POPULARITY
On this show, host Meg Wolitzer gets friendly, and shares three stories about friendships of all kinds. Kelly Stout's zinger “Let's Get Drinks,” offers up the perils of conducting a social life via hyperbolic texts, which are hilariously performed by Jane Curtin and Jane Kaczmarek. Next, “True Friendship,” by Jorge Hernandez, describes a life-long friend who's almost too good to be—true. The reader is Michael Urie. And three misfits fit together in Anthony Marra's “The Last Words of Benito Picone,” performed by John Turturro. A brief interview with Turturro follows the story.
The Love, Happiness and Success Podcast With Dr. Lisa Marie Bobby
Where did everyone go?? At some point, many/most adults look up one day to realize that all their old friends have either moved to Austin or are completely buried in #babylife or never-ending home improvement projects… and they have nobody to spontaneously get a beer with on a Tuesday night. Can you relate? It's not just you. Did you know that, on average, most people lose more friends every year than they gain? Over time, your life can become increasingly lonely unless you're actively working to build and maintain friendships. But here's the thing: making new friends as an adult is harder than it sounds.
Today I am chatting with a client of mine, 47-year-old Dessica, who is a Sensor healthtype. The Sensor often has problems maintaining weight and lean muscle, and many have significant digestive problems. Many incorrectly assume that thin people have few health issues. We will shed light on that in many areas today! Dessica has been able to completely transform her health and her quality of life through personalized health and epigenetic coaching. Listen today to learn Dessica's story In this episode:- Dessica's health journey and how she has been able to embrace who she truly is- The significance of personalized health and identifying specific needs of the individual- Transformation of Dessica's confidence and well-being - Importance of learning when, what, and how to eat for her unique body- Significant improvements in sleep quality and overall energy, allowing her to give up alcohol and prescription medications- Celebrating small victories and the importance of gratitude in achieving a positive mindsetLearn more about Dessica:Dessica Komestakes, 47 year old mother of six (four adopted sons and two biological daughters) and grandmother to three grandsons......has worked in education in all areas of administration and is currently the Business Manager for a school in Minnesota. She has a son at home, getting ready to begin 8th grade. Dessica has been given a second chance in love with an amazing man named Kelly, since March of 2023. We enjoy spending time outdoors and babysitting my youngest grandson who lives close by! RESOURCES:What Alcohol Does to Your Body, Brain, and Health The Huberman PodcastReleasing Stuck Emotions with Kelly Stout of Colorado BioenergeticsShow Links:Visit the website: healthyawakening.co/podcastFind listening links here: https://healthyawakening.co/linksSHOW NOTES: healthyawakening.co/episode19Connect with Susan:Schedule a FREE consultation, send an email to susan@healthyawakening.coFaceboook: https://www.facebook.com/susanrobbinshealthyawakeningInstagram: @susanrobbins_epigeneticcoachLinktree: https://linktr.ee/healthyawakeninP.S. Want reminders about episodes? Sign up for our newsletter, you can find the link on our podcast page! https://healthyawakening.co/podcast
As humans we need to process and release our energy and emotions or it can get trapped and affect us in negative ways.Today on the podcast I am joined by the amazing Kelly Stout, founder of Colorado Bioenergetics. Kelly shares his journey from unwittingly practicing energy work to mastering the art of emotional release through the Body, Emotion and Belief code methods. Join us as we explore the profound impact of releasing trapped emotions on physical well-being and talk about the transformative power of epigenetics and ancestral emotions on our lives.Kelly shares the process of energy work and emotional release through his sessions, the significance of belief systems in shaping our lives, and the profound effects of the "Belief Code" on emotional healing. Uncover the role of ancestral emotions in our well-being, the individualized nature of energy work, and the potential for personal transformation through releasing trapped emotions. Check out the show note links below to find all of Kelly's links and schedule your session with him today to help you release and work through your emotions and energy.Content warning: This podcast contains mention of suicide.Learn more about Kelly:Kelly discovered his passion for healing as a teenager when he intuitively helped friends with their health problems. Despite extensive training in vitamins, nutrition, and traditional medicine, he always returned to energy as the core of his healing work. Over the years, Kelly immersed himself in studying mind, body, emotional, and spiritual healing techniques, culminating in his certification as a practitioner in Dr. Bradley Nelson's Emotion Code, Body Code, and Belief Code systems. These techniques help release old traumas, achieve health balance, and remove negative subconscious beliefs, allowing the body to heal itself.Kelly continues to help others heal themselves, both in person and remotely via phone or Zoom. He also enjoys teaching classes and seminars on energy healing and the role of quantum entanglement in our lives. Kelly's work focuses on holistic healing, integrating emotional, energetic, nutritional, structural, and chemical aspects to promote optimal health.RESOURCES:Visit the website: healthyawakening.co/podcastFind listening links here: https://healthyawakening.co/linksSHOW NOTES: healthyawakening.co/episode9Connect with Kelly:Website: https://colobioenergetics.com/Connect with Susan:Contact me for your DNA testing or to see if we are a fit for coaching with ph360!Schedule a FREE consultation, send an email to susan@healthyawakening.coFaceboook: https://www.facebook.com/susanrobbinshealthyawakeningInstagram: @susanrobbins_epigeneticcoach
Kelly Stout, an LCSW with the Children's Justice Center, helps us define trauma. She explains that knowing a child has experienced trauma can aid caregivers in the way they interact with the child. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/everydaystrong/message
On this show, host Meg Wolitzer gets friendly, and shares three stories about friendships of all kinds. Kelly Stout's zinger “Let's Get Drinks,” offers up the perils of conducting a social life via hyperbolic texts, which are hilariously performed by Jane Curtin and Jane Kaczmarek. Next, “True Friendship,” by Jorge Hernandez describes a life-long friend who's almost too good to be—true. The reader is Michael Urie. And three misfits fit together in Anthony Marra's “The Last Words of Benito Picone,” performed by John Turturro. A brief interview with Turturro follows the story.
Prompted by a recent essay calling for an end to using the pejorative 'Karen', Amy wrestles with how sexism interferes and overlaps with anti-racism work. She and Don discuss how they participate in the systems they want to change—even while they are being hurt—and the importance of being authentic in a world that values power. Additional resources:"How That 'Karen' Meme Benefits the Right" (The National Memo, by Nina Burleigh, July 18, 2020)https://www.nationalmemo.com/karen-meme"What's In a 'Karen'?" (NPR Code Switch, by Karen Grigsby Bates, July 15, 2020)https://www.npr.org/2020/07/14/891177904/whats-in-a-karen"'Karen' Isn't a Slur - It's a Critique of Entitled White Womanhood" (Bitch Media, by Rachel Charlene Lewis, by April 10, 2020)https://www.bitchmedia.org/article/very-online/the-karen-meme-isnt-a-slur-its-a-social-critique"How 'Karen' Became a Coronavirus Villain" (Atlantic, by Kaitlyn Tiffany, May 6, 2020)https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2020/05/coronavirus-karen-memes-reddit-twitter-carolyn-goodman/611104/"Just Because You Never Called a Woman a Bitch Doesn't Mean You Haven't Called a Woman a Bitch" (Esquire, by Kelly Stout, July 24, 2020)https://www.esquire.com/news-politics/a33409041/alexandria-ocasio-cortez-house-speech-ted-yoho/"A small story ..." (Twitter, by Quinn Cummings, July 25, 2020)https://twitter.com/quinncy/status/1287099839726018560Buy "Your Racist Friend" by They Might Be Giants on iTunes
In this episode, Ted and Andy are joined by their first remote guest of the quarantine. Superfan, anniversary show caller, and Andy's niece (and possibly adopted daughter?) Kelly Stout joins the show today as they discuss their favorite Jim Carrey movies. Segment one features a bracket-style tournament of Jim Carrey movies, where the gang decides on the undisputed best Jim Carrey movie of all time. In segment two, Andy puts Ted and Kelly to the test in a high stakes game of Jim Carrey Movie Trivia. Along the way, Andy discovers his knack for advertising, Ted slams the door on a Zoom call, and Kelly explains why her mom had a plumber on speed dial. Largely Likable Kelly: The Lord of the Rings Trilogy and The Hobbit Movies - (start here) https://www.warnerbros.com/movies/lord-rings-fellowship-ring/ Ted: The Empire Strikes Back (40th Anniversary) - https://www.disneyplus.com/movies/star-wars-the-empire-strikes-back-episode-v/iqtDTZAewwYl Andy: Bizarre Albums podcast - https://anchor.fm/bizarrealbums --- 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/largelyunlikable/message
Matthew Komatsu reads his essay After the Tsunami. After the 2011 disaster, which killed his grandmother and laid waste to his ancestral home, Matthew, an American, journeys to Japan to search for what the tsunami left in its wake. This episode is a production of Longreads and Charts & Leisure, produced by Jason Oberholtzer, with help from Michael Simonelli and Kelly Stout. Hosted by Catherine Cusick. Scored with original compositions by Pax. A full soundtrack to this episode, with extended tracks, is available on Soundcloud. Mixed by Michael Simonelli. Recorded in Surreal Studios, Anchorage.
Sari Botton, Catherine Cusick, Aaron Gilbreath and Kelly Stout share what they've been reading and nominate stories for the Weekly Top 5 Longreads. This week: The Battle of Grace Church at The Cut New Coke Didn't Fail. It Was Murdered. from Mother Jones Progressive Boomers Are Making It Impossible For Cities To Fix The Housing Crisis at HuffPost A retired teacher found some seahorses off Long Beach. Then he built a secret world for them from the L.A. Times Produced by Longreads and Charts & Leisure.
Catherine Cusick, and Kelly Stout talk with Aaron Gilbreath and Matt Giles about the joys and challenges of fatherhood. This episode is a production of Longreads and Charts & Leisure, produced by Jason Oberholtzer and Mike Rugnetta. Hosted by Catherine Cusick. Mixed by Michael Simonelli. Longreads' theme music was written and performed by Brian Donohoe.
Catherine Cusick, Mike Dang, Dana Snitzky and Kelly Stout share what they've been reading and nominate stories for the Weekly Top 5 Longreads. This week: The I in We from New York Magazine The Making of a YouTube Radical at The New York Times There is nothing more depressing than “positive news” from The Outline The Rise and Fall of the Bank Robbery Capital of the World at CrimeReads Produced by Longreads and Charts & Leisure.
Sari Botton, Aaron Gilbreath and Kelly Stout share what they've been reading and nominate stories for the Weekly Top 5 Longreads. This week: The Secret Oral History of Bennington: Before, and After, the Jogger at The Cut R. Kelly and the Damage Done in The New Yorker Stephanie Montgomery told the police that she was raped at work, neither they nor her manager helped, so she sought justice her way. from The California Sunday Magazine Produced by Longreads and Charts & Leisure.
Kelly Stout, Mike Dang, Ethan Chiel and Aaron Gilbreath share what they've been reading and nominate stories for the Weekly Top 5 Longreads. This week: • ‘They Were Conned’: How Reckless Loans Devastated a Generation of Taxi Drivers at The New York Times • How San Francisco broke America’s heart from The Washington Post • Separated by Design: How Some of America’s Richest Towns Fight Affordable Housing at CT Mirror • Impossible Foods’ rising empire of almost-meat from Engadget Produced by Longreads and Charts & Leisure.
Ethan Chiel, Catherine Cusick, Aaron Gilbreath and Kelly Stout share what they've been reading and nominate stories for the Weekly Top 5 Longreads. This week: My Cousin Was My Hero. Until the Day He Tried to Kill Me from the New York Times Magazine Going Under at the Playboy Club at The New Republic How America’s Oldest Gun Maker Went Bankrupt: A Financial Engineering Mystery from The New York Times Magazine The Race to Develop the Moon from The New Yorker Produced by Longreads and Charts & Leisure.
Ethan Chiel, Catherine Cusick, Matt Giles and Kelly Stout share what they've been reading and nominate stories for the Weekly Top 5 Longreads. This week: The Stolen Kids of Sarah Lawrence at The Cut In Conversation: Anjelica Huston at Vulture The Raisin Situation from The New York Times The Big Business of Spring Water at Topic Produced by Longreads and Charts & Leisure.
Catherine Cusick, Aaron Gilbreath, Krista Stevens and Kelly Stout share what they've been reading and nominate stories for the Weekly Top 5 Longreads. What’s Behind the Elective-Sobriety Trend at elemental How a tiny endangered species put a man in prison at High Country News Lost at Sea at Harpers The Curious Tale of the Salish Sea Feet at Longreads Produced by Longreads and Charts & Leisure.
Sari Botton, Catherine Cusick, Matt Giles and Kelly Stout share what they've been reading and nominate stories for the Weekly Top 5 Longreads. This week's conversation includes: Marriage: An Investigation at The Cut The Creeping Capitalist Takeover of Higher Education at HuffPost Heaven or High Water at Popula The Baraboo Nazi Prom Photo Shocked The World. The City’s Response Shocked Its Residents. at BuzzFeed News Produced by Longreads and Charts & Leisure.
Catherine Cusick, Mike Dang, Aaron Gilbreath and Kelly Stout share what they've been reading and nominate stories for the Top 5 Longreads of the week.
Senior Editor Kelly Stout and Longreads Head of Research Matt Giles talk about Matt's new feature on Dan Stoddard, a Canadian bus driver in his late 30s pursuing his dream of playing professional basketball. This episode is a production of Longreads and Charts & Leisure, produced by Jason Oberholtzer and Mike Rugnetta with help from Matt Giles and Kelly Stout. Hosted by Catherine Cusick. Mixed by Michael Simonelli. Longreads' theme music was written and performed by Brian Donohoe.
Catherine Cusick, Danielle Jackson and Kelly Stout share what they've been reading and nominate stories for the Top 5 Longreads of the week.
Gawker unionized in 2015, setting off a wave of digital newsroom organizing, invigorated by layoffs and politics that leave journalists feeling embattled. Emily and Heather are joined by long-time labor reporter Steven Greenhouse, Writers Guild of America East organizer Megan McRobert, and writer and WGAE Council member Kelly Stout to explain how unions has been brought into the digital newsroom— and what digital journalism expects from labor.
Mike Dang, Aaron Gilbreath and Kelly Stout share what they've been reading and nominate stories for the Top 5 Longreads of the week.
Catherine Cusick, Aaron Gilbreath, Krista Stevens and Kelly Stout nominate stories for the Top 5 Longreads of the week.
Jezebel features editor Kelly Stout, staff writer Ellie Shechet, and Special Projects Desk senior reporter Anna Merlan talk Omarosa, Steve Bannon, and Roy Moore—and dig deep into the mystery of Rand Paul’s fight with his neighbor.
Joanna Rothkopf, Kelly Stout, and Katie McDonough talk about the recent mass shooting in Sutherland Springs, Texas, and go over—yet again—the connection between gun and domestic violence. They also talk about how, at its best, the DNC should be the highlighter on the brow of a good candidate, summarize the Paradise Papers in 30 seconds, and Katie tells us how to escape a room.
Harvey Weinstein has been a major political donor for decades. Who knew his reputation? Who is at fault? Jezebel's Joanna Rothkopf, Kelly Stout, and Ellie Shechet chat about all of the above and tie themselves in an ethical knot.
The Pubcast - Interviews with online publishing professionals
Palak Patel chats with Kelly Stout, senior editor at Gizmodo Media Group. In this podcast interview, Stout talks about her time with Gawker, the pace of covering politics online, the pros and cons of a digital platform in modern journalism, and online comment moderation. This interview was recorded on April 5, 2017.