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This Thursday, October 14th, 2010, at 8:00 p.m. PST, Hermetic Hour host Poke Runyon will lead a discussion on "The Enoch Syndrome." This is a term we have applied to a type of channeled, visionary (right brain) revelation that is extraordinarily detailed and consistent. The Biblical Enoch and his tour or Heaven is our starting point. We'll proceed through Dee and Kelley, Oasphe, Phylos, Urantia, Richard Shaver, Edgar Cayce, the Seth Material, and finally "The Jet-Propelled Couch" by Robert Lindner, which was the inspiration for the film "K-Pax." Although we are going to examine the psychological factors behind this phenomenon, we are not out to debunk these fascinating revelations, but rather to place them in the perspective of Hermetic philosophy: as a personal reality that extends to encompass the universe, and is therefore "real" in its own context. Join us and expand your consciousness.
“Kinosaade” on taskuhääling, kus kino Artis programmijuht Ra Ragnar Novod, Forum Cinemas programmispetsialist Henryk Johan Novod ning kultuurikriitik Raiko Puust võtavad igal nädalal läbi uued filmid ja seriaalid ning ka olulisemad filmiuudised. Hakka meie toetajaks läbi Patreoni: www.patreon.com/kinosaade “Kinosaate” 260. saates arutavad Ragnar, Henryk ja Raiko nende filmide ja seriaalide üle, mida on nad vahepeal koduste vahendite (Amazon Prime Video, Netflix, Apple TV+ jne) abil vaadanud (K-PAX, Three Thousand Years Of Longing, Daddy's Head, Anora, Dexter Origins, Silo, Life With an Ordinary Guy Who Reincarnated Into a Total Fantasy Knockout, Dandadan, 12.12: The Day, The Mummy,, Home Alone , Home Alone 2: Lost in New York, Lost, Arcane) Lisaks anname ülevaate kinos nähtud filmidest: Mootorsaed laulsid, Rakett, Impeerium, Kütt Kraven, Saatana kümblus, Vaiana 2, Sõrmuste isand. Rohirrimite sõda Vaata seda episoodi Youtube'is: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5K5kJeBIcHw&ab_channel=%C3%95htuleht.ee Sisukord: 0:00 Sissejuhatus 23:00 Nädala parimad elamused: Mootorsaed laulsid ja K-PAX 48:39 Mida on Raiko, Henryk ja Ragnar kodus vaadanud? Raiko: K-PAX (2001), Three Thousand Years Of Longing (2024), Daddy's Head (2024), Anora (2024), Dexter Origins (2024), Silo (2023), Life With an Ordinary Guy Who Reincarnated Into a Total Fantasy Knockout (2022), Dandadan (2024), Henryk: 12.12: The Day (2023), The Mummy (1999), Dandadan (2024), Home Alone (1990), Home Alone 2: Lost in New York (1992) Ragnar: Lost (2004–2010), 12.12: The Day (2023), Arcane (2021 - 2024) 02:48:35 Anname ülevaate kinos nähtud filmidest: Rakett, Impeerium, Kütt Kraven, Saatana kümblus, Vaiana 2, Sõrmuste isand. Rohirrimite sõda Kõik saated on leitavad ka Kinosaade.ee, Apple Podcasts, Spotify ja kõikides teistes podcasti rakendustes. Lisaks leiab meid veel Facebookist, YouTubest ja Twitchist Kinosaade nime alt. Facebook: www.facebook.com/kinosaade YouTube: www.youtube.com/channel/UCeBOcl_yALcrk-U7Ou5BQCw Twitch: www.twitch.tv/kinosaade Kodulehekülg: kinosaade.ee/ Discord: discord.gg/B2zbCWPCc3 Patreon: www.patreon.com/kinosaade Õhtuleht: www.ohtuleht.ee/oltv-raadio/kinosaade Õhtuleht YouTube: www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLv…cINr0VKL-kZG5wUCq
Mark Christopher Lawrence – Family Camp - Get ready for a hilarious and insightful episode as we sit down with the talented comedian and actor, Mark Christopher Lawrence! You've seen him in iconic films like K-Pax and Terminator 2, and his latest movie, 'Family Camp,'. Join us as MCL joins Pete A Turner, along with some potential special guest co-hosts, for a deep dive into Mark's comedy, acting, and screenwriting. Plus, we'll explore Mark's other intriguing interests and uncover the profound truths of life. Don't miss this engaging conversation! Please support the Break It Down Show by doing a monthly subscription to the show All of the money you invest goes directly to supporting the show! For the of this episode head to Haiku Mark's humor and grace, Save the Brave's cause in this space, Laughter paints the chase. Similar episodes: Mark Sullivan Bryan Fuller Rico Alvies Join us in supporting Save the Brave as we battle PTSD. Executive Producer/Host: Pete A Turner Producer: Damjan Gjorgjiev Writer: Dragan Petrovski The Break It Down Show is your favorite best, new podcast, featuring 5 episodes a week with great interviews highlighting world-class guests from a wide array of shows.
Secondo la Prefettura di Brescia all'interno della Caserma Randaccio avrebbe potuto essere realizzato un sistema di prima accoglienza per un gruppo di alcuni immigrati ospitati nella struttura di smistamento regionale dopo essere arrivati in Italia. L'opposizione dell'amministrazione comunale al progetto ha "deviato" verso un capannone a Flero. Ma come funziona l'accoglienza di chi arriva in Italia nella nostra provincia? Nella puntata di Breccast di oggi ascoltiamo, dopo alcune notizie in breve, le spiegazioni di Maria Marelli di ADL Zavidovici e Alessandro Sipolo di K-Pax. Non dimenticare poi che il 24 agosto ci vediamo per registrare una puntata di Breccast dal vivo: appuntamento nel tardo pomeriggio alla Riserva del Grande di Brescia! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/breccast/message
Inspired by the recent testimony of respected former defence official David Grusch, who confirmed before a congressional comittee that the US has been operating an extra-terrestrial crash retrieval and reverse engineering programme for decades, Dan chose the 2001 sci-fi K-PAX for us to cast our eye over.Iain Softley brings an adaptation of Gene Brewer's 1995 novel telling the tale of "prot" (Kevin Spacey), committed to the Psychiatric Institute of Manhattan and placed into the care of wearied workaholic, doctor Mark Powell (Jeff Bridges). Claiming to be an extraterrestrial from the planet 'K-PAX', Powell attempts to gently pierce prot's delusion by piecing together his backstory even as he comes to doubt exactly what he has uncovered. Both leads are excellent - Spacey does smugly vulnerable to perfection - and with an interestingly ambiguous ending and themes about hope and who we turn to for spiritual guidance, even an initially reluctant Sidey found himself engaged by this one.We love to hear from our listeners! By which I mean we tolerate it. If it hasn't been completely destroyed yet you can usually find us on twitter @dads_film, on Facebook Bad Dads Film Review, on email at baddadsjsy@gmail.com or on our website baddadsfilm.com. Until next time, we remain... Bad Dads
Following his breakout success with American Beauty, director Sam Mendes had a variety of projects to choose from, including films like A Beautiful Mind, K-PAX, and The Shipping News. Mendes chose instead to adapt a graphic novel about a hitman and his son on the run in the Prohibition Era Midwest. Starring Tom Hanks, Jude Law, Stanley Tucci, a pre-Bond Daniel Craig, and featuring Paul Newman in his last on-screen film role, the film draws on gangster flicks, Kurosawa, Once Upon a Time in America, and Lone Wolf and Cub to bring the story from page to screen. Nominated for six Academy Awards, cinematographer Conrad L. Hall won a posthumous Oscar for his work, and Tom Hanks himself counts his turn as hitman Michael Sullivan among his most underrated roles. The night is dark, the wind is cold, and we're on the Road to Perdition! For more geeky podcasts visit GonnaGeek.com You can find us on iTunes under ''Legends Podcast''. Please subscribe and give us a positive review. You can also follow us on Twitter @LegendsPodcast or even better, send us an e-mail: LegendsPodcastS@gmail.com You can write to Rum Daddy directly: rumdaddylegends@gmail.com You can find all our contact information here on the Network page of GonnaGeek.com Our complete archive is always available at www.legendspodcast.com, www.legendspodcast.libsyn.com
#thepursuitofhappyness #thepursuitofhappiness #catchmeifyoucan #actor #willsmith #stevenspielberg #shrinking Episode 381."The Pursuit of Happyness"Actor: Brian Howe.The wonderful (and seriously underrated) Brian Howe (The Pursuit of Happyness, Catch Me If You Can, K-Pax) joins me to talk about his impeccable filmography, his New England Roots, Steven Spielberg, The Movie Loft and so much more. Brian is one of my favorite actors. He is a part of so many classic and iconic movies and shows.Welcome the awesome Brian Howe.Monday Morning Critic: Instagram, TiKTok, YouTube and Facebook.www.imdb.com/title/tt12597724/www.mmcpodcast.comThe Fourtress of...The Fourtress of... brings together FOUR friends every week, most weeks, to...Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify
Episode Notes Join us as we dive into the mind ofActor/Comedian Rawle D Lewis.. He'll take us on his journey from his early days of stand up comedy to portraying one of Jamaica's first bobsledders in the 1993 hit "Cool Runnings" Rawle D. Lewis is an American actor and comedian best known for portraying Junior Bevil in the 1993 comedy film Cool Runnings. Lewis is originally from New Jersey and moved to Los Angeles in high school and did his first stand-up set at the age of seventeen. He described himself as being a “pretty shy guy in high school". A friend of his suggested he try stand-up comedy. Lewis almost considered quitting stand-up due to being embarrassed by his debut performance, in which heckling occurred. However, fellow comedian D.L. Hughley encouraged him not to quit. Now you can show your support by purchasing FB stars. Send stars to the stars fb.com/stars This episode is sponsored by Deadly Grounds Coffee "Its good to get a little Deadly" https://deadlygroundscoffee.com ————————————————— https://www.stilltoking.com/ Check out Toking with the Dead Episode 1 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=awhL5FyW_j4 Check out Toking with the Dead Episode 2 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SaUai58ua6o Buy awesome Merchandise! https://www.stilltoking.com/toking-with-the-dead-train https://teespring.com/stores/still-toking-with Sponsorship Opportunities https://www.stilltoking.com/become-a-sponsor or email us at bartlett52108@gmail.com thetokingdead@gmail.com ————————————— Follow our guest https://m.youtube.com/user/Rawletv/videos https://www.instagram.com/rawletv/?hl=en https://twitter.com/rawletv?lang=en https://www.facebook.com/rawletv/ https://vimeo.com/channels/64998 https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0507644/ https://tfiglobalnews.com/.../actor-and-comedian-rawle-d.../ https://www.facebook.com/rawledlewis/ https://www.cameo.com/rawletv ————————————————— Follow Still Toking With and their friends! https://smartpa.ge/5zv1 https://thedorkeningpodcastnetwork.com/ ————————————— Produced by Leo Pond and The Dorkening Podcast Network https://TheDorkening.com Facebook.com/TheDorkening Youtube.com/TheDorkening Twitter.com/TheDorkening Dead Dork Radio https://live365.com/station/Dead-Dork-Radio-a68071 Check out Green Matters: https://www.facebook.com/GreenMattersMiddleboro/ More about our guest Lewis was thought to have been born in Jamaica at first. However, in an interview for the 229th edition of Empire, Lewis stated that “As a result, I lied on my resume. Because I was born in Trinidad, I claimed that I had done all of my actings there, figuring that no one would notice.” Despite this, Lewis claimed to be from the Caribbean in the same interview. In a separate interview, Lewis acknowledged that he has Jamaican ancestors. Lewis hails from New Jersey, according to Reap Mediazine In 1992, he was first recognized for his work in Cool Runnings. Lewis starred in the Spy Hard spoof comedy film in 1996. During the shooting of the film, he said in an Empire interview that Leslie Nielsen “was already like 70, at least, and he was still so entertaining.” Nielsen was “amazing” to work with, according to Lewis. Lewis also starred in the picture Driven, which came out the same year. In the 2001 film K-PAX, he played a security guard
Yes, Howard Brown is a two-time cancer survivor. As you will discover in our episode, he grew up with an attitude to thrive and move forward. Throughout his life, he has learned about sales and the concepts of being a successful entrepreneur while twice battling severe cancer. Howard's life story is one of those events worth telling and I hope you find it worth listening to. He even has written a book about all he has done. The book entitles Shining Brightly has just been released, but you get to hear the story directly from Howards' lips. About the Guest: Howard Brown is an author, speaker, podcaster, Silicon Valley entrepreneur, interfaith peacemaker, two-time stage IV cancer survivor, and healthcare advocate. For more than three decades, Howard's business innovations, leadership principles, mentoring and his resilience in beating cancer against long odds have made him a sought-after speaker and consultant for businesses, nonprofits, congregations, and community groups. In his business career, Howard was a pioneer in helping to launch a series of technology startups before he co-founded two social networks that were the first to connect religious communities around the world. He served his alma mater—Babson College, ranked by US News as the nation's top college for entrepreneurship—as a trustee and president of Babson's worldwide alumni network. His hard-earned wisdom about resilience after beating cancer twice has led him to become a nationally known patient advocate and “cancer whisperer” to many families. Visit Howard at ShiningBrightly.com to learn more about his ongoing work and contact him. Through that website, you also will find resources to help you shine brightly in your own corner of the world. Howard, his wife Lisa, and his daughter Emily currently reside in Michigan. About the Host: Michael Hingson is a New York Times best-selling author, international lecturer, and Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe. Michael, blind since birth, survived the 9/11 attacks with the help of his guide dog Roselle. This story is the subject of his best-selling book, Thunder Dog. Michael gives over 100 presentations around the world each year speaking to influential groups such as Exxon Mobile, AT&T, Federal Express, Scripps College, Rutgers University, Children's Hospital, and the American Red Cross just to name a few. He is Ambassador for the National Braille Literacy Campaign for the National Federation of the Blind and also serves as Ambassador for the American Humane Association's 2012 Hero Dog Awards. https://michaelhingson.com https://www.facebook.com/michael.hingson.author.speaker/ https://twitter.com/mhingson https://www.youtube.com/user/mhingson https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelhingson/ accessiBe Links https://accessibe.com/ https://www.youtube.com/c/accessiBe https://www.linkedin.com/company/accessibe/mycompany/ https://www.facebook.com/accessibe/ Thanks for listening! Thanks so much for listening to our podcast! If you enjoyed this episode and think that others could benefit from listening, please share it using the social media buttons on this page. Do you have some feedback or questions about this episode? Leave a comment in the section below! Subscribe to the podcast If you would like to get automatic updates of new podcast episodes, you can subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts or Stitcher. You can also subscribe in your favorite podcast app. Leave us an Apple Podcasts review Ratings and reviews from our listeners are extremely valuable to us and greatly appreciated. They help our podcast rank higher on Apple Podcasts, which exposes our show to more awesome listeners like you. If you have a minute, please leave an honest review on Apple Podcasts. Transcription Notes Michael Hingson 00:00 Access Cast and accessiBe Initiative presents Unstoppable Mindset. The podcast where inclusion, diversity and the unexpected meet. Hi, I'm Michael Hingson, Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe and the author of the number one New York Times bestselling book, Thunder dog, the story of a blind man, his guide dog and the triumph of trust. Thanks for joining me on my podcast as we explore our own blinding fears of inclusion unacceptance and our resistance to change. We will discover the idea that no matter the situation, or the people we encounter, our own fears, and prejudices often are our strongest barriers to moving forward. The unstoppable mindset podcast is sponsored by accessiBe, that's a c c e s s i capital B e. Visit www.accessibe.com to learn how you can make your website accessible for persons with disabilities. And to help make the internet fully inclusive by the year 2025. Glad you dropped by we're happy to meet you and to have you here with us. Michael Hingson 01:20 Hi, and welcome to another episode of unstoppable mindset. Today, we get to interview Howard Brown, I'm not going to tell you a lot because I want him to tell his story. He's got a wonderful story to tell an inspiring story. And he's got lots of experiences that I think will be relevant for all of us and that we all get to listen to. So with that, Howard, welcome to unstoppable mindset. Howard Brown 01:44 Thank you, Michael. I'm really pleased to be here. And thanks for having me on your show. And excited to talk to your audience and and share a little bit. Michael Hingson 01:54 Well, I will say that Howard and I met through Podapolooza, which I've told you about in the past and event that brings podcasters would be podcasters. And people who want to be interviewed by podcasters together, and Howard will tell us which were several of those he is because he really is involved in a lot of ways. But why don't you start maybe by telling us a little bit about your, your kind of earlier life and introduce people to you and who you are. Sure, sure. Howard Brown 02:23 So I'm from Boston. I can disguise the accent very well. But when I talked to my mother, we're back in Boston, we're packing a car. We're going for hot dogs and beans over to Fenway Park. So gotta get a soda. We're getting a soda, not a pop. So we add the Rs. They call my wife Lisa, not Lisa. But I grew up I grew up in the suburbs of Boston, a town called Framingham. And I'm a twin. And I'm very unusual. But a girl boy twin, my twin sister Cheryl. She goes by CJ is five minutes older. And I hold that I hold that now against her now that we're older and she didn't want to be older, but now she's my older sister, my big sister by five whole minutes. Michael Hingson 03:09 Well, she's big sister, so she needs to take care of her baby brother Howard Brown 03:12 says exactly. And she did. And we're gonna get to that because it's a really important point being a twin, which we'll get to in a second. But so Britta she Where does she live now? So she lives 40 minutes away from me here in Michigan. Michael Hingson 03:25 Oh my gosh, you both have moved out of the area. Howard Brown 03:27 So she she moved to Albany, New York. I moved to Southern then California, LA area and the beaches, and then Silicon Valley. And then the last 17 years we've all lived close. And we raised our families together here in the suburbs of Detroit, Michigan. Michael Hingson 03:40 What got you to all go to Michigan? Howard Brown 03:43 Well, for me, it was a choice. My wife is from Michigan, and I was in Silicon Valley. And we were Pat had a little girl Emily, who's four. There's a story there too. But we'll we decided we wanted her to grow up with a family and cousins and aunts and uncles and my in laws live here. My wife grew up here. And this made it closer for my parents and Boston suburbs to get here as well. So great place to raise a family very different from Silicon Valley in Palo Alto, California. Michael Hingson 04:12 Yeah, but don't you miss Steve's ice cream in Boston? Howard Brown 04:15 I do. I miss the ice cream. I missed the cannolis in the Back Bay. I missed some of the Chinese food. So in the north end, but it just it I do, but I have not lived there. I went to college there at Babson College number one school for entrepreneurship. And then when I got my first job, I moved out to Ohio but then I moved back and well there's a whole story of why I had to move back as well but we'll get Michael Hingson 04:41 there. So are your parents still living in Boston? Howard Brown 04:46 They are and so my dad I call myself son of a boot man. My dad for 49 years has sold cowboy boots in New England in the in the in the western you know the states New York Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusetts. And that's, you know, anyone who stayed somewhere for 49 years got to be applauded. And he's a straight commission boot salesman and he sold women's shoes prior to that. So he he's, he's a renaissance man. Michael Hingson 05:15 Wow. So does he sell cowboy boots with snow treads as it were for the winter? Howard Brown 05:21 No snow trends but, you know, like out west when you're working on, you know, on with cattle and working out west and sometimes it's a fashion statement. Not not too many places in New England like that. But he, he made a living, he enjoyed it. And he's, he's just about to retire at the age of 79. This year. Michael Hingson 05:39 I remember living in Boston and and when I wear shoes with just leather soles, I slid around a lot on the sidewalks and all that so did get rubber rubbers to go over my boots and then later got real boots. Howard Brown 05:54 Right. So I have the big hiking boots, the Timberlands, but I too have a pair of a you know, in Boston, we call them rabbits, rabbits, robins. And they basically are slip ons that gave you grip. They slipped right over your leather shoes. And you wore them when anyway in the snow and in those sloshing in the mess. Yeah. Michael Hingson 06:12 And they worked really well. They did. So you went off to college. And I gather kind of almost right from the beginning you got involved in the whole idea of entrepreneurship. Howard Brown 06:23 Well, I did I transferred to Babson from a liberal arts school called Connecticut College. I just I found out it wasn't for me and Babson College changed the trajectory of my entire life. i i I knew that I wanted to do sales and then later technology. But Babson was the catalyst for that. They just they support entrepreneurship of all kinds, no matter how you define it, and I just drank it in and I loved, I loved my time there. I love my learning there. And I continue to stay involved with Babson very closely as a past president of the Alumni Association, a former trustee, and very actively recruit students to go there and support student businesses. So it was a big impact on me and I continue to give back to it. Michael Hingson 07:11 That's pretty cool. So how, how did you proceed as far as a career and entrepreneurial involvement as it were in in sales and all that? Howard Brown 07:22 So I had an internship, I had wanted cellular one when cellular phones came out and I was basically learning the business. This is really early 1984 And five, and then I got another internship at NCR Corporation if you remember national cash register 120 year old company based out of Dayton, Ohio, and now it's in Atlanta, and it's, it's just not the same company. But I took an internship there a lot of Babson folks work there. And I worked as a trainer, sales installation rep. I trained waitresses, waiters, bartenders, hotel clerks, night audits, how to use cash register computer systems. So I was the teacher and a trainer. And I would, you know, talk to waitresses and waiters and bartenders and say you can make more tips by providing better service. But the way that you do that is you type you the order into a computer, it zaps it to the order station or the back to the back of the house to cook to prepare the foods or for the drinks. And you can spend more time servicing your table which should translate into higher tips. Well, about a third of them said nope, not for me, a third of them were need to be convinced and a third of them are like I'm in. I had a lot of fun doing that. And then after the shift, the either the manager or the owner would come over and they'd give you a savior at a Chinese food restaurant. They give you a poopoo platter to go to take home to your dorm room. Michael Hingson 08:46 So I had a lot of fun, a lot of fun and a lot of good food. Howard Brown 08:50 Sure sure. So that's what really started me off and hired me Michael Hingson 08:55 so did that did that concept of tips and all that and advising people ever get you to translate that to Durgin Park? Howard Brown 09:03 I actually did install the cashiers to computers area ago Daniel hall so the checkerboard you know draped you know cloth on the table and so you know it's there's a lot of good restaurants in Boston, you know the union Oyster House with a toothpick but I did countless restaurants hotels bars, you know it was I was basically at the whim of the Salesforce and there was a couple of us that went to go train and teach people and take the night shift and make sure everything was going smoothly as they installed the new system of course the no name restaurant and other one but well you know for for your listeners that no name was a place to get, you know, really great discounted seafood but you sat on a park bench. Remember that? Michael Hingson 09:50 Right? Oh yeah, definitely. It wasn't. Well, neither was Durgin park, but I haven't kept up Is it still there? Howard Brown 10:00 Yes, I believe it's still there. Michael Hingson 10:01 Oh, good. I heard somewhere that, that it might not be because of COVID. But we enjoy Howard Brown 10:07 down it shut down for a while during COVID I hope it's back open. I'm gonna have to go now. Yeah, you're gonna make me go check to see if it's open. But you know, many of them are still there. And obviously restaurants turn over. But that's a mainstay that's got a lot of history. Michael Hingson 10:19 Oh, it does. And we had a lot of fun with the waitresses and so on at their Compac. I know, once we went there, and you know, the whole story, that Durgan is a place where you sit at family tables, unless we actually have four people then they'll let you sit at one of the tables for for around the outside. Well, there were three of us and my guide dog when we went in one time. And the hostess said, we're gonna put you at one of the tables for for just to give more room for the puppy dog. And she sat us down there. Then the waitress came over and as they are supposed to do at Durgan Park, she said, you're not supposed to sit here. There are only three of you. And I said there's a dog under the table. No, there's not. You can't fool me with that. And the waitress isn't supposed to be snotty, right. And she just kept going on and on about it. And I kept saying there is a dog under the table. She went away. And then she came back a little bit later. And she said, You've got to move and I said no. Why don't you just look, there's a dog under the table. You're not gonna make me fall for that. She finally looked. And there are these Golden Retriever puppy eyes staring back at her. She just melted. It was so much fun. Howard Brown 11:26 Wouldn't be Boston if you didn't get a little attitude. Well, yeah, that's part of what it's all about your right next seating. And they just they sit you in a and they say, meet each other and be married. Michael Hingson 11:38 Yeah, yeah. And it was a lot of fun. So how long did it take you to get to Silicon Valley? Howard Brown 11:44 Well, so the story is that I did. I worked for NCR and I got hired by NCR, but I wanted out of the hospitality business. You know, even though he's young work until two, three in the morning, once they shut the restaurant or bar down or the hotel down, and then you do the night audit and you do the records. It was a hard life. So I looked and I did my research. And I said, you know who's who's making all the money here at NCR in the banking division. And it was really the early days of the outsourcing movement, punch cards, and you're outsourcing bank accounts, over 1200 baud modems. And I said, Well, that's interesting. And so I went to NCRs training at Sugar camp to learn how to be a salesperson were they actually in the early days, they filmed you, they taught you negotiation skills, competitive analysis, Industry Skills, it was fantastic. It's like getting an MBA today. But they did it all in six months, with mixing fieldwork in with, you know, training at this education facility in Dayton, Ohio. And I came out as a junior salesperson working for for very expansive experience, guys. And they just, I knew one thing, if I made them more productive, they'd make me money. And I did. And I, they sent me to banks and savings and loans and credit unions all over New England. And I basically learned the business of banking and outsourcing to these banks. And they made a lot of money. So that was how my career started. You can't do better than that. But to answer the question, because it's a little more complex than that. But it took me NCR in 1988. And then I moved out to Los Angeles in 1991, after a big health scare, which we'll talk about, and then I moved up in 2005. So there's the timeline to get me to Silicon Valley. Michael Hingson 13:29 So you, you definitely moved around. I know that feeling well, having had a number of jobs and been required to live in various parts of the country when going back and forth from one coast to another from time to time. So you know, it's it's there. So you, you did all of that. And you You ended up obviously making some money and continuing to to be in the entrepreneurial world. But how does that translate into kind of more of an entrepreneurial spirit today? Howard Brown 14:00 So great question, Michael. So what happened was is that I built a foundation. So at that time when you graduated school, and as far as for technology, the big computer shops like IBM Unisys, NCR, Hewlett Packard, what they did is they took you raw out of college, and they put you through their training program. And that training program was their version of the gospel of their of their products and your competitors and all that. And that built a great foundation. Well, I moved to Los Angeles after this big health scare, which I'm sure we're gonna go back and talk about, and I moved into the network products division. So I didn't stay in the banking division. I looked at the future and said voice data and video. I think there's the future there and I was right and AT and T bought NCR and, unfortunately, this is probably 1992. They also bought McCaw cellular they had just bought all of Eddie computer. They were a big company of five 600,000 employees and I have To tell you, the merger wasn't great. You felt like a number. And I knew that was my time. That was my time where I said, I got my foundation built. It's now time to go to a startup. So your time had come. My time had come. So at&t, offered early retirement for anyone 50 and older, and then they didn't get enough takers. So they offered early retirement for anyone that wanted to change. And so the talk around the watercooler was, let's wait they'll make a better offer. And I was like, I'm 26 and a half years old. I what am I waiting for? So they made a tremendously generous offer. I took early retirement, and I moved to my first true startup called avid technology that was in the production space. And we basically were changing film and television production from analog to digital. And I never looked back, I basically have been with startups ever since. And that, but that foundation I felt was really important that I got from NCR, but I prefer smaller companies and build the building them up from scratch and moving them forward. Michael Hingson 16:07 Yeah, when you can do more to help shape the way they go. Because the the problem with a larger a lot of larger companies is they get very set in their ways. And they tend not to listen as much as maybe they should to people who might come along with ideas that might be beneficial to them, as opposed to startups as you say, Howard Brown 16:27 Well, it depends. I mean, you know, you want to build a company that is still somewhat innovative. So what these large companies like Google and Facebook do, and Apple is they go acquire, they acquire the startups before they get too big or sometimes like, it's like what Facebook did with Instagram, they acquired six people, Google acquired YouTube, and they acquire the technology of best of breed technology. And then they shape it, and they accelerate it up. So listen, companies like IBM are still innovative, Apple, you know, is so innovative. But you need to maintain that because it can get to be a bureaucracy, and with hundreds of 1000s of employees. And you can't please everybody, but I knew my calling was was technology startups. And I just, I needed to get that, get that foundation built. And then away away I went. And that's what I've done. Since Michael Hingson 17:16 you're right. It's all about with with companies, if they want to continue to be successful, they have to be innovative, and they have to be able to grow. I remember being in college, when Hewlett Packard came out with the HP 25, which was a very sophisticated calculator. Back in the the late 19th, early 1970s. And then Texas Instruments was working on a calculator, they came out with one that kind of did a lot of the stuff that HP did. But about that same time because HP was doing what they were doing, they came out with the HP 35. And basically it added, among other things, a function key that basically doubled the number of incredible things that you could do on the HP 25. Howard Brown 17:58 Right, I had a TI calculator and in high school. Michael Hingson 18:02 Well, and of course yeah, go ahead HPUS pull reverse Polish notation, which was also kind Howard Brown 18:09 of fun. Right and then with the kids don't understand today is that, you know, we took typing, I get I think we took typing. Michael Hingson 18:19 Did you type did you learn to type on a typewriter without letters on the keys? Howard Brown 18:23 No, I think we have letters I think you just couldn't look down or else you get smacked. You know, the big brown fox jumped over the you know, something that's I don't know, but I did learn but I I'm sort of a hybrid. I looked down once in a while when I'd say Michael Hingson 18:39 I remember taking a typing course in actually it was in summer school. I think it was between seventh and eighth grade. And of course the typewriters were typewriters, typewriters for teaching so they didn't have letters on the keys, which didn't matter to me a whole lot. But by the same token, that's the way they were but I learned to type and yeah, we learned to type and we learned how to be pretty accurate with it's sort of like learning to play the piano and eventually learning to do it without looking at the keys so that you could play and either read music or learn to play by ear. Howard Brown 19:15 That's true. And And again, in my dorm room, I had Smith Corona, and I ended up having a bottle of or many bottles of white out. Michael Hingson 19:25 White out and then there was also the what was it the other paper that you could put on the samosa did the same thing but white out really worked? Howard Brown 19:33 Yeah, you put that little strip of tape and then it would wait it out for you then you can type over it. Right? We've come a long way. It's some of its good and some of its bad. Michael Hingson 19:43 Yeah, now we have spellchecker Yeah, we do for what it's worth, Howard Brown 19:49 which we got more and more and more than that on these I mean listen to this has allowed us to, to to do a zoom call here and record and goods and Bad's to all of that. Michael Hingson 19:58 Yeah, I still I have to tell people learning to edit. Now using a sound editor called Reaper, I can do a lot more clean editing than I was able to do when I worked at a campus radio station, and had to edit by cutting tape and splicing with splicing tape. Howard Brown 20:14 Exactly. And that's Yeah, yeah, Michael, we change the you know, avid changed the game, because we went from splicing tape or film and Betamax cassettes in the broadcast studios to a hard drive in a mouse, right? changed, we changed the game there because you were now editing on a hard drive. And so I was part of that in 1994. And again, timing has to work out and we had to retrain the unions at the television networks. And it was, for me, it was just timing worked really well. Because my next startup, liquid audio, the timing didn't work out well, because we're, we were going to try to do the same thing in the audio world, which is download music. But when you do that, when you it's a Sony cassette and Sony Walkman days, the world wasn't ready yet. We we still went public, we still did a secondary offering. But we never really brought product to market because it took Steve Jobs 10 years later to actually sell a song for 99 cents and convince the record industry that that was, you know, you could sell slices of pizza instead of the whole pizza, the whole record out Michael Hingson 21:17 and still make money. I remember avid devices and hearing about them and being in television stations. And of course, for me, none of that was accessible. So it was fun to to be able to pick on the fact that no matter what, as Fred Allen, although he didn't say it quite this way, once said they call television the new medium, because that's as good as it's ever gonna get. But anyway, you know, it has come a long way. But it was so sophisticated to go into some of the studios with some of the even early equipment, like Avid, and see all the things that they were doing with it. It just made life so much better. Howard Brown 21:52 Yeah, well, I mean, you're not I was selling, you know, $100,000 worth of software on a Macintosh, which first of all the chief engineers didn't even like, but at the post production facilities, they they they drank that stuff up, because you could make a television commercial, you could do retakes, you could add all the special effects, and it could save time. And then you could get more revenue from that. And so it was pretty easy sale, because we tell them how fast they could pay off to the hardware, the software and then train everybody up. And they were making more and more and better commercials for the car dealerships and the local Burger Joint. And they were thrilled that these local television stations, I can tell you that Michael Hingson 22:29 I sold some of the first PC based CAD systems and the same sort of thing, architects were totally skeptical about it until they actually sat down and we got them in front of a machine and showed them how to use it. Let them design something that they could do with three or four hours, as opposed to spending days with paper and paper and paper and more paper in a drafting table. And they could go on to the next project and still charge as much. Howard Brown 22:53 It was funny. I take a chief engineer on to lunch, and I tried to gauge their interest and a third, we're just enthusiastic because they wanted to make sure that they were the the way that technology came into the station. They were they were the brainchild they were the they were the domain experts. So a third again, just like training waitresses and waiters and bartenders, a third of them. Oh, they wanted they just wanted to consume it all. A third of them were skeptical and needed convincing. And a third of whom was like, that's never going out on my hair anywhere. Yeah, they were the later and later adopters, of course. Michael Hingson 23:24 And some of them were successful. And some of them were not. Howard Brown 23:28 Absolutely. We continue. We no longer. Go ahead. No, no, of course I am the my first sales are the ones that were early adopters. And and then I basically walked over to guys that are later adopters. I said, Well, I said, you know, the ABC, the NBC and the fox station and the PBS station habit, you know, you don't have it, and they're gonna take all your post production business away from you. And that got them highly motivated. Michael Hingson 23:54 Yeah. And along the way, from a personal standpoint, somebody got really clever. And it started, of course at WGBH in Boston, where they recognize the fact that people who happen to be blind would want to know what's going on on TV when the dialog wasn't saying much to to offer clues. And so they started putting an audio description and editing and all that and somebody created the secondary audio programming in the other things that go into it. And now that's becoming a lot more commonplace, although it's still got a long way to go. Howard Brown 24:24 Well, I agree. So but you're right. So having that audio or having it for visually impaired or hearing impaired are all that they are now we're making some progress. So it's still a ways to go. I agree with you. Michael Hingson 24:36 still a ways to go. Well, you along the way in terms of continuing to work with Abbott and other companies in doing the entrepreneurial stuff. You've had a couple of curveballs from life. Howard Brown 24:47 I have. So going back to my promotion, I was going driving out to Dayton, Ohio, I noticed a little spot on my cheekbone. didn't think anything of it. I was so excited to get promoted and start my new job. up, I just kept powering through. So a few weeks after I'd moved out to Dayton, Ohio, my mom comes out. And she's at the airport and typical Boston and mom, she's like, What's that on your cheek? What's that on your cheek? And I was like, Mom, it's nothing. I kind of started making excuses. I got hit playing basketball, I got it at the gym or something. And she's like, well, we got to get that checked out. I said, No, Mom, it's okay. It's not no big deal. It's a little little market. Maybe it's a cyst or pebble or something I don't know. So she basically said she was worried, but she never told me. So she helped set up my condo, or an apartment. And then she left. And then as long Behold, I actually had to go speak in Boston at the American Bankers Association about disaster recovery, and having a disaster recovery plan. And so this is the maybe August of 1989. And I came back and that spot was still there. And so my mom told my dad, remember, there was payphones? There was no cell phones, no computers, no internet. So she told my dad, she didn't take a picture of it. But now he saw it. And he goes, Let's go play tennis. There's I got there on a Friday. So on a Saturday morning, we'd go do something. And instead of going to play tennis, he took me to a local community hospital. And they took a look at it. And they said off its assist, take some my antibiotic erythromycin or something, you'll be fine. Well, I came back to see them on Monday after my speech. And I said, I'm not feeling that great. Maybe it's the rethrow myosin. And so having to be four o'clock in the afternoon, he took me to the same emergency room. And he's and I haven't had the same doctor on call. He actually said, You know what, let's take a biopsy of it. So he took a biopsy of it. And then he went back to the weight room, he said, I didn't get a big enough slice. Let me take another. So he took another and then my dad drove me to the airport, and I basically left. And my parents called me maybe three weeks later, and they said, You got to come back to Boston. We gotta go see, you know, they got the results. But you know, they didn't tell us they'll only tell you. Because, you know, it's my private data. So I flew back to Boston, with my parents. And this time, I had, like, you know, another doctor there with this emergency room doctor, and he basically checks me out, checks me out, but he doesn't say too much. But he does say that we have an appointment for you at Dana Farber Cancer Institute at 2pm. I think you should go. And I was like, whoa, what are you talking about? Why am I going to Dana Farber Cancer Institute. So it gets, you know, kind of scary there because I show up there. I'm in a suit and tie. My dad's in a suit down. My mom's seems to be dressed up. And we go, and they put me through tests. And I walk in there. And I don't know if you remember this, Michael. But the Boston Red Sox charity is called the Jimmy fund. Right? And the Jimmy fund are for kids with blood cancers, lymphoma leukemias, so I go there. And they checked me in and they told me as a whole host of tests they're going to do, and I'm looking in the waiting room, and I see mostly older people, and I'm 23 years old. So I go down the hallways, and I see little kids. So I go I go hang out with the little kids while I'm waiting. I didn't know what was going on. So they call me and I do my test. And this Dr. George Canalis, who's you know, when I came to learn that the inventor of some chemo therapies for lymphomas very experienced, and this young Harvard fellow named Eric Rubin I get pulled into this office with this big mahogany desk. And they say you have stage four E T cell non Hodgkins lymphoma. It's a very aggressive, aggressive, very aggressive form of cancer. We're going to try to knock this out. I have to tell you, Michael, I don't really remember hardly anything else that was said, I glossed over. I looked up at this young guy, Eric Rubin, and I said, What's he saying? I looked back out of the corner of my eye, my mom's bawling her eyes out. My dad's looks like a statue. And I have to tell you, I was really just a deer in the headlights. I had no idea that how a healthy 23 year old guy gets, you know, stage four T cell lymphoma with a very horrible prognosis. I mean, I mean, they don't they said, We don't know if we can help you at the world, one of the world's foremost cancer research hospitals in the world. So it was that was that was a tough pill to swallow. And I did some more testing. And then they told me to come back in about a week to start chemotherapy. And so, again, I didn't have the internet to search anything. I had encyclopedias. I had some friends, you know, and I was like, I'm a young guy. And, you know, I was talking to older people that potentially, you know, had leukemia or different cancer, but I didn't know much. And so I I basically showed up for chemotherapy, scared out of my mind, in denial, and Dr. RUBIN comes out and he says, we're not doing chemo today. I said, I didn't sleep awake. What are you talking about? He says, we'll try again tomorrow, your liver Our function test is too high. And my liver function test is too high. So I'm starting to learn but I still don't know what's going on. He says I got it was going to field trip. Field Trip. He said, Yeah, you're going down the street to Newton Wellesley hospital, we're going to the cryogenic center, cryo, what? What are you talking about? He goes, it's a sperm bank, and you're gonna go, you know, leave a sample specimen. And it's like, you just told me that, you know, if you can help me out what why I'm not even thinking about kids, right now. He said, Go do it. He says what else you're going to do today, and then you come back tomorrow, and we'll try chemo. So thank God, he said that, because I deposited before I actually started any chemotherapy, which, you know, as basically, you know, rendered me you know, impotent now because of all the chemotherapy and radiation I had. So that was a blessing that I didn't know about until later, which we'll get to. But a roll the story forward a little more quickly as that I was getting all bad news. I was relapsing, I went through about three or four different cycles of different chemotherapy recipes, nothing was working. I was getting sicker, and they tight. My sister, I am the twin CJ, for bone marrow transplant and she was a 25% chance of being a match. She happened to be 100% match. And I had to then gear up for back in 1990 was a bone marrow transplant where they would remove her bone marrow from her hip bones, they would scrub it and cleanse it, and they would put it in me. And they would hope that my body wouldn't immediately rejected and die and shut down or over time, which is called graft versus host these that it wouldn't kill me or potentially that it would work and it would actually reset my immune system. And it would take over the malignant cells and set my set me back straight, which it ended up doing. And so having a twin was another blessing miracle. You know that, you know, that happened to me. And I did some immunotherapy called interleukin two that was like, like the grandfather of immunotherapy that strengthened my system. And then I moved to Florida to get out of the cold weather and then I moved out to California to rebuild my life. I call that Humpty Dumpty building Humpty Dumpty version one. And that's that's how I got to California in Southern California. Michael Hingson 32:15 So once again, your big sister savedthe day, Howard Brown 32:19 as usual. Michael Hingson 32:21 That's a big so we go, Howard Brown 32:23 as we call ourselves the Wonder Twins. He's more. She's terrific. And thank God she gave part of herself and saved my life. And I am eternally grateful to her for that, Michael Hingson 32:34 but but she never had any of the same issues or, or diseases. I gather. She's been Howard Brown 32:41 very healthy, except for like a knee. A partial knee replacement. She's been very healthy her whole life. Michael Hingson 32:48 Well, did she have to have a knee replacement because she kept kicking you around or what? Howard Brown 32:52 No, she's little. She's five feet. 510 So she never kicked me. We are best friends. My wife's best friend. I know. She is just just a saint. She's She's such a giving person and you know, we take that from our parents, but she she gave of herself of what she could do. She said she do it again in a heartbeat. I don't think I'm allowed to give anybody my bone marrow but if I could, would give it to her do anything for her. She's She's amazing. So she gave me the gift, the gift of life. Michael Hingson 33:21 So you went to Florida, then you moved to California and what did you do when you got out here? Howard Brown 33:24 So I ended up moving up to northern California. So I met this girl from Michigan in Southern California, Lisa, my wife have now 28 years in July. We married Lisa Yeah, we got married under the Jewish wedding company's wedding canopies called the hotpot and we're looking at the Pacific Ocean, we made people come out that we had that Northridge earthquake in 94. But this is in July, so things are more settled. So we had all friends and family come out. And it was beautiful. We got it on a pool deck overlooking the Pacific. It was gorgeous. It was a beautiful Hollywood type wedding. And it was amazing. So we got married in July of 94. And then moved up to Silicon Valley in 97. And then I was working at the startups. My life was really out of balance because I'm working 20 hours, you know, a day and I'm traveling like crazy. And my wife says, You know what, you got to be home for dinner if we're going to think about having a family. And we're a little bit older now. 35 and 40. And so we've got to think about these things. And so I called back to Newton Wellesley hospital, and I got the specimen of sperm shipped out to San Jose, and we went through an in vitro fertilization process. And she grew eight eight eggs and they defrosted the swimmers and they took the best ones and put them back in the four best eggs and our miracle baby our frozen kids sickle. Emily was born in August of 2001. Another blessing another miracle. I was able to have a child and healthy baby girl. Michael Hingson 34:58 So what's Emily doing today? Howard Brown 35:00 Well, thank you for asking that. So, she is now in Missoula, Montana at a television station called K Pax eight Mountain News. And she's an intern for the summer. And she's living her great life out there hiking, Glacier National Park. And she ran I think she ran down to the Grand Tetons and, and she's learning about the broadcast business and reporting. She's a writer by trade, by trade and in journalism. And she likes philosophy. So she'll be coming back home to finish her senior year, this at the end of the summer at the University of Michigan. And so she's about to graduate in December. And she's, she's doing just great. Michael Hingson 35:35 So she writes and doesn't do video editing us yet using Abbott or any of the evolutions from it. Howard Brown 35:41 No, she does. She actually, when you're in a small market station, that's you. You write the script, she does the recording, she has a tripod, sometimes she's she films with the other reporters, but when she they sent her out as an intern, and she just covered the, this, you know, the pro pro life and pro choice rallies, she she records herself, she edits on Pro Tools, which is super powerful now, and a lot less expensive. And then, when she submits, she submits it refer review to the news director and to her superiors. And she's already got, I think, three video stories and about six different by lines on written stories. So she's learning by doing, it's experiential, it's amazing. Michael Hingson 36:23 So she must have had some experience in dealing with all the fires and stuff out at Yellowstone and all that. Howard Brown 36:31 So the flooding at Yellowstone, so I drove her out there in May. And I didn't see any fires. But the flooding we got there before that, she took me on a hike on the North Gate of Yellowstone. And she's she's, you know, environmentally wilderness trained first aid trained. And I'm the dad, and I'm in decent shape. But she took me out an hour out and an hour back in and, you know, saw a moose saw a deer didn't see any mountain lion didn't see any Grizzlies, thank God, but we did see moose carcass where the grizzly had got a hold on one of those and, and everybody else to get it. So I got to go out to nature weather and we took a road trip out there this summer, it was a blast. It's the those are the memories, when you've been through a cancer diagnosis that you just you hold on to very dearly and very tight. It was a blast. So that's what he's doing this summer. She'll be back. She'll be back in August, end of August. Michael Hingson 37:22 That's really exciting to hear that she's working at it and being successful. And hopefully she'll continue to do that. And do good reporting. And I know that this last week, with all the Supreme Court cases, it's it's, I guess, in one sense, a field day for reporters. But it's also a real challenge, because there's so many polarized views on all of that. Howard Brown 37:44 Well, everybody's a broadcaster now whether it's Facebook, LinkedIn, Instagram, and all the other ones out there, tick tock. So everybody's sort of a reporter now. And you know, what do you believe, and unfortunately, I just can't believe in something in 140 characters or something in two sentences. Yeah, there's no depth there. So sometimes you miss the point, and all this stuff. And then everything's on 24 hours on CNN, on Fox on MSNBC, so it never stops. So I call that a very noisy world. And it's hard to process. You know, all this. It's coming at you so fast in the blink of an eye. So we're in a different time than when we grew up, Michael, it was a slower pace. Today in this digital world. It's, it's, it's a lot and especially COVID. Now, are we just consuming and consuming and binging and all this stuff, I don't think it's that healthy. Michael Hingson 38:36 It's not only a noisy world, but it's also a world, it's very disconnected, you can say all you want about how people can send tweets back and forth, text messages back and forth and so on. But you're not connecting, you're not really getting deep into anything, you're not really establishing relationships in the way that as you point out, we used to, and we don't connect anymore, even emails don't give you that much connection, realism, as opposed to having meaningful dialogue and meaningful conversations. So we just don't Converse anymore. And now, with all that's going on, in the very divided opinions, there's there's no room for discussion, because everybody has their own opinion. And that's it, there's no room to dialogue on any of it at all, which is really too bad. Howard Brown 39:21 Yeah, I agree. It's been divisive. And, you know, it's, it's hard because, you know, an email doesn't have the body language, the intent, the emotion, like we're talking right now. And, you know, we're expressing, you know, you know, I'm telling stories of my story personally, but you can tell when I get excited, I smile, I can get animated. Sometimes with an email, you know, you don't know the intent and it can be misread. And a lot of that communication is that way. So, you know, I totally get where you're coming from. Michael Hingson 39:55 And that's why I like doing the podcasts that we're doing. We get to really have conversation isn't just asking some questions and getting an answer and then going on to the next thing. That's, frankly, no fun. And I think it's important to be able to have the opportunity to really delve into things and have really good conversations about them. I learned a lot, and I keep seeing as I do these podcasts, and for the past 20 plus years, I've traveled around the world speaking, of course, about September 11, and talking about teamwork, and trust, and so on. And as I always say, if I don't learn more than I'm able to teach or impart, then I'm not doing my job very well. Howard Brown 40:35 So that's exactly and that's, that's where I'm going after the second health concern. You know, I'm now going to teach, I'm gonna inspire, I'm going to educate. And that's, that's, that's what I do, I want to do with the rest of my time is to be able to, you know, listen, I'm not putting my head in the sand, about school shootings, about an insurrection about floods about all that. You gotta live in the real world. But I choose, as I say, I like to live on positive Street as much as possible, but positive street with action. That's, that's what makes the world a better place at the end of the day. So you sharing that story means that one we'll never forget. And you can educate the generations to come that need to understand, you know, that point in time and how it affected you and how you've dealt with it, and how you've been able to get back out of bed every day. And I want to do the same. Michael Hingson 41:26 Well, there's nothing wrong with being positive. I think that there is a need to be aware. But we can we can continue to be positive, and try to promote positivity, try to promote connectionism and conversations and so on, and promote the fact that it's okay to have different opinions. But the key is to respect the other opinion, and recognize that it isn't just what you say that's the only thing that ever matters. That's the problem that we face so much today. Howard Brown 41:58 Right? Respect. I think Aretha Franklin saying that great. She Michael Hingson 42:01 did. She did. She's from Motown here. There you go. See? When you moved out to California, and you ended up in Silicon Valley, and so on, who are you working for them? Howard Brown 42:14 So I moved up, and I worked for this company called Liquid audio that doesn't exist anymore. And it was just iTunes 10 years too early on, there was real audio, there was Mark Cuban's company was called Audio net and then broadcast.com used for a lot of money. And so the company went public and made a lot of money. But it didn't work. The world wasn't ready for it yet to be able to live in this cassette world. It was not ready. I Napster hadn't been invented, mp3 and four hadn't been invented. So it just the adoption rate of being too early. But it still went public a lot. The investors made a ton of money, but they call that failing, failing forward. So I stayed there for a year, I made some money. And I went to another startup. And that startup was in the web hosting space, it was called Naevus. site, it's now won by Time Warner. But at that time, building data centers and hosting racks of computers was very good business. And so I got to be, you know, participate in an IPO. You know, I built built up revenue. And you know, the outsourcing craze now called cloud computing, it's dominated by the folks that like Amazon, and the folks at IBM, and a few others, but mostly, you know, dominated there, where you're basically having lots of blinking lights in a data center, and just making sure that those computers stay up to serve up the pages of the web, the videos, even television, programming, and now any form of communication. So I was, I was early on in that and again, got to go through an IPO and get compensated properly unduly, and, but also my life was out of balance. And so before we were called out for the sperm and had a baby, I transitioned out when Silicon Valley just the pendulum swung the other way, I ended up starting to work at my own nonprofit, I founded it with a couple of Silicon Valley guys called Planet Jewish, and it was still very technologically driven. It was the world's first Community Calendar. This is before Google Calendar, this is in 2000. And we built it as a nonprofit to serve the Jewish community to get more people to come to Jewish events. And I architected the code, and we ran that nonprofit for 17 years. And before calendaring really became free, and very proud of that. And after that, I started a very similar startup with different code called circle builder, and it was serving faith and religions. It was more like private facebook or private online communities. And we had the Vatican as a client and about 25,000 Ministries, churches, and nonprofits using the system. And this is all sort of when Facebook was coming out to you know, from being just an edu or just for college students. And so I built that up as a quite a big business. But unfortunately, I was in Michigan when I started circle builder. I ended up having to close both of those businesses down. One that the revenue was telling off of the nonprofit and also circuit builder wasn't monetizing as quickly or as we needed as well. But I ended up going into my 50 year old colonoscopy, Michael. And I woke up thinking everything was going to be fine. My wife Lisa's holding my hand. And the gastroenterologist said, No, I found something. And when I find something, it's bad news. Well, it was bad news. Stage three colon cancer. Within about 10 days or two weeks, I had 13 and a half inches of my colon removed, plus margins plus lymph nodes. One of the lymph nodes was positive, install a chemo port and then I waited because my daughter had soccer tournaments to travel to but on first week of August in 2016, I started 12 rounds of Rockem sockem chemotherapy called folfox and five Fu and it was tough stuff. So I was back on the juice again, doing chemotherapy and but this time, I wasn't a deer in the headlights, I was a dad, I was a husband. I had been through the trenches. So this time, I was much more of a marine on a mission. And I had these digital tools to reach out for research and for advocacy and for support. Very different at that time. And so I unfortunately failed my chemotherapy, I failed my neck surgery, another colon resection, I failed a clinical trial. And things got worse I became metastatic stage four that means that colon cancer had spread to my liver, my stomach linings called the omentum and peritoneum and my bladder. And I had that same conversation with a doctor in downtown Detroit, at a Cancer Institute and he said, We don't know if we can help you. And if you Dr. Google, it said I had 4% of chances of living about 12 to 18 months and things were dark I was I was back at it again looking looking at the Grim Reaper. But what I ended up doing is research and I did respond to the second line chemotherapy with a little regression or shrinkage. And for that you get more chemotherapy. And then I started to dig in deep research on peritoneal carcinoma which is cancer of the of the of the stomach lining, and it's very tricky. And there's a group called colon town.org that I joined and very informative. I there then met at that time was probably over 100 other people that had had the peritoneal carcinoma, toma and are living and they went through a radical surgery called cytoreduction high pack, where they basically debulk you like a de boning a fish, and they take out all this cancer, they can see the dead and live cells, and then they pour hot chemo in you. And then hot chemo is supposed to penetrate the scanning the organs, and it's supposed to, in theory kill micro cell organism and cancer, although it's still not proven just yet. But that surgery was about a 12 and a half hour surgery in March of 2018. And they call that the mother of all surgeries. And I came out looking like a ghost. I had lost about 60 pounds, and I had a long recovery. It's that one would put Humpty Dumpty back together. It's been now six years. But I got a lot of support. And I am now what's called no evidence of disease at this time, I'm still under surveillance. I was quarterly I just in June, I had my scans and my exams. And I'm now going to buy annual surveillance, which means CAT scans and blood tests. That's the step in the right direction. And so again, I mean, if I think about it, my twin sister saved my life, I had a frozen sperm become a daughter. And again, I'm alive from a stage four diagnosis. I am grateful. I am lucky, and I am blessed. So that's that a long story that the book will basically tell you, but that's where I am today. Michael Hingson 48:50 And we'll definitely get to the book. But another question. So you had two startups that ran collectively for quite a period of time, what got you involved or motivated to do things in the in the faith arena? Howard Brown 49:06 So I have to give credit to my wife, Lisa. So we met at the Jewish Federation of Los Angeles at this young leadership group. And then they have like a college fair of organizations that are Jewish support organizations. And one of them happened to be Jewish Big Brothers, now Jewish Brothers and Big Sisters of Los Angeles. Suppose you'd be a great big brother. I was like, well, it takes up a lot of time. I don't know. She's like, you should check it out. So I did. And I became I fill out the application. I went through the background checks, and I actually got to be a Jewish big brother to this young man II and at age 10. And so I have to tell you, one of the best experiences in my life was to become a mentor. And I today roll the clock forward. 29 years in is now close to 40 years old or 39 years old. He's married with a son who's one noble and two wife, Sarah, and we are family. We stayed together past age 18 Seen, and we've continued on. And I know not a lot of people do that. But it was probably one of the best experiences I've ever done. I've gotten so much out of it. Everyone's like, Oh, you did so much for in? Well, he did so much for me and my daughter, Emily calls him uncle and my wife and I are we are his family, his dad was in prison and then passed away and his mom passed away where his family now. And so one of the best experiences. So that's how I kind of got into the Jewish community. And also being in sales I was I ended up being a good fundraiser. And so these nonprofits that live their lifeblood is fundraising dollars. I didn't mind calling people asking them for donations or sitting down over coffee, asking them for donations. So I learned how to do that out in Southern California in Northern California. And I've continued to do that. So that gave me a real good taste of faith. I'm not hugely religious, but I do believe in the community values of the Jewish community. And you get to meet people beyond boards and you get to raise money for really good causes. And so that sort of gave me another foundation to build off of and I've enjoyed doing that as a community sermon for a long time. Michael Hingson 51:10 I'll bite Where does Ian live today? Howard Brown 51:13 Okay, well, Ian was in LA when we got matched. I had to move to San Francisco, but I I petitioned the board to keep our match alive because it was scholarship dollars in state right. And went to UC Santa Cruz, Florida State for his master's and got his last degree at Hastings and the Jewish community supported him with scholarships. And in was in very recently was in San Francisco, Oakland area, and now he's lives in South Portland, Oregon. Michael Hingson 51:39 Ah, so you haven't gotten back to Michigan yet? Although he's getting into colder weather. So there's a chance? Howard Brown 51:45 Well, let me tell you, he did live with us in Michigan. So using my connections through the Jewish community, I asked if he could interview with a judge from the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals a friend of mine, we sat on a on a board of directors for the American Jewish Committee, Detroit. And I said, she's like, well, Howard, I really have to take Michigan kids. I said, You know what? No problem. You decide if he's if he's worthy or not go through your process, but would you take the phone call? So she took the phone call, and I never heard anything. And then Ian called me and he said, I got it. I as a second year loss. Going to be a second year law student. I'm going to be clerking for summer interning and clerking for this judge Leanne white. And again, it just it karma, the payback, it was beautiful. So he lived with us for about four and a half months. And when he came back, and it was beautiful, because Emily was only about four or five years old. And, and he lived with us for that time. And it was beautiful. Michael Hingson 52:43 But that's really great. That, that you have that relationship that you did the big brother program. And I'm assuming you've been big brother to other people as well. Howard Brown 52:53 No, no. I have not actually. Because what it did is it trained me to be a dad. So when I had Emily, it was more it was more difficult actually to do that. And so no, Ian has been my one and only match. I mentor a lot of Babson students, and I mentor and get mentored by some cancer patients and, and some big entrepreneurs. Mentorship is a core value of mine. I like to be mentored. And I also like to mentor others. And I think that's, that's what makes the world go round. So when Steve Gates when Bill Gates, his wife, Melinda, just donated 123 million to the overall arching Big Brothers, Big Sisters of America. And that money will filter to all those, I think that that's such a core value. If a young person can have someone that takes interest in them, they can really shape their future and also get a lot out of it. So mentorship is one of my key values. And I hope it's hope it's many of your viewers and yours as well. Michael, Michael Hingson 53:52 absolutely is I think that we can't do anything if we can't pass on what we've learned and try to help other people grow. I've been a firm believer my entire life of you don't give somebody a fish, you teach them how to fish and however, and wherever that is, it's still the same thing. And we need to teach and impart. And I think that in our own way, every one of us is a teacher and the more we take it seriously, the better it is. Howard Brown 54:18 Well, I'm now a student not learning podcasting. I learned how to be a book author and I'm learning how to reinvent myself virgin Humpty Dumpty, version two coming out. Michael Hingson 54:29 So you had been a national cancer survivor advocate and so on. Tell me a little bit about that if you would. Howard Brown 54:35 So I respect people that want to keep their diagnosis private and their survivorship private. That's not me. I want to be able to help people because if I would have been screened at age 40 or 42, I probably wouldn't have had colon cancer and I was not, but this is a preventable disease and really minorities and indigenous people as they need to get screened more, because that's the highest case of diagnosis for colorectal cancer. But what I think that that's what his needs now it's the second leading killer of cancer right now. And it's an important to get this advocacy out and use your voice. And so I want to use my voice to be able to sound the alarm on getting screening, and also to help people survive. There's I think, 16 million growing to 23 or 4 million by 2030. Cancer survivors out there, cancer diagnosis, it sucks sex all the way around, but it affects more than the patient, it affects your caregiver, it affects your family affects relationships, it affects emotions, physical, and also financial, there is many aspects of survivorship here and more people are learning to live with it and going, but also, quite frankly, I live with in the stage for cancer world, you also live with eminence of death, or desperation to live a little bit longer. You hear people I wish I had one more day. Well, I wish I had time to be able to see my daughter graduate high school, and I did and I cherished it. I'm going to see her graduate college this December and then walk at the Big House here in Michigan, in Ann Arbor in May. And then God willing, I will walk her down the aisle at the appropriate time. And it's good to have those big goals that are important that drive you forward. And so those are the few things that drive me forward. Michael Hingson 56:28 I know that I can't remember when I had my first colonoscopy. It's been a while. It was just part of what I did. My mother didn't die of colon cancer, but she was diagnosed with colon cancer. She, she went to the doctor's office when she felt something was wrong. And they did diagnose it as colon cancer. She came home my brother was with her. She fell and broke her hip and went into the hospital and passed away a few days later, they did do an operation to deal with repairing her hip. And but I think because of all of that, just the amount that her body went through, she just wasn't able to deal with it. She was 6970. And so it was no I take Yeah, so I was just one of those things that that did happen. She was 71, not 70. But, you know, we've, for a while I got a colonoscopy every five years. And then they say no, you don't need to do it every five years do it every 10 years. The couple of times they found little polyps but they were just little things. There was nothing serious about them. They obviously took them out and autopsy or biopsy them and all that. And no problems. And I don't remember any of it. I slept through it. So it's okay. Howard Brown 57:46 Great. So the prep is the worst part. Isn't it though? The preps no fun. But the 20 minutes they have you under light anesthesia, they snipped the polyps and away you go and you keep living your life. So that's what I hope for everyone, because I will tell you, Michael, showing through the amount of chemotherapy, the amount of surgeries and the amount of side effects that I have is, is I don't wish that on anyone. I don't wish on anyone. It's not a good existence. It's hard. And quite frankly, it's, I want to prevent about it. And I'm just not talking about colon cancer, get your mammogram for breast cancer, get your check for prostate cancer, you know, self care is vital, because you can't have fun, do your job, work Grow family, if your hell if you're not healthy, and the emotional stuff they call the chemo brain or brain fog and or military personnel refer to it as PTSD. It's real. And you've got to be able to understand that, you know, coming from a cancer diagnosis is a transition. And I'll never forget that my two experiences and I I've got to build and move forward though. Because otherwise it gets dark, it gets lonely, it gets depressing, and then other things start to break down the parts don't work well. So I've chosen to find my happy place on the basketball court be very active in sounding the alarm for as an advocate. And as I never planned on being a book author and now I'm going to be a published author this summer. So there's good things that have come in my life. I've had a very interesting, interesting life. And we're here talking about it now so I appreciate it. Michael Hingson 59:20 Well tell me about you in basketball seems to be your happy place. Howard Brown 59:24 So everyone needs to find a happy place. I'll tell you why. The basketball court I've been playing since I was six years old and I was pretty good you know, I'm not gonna go professional. But I happen to like the team sport and I'm a point guard so I'm basically telling people what to do and trash talk and and all that. But I love it a
La voz 'Adalid' se deriva del árabe 'delid' que significa mostrador, ya que enseñaba el Camino y lideraba. Un Adalid de Luz es un Guía, un Guerrero de Luz que saca lo mejor de sí mismo y se compromete a expandirlo iluminando todo aquello que se encuentra a su Paso. Prot llega para Ayudarnos a Entender que hay mucho por Conocer más allá de la Apariencia y lo "oficialistamente" estipulado... Debemos ser capaces de Aceptar que por mucho que Comprendamos en esta Vida Siempre habrá cosas que superar, nuevos retos que Comprender y nuevo Aprendizaje que hacer Consciente. Sólo Dios, la Fuente, la Energía Vital, es capaz de Dar Vida, pero nosotros Somos quienes decidimos la Naturaleza (con la Intención que escojamos dar) de nuestros Actos. Tenemos el Don del Libre Albedrío para Elegir cómo hacer las cosas y qué ofrecer al mundo... ¿por qué elegir el Mal cuando el Bien es más Seguro y sus Consecuencias hacen florecer la Vida? Todo es Bueno, incluso los problemas y desgracias si permitimos Ver el Mensaje que portan: el de Volver hacia el Bien para traer Luz y Amor al mundo... No se trata de que nos pase algo malo o nos hagan daño y responder con la "misma moneda", sino de Aprender de ello y transformarlo en Conocimiento Consciente que nos Ayude a Avanzar y Crecer en la LUZ (Amor, Bien). Esta película es un gran referente para empezar (si no lo hemos hecho ya) a plantearnos nuestra Falibilidad y utilizarla como herramienta para Expandir nuestra Conciencia hacia los Mundos que nos forman y el Origen de nuestro Ser, pues Somos Fractales de la Fuente, Somos Llamitas de Dios co-creando Vida a través de su Palabra (el Bien, la Verdad, la Luz, el Amor), nada que ver con el fanatismo religioso ni con la manipulación sistemática de los organismos de poder para movernos según sus Intenciones... Somos Almas Libres con posibilidad de Elegir cómo manifestarnos... Elige Bien... Tirad del Hilo y Expandid vuestra Luz al Máximo, Adalides, pues las opciones son INFINITAS! Que todo os Impulse en vuestra Búsqueda de la Verdad y, cuando la Encontréis, Convertíos en Ella, pues no es únicamente Saberla sino Aplicarla a cada Acción de nuestra Rutina. Dando Ejemplo. Abrazo Apretao, Adalides!! Mi sitio web: https://coraurzon.wixsite.com/laposadafronteriza e-mail de contacto: auriel113@yahoo.com Donativos HILANDO FINO Podcast: https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=GEXR5HUV85W5U (((Canción: Spirit of Fire. Música: www.fiftysounds.com/es/ ))) --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/cora-muoz-peas/message
We continue our exploration of films stuck in Development Hell with the many attempts to adapt The Six Million Dollar Man to the silver screen. After a successful television run, 3 made-for-TV movies as recently as 1994, and influence that can be felt all throughout US pop culture, shouldn't a big screen version have worked? Join us for a tale of writer's block, unexpected contributors, executive musical chairs, a Weinstein, and another appearance in this series for Mark Wahlberg. Actually, that begs the question: what's going on with Mark Wahlberg's career? Listen with your bionic ears to get the whole story! CW: mention of Harvey Weinstein's sexual assault charges; mention of Mark Wahlberg's racist attack on an Asian man; mention of Mel Gibson's racism and antisemitism. Podcasts plugged in this episode: The Happy Hour Podcast (@HappyHourShow3 on Twitter); Talking SMAC (@TalkingSMACpod on Twitter) Be sure to check out the Happy Hour Podcast's attempt at the world record for the longest podcast record, starting at 10:00 AM on Friday 8/26/2022! We'll be appearing as guests around 7:00 PM that night and there will be appearances from TONS of other amazing indie podcasts. People & Stuff Mentioned In This Episode: The Bionic Woman, Lee Majors, Lindsay Wagner, Richard Anderson, The Venture Bros, Punisher, Kevin Smith, Clerks, Mallrats, Kenner, Star Wars, The Toys That Made Us, Marvel Comics, Stan Lee, Lawrence Gordon, Paul W. S. Anderson, Steven E. de Souza, Event Horizon, Soldier, Resident Evil, K-Pax, Universal Pictures, Dimension Films, Miramax, Bob Weinstein, Mark Frost, David Lynch, Kyle MacLachlan, Smallville, Chris Rock, the Farrelly Brothers, Jim Carrey, Kick-Ass 2, Uwe Boll, BloodRayne, Warner Bros, Peter Berg, Lone Survivor, Shooter, The Departed, Scoob!, Damian Szifron, Daddy's Home, The Beaver, Martin Scorsese, Silence, Patty Jenkins, Wonder Woman 1894, Space Jam 2, The Green Knight, Simu Liu, Shang Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings, David Hughes, Wario, Waluigi --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/derazzled/support
The Equalizer Season 2 Episode 17: Solo Aired on CBS: February 18, 1987 Directed by: Alan Metzger Written by : Carleton Eastlake Featuring: Lindsay Crouse, Kevin Spacey, Austin Pendleton We get it. A lot of us aren't really in the mood to watch Kevin Spacey in anything. And if you are, it'll probably be to watch some classic 90s movie, or to hate watch K-PAX. So instead of writing about him (though he does give a top level EQ villain performance), we'll focus on the romantic sparks flying between Robert McCall and guest Lindsay Crouse, much more complex than the typical damsel in distress. Good plot, good characters. Sure it had an inevitable action scene in an abandoned warehouse, but even the warehouse was better than average, some top tier catwalks. The Equalizer came out of their epic two parter with guns (and grenades) a blazing. @equalizerspod equalizerspodcast at gmail dot com
Today on the show I'll delve more into sci fi with K Pax, Minority Report, Resident Evil, Star Wars Attack of the Clones and so much more. Sit back and relax as the show starts now
Everybody loves a good mystery. In K-PAX, the mystery surrounds the identity of a lovable, odd figure in a mental hospital that changes people's lives.
The Alphabet Theater Podcast is a group of 4 friends who just like to watch and discuss movies. It's a cinematic book club where, each week, the crew will watch a new movie corresponding to that week's letter of the alphabet to then review and rate the film for your listening pleasure. In this eleventh episode the film K-Pax is discussed. This week's episode also sets us up for our L movie! Be sure to check that out that and every new episode each week!
The 2,000 year wait under water has finally come to an end: here is the final episode from our Steven Spielberg round, "A.I. Artificial Intelligence". We are talking about the 20-year Kubrick passion project that got handed off to Steven Spielberg this week. For the first time in a long time, it's the 3 hosts on their own, raising some interesting questions: Is Haley Joel Osment the greatest child actor ever? Is Jude Law the ideal sex robot? Did Ben and Tyler think this was "Bicentennial Man" and "K-PAX" before they started watching this? Find out the answers to all of these questions and our anthropomorphic bear Rushmore in this week's episode! OUR WEBSITE OUR SOCIAL MEDIA Music: Umbels and StreamBeats Support Us --- 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/threefilmspod/message
Welcome to May Movie Madness! For the month of May will be bringing you back-to-back films every week here on MIND SPACE MINIMAL. This week Dan and Jessica discuss the 2001 American-German science fiction-mystery film based on Gene Brewer's 1995 novel of the same name, directed by Iain Softley, starring Kevin Spacey, Jeff Bridges, Mary McCormack, and Alfre Woodard. Visit us at mindspaceminimal.com and follow us on Instagram at @mindspaceminimal. Original track “Writing Instruments” by Daniel Ryan.
¡SE AVISA antes de entrar en spoilers! Reseña de la historia de un paciente de psiquiátrico, Kevin Spacey, que asegura venir de otro planeta, y dejará a su psiquiatra, Jeff Bridges, sumido en un mar de preguntas. A medio camino entre 'Alguien voló sobre el nido del cuco' y 'Starman', y quizá demasiados parecidos con cierta película argentina, algunos descubrimos al polémico Spacey con esta película sencilla, simpática y con algunos momentos realmente mágicos. Ojo con la música de Edward Shearmur.
In a carryover from The Film Room, your hosts Austin, Albert, and Zephyr continue with their media absorption in the never-ending quarantine. We share our experiences watching the likes of Roger Waters, K-Pax, Killer Klowns From Outer Space, Land Before Time, Jack-O, Hobgoblins, Darkwing Duck, Scary Stories, and much much much more. So please enjoy the last of our quarantine casts, at the very least the last one of 2020. And remember, wear your mask, wash your hands, and stay safe this season! The Langston League made an unofficial syllabus for each episode of Lovecraft Country Season 1. You can check it out here! Visit our website at theomniplex.org! Like our Facebook page Follow us on Twitter Subscribe, rate, and review wherever you get your podcasts! Podcast Art by Amy Blue (shylostconfused) Logo Art by Albert Wiltfong using Marquee font Up next: Little Shop of Horrors!
Luke's off gallivanting in Scotland! So for today's episode, Pete is joined by Clash of the Titles' host: Chris Tilly. Consequently, there's a whole load of film chat, including dodgy K-Pax merchandise, 80s action classics and weird novel adaptations. Also on this episode, Chris and Pete chat about the time Pete ate some mystery meat sent to him by a listener and the boys also discuss a piece of Russian facial recognition software that Pete's been using…The emails have been flooding in! Including one from Laura, who went to extreme lengths to watch a World Cup game in 1998. Hit us up at hello@lukeandpeteshow.com to get involved!Make sure you check out Chris' podcast, Clash of the Titles. You can find them on Twitter at @clashpod!***Please take the time to rate and review us on Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your pods. It means a great deal to the show and will make it easier for other potential listeners to find us. Thanks!*** See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Guest - Devin Berko - LA based Photographer / Filmmaker - the many faces of Jeff Bridges - K-PAX, not so bad after all - John Mathieson resumeCast - Detective Pikachu unexpected appreciation - cinematography appreciation - Color GradeCast - the 4 hour Waterworld cut - almost Will Smith - Alison Jones talk, CastingCast - in support of the slow rollout - Dark talk - K-Pax healthcare is better than real life - quarantine activities - TwitchCast - noticing Ajay Naidu - the finer details of alien possession - eating produce whole - missing Casey Neistat - vlogging, but at what cost? - Bladerunner 2049 appreciation - film stock talk - HDR talk - so much k - big ass digital footage - Jeff Bridges talk - hey this movie is pretty good - ID4Cast - Craig McKayCast - the internet - everything is great, except that everything sucks - Chandler, AZ un-appreciation - Aaron PaulCast - baby talk un-appreciation - Planet of the Apes, right next door - Chinese food, all over the place - The Search for General Tso - Rotten Tomatoes continues to be garbage - Nev Pierce shouts out - Arlington Road talk - Lion appreciation - talking Cranberries - Depression BABY - warm blanket pop rock - Kanye West un-appreciation - music video talk - creating a better bath tub - remembering that Spiderman trailer - the race to a billion Youtube views - going back in time: actually an awful idea - Zoom is fine
Are you a big fan of rockin’ or do you prefer rollin’? Either way we have you covered on this episode. We’re going to be talking about everyone’s favorite stringy music maker, the sweet guitar, and the people that can make magic with those babies. Music isn’t the only art form discussed though! We’re also dipping our toes into the art of fine cinema. More specifically we’ll be talking about the hottest film of 2001, that’s right we’re talking K-Pax. K-Pax didn’t understand how to eat a banana and we love that. Grab your favorite yellow fruit and a beanbag chair, this new episode is pretty nice!
Puzsér Róbert
On this episode Jamie and Thelonious review 12 Years a Slave, American Psycho, K-Pax, A Clockwork Orange, Lighthouse, Incendies, and Waking Life. They also give their movie of the month and are joined by a special guest. This episode's title and intro song are from the movie Incendies.
|| YouTube channel/Westworld breakdowns: https://www.youtube.com/lightscamerabarstool || 0:00 – WiFi is down… || 3:25 – Simpsons, K-Pax, Jolene & Quibi || 12:43 – Exclusive Draft Day song || 17:35 – SCOOB! coming to streaming || 21:12 – Trillballins reviews Trolls World Tour || 22:36 – Halloween sequel will be “bold” || 25:37 – No Time To Die story was almost a dream || 28:30 – Ad Read #2 || 29:23 – Tompa Bay vs. Dom Grady || 31:42 – ANOTHER new Star Wars series in works || 34:06 – Mark Wahlberg almost in Men In Black 3 || 38:11 – HBO Max launching soon; what’s it all about? || 45:55 – DRAFT DAY REVIEW (SPOILERS, MOVIE SUCKS) || 1:22:00 – Sam Hargrave Interview (Extraction Director, Avengers Stuntman) || 1:59:36 – Movie Characters With Football Names, Part 2 || 2:13:24 – Box Office Game XXXVI: Jennifer Garner || RATE 2020 MOVIES || MARCH: https://forms.gle/J9PAN66sHcyZWHTL6> || JANUARY: https://forms.gle/FPtY6uW1qetR4LpG7 || FEBRUARY: https://forms.gle/CK9W454vkuHqXd8w6> || RATE 2019 MOVIES || DECEMBER: https://forms.gle/uCYmh7uMtxE99Vj88 || JANUARY: https://goo.gl/forms/cJ5tYtYn7VQx4mlw2 || FEBRUARY: https://goo.gl/forms/N98XcvIy3SukhrIw2 || MARCH: https://goo.gl/forms/dBlIoB9WCB7mnDBQ2 || APRIL: https://forms.gle/7UKyQSYw5Qg5PTCt8 || MAY: https://forms.gle/JNuiEd4rvgLHnLkk9 || JUNE: https://forms.gle/7kHJhSWhjpNrCTUV6 || JULY: https://forms.gle/kqRVtSKDF2G2oFv5A || AUGUST: https://forms.gle/Xt9LfNN72oztVr787 || SEPTEMBER: https://forms.gle/GeNqL9t6vy6WDy6H7 || OCTOBER: https://forms.gle/8765DHeaT6w81PiF7 || NOVEMBER: https://forms.gle/yVJjxeuNspX2GNjSA
WIIIIILLSSOOOONNNN!!!And thus, a thousand tears were shed over a volleyball. On this all-ladies episode of Reel First Time, we discuss that sweet sweet FedEx lawsuit money, Tom Hanks' acting chops, our time as Girl Scouts, and more!We also have an absolute TREAT in the form of our guest host, Hannah Murphy! Her first experience with Cast Away involved stuffed animals and the movies K-Pax and Bandits, which is a far cry from Emma's 2020 viewing right after Tom Hanks won the Cecil B. DeMille Award at the Golden Globes. You can follow Hannah @legallyhannahmurphy to see what she is up to next!Joining Emma & Hannah is Sarah Shoemaker, an Alaskan turned Chicagoan who loves a good Cast Away viewing. Catch her performing around the city & follow her next project, @theatrechi on Instagram!Follow Reel First Time on all the platforms @reelfirsttime & remember to rate and review us!
It's Time D-Heads! This week feel the rhythm with RAWLE D. LEWIS (Cool Runnings, Spy Hard, K-Pax, Malcolm and Eddie, Write, Director) as he stops in and talks about working on Cool Runnings, words of wisdom from John Candy, buffering his resume, feeling blessed and more! In addition no show is complete without the D-Team and Erin has his hand in the bag as he is tossing out remaining pumpkins in I Want To Know. Domenic returns to the show's lineup with an all new segment every week about Disney Plus while Frank gives a little bit of fun and smiles with the Disney Quote of the Week. And let's not forget Randy going deep into Disney Gaming and Interactive with Disney Multi-Media. There is news fresh off the D-Wire with news about Disney Plus, The Mandalorian, Forky, Epcot, The Disney Channel, D-Team, The Magic Kingdom, The Owl House, Sydney to the Max, Mickey Mouse, Jim Henson, One Day at Disney, The Dark Crystal and more! So it's time to Put on Your Ears, Give it a Little Bibbidi Bobbidi Boo, and get ready to Relive the Magic, Memories and Appreciation from Your Lifetime of Disney with DisneyBlu's DizRadio "A Disney Themed Celebrity Guest Show"!
It's Time D-Heads! This week feel the rhythm with RAWLE D. LEWIS (Cool Runnings, Spy Hard, K-Pax, Malcolm and Eddie, Write, Director) as he stops in and talks about working on Cool Runnings, words of wisdom from John Candy, buffering his resume, feeling blessed and more! In addition no show is complete without the D-Team and Erin has his hand in the bag as he is tossing out remaining pumpkins in I Want To Know. Domenic returns to the show's lineup with an all new segment every week about Disney Plus while Frank gives a little bit of fun and smiles with the Disney Quote of the Week. And let's not forget Randy going deep into Disney Gaming and Interactive with Disney Multi-Media. There is news fresh off the D-Wire with news about Disney Plus, The Mandalorian, Forky, Epcot, The Disney Channel, D-Team, The Magic Kingdom, The Owl House, Sydney to the Max, Mickey Mouse, Jim Henson, One Day at Disney, The Dark Crystal and more! So it's time to Put on Your Ears, Give it a Little Bibbidi Bobbidi Boo, and get ready to Relive the Magic, Memories and Appreciation from Your Lifetime of Disney with DisneyBlu's DizRadio "A Disney Themed Celebrity Guest Show"!
Podcast de NEMESIS RADIO: http://www.ivoox.com/podcast-podcast-nemesis-radio_sq_f1133446_1.html -Esta noche hablaremos con la escritora e investigadora MACARENA MILETICH, de cómo expresar la vibración de la conciencia a través de LA VOZ… -Las NOTICIAS DE NÉMESIS RADIO, nuestro compañero PACO TORRES, nos pondrá al día de cómo está en mundo del misterio… -Esta noche tendremos a nuestra compañera ANA THEYSER, en “LA PUERTA OCULTA”, nos hablará de; “EL AURA Y LA VAMPIRACIÓN ENERGÉTICA” -Hablaremos de CINE con nuestra compañera MERCEDES GARCÍA VELASCO, de la película “K-PAX. UN UNIVERSO APARTE (2001)” -Y en nuestro DEBATE, un tema como siempre con mucha tela que cortar… “¿OIGO VOCES EN MI MENTE?” Por Internet a través de nuestras webs: www.lainter968.es www.lainter.es Por FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/N%C3%A9mesis-Radio-1550831935166728/
Podcast de NEMESIS RADIO: http://www.ivoox.com/podcast-podcast-nemesis-radio_sq_f1133446_1.html -Esta noche hablaremos con la escritora e investigadora MACARENA MILETICH, de cómo expresar la vibración de la conciencia a través de LA VOZ… -Las NOTICIAS DE NÉMESIS RADIO, nuestro compañero PACO TORRES, nos pondrá al día de cómo está en mundo del misterio… -Esta noche tendremos a nuestra compañera ANA THEYSER, en “LA PUERTA OCULTA”, nos hablará de; “EL AURA Y LA VAMPIRACIÓN ENERGÉTICA” -Hablaremos de CINE con nuestra compañera MERCEDES GARCÍA VELASCO, de la película “K-PAX. UN UNIVERSO APARTE (2001)” -Y en nuestro DEBATE, un tema como siempre con mucha tela que cortar… “¿OIGO VOCES EN MI MENTE?” Por Internet a través de nuestras webs: www.lainter968.es www.lainter.es Por FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/N%C3%A9mesis-Radio-1550831935166728/
30-ый релиз моего лейбла SkyTop и моя новая работа K-Pax в продаже! Поддержать: skytop.complete.me/kpax Youtube Live Stream: www.youtube.com/user/Intricate…
30-ый релиз моего лейбла SkyTop и моя новая работа K-Pax в продаже! Поддержать: skytop.complete.me/kpax Youtube Live Stream: www.youtube.com/user/Intricate…
Andy Beeker is watching Office Space. This episode is not sponsored! Want to be a sponsor? You can contact me or check out my sponsorship gig on Fiverr This episode is different than a normal episode of Cross Cutting Concerns! This episode is about an R-Rated movie! Normally my podcast is G-rated, but that is not the case for this episode. If you normally listen with children, I recommend you listen to Story Pirates with them instead! This is a long episode: almost an hour. Normally my episodes are around 15 minutes. This is an episode about a (vaguely) technical/computer related movie. I’ve done a couple of episodes like this in the past: 071 - Bill Sempf on Sneakers and 036 - Kevin Groves on Pirates of Silicon Valley. Show Notes: We watched Office Space, a 1999 film by Mike Judge. If you haven’t watched it, you should! Inside joke alert: the mention of a "white jimmy". This is a reference to a GMC Jimmy SUV that’s painted white. But suppose someone came up to you and said "I have a white Jimmy" and then paused for 15 seconds… There are many tangents we go on in this episode. Confused? Send me a question, and I will try to clarify. K*Pax - a film you’ve probably never heard of starring Kevin Spacey, Jeff Bridges, and (notable for this podcast) Ajay Naidu. Speaking of Kevin Spacey, if you’re out of the loop, you might want to read up on Anthony Rapp. The video discussed briefly in the episode is 7 Things You (Probably) Didn’t Know About Office Space Adult Swim is the late night block of Cartoon Network that showed King of the Hill in syndication. Be sure to check out the Office Space soundtrack. Speaking of the "year 2000 switch", check out episode 100 - with Joe Kelly on COBOL. We mentioned Tiger LCD games. Here’s a refresher if you don’t quite remember them. Bob Dole: The Bus Tour What movie should I tackle next time? Leave some feedback and let me know! Want to be on the next episode? You can! All you need is the willingness to talk about something technical.
This week Sam becomes ever more familiar with editing podcasts as we discuss Kevin Spacey’s K-PAX and definitely not anything else related to Kevin Spacey that may be in the news right now. Chris is unwilling to jeopardise any future Hollywood link-ups whilst Sam and Alex are determined to write a better version of this terrible film. And if that’s not enough the debate over whether this is actually sci-fi potentially activates the dreaded Poppin’s Clause. Will K-PAX be our third film not to even make it on to the list? Tune in to find out! Here are the awful K-PAX novel covers we discuss. Next week we watch Joe Cornish’s South London alien romp Attack the Block! GIVE US 5 STARS ON ITUNES! (https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/science-fiction-rating-system/id1200805447) Get in touch! (https://www.sciencefictionratingsystem.com/contact) Visit the Website! (https://www.sciencefictionratingsystem.com) See the list so far! (https://letterboxd.com/scifirating/list/science-fiction-rating-system-rankings/) And we're on Twitter (https://twitter.com/scifirating), Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/scifirating/) and Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/scifirating/) too!
Dr. Who is a big deal, a bigger deal than makes any sense to any of us here at SFRS. But let it not be said we aren’t willing to learn so this week we watch a Dr. Who film and partake in a wide ranging Dr. Who quiz to brush up on our knowledge of sonic screwdrivers and aliens that look like a group of 8 year olds designed them in design & tech class. If you are a big fan of this film, maybe look away now… Next week we watch K-SPACEY in K-PAX and thats not going to be a minefield of inappropriate conversation at all. No sir, definitely not. GIVE US 5 STARS ON ITUNES! (https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/science-fiction-rating-system/id1200805447) Get in touch! (https://www.sciencefictionratingsystem.com/contact) Visit the Website! (https://www.sciencefictionratingsystem.com) See the list so far! (https://letterboxd.com/scifirating/list/science-fiction-rating-system-rankings/) And we're on Twitter (https://twitter.com/scifirating), Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/scifirating/) and Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/scifirating/) too!
Theronathon! - A journey through the career of Charlize Theron
It's The Alien Advocate! It's homicidal K-PAX! It's Rosemary's Baby... FROM SPACE! Special guest Sara Kantner helps us diagnose just what the heck is up with Johnny Depp's hair! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/theronathon/support
Matthew Sweet looks at films that explore clashes of culture and presents a mix of music for the screen which underscore the world as it might appear from the perspective of someone from another world. Films on his list include "My Favourite Martian"; "Species"; "The Man Who Fell To Earth"; "The Day The Earth Stood Still"; "Vikaren"; "K-Pax"; "The Brother From Another Planet"; ""PK" and "District 9". The Classic Score of the Week is Jerry Goldsmith's "Star Trek - The Motion Picture". This week's featured new release is James Cameron Mitchell's "How To Talk To Girls At Parties" featuring new music by Nico Muhly.
For this Double Feature, Lauren and Greg get their heads examined with the psychiatric films Don Juan DeMarco and K-Pax. In our conversations, we discuss the process of mentally separating movies from their actors, when psychiatrists cross the line with their patients, and for each film, we dive deeply into the question: Is the protagonist for real or just crazy? Music by Bensound.com
Our first guest ever is the first one to return for a second time! Welcome K Pax to the podcast once again! If you haven't listened to the first episode with her, go check it out! Come laugh with us as things continue to get weird like they always do with Charlie and friends!
In today's podcast we discuss In today's podcast we discuss Christopher Plummer, Kevin Spacey, Mariah Carey, Twitter, 280 characters, Roy Moore, TSA, screenings, oil companies, climate change, Star Wars, Rian Johnson, trilogy, The Last Jedi, ESPN, Ford Mustang, CNN, AT&T, Time Warner, Blue Jays, Halladay, Alomar, Tim and Sid, Maple Leafs, Auston Matthews, Oran Juice Jones, Seven, ugly christmas sweaters, Braun Strowman, LeBron James, Arthur, Robert Frost, Trump, cancer, House of Cards, The Usual Suspects, American Beauty, K-Pax, CTE, Aaron Hernandez, Seth Myers, Miami, New York, cornflake, milk, box, pineapple, pizza, GOP, Alabama, Senate, Democrats, electoral wins, New Jersey, Virginia, Impact Wrestling, GFW, & Sarah Huckabee Sanders.Also, we are on iTunes! Subscribe, download and review at https://itunes.apple.com/ca/podcast/papa-johns-brain-droppings/id1278787736Listen to the Papa John's Brain Droppings Podcast on Stitcher at http://www.stitcher.com/s?fid=149731&refid=stprFollow us on http://www.Twitter.com/TheJohnDNewton or https://www.facebook.com/PJBDPodcast for the latest updates. Favorite us on TuneIn at https://tunein.com/radio/Papa-Johns-Brain-Droppings-Podcast-p1026907/For video of the podcasts subscribe to https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCnBY8t1-2xJCr7jxYn6evfg
In today's podcast we discuss In today's podcast we discuss Christopher Plummer, Kevin Spacey, Mariah Carey, Twitter, 280 characters, Roy Moore, TSA, screenings, oil companies, climate change, Star Wars, Rian Johnson, trilogy, The Last Jedi, ESPN, Ford Mustang, CNN, AT&T, Time Warner, Blue Jays, Halladay, Alomar, Tim and Sid, Maple Leafs, Auston Matthews, Oran Juice Jones, Seven, ugly christmas sweaters, Braun Strowman, LeBron James, Arthur, Robert Frost, Trump, cancer, House of Cards, The Usual Suspects, American Beauty, K-Pax, CTE, Aaron Hernandez, Seth Myers, Miami, New York, cornflake, milk, box, pineapple, pizza, GOP, Alabama, Senate, Democrats, electoral wins, New Jersey, Virginia, Impact Wrestling, GFW, & Sarah Huckabee Sanders.Also, we are on iTunes! Subscribe, download and review at https://itunes.apple.com/ca/podcast/papa-johns-brain-droppings/id1278787736Listen to the Papa John's Brain Droppings Podcast on Stitcher at http://www.stitcher.com/s?fid=149731&refid=stprFollow us on http://www.Twitter.com/TheJohnDNewton or https://www.facebook.com/PJBDPodcast for the latest updates. Favorite us on TuneIn at https://tunein.com/radio/Papa-Johns-Brain-Droppings-Podcast-p1026907/For video of the podcasts subscribe to https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCnBY8t1-2xJCr7jxYn6evfg
Welcome to the first episode of $hit Could Be Worse with Charlie Classic and friends. On this episode we have guest K Pax in the studio and we talk about weird news and butt stuff.
Gene Brewer has lived and continues to live an amazing life. Raised in Indiana, He studied DNA replication and cell division at Universities and St. Jude’s Children Hospital. Gene than entered and contiued his career as an amazing and talanted author. Gene has a passion for Ecology, animal rights and his wife Karen.Gene's "K-PAX" series of books remains one of the most underrated in literary history and served as inspiration for the hit movie “K-PAX” which stars Kevin Spacey and Jeff Bridges, and is considered by this critic to be one of the best, most underrated movies in history. Meet Gene Brewer.
It's been a month, but the boys are back with a bit of a palate-cleanser in the wake of the Serbian Podcast, in which they speak of their two "guilty pleasures" of recent years, Emilio Estevez's The Way and K-PAX starring pre-Underwood Kevin Spacey and post-Dude Jeff Bridges, as well as an in-depth discussion of one of von Sternberg's favorite 2016 films, Don't Think Twice (which apparently made Burgess weep like a small child) that leads them down the rabbit hole of discussion about the future of employment and the human species itself (yeah, a film about improv made by Mike Birbiglia can do that). Sit back and relax for what has now become known as "The Way-Pax!"Thanks again to Creative Commons and the talents of these fine artists for allowing the use of their music: "Tainted Cloth" by Oelek, "The Cannery" by Kevin MacLeod, "Wagon Wheel" by Kevin MacLeod, and "The Troll of the Mountain Swing" by Underscore Orkestra.
Movie Meltdown - Episode 399 This week we are coming to you "live" from WonderFest where we are joined by this week's special guest... actor Brian Howe. One of the hardest working and most impressive actors in the business, Brian's been featured in Westworld, Catch Me If You Can, The Pursuit of Happyness, American Horror Story, Gran Torino, Annabelle, K-PAX, The Majestic, Déjà Vu, Evan Almighty, Lie to Me, Criminal Minds, Masters of Sex, House of Lies, The Newsroom, Nikita, Justified - and of course, he's one of the cast of regulars in the Larry Blamire films (The Lost Skeleton of Cadavra, Dark and Stormy Night, Trail of the Screaming Forehead, The Lost Skeleton Returns Again). And in between our bouts of clowning around and being a dork, we also bring up... Spielberg's shooting style, that was paramount to me, one of them practically Xeroxed her rolodex, anything I could do - I did, Tony Scott, laying the groundwork, a cast of small town lunatics, Larry Moss, Summer stock theater in the Poconos, Fay Masterson, striking up the band, David Mamet, Trish Geiger, one big scene with Denzel, working in tandem, Kevin Spacey, Spy Hard, America's most beloved action figure, the quiet scary moments, Jim Carrey, State and Main, the bloom is off the rose, it was tremendous fun... blood all over the place, Frank Darabont, The Conjuring Universe, hours were long... temperatures were torturous, it was like the biggest most lumbering independent film I'd ever been involved with, when a casting director goes the extra mile, Kerry O'Malley, fly wrangler, that's how we got our revenge for his, rather indelicate criticism... of our work, a benevolent madman, K-Pax, snow in Pasadena, straight and kind of silly or full absurd, messing with Gabriele Muccino, a sustained level of dread, had to have a fake car to pick him up, one thing, with persistence, does actually lead to another, Will Smith, a state of trust, houses can have bad mojo, Clint Eastwood, my favorite... boy I'm making a Hollywood movie moment, Jeff Bridges, shooting for a dollar and a bucket of chicken, gettin' the laughs and singin' the songs, self-consuming hybrids and Tom Hanks goes mad. "I don't expect to be the big star... but I'll be the big star's neighbor." Follow Brian on Twitter at: twitter.com/BrianHoweActor For more on WonderFest go to: wonderfest.com
Nuevo programa de cine y series en los que además recordamos un peliculón como es K-PAX y nada más y nada menos que Star Wars Turca. Programa dirigido y presentado por Víctor M. Yeste, con Giacco, Maite Araez y Raúl Martín. CINE Estrenos - Alien: Covenant - Life - I am a hero - Los Guardianes de la Galaxia Vol. 2 Videoclub - K-Pax - Un universo aparte Lo que hay que ver - Star Wars Turca SERIES Críticas: - The Big Bang Theory (temporada 10) - Supergirl (temporada 2) - Midnight Dinner Tokio Stories - Master of None (temporada 2) - The Get Down (temporada 2) - Outsiders (temporada 1) Imágenes diseñadas por Gualda Trazos.
Nuevo programa de cine y series en los que además recordamos un peliculón como es K-PAX y nada más y nada menos que Star Wars Turca. Programa dirigido y presentado por Víctor M. Yeste, con Giacco, Maite Araez y Raúl Martín. CINE Estrenos - Alien: Covenant - Life - I am a hero - Los Guardianes de la Galaxia Vol. 2 Videoclub - K-Pax - Un universo aparte Lo que hay que ver - Star Wars Turca SERIES Críticas: - The Big Bang Theory (temporada 10) - Supergirl (temporada 2) - Midnight Dinner Tokio Stories - Master of None (temporada 2) - The Get Down (temporada 2) - Outsiders (temporada 1) Imágenes diseñadas por Gualda Trazos.
This week Zach is joined by Odd Shaped Panel blogger Billy Pollihan to discuss the thirty ninth episode of Smallville, "Visitor." We talk Billy's Smallville and Superman fandom, Reeve vs. Reeves, why Mon-El would've been a perfect character to appear in the series (and maybe even this episode), "Visitor"'s parallels to the movie K-Pax, and much more! Welcome Billy as our newest visitor to Always Hold On To Smallville! Check out Billy's retrospective article on Smallville for Odd Shaped Panel: https://oddshapedpanel.wordpress.com/2016/12/06/no-tights-no-flights-a-10-year-look-at-smallville-by-billy-pollihan/ EPISODE ROUNDUP Zach's Grade: B+ Billy's Grade: B-IMDB Grade: 7.9 Superman Homepage Grade: 4/5 Bechdel Test: PASS SERIES TALLY BOARD Amazing Technicolor Kryptonite: 2 Amnesia Count: 13Blue Shirt/Red Jacket: 7Clark Loses His Powers: 2 Episode Title Said In Episode: 14Hospital Visits: 24In Media Res: 1 Kent Truck Accidents: 6KOs to Keep Clark's Secret: 13Main Character Deaths: 2 Mind Control Count: 8 Movie Plot As An Episode: 1 Product Placement Pete: 2 Smallville High School Faculty Deaths: 3 Smallville High School Student Deaths: 6 Under The Influence: 11Weddings: 1 PATREON: patreon.com/alwaysmallvilleTWITTER: twitter.com/alwaysmallville FACEBOOK: facebook.com/alwaysmallville EMAIL: alwaysmallville@gmail.com ITUNES: itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/always-hold-on-to-smallville/id1080260981
This week, Mallory, Jack, and Tanner all dream of horses, and make the mistake of dreaming too small... "There's something that we K-PAXians have been around long enough to have discovered. The universe will expand, then it will collapse back on itself, then will expand again. It will repeat this process forever. What you don't you know is that when the universe expands again, everything will be as it is now. Whatever mistakes you make this time around, you will live through on your next pass. Every mistake you make, you will live through again, & again, forever. So my advice to you is to get it right this time around. Because this time is all you have." –Prot, K-PAX Music Credits:“Pure Swell” by Podington Bear“My Sharona” MIDI “Where Have All The Cowboys Gone” MIDI "Back In Time” by YV “I Need To Start Writing Things Down” by Chris Zabriskie As always, special thanks to Baby Boy Scott Lamb for the intro music, and to Superbrat for the outro music.
Darren Law kicks off the 2017 season to talk Thunderhill, K PAX, Flying Lizards and the end of the DP era. News was a platoon of driver annoucements and there was actually some races on tv to talk about on page 2.
Darren Law kicks off the 2017 season to talk Thunderhill, K PAX, Flying Lizards and the end of the DP era. News was a platoon of driver annoucements and there was actually some races on tv to talk about on page 2.
Steve Cooper talks with actor Brian Howe. Brian can currently be see playing Sheriff Pickett in HBO's Westworld and was a recurring character on the same network's hit Vice Principals. He began his TV career during the mid-'90s, as an occasional guest player on episodes of such series as Law Order and Spencer for Hire and the short-lived sitcom The Bonnie Hunt Show. He re-teamed with the venerable Hunt for a small role in his first feature, which the actress directed: the romantic comedy Return to Me. Supporting turns in an uneven series of films ensued, ranging from K-PAX to Steven Spielberg's Catch Me If You Can. He later was cast in the short-lived sitcom A Minute With Stan Hooper then landed a trio of supporting roles in A-list films during 2006: one in the Robin William's in RV, another with Will Smith in The Pursuit of Happyness and a third in Tony Scott's Deja Vu. Clint Eastwood cast him in the 2008 drama Gran Torino. He appeared in the 2011 action film I Am Number Four, and in 2012 he appeared as Randy Scheunemann in the made-for-HBO docudrama Game Change. He also had a recurring role in HBO's hit The Newsroom and on Showtime's House of Lies and Masters of Sex. He will soon be seen in the original Amazon series The Last Tycoon.
Bienvenidos al episodio 50 de Mi Gato Dinamita, el podcast que se celebra con café aguado y caramelos de colores. Duración total: 1:34:270:00:01-0:02:46 Susanette abre el libro de quejas y Willi no se queda atrás con la indignación. ¿Qué nos pasa, señores? Clase de meditación para todos y todas.0:02:48-0:06:46 Música: "Márchate ahora" de Los Totora.0:03:43-0:10:36 Intentamos descular la idea de la carencia de economía libidinal en Argentina en relación con España y desembocamos en cualquier cosa hasta llegar a los gatos de Susanette y el correcto orden de los colores a la hora de comer caramelos Mogul.0:10:37-0:11:47 Como este podcast es educativo aprendemos la diferencia entre membrillo y cacao.0:11:48-0:14:23 Mientras esperamos que llegue Entintado, Susanette nos enseña cómo salir de compras por el mundo sin gastar un peso.0:14:24-0:18:16 Seguimos de cerca a Brownie, la perra ladradora que adoptó nuestro amigo Adolfo y contamos detalles aterradores de su comportamiento. También instamos a Lolita, la gata, a taclear a la intrusa. "Ataque Lolita, ataque!"0:18:17-0:18:52 Stanley Jordan cambia su look y nos confunde. Hay que pedirle la receta para saber cómo hizo para pasar del afro al liso perfecto, no? ¿Qué acondicionador usará?0:18:53-0:26:33 Música: "Impressions" por Stanley Jordan.0:26:34-0:29:31 Le seguimos dando a Stanley Jordan hasta que alguien golpea la puerta: por primera vez en la historia del podcast... Entintando está con nosotros. Sí, tiramos las pastillas por la ventana señores y le ponemos un manto de luz divina al enigma de Tinto.0:29:32-0:37:54 Entintado nos declara como podcast educativo y así, sin más preámbulos nos dedicamos a festejar nuestros 50 episodios con bola de boliche y todo.0:37:54-0:45:37 La cocina y los integrantes de Mi Gato Dinamita: pasamos de una Susanette que compra cebolla de verdeo cortada y lavada para no tener que gastar su precioso tiempo en temas culinarios a un Tinto que cocina "Bourbon Chicken" como quien hace una tostada de pan lactal. Willie se pone nervioso.0:45:38-1:06:22 Hablamos de la claustrofobia y Tinto cuenta los proyectos de su amigo Elon Musk, un muchachito emprendedor.1:06:23-1:09:26 Música: "Samson" por Regina Spektor.1:09:27-1:29:57 En nuestro bloque serio, hablamos de la poesía en el cine, de la poesía en la vida. De la vida sin poesía. Y del psicoanálisis. ¿Dejamos acá?1:30:19-1:34:27 Música: "No te quedes afuera" por Gilda.Ilustramos este episodio con un sinfín de imágenes alusivas: nuestro amigo Adolfo Stambulsky con Brownie, que crece a pasos agigantados; Stanley Jordan con la planchita recién hecha; la bola de boliche de Entintado; un exquisito plato de Bourbon Chicken; el Capitán Naturaleza al que Susanette rebautizó como Capitán Natural; Elon Musk, Tusam en un momento clave de su carrera; Leonardo Tusam; afiche de la película "Yves Saint Laurent" de Jalil Lespert; Laura Corvalán (aka P0nja); los chipas que compró Willie; el afiche de "El hombre de al lado"; Gastón Duprat - Mariano Cohn; una escena de "Viudas" de Carnevale; afiche de K-Pax de Ian Softley; una escena de Gloria de Cassavetes; una escena de "Beautiful girls" de Ted Demme; el amigo Foucault; el cacao que le regalaron a Willi; una bolsa de Mogules. Vamos, brindemos: chinchín.
Slipstream Network’s Dusty Michael sat down with PR representative Kelly Brouillet and Flying Lizard Program Manager, Darren Law, at Road America to discuss the return of a Flying Lizard Motorsports-liveried Porsche 911 to the track. Frequent Porsche Club of America competitor, Andy Wilzoch, worked with the ‘Lizards to field his Porsche 911 GT3 R at Road […]
Egy csodálatos elme (A Beautiful Mind | 2001) Rendező: Ron Howard K-PAX - A belső bolygó (K-PAX | 2001) Rendező: Iain Softley Ébredések (Awakenings | 1990) Rendező: Penny Marshall Száll a kakukk fészkére (One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest | 1975) Rendező: Milos Forman | Puzsér Róbert, Magyar Dávid
My guest for this month is Patrick Gibson, and he’s joined me to discuss the film he chose for me, the 2009 science fiction drama film Moon. You can follow the show on Twitter @cinemagadfly. Show notes: This film was co-written and directed by the former Zowie Bowie, Duncan Jones It stars the delightful Sam Rockwell, with voice acting from the also delightful Kevin Spacey We recorded this episode right after the sad passing of Jones' father, David Bowie I watched this film via a Blu-ray that was given to me by former guest of the show Jake Desaulniers The music was composed by Clint Mansell, who has also scored a bunch of Darren Aronofsky films I still maintain that Steve Jobs is the reason my internet was being flaky Daren Arinofsky isn’t Paul Thomas Anderson, thank goodness Mallrats cost $6 millon to make, whereas Clerks cost $27,575. This film cost $5 million There were two slogans for this film, both are very much like what I remembered I haven’t seen Matt Damon in The Martian because I rarely see new films. It cost $108 million to make Here at Cinema Gadfly, we recognize former guest Serenity Caldwell as our official French pronunciation expert It’s way beyond the powers of a one line note to explain set theory. It’s very cool though I wouldn’t watch a television sequel staring Charlie Sheen and Ashton Kutcher. On that point I’m pretty confident This film owns a lot to 2001: A Space Odyssey, in really great ways The Three Laws of Robotics are followed fairly closely in this film Another reminder that Patrick’s wife Maja appeared in two great episodes of this very show I’ll admit that I haven’t actually watched K-PAX. Maybe it’s a great film? Firewatch may not have come out last Tuesday, but it’s a phenomenal game everyone should play Bon Iver’s first album was recorded in singer Justin Vernon’s father’s remote Wisconsin hunting cabin It’s no longer current, but the piece on Apple I mention is still up on Patrick’s awesome site Patrick and Maja are currently traveling around the world, while writing about it. It’s an awesome way to learn about a bunch of interesting places, and see a bunch of cool photos Rent or buy the film from Amazon Rent or buy the film from iTunes
Paul Linke was born on May 6, 1948 in New York City, New York, USA. He is an actor and writer, known for CHiPs(1977), K-PAX (2001) and Motel Hell (1980). He has been married to Christine Healy since 1991. They have one child. He was previously married to Francesca Cagiati Draper.See full bio »
Paul Linke was born on May 6, 1948 in New York City, New York, USA. He is an actor and writer, known for CHiPs(1977), K-PAX (2001) and Motel Hell (1980). He has been married to Christine Healy since 1991. They have one child. He was previously married to Francesca Cagiati Draper.See full bio »
La Val Camonica è detta anche "la valle accogliente": da anni qui sono attivi progetti di microaccoglienza, che funzionano per i richiedenti asilo ma anche per la popolazione locale.
La Val Camonica è detta anche "la valle accogliente": da anni qui sono attivi progetti di microaccoglienza, che funzionano per i richiedenti asilo ma anche per la popolazione locale.
Personal stories through the bending of time and space, maybe. You probably don’t see Happy Accidents coming. What the fuck, this film. Vincent D’Onofrio does all of the things. Various ways to interpret the plot of the film. This description … Continue reading →
The Outcast has been described as a deeply romantic, uncomfortably honest coming-of-age story set in booming post-war Britain. A best-selling novel by Sadie Jones, the book has been adapted by Sadie for BBC One with Iain Softley directing the two-parter. Iain Softley is probably better known as a director of Hollywood blockbusters such as Hackers, The Wings of the Dove, K-Pax and Inkheart. So how did he come to directing an adaptation for TV? Iain speaks to Frankie Ward about how he felt so connected to the story he was compelled to direct it. He talks about the different methods he uses when working with actors including George Mackay, who plays the lead character Lewis. The importance of sound design and music to telling the story is also discussed. Composer Ed Shearmur worked on the score, having worked with Iain on The Wings of the Dove. Iain's early years as a director are explored as he talks about making documentaries and how reading English at university enabled him to become an accomplished storyteller.
It’s time again to travel back to the FIRST decade of this new millennium, as Mike, Adam and Sydney review Kevin Spacey and Jeff Bridges in 2001’s K-PAX! Join us, and figure out the mysteries behind this movie… After Midnight, March 2015
Hírek, érdekességek az elektromos cigaretta háza tájáról, gőzfelhőbe burkolózva. Bővebb info: http://ecigitesztek.hu
Steve Cooper talks with actor Brian Howe. Brian is typically cast as an American everyman in many ways, the most challenging of roles to play. After spending time in stage productions in Boston he began his TV career during the mid-'90s, as an occasional guest player on episodes of such series as Law & Order and Spencer for Hire and the short-lived sitcom The Bonnie Hunt Show. He re-teamed with the venerable Hunt for a small role in his first feature, which the actress directed: the romantic comedy Return to Me. Supporting turns in an uneven series of films ensued, ranging from K-PAX to Steven Spielberg's Catch Me If You Can. He later was cast in the short-lived sitcom A Minute With Stan Hooper then landed a trio of supporting roles in A-list films during 2006: one in the Robin William's in RV, another with Will Smith in The Pursuit of Happyness and a third in Tony Scott's Deja Vu. Clint Eastwood cast him in the 2008 drama Gran Torino. He appeared in the 2011 action film I Am Number Four, and in 2012 Howe appeared as Randy Scheunemann in the made-for-HBO docudrama Game Change. He recently had a recurring role in HBO's hit The Newsroom and can be seen on the new season of Showtime's House of Lies.
Kris and Kole talk about gamers, burns, and organ rights. ALSO: Air VnA. Game people are the worst. K-PAX. You're going to be so delicious. All of the HIV is in the eyes. The Fire Challenge and Your Taint is Fine. One eye is good enough. Drone range. Lesbians have more fun.
Äntligen är vi tillbaka med vårt tredje avsnitt då vi tar en kort paus från våra slumpfilmer för att istället diskutera Trance, Kill Bill, How To Train Your Dragon 2, The Secret Life of Walter Mitty, American Psycho, K-Pax, Enemy, Black Swan och Brokeback Mountain. OBS! Spoilers för Enemy 38:40-49:17. Lyssna här: Avsnitt 3
www.pikfein-musik.com Booking@pikfein-musik.com K:PAX - Berlin ⎜ 21.06.14 PIK-FEIN @ K:PAX ((OPEN AIR))) -♠♤♠ ⎯⎯ ♠♤♠⎯⎯ ♠♤♠⎯⎯ ♠♤♠⎯⎯♠♤♠⎯⎯ ♠♤♠⎯⎯ PLAYTIME: 08:30-10:00 UHR EVENT-LINK: - www.facebook.com/events/263764150474045 LINE UP: WOW!!! Das DJ-Voting ist abgeschlossen und die Beteiligung war grandios. Insgesamt wurden 2318 Stimmen abgegeben. Wir gratulieren den 10 Künstlern und freuen uns auf Ihren musikalischen Beitrag zur unserem Fête de la Musique Open Air. Die 10 mit den meisten Stimmen sind: 1. Juerga - 211 Stimmen 2. Marion Cobretti - 196 Stimmen 3. Projekt Gestalten - 175 Stimmen 4. GR Gregor Rost - 145 Stimmen 5. Chris Robin - 140 Stimmen 6. PIK-FEIN - 130 Stimmen 7. DNNS - 113 Stimmen 8. Andre Stache & Joshkafischa - 99 Stimmen 9. André Wiese - 93 Stimmen 10. Der Taube Jim - 87 Stimmen Ihr alle kennt unser Motto und so wird’s gemacht.. !!! LET THE GEBALLER ENTERTAIN YOU !!! ....more Info about us & Kontakt * info@pikfein-musik.com * www.pikfein-musik.com * www.facebook.com/Pikfein * www.mixcloud.com/pik-fein
Run to your Volvo or your friend’s bathroom during a dinner party, Episode 6 is here! We’ve got the fantastic Brandon Scott Jones (UCB, Very Mary Kate) with us this week. It’s an episode full of fantasy and whimsy: magical boy bands, the hit film K-Pax, Godzilla smashing pumpkins, and that good ole booty. Winston’s […]
Отрезок Релакс микса - Relax World (Part 3). Этой частью я горжусь и готов слушать ее бесконечно.Пишите свои мысли, Ваши любимые фильмы, в которых есть замечательные фразы со смыслом на мою почту - catwmusic@gmail.com. 1. OST "Mr. Destiny"/OST "Мистер Судьба" - The Platters - Only You 2. OST "Just Like Heaven"/OST "Между Небом и Землей" - Amos Lee – Colors 3. OST "City of Angels"/OST "Город Ангелов" - ID - ID 4. OST "K-PAX"/OST "Планета K-PAX" - Edward Shearmur - Grand Central 5. OST "K-PAX"/OST "Планета K-PAX" - Edward Shearmur - Powell's Return
Отрезок Релакс микса - Relax World (Part 3). Этой частью я горжусь и готов слушать ее бесконечно.Пишите свои мысли, Ваши любимые фильмы, в которых есть замечательные фразы со смыслом на мою почту - catwmusic@gmail.com. 1. OST "Mr. Destiny"/OST "Мистер Судьба" - The Platters - Only You 2. OST "Just Like Heaven"/OST "Между Небом и Землей" - Amos Lee – Colors 3. OST "City of Angels"/OST "Город Ангелов" - ID - ID 4. OST "K-PAX"/OST "Планета K-PAX" - Edward Shearmur - Grand Central 5. OST "K-PAX"/OST "Планета K-PAX" - Edward Shearmur - Powell's Return
Andy and Will round off the year with a show on intoxicants: real or fantastical, legal or outlawed, poison or cure (or sometimes both…). James Bond's heart, curare, Charles Waterton's donkey- and bellows-based hobbies, counteracting poisons with poisons, deadly beauty treatments, glass swans, penicillin, recycling a policeman's urine, K-Pax, alkaloids, opiates, the works of Jeff Noon, Hofmann, tripping babies, Equilibrium, mood stabilizers, and a surprisingly large number of emails! The claim that Dolophine, a brand name for methadone, was chosen in honour of Hitler was sadly too good to be true. This is a fantastically interesting show! an anonymous listener Tracklist Alice Cooper – Poison The National – All The Wine Skunk Anansie – She's My Heroine Massive Attack – Rush Minute Plus, if you were listening live: Nirvana – Lithium Belladonna (Atropa Belladonna) (Deadly Nightshade) by Paul Belson Donkey-Face by Rachael Send feedback and comments to show@scienceoffiction.co.uk.
Relax на спокойной волне! Третья часть самой Лаунжевой и Релакс музыки - Relax World.В этой части я постарался рассказать новые истории (прошлые - в прошлых Relax мирах!). Первая история - Любовь. Она о всех тех, кто ее хоть разок почувствовал в груди, помнит как бьется влюбленное Сердце и летает Душа, и мир пахнет цветами! А кто Любовь переживает сейчас...это ощущение зажгется с новой силой! Приятного вечера Вам ;) Вторая история - мечты об океане, лазурном пляже, о зонтиках... О вечерней романтике с Любимым Человеком. Больше слов не нужно ;) Третья история - воспоминания о Классике жанра... Вспомнить тот момент, когда Вы их в первый раз услышали и какие были ощущения.Четвертая и волнующая история (для меня) - просмотр фильмов с Любимым Человеком! Фильмы со смыслом! Приятного просмотра и переживания, но только вместе!Все это я постарался поведать в Relax World! Сказав Люблю 1. Mystic Diversions feat. Mike Francis – Will Follow 2. Lucy Rose – Middle Of The Bed 3. Martin Taylor - Another Chance (Afterlife Mix) 4. Patrick Kelly – Guiding Light Музыка с видом на океан 5. Triangle Sun - Summer Of Our Love 6. Vargo – Relax (Blank and Jones Vocal Remix) 7. Sunlounger – White Sand (Chill Out Mix) Relax Classic 8. ATB – Trilogy (The Final Chapter) 9. Vangelis - Prelude Relax Cinema 10. OST "Mr. Destiny"/OST "Мистер Судьба" - The Platters - Only You 11. OST "Just Like Heaven"/OST "Между Небом и Землей" - Amos Lee – Colors 12. OST "City of Angels"/OST "Город Ангелов" - ID - ID 13. OST "K-PAX"/OST "Планета K-PAX" - Edward Shearmur - Grand Central 14. OST "K-PAX"/OST "Планета K-PAX" - Edward Shearmur - Powell's Return
Relax на спокойной волне! Третья часть самой Лаунжевой и Релакс музыки - Relax World.В этой части я постарался рассказать новые истории (прошлые - в прошлых Relax мирах!). Первая история - Любовь. Она о всех тех, кто ее хоть разок почувствовал в груди, помнит как бьется влюбленное Сердце и летает Душа, и мир пахнет цветами! А кто Любовь переживает сейчас...это ощущение зажгется с новой силой! Приятного вечера Вам ;) Вторая история - мечты об океане, лазурном пляже, о зонтиках... О вечерней романтике с Любимым Человеком. Больше слов не нужно ;) Третья история - воспоминания о Классике жанра... Вспомнить тот момент, когда Вы их в первый раз услышали и какие были ощущения.Четвертая и волнующая история (для меня) - просмотр фильмов с Любимым Человеком! Фильмы со смыслом! Приятного просмотра и переживания, но только вместе!Все это я постарался поведать в Relax World! Сказав Люблю 1. Mystic Diversions feat. Mike Francis – Will Follow 2. Lucy Rose – Middle Of The Bed 3. Martin Taylor - Another Chance (Afterlife Mix) 4. Patrick Kelly – Guiding Light Музыка с видом на океан 5. Triangle Sun - Summer Of Our Love 6. Vargo – Relax (Blank and Jones Vocal Remix) 7. Sunlounger – White Sand (Chill Out Mix) Relax Classic 8. ATB – Trilogy (The Final Chapter) 9. Vangelis - Prelude Relax Cinema 10. OST "Mr. Destiny"/OST "Мистер Судьба" - The Platters - Only You 11. OST "Just Like Heaven"/OST "Между Небом и Землей" - Amos Lee – Colors 12. OST "City of Angels"/OST "Город Ангелов" - ID - ID 13. OST "K-PAX"/OST "Планета K-PAX" - Edward Shearmur - Grand Central 14. OST "K-PAX"/OST "Планета K-PAX" - Edward Shearmur - Powell's Return
Med de to premierefilmene Dream House og New Year's Eve blir stemningen i studio til tider amper. Salget av Eldorado kino gjør oss vondt, men vi kan på en annen side glede oss over K-Pax og to fantastiske filmpersonligheter: Stanley Kubrick og Goldie Hawn.
Paul Linke was born on May 6, 1948 in New York City, New York, USA. He is an actor and writer, known for Parenthood (1989), Motel Hell (1980) and K-PAX (2001). He has been married to Christine Healy since 1991. They have one child. He was previously married to Francesca Cagiati Draper. See full bio » May 6, 1948 in New York City, New York, USABorn: CHiPs (TV Series) Officer Arthur Grossman / Man in Convertible - Return of the Brat Patrol (1983) ... Officer Arthur Grossman - Things That Go Creep in the Night (1983) ... Officer Arthur Grossman - Fast Company (1983) ... Officer Arthur Grossman - Fun House (1983) ... Officer Arthur Grossman - Firepower (1983) ... Officer Arthur Grossman Show all 116 episodes --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/gruesome-hertzogg/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/gruesome-hertzogg/support
This Thursday, October 14th, 2010, at 8:00 p.m. PST, Hermetic Hour host Poke Runyon will lead a discussion on "The Enoch Syndrome." This is a term we have applied to a type of channeled, visionary (right brain) revelation that is extraordinarily detailed and consistent. The Biblical Enoch and his tour or Heaven is our starting point. We'll proceed through Dee and Kelley, Oasphe, Phylos, Urantia, Richard Shaver, Edgar Cayce, the Seth Material, and finally "The Jet-Propelled Couch" by Robert Lindner, which was the inspiration for the film "K-Pax." Although we are going to examine the psychological factors behind this phenomenon, we are not out to debunk these fascinating revelations, but rather to place them in the perspective of Hermetic philosophy: as a personal reality that extends to encompass the universe, and is therefore "real" in its own context. Join us and expand your consciousness.
"Keep It Alive" занимал первую строчку голландского Hardcore Top 40 восемь недель подряд. Overload Records - саб-лейбл Masters Of Hardcore. Успех этой пластинки продолжился переизданием на ещё одном виниле на лейбле Hard Traxx в Испании. http://www.discogs.com/DJ-Or-Beat--K-Pax-Keep-It-Alive/release/96102http://www.discogs.com/DJ-Or-Beat--K-Pax-Keep-It-Alive/release/248373
"Keep It Alive" занимал первую строчку голландского Hardcore Top 40 восемь недель подряд. Overload Records - саб-лейбл Masters Of Hardcore. Успех этой пластинки продолжился переизданием на ещё одном виниле на лейбле Hard Traxx в Испании. http://www.discogs.com/DJ-Or-Beat--K-Pax-Keep-It-Alive/release/96102http://www.discogs.com/DJ-Or-Beat--K-Pax-Keep-It-Alive/release/248373