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In the penultimate episode of Star Trek: Lower Decks, we get a cornucopia of surprises and plot twists that don't disappoint. "Fissure Quest" is the best, most imaginative, and most entertaining episode of Season Five. We are confronted with the mystery of the dimensional fissures, but with answers, we could have never imagined. Let's not spoil your enjoyment by revealing too many details.Star Trek: Age of Discovery is a fan podcast for the Star Trek Universe, including Classic Trek and the Paramount + shows STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS, STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS, STAR TREK: DISCOVERY, STAR TREK: PICARD, STAR TREK: SHORT TREKS, and Netflix's STAR TREK: PRODIGY.Subscribe to Star Trek: Age of Discovery on Apple Podcast by CLICKING HERE. The show is also available on Amazon Music, Google Podcast, Spotify, Stitcher, TuneIn, and iHeartRADIO.Email the show at startrekaod@gmail.com. Follow us on X/Twitter, Threads, and Instagram @StarTrekAoD and Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/StarTrekAoD/. Visit our website at http://startrekaod.net, where we offer additional articles on Star Trek canon, interesting sidebar issues, and aspects of the show.www.facebook.com/StarTrekAoD/. Visit our website at http://startrekaod.net, offering additional articles on Star Trek canon, interesting sidebar issues, and show elements.2024 © Star Trek: Age of Discovery EPISODE CREDITS:Produced and edited by Gary Anderson LINKSWebsite: startrekaod.netBe sure to follow and tag Star Trek: Age of Discovery on Facebook (https://twitter.com/StarTrekAoD) and Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/startrekaod)!
When it's time to check back in with Captain William Boimler, he's lost his love for hunting quantum fissures and he's fed up with derivative multiverse characters. But when a two-pip Harry Kim shows up on board the Anaximander, it's an alternate Mustard Mariner with the engineering skills to save the day. Who enjoyed colonoscopy prep more? When did movie trailers change forever? What's the name of Starfleet's official support garment? It's the episode that's blowing minds and blowing assholes!Support the production of Greatest TrekGet a thing at podshop.biz!Sign up for our mailing list!Greatest Trek is produced by Wynde PriddySocial media is managed by Rob Adler and Bill TilleyMusic by Adam RaguseaFriends of DeSoto for: Labor | Democracy | JusticeDiscuss the show using the hashtag #GreatestTrek and find us on social media:YouTube | Facebook | X | Instagram | TikTok | Mastodon | Bluesky | ThreadsAnd check out these online communities run by FODs: Reddit | USS Hood Discord | Facebook group | Wikia | FriendsOfDeSoto.social
Exploring 'Star Trek: Lower Decks' and Multiverse Madness - Special Cameos and Series Reflections In our latest episode of 'Make It So,' the Star Trek Legacy podcast on the Film Stories Podcast Network, we delve into 'Star Trek: Lower Decks' final season with a deep dive into the episode 'Fissure Quest.' Joined by Kurt North, who takes the captain's chair, and Geoff Owen, We discuss the intriguing cameos, including Lily Sloane, and multiple Harry Kims. We reflect on the season's nostalgic elements, the handling of the multiverse concept, and the ship Anaximander. T Tune in as we also mark a significant change in our journey, with Kurt North stepping down and Geoff Owen taking over the captaincy. 00:00 Welcome to Make It So: Star Trek Legacy Podcast 01:19 Episode Overview and Initial Thoughts 01:42 Cameos and Fan Service 02:51 Season Reflection and Critique 04:45 Nostalgia and Multiverse Discussion 20:33 Cameos Breakdown and Analysis 32:04 Final Thoughts and Farewell to Kurt Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Time capsules and yesterday's dreams of tomorrow, Josie Long presents short documentaries and audio adventures exploring lost futures.That's Merely an Adjective Produced by Zara KarschayTime Play by Chelsea Kigano, Lily Sloane, Lilia Vega, and Emily Shaw Originally made as part of The 24-Hour Radio Race from KCRW's Independent Producer Project Music and sound design by Lily Sloane, with Time Ain't Gonna Make Me Stay by Ed Andrews Special thanks to David LeeLetters Produced by Mika Golubovsky and Sasha Borzenko Featuring Zehnya Feldman and Natasha ZotovaHigher Ground Produced by Leila Goldstein Featuring Winda Safitri, Yoppi and Naya Hidayatul AlialnaCurated by Axel Kacoutié, Eleanor McDowall and Andrea Rangecroft Produced by Axel Kacoutié A Falling Tree production for BBC Radio 4
"David and I met a few months ago, but it feels like it's been so much longer.Sometimes, when we're alone together, we pretend that we're other people, living different lives in completely far away spaces of time. We imagine these characters as ourselves, only slightly different versions. They laugh like us, they smile like us, they even dream like us.How many times can we play this game before we become all that we imagine?" - Chelsea KiganoThis piece was produced in 2020 by Chelsea Kigano, Lily Sloane, Lilia Vega, and Emily Shaw, as part of The 24-Hour Radio Race from KCRW's Independent Producer Project. Music and sound design by Lily Sloane, with "Time Ain't Gonna Make Me Stay" by Ed Andrews from the public domain. Special thanks to David Lee.
Lilia Vega: "About ten years ago, I was inducted into a secret society in my family. The ones who know, and the ones who protect. We are the guardians of the family. The bodies we put between them and Him.He is a dark presence in our family, the man I call grandfather. He sits on the fringes of family gatherings, braying in that low, distinctive voice of his. He's a charming man, but whenever he makes a joke, no one looks at him as they laugh. No one calls him “father.”Is a secret really a secret if everyone knows?"This piece was produced by Chelsea Kigano, Emily Shaw, Lilia Vega, and Lily Sloane, as part of The 24-Hour Radio Race from KCRW's Independent Producer Project in 2019.
What happens when you need someone else to do what you love? (Or at least you feel like you need them?)On this episode of Cozy Boat, we're exploring this question with Spence and Shannon Koehler, the founding brothers of the San Francisco rock band The Stone Foxes!Produced by Emily Shaw and recorded by George S. Rosenthal at the Complex Recording Studio. Editorial support from George S. Rosenthal, Anne Hoffman, Angie Vorhies, Rebecca Williams, Raja Shah, Juliet Hinely, Lily Sloane, the Digging In crew at Duke's Center for Documentary Studies, and SF's Podcast Parlor. Music by The Stone Foxes:Locomotion (Twelve Spells)Stomp (Bears & Bulls)Count Me As One (Twelve Spells)Patience (Bears & Bulls)This Town (Twelve Spells)Through The Fire (Bears & Bulls)Cotto (Small Fires)Little Red Rooster (Bears & Bulls)My Place (Twelve Spells)www.thestonefoxes.comwww.emilyshawcreates.comwww.thecomplex-sf.comWatch Spence and Shannon sing a special Koehler Christmas song in the Cozy Boat here! www.youtube.com/watch?v=DyTRYrsoEd4
Where do songs come from? We're back in the Cozy Boat with Spence and Shannon Koehler, the founding brothers of The Stone Foxes, to get an inside look at their creative process and the back story to a few of their songs!Produced by Emily Shaw and recorded by George S. Rosenthal at the Complex Recording Studio. Editorial support from George S. Rosenthal, Anne Hoffman, Raja Shah, Juliet Hinely, Lily Sloane, the Digging In crew at Duke's Center for Documentary Studies, and SF's Podcast Parlor. Photo by George S. Rosenthal.Music by The Stone Foxes:This Town (Twelve Spells)Ulysses Jones (Small Fires)It Ain't Nothin (Twelve Spells)Everybody Knows (Small Fires)Passenger Train [Acoustic Version] (Bears & Bulls)www.thestonefoxes.comwww.emilyshawcreates.comwww.thecomplex-sf.comWatch Spence and Shannon sing a special Koehler Christmas song in the Cozy Boat here! www.youtube.com/watch?v=DyTRYrsoEd4
Ways to support the show:Buy merch on TeePublic or BonfireMake a one-time or monthly giftShare the show with a friend!Resources:I Need an AOnline Abortion Resource SquadIf/When/How's Repro Legal Helpline and Repro Legal Defense FundFind your local abortion fundLogo by Kate Ryan, theme music by Lily Sloane. Additional music in this episode from Blue Dot Sessions.Have an abortion story you want to share? Send a voice memo or email to accesspodcast(at)protonmail(dot)com. This is a secure email; however, your message will only be fully encrypted from end to end if you also create a free Protonmail account. If you prefer to communicate via Signal, email or DM us on social media for our number.You can also find us on Twitter and Instagram, and don't forget to subscribe!
Ways to support the show:Buy merch on TeePublic or BonfireMake a one-time or monthly giftShare the show with a friend!Past episodes referenced:Episode 15: How Anti-Abortion Doctors and Hospitals Put Pregnant People in DangerEpisode 1: What Actually Happens During an Abortion?Episode 2: COVID-19 and the Divided States of AbortionEpisode 3: The At-Home Abortion RevolutionResources:I Need an APlan CMiscarriage and Abortion HotlineIf/When/How Repro Legal HelplineLogo by Kate Ryan, theme music by Lily Sloane. Photo by Robin Marty.Have an abortion story you want to share? Send a voice memo or email to accesspodcast(at)protonmail(dot)com. This is a secure email; however, your message will only be fully encrypted from end to end if you also create a free Protonmail account. If you prefer to communicate via Signal, email or DM us on social media for our number.You can also find us on Twitter and Instagram, and don't forget to subscribe!
Support the show! Check out our new merch on TeePublic, get a "say the word abortion" hat on Bonfire, or make a one-time or monthly gift.Guests:Jasmine Geonzon, researcher at Media Matters for AmericaSteph Herold, MPH, researcher at Advancing New Standards in Reproductive HealthSources:Abortion Onscreen in 2022 — ANSIRHIn the days after Roe's reversal, the top 5 US papers continue to miss key context about the dire revocation of abortion access — Media MattersHow right-wing media reacted to the Supreme Court overturning Roe v. Wade — Media MattersMurdoch outlets disingenuously claim Kansas abortion vote shows “democracy alive and well” despite steep election obstacles — Media MattersLogo by Kate Ryan, theme music by Lily Sloane. Additional music in this episode from Blue Dot Sessions. Photo via Wikimedia Commons.Have an abortion story you want to share? Send a voice memo or email to accesspodcast(at)protonmail(dot)com. This is a secure email; however, your message will only be fully encrypted from end to end if you also create a free Protonmail account. If you prefer to communicate via Signal, email or DM us on social media for our number.You can also find us on Twitter and Instagram, and don't forget to subscribe!
Wendy does her best to understand her friend John Welles through the daily digital diary he's been keeping.This episode may best be enjoyed with its transcript.---Created by Martin Austwick, with help from Jeff Emtman.With thanks to Tim McSmythurs, Dave Pickering and Lily Sloane.Find us at neutrino.watch and @neutrinowatch on twitterTranscript available at: https://www.dropbox.com/s/ov3ggamee835tzt/You%20can%20really%20get%20to%20know%20someone%20by%20leafing%20through%20their%20diary%20%5BAlmanac%5D_transcript.txt?dl=0
Guest: Jessica Flaum, director of Abortion: Add to Cart.Support the show! Buy merch on TeePublic or Bonfire, or donate.Logo by Kate Ryan, theme music by Lily Sloane. Additional music in this episode from Blue Dot Sessions. Photo courtesy Abortion: Add to Cart.Have an abortion story you want to share? Send a voice memo or email to accesspodcast(at)protonmail(dot)com. This is a secure email; however, your message will only be fully encrypted from end to end if you also create a free Protonmail account. If you prefer to communicate via Signal, email or DM us on social media for our number.You can also find us on Twitter and Instagram, and don't forget to subscribe!
As a child, New Zealand singer-songwriter Marlon Williams believed that if he could nail the songs at iwi or tribe gatherings then surely everything in the world would be ok. Nevermind that elders were discussing big issues such as Maori land rights, water rights and education, Marlon had an inate believe in the virtues of song and his vocal prowess as a singer. Indeed his voice is something to behold — a melismatic, velvety croon that can register as Roy Orbison or Elvis. And before the release of his latest album My Boy, it could be said that it's a voice more comfortable in a different era or genre or part of the world, but after this third record — it's clearly a voice that transcends all of it. Marlon can raid the chest of drawers on any musical era and come up with a piece of art that is contemporary because it speaks to current afflictions in a knowing way, uniquely framed by his indegenuity and wry, humor.Many thanks for making this possible — Marlon for a great psych session, both times! To Dead Oceans for use of all Master Recordings. Native Tongue for Publishing rights. And Jessica Linker at Pitch Perfect PR for all the added support. Thank you to Lily Sloane for additional music and Martin Austwick for additional sound engineering.Songs Featured: "River Rival," "Hello Miss Lonesome," "Dark Child," "Strange Things," "Make Way For Love," "Nobody Gets What They Want Anymore," "My Boy," "My Heart Is A Wormhole," "Princes Walk," "Thinking Of Nina," "Don't Go Back" and "Easy Does It."To share your thoughts on this episode, email: celine.teoblockey@undertheradarmag.com Or leave a voice message here. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Guests:Nikki Lewis, birth mom and advocateSusan, adoptee and writerGretchen Sisson, PhD, sociologist at Advancing New Standards in Reproductive HealthCheck out our new merch option—baseball caps! (This link is different from our regular merch store.)Support the show! Buy merch or donate.This episode is brought to you by OVID, an independent streaming service offering a huge collection of documentaries and contemporary world cinema. This month, OVID has released a special collection of hard-to-find documentaries chronicling the fight for abortion rights over the past fifty years, in the context of the rise of right-wing Christianity in politics, and in the law. OVID is offering ACCESS listeners a special discount offer. Get 50% off the regular monthly membership price of $6.99 if you use promo code ACCESS at checkout! Visit www.ovid.tv to subscribe.Logo by Kate Ryan, theme music by Lily Sloane. Additional music in this episode from Blue Dot Sessions. Photo courtesy Nikki Lewis.Have an abortion story you want to share? Send a voice memo or email to accesspodcast(at)protonmail(dot)com. This is a secure email; however, your message will only be fully encrypted from end to end if you also create a free Protonmail account. If you prefer to communicate via Signal, email or DM us on social media for our number.You can also find us on Twitter and Instagram, and don't forget to subscribe!
Note: This episode states that abortion is banned in Louisiana. However, as of about 6pm on July 12, a court has blocked the state's trigger ban, allowing abortion services to resume for now.Where are clinics open?Guttmacher: State abortion policies post-RoeI Need an AAbortion FinderInformation about abortion pillsPlan CSupport independent clinicsKeep Our ClinicsWest Alabama Women's Center (staying open in AL)Desert Star Family Planning (staying open in AZ)Partners in Abortion Care (new clinic in MD)Whole Woman's Health (moving from TX to NM)Red River Women's Clinic (moving from ND to MN)Jackson Women's Health Organization (moving from MS to NM)Abortion FundsNational Network of Abortion FundsList of abortion funds by statePractical support networksHaven CoalitionApiary for Practical SupportCriminalizationIf/When/HowRepro Legal Defense FundDigital securityDigital Defense Fund Guide to Abortion PrivacySupport the show! Buy merch or donate.Have an abortion story you want to share? Send a voice memo or email to accesspodcast(at)protonmail(dot)com. This is a secure email; however, your message will only be fully encrypted from end to end if you also create a free Protonmail account. If you prefer to communicate via Signal, email or DM us on social media for our number.Logo by Kate Ryan. Theme music by Lily Sloane. Additional music in this episode from Blue Dot Sessions. Photo by Robin Marty.You can also find us on Twitter and Instagram, and don't forget to subscribe!
This reporting was supported by the International Women's Media Foundation's Reproductive Rights Reporting Fund. A written version of the story appears online and in print in The Nation: “What This Later-Abortion Story Tells Us About a Post-Roe Future.”Guests:Kristyn Smith, We Testify abortion storytellerCaroline Kitchener, political reporter for The Washington Post (Byron Calhoun says abortion is never necessary to save a mother's life. He's the only high-risk OB/GYN in central West Virginia.)Dr. Matthew Reeves, founder and executive director of Dupont ClinicDr. Debra Stulberg, associate professor of family medicine at the University of Chicago Medicine and director of the Reproductive Health Outcomes and Disparities Research GroupSupport the show! Buy merch or donate.Music by Lily Sloane, logo by Kate Ryan. Photo courtesy Smith.Have an abortion story you want to share? Contact accesspodcast(at)protonmail(dot)com.You can also find us on Twitter and Instagram, and don't forget to subscribe!
Guest:Dr. Iman Alsaden, medical director of Planned Parenthood Great PlainsResources:Roe Fund (Oklahoma Abortion Fund)Abortion FinderI Need an AAid AccessPlan CIf/When/How Repro Legal HelplineMiscarriage + Abortion HotlineDigital Defense Fund guides for online safety and privacyNational Abortion Federation hotline (abortion referrals and financial assistance)How to Show Up For Abortion Access by Alison TurkosSupport the show! Buy merch or donate.Logo by Kate Ryan, theme music by Lily Sloane. Additional music in this episode from Blue Dot Sessions.Have an abortion story you want to share? Contact accesspodcast(at)protonmail(dot)com.You can also find us on Twitter and Instagram, and don't forget to subscribe!
Co-moderated by ACCESS and Reproductive Transparency Now.Panelists:Dázon Dixon Diallo, MPH: Founder and President of SisterLove, the first women-centered HIV and sexual and reproductive health organization in the SoutheastAimee Registe, Esq.: Policy and Advocacy Program Manager at SisterLoveAndrea Swartzendruber, PhD, MPH: Associate Professor in the Epidemiology and Biostatistics Department in the College of Public Health at the University of Georgia and Co-Founder of CPC MapDanielle Lambert, PhD, MPH: Assistant Professor in the Epidemiology and Biostatistics Department in the College of Public Health at the University of Georgia and Co-Founder of CPC MapMaleeha Aziz: Community Organizer at Texas Equal Access (TEA) Fund and Abortion Storyteller with We TestifyResources:How to Show Up For Abortion Access by Alison TurkosSupport the show! Buy merch or donate.Logo by Kate Ryan, music by Lily Sloane.Have an abortion story you want to share? Contact accesspodcast(at)protonmail(dot)com.You can also find us on Twitter and Instagram, and don't forget to subscribe!
Alex and Rose are podcasters with a deep and unusual relationship to Gus Hommes' music. Their podcast “Gus by Gus” explores the structure, politics, biography and spirituality of a different Gus Hommes song every day - for what might feel like an eternity.---Created by Lily Sloane and Martin Austwick, with help from Jeff Emtman.With thanks to Sam Pay of @songbysongpodFind us at neutrino.watch and @neutrinowatch on twitterTranscript available at: https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/s/y8bznxzb8h5lyn7/Gus%20by%20Gus%20-%20Musings%20and%20Magic%20%5BCartomancy%5D_transcript.txt?dl=0
Guests:Anise Simon, Maleeha Aziz, and Nick, We Testify storytellersRev. Dr. Serene Jones, president, Union Theological SeminaryRafa Kidvai, director, Repro Legal Defense FundRabbi Salem Pearce, executive director, Carolina Jews for Justice; counselor, Faith AloudLauren Morrissey, co-executive director and co-founder, Student Coalition for Reproductive Justice; administrative associate, Catholics for ChoiceRev. Aaron Payson, minister, Unitarian Universalist Church of Worcester; former board member, Religious Coalition for Reproductive ChoiceKristin Hady, clinic escort; community engagement coordinator, Abortion Access FrontSupport the show! Buy merch or donate.Photos courtesy We Testify. Logo by Kate Ryan, theme music by Lily Sloane. Additional music in this episode from Blue Dot Sessions.Have an abortion story you want to share? Contact accesspodcast(at)protonmail(dot)com.You can also find us on Twitter and Instagram, and don't forget to subscribe!
Guests:Hillary Schneller, senior staff attorney at the Center for Reproductive RightsDr. DeShawn Taylor, founder and owner of Desert Star Family PlanningAnd: Kelsey Ryland, Elizabeth Nash, Amber Gavin, Jessy Rosales, Kimberly McGuire, Jeryl Hayes, Josie Pinto, Julie Jenkins, Amy Hagstrom Miller, Jacqueline Ayers, Kathaleen Pittman, Tammi Kromenaker, Karli Vanzile, Erin Grant, Amanda Hambrick AshcraftResources:Abortion Care Network: Communities Need ClinicsSupport the show! Buy merch or donate.Logo by Kate Ryan, theme music by Lily Sloane. Photo by Robin Marty.Have an abortion story you want to share? Contact accesspodcast(at)protonmail(dot)com.You can also find us on Twitter and Instagram, and don't forget to subscribe!
Guest: Josie Pinto, executive director of Reproductive Freedom Fund of New Hampshire.Listener-submitted audio from Alexx Noumena of Tampa Bay Abortion Fund, Angela Vega, and Asha Dahya.Read about Black women-led Hoochies of Houston and their experience with Women's March organizers on Twitter.Logo by Kate Ryan, theme music by Lily Sloane. Photo by Robin Marty.Support the show! Buy merch or donate.Logo by Kate Ryan, theme music by Lily Sloane. Photo by Robin Marty.Have an abortion story you want to share? Contact accesspodcast(at)protonmail(dot)com.You can also find us on Twitter and Instagram, and don't forget to subscribe!
Guest: Elizabeth Nash, principal policy associate for state issues, Guttmacher InstituteResources:If Roe v. Wade Falls: Travel Distances for People Seeking Abortion26 States Are Certain or Likely to Ban Abortion Without Roe: Here's Which Ones and WhySupreme Court oral arguments livestreamSupreme Court Cases: Abortion and ContraceptionSupport the show! Buy merch or donate.Logo by Kate Ryan, theme music by Lily Sloane. Photo by Robin Marty.Have an abortion story you want to share? Contact accesspodcast(at)protonmail(dot)com.You can also find us on Twitter and Instagram, and don't forget to subscribe!
The SyFy Sistas look at the special relationship Captain Jean-Luc Picard maintains with three amazing Black women; Guinan, the El-Aurian bartender from his days on the Enterprise-D, Lily Sloane from his temporal incursion in the film Star Trek: First Contact (1996), and Raffaela (Raffi) Musiker, XO during his command of the Romulan evacuation and later his quest companion in the series Picard. These three women have the ear of the Captain of the Enterprise D and E, the flagship of the Federation fleet, the Chief Contact with the Q Continuum, the Arbiter of Succession for the Klingon Empire, the Savior of Earth from the Borg Invasion, the face of the United Federation of Planets, and a few other things that only Yvette calls him. Our discussion ranges from their conversational styles to our appreciation of the TWA over ugly-ass wigs. But wait until you hear what Fran saw coming that no other SyFy Sista did. We give a special shout out to our sound engineer DoS, the Anonymous. Find him at dostheanonymous1@gmail.com You can find the SyFy Sistas online at syfysistas.com Facebook @SyFy Sistas Twitter: @SyfySistas Instagram: @syfy.sistas And of course, www.trekgeeks.com/syfysistas
The SyFy Sistas look at the special relationship Captain Jean-Luc Picard maintains with three amazing Black women; Guinan, the El-Aurian bartender from his days on the Enterprise-D, Lily Sloane from his temporal incursion in the film Star Trek: First Contact (1996), and Raffaela (Raffi) Musiker, XO during his command of the Romulan evacuation and later his quest companion in the series Picard. These three women have the ear of the Captain of the Enterprise D and E, the flagship of the Federation fleet, the Chief Contact with the Q Continuum, the Arbiter of Succession for the Klingon Empire, the Savior of Earth from the Borg Invasion, the face of the United Federation of Planets, and a few other things that only Yvette calls him. Our discussion ranges from their conversational styles to our appreciation of the TWA over ugly-ass wigs. But wait until you hear what Fran saw coming that no other SyFy Sista did. We give a special shout out to our sound engineer DoS, the Anonymous. Find him at dostheanonymous1@gmail.com You can find the SyFy Sistas online at syfysistas.com Facebook @SyFy Sistas Twitter: @SyfySistas Instagram: @syfy.sistas And of course, www.trekgeeks.com/syfysistas
Resources for in-clinic and self-managed abortion:I Need an Aneedabortion.orgAid AccessPlan CIf/When/How Repro Legal HelplineMiscarriage + Abortion HotlineTexas Abortion Funds:Buckle Bunnies FundLilith FundTEA FundFrontera FundFund Texas ChoiceJane's Due ProcessClinic Access Support NetworkWest FundThe Afiya CenterThe Bridge CollectiveWhole Woman's Health Alliance Stigma Relief Fund50% of proceeds from ACCESS merch sales this week go to Texas abortion funds. You can also donate to support the show.Have a question or an abortion story you want to share? Contact accesspodcast(at)protonmail(dot)com.Logo by Kate Ryan, theme music by Lily Sloane.Find us on Twitter and Instagram, and don't forget to subscribe and share the show!
Guests:Sam Romero, We Testify storytellerAndrea Swartzendruber, PhD, MPH, associate professor at the University of Georgia College of Public Health and co-creator of the CPC MapAmy Hagstrom Miller, president and CEO of Whole Woman's Health and Whole Woman's Health AllianceMarc Hearron, senior counsel at the Center for Reproductive RightsSupport the show! Buy merch or donate.Logo by Kate Ryan, theme music by Lily Sloane. Photo by Robin Marty.Have an abortion story you want to share? Contact accesspodcast(at)protonmail(dot)com.You can also find us on Twitter and Instagram, and don't forget to subscribe!
Guest: Julia Kaye, staff attorney with the ACLU Reproductive Freedom ProjectSupport the show! Logo by Kate Ryan, theme music by Lily Sloane. Photo by Robin Marty.Have an abortion story you want to share? Contact accesspodcast(at)protonmail(dot)com.You can also find us on Twitter and Instagram, and don't forget to subscribe!
Support the show! Guests:Elizabeth Nash, principal policy associate for state issues, Guttmacher InstituteKamyon Conner, executive director, TEA FundVirginia State Senator Jennifer McClellanMore resources:Guttmacher state policy midyear trends reportTxPEP research brief on SB8Logo by Kate Ryan, theme music by Lily Sloane. Photo by Robin Marty.
Crazy, insane, nuts, mad, bonkers, psycho, schizo, OCD - casual vocabulary is strewn with mental health terms, but perhaps shouldn't be? Psychotherapist and podcaster Lily Sloane talks about what we're really saying when we use such words. Content note: in the second half of the show there is some mention of eating disorders. So if that's not what you need to hear about today, tap out at the ad break. There's more about this episode, and a transcript, at theallusionist.org/mind-my-mind. The music is by Martin Austwick. Hear Martin's own songs at palebirdmusic.com or search for Pale Bird on Bandcamp and Spotify, and he's @martinaustwick on Twitter and Instagram. Sign up to be a patron at patreon.com/allusionist by the end of June 2021, and I'll record the word or phrase of your choice to use as your phone alert or alarm! The Allusionist's online home is theallusionist.org. Stay in touch at twitter.com/allusionistshow, facebook.com/allusionists how and instagram.com/allusionistshow. Our ad partner is Multitude. To sponsor an episode of the show, contact them at multitude.productions/ads. This episode is sponsored by: • Acorn TV, the streaming service featuring hundreds of dramas, mysteries and comedies from around the world. Try Acorn TV free for 30 days, by going to Acorn.TV and using my promo code allusionist. (Be sure to type that code in lower case.) • Bombas, makers of the most comfortable socks in the history of feet - and super-smooth undies and T-shirts too. Shop their Pride collection and give a piece of clothing for each one you buy, PLUS get 20 percent off your first purchase at bombas.com/allusionist. • BetterHelp, online therapy with licensed professional counsellors. Allusionist listeners get 10% off your first month at betterhelp.com/allusionist. Support the show: http://patreon.com/allusionist See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
We hear some tape that didn't make it to the James Yorkston & The Second Hand Orchestra episode. And speak to Lily Sloane, an artist and therapist who we thought could speak uniquely to the relationship between art and mental health. What we weren't expecting was the deeper significance that songs such as "Struggle" and "Choices Like Wide Rivers" have for her. For more news on Lily's sound design and composing work follow her @lilyrosesloane on Twitter. Or check out her website lilymakessound.com. Here's the link for Lily's podcast A Therapist Walks Into A Bar. For her solo album We Find Our Demons and her Pale Bird collaboration I told You How Important You Would Be, please head to her Bandcamp page. And here's Martin Austwick's Tom Wait's podcast Song By Song.Write us an Apple Podcast review or if you prefer to share your thoughts with us via email, please drop us a line at celine.teoblockey@undertheradarmag.com — and you might be featured on the podcast. Get your latest print copy of Under the Radar magazine here. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Waves move through this story, somewhat governed by the gravitational action of the moon. That means at certain times of the month, some parts are going to be submerged, unfortunately. That's just what happens when you write a piece involving the sea. I can't stand around shouting at it like a podcaster version of Canute. It won't make any difference. [Created by Martin Austwick with help from Jeff Emtman With thanks to Lily Sloane and Ross SutherlandFind us at neutrino.watch and @neutrinowatch on twitter]
Welcome to Skyjazz! Each night, Wendy and John broadcast live from a stadium in a different city of the world to tell you all about the stars and planets you can see above your heads - and, as ever, we start the show with a listener question!---Created by Martin Austwick based on an original idea by Jeff Emtman. With thanks to Lily Sloane.Find us at neutrino.watch and @neutrinowatch on twitter.Episode Transcript: https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/s/1t7sp7curijn2ep/Wendy%2C%20Watch%20The%20Stars%20%5BAlmanac%5D_transcript.txt?dl=0
Support the show! Guests:Abby Johnson (no, not that one)Yamani Hernandez, executive director of the National Network of Abortion FundsKelsey Ryland, co-director of the All* Above All abortion coverage campaignLogo by Kate Ryan, theme music by Lily Sloane. Photos courtesy All* Above All.Have an abortion story you want to share? Contact accesspodcast(at)protonmail(dot)com.You can also find us on Twitter and Instagram, and don't forget to subscribe!
Support the show! New Handbook for a Post-Roe AmericaWest Alabama Women’s CenterYellowhammer FundLogo by Kate Ryan, music by Lily Sloane.Have an abortion story you want to share? Contact accesspodcast(at)protonmail(dot)com.You can also find us on Twitter and Instagram, and don't forget to subscribe!
Support the show! Guests:Layidua and Sarah, We Testify abortion storytellersCorinne Rocca, PhD, epidemiologist at the University of California San Francisco and researcher on the Turnaway StudyNorthwestern Professor Katie Watson, lawyer, bioethicist, and author of Scarlet ASpecial thanks to Renee Bracey Sherman of We Testify. Logo by Kate Ryan, music by Lily Sloane.Have an abortion story you want to share? Contact accesspodcast(at)protonmail(dot)com.You can also find us on Twitter and Instagram, and don't forget to subscribe!
Support the show! Guests:Kayla Winston, We Testify abortion storyteller (read more about Kayla’s experience here)Diana Greene Foster, PhD, professor and demographer at the University of California, San Francisco (Turnaway Study website and book)Logo by Kate Ryan, music by Lily Sloane.Have an abortion story you want to share? Contact accesspodcast(at)protonmail(dot)com.You can also find us on Twitter and Instagram, and don't forget to subscribe!
Support the show! The Abortion ProjectAbortion Intentions Care PlanWhat’s in our abortion doula bags?Logo by Kate Ryan, music by Lily Sloane, photos courtesy The Abortion Project.Have an abortion story you want to share? Contact accesspodcast@protonmail.com.You can also find us on Twitter and Instagram, and don't forget to subscribe!
Support the show! Guest: Molly Shah, Anti-Abortion Protesters Get Special Treatment from Police, The Real NewsLogo by Kate Ryan, Music by Lily Sloane, photo by Robin Marty.Have an abortion story you want to share? Contact accesspodcast@protonmail.com.You can also find us on Twitter and Instagram, and don't forget to subscribe!
Col turns up the heat on Nicoletta and forces her to confront her actions. Sarah and Col make plans. Sarah is Lily Lammers. Nicoletta is Melissa J Lackie. Col is Andrew Oakes. Written and directed by Sword and Spells Productions. Produced and edited by Audiohm Media. Theme music by Lily Sloane. Learn more at https://www.nickedpod.com/ or on our twitter, @nickedpod. Transcript: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ypgat1Jgyh-luKcFkbzNGursxQSLYJY5pJP4tfZO2X8/edit?usp=sharing
Sarah reckons with the consequences of Nicki's choice. Col celebrates a job well done. Sarah is Lily Lammers. Nicki is Melissa J Lackie. Col is Andrew Oakes. Written and directed by Sword and Spells Productions. Produced and edited by Audiohm Media. Theme music by Lily Sloane. Learn more at https://www.nickedpod.com/ or on our twitter, @nickedpod. Transcript: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ypgat1Jgyh-luKcFkbzNGursxQSLYJY5pJP4tfZO2X8/edit?usp=sharing
Nicki and Sarah are forced to relive the disastrous Halloween from months before. Nicki makes a decision. Sarah is Lily Lammers. Nicki is Melissa J Lackie. Col is Andrew Oakes. Written and directed by Sword and Spells Productions. Produced and edited by Audiohm Media. Theme music by Lily Sloane. Learn more at https://www.nickedpod.com/ or on our twitter, @nickedpod. Transcript: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ypgat1Jgyh-luKcFkbzNGursxQSLYJY5pJP4tfZO2X8/edit?usp=sharing
Col and Nicki have a chat. Sarah visits Nicki's home for the first time. Sarah is Lily Lammers. Nicki is Melissa J Lackie. Col is Andrew Oakes. Written and directed by Sword and Spells Productions. Produced and edited by Audiohm Media. Theme music by Lily Sloane. Learn more at https://www.nickedpod.com/ or on our twitter, @nickedpod. Transcript: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ypgat1Jgyh-luKcFkbzNGursxQSLYJY5pJP4tfZO2X8/edit?usp=sharing
A visit to the mall reveals more about the girls' shared past and stirs up memories they'd rather forget. Sarah is Lily Lammers. Nicoletta is Melissa J Lackie. Col is Andrew Oakes. Written and directed by Sword and Spells Productions. Produced and edited by Audiohm Media. Theme music by Lily Sloane. Learn more at https://www.nickedpod.com/ or on our twitter, @nickedpod. Transcript: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ypgat1Jgyh-luKcFkbzNGursxQSLYJY5pJP4tfZO2X8/edit?usp=sharing
Sarah gets a taste of revenge. The girls revisit their first meeting. Sarah is Lily Lammers. Nicoletta is Melissa J Lackie. Col is Andrew Oakes. Written and directed by Sword and Spells Productions. Produced and edited by Audiohm Media. Theme music by Lily Sloane. Learn more at https://www.nickedpod.com/ or on our twitter, @nickedpod. Transcript: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ypgat1Jgyh-luKcFkbzNGursxQSLYJY5pJP4tfZO2X8/edit?usp=sharing
A mandatory sleepover leads the girls into having a long overdue conversation. Sarah is Lily Lammers. Nicki is Melissa J Lackie. Col is Andrew Oakes. Written and directed by Sword and Spells Productions. Produced and edited by Audiohm Media. Theme music by Lily Sloane. Learn more at https://www.nickedpod.com/ or on our twitter, @nickedpod. Transcript: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ypgat1Jgyh-luKcFkbzNGursxQSLYJY5pJP4tfZO2X8/edit?usp=sharing
The girls enter Col's carnival for an afternoon of fun and games, but Sarah begins to feel uneasy about the situation. Sarah is Lily Lammers. Nicoletta is Melissa J Lackie. Col is Andrew Oakes. Written and directed by Sword and Spells Productions. Produced and edited by Audiohm Media. Theme music by Lily Sloane. Learn more at https://www.nickedpod.com/ or on our twitter, @nickedpod. Transcript: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ypgat1Jgyh-luKcFkbzNGursxQSLYJY5pJP4tfZO2X8/edit?usp=sharing
A week before Winter Break, former best friends Sarah and Nicoletta find themselves caught by Col--a Winter faerie on a mission to make Nicoletta see the error of her ways through magical means. Sarah is Lily Lammers. Nicoletta is Melissa J Lackie. Col is Andrew Oakes. Written and directed by Sword and Spells Productions. Produced and edited by Audiohm Media. Theme music by Lily Sloane. Learn more at https://www.nickedpod.com/ or on our twitter, @nickedpod. Transcript: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ypgat1Jgyh-luKcFkbzNGursxQSLYJY5pJP4tfZO2X8/edit?usp=sharing
Support the show! Guests:Miranda, TexasLarada, OhioSarah, OregonSpecial thanks to We Testify and Fund Texas Choice for connecting us with two of our guests. Logo by Kate Ryan, theme music by Lily Sloane. Additional music in this episode from Blue Dot Sessions. Photo by Robin Marty.Have an abortion story you want to share? Contact accesspodcast@protonmail.com.You can also find us on Twitter and Instagram, and don't forget to subscribe!
Since childhood, Nicoletta Nowell and Sarah Locke were inseparable. But the start of eighth grade marked Nicoletta's sudden transformation from best friend to relentless bully with seemingly no cause. Come December, Sarah is resigned to the new state of affairs until she is swept up in a plot to straighten her bully out by Colzsákos—a Christmas faerie of the Holly Court, specializing in reforming naughty children. It seems like a dream come true, but is Col as ‘good' as he seems, and can his reformation methods be trusted? A little Mean Girls, a little A Christmas Carol, and a little Labyrinth, Nicked is a holiday faerie tale about good kids, bad kids, and best friendship gone cold. The full season premieres December 17th. Sarah is Lily Lammers. Nicoletta is Melissa J Lackey. Col is Andrew Oakes. Written and directed by Sword and Spells Productions. Produced and edited by Audiohm Media. Theme music by Lily Sloane. Learn more at https://www.nickedpod.com/ or on our twitter, @nickedpod.
Support the show!Guests:Calla Hales, executive director of A Preferred Women’s Health CenterHeather Mobley and Jessica Thomas of Charlotte for ChoiceKim Gibson and Derenda Hancock of Pinkhouse Defenders and We EngageLara Chelian of Northland Family PlanningElena Salisbury, abortion clinic escort in NebraskaSteph Black, abortion clinic escort in Washington, D.C.L and S, abortion clinic escorts in New JerseyMusic by Lily Sloane, logo by Kate Ryan, photo by Robin Marty. Special thanks to Charlotte for Choice and We Engage for audio from the field. Transcript available on our website.You can also find us on Twitter and Instagram, and don't forget to subscribe!
In this episode of Para BFF Alice Knows Karate, a dark-pop artist from San Francisco, tells us about the roots of her interest in the occult and about the very real truth that meditation is magickal.In 2019, Alice Knows Karate released an album called Fablewave, an album that takes these roots and gives them a soundtrack.Featured Alice Knows Karate song: She's Got Legs, You Idiot. Enjoying the show? Please support BFF.FM with a donation. Big thanks to Lily Sloane, Amanda Guest, and obviously Keiko aka Alice Knows Karate.Backtrack is Brewing Potions by Rafael Kru. Check out the full archives on the website.
Across the past 5 episodes of this podcast, I’ve shared interviews and performances from our radio archives in the context of this experience we’re now collectively living through and how music and community can be something precious to hold onto in devastating and uncertain times.For the final episode of the season, I'm excited to share another aspect of the BFF community: intimate musical performances, featuring local artists, that pull at our heartstrings and pull us in close together. We used to do them live in person and now they’re happening online every month.Hosting these streams are station founder Amanda Guest and Erika Delgado, AKA DJ Space Abuela, who is BFF.fm's event director and organizer of our monthly "Besties Bashes". Erika is BFF's beloved abuela, clown, and now, with their new podcast PARA BFF, playing the roll of paranormal investigator.They join me in sharing some sweet, funny, moving performances from our virtual Bestie's Bashes, talk about why representation matters, and talk about why the invitation to get weird and play is essential. Enjoying the show? Please support BFF.FM with a donation. Bands/Musicians featured in this episode include: Maggie Gently, Boy Scouts, Night Jars, Maya Songbird, Tyler Holmes, and Practicing SincerityListen to Abuela's Pantry on BFF.fm Fridays 2-4pm and find PARA BFF here.This episode was edited and produced by Lily Sloane.Theme tune by Lily Sloane. Check out the full archives on the website.
Support the show!Guest: Dr. Meera Shah, chief medical officer of Planned Parenthood Hudson Peconic and author of You're The Only One I've Told.This conversation was originally streamed as part of the EstroGenius Festival on October 24, 2020.Music by Lily Sloane, logo by Kate Ryan.You can also find us on Twitter and Instagram, and don't forget to subscribe!
In 2019 SAD13 completed what would be their sophomore album, an album that takes spooky themes as a way to cope with grief and mental illness. Haunted Painting was released on Sadie Dupuis's (SAD13) label Wax Nine and produced by Illuminati Hotties' Sarah Tudzin. An album that tackles themes of not wanting to go outside, dreaming of what could have been, death, ghosts, and isolation. An album that is perfect for 2020 when the creators had no clue 2020 would be the year of isolation and manifested poltergeists.SAD13 has been the indie scene's spooky queen, and so they were the perfect none local musician to talk about weird stuff with. In this podcast, we learn about some personal ghosts, weird owls, and how bros need to stop screaming at ghosts. Please stop screaming at up, we're already dead.Featured SAD13 songs: Ghost of a Good Time, WTD, Hysterical, all from the brand new album Haunted Painting. Enjoying the show? Please support BFF.FM with a donation. Special thanks to Sadie Dupuis, Wax Nine, Terror Bird Media.Always, thank you Lily Sloane and Amanda Guest.Backtrack is Brewing Potions by Rafael Kru. Check out the full archives on the website.
Frank launches a bid to become an edgy comedian by telling eighteen jokes about being arrested. This week’s guest is the multi-talented and endlessly interesting Martin Zaltz Austwick, AKA Pale Bird. Martin’s new album is a collaboration with singer/songwriter Lily Sloane called I Told You How Important You Would Be. Martin talks about the process of recording the album from opposite sides of the Atlantic Ocean. He also tells Frank about recording the album, Year of The Bird, while travelling the world, and the experience of analysing every single Tom Waits song for the Song By Song podcast. (Martin’s also a podcasting legend, by the way.) Featuring the songs Personal Space, The Cascade Mountains and Pocket Full of Bones. Everything you need to know about Martin Zaltz Austwick & Pale Bird: https://martinzaltzaustwick.wordpress.com/ https://palebirdmusic.wordpress.com/ https://palebird.bandcamp.com/ Also check out Lily Sloane: https://lilysloane.bandcamp.com/releases Other music: Lee Rosevere - Going In Circles: https://leerosevere.bandcamp.com/ Theme tune: ProleteR - April Showers: https://proleter.bandcamp.com Frank’s website: www.frankburton.co.uk Frank’s email: fjb79@hotmail.com See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In March, the BFF studio, like almost everything else, closed down. But the shows went on with DJ’s broadcasting from home.Just this past week, with community support, BFF created a pop up studio at San Francisco’s Ferry Building, where guests can safely join DJ’s through a window and listeners can stop by and say hello. The visibility is really exciting and brings us out into the world which is...insert long deep sigh ...much needed.Something so many BFF DJ’s miss is the ability to sit in our quirky studio in the Mission and talk about music with fellow DJ’s, musicians, and friends. I can’t tell you how many hours I spent in that magical little space, designed like a Jules Verne-esque cozy library on the inside of an explorer’s wrecked ship. Each week I discovered new details in a book spine or curio on the shelf, while feeling the joy of sharing ideas, music, and space with other humans I really like. This place felt like home to so many of us and, by extension, our listeners could join us there across the ether.Sometimes, with guitar chords and auxiliary cables spinning spider webs in the space, we even had live performances on air - imagine a miniaturized NPR Tiny Desk show.In July 2019, Ben Ward, host of No Magic Radio, had one such performance by Oakland musician Cara Esten, who releases music as Rusty Sunsets.On her album Disambiguation Station, Cara breaks from her own traditions both musically and conceptually. Built around a self-imposed creative constraint, the album demonstrates that even when artists seek to move away from the familiar, we still discover our core personal themes calling out to us within the new terrain.In No Magic fashion, the conversation flows with reverie through history lessons, self-discovery, climate change, apocalypse, love, and longing for a sense of home. Listening, I’m reminded of the adage “wherever you go, there you are.”Music––whether listening or creating––is its own kind of travel, through time and space. It’s a conversation between the deeply personal and the worlds and histories we inhabit.But first, we have to get all the wires sorted out. Enjoying the show? Please support BFF.FM with a donation. Find Disambiguation and more from Rusty Sunsets here. Listen to No Magic Radio on BFF.fm, Tuesdays 8-10pm.This episode was edited and produced by Lily Sloane.Theme tune by Lily Sloane. Check out the full archives on the website.
Note: this episode includes discussion of pregnancy loss.Support the show!Guests:Christina TaylorDr. Warren Hern of Boulder Abortion ClinicHK GrayBriana McLennanDr. Valerie PetersonJenn ChalifouxOther links from the episode:Summary of research on later abortion from Ibis Reproductive HealthTEA Fund’s Post Abortion Truth and Healing group and other resourcesThe Brigid AllianceThe Turnaway StudySpecial thanks to We Testify and Patient Forward. Music by Lily Sloane, logo by Kate Ryan. Transcript available on our website.Do you have a story about abortion during the pandemic? I want to hear it! Email or send a voice memo to accesspodcast@protonmail.com. You can remain anonymous.You can also find us on Twitter and Instagram, and don't forget to subscribe!
I think it’s fair to say, a community is only as healthy and thriving as its arts scene, just as our personal health depends on our ability to express ourselves across a broad emotional spectrum as part of the larger socio-political conversation––maybe just as much as we need vitamin c to ward off scurvy. I know for me art, community, and the places those two intersect are what drive my will to survive such challenging times.Since this season is all about shining a light on some wonderful artists who’ve visited our live shows and the DJ’s who’ve interviewed them, we’d be remiss not to include this January 2018 interview with Bay Area music legend John Vanderslice.Besides making a ton of music, John is the owner of Tiny Telephone, a recording studio he founded in 1997. Sadly, the San Francisco space closed this past July. But his Oakland studio is alive and well.This interview takes us on a tour of some of the challenges and joys of creating a space that’s become so important to the indie music scene in the Bay Area and well beyond. How do you hold onto your values to have a fair and equitable organization that supports artists in one of the most expensive cities in the world?John sat down in the studio with DJ Nino MSK of Espresso Sesh and what resulted was an engrossing conversation about music, politics, gentrification, community, and mental health.Since this interview, John Vanderslice moved to LA, as he was already dreaming of doing back in 2018. But Tiny Telephone is still operating in Oakland so we didn’t lose everything. Enjoying the show? Please support BFF.FM with a donation. Listen to/purchase John Vanderslice's newest EP, Eeeeeeep!Listen to Espresso Sesh Tuesdays 2-4pm.This episode was edited and produced by Johnathon Sosa and Lily Sloane.Theme tune by Lily Sloane."Song For Leopold" used with permission from John Vanderslice. Check out the full archives on the website.
I love the broad range of music our DJ’s so lovingly share with us on their shows at BFF. I’ve heard music I wouldn’t have discovered on my own, either because it’s of a genre I don’t normally listen to or the artist is deep underground. Community radio like this helps turn that whispered word of mouth into something just audible so I can learn about all these interesting people who throw themselves into their unique and personal musical expressions. I feel lucky to not only hear their music, but to also hear about their lives and artistic processes.SAHAB is a prolific Iranian-American electronic music producer and painter in the Bay Area.Being a local doesn’t have to limit you to one place though. SAHAB grew up splitting his time between Fresno and Iran. With influences ranging from Dervish poetry to 90’s grunge, his work can be seen as both a celebration and reconciliation of multifaceted aspects of the self that transcend one home or cultural experience.For this episode, let’s get in the time machine and travel to the before before times of November 5th, 2016 when Zuha Khan, AKA DJ Baqvas, invited SAHAB onto her show, Fractal Chambers, to talk about multiculturalism and art. I don’t know about you, but I’d like to just let my mind settle in this other place and time for a bit. Since this interview, SAHAB has continued on his quest to tell us his truth. For his self-titled seventh album, he’s joined with UK based label Zabte Sote, which keeps a unique focus on experimental electronic music from Iranian composers. His single, MOCHA, is available now and the whole album is available for preorder on Zabte Sote's Bandcamp.DJ Baqvas does such a great job creating a show with incredible depth and breadth, introducing us to music from all over the world. There’s something special about bridging a focus on local indie music with a global one, especially because many of the things we face, like our current pandemic reality, climate change, and white supremacy, affect the whole world. Shrinking the distance between us, sharing in our humanity, and learning from the ways we’re different is so vital to our survival.And so is the comfort of listening over and over to the albums we know and love like they’re our best friends in the world. Enjoying the show? Please support BFF.FM with a donation. Listen to Fractal Chambers live on BFF.fm Saturdays 10 - 11 am. PSTThis episode was edited and produced by Lily Sloane.Theme tune by Lily Sloane.Hole's Malibu cover and MOCHA used in this episode with SAHAB's permission. Check out the full archives on the website.
When shelter in place went into effect, the BFF community rose to the crisis moment immediately, to ensure DJs could keep recording and broadcasting their shows from home.It felt vital we didn’t lose this ability to be a source of comfort for DJs, musicians, and listeners alike. DJs swapped photos of their blanket fort home studios, learned how to use software they’d never used before, and chipped in money to help those who couldn’t afford it purchase microphones and other necessities for home recording.Bedroom to bedroom and broadcast to the world, you wouldn’t know we were so isolated, music being such a connective force.By May, DJ Sweet T of Casually Crying, was ready to take on the technical challenge of having a guest and musical performance on her show––the station’s first since lock down.Devin Lane, who releases music under the name Gentle Return, joined Sweet T over Zoom to perform some gorgeous songs from his 2020 album, aptly titled “This Is Really Happening”. To add to it, there’s a really beautiful and relatable drawing of a woman clutching her stomach and barfing up flowers on the cover. I love the depth and vulnerability of this conversation. But of course you can expect that on a show like Casually Crying and from an artist like Devin. Enjoying the show? Please support BFF.FM with a donation. Listen to DJ Sweet T on Casually Crying, Fridays 6am-8am.This episode was edited and produced by Jonathan Sosa and Lily Sloane. Theme tune by Lily Sloane. Check out the full archives on the website.
Oakland-based psychedelic duo, Sugar Candy Mountain, is a local favorite. Their website bio aptly says “If Brian Wilson had dropped acid on the beach in Brazil and decided to record an album with Os Mutantes and The Flaming Lips, it would sound like this- all psychedelic pop Wall-of Sound and beach balladry.”In March 2019, DJ Duffy of BFF.fm’s The Green Room talked to Ash of Sugar Candy Mountain. Back in a time when plans were made, tours were had, and the demise of beloved Bay Area venues was on the minds of musicians and fans alike. This really highlights how essential touring and performing live is for working musicians. But stuff happens. And Ash even shares a perfect example of when things didn’t go as planned and the show could not go on. As we all know, just a year after this interview, life as we knew it had been completely altered. But also, in the midst of it all, Ash and Will had a baby! This interview in some ways can feel like a relic of the “before times” but it also taps into the same hopes and fears indie artists are experiencing today.Listen to DJs Duffy and Kellie on The Green Room every Thursday 6-8pm.This episode was edited and produced by Jonathan Sosa and Lily Sloane. Theme tune by Lily Sloane. Enjoying the show? Please support BFF.FM with a donation. Check out the full archives on the website.
Guests:Kelsea McLain, We Testify abortion storytellerDr. Daniel Grossman, Director of Advancing New Standards in Reproductive HealthDr. Jane*, a founder of the Miscarriage and Abortion HotlineJill Adams, Executive Director of If/When/HowMusic by Lily Sloane, logo by Kate Ryan. Photo: We Testify storytellers, courtesy We Testify. Transcript available on our website.Do you have a story about abortion during the pandemic? I want to hear it! Email or send a voice memo to accesspodcast@protonmail.com. You can remain anonymous.ACCESS is a fully independent production, reported, produced, and hosted by Garnet Henderson. Support the show here.You can also find us on Twitter and Instagram, and don't forget to subscribe!*pseudonym
Guests:Dr. Meera Shah, Chief Medical Officer of Planned Parenthood Hudson Peconic and author of You’re the Only One I’ve ToldLeah Coplon, certified nurse midwife and Program Director for Maine Family PlanningDr. Bhavik Kumar, Medical Director for Primary and Trans Care at Planned Parenthood Gulf CoastMusic by Lily Sloane, logo by Kate Ryan, photo by Robin Marty. Transcript available on our website.Do you have a story about abortion during the pandemic? I want to hear it! Email or send a voice memo to accesspodcast@protonmail.com. You can remain anonymous.ACCESS is a fully independent production, reported, produced, and hosted by Garnet Henderson. Support the show here.You can also find us on Twitter and Instagram, and don't forget to subscribe!
Guest: Dr. Meera Shah, family medicine physician, Chief Medical Officer of Planned Parenthood Hudson Peconic, and author of You’re the Only One I’ve Told: The Stories Behind Abortion.Music by Lily Sloane, logo by Kate Ryan, photo by Robin Marty.For an illustration of some of the medical instruments Dr. Shah mentions in this episode, visit our website to see photos by Robin Marty. You'll find the full episode transcript there, too.ACCESS is a fully independent production, reported, produced, and hosted by Garnet Henderson. Support the show here.You can also find us on Twitter and Instagram, and don't forget to subscribe!
Trekonomics, with Manu Saadia. “The economics of the future are somewhat different,” Captain Jean-Luc Picard tells Lily Sloane in Star Trek: First Contact. “You see, money doesn’t exist in the 24th century.” But the “primitive” 21st-century human is instinctively appalled: “No money? You mean you don’t get paid?” To some viewers, the post-scarcity economic system that underpins the Star Trek universe—what author Manu Saadia calls “Trekonomics”—can seem equally baffling. But is the utopian future of the Federation really as improbable as the creation of warp drive or the transporter? Or is Star Trek, as a cultural product of American capitalism, produced by relatively well-paid entertainment professionals, just fundamentally ambivalent when it comes to some of its most sacred ideals? In this episode of Primitive Culture, host Duncan Barrett is joined by Saadia for a look at both the imaginary economics of Star Trek and the real-world economics of getting the show on the air—and turning a profit from it. We also discuss the link between economic conditions and “evolved” human behavior, the thorny question of human nature, and the extent to which—in attempting to predict the future—all economic theories are really little more than science fiction. Host Duncan Barrett Guest Manu Saadia Production Duncan Barrett (Editor and Producer), C Bryan Jones (Executive Producer) Matthew Rushing (Executive Producer) Ken Tripp (Executive Producer) Norman C. Lao (Associate Producer) Amy Nelson (Associate Producer) Tony Black (Associate Producer) Clara Cook (Associate Producer) Richard Marquez (Production Manager)
Trekonomics, with Manu Saadia. “The economics of the future are somewhat different,” Captain Jean-Luc Picard tells Lily Sloane in Star Trek: First Contact. “You see, money doesn’t exist in the 24th century.” But the “primitive” 21st-century human is instinctively appalled: “No money? You mean you don’t get paid?” To some viewers, the post-scarcity economic system that underpins the Star Trek universe—what author Manu Saadia calls “Trekonomics”—can seem equally baffling. But is the utopian future of the Federation really as improbable as the creation of warp drive or the transporter? Or is Star Trek, as a cultural product of American capitalism, produced by relatively well-paid entertainment professionals, just fundamentally ambivalent when it comes to some of its most sacred ideals? In this episode of Primitive Culture, host Duncan Barrett is joined by Saadia for a look at both the imaginary economics of Star Trek and the real-world economics of getting the show on the air—and turning a profit from it. We also discuss the link between economic conditions and “evolved” human behavior, the thorny question of human nature, and the extent to which—in attempting to predict the future—all economic theories are really little more than science fiction. Host Duncan Barrett Guest Manu Saadia Production Duncan Barrett (Editor and Producer), C Bryan Jones (Executive Producer) Matthew Rushing (Executive Producer) Ken Tripp (Executive Producer) Norman C. Lao (Associate Producer) Amy Nelson (Associate Producer) Tony Black (Associate Producer) Clara Cook (Associate Producer) Richard Marquez (Production Manager)
Today’s episode is a bit different than most of the ones you’ll hear on This is Not What I Ordered. Instead of an interview with a single guest or couple, I was able to connect with Lily Sloane and Latasha Doyle, two of the people on our podcast team. In light of everything going on in the world, and with heightened anxiety and worry for many in the chronic illness community, we decided to discuss how we’re navigating this uncharted territory. While grief, anger, and concern over our own health and safety were all discussed, we also talked about the beauty that has come from self-isolation. Each of us shares a bit of our struggles, as well as what we’re really thankful for in times like this. We also talk about how these events are elevating our experiences with our bodies, and calling us to really turn to the tools we’ve already built up to take care of ourselves. I know that many of you are trying to process the effects of this pandemic in your own life, and I hope this conversation shows you that you’re definitely not alone in this community.
《星际迷航:皮卡德》第一季第 6 集剧评。剧情越来越好看,欢迎收听这期的吹捧。"The Impossible Box" PIC 1x06本期节目录制于20200301,主播:CrazyEMH|大腐|胡子————00:02:11 - 00:32:56:剧情回顾与分析 00:03:48 Star Trek 8: First Contact (星际旅行VIII:第一次接触) 00:04:08 Lily Sloane 00:05:38 迷于星际第68 集《皮卡德自传》The Autobiography of Jean Luc Picard书评《68 模范人类》00:32:56 - 00:39:47:彩蛋分析 00:29:42 "Once Upon a Time"VOY5x05中出现的全息小说The Adventures of Flotter 00:32:58 Spatial trajector(空间弹射器)曾出现在"Prime Factors"VOY1x10 00:36:31 Chronometric particle00:39:47 - 末尾:外延话题与吹捧�环节 �剧作流畅度 �技术细节的吐槽 �比以往的星际迷航更多的私人情感生活展现 �老年人为第一主角的难得和独特 �未来剧情走向的预测 �剧情进行到目前,双线叙事剪辑是否还有必要
《星际迷航:皮卡德》第一季第 6 集剧评。剧情越来越好看,欢迎收听这期的吹捧。"The Impossible Box" PIC 1x06本期节目录制于20200301,主播:CrazyEMH|大腐|胡子————00:02:11 - 00:32:56:剧情回顾与分析 00:03:48 Star Trek 8: First Contact (星际旅行VIII:第一次接触) 00:04:08 Lily Sloane 00:05:38 迷于星际第68 集《皮卡德自传》The Autobiography of Jean Luc Picard书评《68 模范人类》00:32:56 - 00:39:47:彩蛋分析 00:29:42 "Once Upon a Time"VOY5x05中出现的全息小说The Adventures of Flotter 00:32:58 Spatial trajector(空间弹射器)曾出现在"Prime Factors"VOY1x10 00:36:31 Chronometric particle00:39:47 - 末尾:外延话题与吹捧�环节 �剧作流畅度 �技术细节的吐槽 �比以往的星际迷航更多的私人情感生活展现 �老年人为第一主角的难得和独特 �未来剧情走向的预测 �剧情进行到目前,双线叙事剪辑是否还有必要
《星际迷航:皮卡德》第一季第 6 集剧评。剧情越来越好看,欢迎收听这期的吹捧。 "The Impossible Box" PIC 1x06 本期节目录制于20200301,主播:CrazyEMH|大腐|胡子 ———— 00:02:11 - 00:32:56:剧情回顾与分析 00:03:48 Star Trek 8: First Contact (星际旅行VIII:第一次接触) 00:04:08 Lily Sloane 00:05:38 迷于星际第 68 集《皮卡德自传》The Autobiography of Jean Luc Picard 书评《68模范人类》 00:32:56 - 00:39:47:彩蛋分析 00:29:42 "Once Upon a Time" VOY 5x05 中出现的全息小说 The Adventures of Flotter 00:32:58 Spatial trajector(空间弹射器)曾出现在 "Prime Factors" VOY 1x10 00:36:31 Chronometric particle 00:39:47 - 末尾:外延话题与吹捧
For this episode of Not What I Ordered, I’m joined by my amazing music editor and close friend, Lily Sloane. Lily is a therapist, composer, audio producer, and host of a weekly advice show with a deep passion for making the world a better place through self-healing. Learning to live with and accept her health challenges through therapy has helped her find comfort in the unknown, which she then channels into her own practice. By tearing down the notion of “perfect health”, Lily is able to help her clients -- and herself -- open the door to gratitude.Lily shows true vulnerability as she opens up about the shame and dogma attached to chronic illness, as well as how she learned to live with her illness without needing to know what it is. She also shares how therapy has taught her to accept where she is on her health journey instead of where she’d like to be -- or where anyone else expects her to be! By transforming her perspective, Lily was able to change her inner narrative, shed her need to fix everything, and learn to sit with her discomfort. Her story is a much-needed reminder that it’s okay to not have all the answers. Throughout her journey, she has learned that in order to make a change in the world around us, we must first make a change within ourselves. My open-heart discussion with Lily is full of powerful insights on making more space for acceptance and how embracing the unknown can lead to a more empowered life. I hope you enjoy our talk as much as I did!
"Real life is a hashtag we're nostalgic to remember." This piece is audio from a film (soon to be released) and was originally produced for Earlid as part of their 2019 Liminal Sounds exhibit Retreat, Disappearance. It was produced by Lily Sloane and Garrett Tiedemann.
This week I’m talking to Lily Sloane, MFT, a San Francisco-based psychotherapist with a background in treating eating disorders, disordered eating, and body image issues. She is also a composer/independent audio producer and creator of the podcast A Therapist Walks Into a Bar and the community radio show Radical Advice on BFF.fm. Listen to Lily discuss the role the inner critic plays in disordered and the lure of dieting as a means to fixing life’s more complicated problems. Show Highlights What it was like to grow up in a religious environment focused on health food All the compliments that come with weight-loss assume you are doing great Working on the inner critic was helpful in healing disordered eating but wasn’t radical enough How the inner critic can take over mindful or intuitive eating Chronic dieting dovetails with capitalist ideas of always having to be fixing yourself Veiling talk about weight in talk about “health” The difference between correlation and causation How she is open with her clients about her own struggles so they know they are not alone Declining getting weighed at the doctor’s office One can work on their health without focusing on their weight Learning to accept that we go through different seasons of life which will impact how we eat and move How loving your body all the time is unrealistic The impact of being single on how she eats How she has to try to not solve life’s problems by going on a diet Popular wellness models such as “clean eating” are very puritanical French fries fried in beef drippings are delicious! Links & Resources Lily Sloane, MFT Therapy Website Radical Advice on BFF.fm Ellyn Satter’s “What Is Normal Eating” “Eat Up” by Ruby Tandoh
Photo by Jaime Borschuk Lily Sloane, host of Radical Advice at BFF.fm, chats about her beginning through present views on therapy and her role as a Psychotherapist. She delves into the problem of transparency in the field of therapy, and offers insights into how the negative connotation of the term/meaning of ‘judgment’ can get in the way of having honest, healthy relationships with ourselves and others. She posits that therapists as well as their clients (and folks in general) need to work toward unpacking judgements to find out how and why they shape certain social perceptions, and what that might reveal about ourselves. Learn more about and/or connect with Lily... Listen to her show live on Tuesdays from 10am to noon, and Tweet her questions in search of radical advice, or submit questions on RA's homepage. Also, check out her past podcast A Therapist Walks Into a Bar. *PS....I made a rookie mistake and forgot to press the ole play button for the first hour of our live conversation... Hope you caught it when it aired, and if you didn't, my apologies. In a nutshell re-enactment that won't do it justice but is better than nothin'-- we delved pretty deeply into the process of podcasting in terms of craft, content, creative audio composition, editing, genre, and several things in between. We especially addressed the subject of gender inequality in the audio world, where only 5% of production in audio/media is produced by women. Lily dropped an invaluable toolkit of storytelling in radio/podcast resources if you’re looking to create your own podcast but need some more direction in how to get started... HowSound on Transom A graphic guide-book called Out on the Wire: The Storytelling Secrets of the New Masters of Radio Women's Audio Mission Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University *Recommendation of an audio fiction podcast, Imaginary Advice --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/darcy-allred/message
Lily Sloane returns to give a more nuanced and informed assessment of Waits's repression of feelings, as we revisit the heartbreak, loss and loneliness of this song. With some discussion of his singing technique as well as the lyrical changes, we head towards the final tracks of this extended season of Song by Song. Song by Song is Martin Zaltz Austwick and Sam Pay; two musicians listening to and discussing every single Tom Waits track in chronological order. website: songbysongpodcast.com twitter: @songbysongpod e-mail: songbysongpodcast@gmail.com Music extracts used for illustrative/review purposes include: More Than Rain, Big Time (film), Tom Waits (1988) We think your Song by Song experience will be enhanced by hearing, in full, the songs featured in the show, which you can get hold of from your favourite record shop or online platform. Please support artists by buying their music, or using services which guarantee artists a revenue - listen responsibly.
Dearly Beloved, we are gathered here today to talk about the end. It's the end of the third season of this podcast. A season full of stories about what it's like to be living in these minds and bodies. But it's also the final episode of this show. I want to quickly add, before you have a chance to react, “at least for now!” I want to imply the show could come back to make this ending feel like not a big deal. But let's not do that. Let's just take a moment to let it be. This is the end of the show. Afterall, resurrection fantasies are another defense against loss. As much as I want to just ghost on this ending, I'm not going to. So in this episode, I go back to some of the people who've been on the show before and talk about endings and why acknowledging them is important. And I take this chance to say goodbye to you and to the podcast. Credits: Writer/Producer - Lily Sloane Sound Designer and Composer - Lily Sloane Story Editor - Emily Shaw [emilyshawcreates.com] Thank you Dani Scoville, Molly Merson, Jessica Brown, Kip Williams, Dusty Porn, and Al Anzola for taking part in this funeral...I mean, episode. If you want to stay up to date on my new projects, follow me on Twitter @lilyrosesloane and sign up for the newsletter at atherapistwalksintoabar.com, which I'll transition away from being about this specific podcast - and don't worry, emails will still be fairly infrequent. To check out my other work and see if you want to hire me for something, visit lilymakessound.com. You can still hear me talk about therapy stuff every week on Radical Advice which is live on BFF.fm Tuesdays 10am-noon Pacific time. If you can't listen live, subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts and tune in whenever. You can submit life questions by visiting radicaladviceshow.com. Episode Image: Original Photo by Jaime Borschuck [jaimeborschuk.photo], adapted to black and white and ghostified by Lily Sloane
This piece was produced, mixed, and scored by Lily Sloane from the podcast A Therapist Walks Into A Bar. Find all her brilliance at http://www.lilymakessound.com/.
Episode 150! We made it! … if by "it", you mean a round number of episodes, and if by "we" you mean Sam, Martin and returning guest Lily Sloane. In this landmark episode we go back to talk about Way Down In The Hole for the 7th (8th?) and final time, discussing again question of the appropriation of black culture, the use of money in the language of Waits's preacher character, and Lily's random Tom Waits sightings. Song by Song is Martin Zaltz Austwick and Sam Pay; two musicians listening to and discussing every single Tom Waits track in chronological order. website: songbysongpodcast.com twitter: @songbysongpod e-mail: songbysongpodcast@gmail.com Music extracts used for illustrative/review purposes include: Way Down In The Hole, Big Time, Tom Waits (1988) We think your Song by Song experience will be enhanced by hearing, in full, the songs featured in the show, which you can get hold of from your favourite record shop or online platform. Please support artists by buying their music, or using services which guarantee artists a revenue - listen responsibly.
A long weekend yields special programming and so we're delighted to present an extra special afternoon episode of Eclectic Kettle for the Labor Day holiday. “Less Steve Lamaq, a little more Mark Radcliffe” is the plan. Tune in for afternoon choons, affable rambling, and the true meaning of Labor Day. Plus we'll replay our conversation with Matt B from last week's Tuesday show, and give you all another chance to indulge the wonders of the modular synth.What's more, this broadcast comes LIVE from BFF.fm's studio installation in the window of Artists Television Access on Valencia. So, stop by on your way to and from your grills and beer runs, watch Ben in action, gawp and wave, chill with a coffee in the Blue Fig parklet, perhaps. One way or another, we hope to see you there!Sorry it took a little while to get the podcast of this show up: The logistics of broadcasting from multiple locations are no joke. Massive thank yous to Lily Sloane and Forrest Guest for helping get the recordings wrangled. Enjoying the show? Please support BFF.FM with a donation. Playlist 2′22″ Bank Holiday by Blur on Parklife (Food) 3′35″ Another Sunny Day by Belle & Sebastian on The Life Pursuit (Matador) 10′20″ The Masses Against The Classes by Manic Street Preachers on The Masses Against The Classes (Sony) 13′32″ The View from the Afternoon by Arctic Monkeys on Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not (Domino) 17′40″ Afternoon by Youth Lagoon on The Year of Hibernation (Fat Possum) 25′33″ To Have and Have Not by Billy Bragg on Life's A Riot with Spy vs. Spy (Cooking Vinyl) 28′58″ Thatcher Fucked The Kids by Frank Turner on Campfire Punkrock (Xtra Mile) 31′24″ Blue Collar by Gil Scott-Heron on Nothing New (XL) 35′20″ 70's Blues by Betty Davies on They Say I'm Different (Light in the Attic) 42′28″ The Eton Rifles by The Jam on Setting Sons (Universal) 46′52″ The Underside of Power by Algiers on The Underside of Power (Matador) 51′26″ French Disko by Stereolab on Serene Velocity (Elektra) 53′55″ One of These Days by Pink Floyd on Meddle (Sony) 65′23″ Slip Inside This House by Primal Scream on Screamdelica (Reprise) 70′23″ Run Run Run by The Velvet Underground on The Velvet Underground & Nico (Universal) 74′39″ The Flowers of Guatemala by R.E.M. on Life's Rich Pageant (EMI) 78′31″ Half The World Away by Oasis on The Masterplan (Helter Skelter) 96′06″ Moons Apart by Ann Annie on Atmospheres, Vol. 2 (Modularfield) 98′54″ Goodbye Earth by Hannah Peel on Mary Casio: Journey to Cassiopeia (My Own Pleasure) 104′24″ Perdonare by Alessandro Cortini on AVANTI (Point of Departure) 111′49″ The Dajon Song by Gomez on Machismo EP (Virgin) Check out the full archives on the website.
Every podcast has an origin story. In this episode, Lily Sloane, the creator and producer of A Therapist Walks into a Bar, talks about how she got started and how podcasting came to be the first thing she tells people when they ask, "What do you do?" If you missed Part 1, click here. We recorded this podcast at The Sycamore in June 2018. Film photography by Michelle Kilfeather
Lily Sloane is a podcaster, a radio producer, a music composer, and a psychotherapist, in that order. But it hasn't always been that way. Lily's family moved to Petaluma from the East Coast when she was 8. She moved herself to San Francisco to go to college. But, having never stayed anywhere too long, and despite being here for a reason, it took a little time for the city to become her home. In this podcast, Part 1 of 2, Lily talks about coming to feel like San Francisco is where she needs to be. Some revelations along the way helped usher in that feeling. Check back Thursday for Part 2, when Lily will share the story of starting her podcast, A Therapist Walks into a Bar. We recorded this podcast at The Sycamore in June 2018. Film photography by Michelle Kilfeather
This week, we invite you to tell us about your feelings. Yes, it's a proper therapy session as Barry and Ben lie on the couch with Lily Sloane, therapist and host of the 'A Therapist Walks Into A Bar' podcast. Lily answers all our questions with questions, Ben is on tenterhooks awaiting his new baby and Barry is ready to unload 18 months worth of feelings. We indulge in some glasses of urine, discover the most toxic of men and delve into Freud's cocaine habit. Follow us on Twitter: @worstfoot @bazmcstay @benvandervelde @lilyrosesloane Visit www.worstfootforwardpodcast.com for all previous episodes and you can now donate to us on Patreon if you’d like to support Ben’s new baby and Barry’s crippling trivia addiction: https://www.patreon.com/WorstFootForward Worst Foot Forward is part of Podnose: www.podnose.com
Where do songs come from? We’re back in the Cozy Boat with Spence and Shannon Koehler, the founding brothers of The Stone Foxes, to get an inside look at their creative process and the back story to a few of their songs! (Produced by Emily Shaw and recorded by George S. Rosenthal at the Complex Recording Studio. Editorial support from George S. Rosenthal, Anne Hoffman, Raja Shah, Juliet Hinely, Lily Sloane, the Digging In crew at Duke’s Center for Documentary Studies, and SF’s Podcast Parlor.) Music by The Stone Foxes: This Town (Twelve Spells) Ulysses Jones (Small Fires) It Ain’t Nothin (Twelve Spells) Everybody Knows (Small Fires) Passenger Train [Acoustic Version] (Bears & Bulls) www.thestonefoxes.com www.emilyshawcreates.com www.thecomplex-sf.com Watch Spence and Shannon sing a special Koehler Christmas song in the Cozy Boat here! www.youtube.com/watch?v=DyTRYrsoEd4
Lily Sloane returns for one more Franks Wild Years track, debating Waits’s attitude towards religion, how the track relates to the rest of the album, and the presence of joy in music. Song by Song is Martin Zaltz Austwick and Sam Pay; two musicians listening to and discussing every single Tom Waits track in chronological order. website: songbysongpodcast.com twitter: @songbysongpod e-mail: songbysongpodcast@gmail.com Music extracts used for illustrative/review purposes include: Way Down In The Hole, Franks Wild Years, Tom Waits (1987) Oh Happy Day, The Best of the Edwin Hawkins Singers, The Edwin Hawkins Singers (1967/2001) We think your Song by Song experience will be enhanced by hearing, in full, the songs featured in the show, which you can get hold of from your favourite record shop or online platform. Please support artists by buying their music, or using services which guarantee artists a revenue - listen responsibly.
What happens when you need someone else to do what you love? (Or at least you feel like you need them?) On this episode of Cozy Boat, we’re exploring this question with Spence and Shannon Koehler, the founding brothers of the San Francisco rock band The Stone Foxes! (Produced by Emily Shaw and recorded by George S. Rosenthal at the Complex Recording Studio. Editorial support from George S. Rosenthal, Anne Hoffman, Angie Vorhies, Rebecca Williams, Raja Shah, Juliet Hinely, Lily Sloane, the Digging In crew at Duke’s Center for Documentary Studies, and SF’s Podcast Parlor.) Music by The Stone Foxes: Locomotion (Twelve Spells) Stomp (Bears & Bulls) Count Me As One (Twelve Spells) Patience (Bears & Bulls) This Town (Twelve Spells) Through The Fire (Bears & Bulls) Cotto (Small Fires) Little Red Rooster (Bears & Bulls) My Place (Twelve Spells) www.thestonefoxes.com www.emilyshawcreates.com www.thecomplex-sf.com Watch Spence and Shannon sing a special Koehler Christmas song in the Cozy Boat here! www.youtube.com/watch?v=DyTRYrsoEd4
Martin and Sam are joined by Lily Sloane of A Therapist Walks Into A Bar to discuss this side of the album's final track (as well as the first song from the play), and the images of dreams, hope, despair and fantasy that it evokes. Plus turnip-sales. Song by Song is Martin Zaltz Austwick and Sam Pay; two musicians listening to and discussing every single Tom Waits track in chronological order. website: songbysongpodcast.com twitter: @songbysongpod e-mail: songbysongpodcast@gmail.com Music extracts used for illustrative/review purposes include: Franks Theme, Franks Wild Years, Tom Waits (1987) Life In A Scotch Sittingroom #2 Episode 11, Jammy Smears, Ivor Cutler (1976) We think your Song by Song experience will be enhanced by hearing, in full, the songs featured in the show, which you can get hold of from your favourite record shop or online platform. Please support artists by buying their music, or using services which guarantee artists a revenue - listen responsibly.
In a new bonus segment of A Therapist Walks Into a Bar, which will release on the third Wednesday of each month, I pull the best moments from my sister show, Radical Advice, which airs live on Tuesdays from 10am-noon PST. You can tune in at BFF.fm. This time, San Francisco psychotherapist, Brian Thompson, and I call his mom, Noreen, a psychiatric nurse, for help answering a listener's question about their childhood imaginary friend. If you want your life questions answered, visit www.radicaladviceshow.com and click submit. This episode was produced, edited, mixed, scored, etc. by me, Lily Sloane.
This week we discuss the brilliant and courageous Lily Sloane from the Star Trek film, First Contact. The great tragedy is that she built the first warp engine but did not get credit for it. Fictionalfemales.com Podcast Pick: Women At Warp, http://www.womenatwarp.com/
This piece was produced, mixed, and scored by Lily Sloane from the podcast A Therapist Walks Into A Bar. Find all her brilliance at http://www.lilymakessound.com/.
When was the last time you cried? How about the last time you cried in front of someone else? Most of us have mixed experiences with crying - whether it's our own tears or seeing them in someone else. And a lot of this is impacted by gender norms and expectations. In this episode we bring back Jesse Rhodes, host of the podcast Man-ish, to share his latest two-part series about crying in politics. Part one tells the story of Edmond Muskie, a 1972 Democratic presidential candidate, who's public tears were so fatal to his campaign "The Muskie Rule" was created to reflect how detrimental it is for politicians to cry. Part two, "Muskie Today", questions this rule by diving into some more recent examples of political tears. The "Muskie Rule" and "Muskie Today" were written and produced by Jesse Rhodes. Learn more about Man-ish by visiting www.man-ish.weebly.com. Special thanks to The Edmund S. Muskie Archives and Special Collections Library, John Milne, Jim Witherall, Emily Palena, Brandon Pascal, Shoshana Walter, and Ryan Neville-Shepard. To find links to Ryan's research, go to the show's website, and open the page for this episode. There, you can also find links to music you heard on the show. A Therapist Walks Into a Bar is produced by Lily Sloane and Jessica Brown.
Lily Sloane shares the journey of creating both a private practice and her ground-breaking podcast “Therapist Walks Into A Bar” on this episode of Therapist Clubhouse. She talks about the risks and rewards of sharing her real self in her podcast, dealing with the ups and downs of running a business, and planning for the future HER way. Topics discussed in this episode: Creating “Therapist Walks Into A Bar” and how she chooses new topics Redefining the idea of being an expert with room for honesty and vulnerability Her future plans for her podcast Creating a schedule that prioritizes happiness and effectiveness Keeping her expenses low and maximizes her financial freedom Fighting isolation in her private practice Creating balance in being CEO, clinician and podcast creator Riding the ups and downs of a small private practice with less shame and fear Setting business goals flexibly and creatively Creating meaningful relationships to bring accountability and collaboration into her business Shownotes at coachingwithannie.com/podcast
Podcast Episode 082 Release Date: October 7, 2016 On this podcast Family and Marriage Therapist Lily Sloane discusses the creative processes behind the creation of her successful and well received podcast series entitled A Therapist Walks into a Bar. Lily explains what it’s like to talk to bar patrons in this surprising way and […]
A Therapist Walks Into a Bar Presents: A Brief Psycho-Education There are lots of cliches about therapy, but one of the most popular...well, it's true. We DO ask “how does that make you feel?” A lot. In this brief episode, I'll talk about why we ask and why it's important to learn how to tell the difference between thoughts and feelings. Thank you Jesse Rhodes, Abby Thompson, Molly Merson, Talia Recht, Tiffany McLain, Dan Scharlack, Christine Hutchison, Robert Solley, Elaine Chan-Scherer, John Clark, Abby Volk, Tina Kopko, Cynthia Hoffman, Paul Ziller, and Topher M. Lewis for contributing your voices to this "minisode". This episode was produced by Lily Sloane with editorial assistance from Jesse Rhodes. The theme song is "Maruumba" by Topher M. Lewis and this episode also featured the song "Identical Twins" by Lily Sloane.
Podcast Episode 068 Release Date: July 1, 2016 On this podcast Lily Sloane shares her views on how and why getting psychotherapy helps prevent you from living a numbed out life. Ms. Sloane is the board President for the San Francisco Chapter of the California Association of Marriage and Family Therapists. Lily also hosts the […]
Visit the Show Notes for this episode to see the Star Trek The Experience Video and photos of the exhibits Angela mentioned. In this edition of Anomaly, Jen and Angela talk about Star Trek: First Contact—Picard's fallibility (what humanizes him), themes, favorite quotes, cyborg zombies, favorite characters and more. P.S. Lily Sloane's decedent should be the captain of the next star ship featured in the new Star Trek series. Thank you for listening! If you like our show, please rate us on iTunes and Stitcher and share with your friends. Help us improve what we do here, by filling out this survey: survey.libsyn.com/anomaly Your voice matters to us! Join in the conversation and get your voice heard on Anomaly: Send an audio comment or email to girlygeekz@gmail.com Call our voicemail line at 432-363-4742 or comment in the show notes at Anomalypodcast.com/Shownotes/ Subscribe to Anomaly and the Anomaly Email list at AnomalyPodcast.com. You can also like us on Facebook and follow us on Pinterest at Pinterest.com/AnomalyPodcast/, Instagram and on Twitter @AnomalyPodcast. Donate: Via Paypal