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Skip the Queue is brought to you by Rubber Cheese, a digital agency that builds remarkable systems and websites for attractions that helps them increase their visitor numbers. Your host is Paul Marden.If you like what you hear, you can subscribe on iTunes, Spotify, and all the usual channels by searching Skip the Queue or visit our website SkiptheQueue.fm.If you've enjoyed this podcast, please leave us a five star review, it really helps others find us. And remember to follow us on Twitter or Bluesky for your chance to win the books that have been mentioned in this podcast.Competition ends on 9th July 2025. The winner will be contacted via Bluesky. Show references: Matthew Tanner, Vice President of AIM and Independent Consultant https://aim-museums.co.uk/Richard Morsley, CEO of Chatham Historic Dockyardhttps://thedockyard.co.uk/Hannah Prowse, CEO, Portsmouth Historic Quarterhttps://portsmouthhq.org/Dominic Jones, CEO Mary Rose Trusthttps://maryrose.org/Andrew Baines, Executive Director, Museum Operations, National Museum of the Royal Navyhttps://www.nmrn.org.uk/ Transcriptions: Paul Marden: Welcome to Skip the Queue. The podcast of people working in and working with visitor attractions, and today you join me in Portsmouth Historic Dockyard. I am actually in the shadow of HMS Victory at the moment, right next door to the Mary Rose. And I'm at the Association of Independent Museum's annual conference, and it is Wednesday night, and we're just about to enjoy the conference dinner. We've been told by Dominic Jones, CEO of Mary Rose, to expect lots of surprises and unexpected events throughout the meal, which I understand is a walking meal where we'll partake of our food and drink as we're wandering around the museum itself, moving course to course around different parts of the museum. So that sounds very exciting. Paul Marden: Today's episode, I'm going to be joined by a I don't know what the collective noun is, for a group of Maritime Museum senior leaders, but that's what they are, and we're going to be talking about collaboration within and between museums, especially museums within the maritime sector. Is this a subject that we've talked about a lot previously? I know we've had Dominic Jones before as our number one most listened episode talking about collaboration in the sector, but it's a subject I think is really worthwhile talking about. Paul Marden: Understanding how museums work together, how they can stretch their resources, increase their reach by working together and achieving greater things than they can do individually. I do need to apologise to you, because it's been a few weeks since our last episode, and there's been lots going on in Rubber Cheese HQ, we have recently become part of a larger organisation, Crowd Convert, along with our new sister organisation, the ticketing company, Merac.Paul Marden: So there's been lots of work for me and Andy Povey, my partner in crime, as we merge the two businesses together. Hence why there's been a little bit of a lapse between episodes. But the good news is we've got tonight's episode. We've got one more episode where I'll be heading down to Bristol, and I'll talk a little bit more about that later on, and then we're going to take our usual summer hiatus before we start the next season. So two more episodes to go, and I'm really excited. Paul Marden: Without further ado, I think it's time for us to meet our guests tonight. Let me welcome our guests for this evening. Matthew Tanner, the Vice President of AIM and an Independent Consultant within the museum sector. You've also got a role within international museums as well. Matthew, remind me what that was.Matthew Tanner: That's right, I was president of the International Congress of Maritime Museums.Paul Marden: And that will be relevant later. I'm sure everyone will hear. Richard Morsley, CEO of Chatham Historic Dockyard Trust. I've got Hannah Prowse with me, the CEO of Portsmouth Historic Quarter, the inimitable chief cheerleader for Skip the Queue Dominic Jones, CEO of Mary Rose Trust.Dominic Jones: Great to be back.Paul Marden: I expect this to be the number one episode because, you know, it's got to knock your previous episode off the hit list.Dominic Jones: Listen with guests like this. It's going to be the number one. You've got the big hitters, and you've even got one more to go. This is gonna be incredible.Paul Marden: Exactly. And I've got Andrew Baines, the Executive Director Museum Operations at the National Museum of the Royal Navy. That's quite a title.Dominic Jones: He loves a title that's a lot shorter than the last.Paul Marden: Okay, so we always have icebreakers. And actually, it must be said, listeners, you, unless you're watching the YouTube, we've got the the perfect icebreaker because we've started on Prosecco already. So I'm feeling pretty lubed up. Cheers. So icebreakers, and I'm going to be fair to you, I'm not going to pick on you individually this time, which is what I would normally do with my victims. I'm going to ask you, and you can chime in when you feel you've got the right answer. So first of all, I'd like to hear what the best concert or festival is that you've been to previously.Hannah Prowse: That's really easy for me, as the proud owner of two teenage daughters, I went Tay Tay was Slay. Slay. It was amazing. Three hours of just sheer performative genius and oh my god, that girl stamina. It was just insane. So yeah, it's got to be Tay Tay.Paul Marden: Excellent. That's Taylor Swift. For those of you that aren't aware and down with the kids, if you could live in another country for a year, what would Dominic Jones: We not all answer the gig. I've been thinking of a gig. Well, I was waiting. Do we not all answer one, Rich has got a gig. I mean, you can't just give it to Hannah. Richard, come in with your gig.Richard Morsley: Thank you. So I can't say it's the best ever, but. It was pretty damn awesome. I went to see pulp at the O2 on Saturday night. They were amazing. Are they still bringing it? They were amazing. Incredible. Transport me back.Matthew Tanner: Members mentioned the Mary Rose song. We had this.Dominic Jones: Oh, come on, Matthew, come on. That was brilliant. That was special. I mean, for me, I'm not allowed to talk about it. It's probably end ups. But you know, we're not allowed to talk you know, we're not allowed to talk about other than here. But I'm taking my kids, spoiler alert, if you're listening to see Shawn Mendes in the summer. So that will be my new favourite gig, because it's the first gig for my kids. So I'm very excited about that. That's amazing. Amazing. Andrew, any gigs?Andrew Baines: It has to be Blondie, the amazing. Glen Beck writing 2019, amazing.Dominic Jones: Can you get any cooler? This is going to be the number one episode, I can tell.Paul Marden: Okay, let's go with number two. If you could live in another country for a year, which one would you choose? Hannah Prowse: Morocco. Paul Marden: Really? Oh, so you're completely comfortable with the heat. As I'm wilting next.Hannah Prowse: Completely comfortable. I grew up in the Middle East, my as an expat brat, so I'm really happy out in the heat. I just love the culture, the art, the landscape, the food, the prices, yeah, Morocco. For me, I thinkMatthew Tanner: I've been doing quite a lot of work recently in Hong Kong. Oh, wow. It's this amazing mix of East and West together. There's China, but where everybody speaks English, which is fantastic.Dominic Jones: I lived in Hong Kong for a few years, and absolutely loved it. So I do that. But I think if I could choose somewhere to live, it's a it's a bit of cheating answer, because the country's America, but the place is Hawaii, because I think I'm meant for Hawaii. I think I've got that sort of style with how I dress, not today, because you are but you can get away with it. We're hosting, so. Paul Marden: Last one hands up, if you haven't dived before, D with Dom.Dominic Jones: But all of your listeners can come Dive the 4d at the Mary Rose in Portsmouth Historic Dockyard, as well as the other amazing things you can do here with our friends and National Museum of Portsmouth Historic Quarter, he will cut this bit out.Paul Marden: Yeah, there will be a little bit of strict editing going on. And that's fair. So we want to talk a little bit today about collaboration within the Maritime Museum collective as we've got. I was saying on the intro, I don't actually know what the collective noun is for a group of Maritime Museum leaders, a wave?Hannah Prowse: A desperation?Paul Marden: Let's start with we've talked previously. I know on your episode with Kelly, you talked about collaboration here in the dockyard, but I think it's really important to talk a little bit about how Mary Rose, Portsmouth Historic Dockyard and the National Museum of the Royal Navy all work together. So talk a little bit for listeners that don't know about the collaboration that you've all got going. Dominic Jones: We've got a wonderful thing going on, and obviously Hannah and Andrew will jump in. But we've got this great site, which is Portsmouth Historic Dockyard. We've got Portsmouth Historic Quarter that sort of curates, runs, owns the site, and I'll let Hannah come into that. We've got the Mary Rose, which is my favourite, amazing museum, and then we've got all of the museums and ships to the National Museum of the Royal Navy. But do you want to go first, Hannah, and talk about sort of what is Portsmouth Historic Quarter and the dockyard to you? Hannah Prowse: Yeah, so at Portsmouth Historic Quarter, we are the landlords of the site, and ultimately have custody of this and pretty hard over on the other side of the water. And it's our job to curate the space, make sure it's accessible to all and make it the most spectacular destination that it can be. Where this point of debate interest and opportunity is around the destination versus attraction debate. So obviously, my partners here run amazing attractions, and it's my job to cite those attractions in the best destination that it can possibly be.Matthew Tanner: To turn it into a magnet that drawsDominic Jones: And the infrastructure. I don't know whether Hannah's mentioned it. She normally mentions it every five seconds. Have you been to the new toilets? Matthew, have you been to these new toilets?Paul Marden: Let's be honest, the highlight of a museum. Richard Morsley: Yeah, get that wrong. We're in trouble.Hannah Prowse: It's very important. Richard Morsley: But all of the amazing ships and museums and you have incredible.Paul Marden: It's a real draw, isn't it? And you've got quite a big estate, so you you've got some on the other side of the dockyard behind you with boat trips that we take you over.Andrew Baines: Absolutely. So we run Victor here and warrior and 33 on the other side of the hub with the Royal Navy submarine museum explosion working in partnership with BHQ. So a really close collaboration to make it as easy as possible for people to get onto this site and enjoy the heritage that we are joint custodians of. Paul Marden: Yeah, absolutely. It's amazing. So we're talking a little bit about museums collaborating together, which really is the essence of what we're here for conference, isn't it? I remember when we had the keynote this morning, we were talking about how important it is for everybody to come together. There's no egos here. Everyone's sharing the good stuff. And it was brilliant as well. Given that you're all maritime museums, is it more important for you to differentiate yourselves from one another and compete, or is it more important for you to collaborate?Richard Morsley: Well, from my perspective, it's there is certainly not competitive. I think there's sufficient, I was sufficient distance, I think, between the the attractions for that to be the case, and I think the fact we're all standing here today with a glass of wine in hand, with smiles on our face kind of says, says a lot, actually, in terms of the collaboration within the sector. And as you say that the the AIM conference today that for me, is right, right at the heart of it, it's how we as an independent museum sector, all come together, and we share our knowledge, we share our best practice, and once a year, we have this kind of amazing celebration of these incredible organisations and incredible people coming together and having a wonderful couple of days. Matthew Tanner: But if I could step in there, it's not just the wine, is it rum, perhaps. The maritime sector in particular is one that is is so closely knit and collected by the sea, really. So in the international context, with the International Congress, is about 120 museums. around the world that come together every two years into the fantastic Congress meetings, the connections between these people have come from 1000s of miles away so strong, it's actually joy and reminds us of why we are so excited about the maritime.Paul Marden: I saw you on LinkedIn last year. I think it was you had Mystic Seaport here, didn't you?Dominic Jones: We did and we've had Australia. We've had so many. It all came from the ICM conference I went with and we had such a good time, didn't we saw Richard there. We saw Matthew, and it was just brilliant. And there's pinch yourself moments where you're with museums that are incredible, and then afterwards they ring you and ask you for advice. I'm thinking like there's a lady from France ringing me for advice. I mean, what's that about? I passed her to Andrew.Hannah Prowse: I think also from a leadership perspective, a lot of people say that, you know, being a CEO is the loneliest job in the world, but actually, if you can reach out and have that network of people who actually are going through the same stuff that you're going through, and understand the sector you're working in. It's really, really great. So if I'm having a rubbish day, Dom and I will frequently meet down in the gardens outside between our two offices with a beer or an ice cream and just go ah at each other. And that's really important to be able to do.Dominic Jones: And Hannah doesn't laugh when I have a crisis. I mean, she did it once. She did it and it hurt my feelings.Hannah Prowse: It was really funny.Dominic Jones: Well, laughter, Dominic, Hannah Prowse: You needed. You needed to be made. You did. You did. But you know, and Richard and I have supported each other, and occasionally.Richard Morsley: You know, you're incredibly helpful when we're going through a recruitment process recently.Hannah Prowse: Came and sat in on his interview.Richard Morsley: We were rogue. Hannah Prowse: We were so bad, we should never be allowed to interview today. Paul Marden: I bet you were just there taking a list of, yeah, they're quite good. I'm not going to agree to that one.Hannah Prowse: No, it was, it was great, and it's lovely to have other people who are going through the same stuff as you that you can lean on. Richard Morsley: Yeah, absolutely.Dominic Jones: Incredible. It's such an important sector, as Matthew said, and we are close, the water doesn't divide us. It makes us it makes us stronger.Matthew Tanner: Indeed. And recently, of course, there's increasing concern about the state of the marine environment, and maritime museums are having to take on that burden as well, to actually express to our puppets. It's not just about the ships and about the great stories. It's also about the sea. It's in excess, and we need to look after it. Paul Marden: Yeah, it's not just a view backwards to the past. It's around how you take that and use that as a model to go forward. Matthew Tanner: Last week, the new David Attenborough piece about the ocean 26 marathon museums around the world, simultaneously broadcasting to their local audiences. Dominic Jones: And it was phenomenal. It was such a good film. It was so popular, and the fact that we, as the Mary Rose, could host it thanks to being part of ICM, was just incredible. Have you seen it? Paul Marden: I've not seen Dominic Jones: It's coming to Disney+, any day now, he's always first to know it's on. There you go. So watch it there. It's so good. Paul Marden: That's amazing. So you mentioned Disney, so that's a kind of an outside collaboration. Let's talk a little bit. And this is a this is a rubbish segue, by the way. Let's talk a little bit about collaborating outside of the sector itself, maybe perhaps with third party rights holders, because I know that you're quite pleased with your Lego exhibition at the moment.Richard Morsley: I was actually going to jump in there. Dominic, because you've got to be careful what you post on LinkedIn. There's no such thing as I don't know friends Exactly. Really.Dominic Jones: I was delighted if anyone was to steal it from us, I was delighted it was you. Richard Morsley: And it's been an amazing exhibition for us. It's bringing bringing Lego into the Historic Dockyard Chatham. I think one of the one of the things that we sometimes lack is that that thing that's kind of truly iconic, that the place is iconic, the site is incredible, but we don't have that household name. We don't have a Mary Rose. We don't have a victory. So actually working in partnership, we might get there later. We'll see how the conversation, but yeah, how we work with third parties, how we use third party IP and bring that in through exhibitions, through programming. It's really important to us. So working at a Lego brick Rex exhibition, an exhibition that really is a museum exhibition, but also tells the story of three Chatham ships through Lego, it's absolutely perfect for us, and it's performed wonderfully. It's done everything that we would have hoped it would be. Dominic Jones: I'm bringing the kids in the summer. I love Chatham genuinely. I know he stole the thing from LinkedIn, but I love Chatham. So I'll be there. I'll be there. I'll spend money in the shop as well.Richard Morsley: Buy a book. Yeah.Paul Marden: Can we buy Lego? Richard Morsley: Of course you can buy Lego. Paul Marden: So this is a this is a magnet. It is sucking the kids into you, but I bet you're seeing something amazing as they interpret the world that they've seen around them at the museum in the Lego that they can play with.Richard Morsley: Of some of some of the models that are created off the back of the exhibition by these children is remind and adults actually, but mainly, mainly the families are amazing, but and you feel awful at the end of the day to painstakingly take them apart.Richard Morsley: Where is my model?Dominic Jones: So we went to see it in the Vasa, which is where he stole the idea from. And I decided to, sneakily, when they were doing that, take a Charles model that was really good and remodel it to look like the Mary Rose, and then post a picture and say, I've just built the Mary Rose. I didn't build the Mary Rose. Some Swedish person bought the Mary Rose. I just added the flags. You get what you say. Hannah Prowse: We've been lucky enough to be working with the Lloyds register foundation this year, and we've had this brilliant she sees exhibition in boathouse four, which is rewriting women into maritime history. So the concept came from Lloyd's Register, which was, you know, the untold stories of women in maritime working with brilliant photographers and textile designers to tell their stories. And they approached me and said, "Can we bring this into the dockyard?" And we said, "Yes, but we'd really love to make it more local." And they were an amazing partner. And actually, what we have in boathouse for is this phenomenal exhibition telling the stories of the women here in the dockyard.Richard Morsley: And then going back to that point about collaboration, not competition, that exhibition, then comes to Chatham from February next year, but telling, telling Chatham stories instead of. Hannah Prowse: Yeah, Richard came to see it here and has gone, "Oh, I love what you've done with this. Okay, we can we can enhance, we can twist it." So, you know, I've hoped he's going to take our ideas and what we do with Lloyd's and make it a million times better.Richard Morsley: It's going to be an amazing space.Dominic Jones: Richard just looks at LinkedIn and gets everyone's ideas.Andrew Baines: I think one of the exciting things is those collaborations that people will be surprised by as well. So this summer, once you've obviously come to Portsmouth Historic Dockyard and experience the joys of that, and then you've called off on Chatham and another day to see what they've got there, you can go off to London Zoo, and we are working in partnership with London Zoo, and we have a colony of Death Watch beetle on display. Paul Marden: Oh, wonderful. I mean, can you actually hear them? Dominic Jones: Not necessarily the most exciting.Andrew Baines: I'll grant you. But you know, we've got a Chelsea gold medal on in the National Museum of the Royal Navy for collaboration with the Woodlands Foundation, looking at Sudden Oak death. And we've got an exhibition with ZSL at London Zoo, which I don't think anybody comes to a National Maritime Museum or an NMRN National Museum The Royal Navy, or PHQ, PhD, and expects to bump into tiny little animals, no, butDominic Jones: I love that, and it's such an important story, the story of Victor. I mean, look, you're both of you, because Matthew's involved with Victor as well. Your victory preservation and what you're doing is incredible. And the fact you can tell that story, it's LSL, I love that.Andrew Baines: Yeah. And we're actually able to feed back into the sector. And one of the nice things is, we know we talk about working collaboratively, but if you look at the victory project, for example, our project conservator came down the road from Chatham, equally, which you one of.Richard Morsley: Our your collections manager.Paul Marden: So it's a small pool and you're recycling.Andrew Baines: Progression and being people in develop and feed them on.Matthew Tanner: The open mindedness, yeah, taking and connecting from all over, all over the world, when I was working with for the SS Great Britain, which is the preserved, we know, great iron steam chip, preserved as as he saw her, preserved in a very, very dry environment. We'll take technology for that we found in the Netherlands in a certain seeds factory where they had to, they had to package up their seeds in very, very low humidity environments.Paul Marden: Yes, otherwise you're gonna get some sprouting going on. Matthew Tanner: Exactly. That's right. And that's the technology, which we then borrowed to preserve a great historic ship. Paul Marden: I love that. Dominic Jones: And SS Great Britain is amazing, by the way you did such a good job there. It's one of my favourite places to visit. So I love that.Paul Marden: I've got a confession to make. I'm a Somerset boy, and I've never been.Dominic Jones: Have you been to yoga list? Oh yeah, yeah. I was gonna say.Paul Marden: Yeah. I am meeting Sam Mullins at the SS Great Britain next next week for our final episode of the season. Matthew Tanner: There you go.Dominic Jones: And you could go to the where they made the sale. What's the old court canvas or Corker Canvas is out there as well. There's so many amazing places down that neck of the woods. It's so good.Paul Marden: Quick segue. Let's talk. Let's step away from collaboration, or only very lightly, highlights of today, what was your highlight talk or thing that you've seen?Richard Morsley: I think for me, it really was that focus on community and engagement in our places and the importance of our institutions in the places that we're working. So the highlight, absolutely, for me, opening this morning was the children's choir as a result of the community work that the Mary Rose trust have been leading, working.Dominic Jones: Working. So good. Richard Morsley: Yeah, fabulous. Paul Marden: Absolutely. Matthew Tanner: There's an important point here about about historic ships which sometimes get kind of positioned or landed by developers alongside in some ports, as if that would decorate a landscape. Ships actually have places. Yes, they are about they are connected to the land. They're not just ephemeral. So each of these ships that are here in Portsmouth and the others we've talked about actually have roots in their home ports and the people and the communities that they served. They may well have roots 1000s of miles across the ocean as well, makes them so exciting, but it's a sense of place for a ship. Hannah Prowse: So I think that all of the speakers were obviously phenomenal.Dominic Jones: And including yourself, you were very good.Hannah Prowse: Thank you. But for me, this is a slightly random one, but I always love seeing a group of people coming in and watching how they move in the space. I love seeing how people interact with the buildings, with the liminal spaces, and where they have where they run headlong into something, where they have threshold anxiety. So when you have a condensed group of people, it's something like the AIM Conference, and then they have points that they have to move around to for the breakout sessions. But then watching where their eyes are drawn, watching where they choose to go, and watching how people interact with the heritage environment I find really fascinating. Paul Marden: Is it like flocks of birds? What are moving around in a space? Hannah Prowse: Exactly. Yeah.Paul Marden: I say, this morning, when I arrived, I immediately joined a queue. I had no idea what the queue was, and I stood there for two minutes.Dominic Jones: I love people in the joint queues, we normally try and sell you things.Paul Marden: The person in front of me, and I said, "What we actually queuing for?" Oh, it's the coffee table. Oh, I don't need coffee. See you later. Yes.Dominic Jones: So your favourite bit was the queue. Paul Marden: My favourite..Dominic Jones: That's because you're gonna plug Skip the Queue. I love it.Dominic Jones: My favourite moment was how you divided the conference on a generational boundary by talking about Kojak.Dominic Jones: Kojak? Yes, it was a gamble, because it was an old film, and I'll tell you where I saw it. I saw it on TV, and the Mary Rose have got it in their archives. So I said, Is there any way I could get this to introduce me? And they all thought I was crazy, but I think it worked. But my favorite bit, actually, was just after that, when we were standing up there and welcoming everyone to the conference. Because for four years, we've been talking about doing this for three years. We've been arranging it for two years. It was actually real, and then the last year has been really scary. So for us to actually pull it off with our partners, with the National Museum of the Royal Navy, with Portsmouth Historic quarter, with all of our friends here, was probably the proudest moment for me. So for me, I loved it. And I'm not going to lie, when the children were singing, I was a little bit emotional, because I was thinking, this is actually happened. This is happening. So I love that, and I love tonight. Tonight's going to be amazing. Skip the queue outside Dive, the Mary Rose 4d come and visit. He won't edit that out. He won't edit that out. He can't keep editing Dive, The Mary Rose.Dominic Jones: Andrew, what's his favourite? Andrew Baines: Oh yes. Well, I think it was the kids this morning, just for that reminder when you're in the midst of budgets and visitor figures and ticket income and development agreements, and why is my ship falling apart quicker than I thought it was going to fall apart and all those kind of things actually just taking that brief moment to see such joy and enthusiasm for the next generation. Yeah, here directly connected to our collections and that we are both, PHQ, NRN supported, MRT, thank you both really just a lovely, lovely moment.Paul Marden: 30 kids singing a song that they had composed, and then backflip.Dominic Jones: It was a last minute thing I had to ask Jason. Said, Jason, can you stand to make sure I don't get hit? That's why I didn't want to get hit, because I've got a precious face. Hannah Prowse: I didn't think the ship fell apart was one of the official parts of the marketing campaign.Paul Marden: So I've got one more question before we do need to wrap up, who of your teams have filled in the Rubber Cheese Website Survey. Dominic Jones: We, as Mary Rose and Ellen, do it jointly as Portsmouth historic document. We've done it for years. We were an early adopter. Of course, we sponsored it. We even launched it one year. And we love it. And actually, we've used it in our marketing data to improve loads of things. So since that came out, we've made loads of changes. We've reduced the number of clicks we've done a load of optimum website optimisation. It's the best survey for visitor attractions. I feel like I shouldn't be shouting out all your stuff, because that's all I do, but it is the best survey.Paul Marden: I set you up and then you just ran so we've got hundreds of people arriving for this evening's event. We do need to wrap this up. I want one last thing, which is, always, we have a recommendation, a book recommendation from Nepal, and the first person to retweet the message on Bluesky will be offered, of course, a copy of the book. Does anyone have a book that they would like to plug of their own or, of course, a work or fiction that they'd like to recommend for the audience.Paul Marden: And we're all looking at you, Matthew.Dominic Jones: Yeah. Matthew is the book, man you're gonna recommend. You'reAndrew Baines: The maritime.Paul Marden: We could be absolutely that would be wonderful.Matthew Tanner: Two of them jump into my mind, one bit more difficult to read than the other, but the more difficult to read. One is Richard Henry. Dana D, a n, a, an American who served before the mast in the 19th century as an ordinary seaman on a trading ship around the world and wrote a detailed diary. It's called 10 years before the mast. And it's so authentic in terms of what it was really like to be a sailor going around Cape corn in those days. But the one that's that might be an easier gift is Eric Newby, the last great grain race, which was just before the Second World War, a journalist who served on board one of the last great Windjammers, carrying grain from Australia back to Europe and documenting his experience higher loft in Gales get 17 knots in his these giant ships, absolute white knuckle rides. Paul Marden: Perfect, perfect. Well, listeners, if you'd like a copy of Matthew's book recommendation, get over to blue sky. Retweet the post that Wenalyn will put out for us. I think the last thing that we really need to do is say cheers and get on with the rest of the year. Richard Morsley: Thank you very much. Andrew Baines: Thank you.Paul Marden: Thanks for listening to Skip the Queue. If you've enjoyed this podcast, please leave us a five star review. It really helps others to find us. Skip The Queue is brought to you by Rubber Cheese, a digital agency that builds remarkable systems and websites for attractions that helps them to increase their visitor numbers. You can find show notes and transcripts from this episode and more over on our website, skipthequeue fm. The 2025 Visitor Attraction Website Survey is now LIVE! Dive into groundbreaking benchmarks for the industryGain a better understanding of how to achieve the highest conversion ratesExplore the "why" behind visitor attraction site performanceLearn the impact of website optimisation and visitor engagement on conversion ratesUncover key steps to enhance user experience for greater conversionsTake the Rubber Cheese Visitor Attraction Website Survey Report
On this weeks show we celebrate the life and music of Junior Byles who passed away at the age of 77 down in Jamaica. We will featurenmusic spanning his career from the 1960's through 1980 from the great producers like Joe Gibbs, Pete Weston, Lee Scratch Perry and Niney The Observer. Also this week we play some roots classics from Burning Spear, Sugar Minott, Barrington Levy, Don Carlos, Hugh Mundell, Prince Phillip & Breezy, Glen Washington, Mystic Eyes & The Revolutionaries and Barry Brown with The Aggrovators. New Music this week comes from The Georgetown Orbits, Real Mckoy, Skillinjah, Queen Omega with Nature Makonnen, Joseph Lalibella & Vibronics, Groundation with Mykal Rose and Alpha Blondy, Clinton Fearon, Chezidek, Baltimores and Eskifaia Sound, Protoje, Dougy, and Busy Signal plus the ever popular many many more! Enjoy! Junior Byles - Weeping - Niney The Observer: Roots With Quality - VP Records Junior Byles w/Kojak & Liza - Dreadlocks Time/Fist To Fist - Joe Gibbs 12” Reggae Discomix Showcase - VP Records Junior Byles & Rupert Reid - Chant Down Babylon - 129 Beat Street Ja-Man Special 1975-1978 - Blood & Fire Junior Byles w/Jah T & The Upsetters - Beat Down Babylon/Informer Man/Outformer Version/Ital Version - Beat Down Babylon Deluxe - Doctor Bird Scientist Meets Blanc du Blanc - Treading: Eternal Resonance - Before The Beginning - Soul Selects Records Junior Byles & The Mighty Two - Heart & Soul/Give It To Jah - Errol T Records 7” Junior Byles - A Place Called Africa - Orchid 7” Dennis Alcapone - Africa Stand - Beat Down Babylon Deluxe - Doctor Bird Junior Byles - Demonstration - Curley Locks: Best Of Junior Byles & The Upsetters 1970-1976 - Heartbeat Records Junior Byles - King Of Babylon - Reggae Anthology: Randy's 50th Anniversary - VP Records Junior Byles & The Versatiles - Cutting Razor - Cutting Razor: Rare Cuts From The Black Ark - Heartbeat Records The Versatiles - Trust The Book - Joe Gibbs & Friends: The Reggae Train 1968-1971 - Trojan Records Junior Byles - Rasta No Pick Pocket - Beat Down Babylon Deluxe Edition - Doctor Bird Junior Byles - When Will Better Come - Curley Locks: Best Of Junior Byles & The Upsetters 1970-1976 - Heartbeat Records Junior Byles - Lorna Banana - Micron Music Presents: Every Mouth Must Be Fed - Pressure Sounds Pete Weston & The Flames - Revolution Is For The Chinaman - Micron Music Presents: Every Mouth Must Be Fed - Pressure Sounds Junior Byles - Ain't To Proud To Beg/Last Of The Love Songs - Micron Music Presents: Every Mouth Must Be Fed - Pressure Sounds Junior Byles - Come Da Da - Curley Locks: Best Of Junior Byles & The Upsetters 1970-1976 - Heartbeat Records Junior Byles - Fever/Lick The Pipe Peter - Beat Down Babylon Deluxe Edition - Doctor Bird The Georgetown Orbits - Disintegrator - Constellations - Orion Anderson Burning Spear - My Roots - The Burning Spear Experience - Burning Music Productions Sugar Minott - Devil's Pickney - Sugar & Spice - Ras Records Barrington Levy - Prison Oval Rock (Greensleeves 12” Mix) - Prison Oval Rock 40th Anniversary Edition - VP Records Don Carlos - Favorite Cup - Changes - Heartbeat Hugh Mundell w/Roots Radics & Scientist - Jacqueline/Dangerous Match 3 - Junjo Presents: Wins The World Cup - Greensleeves Prince Phillip feat. Breezy & Hugh Mundell - Riding On A High & Windy Day/Riding Rhythm - Prince Philip Presents: Dubplates & Raw Rhythm From King Tubby's Studio 1973-1976 - DKR/Bond Export Junior Byles & I-Roy - Fade Away/Rootsman - Jama Glen Washington - Jah Glory - Most Wanted - Greensleeves Real McKoy - Jah Reign - Dub Style Riddim - River Nile Entertainment Skillinjah - Live Up - Dub Style Riddim - River Nile Entertainment Queen Omega & Nature Makonnnen - Resilience - Reverence Riddim - Empress League Groundation feat. Mykal Rose & Alpha Blondy - The Youth - Candle Burning - Young Tree/Baco Records Joseph Lalibela Meets Vibronics & Mafia & Fluxy Band - Chant Down Babylon/Chant Down Dub - Ancient Breeze - Scoops Records Clinton Fearon - Jah Is Love - Jah Is Love - Baco Records Junior Byles & The Upsetters - The Long Way/The Longer Way aka All The Way - Beat Down Babylon Deluxe Edition - Doctor Bird Junior Byles w/ Lee Scratch Perry & The Upsetters - Curley Locks/Lock & Key/Dreader Locks - Beat Down Babylon Deluxe Edition - Doctor Bird Carlton Livingston - Fade Away - Grade One Wayne Smith - Ask Jah - Heartical Meets BDF: Fade Away Showcase - Heartical Sound Hopeton James & Ranking Joe - Heartbeat - Heartical Meets BDF: Fade Away Showcase - Heartical Sound BDF - Fade Away (Melodica Way) - Heartical Meets BDF: Fade Away Showcase - Heartical Sound Dubmatix feat. Rasta Rueben Kwabena & Raffa - Dub In Me Hand - Renegade Rocker - Echo Beach Dubussy - Nautilus Horn - Horn N Tentacles - Dubophonic Records Dubkasm feat. Ras Addis - Strictly Ital - Transform I - Sufferah's Choice Dubkasm - Beto's Yard - Transformed In Dub - Sufferah's Choice Salute - Circle Bass - Room In The Sky Masters Of Reggae 2020 - Room In The Sky Junior Byles - Remember Me - 129 Beat Street Ja-Man Special 1975-1978 - Blood & Fire Mystic Eyes & The Revolutionaries - Perilous Times/Roots Man Version - Iration Steppas: Dubs From The Foundation - Greensleeves Barry Brown & The Aggrovators - Give Thanks & Praise/Give Thanks (Lion Mix) - Praises - Pressure Sounds Yabby You - Rally Dub(Apollo 440 Remix) - Select Cuts From Blood & Fire Chapter 2 - Select Cuts Junior Roy & Ashanti Selah - Reality Talking/Dub Talking - Urban Observations - Ashanti Selah Kabaka Pyramid feat. Buju Banton - Faded Away - The Kalling - Ghetto Youths International/Bebble Rock Music Chezidek & Greatest Friends - It's No Crime - Evidence Music Collie Buddz feat. Busy Signal - Spark Up - Ineffable Records Baltimores & Eskifaia Sound - Cool & Irie - Evidence Music Protoje - Big 45 - Ineffable Records/Indiggnation Collective Dougy - Run The Session - Still And Solid - Evidence Music Busy Signal - Roots - Inna Roots Riddim - Kirkledove Records Inner Circle feat. Freddie McGregor & Mykal Rose - Beat Down Babylon - Still Beating Down Babylon - DubShot Records Inner Circle & Don Camel - Beat Dub Babylon (Don Camel Dub) - Still Beating Down Babylon - DubShot Records
I'm joined by Phil DeGlass of Flixology101 to discuss the first two episodes of season 3 of Kojak. A more in depth and serious discussion as opposed to some of the movies he and I have talked about in the past. As always, a huge pleasure to have him in the Lounge!
For our final season, we're covering the short life of Martin Goodman's Atlas/Seaboard comics by reviewing all the debut issues from their line. WATCH IT ON YOUTUBE! https://youtube.com/live/FxDNA8jYfpo Goodman also published a POLICE ACTION at the pre-Marvel Atlas. This one seems to appeal to fans of the swarms of detectives and cops that cluttered up American TV screens in the mid-'70s, like Banacek, Kojak, and Baretta. POLICE ACTION offered up TWO lead characters in their own stories: Sam Lomax, NYPD, and Luke Malone: Manhunter. Stories by Russ Jones and Mike Ploog with art by Mike Sekowsky, Al McWilliams, and Mike Ploog. You can read all 3 issues here: https://archive.org/details/police-action-complete/Police%20Action%20001/ TAKE JOHN'S SURVEY ABOUT COMICS: https://iu.co1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_78L6fCCluZuR6fA MAIL: bronzeagemonsters@gmail.com STORE: https://bronzeagemonsters.threadless.com/ SUPPORT THE SHOW: https://www.patreon.com/BronzeAgeMonsters JOIN US ON OUR DISCORD SERVER: https://discord.gg/wdXKUzpEh7
On today's MJ Morning Show: Another Publix customer won big from Florida Lottery A grandmother tried to get tickets to Lion King, but ended up needing help from Behnken Morons in the news Thailand restaurant offers 'skinny discount' if you can squeeze through gates Teens gone bad Guy standing outside the office barefoot Surprise song for Michelle Road rage guy who threw bottle charged Ways people are saving money Trader Joe's tote bag listed for ridiculous prices online Fester got a deal on a smoker, but not the deal he'd hoped Michael Jackson look-a-like picture on MJ Morning Show Facebook page Chris from Kojak's Ribs says their building was shot Old Navy sent woman wrong order, makes her jump through hoops to send back Celebrity's house for sale, has gold-plated toilet Beware of fake JOANN's websites Tiktok video touts DIY facelift with office supplies Tree fell on a car in traffic, caught on surveillance camera Woman rented a car through Turo... car got repo'd Olive Garden out, Texas Roadhouse in as #1 fast casual South Tampa peeping Tom arrested Ryan Seacrest hurt in cheese wheel chase
We're here for another Life in the Fast Lane as we track Vin Diesel's evolution through the ages across art, film, and revolution. First, though, we discuss a minute from Tokyo Drift that is exciting to watch but difficult to research and look at a preview for Universal's new F&F rollercoaster. We then luxuriate in nine new Run the VIN posts (in just 14 days!). We talk about Vin Diesel crossing his franchise characters over into other franchises, his D&D prowess, and if he's trying to manifest a Groot movie. Wait, Vin is *directing* Kojak? And, more importantly, where is OUR Vin Diesel thank you post? Joey live-designs merch on-air. (You REALLY need to go to Vin's Instagram to see these posts.) Email us: family@cageclub.me Visit our Patreon page at patreon.com/2fast2forever. Show your support at the 2 Fast 2 Forever shop! Extra special shout-out to Alex Elonen, Nick Burris, Brian Rodriguez (High School Slumber Party), Michael McGahon, Lane Middleton, Jason Rainey, Wes Hampton, Mike Gallier, Josh Buckley (Whole Lotta Wolves), Michael Moser, Christian Larson, Terra New One, Aaron Woloszyn, and Randy Carter for joining at the “Interpol's Most Wanted” level or above! Intro music by Nico Vasilo. Interlude and outro music by Wes Hampton.
There's a Shadow in the City on Episode 143 of The Bulletproof Podcast! Join your host, Chris the Brain, along with co-hosts, the "Toyman" Chris DePetrillo and Ryan Campbell, as they discuss the Cannon classic... Death Wish II! Charles Bronson's return to the role of architect turned vigilante Paul Kersey, bridges the gap of the 1974 original and sets up the future over the top sequels! Michael Winner's perversions, the unforgettable lines and delivery of Charles Bronson, the Jimmy Page soundtrack, the multiple versions of the movie are among the topics of discussion, Plus, numerous attempts to connect the film to Kojak are made! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
It's a wild ride on The Geoff and Whisp Show as Patrick Cotnoir stops by the show to talk about his podcast and SO MUCH MORE - 108.9 The Hawk STYLE! The Sultans of Swing: Whisp recounts his induction into the prestigious Illuminati-like, Sultans of Swing, an exclusive club founded by Mark Knopfler. "Hey, That's Me": Patrick Cotnoir discusses his new podcast, "Hey, That's Me," where he interviews individuals who worked on movies and TV shows but never got to do commentaries. A ” Vinyl" Controversy: Reminisce about the short-lived HBO series "Vinyl," and the alleged cocaine-fueled demise of the show, involving Mick Jagger and Martin Scorsese. SNL 50 Speculation: Geoff, Whisp and Patrick engage in an outlandish guessing game about potential surprise guests for the 50th anniversary of Saturday Night Live. Plus, Big Truck broadcasts live from the Sammy Hagar School of Good Driving! And today's episode of The Geoff and Whisp Show is brought to you by FogCar - a new ridesharing service operated by the band, Foghat. Sponsored by: Michael McDonald Hair Institute, Alex VanNeckbraces Guest: Patrick Cotnoir (Hey, That's Me, The George Lucas Talk Show) Love 108.9 The Hawk? THEN DIVE ON IN! Subscribe on Apple. Follow on Spotify! Subscribe to our channel on YouTube! Give a five-star review on Apple Podcasts! Get official merch: http://tee.pub/lic/goodrockshirts Early access to audio and video episodes & bonus shows: https://patreon.com/1089thehawk Follow us on social media: YouTube, Instagram, TikTok, Bluesky, Threads Learn more & sign up for our mailing list: https://1089thehawk.com Keywords: Geoff and Whisp Show, morning radio, comedy podcast, Hey That's Me, Patrick Cotnoir, Vinyl, Mick Jagger, Martin Scorsese, SNL 50th Anniversary, Big Truck, Brain Juice, Predator, The Shawshank Redemption, Andy Dick, 108.9 The Hawk, Jason Gore, Geoff Garlock, George Lucas, Kojak, classic rock, Sammy Hagar, Dire Straits, Mark Knopfler, Illuminati, Sultans of Swing, Carson Daly
sMariachi Day. Entertainment from 1982. Carter pardoned the draft dodgers, Lorena Bobbitt got off cutting off her husbands penis, 1st Star Trek convention, Delorean cars began being made. Todays birthdays - Telly Savalas, Benny Hill, Wolfman Jack, Richie Havens, Mac Davis, Billy Ocean, Geena Davis, Baby Spice. George Orwell died.Intro - Pour some sugar on me - Def Leppard http://defleppard.com/El Son de la Negra - Mariachi Vagasde TecalitanPhysical - Olivia Newton-JohnRed neckin love makin night - Conway TwittyBirthdays - In da club - 50 Cent http://50cent.com/Minstrel from gault - Richie HavensBaby don't get hooked on me - Mac DavisCarribean Queen - Billy OceanThe ground you walk on - Geena DavisWhat took you so long - Emma BuntonExit - It's not love - Dokken https://www.dokken.net/
De 17H à 20H, l'Happy Hour FG, Avec Antoine Baduel, Stars, Mixes Live, cadeaux. L'Happy Hour, c'est le son de la DJ radio, des interviews, des voyages de rêve, et les bons plans de la rédaction
Sie sind wieder da! Johann und Sebastian/Johannes/Zebaschdian treffen sich zur Folge 101 und es gibt wahnsinnig viel zu bereden!- Was macht Kojak im Kreißsaal? - Wie bringt man Zebaschdian zum lachen?- Was ist der geheime Spitzname und woher weiß Spotify alles?Ansonsten weitere diverse Namen und verrückte Experimente mit Bratensoße, Autotune und Tassenpudding!+ Markus Söder schändet Lebkuchen und Musik im Allgemeinen + Johann gongt mit Jürgen am MorgenWyld, wie die Kidzzz und Susanne Daubner sagen würden. Gönnt!#SehrGuteUnterhaltungGong am Morgen: https://www.instagram.com/good_vibrations_cologne
On today's MJ Morning Show: Hypnosis Morons in the news Police department employee fired for lying about education The new studio is coming along! MJ's brother on women getting less Kardashian-like treatments Utah man drove through dealership Should someone caught with a side-hustle get fired or be forced to quit Luigi Mangione update/details Bengals QB's home burglarized and reported by NOT his girlfriend Bill Belichick may take head coaching position at University of North Carolina Signs he's cheating by age group MJ's dishwasher died Jamie Fox audio Tyler Perry Productions president died in Florida plane crash Family sues over AI telling child it's ok to kill parents Kojak's visit to the studio with BBQ and Aztec Death Whistles Kiera Knightly doesn't want more kids after sitting through Peppa Pig MJ's mouth music... trying to guess who's coming in concert
When is the last time BYU was this relevant and who are some of the delightful names that are brought to mind? Then, Chris accidentally made a tragic mistake on a live read, the debate rages on regarding how little Erik Spoelstra slept because of last night's loss, and Tony learns that Kojak was a guy who looked like Dracula and was named "Telly." Plus, the Florida Panthers got into an unbelievable fight last night, Billy and Jeremy disagree over the merit of the College Football Playoff, and Stugotz delivers ANOTHER list of Top 5 QB Names If They Were Jewish. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
TVC 665.5: Ed welcomes back James Sutorius, one of the most accomplished stage actors of our time, having starred on Broadway many times throughout his career (as well as many major theatre groups and repertory companies across the country), and an actor who has appeared frequently on television over the past five decades, including such classic shows as Matlock, Kojak, Columbo, and Murder, She Wrote, the acclaimed CBS miniseries Space, and his own series, The Andros Targets. A Shakespearean actor at heart, James recently starred in My Life with Will: An Evening with Will Shakespeare and James Sutorius, a one-man show (written by Dennis Brown) in which James shares stories from his fifty-year career in stage, movies, and television, and why he always returns to the works of Shakespeare for sustenance.
TVC 665.5: Ed welcomes back James Sutorius, one of the most accomplished stage actors of our time, having starred on Broadway many times throughout his career (as well as many major theatre groups and repertory companies across the country), and an actor who has appeared frequently on television over the past five decades, including such classic shows as Matlock, Kojak, Columbo, and Murder, She Wrote, the acclaimed CBS miniseries Space, and his own series, The Andros Targets. A Shakespearean actor at heart, James recently starred in My Life with Will: An Evening with Will Shakespeare and James Sutorius, a one-man show (written by Dennis Brown) in which James shares stories from his fifty-year career in stage, movies, and television, and why he always returns to the works of Shakespeare for sustenance. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
This week on It Was a Thing on TV First, in this installment, we look at another show which was rated as one of the worst shows of all-time. Was Me and the Chimp justifiably the 46th worst show ever? Maybe if audiences went bananas over the ridiculous plot, we wouldn't be talking about this show almost 53 years later. Then, over the years, we have talked about revivals and sequels, which are almost never as successful or popular as the original. This is another case of that. Update a beloved franchise without any of its original cast and give that show an undesirable time slot, and it is bound to fail quickly. After less than a dozen episodes, this update of Kojak enjoyed its last lollipop, quickly going to dustbin of bad TV updates. Follow us at all our socials via our Linktree page at linktr.ee/itwasathingontv Timestamps 0:11 - The Final Joey Gallo Update of 2024 6:31 - Me and The Chimp (Episode 507) 47:24 - Kojak (2005) (Episode 508)
Over the years, we have talked about revivals and sequels, which are almost never as successful or popular as the original. This is another case of that. Update a beloved franchise without any of its original cast and give that show an undesirable time slot, and it is bound to fail quickly. After less than a dozen episodes, this update of Kojak enjoyed its last lollipop, quickly going to dustbin of bad TV updates.
Veteran theater and film actor James Sutorius has performed for the most prestigious regional and repertory theater companies including The Old Globe, La Jolla Playhouse, Center Theatre Group, South Coast Repertory, and Pasadena Playhouse. He's also performed at Lincoln Center, Yale Repertory, Long Wharf Theatre, Seattle Repertory, and many more. In 2007, he won two San Diego Theatre Critics Awards for his performance as George in "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" and for his multiple supporting roles in John Strand's play "Lincolnesque." James made his Broadway debut in 1973 in "The Changing Room." In his very first entrance as a member of a rugby team, he had to walk downstage and strip off all his clothes! Instead of finding the experience terrifying, he actually found it liberating. And he played Laertes opposite Sam Waterston's Hamlet at the Vivian Beaumont Theater, alongside a cast of rising stars including Jane Alexander, Mandy Patinkin, George Hearn and John Heard. Most recently James was seen on Broadway in Aaron Sorkin's play "The Farnsworth Invention" that was directed by Des McAnuff and produced by Steven Spielberg. James was the voice for Ragu Spaghetti Sauce for 17 years, spawning the national catchphrase "Now, THAT'S Italian!" He continues to pitch other products for Coca Cola and Wrangler Jeans. He also lends his distinctive voice to audio books and short story anthologies on tape.On TV, James' break came when he starred as investigative reporter Mike Andros in The Andros Targets. He's also appeared on such well-known TV series as Dynasty, Cannon, Kojak, St. Elsewhere, Family Ties, 21 Jump Street, Murder, She Wrote, L.A. Law, The X Files, Judging Amy, and many others. And he was a regular on Bob Crane's short-lived sitcom, The Bob Crane Show. Additionally, he's appeared in such notable TV movies as: A Death in Canaan, A Question of Love, Skokie, Space, and On Wings of Eagles. In feature films, James can be seen in Dancing as Fast as I Can starring Jill Clayburgh and Windy City with John Shea and Kate Capshaw.
Az előfizetők (de csak a Belső kör és Közösség csomagok tulajdonosai!) már szombat hajnalban hozzájutnak legfrissebb epizódunk teljes verziójához. A kedden publikált, ingyen meghallgatható verzió tíz perccel rövidebb. 00:30 Orbán Balázs még mindig nem adott interjút. 01:37 Az ez a gumicsont előtti gumicsont. Az RTL mellett és ellen. Amikor az RTL rászállt Mészáros Lőrincre. AZ RTL-Index-barátság. Heltai Jenő: Ballada a három patkányról. 06:34 Minden gumicsont. Prompt hatalmi érdekből elkövetett bullshit. Hány tusa volt meg Orbán Viktornak? Orbán, pisztoly, Gyárfás Tamás. 12:32 Kínaitea-mérfőldkö. Oriental beauty, a tajvani kabócatea. Pirított oolong vagy zöld oolong? A kínai néni teája. 16:59 Újabb érdekes adatok argentin sörökről. Cervecería Bariloche. Nácik az argentin Zakopanéban. Változó komlódivat. 21:38 Éttermi koncepciók Mályinkától a József Nádor térig. Iszkor és Alelí. Dani García. 26:35 Oszter Sándor és az ostería. Koncepciónk, a minőségi betű. Jó a körömpörkölt, csak drága. 31:25 1000 eurós minimálbér. Helyreigazítás: a Rogán-Nagy-Orbán politikusgenerációk. Kexet láttad? 35:39 Szarva közt a tőgye. Elnézést a vaddisznóktól! Nyugodtan túrjanak. 41:17 Helyreigazítás: büntetőfékezés. Break check és road rage. Michael Flatley mint James Bond. 46:04 Kojak ismét Budapesten. A DVD-k végső búcsúja. A Burzsoá Nyugdíjasokat 5 forintért leszúrják az utcán. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Scott McCloud is a guitarist, singer, and songwriter. He has been a founding member of Girls Against Boys, New Wet Kojak and Soulside. He continues to tour extensively, performs acoustically, and operates in various projects including Agrio and Paramount Styles. In this episode, Scott shares a story where a simple misunderstanding of gratitude leads to a confusing, riotous, and even violent reaction from the crowd when his band Operator opened for Placebo in Lisbon. Joe and Scott discuss what this good intention turned bad tells us about humans in large groups, selective communication, crowd tipping points and why Scott still thinks about this show today. Music by Operator. A special thank you to John Schmersal for generously funding this episode. GVSB Paramount Styles Agrio Episode supported by Izotope Episode supported by Distrokid
WARREN CUMMINGS on some 1970s USTV Cop Shows. First broadcast on FAB RADIO INTERNATIONAL at 19:00 on August 18th 2024. This week WARREN CUMMINGS is back, and we're going to talk about all of those 1970s US TV Cop Shows that we used to love like KOJAK and IRONSIDE and THE STREETS OF SAN FRANCISCO, all of which were on our British television screens during a decade in which it seemed not a week could pass without a brand new cop show turning up on TV, each one with a brand new quirk or unique selling point to persuade us that it really was not the same as all of those OTHER cop shows that you might be enjoying, often with attributes so distinct that they made inroads into the pop culture of this country to the point that the likes of BENNY HILL or MIKE YARWOOD could don the old raincoat, or brandish a lollipop, and everyone watching at home would know exactly what they meant. PLEASE NOTE - For Copyright reasons, musical content sometimes has to be removed for the podcast edition. All the spoken word content remains (mostly) as it was in the broadcast version. Hopefully this won't spoil your enjoyment of the show.
Episode Notes Rob returns with DJ Valentine of Simplistic Reviews as a Finnish wrestler turned Parliament member gets concerned by the bomb.
[Reklama] Partnerem odcinka jest kanał Stopklatka. Na kanale Stopklatka od poniedziałku do piątku od 16 można oglądać po 2 odcinki kultowego serialu „Kojak”. https://stopklatka.pl/ (2:40) Nowe Horyzonty: Rodzaje życzliwości Motocykliści (11:05) Pierwsza historia Morderstwo Dannielle Finlay-Jones (31:20) Druga historia Morderstwo Sheili Bellush Nie zapomnij sprawdzić zdjęć z tego odcinka na naszym instagramie @2karoliny2podcasty Instagram Karoliny 1 @acecaroline + instagram Karoliny 2 @karolinagawr Możesz też nas symbolicznie wesprzeć na Patronite https://patronite.pl/prawdziwe-zbrodnie
Zachęcam do obejrzenia kultowego serialu kryminalnego "Kojak" - od poniedziałku do piątku o 16:00 i 17:00 w telewizji Stopklatka! Jeśli pamiętacie ten serial z dawnych lat, to świetna okazja, żeby jeszcze raz wczuć się w niepowtarzalny klimat przygód legendarnego detektywa Kojaka. A jeśli jeszcze go nie znacie, to tym bardziej zachęcam do obejrzenia np. z rodzicami, którzy z pewnością go pamiętają i darzą sentymentem :) https://www.youtube.com/@stopklatkatvhttps://www.instagram.com/stopklatka_oficjalny_profilhttps://www.facebook.com/StopklatkaTV 15 grudnia 1981 roku w Pensylwanii doszło do brutalnej zbrodni – 32-letnia Linda Mae Craig została porwana po wyjściu z pracy i niestety jej ciało odnaleziono następnego dnia. O zbrodnię oskarżono 20-letniego Nicholasa Yarrisa i mimo wielu wątpliwości chłopak został skazany na śmierć. Dopiero po latach na jaw zaczęła wychodzić prawda na temat tej sprawy.
1 marca 2011 roku w Lesie Kabackim zostają odnalezione zwęglone ludzkie zwłoki. Po czasie, okazuje się, że ciało należy do działaczki lokatorskiej Jolanty Brzeskiej. Początkowo śledczy będą zakładać, że mają do czynienia z samobójstwem. Nikt jednak nie zgadza się z tą tezą. Wszystko wskazuje na to, że Jolanta Brzeska padła ofiarą brutalnego zabójstwa. Zapraszam Was również do obejrzenia kultowego serialu kryminalnego „Kojak”, który jest emitowany w popołudniowej ramówce na kanale Stopklatka. Już w tę środę o godzinie 17:00 będziecie mogli zobaczyć 14 odcinek serialu, w którym porucznik Kojak badać będzie sprawę zabójstwa lokalnego reportera telewizyjnego. W tle pojawia się również wątek zorganizowanej grupy przestępczej. Serial „Kojak” pojawia się na kanale Stopklatka od poniedziałku do piątku, co więcej każdego dnia emitowane są aż dwa odcinki. Fanów kryminalnych seriali zapraszam przed ekran o godzinie 16:00 i 17:00. Serdecznie polecam! @stopklatkatv Więcej informacji: http://stopklatka.pl/ Research Judyta Gołębiowska Montaż Judyta Gołębiowska Masz dla mnie sprawę? Wyślij ją mailem: po[at]piateniezabijaj.pl Możesz mnie spotkać: Grupa: http://www.facebook.com/groups/PiateNieZabijaj _______ Słuchaj na: Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2WM488O Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/3CELhCr Tidal: https://bit.ly/3tUkXAw Google : https://bit.ly/3I7v5L6 YouTube: http://bit.ly/2Ur9Cbw _______ Muzyka wykorzystana w odcinku: Wstęp: Resolver - Amulet Czołówka: Doug Maxwell - Heartbeat of the Hood Tło: Luke Atencio - Counsel Tyłówka: The Inner Sound - Jesse Gallagher Musicbed SyncID: MB01TFL0BRK5AZQ Wybrane źródła: https://wyborcza.pl/duzyformat/7,127290,9500936,jolanta-i-ogien.html?_gl=1*hcnvux*_ga*NDkzMjQ1NTc3LjE3MjAxODkxNDc.*_ga_6R71ZMJ3KN*MTcyMDE4OTE0Ni4xLjAuMTcyMDE4OTIyNy4wLjAuMA..*_gcl_au*NjQ0NjY4MTU3LjE3MjAxODkxNDc.&_ga=2.51078817.98451294.1720189140-1183357279.1720189140#S.embed_article-K.C-B.1-L.1.zw https://tvn24.pl/tvnwarszawa/mokotow/warszawa-sprawa-jolanty-brzeskiej-10-lat-bledow-i-poszukiwan-zabojcy-analiza-sledztwa-st5032141 https://www.rp.pl/kraj/art5627141-jolanta-brzeska-zostala-zamordowana-sledztwo-umorzone https://warszawa.wyborcza.pl/warszawa/7,54420,26824429,sprawa-jolanty-brzeskiej-mamy-jeszcze-20-lat.html https://www.rp.pl/kraj/art5627141-jolanta-brzeska-zostala-zamordowana-sledztwo-umorzone https://www.money.pl/gospodarka/wiadomosci/artykul/komisja-weryfikacyjna-reprywatyzacja,255,0,2383359.html https://wiadomosci.onet.pl/tylko-w-onecie/smierc-brzeskiej-jak-mafia-pokonala-panstwo/fz79snm?utm_source=wiadomosci.onet.pl_viasg_wiadomosci&utm_medium=referal&utm_campaign=leo_automatic&srcc=ucs&utm_v=2 https://wiadomosci.onet.pl/warszawa/smierc-jolanty-brzeskiej-prokuratura-umorzyla-sledztwo-dotyczace-bledow/dr1ws4l https://www.se.pl/warszawa/morderca-jolanty-brzeskiej-wciaz-na-wolnosci-corka-zabitej-dzialaczki-wciaz-mam-nadzieje-ze-morderca-mamy-odpowie-za-to-aa-xyst-4bm8-aikc.html https://magazynkontakt.pl/ofiara-reprywatyzacji-historia-jolanty-brzeskiej/ https://www.gazetakongresy.pl/kim-byla-jolanta-brzeska/ https://tvn24.pl/tvnwarszawa/najnowsze/probowal-pan-wywazyc-drzwi-do-jolanty-brzeskiej-marek-m-nie-odpowiada-ls266425 https://www.polityka.pl/tygodnikpolityka/spoleczenstwo/1677996,1,henryk-grocholski--wladca-kawalka-polski.read https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bke0e34_jz8 https://www.cda.pl/video/95051113 https://tvn24.pl/tvnwarszawa/najnowsze/marek-m-skazany-zatail-fakt-smierci-fanny-ajzensztadt-ls739417
Bonnie Bartlett's impressive career spans half a century beginning with three starring years on the 50s soap, Love of Life and building towards guest starring parts in Gunsmoke, The Waltons, Kojak, The Rockford Files, Home Improvement, and starring turns in St. Elsewhere, Little House on The Prairie and Boy Meets World. Additionally, she played the infamous Barbara Thorndyke on The Golden Girls. Bonnie and William Daniels have been married for over 73 years, often playing husband and wife and even winning Emmys together for St. Elsewhere!Bonnie's bold and honest new book is called Middle of the Rainbow. In it, she describes her journey to pull life lessons from her troubled childhood, build a career, sustain a loving relationship, raise her kids and cherish her life's many gifts. In an era long before #MeToo, Bonnie used therapy and Lee Strasberg acting classes to process her tangled emotions, heal her scars and find her best path forward. Plus, Fritz and Weezy are recommending The Grab, now streaming and Andrew McCarthy's Brat Pack doc, Brats, on Hulu.Path Points of Interest:Middle of the Rainbow by Bonnie BartlettBonnie Bartlett on WikipediaBonnie Bartlett on IMDBWilliam Daniels' Book - There I Go AgainSt. ElsewhereLittle House on the PrairieBoy Meets WorldShe Drinks a LittleGift of DemocracyMedia Path PodcastThe Grab - StreamingBrats
Skywalking Through Neverland: A Star Wars / Disney Fan Podcast
Imagine an alternate universe where another set of podcasters were also breaking down classic comics. Well, that universe just collided with ours! Andrew Kilpatrick and Phil Oberholzer of the podcast THIS IS GETTING GRAPHIC join us to break down 1982's Classic Marvel Star Wars Annual #2!! I don't know when we've laughed so hard while doing a comics episode! What does this comic issue have in common with The High Republic? Will Han Solo become the next Satab? And what would a Star Wars x Kojak cross-over look like? All these questions will be answered in this KING-SIZE EPISODE of over 2 hours long!! We recommend watching the video version of this episode which contains the full comic as we page through it. Star Wars Annual #2 “SHADESHINE" Release Date: August 17, 1982 Writer: David Michelinie Artwork: Carmine Infantino, Rudi Nebres, George Roussos Cover Art: Carmine Infantino, Rudi Nebres Luke Skywalker, Lando Calrissian, and C-3PO evade Imperial Stormtroopers when they duck inside a palace containing a giant golden statue of Han Solo. The Rebels are puzzled until Rov Vetter Pin appears, declaring that Solo is the savior of the planet Ventooine. He activates a recording of Solo's voice which recounts the story of how Solo saved the planet. Solo and Chewbacca were traveling to Ventooine to deal in Sansanna spice. When Solo is run out of the Cantina when he is labeled a supporter of the Satab, he saves Tieress Chrysalla, the consort to the Satab. Solo is brought back to the Satab's palace as a hero where he discovers that the Satab rules the planet through the use of a stone known as the Shade-shine. Because of his heroics, Solo is placed in line to take the title of The Satab. Will he be the new ruler and at what cost? Why is there a giant gold statue in the middle of this palace? And where is Chewbacca during all this? As usual, we take our Facebook Group Comments on the cover into account as we analyze this issue. Become a part of our Facebook Group to contribute! FTOOM FAST FACTS Sansanna Spice is mentioned in The Book of Boba Fett "Chapter 2: Tribes of Tatooine" and The Clone Wars, season 5 "The Revival" The setting of an abandoned throne room with statues, and talking rocks, may have a tie to Claudia Gray's High Republic novel Into The Dark Contact Us Instagram: http://instagram.com/skywalkingpod Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/skywalkingthroughneverland Join us every week on YouTube for a behind-the-scenes look at our show. We also bring you to Disneyland, Red Carpet Events and Theme Park Openings. Send emails to share@skywalkingthroughneverland.com and follow us on Facebook.
Imagine an alternate universe where another set of podcasters were also breaking down classic comics. Well, that universe just collided with ours! Andrew Kilpatrick and Phil Oberholzer of the podcast THIS IS GETTING GRAPHIC join us to break down 1982's Classic Marvel Star Wars Annual #2!! I don't know when we've laughed so hard while doing a comics episode! What does this comic issue have in common with The High Republic? Will Han Solo become the next Satab? And what would a Star Wars x Kojak cross-over look like? All these questions will be answered in this KING-SIZE EPISODE of over 2 hours long!! We recommend watching the video version of this episode which contains the full comic as we page through it. Star Wars Annual #2 “SHADESHINE" Release Date: August 17, 1982 Writer: David Michelinie Artwork: Carmine Infantino, Rudi Nebres, George Roussos Cover Art: Carmine Infantino, Rudi Nebres Luke Skywalker, Lando Calrissian, and C-3PO evade Imperial Stormtroopers when they duck inside a palace containing a giant golden statue of Han Solo. The Rebels are puzzled until Rov Vetter Pin appears, declaring that Solo is the savior of the planet Ventooine. He activates a recording of Solo's voice which recounts the story of how Solo saved the planet. Solo and Chewbacca were traveling to Ventooine to deal in Sansanna spice. When Solo is run out of the Cantina when he is labeled a supporter of the Satab, he saves Tieress Chrysalla, the consort to the Satab. Solo is brought back to the Satab's palace as a hero where he discovers that the Satab rules the planet through the use of a stone known as the Shade-shine. Because of his heroics, Solo is placed in line to take the title of The Satab. Will he be the new ruler and at what cost? Why is there a giant gold statue in the middle of this palace? And where is Chewbacca during all this? As usual, we take our Facebook Group Comments on the cover into account as we analyze this issue. Become a part of our Facebook Group to contribute! FTOOM FAST FACTS Sansanna Spice is mentioned in The Book of Boba Fett "Chapter 2: Tribes of Tatooine" and The Clone Wars, season 5 "The Revival" The setting of an abandoned throne room with statues, and talking rocks, may have a tie to Claudia Gray's High Republic novel Into The Dark Contact Us Instagram: http://instagram.com/skywalkingpod Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/skywalkingthroughneverland Join us every week on YouTube for a behind-the-scenes look at our show. We also bring you to Disneyland, Red Carpet Events and Theme Park Openings. Send emails to share@skywalkingthroughneverland.com and follow us on Facebook.
Happy Fourth of July, podheads! We lit so many fuses that the fireworks from this episode had us scurrying for cover. Our civic duty obliged us to contemplate the state of our country by trash talking the Brits while lamenting about last week's presidential debate. We fondly remembered bigger-than-life heroes from the past, e.g., Jack Palance's push-up on the Oscar stage, Reagan's aplomb, and Kojak's lollipop. When we linked angelic coolness with cigarette smoking, we decided to say farewell. Picture us waving goodbye with the delight of two modern dictators.
Join Rosie Russell and Catherine Austen as they delve into the 4* competition at Aston Le Walls, a key event on the British eventing calendar. This episode is packed with insights and exciting predictions, featuring:
Mekkora CSRM-tetkóért jár az ingyenes Patreon hozzáférés, jó-e a capoeira a lányoknak, mi lehet a bajusz mögött, mi a háttere a nadapi vadaskertnek, kevesebb-e a prostituált az ingyenpornó elterjedése óta, ellenzéki szavazó mehet-e NER-es balatoni szállodába nyaralni, miért van egy városon belül több azonos nevű utca, miért vannak a budapesti metrón ajtónyitó gombok, hogy működik a zajszűrős fülhallgató, miért működik a levéltrágyázás, mi legyen a leendő kutya és macska neve, a Kojak nyalókáról lerágni vagy leszopogatni kell a csokiborítást, hogy lehet segíteni egy depresszióval élő barátnak, miért van szüksége a rakétáknak a szökési sebességre, minek van a les a fociban, lesz-e nátha a holdi kolóniákban, láthattak-e a középkori magyarok egzotikus állatokat, vannak-e balkezes mókusok, szőke lábszőrt meghagyjuk-e egycentis hosszig, milyen kávéfőzőt érdemes venni, mi hiányzik egy egyke képességei közül, hogyan lassul le az idő egy baleset előtt, miért ülnek a buszon a külső ülésre az emberek, miért különböző a pingpong ütő két oldala, mit gondolunk a vadászatról, hogy megy előre a hullám? Zenék: Pátkai Rozina --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/csunyarosszmajom/message
After reading about the characters in this book, I made it my mission to have their kind of life for myself. Today we meet David Ciminello and we're talking about the book that saved his life: More Tales of the City by Armistead Maupin.David Ciminello is a Lambda Literary Fellow and author of The Queen of Steeplechase Park. As an actor, David guest starred on Seinfeld (“The Barber”), Murder She Wrote, Matlock, and Kojak. His original screenplay Bruno was made into a motion picture directed by Shirley MacLaine and stars Kathy Bates, Gary Sinese, and Jennifer Tilly.In More Tales of the City, the tenants of 28 Barbary Lane have fled their cozy nest for adventures far afield. Mary Ann Singleton finds love at sea with a forgetful stranger, Mona Ramsey discovers her doppelgänger in a desert whorehouse, and Michael Tolliver bumps into his favorite gynecologist in a Mexican bar. Meanwhile, their venerable landlady takes the biggest journey of all--without ever leaving home.Connect with Davidwebsite: davidciminello.cominstagram: @djciminelloFacebook: facebook.com/david.ciminelloOur BookshopVisit our Bookshop for new releases, current bestsellers, banned books, critically acclaimed LGBTQ books, or peruse the books featured on our podcasts: bookshop.org/shop/thisqueerbookTo purchase More Tales of the City visit: https://bookshop.org/a/82376/9780060929381To purchase The Queen of Steeplechase Park visit: https://bookshop.org/a/82376/9781942436614Become an Associate Producer!Become an Associate Producer of our podcast through a $20/month sponsorship on Patreon! A professionally recognized credit, you can gain access to Associate Producer meetings to help guide our podcast into the future! Get started today: patreon.com/thisqueerbookCreditsHost/Founder: J.P. Der BoghossianExecutive Producer: Jim PoundsAssociate Producers: Archie Arnold, K Jason Bryan and David Rephan, Natalie Cruz, Jonathan Fried, Paul Kaefer, Nicole Olila, Joe Perazzo, Bill Shay, and Sean SmithPatreon Subscribers: Stephen D., Stephen Flamm, Ida Göteburg, Thomas Michna, and Gary Nygaard.Creative and Accounting support provided by: Gordy EricksonMusic and SFX credits: visit thiqueerbook.com/musicQuatrefoil LibraryQuatrefoil has created a curated lending library made up of the books featured on our podcast! If you can't buy these books, then borrow them! Link: https://libbyapp.com/library/quatrefoil/curated-1404336/page-1June 18: 2-Year Anniversary Livestream: Follow us on Instagram @thisqueerbook. (7:30am EST/6:30am CST)June 22: Queer Speculations: A Reading and Gathering. On Zoom. Visit armenianliterary.org to register. (1pm EST/12pm CST)June 29: Live broadcast from Twin Cities PRIDE. 2pm CST. Listen to AM950 Radio on your radio app or am950radio.com. Or, visit our tent!Support the Show.
Sugar is sweet, where's the beef, some hair-raising hairpieces, my man Alfredo ("you broke my heart, Fredo") Pacino, the sleazy and ugly Phil Spector, some John Travolta, a little Frank Sinatra, the hair and genius that was Burt Reynolds, big-screen boobs, Yul Brenner and I, a Peter Fonda moment, Matthew McConaughey and a miracle hair potion, a great Telly Savalas memory, and yes, some quotes. Stuff mentioned: Sugar (2024), Serpico (1973), Dog Day Afternoon (1975), The Dog (2013), Elton John "Amoreena" (1970), Scarface (1983), Sea of Love (1989), Frankie and Johnny (1991), Terence McNally Frankie and Johnnie in the Clair de Lune (1987), 88 Minutes (2007), Spector (2022), The Beatles Let it Be (1970), George Harrison All Things Must Pass (1970), The Ramones End of the Century (1980), George Harrison "What is Life" (1970), Grease (1978), Perfect (1985), Get Shorty (1985), Swordfish (2001), Tony Rome (1967), The First Deadly Sin (1980), Hustle (1975), The Cannonball Run (1981), S.O.B. (1981), Dallas (1978-1991), The Sound of Music (1965), Sharky's Machine (1981), Stick (1985), Heat (1986), Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969), All the President's Men (1976), Malone (1987), Rent-a-Cop (1987), Westworld (2016-2022), Westworld (1973), Stephen Malkmus Stephen Malkmus (2001), Stephen Malkmus "Jo-Jo's Jacket" (2001), Futureworld (1976), Ghost Rider (2007), Birdy (1984), The Munsters (1964-1966), and Kojak (1973-1978).
I don't remember if it was my first visit to the public library, a Carnagie Public Library of course, but it was definitely the first time I strayed away from the children's section and started looking for books to read.The adult side of the library was very different. No cartoon covers in bright colors, just rows and rows of big fat books, they all looked the same. And they all looked like they were more than I could handle. But then I found them.They were in their own section. Rows and rows of small little paperbacks with colorful covers and images of … cowboys.The authors name on the books was Louis L'amour and they were my first foray into adult fiction.I read them all, and loved every minute of it. I still have an old copy of The Daybreakers laying around somewhere in the house.I grew up towards the end of the Western era in Hollywood, Bonanza and Gunsmoke were still on TV, but they would be gone very soon replaced with shows like Kojak and MASH. The westerns of the decade spent more time deconstructing the genre then telling western stories and John Wayne's last film the Shootist hit box offices in 1976.Many of you out there look at the western as an outdated genre, one that has little place in the hustle and bustle of 21st century storytelling. And of course, when it comes to roleplaying nobody is playing a western, right…Right?Well, we are here to point out that you are likely playing a western and don't realize it. Just like with our Sci-Fi episode where we determined that almost everything in roleplaying could be considered Sci-Fi. I would argue that almost every story our table top roleplaying games are telling is a western.The importance of the western can not be understated. The mythic and timeless stories are tied closely into the three pillars of roleplaying; Social, Exploration, and Combat.While I can go on for hours about Westerns, Mike, you never really got into the western. When did you recognize how tied in it was to most rolelplaying games.
It's time to finish up 2 Fast 2 Furious in the F&F Minute as we cover the rest of the film's credits! We give them 19 thumbs up, 0 thumbs down. In covering "a minute" without audio, we parse the credits order/character split and explore some notable names in the credits. We pivot to one of the most important On the Streets segments in months, including: rough production dates for Fast Xi (and where it will take place), why Universal is freaking out about the future of the franchise, the disaster of Dwayne Johnson's Red One, the announcement of Riddick: Furya, Vin Diesel as Kojak (?), the new Hollywood Drift rollercoaster, and Gibseyhana's hiring practices. Joe sets Vegas odds for the number of remaining F&F movies. We explore what degrees the family may have. Terra shares a heartwarming story about a stolen bicycle. Joe talks about his globetrotting adventures and Joey talks about more movies and Balatro. Email us: family@cageclub.me Visit our Patreon page at patreon.com/2fast2forever. Show your support at the 2 Fast 2 Forever shop! Extra special shout-out to Alex Elonen, Nick Burris, Brian Rodriguez (High School Slumber Party), Michael McGahon, Lane Middleton, Jason Rainey, Wes Hampton, Mike Gallier, Josh Buckley (Whole Lotta Wolves), Michael Moser, Christian Larson, Terra New One, Aaron Woloszyn, and Randy Carter for joining at the “Interpol's Most Wanted” level or above! Intro music by Nico Vasilo. Interlude and outro music by Wes Hampton.
Tom Brady runs afoul of fans, Walt runs afoul of the missus, super-centenarians, Barry Manilow, Swiftie revenge, Breast feeding and cloth diapers.
Chelsea chats about robot overlords then makes several half-hearted attempts at guided visualizations with largely disinterested callers who probably have Aphantasia. An overlong discussion of B12. Salad talk. A celebration of Kojak's songs. Comment section outrage. Sweet tooth snacks. Protein. A brown recluse cameo featuring tunneling necrotic flesh. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Today on The Neil Haley Show, Neil "The Media Giant" Haley of The Neil Haley Show interviws Thaao Penghlis. Thaao Penghlis is an Australian actor. He is best known for roles in United States daytime soap operas such as Days of Our Lives, Santa Barbara, and General Hospital, but has also guest-starred on a number of crime dramas, such as Kojak, Cannon, Tenspeed and Brown Shoe, Hart to Hart, Nero Wolfe and Magnum, P.I.
Join your host Petey Power as he takes you through 3 exciting Power/Peter Pan Records! We listen to some Laurel and Hardy, Kojak and more! Plus some songs and commercials. It's a fun hour of Power Records Fun! Make sure to tell a friend!
February 12-18, 1977 This week Ken welcomes comedian, co-host of the Woo Woo Podcast, and woman behind the new stand up comedy special, "Sweetie", Irene Bremis. Ken and Irene discuss growing up in Boston, racism, being Greek, living in New York, having a braided perm, getting picked on at school, trying to pass a Puerto Rican, Kojak, strong family ties, not smoking, good parking spaces, lollipops, how handsome Ken is, when everyone smoked, Kraft Singles, kissing grits, ventriloquism, meeting Carol Burnett, Ken big upping Irene, being a Trekkie, Leather Tuscadero, Happy Days, strong women leads in television shows in the 1970s, Valerie Harper, being fired from your own show, cruel producers, loving horror movies, Don't Go to Sleep, Carrie, The Exorcist, growing up religious (culturally or otherwise), Wonder Woman, Golden Girls, loving Bea Arthur, pros and cons of boob jobs, Bruce Campbell, Burt Offerings, One Day at a Time, Van Halen, Wrestling, girl crushes, celebrity murderers, Bionic People, Barney Miller, Fish, how the 70s could be more progressive than today, Soap, gay characters on television, Tony Randall, when Johnny Carson screwed over Joan Rivers, Red Fox, Cher, and the ballad of the Guidette.
Harvey Brownstone conducts an in-depth Interview with Morgan Fairchild, Legendary Actress About Harvey's guests: Today's special guest, Morgan Fairchild, is a highly acclaimed and beloved actress, whose many movie credits include “The Initiation of Sarah”, “The Seduction”, “Deadly Illusion”, “Mob Boss”, “Naked Gun 33 and a third”, “Venus Rising”, “The Nana Project”, and “Our Almost Completely True Love Story”, co-starring Mariette Hartley and Jerry Sroka, who recently appeared on our show. And on TV, she created the iconic roles of “Jennifer Pace Phillips” on “Search for Tomorrow”, “Constance Weldon Carlyle” on “Flamingo Road”, for which she got a Golden Globe Award nomination, “Jordan Roberts” on “Falconcrest”, for which she received a Soap Opera Digest Award nomination, “Julia St. Martin” on “Murphy Brown”, for which she earned a Primetime Emmy Award nomination, “Sydney Chase” on “The City”, “Sophia Blakely” on “Fashion House”, and “Angelica Devereux” on “Days of Our Lives”, for which she received a Daytime Emmy Award nomination. And let's not forget that she was the original “Jenna Wade” on “Dallas”. She also guest starred on the most popular TV shows including “Mork & Mindy”, “Roseanne”, “Friends”, “Happy Days”, “The Bob Newhart Show”, “Police Woman”, “Kojak”, “Murder, She Wrote”, and dozens more. She's appeared in some great miniseries including “The Dream Merchants”, “Too Old to Die Young” and “North and South, Parts 1 and 2”. And most recently, she co-starred with Donna Mills, Nicolette Sheridan, and 2 of my friends who recently appeared on our show, Loni Anderson and Linda Gray, in a delightful TV movie entitled, “Ladies of the 80s: A Divas Christmas”, co-written by Stan Zimmerman, who appeared on our show last week. On stage, our guest starred in the off-Broadway play “Geniuses”, which was named by Time Magazine and the New York Times as one of the top 10 plays of 1983. But our guest is much, much more than a talented, beautiful and glamorous Hollywood star. She's an extremely dedicated and highly respected humanitarian. She's been in the forefront as an outspoken and dedicated advocate in the fight against AIDS, the pro-choice movement and many environmental issues. In fact, she helped found the Environmental Communications Office, which fosters education and activism among entertainment industry professionals. And somehow, on top of everything else she's done, she found time in the 80's to write a book providing beauty tips, and she's also on the Board of Directors of SAG-AFTRA. For more interviews and podcasts go to: https://www.harveybrownstoneinterviews.com/ To see more about Morgan Fairchild, go to:https://www.morganfairchild.com/https://www.facebook.com/MorganFairchildOfficialFanPage https://www.instagram.com/morganfairchild1https://twitter.com/morgfair #MorganFairchild #harveybrownstoneinterviews
These are some of the official showcase artists at this year's Folk Alliance International event: Connie Kaldor "Pain And Sorrow" - Keep Going www.conniekaldor.com Ellis Paul "The Gift" - 55 www.ellispaul.com Stillhouse Junkies "Over The Pass" - Small Towns www.stillhousejunkies.com Alice Howe "With You By My Side" - Circumstance www.alicehowe.com Grace Pettis "Working Woman" - Working Woman www.gracepettis.com Karyn Oliver "Jenny" - Cherchez La Femme www.karynoliver.com The Accidentals "Wide Open" - Time Out: Session #2 www.theaccidentalsmusic.com Ordinary Elephant "I Come From" - Honest www.ordinaryelephant.com Ever More Nest "My Story" - Out Here Now www.evermorenest.com ************************ We Ghosts "Almost Alone" www.weghosts.com Corvus & The Morning Star "A Break In The Clouds" https://catmsband.co.uk/ KMFDM "Next Move" - Let Go https://kmfdm.net/ Strange Majik "Dopamine" - NYC Animal www.strangemajik.com Kojak "Midnight" s/t https://www.kojakmusic.com/ For Closure "Moon At Noon" https://www.facebook.com/ForClosureLA Mio "Det er meg det samme hvor jeg havner når jeg dør" - www.miomusikk.com Free Sergio "Free Sergio" - https://www.facebook.com/freesergioband *********************** Robert Connelly Farr "Things They Tellin' You" - Pandora Sessions www.robertconnellyfarr.com Shane Martin "Almost" - Anywhere www.shanemartin.com The Lucky Ones "Fool's Gold" A Nickel For The Fiddler https://www.theluckyonesmusic.com/ The Pairs "Easier To Leave" - When Will We Find Our Way www.thepairsmusic.com Daniel Isaiah "I've Got A Lot Riding On You" - To Live A Wild Life facebook.com/danisaiah Dana & Susan Robinson "No Billboards" - The Town That Music Saved www.robinsongs.com Kellie Loder "When We Kiss" https://kellieloder.com/ Cosy Sheridan & Charlie Koch "Demeter In The Underworld" - My Fence & My Neighbor www.cosysheridan.com Allysen Callery "Elemental Child" - Ghost Folk www.allysencallery.com Closing music: MFSB "My Mood" Running time: 4 hours 10 minutes --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/radiocblue/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/radiocblue/support
2024 BBWAA HOF Ballot With the new year nearly upon us, it's time to once again talk about the Hall of Fame, focusing on the candidates on the BBWAA ballot. There are many strong holdovers who either have a shot at election this year, like Todd Helton and Billy Wagner, or will make strides towards future enshrinement, like Andruw Jones and Carlos Beltrán. There are the suspected or confirmed PED users, like AROD, Manny Ramirez, Andy Pettite, and Gary Sheffield, who will all likely fall short of the 75% threshold. And then there's the new guys. There's Adrián Beltré, whose 3,000 hits, 477 HR and 5 Gold Gloves at third base pretty much guarantee his election, the only question being how many writers don't vote for him. Former Twins MVP and standout catcher Joe Mauer makes his debut on the ballot, and he brings with him a very compelling case, though he is anything but a sure bet given the injuries that hampered his longevity. Phillies gritty second baseman Chase Utley is a sabermetric darling, but he lacks the career counting stats and accolades that usually accompany players of his caliber. There are plenty of other intriguing names on this ballot, and for most of the them, the honor is just making it to this point. Take a listen as we discuss this year's candidates for the Baseball Hall of Fame. Audio clip sources listed below Adrián Beltré's 3000th hit - TEX radio KRLD 105.3 by Matt Hicks Joe Mauer's final game - MIN TV Fox Sports North by Dick Bremer and Bert Blyleven Chase Utley is ‘The Man' - PHI radio WIP by Harry Kalas and Chris Wheeler Bartolo Colon - the impossible has happened - NYM TV SNY by Gary Cohen, Ron Darling, and Keith Hernandez As always, shout out to Baseball Reference and SABR for statistics, boxscores, background information, and much, much more. Catch you next time, P.C.O.
00:00 Márton Balin kovidos, Róbert Budapesten kovidosnak hiszi magát. Tartalomjegyzék nincs. 04:00 Karácsonyi tartalom! Karácsony alkalmatlan, mert egész Bali egy nagy dugó. 04:40 Ojek nem a Kojak indonéz változata, hanem motoros taxi. Appja a Gojek. Winkler sosem ülne föl idegen mögé, Bede fölült simán. Are you OK, Sir? 06:55 Antiszeminyak és Bedugul. A turizmus és a nagyon részeg ausztrálok észak felé terjednek. További szóviccek Bali térképén. 08:25 Igénytelen top-dj-k paradicsoma. Steve Aoki és Sven Vath. 10:30 Találkozás az ausztrál társadalom mélyebb rétegeivel. Már nem mindenki úgy néz ki, mint Angus Young. Blood and Thunder: The Sound of Alberts – dokumentumfilm az ausztrál rock hatvanas-hetvenes évekbeli berobbanásáról. 12:30 Szentreggeli Borízű a fa alá. Ohne karácsonyi tematika. Mulletes, bebaszott, lángosképű Mikulások szörfdeszkával? 13:50 Mégis karácsonyi téma: halászlé. Uj Péter imapaktja. A zsinórmérték nulla kilométerköve. 15:40 Miért idegenkedik a Gundel séfje a halpatkótól? 19:00 A pingvin is megeszi a halat, hiába szálkás. 20:30 Winkler erőlteti a reptéri zongorát. 24:15 Az év helyreigazítása. Az apacsnak nincs tomahókja! 29:00 Bede a hutiknak drukkol. A szimpatikus kiscsapat. 31:20 Kvíz. „Lófasz az ott, nem kuglóf” Imperial Stout. 34:50 A kuglóf az zsidó? (Úgy tűnik, nem az.) 39:00 Ismerkedés Terézváros mélyével. A világ szabadulószoba-központja. Ázsiai étterem ázsiai étterem hátán. 40:00 Meglepő adat: Terézvárosban lakik a legtöbb külföldi. 43:00 Nagy reményeket fűzünk a Zenhez. 48:00 Karácsonyi kalandok a postán, sok szkrollozással. 53:30 Kvíz: Építünk, alkotunk, teremtünk. 55:30 Nina Hagen az új krokodilt főző kínai. 57:00 Klaus Nomi: Total Eclipse. 58:40 Billy Ray Cyrus: Achy Breaky Heart. 60:00 Kínai néni mangalicát vásárol a Lehel piacon Winklerrel. 63:30 De miért kel nekünk a GYESEV? Ki szabotálta a reptéri vasutat? See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
What if we told you that the summer of 1967 could hold the secrets to some of the greatest music ever? With our old pals, Scott, Mark and Lou of the Music Relish Show, we rewind time to this iconic year, unearthing fascinating stories and dissecting pivotal moments in music history. From The Doors' groundbreaking debut album to the first Shafa music festival in Central Park, our conversation takes unexpected twists, even as we navigate technical glitches, sharing laughs, and profound insights along the way.Drum roll, please! We explore the importance of drumming in setting the tone of a song, using The Doors' debut album as a case study. Our banter veers from the arrest of Mick Jagger and Keith Richards to the Beatles' promotional film for Strawberry Fields Forever. But it's not all music - we also dive into the movies, TV shows, and pop culture moments that defined 1967. Elvis Presley's Clambake, the anti-war movie You Only Live Twice, and TV classics like Hill Street Blues and Kojak are all up for discussion.Finally, our conversation circles back to the bands that shaped the sound of '67, featuring Credence Clearwater Revival, Fleetwood Mac, and Earth, Wind, and Fire, among others. We debate the controversy surrounding Bob Welch's exclusion from Fleetwood Mac and reflect on the Grammy Award win of Jethro Tull. It's a vibrant, exhaustive discussion that doesn't shy away from personal anecdotes and playful banter. So, sit back, relax, and let us take you on a sonic journey through 1967 - a year that forever changed the face of music and pop culture.
While we're in "post-pro" on our third season of Worst Movies Ever Played (coming soon!), here's a bonus made-for-TV style movie called Sunset House from the mid-80s horror anthology series Stories Related to and Generally Concerning the Graveyard. Percy, an encyclopedia salesman, and Kushy, a van-loving vagabond, are amateur supernatural investigators who come upon a legendary haunted house. No one who stays the night survives until morning, and when the house traps Percy and Kushy inside, they soon learn why.This special episode is a crossover with Shelterwood, an upcoming 16 episode docu-horror audio fiction series about a missing girl, an impossible suburb, and the American dream. Shelterwood is written and produced by our story editor Stephen Indrisano. Check out Shelterwood's Indiegogo campaign and delve into the mystery.CREDITSYour Director: Stephen IndrisanoPercy Marsten: Patrick BakerKushy: Geoffrey GoldenStory Editor & Sound Design: Stephen IndrisanoFOLLOWTwitterInstagramFacebook@ItsPatrickBaker@GeoffreyGolden@BrentLButlerStraight to VHS is a product of Lost Cat Games.Movie Trivia: The house used as the main shooting location was owned at the time by Kojak star Telly Savalas. In the background of the kitchen are a box of lollipops.
Two years after escaping a harrowing episode of their own doing, old podcast friends must defend themselves against a sentient technological being hellbent on destroying their fun. On Episode 576 of Trick or Treat Radio we discuss The Wrath of Becky, from directors Matt Angel and Suzanne Coote! We also talk about the cult classic Street Trash and other classic films we'd like to remake, the rise of white supremacists in the US and how gratifying it is to see them die horribly in films, and who the George Washington of Hip-Hop is. So grab your favorite cult classic on VHS, lace your yellow laces up tight, and strap on for the world's most dangerous podcast!Stuff we talk about: William Friedkin, The Exorcist, Sorceress, Denise Dax, Grand Guignol, vacationing at the safe house, lit keyboards, tech issues, old fogey, high tech nerd rooms, Ray Bradbury, Ryan Kruger, Fried Barry, Street Trash, Viper, Cult Classics, films that don't need to be remade, Body Melt, Class of Nuke ‘em High, Eamon's Road, Dave's Not Here, Lightning Video, James Lorinz, nutthuggers, Weird Science, Neon Maniacs, movies we'd like to remake, Sir Mix-A-Lot, The George Washington of Hip Hop, The Wrath of Becky, Courtney Gaines, Seann William Scott, Lulu Wilson, Mia Goth, Samara Weaving, The Taking of Deborah Logan, Shutter Island, Kevin James, Robert Maillet, Joel McHale, Noble Men, Green Room, Sisu, fuck around and find out films, Dick Grayson, Nightwing, taking joy in the pain of neo-nazi scumbags, Linda Hamilton, Sisu, Marianne, Samuel Bodin, Let Me In, Let The Right One In, Sympathy for the Devil, Nicolas Cage, Joel Kinnaman, laces theory, SHARP, Cobweb, Antony Star, Lizzy Caplan, cosmic treadmill, Kojak, Safe Word for the Safe House, The Sixteen Year Old Samurai, Don't Hate the Player Hate the Gaines, and The Origin of a Future Badass. Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/trickortreatradioJoin our Discord Community: discord.trickortreatradio.comSend Email/Voicemail: mailto:podcast@trickortreatradio.comVisit our website: http://trickortreatradio.comStart your own podcast: https://www.buzzsprout.com/?referrer_id=386Use our Amazon link: http://amzn.to/2CTdZzKFB Group: http://www.facebook.com/groups/trickortreatradioTwitter: http://twitter.com/TrickTreatRadioFacebook: http://facebook.com/TrickOrTreatRadioYouTube: http://youtube.com/TrickOrTreatRadioInstagram: http://instagram.com/TrickorTreatRadioSupport the show
February 23 - March 1, 1985 This week Ken welcomes UK writer (‘Sort Your Head Out - Mental Health Without All The Bollocks'), podcaster (Top Flight Time Machine, The Reset), broadcaster and all around fascinating guy Sam Delaney to the show. Ken and Sam discuss living in London, the suburbs, New Cross, violent cities, how 1985 is EVERYTHING, being the editor of Heat Magazine, the editorial decisions behind what goes on the cover, watercolors, Live Aid, pop music, toys, Glen A. Larson, the history of TV Guide, TV/Radio Times, smoking, Christmas Cigarettes for children, the golden age of "Kids Gone Wild" media, Terrorism on TV, Posh Families, the TV Guide Empire, Kirstie Allie as Gloria Steinem as a Playboy Bunny, being completely confused and perplexed by the TV Guide listings, The Young Ones, US vs UK news, visiting NYC with your Dad, how low it took for the UK to get movies from the US, Christmas movie premiers, James Bond, teenage mini bar raids of beer, how everyone in America seemed rich, ET, the mind blowing concept of pizza delivery, The Damned, boredom, recovering from addiction, The A-Team, how prime time action shows in the US were for children in the UK. 70s UK sci-fi shows, Day of the Triffids, Tripods, The Day After vs. Threads, reassessing Reagan, the horrors of Thatcher, TJ Hooker, Starsky and Hutch, Kojak, sleazy cops, grim 70s cinema, the delusional positivity of 1980s pop culture, time investment, how amazing Sesame St is and was, how TV can help kids, Jim Henson, The Atomic Testing Museum, having a near death experience, Rockford Files, Dukes of Hazard, war games, being judged by your parents, low culture vs high culture, 60s movies in the 80s, how class effects how you view commercials, loving Harold Lloyd, and how TV was the center of the family.
Flula Borg (Pitch Perfect: Bumper in Berlin) joins Andy Richter to discuss childhood obsessions, playing to the room, learning to love affirmations, Kojak vs Kujo, and much more.