Numerous groups recognized Brothers for her strong leadership as a woman in the psychological field and for helping to destigmatize the profession overall. IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO MAKE A COMMITTED MONTHLY DONATION FOR FUTURE EPISODES YOU CAN DONATE HERE: https://anchor.fm/thequeensnewyorker/support PICTURE BY: By New York World-Telegram and the Sun staff photographer: Twachtman, Phyllis, photographer. - Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division. New York World-Telegram and the Sun Newspaper Photograph Collection. http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/cph.3c17953, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=1307033 TUNE IN TO THE NEW 2 HOUR PODCAST CALLED "THE DECANIO DISCUSSION": https://www.mixcloud.com/jason-decanio/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thequeensnewyorker/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thequeensnewyorker/support
This week on Guides' Own, We are talking about Mental Health and how Guiding has taken time to make sure that girls today have the tools to have good mental health and how Canadian compares have been working to destigmatize mental health problems. We talk about Dr. Joyce Brothers, a TV Psychologist who made waves in the field in the 50s, 60s, and 70s by educating the public about mental health and making it a part of our daily conversations. And finally we sing a song new to Marissa, but an old fave of Taryn's, An Irish Blessing.
By 1984, Steve Martin had played an idiot, a down-on-his-luck sheet music salesman in 30s Chicago, a noir detective, and a mad scientist – quite a variety of characters, though all very specific in their characterizations. Because of that, seeing him play a pretty normal, non-affected straight guy in Arthur Hiller's comedy The Lonely Guy almost seemed a bit of a surprise. Surely, Martin was looking for a variety of parts so he could show off what we could do, so it makes sense. The film didn't end up being a success, but it still allowed Martin the chance to play something a bit different yet again. Join us – Pete Wright and Andy Nelson – as we continue our Steve Martin series with Hillers' 1984 film The Lonely Guy. We talk about why a lot of this film doesn't work, but why parts of it do work. We look at why comedy beats with Dr. Joyce Brothers may work (or not, depending on your take), but how her presence does seem to date the film a bit. We look at the team behind some of the technical elements, including composer Jerry Goldsmith. And we look at other cast members like Charles Grodin and Judith Ivey and chat about what works with their performances versus Martin's. It's a tricky little film that feels at times like the parts are better than the sum. Regardless, it has some great comedic beats, even if the tone is a mess. We have a great time talking about it on this week's show so check it out then tune in. The Next Reel – when the movie ends, our conversation begins. Join the conversation with movie lovers from around the world on The Next Reel's Discord channel! Film Sundries Thank you for supporting The Next Reel Film Podcast on Patreon! Watch this film: iTunes • Amazon • Hulu • YouTube Script Transcript Original theatrical trailer Original poster artwork The Lonely Guy's Book of Life by Bruce Jay Friedman Flickchart Letterboxd
By 1984, Steve Martin had played an idiot, a down-on-his-luck sheet music salesman in 30s Chicago, a noir detective, and a mad scientist – quite a variety of characters, though all very specific in their characterizations. Because of that, seeing him play a pretty normal, non-affected straight guy in Arthur Hiller’s comedy The Lonely Guy almost seemed a bit of a surprise. Surely, Martin was looking for a variety of parts so he could show off what we could do, so it makes sense. The film didn’t end up being a success, but it still allowed Martin the chance to play something a bit different yet again. Join us – Pete Wright and Andy Nelson – as we continue our Steve Martin series with Hillers’ 1984 film The Lonely Guy. We talk about why a lot of this film doesn’t work, but why parts of it do work. We look at why comedy beats with Dr. Joyce Brothers may work (or not, depending on your take), but how her presence does seem to date the film a bit. We look at the team behind some of the technical elements, including composer Jerry Goldsmith. And we look at other cast members like Charles Grodin and Judith Ivey and chat about what works with their performances versus Martin’s. It’s a tricky little film that feels at times like the parts are better than the sum. Regardless, it has some great comedic beats, even if the tone is a mess. We have a great time talking about it on this week’s show so check it out then tune in. The Next Reel – when the movie ends, our conversation begins. Join the conversation with movie lovers from around the world on The Next Reel’s Discord channel! Film Sundries Thank you for supporting The Next Reel Film Podcast on Patreon! Watch this film: iTunes • Amazon • Hulu • YouTube Script Transcript Original theatrical trailer Original poster artwork The Lonely Guy’s Book of Life by Bruce Jay Friedman Flickchart Letterboxd
Jack puts Amanda in an uncomfortable position, but she’s able to return the favor – an event that forces her to lean on Peter and open up to Michael. Brooke’s scheming continues, Jake and Jo go to the Rose Bowl, Kimberly learns news both good and bad, and no one cares about Matt’s dead dad.
Victoria Jackson Guests Animal Radio's Season of Stars continues with comedian Victoria Jackson (Saturday Night Live). There's no stopping her when it comes to yapping about her pets. She talks about how her dog got her kicked off a TV sitcom. Listen Now Couples and Their Pets Remembering world renown Psychiatrist Dr. Joyce Brothers as she discusses the relationship between humans and pets, especially when they come between partners. Listen Now Doggie Ice Cream Trucks and Vending Machines For Fido! A handful of new businesses are going after the pampered pet set with gourmet snacks, frozen desserts and even vending machines for dogs. A number of areas have also seen canine food trucks hit the streets. Listen Now Lush Lawn Can Cause Cancer In Dogs A lush lawn creates a sense of pride for many American homeowners, but a new study finds that utilizing a chemical lawn service to achieve those results is likely causing malignant cancer in many pet dogs. Listen Now Read more about this week's show.
Episode 5 - JOSE ESCAMILLA - UFOs, Roswell Rods and Cities on the Moon: Producer-Director, Jose Escamilla has been editing film and video for over 20 years. Video productions in release nationwide include; L.A. Gang Violence - a documentary about LA Gangs and Donny - The Educational Dinosaur, a cartoon series starring; RUTH BUZZI, RICHARD MOLL, SWOOSIE KURTZ, BRENDA VACCARO, KATHY IRELAND, ED BEGLEY, JR., DR. JOYCE BROTHERS, TOM BOSLEY, CARLOS PALOMINO, and NEL CARTER. In 1985 he put together a world event entitled: ONE MINUTE OF PEACE, where he asked everyone in the world to stop what they were doing all together for "one minute" in honor of Samantha Smith and the children of the world. He performed the title song at The Hollywood Bowl and via satellite world wide and the One Minute of Peace project was underway. He produced, arranged and performed all the background music for TITO GUIZAR in 1990, as he helped Tito make a comeback with his music in an album and home video which Jose produced. Tito has starred in Mari Mar, the latest hot "novella" now airing in Mexico and the US and is now starring in his third soap opera in Mexico at age 88! Tito Guizar, best known as the Mexican Troubadour, making famous such songs as, Alla En El Rancho Grande, Cielito Lindo, Maria Elena, Guadalajara, Jalisco, South of The Border, What a Difference a Day Makes , and many more songs that are standards today all over the world. Jose's work with Tito is an experience that he will never forget. "Tito is the last living legend from Mexico and the Golden Era of Hollywood." Aside from Jose's work with many artists and celebrities, Jose's UFO experiences that occurred at Midway, New Mexico on March 5,1994, have put him on a variety of lectures and television and radio programs talking about the subject. He has appeared on television shows such as The Learning Channel, Geraldo Rivera, Hard Copy, Sightings, Encounters, The Other Side, Inside Edition, the BBC in London, Spanish Language programs, (Sabado Gigante-"EL Y ELLA"), and on many Network News broadcasts, ABC, NBC, CBS NEWS. He has appeared in many UFO related magazines, America On-line, The Internet, CompuServe, Newspapers and radio talk shows. He has lectured at many conventions on the subject including, New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, Colorado, and Mexico City. His first hand experiences with the phenomena and background in the Entertainment Industry, lend a unique quality in presenting UFOs to the public. - www.tblnfilms.com
Air Date Oct 30, 1995. When Billy find's Brooke's birth control unused, she declares her omission had the usual consequence. Alison moves into Hayley's mansion where she discovers a locked room belonging to his late wife that she cannot enter. Meanwhile, Matt asks help from Michael for his entrance test to medical school. Richard asks Jo to come with him to Hawaii to do a photo shoot, while he sends Jane to New York. Jake becomes furious when he learns about Jo wanting to go to Hawaii and he seeks comfort with Shelly. When Amanda expresses her feelings to Peter, hoping that the comatose Jack shall never recover, Sydney's there to record it on tape. Also, Kimberly gets invited as a guest on Dr. Joyce Brothers' radio show whose special topic deals with psychotics. But Kimberly must find a way to get the monitoring bracelet off her wrist first. We're now on Spotify! Listen here! - http://bit.ly/melrosepodspotify Contribute to the podcast! Patreon- https://bit.ly/2pq8x1B Follow us on social media! Join our Facebook Group - https://bit.ly/MelroseFBGroup Facebook- Https://facebook.com/melrosepod Instagram- https://instagram.com/melrosepod Twitter- Https://twitter.com/melrosepod Email - Melrosepod@gmail.com More Ways to listen! Apple Podcasts - https://goo.gl/9T4Wnb Spotify - http://bit.ly/melrosepodspotify Google Podcasts - https://goo.gl/cxtxjT Stitcher - https://goo.gl/54w8PA
Air Date Oct 23, 1995. After Jack tries to kill Amanda at his mansion, he falls off a balcony and lands in a coma. Amanda goes to Peter for help who promises to help her avoid attempted murder charges, and get rid of Jack's mafia lawyer, Nick Diamond, who begins tailing her. But Michael sees a chance to find some dirt on Peter to use against him and cuts in, making Jack his patient. Meanwhile, Kimberly fills her boredom by calling Dr. Joyce Brothers' radio call-in show to talk of her problems and when she learns from Sydney about Peter spending time with Amanda, she violates her parole. Peter finally tells Kimberly why he's determined to help her which stems from his previous wife who also suffered from a mental illness. But Kimberly eventually faces her fear and confronts the actor, Mark Paul, hired to play Henry and is happy to be over him for good. Hayley and Alison reveal their engagement to Brooke and Billy. After his father's funeral, Matt tells his mother that he will keep his promise to his father by going to medical school. Also, Shelly buys a computer to help Jake with his accounts at Shooters while he tries to make up for lost time with Jo. We're now on Spotify! Listen here! - http://bit.ly/melrosepodspotify Contribute to the podcast! Patreon- https://bit.ly/2pq8x1B Follow us on social media! Join our Facebook Group - https://bit.ly/MelroseFBGroup Facebook- Https://facebook.com/melrosepod Instagram- https://instagram.com/melrosepod Twitter- Https://twitter.com/melrosepod Email - Melrosepod@gmail.com More Ways to listen! Apple Podcasts - https://goo.gl/9T4Wnb Spotify - http://bit.ly/melrosepodspotify Google Podcasts - https://goo.gl/cxtxjT Stitcher - https://goo.gl/54w8PA
Buncha Dr. Joyce Brothers's over here. We discuss Producer Dave's fondness of cross dressers' packages, Daily's war with the illegal day care in the apartment upstairs, celebrities' deformities, Surviving R Kelly, slam dancing, and how to last longer in bed.
National Polygamy Advocate ™ Mark Henkel was the guest on Poppoff with Mary Jane Popp, on KAHI 104.5-FM & 950-AM, in Sacramento, California, on February 1, 2016, the week after the Brown v. Buhman ("Sister Wives") case was appealed at the US 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver, Colorado. The host conducted the interview as a genuine professional, asking numerous excellent questions with respectul politeness. The answers include many concepts that help people understand UCAP, Unrelated Consenting Adult Polygamy - such as definitions of polygamy, polygyny, and polyandry; anthropology, biology, and Biblical history; the Dr. Joyce Brothers 1994 quote; women choose the man in species; the seed and garden example; "Manufactured News outlets;" "10 men & 10 women" analogy of free marriage market economics; "stay-at-home mom & travelling high-career woman" example of choice; and the reason for hope that the Supreme Court might uphold the lower court's decision in Brown v. Buhman to de-criminalize "de facto polygamy:" saying, "If you can't prosecute monogamists for shacking up, you can't prosecute polygamists for shacking up." (It should be noted here that, unfortunately, that did NOT happen later in 2016 and 2017, when the Appeals Court instead REVERSED and then the Supreme Court DECLINED to hear the case at all.) http://www.NationalPolygamyAdvocate.com --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/nationalpolygamyadvocate/support
"It's all about you, baby" Welcome to Episode #6 of Crushing Disappointment. Matt chats to Rheannon about her crush on McFly.Disappointments: Do you spend enough time talking about McFly? Isn't that verse by Ludacris and not Lil Jon? Are you accidentally reasserting a male/female binary in your questions? Is your introduction good enough considering the times you've failed in your interviews? Adam Ruins Everything: Why You Should Tell Coworkers Your SalaryRachel Simmons: The Curse of the Good Girl: Raising Authentic Girls with Courage and ConfidenceEhrenreich, Hess & Jacobss: "Beatlemania: Girls just want to Have Fun" from, I think, Re-Making Love: The Feminization of Sex This includes the Dr. Joyce Brothers quote: "The Beatles display a few mannerisms which almost seem a shade on the feminine side, such as the tossing of their long manes of hair. . . . These are exactly the mannerisms which very young female fans (in the 10-to-14 age group) appear to go wildest over"Matt Willis interview on Scroobius Pip's Distraction PiecesAlexis Petridis: Mad About the Boys
In her book, Dr. Joyce Brothers: The Founding Mother of TV Psychology (Rowman and Littlefield, 2016), Kathleen Collins presents an extensive history of the woman who is arguably the most famous television psychologist. Starting with Brothers' appearance as a boxing expert on the $64,000 Question in the 1950s, and bringing readers through her decades-long career in television and radio, Collins argues that Brothers created the personal approach to psychology that became the norm for television other popular media. Collins examines the different ways that Brothers created a career for herself for over 50 years, looking at her role as psychologist, as well as her roles as guest star, actor, and media celebrity. She looks at the ways Brothers used her savvy business sense to create a multilayered career that made vital contributions to psychology, television, and U.S. cultural history. Collins uses Brothers' personal papers and her published interviews as well as her own interviews with Brothers' daughter and colleagues to create a well-researched and informative exploration into this television icon. Rebekah Buchanan is an Assistant Professor of English at Western Illinois University. Her work examines the role of narrative–both analog and digital–in people's lives. She is interested in how personal narratives produced in alternative spaces create sites that challenge traditionally accepted public narratives. She researches zines, zine writers and the influence of music subcultures and fandom on writers and narratives. You can find more about her on her website, follow her on Twitter @rj_buchanan or email her at rj-buchanan@wiu.edu. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In her book, Dr. Joyce Brothers: The Founding Mother of TV Psychology (Rowman and Littlefield, 2016), Kathleen Collins presents an extensive history of the woman who is arguably the most famous television psychologist. Starting with Brothers’ appearance as a boxing expert on the $64,000 Question in the 1950s, and bringing readers through her decades-long career in television and radio, Collins argues that Brothers created the personal approach to psychology that became the norm for television other popular media. Collins examines the different ways that Brothers created a career for herself for over 50 years, looking at her role as psychologist, as well as her roles as guest star, actor, and media celebrity. She looks at the ways Brothers used her savvy business sense to create a multilayered career that made vital contributions to psychology, television, and U.S. cultural history. Collins uses Brothers’ personal papers and her published interviews as well as her own interviews with Brothers’ daughter and colleagues to create a well-researched and informative exploration into this television icon. Rebekah Buchanan is an Assistant Professor of English at Western Illinois University. Her work examines the role of narrative–both analog and digital–in people’s lives. She is interested in how personal narratives produced in alternative spaces create sites that challenge traditionally accepted public narratives. She researches zines, zine writers and the influence of music subcultures and fandom on writers and narratives. You can find more about her on her website, follow her on Twitter @rj_buchanan or email her at rj-buchanan@wiu.edu. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In her book, Dr. Joyce Brothers: The Founding Mother of TV Psychology (Rowman and Littlefield, 2016), Kathleen Collins presents an extensive history of the woman who is arguably the most famous television psychologist. Starting with Brothers’ appearance as a boxing expert on the $64,000 Question in the 1950s, and bringing readers through her decades-long career in television and radio, Collins argues that Brothers created the personal approach to psychology that became the norm for television other popular media. Collins examines the different ways that Brothers created a career for herself for over 50 years, looking at her role as psychologist, as well as her roles as guest star, actor, and media celebrity. She looks at the ways Brothers used her savvy business sense to create a multilayered career that made vital contributions to psychology, television, and U.S. cultural history. Collins uses Brothers’ personal papers and her published interviews as well as her own interviews with Brothers’ daughter and colleagues to create a well-researched and informative exploration into this television icon. Rebekah Buchanan is an Assistant Professor of English at Western Illinois University. Her work examines the role of narrative–both analog and digital–in people’s lives. She is interested in how personal narratives produced in alternative spaces create sites that challenge traditionally accepted public narratives. She researches zines, zine writers and the influence of music subcultures and fandom on writers and narratives. You can find more about her on her website, follow her on Twitter @rj_buchanan or email her at rj-buchanan@wiu.edu. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In her book, Dr. Joyce Brothers: The Founding Mother of TV Psychology (Rowman and Littlefield, 2016), Kathleen Collins presents an extensive history of the woman who is arguably the most famous television psychologist. Starting with Brothers’ appearance as a boxing expert on the $64,000 Question in the 1950s, and bringing readers through her decades-long career in television and radio, Collins argues that Brothers created the personal approach to psychology that became the norm for television other popular media. Collins examines the different ways that Brothers created a career for herself for over 50 years, looking at her role as psychologist, as well as her roles as guest star, actor, and media celebrity. She looks at the ways Brothers used her savvy business sense to create a multilayered career that made vital contributions to psychology, television, and U.S. cultural history. Collins uses Brothers’ personal papers and her published interviews as well as her own interviews with Brothers’ daughter and colleagues to create a well-researched and informative exploration into this television icon. Rebekah Buchanan is an Assistant Professor of English at Western Illinois University. Her work examines the role of narrative–both analog and digital–in people’s lives. She is interested in how personal narratives produced in alternative spaces create sites that challenge traditionally accepted public narratives. She researches zines, zine writers and the influence of music subcultures and fandom on writers and narratives. You can find more about her on her website, follow her on Twitter @rj_buchanan or email her at rj-buchanan@wiu.edu. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In her book, Dr. Joyce Brothers: The Founding Mother of TV Psychology (Rowman and Littlefield, 2016), Kathleen Collins presents an extensive history of the woman who is arguably the most famous television psychologist. Starting with Brothers’ appearance as a boxing expert on the $64,000 Question in the 1950s, and bringing readers through her decades-long career in television and radio, Collins argues that Brothers created the personal approach to psychology that became the norm for television other popular media. Collins examines the different ways that Brothers created a career for herself for over 50 years, looking at her role as psychologist, as well as her roles as guest star, actor, and media celebrity. She looks at the ways Brothers used her savvy business sense to create a multilayered career that made vital contributions to psychology, television, and U.S. cultural history. Collins uses Brothers’ personal papers and her published interviews as well as her own interviews with Brothers’ daughter and colleagues to create a well-researched and informative exploration into this television icon. Rebekah Buchanan is an Assistant Professor of English at Western Illinois University. Her work examines the role of narrative–both analog and digital–in people’s lives. She is interested in how personal narratives produced in alternative spaces create sites that challenge traditionally accepted public narratives. She researches zines, zine writers and the influence of music subcultures and fandom on writers and narratives. You can find more about her on her website, follow her on Twitter @rj_buchanan or email her at rj-buchanan@wiu.edu. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In her book, Dr. Joyce Brothers: The Founding Mother of TV Psychology (Rowman and Littlefield, 2016), Kathleen Collins presents an extensive history of the woman who is arguably the most famous television psychologist. Starting with Brothers' appearance as a boxing expert on the $64,000 Question in the 1950s, and bringing readers through her decades-long career in television and radio, Collins argues that Brothers created the personal approach to psychology that became the norm for television other popular media. Collins examines the different ways that Brothers created a career for herself for over 50 years, looking at her role as psychologist, as well as her roles as guest star, actor, and media celebrity. She looks at the ways Brothers used her savvy business sense to create a multilayered career that made vital contributions to psychology, television, and U.S. cultural history. Collins uses Brothers' personal papers and her published interviews as well as her own interviews with Brothers' daughter and colleagues to create a well-researched and informative exploration into this television icon. Rebekah Buchanan is an Assistant Professor of English at Western Illinois University. Her work examines the role of narrative–both analog and digital–in people's lives. She is interested in how personal narratives produced in alternative spaces create sites that challenge traditionally accepted public narratives. She researches zines, zine writers and the influence of music subcultures and fandom on writers and narratives. You can find more about her on her website, follow her on Twitter @rj_buchanan or email her at rj-buchanan@wiu.edu. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/psychology
In her book, Dr. Joyce Brothers: The Founding Mother of TV Psychology (Rowman and Littlefield, 2016), Kathleen Collins presents an extensive history of the woman who is arguably the most famous television psychologist. Starting with Brothers’ appearance as a boxing expert on the $64,000 Question in the 1950s, and bringing readers through her decades-long career in television and radio, Collins argues that Brothers created the personal approach to psychology that became the norm for television other popular media. Collins examines the different ways that Brothers created a career for herself for over 50 years, looking at her role as psychologist, as well as her roles as guest star, actor, and media celebrity. She looks at the ways Brothers used her savvy business sense to create a multilayered career that made vital contributions to psychology, television, and U.S. cultural history. Collins uses Brothers’ personal papers and her published interviews as well as her own interviews with Brothers’ daughter and colleagues to create a well-researched and informative exploration into this television icon. Rebekah Buchanan is an Assistant Professor of English at Western Illinois University. Her work examines the role of narrative–both analog and digital–in people’s lives. She is interested in how personal narratives produced in alternative spaces create sites that challenge traditionally accepted public narratives. She researches zines, zine writers and the influence of music subcultures and fandom on writers and narratives. You can find more about her on her website, follow her on Twitter @rj_buchanan or email her at rj-buchanan@wiu.edu. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
That lovable, furry, cat-eating alien ALF sits in for Johnny in the extra-long "Tonight, Tonight" (Season 3, Episode 4). Joining ALF, Ed McMahon, Tommy Newsom and the Tonight Show Orchestra, plus guests Pope John Paul II, Dr. Joyce Brothers, and Joan Embery from the San Diego Zoo. Plus the TV Guide Game!
Joyce Brothers is widely-known for helping Americans understand how their emotions influence their lives. She brings her message to America through broadcasts on NBC Radio's program Newsline and as a regular columnist for Good Housekeeping magazine. Her daily column appears in more than 350 newspapers, and her books have been translated into 26 languages.
Join your HORROR HOSTS - SHAWN ENGEL, LUKE JACONETTI, CHRIS TYLER and CHRIS HONEYWELL as they get some TELEKINETIC THRILLS from FRIDAY THE 13TH PART VII - THE NEW BLOOD! SEE - cut rate ROBERT VAUGHN - poor man's JIM CARREY, Dr. JOYCE BROTHERS as MOM and THE SWINGIN' SLEEPING BAG! It is a CONFLUENCE of LUCKY snd UNLUCKY numbers that can only happen ONCE! TUNE IN NOW!!!!!Feedback for this show can be sent to: freakvault@gmail.comTwo True Freaks! is a proud member of BOTH the Comics Podcast Network (http://www.comicspodcasts.com/) and the League of Comic Book Podcasts (http://www.comicbooknoise.com/league/)!! Follow the fun on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/groups/113051642052970/ THANK YOU for listening to Two True Freaks!!
Join your HORROR HOSTS - SHAWN ENGEL, LUKE JACONETTI, CHRIS TYLER and CHRIS HONEYWELL as they get some TELEKINETIC THRILLS from FRIDAY THE 13TH PART VII - THE NEW BLOOD! SEE - cut rate ROBERT VAUGHN - poor man's JIM CARREY, Dr. JOYCE BROTHERS as MOM and THE SWINGIN' SLEEPING BAG! It is a CONFLUENCE of LUCKY snd UNLUCKY numbers that can only happen ONCE! TUNE IN NOW!!!!!Feedback for this show can be sent to: freakvault@gmail.comTwo True Freaks! is a proud member of BOTH the Comics Podcast Network (http://www.comicspodcasts.com/) and the League of Comic Book Podcasts (http://www.comicbooknoise.com/league/)!! Follow the fun on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/groups/113051642052970/ THANK YOU for listening to Two True Freaks!!
Holy Crap! DAVID SEDARIS is on this episode!!!!!!! Oh, hello. Sorry. I just got right into it, didn't I. Anyway. This episode of How Was Your Week is so exciting, none of us can handle it. As mentioned, DAVID SEDARIS is on the show to discuss his new book LET'S EXPLORE DIABETES WITH OWLS, and to surprise Julie with the revelation that HE has questions for HER! That's right! David Sedaris is a fan of this very podcast! I know. I know. So, once that fact is dealt or not dealt with, David and Julie have lots to talk about. Eating steak during signings, renting cats with poopy butts, reading books about pederasty, writing about doing it, and having the good fortune to be friends with David Rakoff. Also: Julie counts down to the Liberace movie, contemplates the new crop of network shows, briefly mourns Dr. Joyce Brothers, explains the source of her recent panic attack, speculates about Al Pacino's headspace, and directs young men who wish to be sexy toward Don Draper's hotel room shenanigans. BUT MORE IMPORTANTLY! DAVID SEDARIS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Enjoy this.
9 AM - New Michael J Fox TV show trailer and Arrested Development trailer; More on the After Show controversy; Presidential historians; RIP Dr Joyce Brothers; Kelly Ripa is doing yoga on TV; Higher ups in the media have close relatives and spouses in the Obama admin.
Victoria Jackson Guests Animal Radio's Season of Stars continues with comedian Victoria Jackson (Saturday Night Live). There's no stopping her when it comes to yapping about her pets. She talks about how her dog got her kicked off a TV sitcom. Lush Lawn Can Cause Cancer In Dogs A lush lawn creates a sense of pride for many American homeowners, but a new study finds that utilizing a chemical lawn service to achieve those results is likely causing malignant cancer in many pet dogs. Couples and Their Pets World renown Psychiatrist Dr. Joyce Brothers discusses the relationship between humans and pets, especially when they come between partners. Doggie Ice Cream Trucks and Vending Machines For Fido! A handful of new businesses are going after the pampered pet set with gourmet snacks, frozen desserts and even vending machines for dogs. A number of areas have also seen canine food trucks hit the streets. More this week
DR. JOYCE BROTHERS on Pets in Bed...PBS's Equitrekking DARLEY NEWMAN, LISA DUNN DERN. This is the abridged version. The full two-hour show is available at AnimalRadio.com.
Legendary Shrink DR. JOYCE BROTHERS discusses everything from "Why we look like our pets," "How to deal with a pooch that likes to sleep in the bed between you and your spouse, SAN FRANCISCO ZOO VALENTINES SEX TOUR with Jane Tolleni, American Humane's President and CEO MARIE BELEW WHEATLEY talks about the Film Unit that oversees Hollywood movie making. Remember, this Podcast is only a half-hour. The full two-hour show is available at AnimalRadio.com.