Podcast appearances and mentions of lisa hammer

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Best podcasts about lisa hammer

Latest podcast episodes about lisa hammer

A Scary Home Companion
and When She Saw What She Had Done... (Mad Dog Blood Chapter Four)

A Scary Home Companion

Play Episode Play 50 sec Highlight Listen Later Aug 12, 2024 44:23


Revelations about their family tree send Emily and Kassi down different paths of madness. Kassi deep dives into secrets best left buried, while Emily teams up with the two craziest people she knows to have some fun in the mutant-filled prison. Sick, twisted, hilarious, and heartwarming, this episode has it all. I was joined by some talented ladies for this killer tale,Evangeline Hensley as Kassi LakeSavannah Hensley as Emily Mason, and making her debut, Violet Hensley as Zee.Music provided by:the amazingly talented Lisa Hammer, with the tracksWalking a lonely road, Clubland loop, and EidelonAlso featured was Savage Customs, by Emperors of Blefuscu as always find these songs at FMA.ORG, and make sure to visit Lisahammer.com Listen on PoduramaPlease subscribe through Buzzsprout, Stitcher, Spotify, Podchaser, or iTunesFind me on social media on Instagram Facebook and Twitter, or email me direct at AScaryHomeCompanion@gmail.comSupport our PATREON page! And check out the Redbubble merch shop. Support the Show.

The Guy Gordon Show
Ann Arbor Family Rooting on Olympic Speed Climber

The Guy Gordon Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2024 9:46


July 29, 2024 ~ The Hammer family, parents Lisa & Gary and older siblings Max & Maggie, are in Europe with the youngest Hammer, Zach, who is preparing to compete in speed climbing for Team USA in the Olympics! Guy talks with the family, as they follow the climbing team to Barcelona for training ahead of next week's competition in Paris. Photo: (L to R) Maggie Hammer, Zach Hammer, Chris Sharma, Lisa Hammer, Gary Hammer

A Scary Home Companion
SplatterMask

A Scary Home Companion

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2024 46:27


It's "No Country for Old Slashers" when an aging serial killer decided he needs one final rampage, no matter what the cost!All music provided by UniversfieldAll music this episode courtesy of Lisa Hammer. Support her on Bandcamp, or check out her website!Listen on PoduramaPlease subscribe through Buzzsprout, Stitcher, Spotify, Podchaser, or iTunesFind me on social media on Instagram Facebook and Twitter, or email me direct at AScaryHomeCompanion@gmail.comSupport our PATREON page! And check out the Redbubble merch shop. Support the Show.

A Scary Home Companion
Psychopath Slumber Party (Mad Dog Blood part Two)

A Scary Home Companion

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2024 40:19


Two teenage serial killers discover the genetic bond they share, and go to recruit an EVEN MORE dangerous serial killer -- their Uncle Danny -- to help them find answers. It's an unforgettable night at the skating rink.  Guest voices:Savannah Hensley as Emily MasonEvangeline Hensley as Kassi LakeAll music this episode courtesy of Lisa Hammer. Support her on Bandcamp, or check out her website!Listen on PoduramaPlease subscribe through Buzzsprout, Stitcher, Spotify, Podchaser, or iTunesFind me on social media on Instagram Facebook and Twitter, or email me direct at AScaryHomeCompanion@gmail.comSupport our PATREON page! And check out the Redbubble merch shop. Support the Show.

My Views Are My Own
Doug and Levi and Lisa at a Gas Station on Charlotte Pike

My Views Are My Own

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2024 63:14


In this episode, I talk with married filmmaker duo Lisa Hammer and Levi Wilson about their newest short film, "Luke and Emma at a Gas Station on Franklin Ave," a semi-autobiographical story about a mixed Asian-American boy and his mother and the interactions they have while stopping at a convenience store. Levi is an award-winning playwright and Lisa is an award-winning producer and the voice of Trianna Orpheus on Adult Swim's The Venture Bros. We discuss the process of creating an autobiographical film, what it's like casting actors to play yourself or people you know in real life, how to work together as husband and wife, and how documentaries and narrative films can be a powerful method for driving social change. We also talk about Lisa and Levi's participation in the Occupy Wall Street movement, and the bizarre irony of the fact that many other participants have since moved to the extreme right, such as Tim Poole, who I consider my personal podcast nemesis. We discuss gas stations at length, including the weirdest things we've ever seen sold at a gas station and which gas stations are the nicest ones and the grossest ones. 

3 Geeks Podcast
Conversation With Levi Wilson and Lisa Hammer

3 Geeks Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2024 37:27


Join us on the 3 Geeks Podcast as we dive deep into the world of independent filmmaking with the exceptionally talented duo, Levi Wilson and Lisa Hammer. In honor of Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month, we're thrilled to feature their celebrated coming-of-age short film, Luke and Emma and a Gas Station on Franklin Ave, now streaming on AMC+. This poignant and humorous film, set in 1980s rural America, follows the journey of 11-year-old Luke, a mixed Asian boy navigating the complexities of identity, puppy love, and racism in a predominantly white world. In this episode, we delve into the inspiration behind the film, exploring Wilson's semi-autobiographical narrative and the personal experiences that shaped this heartfelt story. Wilson shares insights on the challenges and triumphs of bringing such a relevant and authentic Asian-American experience to the screen, emphasizing its ongoing relevance in today's society. We'll also uncover the magic behind Wilson and Hammer's production company, Wilson Arts Diversified, and their journey through the film festival circuit, where Luke and Emma and a Gas Station on Franklin Ave garnered numerous accolades, including Best Short Film at the New Faces New Voices screening and wins at the New York Int'l Women Fest and Austin Int'l Art Fest. But that's not all—get a sneak peek into their exciting future projects. The duo is currently developing a feature-length version of Luke and Emma, along with several other compelling comedy and drama screenplays. Hammer shares her passion for collaborating with Wilson, highlighting the creative synergy they experience whether they're writing, directing, or acting together. Additionally, we discuss their work on the dark comedy series Great Kills on Amazon Prime, co-created by Hammer and directed by James Merendino. The series, now wrapping up its second season, features an impressive cast including Eric Roberts, Cathy Mortiarty, and Bai Ling, and follows a documentary film crew capturing the life of a Staten Island hitman. Levi Wilson, a Kentucky native turned New Yorker, has an impressive background as a producer, writer, director, and actor. His portfolio includes independent series, comedy shorts, and notable features such as The Invisible Life of Thomas Lynch and Punk's Dead: SLC Punk! 2. Lisa Hammer, an accomplished director, writer, actor, and musician, brings her unique vision to their projects, with works like Maybe Sunshine and Turn of the Century receiving critical acclaim and cult followings. Join us for an in-depth conversation with these rising stars as they share their journey, inspirations, and future aspirations. Don't miss out on this inspiring episode celebrating creativity, diversity, and the power of storytelling. Follow us @3geekspodcast and email us at 3geekspodcast@gmail.com for more updates and exclusive content. LisaHammer.com My site has the projects we spoke of on the front page and they can get to "Luke and Emma" from there, as well as "Great Kills" and the Night Flight Plus show. You can also access these on our linktree: https://linktr.ee/WilsonArtsDiversified

A Scary Home Companion
The Madman Always Kills Twice: A Horror Noir

A Scary Home Companion

Play Episode Play 45 sec Highlight Listen Later Apr 30, 2024 36:54


San Francisco, 1941 -- hardboiled gumshoe Mike Bolan gets a case too lucrative to pass up. The local gangsters think someone had been making their working girls disappear. Bolan has never heard the term "serial killer" before, but he's about to get an education in madness and depravity. Featuring the stunning music:Lisa Hammer – jazzy intrigue and jazzy inquisitors Pitor Hummel – midnight bluesLobo Loco – phantom hunters and shadow man Listen on PoduramaPlease subscribe through Buzzsprout, Stitcher, Spotify, Podchaser, or iTunesFind me on social media on Instagram Facebook and Twitter, or email me direct at AScaryHomeCompanion@gmail.comSupport our PATREON page! And check out the Redbubble merch shop. Support the Show.Support the Show.

A Scary Home Companion
Revelations

A Scary Home Companion

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2024 36:08


The serial killer and the orphan sat down in the kitchen, and over a few pints of Ben & Jerrys, he explains to her the true nature of evil in the world. Death, the universe, and everything sinister are laid bare in this eye-opening tale that has been in the making for over 200 episodes.  guest voices: Chris Kaufmann, Kelly Kaufmann, Dan Jopling, Buck Rogers, and the lovely Jamie Lee Hensley Music by:Beat Mekanik with thumperand Lisa Hammer with cold dread, deep note, ethereal dread, graveyard picnic, high pitch, and night terror. Listen on PoduramaPlease subscribe through Buzzsprout, Stitcher, Spotify, Podchaser, or iTunesFind me on social media on Instagram Facebook and Twitter, or email me direct at AScaryHomeCompanion@gmail.comSupport our PATREON page! And check out the Redbubble merch shop. Support the show

Binary System Podcast Archive
Binary System Podcast #391 - Christmas recap and yes we're watching Skibidi Toilet

Binary System Podcast Archive

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2023 15:32


This originally broadcast on December 28, 2023, the original podcast post is here: https://pixelatedgeek.com/2023/12/binary-system-podcast-391-christmas-recap-and-yes-were-watching-skibidi-toilet/ Happy last-podcast-of-2023! Recorded on location in the wilds of Western Florida (aka our parents' house) we start out this episode with a quick breakdown of Christmas, including successful hospital trips (spoilers: we were NOT stealing babies) and geeky presents, but it all goes by really fast because we've gotta talk about "Skibidi Toilet." Seriously you guys, this series is messed up. It's the weirdest thing we've seen all year, intentionally disturbing nightmare fuel, super upsetting and definitely not the kind of thing we'd like. Which is why we've watched all 69 episodes. They didn't really kill that guy did they? What's up with the lens? Is the Alliance okay? Where are the Titans? Where's the TV Headed Woman? So many questions arrgh when's the next episode??!! This week's outro is a clip from Bollywood Dream by Lisa Hammer. (It's not possible to get something quite as weird as the Skibidi Toilet song so we just went with this one.) Here's a link to Skibidi Toilet but fair warning, it's some serious nightmare fuel right from the beginning, so if you don't want that living in your brain you can just listen to our recap of it. Looking for a present for that hard-to-shop-for person? Want to buy them (or yourself) a square foot of a castle in Scotland? Look no further! You can support the restoration of Dunan's castle, legally call yourself Lady or Laird, AND if you use this link to get there, you can support this podcast too! ScottishLaird.co.uk. For updates, fan art, and other randomness, come follow us on Facebook, Tumblr, Twitter, and Instagram!

The Adventure Zone
The Adventure Zone: Outre Space - Episode 4

The Adventure Zone

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2023 88:22


The Babysitters jump through spheres and broods to search for their missing friend, only to find someone they never expected at the center of it all. Kate and Simon get some reps in. Miles and Sebastian turbo-hug it out. Thori goes ham. Special guests Kate Welch: https://www.instagram.com/katewelchhhh/ Gabe Hicks: https://instagram.com/gabejamesgames/ We're playing the Marvel Multiverse RPG: https://www.marvel.com/rpg Additional Music in this Episode: “The Unknown” and “Simple Song” by Jar of Flies: https://jaroffliesofficial.bandcamp.com/; “Unforeseen Consequences (Remastered)” by Techtheist: https://techtheist.ru/; “Somethings Out There” by Holizna: https://holiznaroyaltyfree.bandcamp.com/; “choice” by Roman: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/roman/; “When the Wick is Gone” by The Pangolins: http://thepangolins.yolasite.com/; “We must explore” by Moon Toad: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/moon-toad/; “Embers and Ashes” by Anenon: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Anenon/; “Testing your limits” by Pawel Feszczuk: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/pawel-feszczuk/; “Languid dawn” by Blear Moon: https://blearmoon.bandcamp.com/; "Haunts" by Triple5 Here: https://soundcloud.com/steven-stresau; “Stay Safe in The Upcoming Storm” by Schemawound: https://schemawound.com/; “Odd Singularity” by 1st Contact: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/1st-contact/; “Time Flux” by Revolution Void: http://www.revolutionvoid.com; "Bye-xx" by Koi-Discovery: https://koi-discovery.lescigales.org/; and “Blind Elephant” by Lisa Hammer: https://www.lisahammer.com/.  

FRUMESS
SLC Punk Writer and Director James Merendino is PIZZA PUNK! | Frumess

FRUMESS

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2023 91:52


FRUMESS is POWERED by ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠www.riotstickers.com/frumess⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ GET 1000 STICKERS FOR $79  RIGHT HERE - NO PROMO CODE NEED! JOIN THE PATREON FOR LESS THAN A $2 CUP OF COFFEE!! ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.patreon.com/Frumess ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

Travel Along With Laura
Laos 2: Luang Namtha: Trekking in Nam Ha National Preserve

Travel Along With Laura

Play Episode Play 56 sec Highlight Listen Later Sep 4, 2023 61:17


Laura and her friend Gayle got a little more than they were prepared for when they signed up for this three day trek through the Nam Ha protected area in northern Laos.  Exploring both nature and culture, they learned so many things through new foods, animal encounters, unplanned off-trail adventures and a village homestay.  Above all there was mud, lots and lots of mud.The Hiker- Highly recommend this trekking companyThe Halo Trust- Clearing UXOs (unexploded ordinances) Cope Laos- Helping UXO survivorsTravel Along with Laura Patreon Page- see photos, maps or become a Patron!Wonder Cycle by Chris Zabriskie is licensed under a Attribution 4.0 International License.   Night Terror_Lisa Hammer.mp3 by Lisa Hammer is licensed under a Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.  Depth Of Focus by Shane Ivers is licensed under CC BY 4.0.  Fantasy Overture by Shane Ivers is licensed under CC BY 4.0.  Ailsa's Lullaby by Axletree is licensed under a Attribution License.   Give A Little © 2021 by Shane Ivers is licensed under CC BY 4.0. Support the show

Be a Marketer with Dave Charest
#19 - The Joy of Being Your Own Boss With Lisa Hammer and Dave Newman

Be a Marketer with Dave Charest

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2023 46:18


Lisa Hammer is a business leader with a mindset for marketing, communications, and finance. Dave Newman is a mechanical engineer with a passion for teaching. Together, they run Leadership Techniques LLC, where their complementary skill sets drive their success.Lisa and Dave met while working for different companies and found common ground discussing the challenges they faced as managers. They decided to bring a group together to discuss handling personnel issues. Afterward, one participant asked them: “You two are so passionate about this. Why aren't you teaching it?”They needed that motivation to take the plunge into starting their own business. Today, Leadership Techniques offers courses and consulting to help people become better managers and leaders. On this episode of Be a Marketer, Lisa, Dave, and host Dave Charest, Director of Small Business Success at Constant Contact, discuss what it takes to build a successful business with a partner and how to adapt when the world around you changes. Tune in to hear how Lisa and Dave share the business responsibilities, how they've adapted to change, and why they love email marketing as a tool for growing their business. Meet Today's Guests: Lisa Hammer and Dave Newman of Leadership Techniques☕ What they do: Lisa and Dave are the co-founders and owners of Leadership Techniques, a business that provides training and consulting on project management, math-oriented scheduling, and leadership skills. 

Dishing with Stephanie's Dish
Episode 53: Julie Jo Severson author of "Oldest Twin Cities"

Dishing with Stephanie's Dish

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2023 18:41


Stephanie [00:00:12]:Hello, everybody, and welcome to Dishing with Stephanie's dish. We talk to people that have written cookbooks or books or food adjacent things because I can't get enough about talking about food, and and today we have a great guest. She is julie joe sieverson. She is the author of Oldest Twin Cities a Guide to Historic Treasures. And I had read about this book, and I thought, oh, that's cool. I wonder if she has stuff in there about restaurants and breweries, because we have so much history in the Twin Cities. And indeed she does. Welcome to the program.Julie [00:00:47]:Thank you for having me here. This will be fun.Stephanie [00:00:50]:Yes, it will be fun. So how did you decide? Are you like a born and bred twin Citian, and how did you decide to undertake this project?Julie [00:00:59]:Yes, I'm a fourth generation Minnesotan, and I've lived in the Twin Cities most of my life. I first wrote a book called Secret Twin Cities a Guide to the Weird, Wonderful, and Obscure, and that came out in 2020, arrived March, mid March, right when the cities were shutting down. So good timing on my part. I shoved them all in the corner for a couple of weeks because I thought, who's going to want to buy a travel guide right now?Stephanie [00:01:24]:Right?Julie [00:01:25]:It turned out okay for secret Twin cities. They had a lot of social distancing ideas in it, coincidentally. But anyway, all this Twin Cities evolved from that book. About a year later, the publisher asked if I'd like to write another one. And I really wanted to do one of more of a historic nature because I just think with COVID and the really tough year that the Twin Cities had in 2020, including the murder of George Floyd and the Civil uprising and businesses shutting down, burned down. I just felt like I needed a reason to fall back in love with the Twin Cities. And I was feeling a loss of community and a loss of connection. And for me to feel connected to the region I live in is very important to me. I need to feel part of the fabric. And so I just stopped focusing on enduring places in our midst and places that hung in there and have endured and have reopened, providing us continuity, kind of a comfort that was good for my soul to focus my energy there. So that's why I kind of went in this direction.Stephanie [00:02:43]:Well, and one of the selections in the book is the Oldest Best Bar, which is our friend Tony Zacardi, who bought it from our friend Lisa Hammer. I knew Lisa and Keith, and they had shepherded the bar, and then they sold it to Tony Zacardi. And it's from 1906.Julie [00:03:03]:Apparently.Stephanie [00:03:04]:It's an institution on Cedar Avenue. And you talk about sort of that pandemic and that coming back to life. Tony is a good example of someone that really he had just bought the bar and all of a sudden it has to close, and they're trying to hang on. And a lot of these bars and restaurants and distilleries really were in tough shape. So I was so glad that when we came out of the pandemic that Palmers has come out of it. And tell me a little bit about the history of Palmers in particular.Julie [00:03:40]:Yeah. And Tony really was he was really propelled into the national spotlight during that time. Yes.Stephanie [00:03:48]:He was an African American man who.Julie [00:03:51]:Owns this in the heart of he spray painted black owned business in hopes to protect his business, to deflect potential looters. And he was really a spokesperson and a comfort, I think, for the twin stage community during that time. We needed absolutely.Stephanie [00:04:10]:And the music community, too, because Palmer has had such a history in steeped in music.Julie [00:04:16]:Yeah. What a gem this place is. It's so unique, with an Islamic mosque on one end and then that iconic Mustachioed man against it on the other one. And as I write in the book, you rarely leave this place without a story to tell. Kind of rough edge place. Maybe not everybody's going to feel comfortable there, but you're very welcome there, no matter who you are. And you'll be invited to play a game of Scrabble or get into a conversation, unless you're a jerk. Because if you're a jerk, you're going to get plastered on a poster note on the back wall, and you're not going to be welcome there at all.Stephanie [00:05:00]:That's funny.Julie [00:05:02]:Yeah.Stephanie [00:05:02]:Another institution that is in downtown Minneapolis specifically, and I didn't realize that they had had a fire in 1989, but this was Glicks, the oldest downtown bar.Julie [00:05:20]:Yeah. Lots lots of damage. It seems like most of these places have endured fires over the years. Yeah.Stephanie [00:05:30]:You can imagine that. Yep.Julie [00:05:32]:Yeah, they they really came back from that. In fact, there was a moose in there. They have these animal heads mounted all throughout the restaurant. And the moose in the back room had been stolen from during a fraternity party there. And I think this group, whoever had stolen it, felt so bad because of fire that Reopening day, they anonymously returned it, leaning it against the front door. Welcome, everybody back. But yeah, my daughter was just there the other day. She's like I'm a glicks. I'm like, do you know that's in my book? No, I didn't even know that.Stephanie [00:06:05]:I had no idea either. Now, the Monte Carlo has been near and dear to my heart for some time, and my mom and dad got divorced, and my dad moved downtown. And that was really like, wow. Because we were suburban girls. And the first weekend my dad had us, he took us into this CD alley, and he went through this back door that had this weird sign above it and brought us in. And I thought he was bringing us into a pool hall. And I was like, oh, my gosh, my dad has really tipped over here, and it turned out to be the Loveliest bar inside. It was actually the Monte Carlo, and he was kind of a regular there. What's the historic nature of the Monte Carlo?Julie [00:06:47]:Yeah. Well, yeah, the hum of the neon sign is going to remain a constant in the North Loop Bar. It's really exquisite in there with this mirrored wall behind the bar. One's kind of an elegance to it, to it all. But the whole North Loop area, the warehouse district is where the Milky Way candy bars and cream of pasta and pop up toaster were invented. This was a real industrial place. The neighborhood has more than 60 buildings that are over a century old. A lot of them have been repurposed. Some of them. A few of them are rehearsal spaces for the Minnesota Opera, and a lot of them are faded. Business signs are repurposed. You see the old signs, ghost signs, sort of. But the Monte Carlo Bar and Grill have stood the test of time. It used to be mostly only for men, but then when it changed ownership, mr. Rimsick, who owns a number of places in the Twin Cities, he kind of turned it into a destination for all the patty, is a great happening place. Now, Beijing style wings, they're really famous for.Stephanie [00:08:06]:Yeah, the dry rubbed wings are my favorite. Yeah, a kind of funny one that I didn't expect would reach me and grab me, but it did. So I work on the Stone Arch Bridge festival and I curate a culinary market that happens underneath the Hennepin Avenue Bridge. And underneath that bridge, we have 38 ten x ten booths of vendors that produce Minnesota made food products. And as I was looking through your book, it's the oldest bridge relic at First Bridge Park, which is where I am during these two days of the festival from 1855. Underneath that bridge, there's these giant anchors, and I sit on those anchors. That's my chair during the two days of the festival. So I didn't realize they were so old.Julie [00:08:56]:Well, yeah, those don't date back to the very first bridge to cross the Mississippi River anywhere. Right there at St. Anthony Falls. I mean, prior to that bridge back in 1855, people were crossing over the falls to get to the other side. That first bridge didn't last real long, and then they created another one and another one. So anyway, these archaeological excavations revealed anchors from the original bridges, and so now they are under the Hennepin Bridge. Now you can see and sit on them if you want. There's plaque. So cool. Really interesting history at that park. Yeah. Right down from Melrose Park.Stephanie [00:09:42]:The oldest island venue in 1893 is the Nicolette Island Inn, which is still operating as a hotel, as a restaurant. It is a beautiful, gorgeous spot. If you ever just want to pop in for a drink or they have delicious food, too. Yeah, that's a great spot. And I didn't realize that David Shea was kind of responsible for bringing that back. He's designed so many restaurants in the Twin Cities.Julie [00:10:08]:Yeah. I didn't realize he was connected to that either until I started research. Talented guy. Yeah. That place I learned a lot about. I didn't really know a lot about that fire that had kind of spread through Nicholas Island and all northeast Minneapolis. A very ravishing fire, and only one of two structures, industrial structures, on the island to survive it. A fire started by some boys smoking. And so, again, these places that have endured. And at one point, it was a men's shelter, salvation army men's shelter. So I really and, you know, I can't help but continue then to learn about and read about Nicholette Island.Stephanie [00:10:52]:Right.Julie [00:10:53]:So many storied history there. Couple donkeys, Pearl and she. But I really focused on that island and my secret Twin Cities.Stephanie [00:11:01]:Who would have known that the oldest bowling alley was the Bryant Lake Bowl?Julie [00:11:08]:Yeah, I mean, that's a legendary spot in the Lin Lake neighborhood, and that's really evolved over the years. It used to be a Ford garage, and apparently it's haunted by a mechanic who was crushed by a car there. But at the heart of it is the eight lane bowling alley. Old school. But around it now is a really funky groovy restaurant that you never super funky for. A bowling alley and a cabaret with these red leather seats from Stillwater Junior High School, where you can go to all kinds of events there. And there's a really cool drone video that went viral in 2021 that they created to support businesses struggling through the pandemic. It's a cool right up our alley. You can Google it went viral. Yeah.Stephanie [00:11:57]:In 1964, Boca Chico became the oldest Mexican eatery, which is interesting, because I know that the Silva family opened El Burrito Mercado a little bit further down the street in the 70s, early seventy s. I didn't realize Boca Chica was that old. And it's still run by the family, isn't it?Julie [00:12:17]:Yeah, it sure is. Grandma Fria seasoned pork tamales are still on the menu. Yeah, this place was a really delightful surprise. Walking into you can go there after visiting the Wapisher Caves, the gangster tours there. That's a great place to go to afterwards. You just walk in and every wall tells a story of the family's heritage murals. But, yeah, Uramo Frias and Gloria Coronado, who's a petite, spunky lady, they fell in love and started this little place. She was actually linked to a dynasty, cultural dynasty in Minneapolis. Her parents owned the first Mexican restaurant in St. Paul, and then in Minneapolis called the Casa Coronado, but that has long closed.Stephanie [00:13:10]:And there's the oldest family Italian restaurant in St. Paul. Yuruso's.Julie [00:13:15]:Yeah. Yuruso's and giant meatballs. And again, that's family owned. Same family. And what I love about that place are giant murals of Sweet Hollow especially. It is located right across from Sweet Hollow. You would never know that across the street there is a hidden valley below street level. Right. We're former immigrant shanty town and in the book I give directions on how to get there because it's a little kind of windy but you can find it.Stephanie [00:13:50]:Yeah.Julie [00:13:51]:Yes.Stephanie [00:13:53]:When you were writing the book, what was one of your favorite discoveries?Julie [00:14:00]:Well, I fell in love with the New York Life Eagle. And that's a Summit overlook park in the Summit neighborhood. It overlooks the river valley.Stephanie [00:14:09]:I lived right there. It's right across from the University Club on Point of Land.Julie [00:14:16]:Maybe because of a mother. She's a mother. She's there taking her tail ons into a serpent, digging in there, protecting her nest of eaglets there in that pose she was almost discarded. She used to be on the third story entrance of the New York Life building in downtown St. Paul. And when that was removed, she really was nearly forgotten and discarded. And she was kind of put on a pedestal in front of a parking lot for a while until she found her new home here. And now she's in all her glory. There a nice spot while you're mansion goggling over mansions there in that area.Stephanie [00:14:54]:Yeah. I had no idea about Newman's being the oldest bar in the state.Julie [00:15:00]:Well, that's the big question because it's a tie between Newman's and the Spot Bar in St. Paul. The feud. I'm sure St. Spot fans will be mad at me for including Newman's, but I included the Spot bar in secret to the city, so I had to be fair. But those two kind of feud over. They both have very good reason but different reasons to want to claim that title. So yeah, Newman's is famous for their frog tank in the window.Stephanie [00:15:30]:What is the story of the frog tank? Do you know?Julie [00:15:34]:You ask people there and the Tank of Frogs has just been there as long as anybody can remember. It's just a tradition that they keep going and I guess the frogs have disappeared every now and then. One was found in a pitcher of beer. But this place has a hidden door behind the Tank of Frogs. It's only used for special events, but they used to hide have kind of speakeasy up there during prohibition and that's where you could speak up there and have a legal hooch. And there was like a phone that connected upstairs to the main bar to let the bartenders know when the cops were coming sniffing.Stephanie [00:16:13]:That's hilarious. Yeah. I love it. You go into all this detail like 1972. The oldest food co op is the Seward food Co op. Who knew that that was I mean, I don't know. The Twin Cities co op movement has been so strong, but who knew Seward was the first? I didn't. I thought the wedge was the first.Julie [00:16:36]:Yeah, no, they were really kind of the first, and now the most enduring. And what I didn't know was what a violent struggle the food co op went through in those early years. It sounds kind of like stuff going on these days with, you know, there was a takeover yeah. That tried to take over with steel bars and fire bombs, but they failed because there was such a difference of philosophy. And these were really some veteran radicals really disagreed with what they called the white bourgeois elitism. That's kind of how the opposing group.Stephanie [00:17:21]:Those bourgeois co op people.Julie [00:17:25]:And there's a new documentary about that called The Co op wars that was created in 2021. Super interesting to learn about the whole early Twin Cities.Stephanie [00:17:34]:Yeah, that sounds neat. Well, this is a great book. Your second book, Julie. Joe Sieverson Oldest Twin Cities a Guide to Historic Treasures. Are you already working on your third?Julie [00:17:44]:Not yet. Promoting this is full time right now.Stephanie [00:17:49]:Yes. Well, it's fun to visit with you and to hear the story and to just get more history about some of these great spots. Pick up the book and then take your own kind of historical tour, right?Julie [00:18:03]:Yes.Stephanie [00:18:04]:I love it. Thank you, Julie Joe. And thank you for highlighting some of our relics. Treasures, a fabric of a community is always about the history. That where you come from. Right. And it's good to be reminded of some of these great spots. I sat on that anchor all summer, last summer, and I never knew. So I love it. Thank you so much for joining us. I appreciate you.Julie [00:18:29]:Absolutely. Thank you.Stephanie [00:18:30]:All right, we'll talk soon. Okay, bye. Get full access to Stephanie's Dish Newsletter at stephaniehansen.substack.com/subscribe

Makers of Minnesota
Episode 53: Julie Jo Severson author of "Oldest Twin Cities"

Makers of Minnesota

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2023 18:41


Stephanie [00:00:12]:Hello, everybody, and welcome to Dishing with Stephanie's dish. We talk to people that have written cookbooks or books or food adjacent things because I can't get enough about talking about food, and and today we have a great guest. She is julie joe sieverson. She is the author of Oldest Twin Cities a Guide to Historic Treasures. And I had read about this book, and I thought, oh, that's cool. I wonder if she has stuff in there about restaurants and breweries, because we have so much history in the Twin Cities. And indeed she does. Welcome to the program.Julie [00:00:47]:Thank you for having me here. This will be fun.Stephanie [00:00:50]:Yes, it will be fun. So how did you decide? Are you like a born and bred twin Citian, and how did you decide to undertake this project?Julie [00:00:59]:Yes, I'm a fourth generation Minnesotan, and I've lived in the Twin Cities most of my life. I first wrote a book called Secret Twin Cities a Guide to the Weird, Wonderful, and Obscure, and that came out in 2020, arrived March, mid March, right when the cities were shutting down. So good timing on my part. I shoved them all in the corner for a couple of weeks because I thought, who's going to want to buy a travel guide right now?Stephanie [00:01:24]:Right?Julie [00:01:25]:It turned out okay for secret Twin cities. They had a lot of social distancing ideas in it, coincidentally. But anyway, all this Twin Cities evolved from that book. About a year later, the publisher asked if I'd like to write another one. And I really wanted to do one of more of a historic nature because I just think with COVID and the really tough year that the Twin Cities had in 2020, including the murder of George Floyd and the Civil uprising and businesses shutting down, burned down. I just felt like I needed a reason to fall back in love with the Twin Cities. And I was feeling a loss of community and a loss of connection. And for me to feel connected to the region I live in is very important to me. I need to feel part of the fabric. And so I just stopped focusing on enduring places in our midst and places that hung in there and have endured and have reopened, providing us continuity, kind of a comfort that was good for my soul to focus my energy there. So that's why I kind of went in this direction.Stephanie [00:02:43]:Well, and one of the selections in the book is the Oldest Best Bar, which is our friend Tony Zacardi, who bought it from our friend Lisa Hammer. I knew Lisa and Keith, and they had shepherded the bar, and then they sold it to Tony Zacardi. And it's from 1906.Julie [00:03:03]:Apparently.Stephanie [00:03:04]:It's an institution on Cedar Avenue. And you talk about sort of that pandemic and that coming back to life. Tony is a good example of someone that really he had just bought the bar and all of a sudden it has to close, and they're trying to hang on. And a lot of these bars and restaurants and distilleries really were in tough shape. So I was so glad that when we came out of the pandemic that Palmers has come out of it. And tell me a little bit about the history of Palmers in particular.Julie [00:03:40]:Yeah. And Tony really was he was really propelled into the national spotlight during that time. Yes.Stephanie [00:03:48]:He was an African American man who.Julie [00:03:51]:Owns this in the heart of he spray painted black owned business in hopes to protect his business, to deflect potential looters. And he was really a spokesperson and a comfort, I think, for the twin stage community during that time. We needed absolutely.Stephanie [00:04:10]:And the music community, too, because Palmer has had such a history in steeped in music.Julie [00:04:16]:Yeah. What a gem this place is. It's so unique, with an Islamic mosque on one end and then that iconic Mustachioed man against it on the other one. And as I write in the book, you rarely leave this place without a story to tell. Kind of rough edge place. Maybe not everybody's going to feel comfortable there, but you're very welcome there, no matter who you are. And you'll be invited to play a game of Scrabble or get into a conversation, unless you're a jerk. Because if you're a jerk, you're going to get plastered on a poster note on the back wall, and you're not going to be welcome there at all.Stephanie [00:05:00]:That's funny.Julie [00:05:02]:Yeah.Stephanie [00:05:02]:Another institution that is in downtown Minneapolis specifically, and I didn't realize that they had had a fire in 1989, but this was Glicks, the oldest downtown bar.Julie [00:05:20]:Yeah. Lots lots of damage. It seems like most of these places have endured fires over the years. Yeah.Stephanie [00:05:30]:You can imagine that. Yep.Julie [00:05:32]:Yeah, they they really came back from that. In fact, there was a moose in there. They have these animal heads mounted all throughout the restaurant. And the moose in the back room had been stolen from during a fraternity party there. And I think this group, whoever had stolen it, felt so bad because of fire that Reopening day, they anonymously returned it, leaning it against the front door. Welcome, everybody back. But yeah, my daughter was just there the other day. She's like I'm a glicks. I'm like, do you know that's in my book? No, I didn't even know that.Stephanie [00:06:05]:I had no idea either. Now, the Monte Carlo has been near and dear to my heart for some time, and my mom and dad got divorced, and my dad moved downtown. And that was really like, wow. Because we were suburban girls. And the first weekend my dad had us, he took us into this CD alley, and he went through this back door that had this weird sign above it and brought us in. And I thought he was bringing us into a pool hall. And I was like, oh, my gosh, my dad has really tipped over here, and it turned out to be the Loveliest bar inside. It was actually the Monte Carlo, and he was kind of a regular there. What's the historic nature of the Monte Carlo?Julie [00:06:47]:Yeah. Well, yeah, the hum of the neon sign is going to remain a constant in the North Loop Bar. It's really exquisite in there with this mirrored wall behind the bar. One's kind of an elegance to it, to it all. But the whole North Loop area, the warehouse district is where the Milky Way candy bars and cream of pasta and pop up toaster were invented. This was a real industrial place. The neighborhood has more than 60 buildings that are over a century old. A lot of them have been repurposed. Some of them. A few of them are rehearsal spaces for the Minnesota Opera, and a lot of them are faded. Business signs are repurposed. You see the old signs, ghost signs, sort of. But the Monte Carlo Bar and Grill have stood the test of time. It used to be mostly only for men, but then when it changed ownership, mr. Rimsick, who owns a number of places in the Twin Cities, he kind of turned it into a destination for all the patty, is a great happening place. Now, Beijing style wings, they're really famous for.Stephanie [00:08:06]:Yeah, the dry rubbed wings are my favorite. Yeah, a kind of funny one that I didn't expect would reach me and grab me, but it did. So I work on the Stone Arch Bridge festival and I curate a culinary market that happens underneath the Hennepin Avenue Bridge. And underneath that bridge, we have 38 ten x ten booths of vendors that produce Minnesota made food products. And as I was looking through your book, it's the oldest bridge relic at First Bridge Park, which is where I am during these two days of the festival from 1855. Underneath that bridge, there's these giant anchors, and I sit on those anchors. That's my chair during the two days of the festival. So I didn't realize they were so old.Julie [00:08:56]:Well, yeah, those don't date back to the very first bridge to cross the Mississippi River anywhere. Right there at St. Anthony Falls. I mean, prior to that bridge back in 1855, people were crossing over the falls to get to the other side. That first bridge didn't last real long, and then they created another one and another one. So anyway, these archaeological excavations revealed anchors from the original bridges, and so now they are under the Hennepin Bridge. Now you can see and sit on them if you want. There's plaque. So cool. Really interesting history at that park. Yeah. Right down from Melrose Park.Stephanie [00:09:42]:The oldest island venue in 1893 is the Nicolette Island Inn, which is still operating as a hotel, as a restaurant. It is a beautiful, gorgeous spot. If you ever just want to pop in for a drink or they have delicious food, too. Yeah, that's a great spot. And I didn't realize that David Shea was kind of responsible for bringing that back. He's designed so many restaurants in the Twin Cities.Julie [00:10:08]:Yeah. I didn't realize he was connected to that either until I started research. Talented guy. Yeah. That place I learned a lot about. I didn't really know a lot about that fire that had kind of spread through Nicholas Island and all northeast Minneapolis. A very ravishing fire, and only one of two structures, industrial structures, on the island to survive it. A fire started by some boys smoking. And so, again, these places that have endured. And at one point, it was a men's shelter, salvation army men's shelter. So I really and, you know, I can't help but continue then to learn about and read about Nicholette Island.Stephanie [00:10:52]:Right.Julie [00:10:53]:So many storied history there. Couple donkeys, Pearl and she. But I really focused on that island and my secret Twin Cities.Stephanie [00:11:01]:Who would have known that the oldest bowling alley was the Bryant Lake Bowl?Julie [00:11:08]:Yeah, I mean, that's a legendary spot in the Lin Lake neighborhood, and that's really evolved over the years. It used to be a Ford garage, and apparently it's haunted by a mechanic who was crushed by a car there. But at the heart of it is the eight lane bowling alley. Old school. But around it now is a really funky groovy restaurant that you never super funky for. A bowling alley and a cabaret with these red leather seats from Stillwater Junior High School, where you can go to all kinds of events there. And there's a really cool drone video that went viral in 2021 that they created to support businesses struggling through the pandemic. It's a cool right up our alley. You can Google it went viral. Yeah.Stephanie [00:11:57]:In 1964, Boca Chico became the oldest Mexican eatery, which is interesting, because I know that the Silva family opened El Burrito Mercado a little bit further down the street in the 70s, early seventy s. I didn't realize Boca Chica was that old. And it's still run by the family, isn't it?Julie [00:12:17]:Yeah, it sure is. Grandma Fria seasoned pork tamales are still on the menu. Yeah, this place was a really delightful surprise. Walking into you can go there after visiting the Wapisher Caves, the gangster tours there. That's a great place to go to afterwards. You just walk in and every wall tells a story of the family's heritage murals. But, yeah, Uramo Frias and Gloria Coronado, who's a petite, spunky lady, they fell in love and started this little place. She was actually linked to a dynasty, cultural dynasty in Minneapolis. Her parents owned the first Mexican restaurant in St. Paul, and then in Minneapolis called the Casa Coronado, but that has long closed.Stephanie [00:13:10]:And there's the oldest family Italian restaurant in St. Paul. Yuruso's.Julie [00:13:15]:Yeah. Yuruso's and giant meatballs. And again, that's family owned. Same family. And what I love about that place are giant murals of Sweet Hollow especially. It is located right across from Sweet Hollow. You would never know that across the street there is a hidden valley below street level. Right. We're former immigrant shanty town and in the book I give directions on how to get there because it's a little kind of windy but you can find it.Stephanie [00:13:50]:Yeah.Julie [00:13:51]:Yes.Stephanie [00:13:53]:When you were writing the book, what was one of your favorite discoveries?Julie [00:14:00]:Well, I fell in love with the New York Life Eagle. And that's a Summit overlook park in the Summit neighborhood. It overlooks the river valley.Stephanie [00:14:09]:I lived right there. It's right across from the University Club on Point of Land.Julie [00:14:16]:Maybe because of a mother. She's a mother. She's there taking her tail ons into a serpent, digging in there, protecting her nest of eaglets there in that pose she was almost discarded. She used to be on the third story entrance of the New York Life building in downtown St. Paul. And when that was removed, she really was nearly forgotten and discarded. And she was kind of put on a pedestal in front of a parking lot for a while until she found her new home here. And now she's in all her glory. There a nice spot while you're mansion goggling over mansions there in that area.Stephanie [00:14:54]:Yeah. I had no idea about Newman's being the oldest bar in the state.Julie [00:15:00]:Well, that's the big question because it's a tie between Newman's and the Spot Bar in St. Paul. The feud. I'm sure St. Spot fans will be mad at me for including Newman's, but I included the Spot bar in secret to the city, so I had to be fair. But those two kind of feud over. They both have very good reason but different reasons to want to claim that title. So yeah, Newman's is famous for their frog tank in the window.Stephanie [00:15:30]:What is the story of the frog tank? Do you know?Julie [00:15:34]:You ask people there and the Tank of Frogs has just been there as long as anybody can remember. It's just a tradition that they keep going and I guess the frogs have disappeared every now and then. One was found in a pitcher of beer. But this place has a hidden door behind the Tank of Frogs. It's only used for special events, but they used to hide have kind of speakeasy up there during prohibition and that's where you could speak up there and have a legal hooch. And there was like a phone that connected upstairs to the main bar to let the bartenders know when the cops were coming sniffing.Stephanie [00:16:13]:That's hilarious. Yeah. I love it. You go into all this detail like 1972. The oldest food co op is the Seward food Co op. Who knew that that was I mean, I don't know. The Twin Cities co op movement has been so strong, but who knew Seward was the first? I didn't. I thought the wedge was the first.Julie [00:16:36]:Yeah, no, they were really kind of the first, and now the most enduring. And what I didn't know was what a violent struggle the food co op went through in those early years. It sounds kind of like stuff going on these days with, you know, there was a takeover yeah. That tried to take over with steel bars and fire bombs, but they failed because there was such a difference of philosophy. And these were really some veteran radicals really disagreed with what they called the white bourgeois elitism. That's kind of how the opposing group.Stephanie [00:17:21]:Those bourgeois co op people.Julie [00:17:25]:And there's a new documentary about that called The Co op wars that was created in 2021. Super interesting to learn about the whole early Twin Cities.Stephanie [00:17:34]:Yeah, that sounds neat. Well, this is a great book. Your second book, Julie. Joe Sieverson Oldest Twin Cities a Guide to Historic Treasures. Are you already working on your third?Julie [00:17:44]:Not yet. Promoting this is full time right now.Stephanie [00:17:49]:Yes. Well, it's fun to visit with you and to hear the story and to just get more history about some of these great spots. Pick up the book and then take your own kind of historical tour, right?Julie [00:18:03]:Yes.Stephanie [00:18:04]:I love it. Thank you, Julie Joe. And thank you for highlighting some of our relics. Treasures, a fabric of a community is always about the history. That where you come from. Right. And it's good to be reminded of some of these great spots. I sat on that anchor all summer, last summer, and I never knew. So I love it. Thank you so much for joining us. I appreciate you.Julie [00:18:29]:Absolutely. Thank you.Stephanie [00:18:30]:All right, we'll talk soon. Okay, bye. Get full access to Stephanie's Dish Newsletter at stephaniehansen.substack.com/subscribe

STORYSCAPES
Episode 10 - The Masque of the Red Death - by Edgar Allen Poe - STORYSCAPES

STORYSCAPES

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2021 23:49


“The Masque of the Red Death” by Edgar Allen PoePerformed and Sound Designed by Alex RogersProduced by Chris TrullOpening Theme Music by InkaroseStory music by Lisa Hammer and FrankumjaySTORYSCAPES is brought to you by the Wild 7 Podcast Network.LISTEN DIFFERENT. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Hench Life Pirate Radio
Conjectural Technologies Presents: An Interview with Lisa Hammer

Hench Life Pirate Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2021 108:54


Hey there everyone! We're on a touch of a hiatus right now, just about to be swinging back into gear, but we noticed our interview with Lisa Hammer wasn't up anymore. We published it at the beginning of the summer, only for…something to have happened. So if you missed it the first time, enjoy! If you heard the first time and have been trying to pull it back up for her quote on wether or not Lisa will be back for the upcoming VB movie, or you've just missed our voices the last 3 or so months, well, you enjoy it too! From everyone here at HLPR, we just want to thank the lovely Mrs.Lisa one more time, and hope y'all enjoy it. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/hench4life/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/hench4life/support

technology vb lisa hammer
Hench Life Pirate Radio
Conjectural Technologies Presents: You ask for the LISA, you get the HAMMER!

Hench Life Pirate Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2021 112:14


Greetings Venturoos! The HLPR crew had a chance to interview the incredibly creative Lisa Hammer about her career, voicing Triana Orpheus, and growing up in Salem. There's also a quick drop in from avant-garde Shaolin monk Levi Wilson! And they let us pitch a new startup: Theatrical Butthole Solutions. Yes, it's exactly what you think it isn't. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/hench4life/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/hench4life/support

The Other 50% - a herstory of hollywood

Lisa Hammer is a film director, writer and musician. She is best recognized as the voice of Triana Orpheus on the Adult Swim cartoon The Venture Bros. She has written/directed independent dark comedy feature and short films such as Pox and Pus$bucket, and the CMJ Film Festival winner The Invisible Life of Thomas Lynch which she co-wrote and co-directed with James Merendino (SLC Punk). Lisa's films have won awards from dozens of festivals including: the CMJ Film Festival, Telly Awards, Hugo Awards, It Came From Kuchar Film Festival, the Chicago Underground Film Festival, Canada International Screenplay Festival, Ontario Film Festival, Antimatter, Indieworks and two from New York Press. She has had one-woman shows at the Olympia Film Festival, Perth International Film Festival, and the Duolun Art Museum in Shanghai, China. Her surrealist silent film Empire of Ache was recently acquired by The Getty Museum's feminist film collection, curated by Miranda July. Her storytelling abilities support not only writing, but her editing, gaining her the reputation for saving shelved films as “The Edit Doctor”. Hammer's most recent film The Sisters Plotz, starring Eve Plumb (The Brady Bunch) was recently acquired by Amazon Prime, the Roku Channel and FandangoNow. Hammer co-created and co-writes the original series Maybe Sunshine now on the Seeka TV channel on Roku. Her new "Environmental-Comedy-Sci Fi- Horror" screenplay Ghostapus is winning and placing in dozens of festivals and screenplay contests and is in development.  We talked about her career and the gritty days in New York where you could have rent control and live as an artist.

PM Point of View
60. High Performance Teams

PM Point of View

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2019 60:10


A former US Marine/Special Ops commander, the co-founders of Leadership Techniques International, and the director/coach of the offshore sailing team at the US Naval Academy in Annapolis talk about what it takes to lead highly effective, high-performing teams. Project management is not for the faint of heart! Courage, selflessness, and dedication to the well-being of the team are some of the qualities needed to lead a truly high-performing team. Everyone needs to be 100% engaged in the endeavor. Bring your team to the table and let them have their say. If you really want to up your PM game, this episode is inspiring as well as practical. Listen, learn, and get a free PDU. PDU Information Earn education PDUs in the PMI Talent Triangle for each podcast. Use the following information in PMI’s CCRS system to register the PDUs for this podcast: PDU Category: Online or Digital Media   Provider Number: 4634   Activity Number: PMPOV0060   PDU Claim Code: 4634EBDJTZ   PDUs for this episode: 1 About the Speakers Jahn Tihansky has carved out a successful career in the marine industry including manufacturing, sales, consulting and education.  He started two companies - a manufacturing entity based in Florida in 1985, and then an on-water education program based in Maryland in 1993.  There he developed recreational courses, as well as team-building programs for corporate clients including Northrup-Grumman, Marriott, Pfizer and Coca-Cola. In 2005 he became Director/Head Coach of the Offshore Sailing Team at the United States Naval Academy. His program’s objectives include developing leadership and teamwork skills. During his tenure, his team has won four national championships along with numerous other prestigious ocean racing trophies. Leadership Techniques, LLC David B. Newman and Lisa Hammer are co-founders and principals of Leadership Techniques, LLC. They have the honor of being part of an elite group of instructors selected to deliver multiple courses for PMI SeminarsWorld®, a series of professional seminars which are held annually in various cities throughout the United States and internationally. David B. Newman, PMP, PMI-ACP, SPHR, CSM, ITIL holds a Master’s degree in Technical Management from Johns Hopkins University. He has a diversified background in engineering and product development, is a certified trainer for leadership seminars, and loves to share his experience and extensive background with others.   Lisa Hammer, PMP has more than 30 years of experience, specializing in project management and staff development for both large and small firms. She has managed the implementation of several multi-million-dollar programs, which included coordination of staff, consultants and subcontractors to achieve client goals while maintaining budget and cost controls across all activities.  Colonel Steve Corcoran retired from the United States Marine Corps after 28 years of active service. Commanding at every level in the most austere and challenging environments, he successfully led the nations finest and was recognized for distinguished service in combat and peacetime.  Steve has been the Chief of Cyber Strategy for the Telos Corporation since retiring, successfully taking his leadership knowledge from the Marine Corps, National Outdoor Leadership School into a corporate environment as well as continuing to serve and mentor other veterans transitioning into the civilian workforce. With a strong passion for serving veterans, he sits on the board of directors for Warriors At Ease©.

Art School Acid Podcast
Interview - Lisa Hammer

Art School Acid Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2017 58:55


Filmmaker, musician, and actress Lisa Hammer spoke to us about her awesome life. From her very early films made possible by editing video for an s&m company to her career as a medieval shoegaze singer and so much more! 1:00 "That kids going places” - how Lisa feels about Grant 4:30 Lisa went to Emerson College 9:30 Lisa loves silent and exploitation films 12:30 Bizarre Video - editing s&m 15:20 "On God’s Day he would write porno descriptions” 16:00 Pus Bucket 18:30 Lisa got prison mail! 24:30 Pox 25:30 Lisa moved to LA and worked at THX 27:00 Star Wars inside gossip 32:20 Lisa falls in love! 36:30 Requiem in White 37:55 Metallica dug it 41:50 We listen to Lisa’s new track! 43:10 Maybe Sunshine 46:30 Fuck cancer 51:00 Wilson Arts Diversified 54:30 Cleaning human feces and needles http://www.lisahammer.com/ https://www.youtube.com/user/lisahammer

Science of Arboriculture
From Engineers to Arborists, the Evolution of a Sidewalk Repair Project

Science of Arboriculture

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2015


Urban landscapes can be a hostile environment for trees, and when a major city plans sidewalk upgrades the situation often becomes worse. Lisa Hammer, horticulturist and arborist, and Aida Curtis of Curtis and Rogers Design Studio report on a Miami Florida project that takes the trees into account first. (A,M,Bm)

Science of Arboriculture
From Engineers to Arborists, the Evolution of a Sidewalk Repair Project

Science of Arboriculture

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2015 35:22


Urban landscapes can be a hostile environment for trees, and when a major city plans sidewalk upgrades the situation often becomes worse. Lisa Hammer, horticulturist and arborist, and Aida Curtis of Curtis and Rogers Design Studio report on a Miami Florida project that takes the trees into account first. (A,M,Bm)

Hello, Sweetie! Podcast
Episode 119: Everything’s Coming Up Robots

Hello, Sweetie! Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2014 84:23


Interview with Lisa Hammer, Triana Venture of Venture Bros!! Where’s all your whoorres? PSA: Just don’t. Hand gestures are Danielle’s way of protesting. He’s knifey, to emphasize his shreddiness. Who had the case of the stink eye? Spritz some hydrochloric acid on it. Entitled bitches. Peter Sarsgaard SARS guard. Ginger… Continue reading

Dress Code Cracker: the podcast -- style and communication
Dress Code Cracker Episode 4: Lisa Stockton Wilson AKA Lisa Hammer

Dress Code Cracker: the podcast -- style and communication

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2014 39:36


Lisa Stockton Wilson (aka Lisa Hammer/Trianna Orpheus) met with me at her home in Queens NY to discuss punk, Pippi Longstocking, the hill people of Indonesia, thrift store pickings and Gothic Lolita.  She's a film maker, actor and musician--and obsessive collector of clothes. Her influences are eclectic and her enthusiasm for fashion stems from her appreciation of other art forms: German expressionist film, late 19th century symbolism and on to modern music/TV and film.  I loved that she thought everyone's style was influenced by art--if only. 

Official Women in Horror Month Podcast
Episode 2: Women in Horror Month 2013 Recap & Barbara Muschietti

Official Women in Horror Month Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2013 43:42


We're back! The featured music is brought to you by director and actress Lisa Hammer from her album Radiana! The second episode of the Official Women in Horror Month podcast is a recap of this past February and a big, huge thank you to all who participated. If we forgot to mention you, multiple apologies. The response was overwhelming in a positive way and we appreciate all the hard work and effort from ambassadors, event organizers, the generosity of sponsors and our Viscera family. Ashlee summarized her event, Philly Loves Women In Horror with a focus on how its purpose was to foster the spirit of philanthropy for your local arts & youth non-profits. By the sheer excitement of audience members and continued partnership with donation recipient Lil Filmmakers, Ashlee's already planning on a bigger platform next year with more films and a Q&A panel that will include co-host Hannah as well as Philadelphia horror mavens Jenny Dreadful and Samm Deighan. La Petite Morgue's Kellie posted a brief recap of the organization's event, Bloody Gore-geous Monologues and shared some next steps for the budding organization. Jovana Dimitrijevic's triumphant quest to pay homage to women horror artists in Serbia, Girls Can Do Horror spanned over the stretch of 10 days as a multimedia showcase of the work and insight these artists are contributing to the horror community. Jovana also had a film screening event on March 8th in Postdam, Berlin Germany. Details can be found on the Facebook page where Jovana continues to share amazing art by talented women! A few WiHM supporters came through with some great PSA's! Shout out to Fem Furry of The Whorer podcast, Tonjia Atomic, and the Soska twins for putting in the time to keep the PSA component alive! Hannah & Ashlee spoke with writer and producer of the Universal Pictures release Mama (2013) Barbara Muschietti about sibling creative partnership strategies, working with Neil Cross and Guillermo del Toro, Mama 2 (?), and the love of horror films. Connect with Hannah and/or Ashlee via email or through the various WiHM social media channels with questions, comments, suggestions and stay in the loop for our future episodes! Links can be found at: wihmpodcast.blogspot.com

The Joe and Mike Show
This Show Sucks - Venture Bros. S1 E5

The Joe and Mike Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 1970


The Venture Bros. TV-MA | 22min | Animation, Comedy, Sci-Fi | TV Series (2003– ) The bizarre animated escapades of pseudo-heroic scientist Dr. Rusty Venture, his competent, high strung bodyguard, and his two over-enthusiastic sons. Creator: Christopher McCulloch Stars: Christopher McCulloch, James Urbaniak, Michael Sinterniklaas, Patrick Warburton ## Episode Cast[Edit](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Eeney,_Meeney,_Miney..._Magic!?action=edit§ion=2) * **[James Urbaniak](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/James_Urbaniak)** as [Dr. Venture](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Dr._Venture). * **[Michael Sinterniklaas](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Michael_Sinterniklaas?redlink=1&action=edit&flow=create-page-article-redlink)** as [Dean Venture](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Dean_Venture). * **[Patrick Warburton](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Patrick_Warburton?redlink=1&action=edit&flow=create-page-article-redlink)** as [Brock Samson](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Brock_Samson). * **[Christopher McCulloch](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Christopher_McCulloch)** as [Hank Venture](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Hank_Venture) (though misspelt). * **[Doc Hammer](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Doc_Hammer)** as [Tommy](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Tommy). * **[Steven Rattazzi](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Steven_Rattazzi?redlink=1&action=edit&flow=create-page-article-redlink)** as [Dr. Orpheus](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Dr._Orpheus). * **[Lisa Hammer](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Lisa_Hammer?redlink=1&action=edit&flow=create-page-article-redlink)** as [Triana Orpheus](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Triana_Orpheus). * **[Rachael Simon](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Rachael_Simon?redlink=1&action=edit&flow=create-page-article-redlink)** as "Fantasy Mom". * **[Tom Vollette](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Tom_Vollette?redlink=1&action=edit&flow=create-page-article-redlink)** as "Signer" (the American Sign Language interpretor). * **[Mia Barron](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Mia_Barron?redlink=1&action=edit&flow=create-page-article-redlink)** as [Molotov Cocktease](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Molotov_Cocktease) (though not credited). * **[Soul-Bot](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Soul-Bot?redlink=1&action=edit&flow=create-page-article-redlink)** as [H.E.L.P.eR.](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/H.E.L.P.eR.) ## Cultural References[Edit](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Eeney,_Meeney,_Miney..._Magic!?action=edit§ion=3) * [Dean Venture](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Dean_Venture) wears a Burger King crown in his fantasy of being [Triana Orpheus](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Triana_Orpheus)'s hero. * Triana sarcastically calls Dean "David Koresh" in a reference to the word "compound" when Dean says "So, I'll see you around [the compound](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/The_Venture_Compound)?" * When asked about the skull and crossbones on her shirt, Triana replies that she is going for a "retro _Adam and the Ants_ kind of thing", referring to the new romantic band of the same name. * Dean apparently watches reruns of _Kolchak: The Night Stalker_. * The brothers wrap Dean's shirt around Brock's head after peeing on it. This is a reference to the movie _Total Recall_ where a character wrapped a wet towel around his head to disrupt a tracking device. * When Hank is shuffling through a box of [Brock Samson](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Brock_Samson)'s cassette tapes, he finds the _Led Zeppelin_ album "In Through the Out Door" and ask if he and Brock can listen to it, but Brock refuses stating that "Zep sold out on that one", and the album brings back memories of the only woman he ever loved (most likely [Molotov Cocktease](http://venturebrothers.wikia.com/wiki/Molotov_Cocktease)).