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For the final time, pack your mosquito spray and come with us into the fake jungles of Rome's film studios in search of a mythical white goddess who has the kind of sex appeal that even the animals can dig. Yes, it's Tarzana, the beautiful heiress whose parents died in the plane crash that left her alone in Kenya to survive and thrive, learning such essential jungle skills as how to swing on vines, how to direct elephants, and how to weave tiny thongs.In the episode we discuss the lack of available interviews with star Ken Clark. Rod mentions some videos, but on post-episode examination it turns out these are interviews with British politician Ken Clarke. However, the fanzine European Trash Cinema did interview our Ken back in 1995. You can find part of that interview reproduced HERE. If you want to read the whole thing, the issue is currently for sale on eBay.The only decent online coverage of Tarzana can be found on the blog Spinning Image.We hope you have enjoyed this jungle-themed mini-season. We would love to hear from you if you have any favourite Jungle Girl films, or if you ever got lost in the jungle yourself and ended up befriending the animals or becoming a god to a local tribe. You can contact us on Twitter and Instagram or by email at wildwildpodcast@gmail.com. Please also remember to rate and review us on your podcast platform of choice!If you enjoy the podcast, why not buy us a coffee at ko-fi.com/wildwildpodcast? Espresso, naturally. Grazie mille! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
L'Histoire de la bande dessinée américaine fourmille d'anecdotes plus ou moins inattendues, mais l'histoire que je vais vous raconter compte incontestablement parmi les plus bizarres qu'il m'ait été donné d'entendre. Aujourd'hui, on parle de Fletcher Hanks et de ses créations à la limite du surréalisme… Avec la sortie du premier numéro de Action Comics en 1938, la bande dessinée américaine connaît un véritable cataclysme. Superman, le premier super-héros moderne, est un succès éditorial instantané et le format comic book s'impose définitivement dans les kiosques. Si les créateurs de l'Homme d'Acier, Jerry Siegel et Joe Shuster, auront bien du mal à faire reconnaître leurs droits sur le personnage et la pléthore de produits dérivés qui en seront tirés, ils n'en sont pas moins à l'origine d'une tendance qui va faire des émules. Les gamins veulent des justiciers costumés dotés de super pouvoirs ? Et bien, on va leur en donner ! En l'espace de quelques semaines, tous les éditeurs ou presque se mettent à commander aux artistes qui travaillent pour eux des histoires de super-héros. Et si Batman, Wonder Woman, The Flash, Captain Marvel ou Namor the Sub-Mariner sont parvenus jusqu'à nous, parfois au prix de changements drastiques, vous vous doutez bien qu'une bonne partie des créations de l'époque n'ont pas connu la même longévité. Si Black Cat, Green Lama, Doll Man, Black Terror ou Blue Bolt n'ont pas autant marqué l'histoire des comics que Captain America ou Green Lantern, et ce malgré quelques tentatives isolées de les réanimer, il existe d'autres personnages, bien plus exotiques encore, que le grand public a totalement oublié aujourd'hui. Parmi les proto-super-humains des comic books, la justicière Fantomah est tout à fait remarquable. Apparue dans Jungle Comics #2 en février 1940 sous la plume d'un dénommé Barclay Flagg, chez l'éditeur Fiction House, Fantomah est parfois considérée comme la véritable première super-héroïne, devançant ainsi la célèbre Wonder Woman de William Moulton Marston et Harry G. Peter, apparue dans All-Star Comics #8 en octobre 1941. Cette réputation reste largement sujette à débat, étant donné que Fantomah n'est ni la première protectrice de la jungle ; Rima the Jungle Girl étant apparue bien avant elle ; ni la première à posséder sa propre série, ce titre revenant à Sheena, Queen of the Jungle ; ni le premier personnage féminin à posséder un semblant de super pouvoirs, L'Oiselle du français René d'Anjou ayant pris son envol dès 1909. Si Fantomah peut prétendre à ce statut, c'est parce qu'elle est le premier personnage féminin apparu directement dans une bande dessinée américaine à englober plusieurs caractéristiques super-héroïques, comme des pouvoirs surhumains paranormaux ou une transformation physique comparable à une sorte d'identité secrète. Bien que ses aventures ne soient pas précisément localisées, l'héroïne défend son royaume, très largement fantasmé, de pilleurs occidentaux malintentionnés, abattant son courroux sur ceux qui voudraient profaner son sauvage sanctuaire. À la découverte des surprenantes aventures de Fantomah, on serait en droit de se demander pourquoi son créateur, Barclay Flagg, n'est pas resté dans l'histoire comme Jack Kirby, Stan Lee, ou Will Eisner. Et bien, tout simplement parce que Barclay Flagg n'existe pas. Il s'agit en fait de l'un des nombreux pseudonymes utilisés par l'un des plus mystérieux auteurs de comics du XXe siècle : Fletcher Hanks. Pendant des décennies, Fletcher Hanks est resté l'une des plus grandes énigmes de la bande dessinée américaine, jusqu'à ce que l'auteur Paul Karasik ne se lance dans une incroyable enquête qui l'a mené jusqu'à rencontrer le fils du dessinateur, Fletcher Hanks Jr., au début des années 2000. Ainsi, tout ce que l'on sait, ou presque, de Fletcher Hanks est issu du témoignage de son fils. Né en 1887, Fletcher Hanks grandit à Oxford, dans le Maryland, dans un environnement rude et violent. Gâté par sa mère, qui lui paie des cours de dessin par correspondance, Fletcher gagne sa vie en peignant des fresques chez de riches clients du coin, mais dépense tout son argent dans l'alcool, au détriment de sa famille, allant jusqu'à participer à des beuveries qui s'avérèrent mortelles pour certains de ses camarades de boisson ! Mari violent et père de quatre enfants, Hanks abandonne le domicile conjugal vers 1930, dérobant au passage les économies de son fils de 12 ans... Fletcher ne refait surface qu'en 1939, en tant que dessinateur de comic book et créateur de Stardust, chez Fox Features Syndicate. Stardust the Super Wizard, apparu dans Fantastic Comics #1 en décembre 1939, met à l'amende pratiquement tous les autres super-héros de la bande dessinée américaine. Personnage mesurant au moins deux mètres cinquante de haut, omniscient, omnipotent, invulnérable, et doté d'une interminable liste de super-pouvoirs défiants toutes les lois de la physique, s'allongeant au fil des épisodes selon les envie de Hanks, ce surhomme venu d'une lointaine planète apparaît dans le ciel pour venir faire triompher la justice dans un monde gangréné par la trahison et la corruption. Dès les premiers épisodes de Stardust, on voit en filigrane les différentes obsessions de Fletcher Hanks, à travers des thématiques qui reviendront inlassablement dans pratiquement chacune de ses histoires : sa véritable fixation autour de la figure du traître ; qui porte généralement ce vice jusque dans ses traits physiques, à la limite de la difformité ; mais aussi la punition impitoyable et systématique de ces derniers par un justicier tout-puissant. Les univers développés par Hanks, sous couvert de pas moins d'une dizaine de pseudonymes, sont un mélange d'extravagance régressive et de concepts pseudo-scientifiques paradoxalement en avance sur leur temps. Ainsi, son univers de science-fiction très pulp, ouvertement inspiré du Flash Gordon de Alex Raymond, présente autant d'appareils de télécommunication avant-gardistes que de martiens grotesques, tout droit sortis d'un cartoon. Ceci est particulièrement visible dans son autre création présente au sommaire du premier numéro Fantastic Comics, Space Smith, qu'il signe cette fois-ci sous le nom de Hank Christy. Un aventurier de l'espace, accompagné de son assistante Dianna, qui vit diverses aventures plus ou moins hallucinées dans un cosmos totalement chimérique. Il utilisera une recette très similaire pour son personnage de Whirlwind Carter, dans Daring Mystery #4, en mai 1940 chez Timely Comics, qui bien que n'ayant eu droit qu'à deux aventures, a tout de même la particularité d'être considéré comme un personnage de l'univers Marvel. Parmi les autres héros de Fletcher Hanks, on compte Big Red McLane, apparu dans Fight Comics #1 en janvier 1940, et dont il signe alternativement les épisodes Chris Fletcher ou Charles Netcher, une série mettant en scène des bagarres de bûcherons, sans doute assez proche de l'ambiance de sa vie à Oxford. Ici, il est de nouveau question de traîtrise et de brigandage, mais dans le monde du bûcheronnage qui, convenons-en, est assez inhabituel dans les comic books. Toujours en janvier 1940, Hanks, sous le pseudo de Henry Fletcher, dessine Tabu, Wizard of the Jungle, dans Jungle Comics #1, une sorte de proto-Animal Man, capable d'imiter les animaux. On retrouve plusieurs similitudes entre Tabu et Fantomah, dont la première aventure est publiée le mois suivant. Pinacle de l'exotisme : dans le deuxième numéro de Planet Comics, en février 1940, on découvre l'unique épisode de Tiger Hart, un guerrier vivant sur Saturne, une planète qui se révèle être similaire à la Terre au Moyen-Âge. Là encore, le décor est aussi fantastique que fantasmé, gloubi-boulga de mythes chevaleresques et de fantasy pulp. Parfois comparés à de l'art brut et empreints de surréalisme, sans pour autant pouvoir être rattachés à ce courant, mais aussi influencés par Chester Gould, le créateur de Dick Tracy, les travaux de Fletcher Hanks sont facilement reconnaissables grâce à son style graphique si particulier, ce qui aura justement permis de les regrouper, malgré ses multiples alias. Si son trait peut être jugé naïf et très cru, Hanks a pourtant suivi une formation au cours de laquelle il a démontré son talent pour le dessin. On peut donc supposer que le rendu visuel de ses productions n'a rien d'un hasard. Sans doute pensait-il, en partie à raison, que ces bandes dessinées s'adressaient aux enfants, et donc qu'elles devaient être simplistes pour être comprises par les plus jeunes. Il en va de même pour ses récits, souvent alambiqués, dans lesquels il expose une vision très personnelle des châtiments qui doivent être réservés à des malfaiteurs dont la fourberie n'a souvent d'égal qu'une manifeste débilité. Les méchants sont des traîtres perfides qui n'ont pour seule motivation que la destruction du monde ou l'enrichissement personnel, tandis que les héros sont des êtres supérieurs invincibles, quasi-divins, fléaux implacables anéantissant les scélérats, non sans les avoir humiliés au passage. Il est intéressant de souligner que Fletcher Hanks faisait tout lui-même, du scénario à la colorisation, avec un rythme de travail visiblement soutenu, et rendait ses travaux dans les temps, ce qui plaisait bien évidemment beaucoup aux éditeurs. On aurait pu croire que l'artiste derrière la première super-héroïne de la bande dessinée américaine était un homme conscient des problèmes de son temps, mais, à en croire le témoignage de son fils, Fletcher Hanks était un sale type. Après un dernier épisode de Stardust, dans Big Three Comics #2, paru durant l'hiver 1941, il disparaît du jour au lendemain de l'industrie des comic books, exactement comme quand il avait abandonné sa famille des années auparavant. S'il subsiste quelques traces de ses activités à Oxford à la fin des années 1950, on ne sait pratiquement rien du reste de la vie de Fletcher Hanks, retrouvé mort de froid en 1976 sur un banc public à New-York. Passé de vie à trépas dans la solitude et la misère, Hanks a peut-être finalement été lui-même victime de la fatalité qui s'abattait sur les crapules que combattaient ses héros. Considéré par certains comme le “Ed Wood des comics”, avec seulement une cinquantaine d'histoires à son actif, Fletcher Hanks, ou Barclay Flagg, ou Henry Fletcher, reste un artiste dont les travaux, remplis de colosses surpuissants et de vilains difformes, témoignent d'une époque où il n'existait aucune norme, ni pratiquement aucun code, pour les comics de super-héros. Il en résulte des illustrés primitifs, aussi cruels que candides. Le tardif regain d'intérêt pour ses travaux ; initié notamment par Jerry Moriarty, professeur à la School of Visual Arts de New-York et grand collectionneur, puis par Art Spiegelman, qui a réédité une histoire de Stardust the Super Wizard dans sa revue RAW en 1980 ; a mené l'artiste Paul Karasik à approfondir le parcours de Fletcher Hanks et à compiler son œuvre au cours d'un fastidieux travail de recherche. L'absence de témoins survivants de l'époque et la carrière éclair de Hanks, auxquels il faut ajouter le peu de souvenirs que Fletcher Hanks Jr. avait de son père, n'ont pas facilité sa démarche, mais Karasik est parvenu à publier plusieurs ouvrages chez Fantagraphics, en 2007 et en 2009, puis Turn Loose Our Death Rays and Kill Them All ! The Complete Works of Fletcher Hanks en 2016, disponible en français aux éditions Actes Sud, qui m'a été très précieux pour vous raconter cette histoire. 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Come with us up river with Edwige Fenech and Roger Browne as we look for diamonds amongst the stock footage and become on speaking terms with Samoa, the only jungle girl in history to not actually live in a jungle. Yes, it's our penultimate episode in this jungle-flavoured mini-season, and this one is a little different from what we've become accustomed to. But it's still great fun! Just don't pin all your affection on Clint. He'll let you down.In the episode we discussed a great podcast interview with Roger Browne that was published a few years ago by Dorado Films. It is currently offline, but if we manage to locate a copy we will let you know.There's not a lot out there written about the film, but we did locate two blog posts which are quite good, HERE and HERE.We would love to hear from you if you have any favourite Jungle Girl films, or if you ever got lost in the jungle yourself and ended up befriending the animals or becoming a god to a local tribe. You can contact us on Twitter and Instagram or by email at wildwildpodcast@gmail.com. Please also remember to rate and review us on your podcast platform of choice!If you enjoy the podcast, why not buy us a coffee at ko-fi.com/wildwildpodcast? Espresso, naturally. Grazie mille! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Stop us if you've heard this one before: a plane crashes in the jungle, killing both parents and leaving a solitary three-year-old girl to fend for herself. Communing with the animals, she grows into a beautiful young woman who the local tribes worship and fear as a goddess. Yes, if you asked AI to write you a jungle girl movie, it wouldn't be all that different from the plot of Luana, but we here on the Wild, Wild Podcast love it, and her, anyway.You can learn more about the star of the film, Mei-Chen, and see plenty of pictures, over on Pulp International. You can also check out the amazing Luana comic strips and Frank Frazetta artwork HERE. And of course, if you want to watch Luana, it's available on YouTube.We would love to hear from you if you have any favourite Jungle Girl films, or if you ever got lost in the jungle yourself and ended up befriending the animals or becoming a god to a local tribe. You can contact us on Twitter and Instagram or by email at wildwildpodcast@gmail.com. Please also remember to rate and review us on your podcast platform of choice!If you enjoy the podcast, why not buy us a coffee at ko-fi.com/wildwildpodcast? Espresso, naturally. Grazie mille! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Listen Now to 35 Future Now Show This week we podcast live from the post party of Dr. Future’s birthday in Aptos, CA. In studio guests include Jungle Girl, Master Now, and Free Energy Bob, as well as Al & Sun, with Bobby Wilder. A lot of humor in this show, so be prepared to laugh! We also cover some Dr. Future’s favorite topics, such as the latest eVTOL success, mysterious explosions in space, solving the plastics pollution problem, a radically exclusive inclusives club, and an intro to Methylene Blue for many a malady. Enjoy! A mysterious massive explosion between Galaxies
Grab your pith helmet, machete and mosquito net and come with us into the deepest, darkest, fakest-looking jungle in search of the lost heiress Gungala. Yes, we're back with a brand new mini-season, taking a look at the brief burst of Jungle Films to come out of Italy in 1968-1969. Gungala la pantera nuda is significant for a number of reasons; the first is of course the presence of Kitty Swan in the lead role, and the second is that it was Ruggero Deodato's first jungle movie. Give him another few years and he would become infamous for what he caught on camera in the jungles of South America. Here however it's Africa, although it's mostly the De Paolis sound stages in Rome. You will struggle to tell the difference.You can read all about Kitty Swan's terrible accident and miraculous recovery in THIS ARTICLE. Or if you just want to look at lots of photos of Kitty Swan THIS LINK has you covered.We would love to hear from you if you have any favourite Jungle Girl films, or if you ever got lost in the jungle yourself and ended up befriending the animals or becoming a god to a local tribe. You can contact us on Twitter and Instagram or by email at wildwildpodcast@gmail.com. Please also remember to rate and review us on your podcast platform of choice!If you enjoy the podcast, why not buy us a coffee at ko-fi.com/wildwildpodcast? Espresso, naturally. Grazie mille! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Back on the mic with one of my “day ones” Jungle Girl Z! We have been friends for so long and we have so many memories together. This is a funny memory to use but I want to give a - ***Trigger Warning *** about "Drugs & Roofies! "Z's Link- https://linktr.ee/JunglegirlzSid's Links Want to find Fit Sidney on socials & sites? Want to help support the show? Check out the links below to see ALL her content!VIP OnlyFans- https://onlyfans.com/FitSidFree OnlyFans- https://onlyfans.com/xxxfitsidFansly- https://fans.ly/r/SidSext Me- SextSid.comSnap- https://www.snapchat.com/add/simplysidneyxoTik Tok- https://www.tiktok.com/@Fit.SidneyYouTube- https://www.youtube.com/c/FitSidTwitter- https://twitter.com/FitSidney Instagram- https://www.instagram.com/stalkingsidney/Website- https://www.fitsid.com
In 2007, a feral young woman was found stealing food from a village before scurrying back into the jungle where it is presumed she lived. Local villagers caught her, wanting to understand what was going on. Shortly after, a man claiming to be her father said that she was his long-lost daughter and took her home to his family. Everyone thought that was the conclusion to the story—until another family showed up to claim her. Who is she really?
I've known Jungle Girl Z for over a decade...We have been “day ones” since we met and now we do porn together. I started porn 1-2 years before she did but she was always around it and helping me with my random projects that one day she wanted to start an OnlyFans. Then we started doing some shoots together and now she strips too! Z's OF Link- https://onlyfans.com/junglegirlz1Want to find Fit Sidney on socials & sites? Check out the links below to see ALL her content!VIP OnlyFans- https://onlyfans.com/FitSidFree OnlyFans- https://onlyfans.com/xxxfitsidSnap- https://www.snapchat.com/add/simplysidneyxoTik Tok- https://www.tiktok.com/@Fit.SidneyYouTube- https://www.youtube.com/c/FitSidTwitter- https://twitter.com/FitSidney Instagram- https://www.instagram.com/stalkingsidney/Website- https://www.fitsid.com
On December 24, 1971 LANSA Flight 508 from Lima to Pucallpa Peru took off against warnings of severe weather threats. The plane was struck by lightning and crashed over the Amazon rainforest, the only survivor, a 17 year old girl, named Juliane Koepcke, and little did she know her survival story was just beginning…. EVERYTHING TRUE CRIME GUYS: https://linktr.ee/Truecrimeguysproductions Patreon.com/truecrimeguys Merch: truecrimeguys.threadless.com OhMyGaia.com Facebook Twitter/Instagram: @TrueCrimeGuys @AndImMichael @sandupodcast STICKERS CREEPER MERCH Sources: https://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-17476615 https://youtu.be/eDyTyszVyCM https://historydaily.org/the-double-survival-miracle-of-juliane-koepcke
We enter into one of the odder areas of the 1940's Universal Horrors with CAPTIVE WILD WOMAN (1943)! The few jungle girl movies made by the studio in the decade can be seen as a slightly faltering bridge between the occasional jungle themed serials of the 1930's, the Weissmuller Tarzan series and the rapid growth of such film and television tales in the 1950's. By the time the Jungle Jim and Bomba films were Saturday matinee staples Sheena and Ramar were also enticing young viewers at home. These tales of wild animals, poachers and evil treasure hunters were perfect adventure fodder for young minds and if the subject was a leopard skin clad Jungle Girl then you might even find a few adults tuning in for the action. CAPTIVE WILD WOMAN is an attempt to build a mad scientist horror film out of a lot of exciting circus footage. It is more effective than you might expect but the ratio of horror stuff to circus stuff is probably weighted in the wrong direction. Troy and I chew our popcorn while watching the spectacle! Deciding which parts work and which ones are very strange occupy most of our time but we discuss the cast and director with some detail too. We only get a short period of time with Acquanetta's silent wild woman/gorilla character but the 1932 animal act footage is skillfully integrated into the film almost making you forget this is supposed to be a horror tale. Luckily, John Carradine is one of the smoothest mad scientists of all time so it's a joy to watch him slither across the screen. The show can be reached at thebloodypit@gmail.com if you have any questions or comments. We would love to hear from you and we do wonder who you would name as best Jungle Girl or most impressive Mad Scientist. Thank you for listening!
When a young Black woman agrees to date her cool, sexy co-worker, she's shocked by his efforts to connect with her on a cultural level.
Lis and Vera travel to a far off planet to find cliche, tropes, and bad pacing. Oh joy. The TOUGH LIKE A GIRL Podcast is a Council of Geeks Production! Follow the TOUGH LIKE A GIRL Podcast: Subscribe via iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/punch-like-a-girl/id1161149489 Follow us on TWITTER: https://twitter.com/ToughLikeAGirl1 Like our FACEBOOK page: https://www.facebook.com/toughlikeagirlpod This podcast is a proud member of the FIRE AND WATER PODCAST NETWORK: Visit the Fire & Water WEBSITE: http://fireandwaterpodcast.com Follow Fire & Water on TWITTER: https://twitter.com/FWPodcasts Like our Fire & Water FACEBOOK page: https://www.facebook.com/FWPodcastNetwork Use our HASHTAG online: #FWPodcasts
Today's episode is an adventure through one small business owners journey. Listen how Cynde Panges came from a small flower shop in the midwest to to a funky boutique here on Kauai. Since 1998, Jungle Girl has been known as the Island Funk and Flash. Listen in as Cynde explains her journey as an entrepreneur, she uses her intuition and self awareness like compass. Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/junglegirlkoloaInstagram:https://www.instagram.com/explore/locations/254181652/jungle-girl-boutique-island-funk-flash-since-1998/Pinterest:https://www.pinterest.com/junglegirlkauai/_saved/Phone:808-639-8928Boutique address:5424 Koloa Rd, Koloa, HI 96756Website:https://www.junglegirljewelry.com/Music by; Surf Shimmy by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4448-surf-shimmyLicense: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Michael, Noel, and guest David May review the decade in which Tarzan fully became king not only of the jungle, but also all of pop culture. We re-discuss the move of the film series from MGM to RKO under Sol Lesser's leadership while also covering the many comics and film imitators like Nyoka the Jungle Girl and Jo-Jo the Congo King. Opening music from Terry and the Pirates by Lee Zahler Closing music from Bomba the Jungle Boy by Edward J Kay
Beautiful looking, and a ripping yarn in its own way, but really follows a well beaten path.
What’s your wild business idea? Known as “The Jungle Girl”, Tamara Jacobi is the founder of the Tailwind Jungle Lodge and author of Wildpreneurs (HarperCollins Leadership, Feb. 2020)—a guidebook for turning passion into business. The book is also an adventure story that tells of creation of the Tailwind Jungle Lodge alongside the wisdom and experience of fellow Wildpreneurs globally. [...] The post How to Pursue your Passion in Life + Business appeared first on Sara Schulting-Kranz | Love Life. Live Boldly.
Ava the Jungle Girl saves a lion and Trex who were lost in the jungle.
Comedians Eleanor Kerrigan and Sara Weinshenk join Jayson Thibault, Fight Nanny and Johnny Woodard in studio on this week’s episode.
Rima Danielle Jomaa is a Psychotherapist and Yogini. She also holds Sacred Medicine retreats at her home in Costa Rica.
Episode 105: Today I talk with Sheena Smith of Jungle Girl Designs. A line of clothing and merchandise with her original art on it. The line was inspired by her son. She wanted to find a way to explain tough concepts like evolution, global warming, and nutrition to him. She figured the best way was through […] The post Sheena Smith: Jungle Girl Designs appeared first on Let's Talk Art With Brooke.
Rima is an entrepreneur, psychotherapist, vegan lifestyle advocate & yoga teacher from LA. She hosts "The Rima the Jungle Girl" podcast from her jungle house in Santa Teresa, Costa Rica, where she lives the life of her dreams every single day. She hosts adventure, healing, and couples retreats around Costa Rica. Rima and I hung out in-real-life in Costa Rica when I was there in August. And this woman walks her talk… In this conversation, we dive deep into a number of topics such as: How she ended up in Costa Rica How a comic book changed her life Hypnotherapy and past life regression We also discuss: How she sat in silence for 7 days...and what this experience was really like How plant medicine opens up our consciousness (and why this is one of many tools Veganism Please do not hesitate to reach out to me on LinkedIn, Instagram, Twitter, or email: hello@jessicaannmedia.com LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/itsjessicann/ Instagram: https://instagram.com/itsjessicann/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/itsjessicann Medium: https://medium.com/@itsjessicann/ Jessica Ann: https://www.jessicaannmedia.com/ AoH: http://artofhumanity.io/ If you like this podcast, it would mean so much to me if you could please leave a 5-star review in the iTunes store.
Rima catches listeners up on her entrepreneurial pursuits, which include low “ebbs” along the way. With all transparency, Rima talks about a lack of motivation, feeling stuck in work & life, & how “ebbs” can be depressing. She shares how she deals with these moments & how it's actually a good thing to have ups and downs in life. She talks about the importance of creating space for different opportunities to come in & being open for what comes. Sometimes we need a break from our routine or our story to clear all the voices out before we can figure out what we really want for ourselves. As entrepreneurs, it can be challenging to stick to one path, to get focused, & to not do all of the things that come our way, & this episode talks all about dealing with those things & the attachments we collect along the way.
Tara uses the written word & surfing as a metaphor to Identify and discuss a broader experience of women all over felt both in the water and on land… processes that include patriarchy and misogyny, and she uses her experience as a writer and surfer to give voice to women in her own work & in her collaborations with women all over the world (in the book she's working on, Women's Surf Stories). She's a well-published author and PhD student who's specializing in Sustainable Surf Tourism & she travels the world & hosts various events & retreats. In this episode, she talks about putting boundaries in place with her art, the abuse and reactivity she experienced when speaking her voice, being silenced as a woman who's voice doesn't go along with the mainstream, dating across cultures, coming to Costa Rica in the student abroad program & feeling “home”, being non-attached as an artist & writer, whether to positive or negative feedback, being a program assistant for a study abroad program called Surfing and Sustainability, and more!
Today our guest leads us in a toast to meeting new people, the beautiful jungle atmosphere, and being able to do what we love and connect with people. It was the perfect toast to kick off my very first conversation with Rima Danielle Jomaa, AKA Rima the Jungle Girl. Rima is an entrepreneur, licensed marriage counselor, and vegan lifestyle advocate. She’s really incorporated an incredible brand and lifestyle, inspiring and activating others to reclaim their health, happiness, and freedom through her podcast, coaching, retreats, and more. “I’m a vegan simply because I want my actions and my words to align with my morals and ethics – that’s really all it’s about. It’s the best way that I’ve found to extend the compassion and love that I preach about and want for myself to all living creatures.” –Rima the Jungle Girl We also discuss: Doing what needs to be done to live a life that you love Earthlings, the documentary that changed Rima’s perspective on eating animals The difference between plant-based and vegan Managing vegan popups Yoga being helpful… but painful! Rima’s retreats The Gottman certification The 7 principles of making a marriage work The story behind “Rima the Jungle Girl” Working without relying on technology Watching & writing stand-up comedy Perceived problems The secret “MargaRima” recipe Resources: Check out RimaTheJungleGirl.com Connect with Rima: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter Follow Debi’s Costa Rican adventure on Facebook: facebook.com/debi.saltzberg Want to increase sales & improve service in your restaurant? Get 20% off TouchBistro at touchbistro.com/justforkingaround Get 15% off your supplements by using discount code “JustForkingAround” at OraOrganic.com Rima’s Bio: Rima is an entrepreneur, psychotherapist, vegan lifestyle advocate & yoga teacher from LA. She hosts the "The Rima the Jungle Girl" podcast from her jungle house in Santa Teresa, Costa Rica, where she lives the life of her dreams every single day. She hosts adventure, healing, and couples retreats around Costa Rica. You can find her at www.rimathejunglegirl.com or on Instagram @rima_danielle. Just Forking Around is produced by Podcast Masters
Cristina Kalyani Paes found her path from a very young age & found herself asking primordial questions that weren't typical of the time. She had paranormal experiences & was given resources to study about yoga & to work with a paranormal psychologist. From there, she deepened her studies for many years by learning about breathwork, hypnotherapy (from Brian Weiss & Dolores Cannon), yoga philosophy and lifestyle at the Bihar School of Yoga & meditation. A pilgrim, she traveled by horseback for a year and a half around South America, introducing fire dancing and yoga choreography to the unprivileged people in the mountains of Peru with Nomads United, before she settled in Costa Rica 16 years ago. Now, she practices the Yoga of Life, without putting labels or trying to market herself in an inauthentic way. Her work is a culmination of her experiences & knowledge. She wants to see yoga remain what it really is & shares the message that we don't all need to quit everything, become yoga teachers and monks, and live in the jungle in order to be spiritual. “The world needs all professions, not just yoga teachers. We can always transform the work that we do into something beautiful. Anything we can do to go back to nature is they key - not that we have to release or get rid of our lives.” She talks about the need for community gathering centers in big cities where people can connect and experience a tribe, a place where one can LIVE yoga or spirituality. She's frustrated with centers and studios that give employment to yoga teachers based on their social media followings and not based on their merit and it causes her to question the integrity of these places. She believes we need to find a balance with yoga as a profession and yoga as a philosophy, and always remain in our authenticity.
Maya DeGabrielle lives her life as a true example for all. Never a bad word to say about anybody, she is constantly smiling and brightening the lives of those around her. She left her parents' house at 16 & went off into the wild, living in numerous paradise-destinations, including Indonesia, Ibiza, South Africa & more, before deciding to settle in Santa Teresa, Costa Rica, where she has a Standup Paddleboard company - Sundah Surfers. She gets to be a mermaid all day long as she wows her guests with the simplicity of nature, being present & always having a positive mindset. Even when her beautiful car was stolen, I never heard Maya complain once or say anything negative - hear why she lives her life this way and what it's done for her. She's trusting the flow & the calling of her life to fulfill her deepest-rooted desires.
Mona grew up in Argentina where she was pressured to go to university immediately after high school. At 17, she wanted to be a fashion designer but decided, on her first day of university, to switch to studying architecture. Not a small feat, she spent 6 years studying & working to survive. She took a solo trip to Costa Rica and her perspective completely changed. She went home to take her final exams & after graduating, she came back to Santa Teresa & decided to follow her heart. She spent her days surfing & soon became a surf instructor and a little monkey or a “Mona”. She began designing her own personal surf swimwear & her students wanted to buy them. She went from sewing 10 suits at a time to a full-time team of partners and staff in Costa Rica & California growing the brand. She named the brand Mona, and the designs are now made from recycled abandoned fishing nets from the bottom of the ocean, is fully recyclable, & is so smooth & comfortable! So it turns out she became a fashion designer in the end! A true full circle story… Her story is so inspiring to the female entrepreneur chasing her dreams.
Nancy road tripped down the coast of Mexico through Central America over 20 years ago before settling in Costa Rica, where her family had already moved to live a different life. Together, they built, sold & built another successful hotel which they now run together in paradise. Nancy was a devout Ashtangi for many years before becoming a certified yoga teacher by popular demand - she was already teaching classes in town because everyone loved her style and there was a huge demand for yoga! After losing her toddler in a car accident 17 years ago, Nancy has learned countless lessons on grief, transformation, the importance of family, community & a support system, and understanding that “what we have is here and now. The more we can open up and be less attached to what is in the future, there's a deeper sense of happiness.”
POWERFUL interview with RIMA OF THE JUNGLE - Entrepreneur, therapist, yoga teacher & vegan advocate who is living in the jungle of Costa Rica. We talk about the nature of modern society, the bizarre side of activism, the jungle life, balance, happiness, living according to your nature, listening to instinct vs what you have been told and wayyyyyy more. Get motherfunkin inspired! Studio: Rima's Jungle Abode, Mal Pais, Costa Rica HOST: IG / WEB GUEST: IG / WEB
Heidi opened a huge nightclub in North Carolina at 24 and ran it successfully for 11 years. The club had it all from a Tiki bar to a mechanical bull; she hosted huge musical acts & raging parties while keeping everything running smoothly. She came to Nicoya on a vacation and immediately felt like she was home. From the monkeys overhead, the waterfalls, the blue butterflies, the weather… before she knew it, she was putting an offer in on a house. She bought the house & five years later, she's still calling Santa Teresa home. Now, Heidi spends her days rehabilitating animals with Wild Sun Rescue Center in Cabuya & uses her business skills to find ways to make the rescue sustainable. She balances animal rescue will lots of adventure, fun girl time, community & love.
When I met Emily, she was a pregnant woman in the jungle. When I heard her story, I was amazed! A double Aquarian like me, she spent 15 years in Venice Beach (where I lived for many years!) and followed the traditional path - working for a fortune 500 and spending 1000s of dollars on clothing and shoes. She had the picturesque life but her heart still yearned for Costa Rica - where she had spent 6 months backpacking out of college. She finally returned to the small surf town she fell in love with before, Santa Teresa, over a decade later, and ended up falling in love with a charming French surfer. Soon she returned, they had a baby & the rest is history. Listen in for more details and epic quotes like this: “It's like if motherhood is a video game and doing it in the jungle is the hardest level.” Emily is amazing!
This bad ass jungle girl boss is an inspiration to Rima & many others. She cracks tourists & locals alike wide open with her famous Kundalini yoga classes in Santa Teresa. Originally from the US, Tammy first touched Costa Rican soil in 2002 & she knew she was home. She was living the daily grind in corporate America but she decided to create a different life for herself. She was introduced to Kundalini yoga, the Mayan calendar, Destiny Cards & western astrology... she delved deeply into these areas & now teaches to thousands of people worldwide. She is birthing a book & is highly revered in the community she's spent over 10 years growing roots in & shares with us how to go after what you want & why community & self-care are so important.
Chris gets down to his annual Adopt A Character show and this year he chooses a genre: “Jungle” including stories that feature Tarzan, Ka-Zar, Black Panther and Lorna the Jungle Girl and includes creators such as Burne Hogarth, Joe Kubert, Jack Kirby, Jesse Marsh and Wally Wood. You are welcome to follow all year long and we welcome you to join in - details are in the show. Also on the show: some of my favorite collected editions, blogs, groups and podcasts!
In this episode, I talk with Rima Danielle Jomaa a.k.a Rima the Jungle Girl. She joins me from Costa Rica while I recorded on my end from Bali! For Rima it was 6:30 am and I was able to catch her just before she and her boyfriend went out for a morning surf. Stuff of dreams right?Rima is a licensed marriage and family therapist, yoga teacher, entrepreneur, advocate for all things vegan, natural & herbal, and host of the Rima the Jungle Girl Podcast. Her aim is to inspire and show people "that living a life in alignment with ethics, morals, and nature is not only possible but essential for the successful progression of our species." Yes, it literally is the stuff of Rima's dreams. Listen in to find out how she went from running a hotel and being in real estate, to stepping full-time into work that she loves while simultaneously living by the beach, doing yoga, having lots of time to actually "live", and surfing bright and early with her hunky vegan chef boyfriend. She finally feels like life is clicking and she shares all about how she got there in this episode!Your Host,Katie
Rima shares a story about envisioning her dream (despite the challenges), being bold enough to pursue it and now living the life of her dream. Since 2012, she's been traveling and living in Costa Rica. She believes in positivity, education, activism, and above all, wildness. When we remove ourselves from the distraction and chaos of modern technology and culture, we become clear channels and forces of change in this world. She's a licensed marriage and family therapist, using coaching to inspire and activate. She's a yoga teacher, informing her life with movement, meditation, and breath. She's an entrepreneur, leveraging the potential of businesses to do good in this world. She's an advocate for all things vegan, natural & herbal. She aims to inspire and to show others that living a life in alignment with ethics, morals, and nature is not only possible, but essential, for the successful progression of our species. She lives in Santa Teresa, Costa Rica with her black cat, Zuko, & her boyfriend, Russell. She doesn't take myself too seriously, and she loves people that can laugh at themselves as well! http://rimathejunglegirl.com/ https://twitter.com/rima_danielle https://www.instagram.com/rima_danielle/
Rima is an entrepreneur from LA. She currently lives in Santa Teresa, Costa Rica where she manages a yoga retreat center & vegan restaurant and surfs all day. Sponsors: Breather: Don’t overpay for space you don’t need - book a Breather space, just for the time you need it! Try Breather today and you'll receive $100 off your first booking when you go to Breather.com/fire! ZipRecruiter: Find out today why ZipRecruiter has been used by businesses of ALL sizes to find the most qualified job candidates. Post jobs on ZipRecruiter for FREE today by visiting ZipRecruiter.com/fire!
Learn about the host of the podcast, Rima, and what the podcast is about. A nice storyline that includes Rima's journey with Costa Rica, yoga, vegan lifestyle, psychology & her path as an entrepreneur, leading up to episode 002 - The Costa Rica Story.
It's here folks, the city is awash with lanyards, Spiegeltents (yes, plural) have been erected, the purple cow is upside down and the circus has most definitely come to town, literally and figuratively. For episode two of Festival City our intrepid host Gareth K Vile headed to National Theatre of Scotland's new, multiple purpose venue Rockvilla for two conversations on plays showing at the Traverse Theatre during the Festival. His first interview is with Jo Clifford on her autobiographical play Eve in which they discuss the lack of trans-narratives in the arts and how these pieces have universal dimensions, after all, we're all just trying to figure out who we are. After critic Lorna Irvine stops by with some theatre recommendations, Gareth is joined by director Cora Bissett to discuss Adam, which tells the story of a boy born in a girl's body in Egypt and who travels to Glasgow in search of liberation. There may also be some Glasgow spruiking in a podcast about the Edinburgh Fringe... cheeky.Show notes:00:00:00 – Introduction from Gareth00:01:47 – Jo Clifford interview for Eve00:11:57 – Music, Derailed 'Oxytosin' Pleasance Dome00:13:23 – Lorna Irvine, theatre picks from Fringe. Lilith the Jungle Girl, To Be Me, Staging Wittgenstein00:16:59 – Music – Behind the Mirror, Go (company) C Venues00:19:41 – Cora Bissett interview for Adam00:30:12 – OutroFurther reading:Rebecca Monks article 'A look at the trans shows of this year's Edinburgh Festival Fringe'Lilith: The Jungle Girl previewRead more of Lorna Irvine's work on The List and follow her on Twitter @LorIrvineFestival City is now on StitcherCredits:Festival City Podcast is co-created by Gareth K Vile (host) and Scott Henderson (producer). Intro music by The Joy Drops. Supported by SGSAH.Please send feedback to podcasts[at]list.co.uk
"Hollywood is the great value-dictator of our time." - Amos Gebhardt The third episode of our season on belonging and exclusion is here, and this month we are conversing across many disciplines, and setting a record with the number of voices featured. Our guests are writer and performer Candy Bowers, artist and filmmaker Amos Gebhardt, and playwright and theatre-maker Chi Vu, three artists who have challenged the dominant narratives of gender, culture, and race both in their work, and as prominent public speakers. In this episode, recorded at FCAC and moderated by RMIT Deputy Dean of Media Lisa French, our guests speak about the female gaze on stage and screen, and what to do with Jill Soloway when being woman-identifying is only one of the parts of your identity. "So I worked on a play called Straight White Men by Young Jean Lee last year at MTC. And I thought what was extraordinary with that play is that - I really don't think Melbourne is at the same level regarding consciousness and dialogue in regards to whiteness and privilege - more than half of the audience saw one play, and all the intersectional feminists saw a different play. Literally, people laughed at different jokes. I read the play and I thought it was so funny straight away, and most of the guys I was working with, including the director, didn't think it was funny, didn't understand it. And I thought: 'This is a really clear case study in the fact that I've lived a life reading between the lines, and they've lived a life on the line. The line has been for them'." - Candy Bowers This panel ‘Female Gaze on Film and Stage’ was originally recorded as part of the program for WOW Melbourne at FCAC, and was presented in partnership with the Australian Centre for the Moving Image. It’s the very end of summer in Melbourne, it's a lovely Thursday afternoon, everyone is just settling in for an afternoon of discussions. It's a beautiful conversation: it is a rare occasion to hear some distinguished voices of the Australian independent arts speak about the intersectional experience in a space that is safe and expansive, outside of the carnival of outrage and provocation that so often greets those who speak about diversity. Discussed in this episode: decolonising ourselves, Jill Soloway, inclusivity and being included, very small paths, being Best Female Performer for playing a straight man, what is cultural safety?, how bilinguals are not like two monolinguals in the same body, Back to Back Theatre, creating little worlds, what's wrong with make-up artists in Australia?, and the female gaze. "As an artist, creating a culture of safety, however you define it, is the only way you can make work over a long term." - Chi Vu Bibliography: Jill Soloway on The Female Gaze, Master Class, TIFF 2016 Ben Neutze: Candy Bowers on Australian Theatre's White Patriarchy: Burn it Down, The Daily Review, Oct 2016 Ben Neutze: Review: Lilith the Jungle Girl, The Daily Review, Sep 2016 Stephanie Lai: Review: Coloured Aliens by Chi Vu, Peril, Apr 2017 Dylan Rainforth: Amos Gebhardt's Nude Portraiture Celebrates Difference, The Age, Feb 2016 You can subscribe to Audiostage on iTunes or any number of Android platforms, friend us on Facebook, or follow us on Twitter. This season of Audiostage was created in partnership with Footscray Community Arts Centre as part of WOW – Women of the World Festival Melbourne, delivered in association with Southbank Centre London.
Carla returns and the gang goes to MTC's Lilith: The Jungle Girl and Two Dogs - presented by Melbourne International Arts Festival. Intermission banter is a long time coming catch up, coming soon discusses the NGV and Melbourne International Arts Festival.
Talking Dirty | Sexuality | Comedy | Sex Education | Fetish | Porn | Adult Business | Adult Industry
iTunes Reviews MyPhoneChat – FB Family Account Adult Con Shoot for Painted PinUps http://paintedpinups.com PinUp Photo http://www.rebeccalove.com/store/ $30 Jungle Girl – Space Vixen Webcam Video AVVC http://rebeccalove.com/webcam/ Fear of Clowns http://thetomgulleyshow.blogspot.com/2015/02/the-fear-of-clowns-podcast.html?m=1 iTunes Reviews https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/adult-film-star-network-podcast/id945146033 Bad Dirty Talk – Leave a Funny Message on AFSNetwork Randy Segovia @rsegovia1952 _______________________ […] The post 124 iTunes Reviews – Talking Dirty with Rebecca Love – appeared first on Adult Film Star Network.
It is the summer and once again the NaschyCast hears the call of the wild....jungle wild, that is! Yes- it's time for a Jungle Girl romp through the foliage and the stock footage as we ogle untamed women in fur bikinis and indulge in adolescent fantasies about the fairer sex. Will we ever grow up? Probably not. But while we stumble through the faux African landscape we do talk about this odd but oddly entertaining Naschy effort that marks his first collaboration with the director of THE NIGHT OF THE HOWLING BEAST a.k.a. THE WEREWOLF AND THE YETI. I have to admit that when we covered that film back in episode three I was unaware of this movie so this show serves as proof that Troy and I are still learning about our favorite Spanish Wolfman even now. Think of these podcasts as the strangest series of film history classes of all time! Now I just need to watch the Kilma sequel and see what director Miguel Iglesias brought to the table for a second Jungle Girl film with Blanca Estrada. We start the show with a few announcements of interest to fans of Spanish Horror and are only interrupted once by a vicious catfight - I guess that is progress, of a sort. The mailbag segment has us being questioned by a female listener who has finally chimed in and wants info on the TV horror host of our youth. If you have questions for us the email address is naschycast@gmail.com or you can join us over on the Facebook page. Thanks downloading the show and listening to the show. Come on back now- ya hear?
What better way to get the pulse of the comics industry than with two shop owners live in-studio? Setlist goes something like this: news, comic chatter, book club, and letters! Special thanks to YOU for our iTunes reviews and/or ratings so far; they help spread the word about the show. Topics included, but were not limited to: Sarah & Patrick Titus live in studio. New 52s impact on comic shops. TV property comics are loved "Jossus Christ" What are the top print comics? Dark Horse Comics same-day debacle (12.36) Mark Millar wants to make love to retailers Greg Land Phoenix Event coming? Comics chatter. (26.00) Aquaman, New Avengers, Defenders, The Shade, and Infinite Horizon. Lighting Round™. (48.59) Invincible, Rise of the Governor, Secret Avengers, Jungle Girl, and Shinku. Superman: Secret Identity. (51.23) Your letters! (67.58) Tumblr | Twttr | Facebook