POPULARITY
Join us as we talk to Reece Carter.At 27, just six weeks after moving to LA, Reece was diagnosed with testicular cancer. In this episode, he shares the importance of trusting your instincts and seeking a second opinion if something feels off.Reece recalls spending the day before surgery at Disneyland - his right testicle's "last outing" - and shares his experience navigating treatment in the US, which was fortunately covered by his travel insurance.Reece now resides in Sydney, and this April will mark 10 years since his diagnosis. On April 1st, he will celebrate the release of The Lost Notes of the Soul Spinners, the third book in his series.LINKSPre Order The Lost Notes of the Soul Spinners here - https://amzn.asia/d/bl2jvg3https://thebigcpodcast.com/ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
On this episode of Vibe Check, Saeed, Sam and Zach chat about the internet's reaction to Luigi Mangione, suspect in the United Healthcare shooting. Plus, they discuss LGQBT+ rights under a second Donald Trump presidency and a few recommendations to keep your vibe right.We want to hear from you! Email us at vibecheck@stitcher.com, and keep in touch with us on Instagram @vibecheck_podor TikTok @vibecheckpod. You can now get direct access to the group chat! Find us on Patreon at patreon.com/vibecheck. Vibe Check listeners can now get a free three month trial to the SiriusXM app by going to siriusxm.com/vibecheck.Merch: www.podswag.com/vibecheck------------------------------------------------------RECOMMENDATIONS:SAM: The Wonder of Stevie podcast, Lost Notes: 1980 - Ep 1. Stevie WonderZACH: Anatomy of Lies doc on PeacockSAEED: “A Poem of Friendship” by Nikki Giovanni, Wild Card podcast with Nikki Giovanni
Dylan Tupper Rupert is the host of the podcast, Groupies: Women of the Sunset Strip from the Pill to Punk. It's the latest season of KCRW's Lost Notes. Dylan is also Producer Emeritus for Bandsplain. We talk about birth control, the dawn of punk, a scandalous version of Cosmo in 1971, making a show about sexual relationships between rock stars and teens, that Cormac McCarthy Vanity Fair story, the vampiric energy of Jimmy Page, Pamela Des Barres, Dee Dee Keel, empowerment vs. exploitation, the mid-2000s Seattle scene, The Vera Project, The Lashes, her feelings about LA, Blood Brothers, throwing a music fest on Orcas Island, and the Jackson Browne For Everyman house. Groupies is live now on your podcast app. Subscribe to After the Deluge Patreon and get extra stuff and a free zine mailed to your home: patreon.com/afterthedeluge - instagram.com/yaydylan - instagram.com/routinelayup --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/afterthedeluge/support
In the Delphi double murder trial, suspect Richard Allen talked to investigators in 2017, but the interview notes were lost until 2022. In Utah, a growing number of parents and advocates are pushing for a ban on the use of padded seclusion rooms in schools for disabled children. Drew Nelson reports.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Does listening to music during sex actually change the experience? I’m meeting my bestie’s boyfriend for the first time! Should I give up on dating? Dylan Tupper Rupert explores the world of the Sunset Strip's most legendary rock n’ roll groupies in the newest season of KCRW’s Lost Notes. She joins Myisha to talk sex playlists and why she says f*** the dating scene. Plus, Dylan shares the dating mishap that still haunts her. Follow Myisha: @myishabattle Follow Dylan: @yaydylan Check out KCRW’s Lost Notes: Groupies on your favorite podcast app!
An audio folk story examining the tradition of Black watermelon long-haulers, who drive to farms in the South for watermelon and sell them in Black neighborhoods around the US. This is a special bonus edition from KCRW's Lost Notes.
America is experiencing the worst spate of domestic violence since the 1960s and 1970s. July 13's assassination attempt against former President Trump should be a wakeup call. Judge Aileen Cannon dismissed the case against former President Trump over his handling of classified documents, saying the special counsel's appointment violated the Constitution. What’s next? Long Beach-based video artist Bill Viola died this past Friday at age 73 after being diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimer’s disease in 2012. Musician Reggie Andrews mentored hundreds of students at LA’s Locke High School, some of whom became stars, like Thundercat and Kamasi Washington. Andrews is the focus of the latest “Lost Notes” episode.
Today Elliot talks to Jesse about two podcasts, The Bones of Old New York and Lost Notes, season 4.
We're doing a feed swap today! We would like to introduce you to Lost Notes from KCRW. A music documentary podcast that we feel is in conversation with Primer. This episode focuses on Fela Kuti's time in LA and the creation of his legendary Afrobeat sound. If you like the show, subscribe and tell em Primer sent you! Find more info on KCRW
In the early days of the war on terror, the US captured thousands of alleged “enemy combatants” overseas, but they needed somewhere to hold and interrogate them… without worrying about those pesky Geneva Conventions. Guantánamo Bay was the perfect solution. But not long after it opened, the truth of its makeshift justice system started coming to light. The new season of Serial offers an unprecedented look behind the scenes at the island prison. Today, Leah sits down with co-hosts Sarah Koenig and Dana Chivvis to hear the story behind their reporting. Plus, you know the song "Tainted Love" by Soft Cell? Well, did you know it was actually an obscure soul song written in the 1960s? We'll hear that story from Lost Notes, plus Leah talks to co-hosts Novena Carmel and Michael Barnes about the show. All that and more this week on Podcast Playlist. Featuring: Serial, Lost Notes, Broomgate, White Devil For links and more info, head to cbc.ca/podcastplaylist.
Lost Notes by KCRW explores how Fela Kuti's time in LA in 1969 was instrumental in the creation of his legendary Afrobeat sound. Hosted by Michael Barnes and Novena Carmel. Find a full transcript of Lost Notes at KCRW. And subscribe to the show. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
This episode's guest is Myke Dodge Weiskopf. I met Myke through KCRW's Independent Producer program, as he's the senior producer in the Music Department. He's been publicly writing, thinking, and obsessing about music since age 13, when he published his first fanzine on a hand-me-down Apple IIe and a dot-matrix printer.He is the founding producer of KCRW's Lost Notes (which I reviewed on my website), and – as he writes on his website -- makes beautiful and atmospheric audio stories. A love of sound is the fundamental through-line in his life and work. When he's not producing audio, he's an avid outdoorsman, and has worked as a fire lookout under the US Forest Service and volunteered on backcountry trail restoration projects deep in Los Padres National Forest.
Reading from T. Townsend Brown's personal notes on "The Structure of Space" - denoting an "off the books" physics... Become a Paid Subscriber: https://anchor.fm/wayne-mcroy/subscribe https://www.rokfin.com/waynemcroy https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCSdS1CiIycQRaSy2UupPrzg https://www.amazon.com/Books-Wayne-McRoy/s?rh=n%3A283155%2Cp_27%3AWayne+McRoy https://m.facebook.com/Files-From-The-Conspiratorium-1542730889274114/ thealchemicalbeacon.substack.com https://my-store-d08567.creator-spring.com/listing/atr-design-1 https://my-store-d08567.creator-spring.com/listing/atr-design-2 https://freeworld.fm/ If you would like to make a one time donation, you can send it through PayPal to: dmcroy98@epix.net Tickets now available for FreeWorld N.Y.C. -https://www.eventbrite.com/e/free-world-nyc-tickets-667727369537?aff=ebdshpsearchautocomplete
This week, hosts Greg Kot and Jim DeRogatis talk with the director of the documentary, Jimmy Carter: Rock and Roll President about how Carter changed the way politicians interact with musicians. Plus, poet and music critic Hanif Abdurraqib talks about hosting a season of the Lost Notes podcast on 1980. Then, Jim and Greg share their thoughts on the first new album in 24 years by the British duo, Everything but the Girl. Join our Facebook Group: https://bit.ly/3sivr9T Become a member on Patreon: https://bit.ly/3slWZvc Sign up for our newsletter: https://bit.ly/3eEvRnG Make a donation via PayPal: https://bit.ly/3dmt9lU Send us a Voice Memo: Desktop: bit.ly/2RyD5Ah Mobile: sayhi.chat/soundops Featured Songs: Bob Dylan, "It's Alright, Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)," Bringing It All Back Home, Columbia, 1965The Beatles, "With A Little Help From My Friends," Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, Capitol, 1967Everything but the Girl, "Nothing Left To Lose," Fuse, Buzzin' Fly, Virgin, 2023Everything but the Girl, "When You Mess Up," Fuse, Buzzin' Fly, Virgin, 2023Everything but the Girl, "Lost," Fuse, Buzzin' Fly, Virgin, 2023The Allman Brothers Band, "Ramblin' Man," Brothers and Sisters, Capricorn, 1973Bob Dylan, "Maggie's Farm," Bringing It All Back Home, Columbia, 1965Bob Dylan, "Gotta Serve Somebody," Slow Train Coming, Columbia, 1979Joy Division, "Love Will Tear Us Apart," Closer, Factory, 1980Grace Jones, "On Your Knees," Muse, Island, 1979Grace Jones, "Warm Leatherette," Warm Leatherette, Island, 1980The Normal, "Warm Leatherette," Warm Leatherette (Single), Mute, 1978Ceremony, "New Order," Movement, Factory, 1981The Germs, "Forming," Forming (Single), What, 1977Yoko Ono, "Walking on Thin Ice," Walking on Thin Ice (Single), Geffen, 1981Phil Collins, "Sussudio," No Jacket Required, Atlantic, 1985Support The Show: https://www.patreon.com/soundopinionsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Today Elliot talks to Jesse about Lost Notes, a music podcast from KCRW, a radio station in California.
Riddle me this: What happens when I lose my podcast notes right before we record the episode? Answer: This Episode! The bookclub gang does it live this week, with no preparation or guidance, we talk about comic book movies and media and varying degree and clarity, enjoy! Art and Comics from Ross Radke - https://www.rossradke.com/ Also check out and like Ross Radke's Webtoon "SpandEX" https://www.webtoons.com/en/challenge/spandex/list?title_no=785312 Corridor Crew Justice League Comparison Video https://youtu.be/2sqOBaw5CQM Doomed: The Untold Story of Roger Corman's The Fantastic Four https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OzhmBdqzuJI&ab_channel=Popcornflix The Death of "Superman Lives", What Happened? https://thedeathofsupermanliveswhathappened.vhx.tv/ Logo by Ross Radke https://www.rossradke.com/ opening and closing theme by https://onlybeast.com/
"Rumble Strip gives you extraordinary stories about ordinary life."This episode of MetaPod features two New Englanders talking about how to capture the culture of the region for a podcast. That would be Erica Heilman, creator of Rumble Strip, a podcast that she makes in her underwear closet in Vermont, and Wendy, host of MetaPod and native of the Live Free or Die State (aka New Hampshire).Erica is an award-winning indie podcaster and has been producing stories for radio for 15+ years. She calls Rumble Strip "a show about people getting through the day". Although the scenes and smells are characteristic of life in Vermont, Rumble Strip listeners will discover that people are more alike than different. Wendy and Erica discuss how Erica manages to ride tractors, hunt grouse, learn to skin cows while being in a state of wonder talking to people about what the heck is going on. Wendy also asks about the Peabody Award for Erica's episode Finn and the Bell and what it was like to work with band Sylvan Esso on a podcast. And finally, Wendy asks Erica to describe some of the unique smells of Vermont and how she's included them in Rumble Strip. Oh, and p.s. Erica reveals her power song!Show notesFifty. A Phoenix Moment (Total Eclipse of the Heart)Forrest Foster, Independent DairymanVirtual JusticeSylvan Esso (band)Shaking Out the Numb (produced by Erica Heilman)About Erica HeilmanErica Heilman invites herself into people's homes to find out what they know, hate, love, what they're afraid of, and what makes them more like you than you'd realized. These are messy, obsessively crafted stories of the everyday. Rumble Strip's Finn and the Bell won a Peabody Award in 2022. The Our Show series was named the #1 podcast of 2020 by The Atlantic. Erica's independent radio work has aired on NPR, Hearing Voices, SOUNDPRINT, CBC, BBC, KCRW's UnFictional, KCRW's Lost Notes, and on major public radio affiliates across the United States.
Something evil and wicked dwells in the sewers underneath Waterdeep. Who OR what is The Xanathar? DMsGuild Corner of the Week: Xanathar's Lost Notes to Everything Else ~~DnD Lorecast D&D Rulebook Giveaway~~ Through 11:59pm on June 30, 2022, the DnD Lorecast will be having drawing for EIGHT Dungeons and Dragons rulebooks with 100% of the proceeds going to the Critical Role Foundation. Included are: D&D Core Rulebook Gift Set (PHB, DMG, and MM + DM Screen) Fizban's Treasury of Dragons Mordekainen's Tome of Foes Tasha's Cauldron of Everything Volo's Guide to Monsters Xanathar's Guide to Everything ONE ticket costs $4USD, THREE tickets cost $10USD You can buy tickets by sending money via PayPal, Venmo, or CashApp! A winner will be announced during our July 7 show! Equip your own adventures: D&D 5th Edition Starter Set: https://amzn.to/2WgZX6O D&D 5th Edition Players Handbook: https://amzn.to/3iRtcH4 D&D 5th Ed Monster's Manual: https://amzn.to/2Eeh8Qp 38 Fantasy Miniatures: https://amzn.to/34kh6kX Spellbook Cards (Arcane): https://amzn.to/3iRJfUo Spellbook Cards (Cleric): https://amzn.to/2Qfrwdf Awesome Looking Dice Sets: https://amzn.to/3aHFwpM Links: Crit's TTRPG Shows: Fumbling 4 and the All-Mighty Crit - *SECOND SEASON* homebrew Dungeons and Dragons 5e live playcast Cyberpunk'd - Cyberpunk RED live playcast Call of Cthulhu: Mythos Mysteries - *SECOND SEASON* Call of Cthulhu 7e live playcast Delta Green SCP Files - Delta Green TTRPG with an SCP twist live playcast Nights of Darkness - World of Darkness: Vampire the Masquerade live playcast Resident Evil Lorecast - a look at all things within the Resident Evil universe Legend of Zelda Lorecast - a look at all thinks LoZ from NES to Switch Avatar Legends: Journey of the Elements - ***currently on hiatus*** Mythical Mysteries - ***COMING SOON*** Sergio's OTHER nerdy podcast Fandom University - multi-episodes arcs deep-diving into various nerdy topics Other: Stuart Watkins' D&D Show - Committee Quest: https://www.committee-quest.com/ Talk D&D and join the Robots Radio fam: Discord: discord.gg/JXKfVhM Visit and chat w/ Crit and Sergio live every Thurs at 8:30p EST: twitch.tv/allmightycrit Stay plugged in on Twitter: twitter.com/dndlorecast Send us a note! Email: dndlorecast@gmail.com Get a cool shirt, hat, or sticker, and support the show. Merch: https://robotsradio.net/store/ ROBOTSRADIO.net - Smart Shows for Interesting People. Explore all the awesome shows on the network. Music: Dangerous by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3587-dangerous License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Something evil and wicked dwells in the sewers underneath Waterdeep. Who OR what is The Xanathar? DMsGuild Corner of the Week: Xanathar's Lost Notes to Everything Else Equip your own adventures: D&D 5th Edition Starter Set: https://amzn.to/2WgZX6O D&D 5th Edition Players Handbook: https://amzn.to/3iRtcH4 D&D 5th Ed Monster's Manual: https://amzn.to/2Eeh8Qp 38 Fantasy Miniatures: https://amzn.to/34kh6kX Spellbook Cards (Arcane): https://amzn.to/3iRJfUo Spellbook Cards (Cleric): https://amzn.to/2Qfrwdf Awesome Looking Dice Sets: https://amzn.to/3aHFwpM Links: Crit's TTRPG Shows: Fumbling 4 and the All-Mighty Crit - *SECOND SEASON* homebrew Dungeons and Dragons 5e live playcast Cyberpunk'd - Cyberpunk RED live playcast Call of Cthulhu: Mythos Mysteries - *SECOND SEASON* Call of Cthulhu 7e live playcast Delta Green SCP Files - Delta Green TTRPG with an SCP twist live playcast Nights of Darkness - World of Darkness: Vampire the Masquerade live playcast Resident Evil Lorecast - a look at all things within the Resident Evil universe Legend of Zelda Lorecast - a look at all thinks LoZ from NES to Switch Avatar Legends: Journey of the Elements - ***currently on hiatus*** Mythical Mysteries - ***COMING SOON*** Sergio's OTHER nerdy podcast Fandom University - multi-episodes arcs deep-diving into various nerdy topics Other: Stuart Watkins' D&D Show - Committee Quest: https://www.committee-quest.com/ Talk D&D and join the Robots Radio fam: Discord: discord.gg/JXKfVhM Visit and chat w/ Crit and Sergio live every Thurs at 8:30p EST: twitch.tv/allmightycrit Stay plugged in on Twitter: twitter.com/dndlorecast Send us a note! Email: dndlorecast@gmail.com Get a cool shirt, hat, or sticker, and support the show. Merch: https://robotsradio.net/store/ ROBOTSRADIO.net - Smart Shows for Interesting People. Explore all the awesome shows on the network. Music: Dangerous by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3587-dangerous License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Welcome aboard show #275. Turn back all ye that do not enjoy music that is somewhat “challenging”. You have been warned.We will not be accepting negative feedback on this show. If you don't like it… just remember that “Music's Not for Everyone”.If you like what you hear join us live (almost) every Sunday 9pm-11pm on SheffieldLive!93.2fm, via the TuneIn Radio App or www.sheffieldlive.orgGet in touch with requests, recommendations and guest mix inquiries! We're also available for family functions, weddings, funerals, boat launches and more.www.twitter.com/RadioNightTrainSHOWNOTESQuesting with Zakia on NTSJimmy Smack - Anguish (Official Video)Sculpture - Plastic Infinite Official VideoRaymond Scott & Jim Hensoneden ahbez episode of Lost Notes. Deb Grant on eden ahbez and reissuesLullabies to Paralyse: Original Soundtrack SpecialTNT Chills OutTNT's EP ShowBeastie Revolution: A Gala EventTripping (1999 Ken Kesey / Merry Pranksters documentary)
Phil Cousineau is a freelance writer, filmmaker, photographer, art and literary tour leader, teacher of creativity, mythographer, storyteller, and an all-around Renaissance man. He's published over 40 books and has over 25 documentary film writing credits. He is also host and co-writer of "Global Spirit," a nationally broadcast television series. His books include Wordcatcher (Viva Editions, Cleis Press 2010), Beyond Forgiveness: Reflections On Atonement (Jossey-Bass 2011), Stoking The Creative Fires (Red (Wheel/Wiser 2008), Burning the Midnight Oil: Illuminating Words For the Long Night's Journey Into Day (Viva Editions 2014), The Book of Roads: Travel Stories from Michigan to Marrakech (Viva Editions 2015), The Art of Pilgrimage revised (Conari Press 2021), The Lost Notes of Sisyphus (Sisyphus Press 2021)Interview Date: 11/17/2021 Tags: Phil Cousineau, Joseph Campbell, Albert Camus, Greek mythology, Sisyphean task, struggle, metaphor, boredom, despair, rise of authoritarianism, The Great Gatsby, Rollo May, shame, Persephone, pandemic, Merope, Prometheus, Zeus, Mythology, Philosophy
The Greek myth of Sisyphus unveils our valiant and irrepressible desire to create something unique out of our lives despite our despair and our defeats. This deep conversation plunges the depths and fullness of this misunderstood myth. It is a parable for the modern world and our fight against the hell of the pandemic and the rise of authoritarianism in the world today. Phil Cousineau is a freelance writer, filmmaker, photographer, art and literary tour leader, teacher of creativity, mythographer, storyteller, and an all-around Renaissance man. He's published over 40 books and has over 25 documentary film writing credits. He is also host and co-writer of "Global Spirit," a nationally broadcast television series. His books include Wordcatcher (Viva Editions, Cleis Press 2010), Beyond Forgiveness: Reflections On Atonement (Jossey-Bass 2011), Stoking The Creative Fires (Red Wheel/Wiser 2008), Burning the Midnight Oil: Illuminating Words For the Long Night's Journey Into Day (Viva Editions 2014), The Book of Roads: Travel Stories from Michigan to Marrakech (Viva Editions 2015), The Art of Pilgrimage revised (Conari Press 2021) and The Lost Notes of Sisyphus (Sisyphus Press 2021)Interview Date: 11/17/2021 Tags: Phil Cousineau, Joseph Campbell, Albert Camus, Greek mythology, Mythology, Philosophy
Community Producer Rochelle Kwan (a.k.a. YiuYiu in her DJ life) gathers the DJs who joined her in curating our first annual mixtape — to chat about how we can use music to reconnect our diaspora communities, across generations and borders. If you haven't heard the mixtape — which features musical selections by Les Talusan (a.k.a. Les The DJ of OPM Sundays), Arshia Fatima Haq (of Discostan), Roger Bong (of Aloha Got Soul), and YiuYiu (of Manhattan Chinatown) — then you can hear it here, or wherever you get podcasts. Need more music? Did we miss a favorite track of yours that the world absolutely needs to hear? Then check out our public Spotify playlist (a totally separate, community-sourced playlist that we're pairing with this mixtape) to hear a bigger range of tunes from Asian and Pacific diaspora cultures — and add your own favorites! About the DJs Les Talusan a.k.a. Les The DJ (she/they) Les The DJ aka Les Talusan is a DJ, photographer, curator, teaching artist and organizer whose practice immerses people in the joy of discovery, empowerment, and community. This approach is informed by Les' own story of resilience, liberation and courage as an immigrant, mother and v/s. Born and raised in Manila, Philippines, Les fell in love with music at a young age, DJing at local clubs and playing in bands. Les has lived in Washington, DC for over 20 years and continues to expand their talents, performing behind the decks in the U.S. and abroad. Arshia Fatima Haq - @discostan | @arshiaxfatima Arshia Fatima Haq (born in Hyderabad, India) works through film, visual art, performance, and sound, in feminist modes outside of the Western model. She is interested in counterachives and speculative narratives, and is currently exploring themes of embodiment, mysticism, indigenous and localized knowledge within the context of Sufism. She is the founder of Discostan, a collaborative decolonial project and record label working with cultural production from South and West Asia and North Africa. She hosts and produces radio shows on Dublab and NTS, and has produced episodes for KCRW's acclaimed "Lost Notes" podcast series. Her work has been presented nationally and internationally at museums, galleries, nightclubs, and in the streets. Roger Bong (he/him) - @alohagotsoul | @rogerbong Roger Bong launched Aloha Got Soul as a blog in 2010 after graduating college with a journalism degree and — more importantly — after hearing DJ Muro's Hawaiian Breaks mix. Roger's love for story, sound and design has turned the blog into an independent record label that champions all genres and generations of music from Hawai‘i. He and his wife run the label from Honolulu. Rochelle Kwan a.k.a. YiuYiu (she/her) - @rochellehkwan Rochelle Kwan, also known as YiuYiu, is a cultural organizer, oral history educator, and DJ based on Lenape land in NYC's Manhattan Chinatown. Bringing together her backgrounds in organizing, history, and music, she trains everyday people to build multigenerational oral history projects and engage with their communities as classrooms. As a cultural archivist, DJ, and dancer, she works to amplify arts and culture as essential to community resilience and foster intergenerational relationships and dance floors. Rochelle's also the Community Producer at Self Evident, where she leads our budding oral history program and helps to grow our listening party program through partnership and collaboration. Credits Produced by Rochelle Kwan and Julia Shu Music curated by Les The DJ (a.k.a. Les Talusan), Arshia Fatima Haq, Roger Bong, and YiuYiu (a.k.a. Rochelle Kwan) Edited by James Boo, with help from Sheena Tan Fact checked by Alex Chun and Harsha Nahata Sound mix by Timothy Lou Ly Self Evident theme music by Dorian Love Our Executive Producer is Ken Ikeda
Community Producer Rochelle Kwan (a.k.a. YiuYiu) invites three of her favorite DJs to curate our first annual mixtape — and chat with them about how we can use music to reconnect our diaspora communities, across generations and borders. Our first annual international, transnational mixtape features musical selections from YiuYiu (of NYC Manhattan Chinatown), Les Talusan (a.k.a. Les The DJ of OPM Sundays), Arshia Fatima Haq (of Discostan), and Roger Bong (of Aloha Got Soul). The 22 specially curated tracks on this episode span the South West Asian / North African (SWANA) region, Hawai'i, the Philippines, Hong Kong, Taiwan, and their global diasporas. Just as each song and record comes with its own stories, this mixtape weaves in the personal stories that brought Roger, Les, Arshia, and Rochelle to music and DJing today. Need more music? Did we miss a favorite track of yours that the world absolutely needs to hear? Then check out our public Spotify playlist (a totally separate, community-sourced playlist that we're pairing with this mixtape) to hear a bigger range of tunes from Asian and Pacific diaspora cultures — and add your own favorites! Resources, Reading, and Music READ “Vinyl-Only Nights Return to D.C.” by Haley McKey for District Fray Magazine READ "How an obscure '80s album helped this father and son connect" by Aparita Bhandari for CBC/Radio-Canada READ + LISTEN “Kalapana's 1974 debut: the record that forever changed Hawaii” by Aloha Got Soul READ + LISTEN "Chinatown Records" by Rochelle Kwan for The Vinyl Factory LISTEN - DJ Muro - Hawaiian Breaks (with tracklist) by Aloha Got Soul LISTEN - OPM Sundays w/ Les The DJ & Joel Quizon on Twitch LISTEN - Phambinho w/ YiuYiu for NTS Radio LISTEN - My Father's Favorite Music by Discostan LISTEN - Disco Se Aagay by Nermin Niazi and Feisal Mosleh for Discostan LISTEN - Pacific Sounds (inspired by the sounds of Hawaii and the Pacific) SUPPORT Aloha Got Soul and Aloha Got Soul Bandcamp SUPPORT Discostan and Discostan Bandcamp SUPPORT YiuYiu Add your own diaspora tracks to our public Spotify playlist! About the DJs Les Talusan a.k.a. Les The DJ Les The DJ aka Les Talusan is a DJ, photographer, curator, teaching artist and organizer whose practice immerses people in the joy of discovery, empowerment, and community. This approach is informed by Les' own story of resilience, liberation and courage as an immigrant, mother and v/s. Born and raised in Manila, Philippines, Les fell in love with music at a young age, DJing at local clubs and playing in bands. Les has lived in Washington, DC for over 20 years and continues to expand their talents, performing behind the decks in the U.S. and abroad. Arshia Fatima Haq - @discostan | @arshiaxfatima Arshia Fatima Haq (born in Hyderabad, India) works through film, visual art, performance, and sound, in feminist modes outside of the Western model. She is interested in counterachives and speculative narratives, and is currently exploring themes of embodiment, mysticism, indigenous and localized knowledge within the context of Sufism. She is the founder of Discostan, a collaborative decolonial project and record label working with cultural production from South and West Asia and North Africa. She hosts and produces radio shows on Dublab and NTS, and has produced episodes for KCRW's acclaimed "Lost Notes" podcast series. Her work has been presented nationally and internationally at museums, galleries, nightclubs, and in the streets. Roger Bong - @alohagotsoul | @rogerbong Roger Bong launched Aloha Got Soul as a blog in 2010 after graduating college with a journalism degree and — more importantly — after hearing DJ Muro's Hawaiian Breaks mix. Roger's love for story, sound and design has turned the blog into an independent record label that champions all genres and generations of music from Hawai‘i. He and his wife run the label from Honolulu. Rochelle Kwan (a.k.a. YiuYiu) - @rochellehkwan Rochelle Kwan, also known as YiuYiu, is a cultural organizer, oral history educator, and DJ based on Lenape land in NYC's Manhattan Chinatown. Bringing together her backgrounds in organizing, history, and music, she trains everyday people to build multigenerational oral history projects and engage with their communities as classrooms. As a cultural archivist, DJ, and dancer, she works to amplify arts and culture as essential to community resilience and foster intergenerational relationships and dance floors. Rochelle's also the Community Producer at Self Evident, where she leads our budding oral history program and helps to grow our listening party program through partnership and collaboration. Credits Produced by Rochelle Kwan and Julia Shu Music curated by Les The DJ (a.k.a. Les Talusan), Arshia Fatima Haq, Roger Bong, and YiuYiu (a.k.a. Rochelle Kwan) Edited by James Boo, with help from Sheena Tan Sound mix by Timothy Lou Ly Self Evident theme music by Dorian Love Our Executive Producer is Ken Ikeda About Self Evident is a Studio To Be production. Our show is made with support from PRX and the Google Podcasts creator program — and our listener community.
In her 25 years as a music journalist, Jessica Hopper has profiled the doyennes of modern rock and pop music: Björk, Kacey Musgraves, St. Vincent, Liz Phair, Robyn, and many more. Her reviews run the gamut from the latest Nicki Minaj album and the “mobile shopping mall that is the Vans Warped Tour” to the only album by D.C.'s first all-women punk band, released three decades after they broke up. The new second edition of The First Collection of Criticism by a Living Female Rock Critic expands on the 2015 one. That the provocative (and mostly accurate) title still works six years later points out that rock criticism has even fewer women in it than rock music does. Hopper joins us on the podcast to discuss her writing, from her beginnings as a local Chicago critic to her expansive oral histories of Hole and the women who transformed Rolling Stone in the 1970s. Go beyond the episode:Jessica Hopper's The First Collection of Criticism by a Living Female Rock CriticRead “Building a Mystery,” her oral history of Lilith Fair, and her reflections on Joni Mitchell's Blue, 50 years onListen to her eclectic playlist of music that came out of ChicagoHopper hosted Season 2 of KCRW's Lost Notes podcast, looking at artistic legacies of the likes of The Freeze and Cat PowerTune in every week to catch interviews with the liveliest voices from literature, the arts, sciences, history, and public affairs; reports on cutting-edge works in progress; long-form narratives; and compelling excerpts from new books. Hosted by Stephanie Bastek.Subscribe: iTunes • Feedburner • Stitcher • Google Play • AcastHave suggestions for projects you'd like us to catch up on, or writers you want to hear from? Send us a note: podcast [at] theamericanscholar [dot] org. And rate us on iTunes! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In her 25 years as a music journalist, Jessica Hopper has profiled the doyennes of modern rock and pop music: Björk, Kacey Musgraves, St. Vincent, Liz Phair, Robyn, and many more. Her reviews run the gamut from the latest Nicki Minaj album and the “mobile shopping mall that is the Vans Warped Tour” to the only album by D.C.'s first all-women punk band, released three decades after they broke up. The new second edition of The First Collection of Criticism by a Living Female Rock Critic expands on the 2015 one. That the provocative (and mostly accurate) title still works six years later points out that rock criticism has even fewer women in it than rock music does. Hopper joins us on the podcast to discuss her writing, from her beginnings as a local Chicago critic to her expansive oral histories of Hole and the women who transformed Rolling Stone in the 1970s. Go beyond the episode:Jessica Hopper's The First Collection of Criticism by a Living Female Rock CriticRead “Building a Mystery,” her oral history of Lilith Fair, and her reflections on Joni Mitchell's Blue, 50 years onListen to her eclectic playlist of music that came out of ChicagoHopper hosted Season 2 of KCRW's Lost Notes podcast, looking at artistic legacies of the likes of The Freeze and Cat PowerTune in every week to catch interviews with the liveliest voices from literature, the arts, sciences, history, and public affairs; reports on cutting-edge works in progress; long-form narratives; and compelling excerpts from new books. Hosted by Stephanie Bastek.Subscribe: iTunes • Feedburner • Stitcher • Google Play • AcastHave suggestions for projects you'd like us to catch up on, or writers you want to hear from? Send us a note: podcast [at] theamericanscholar [dot] org. And rate us on iTunes! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
On this episode of Open Stacks, a circle around the Co-op's Front Table: from a post-war pioneer of Afrofuturism on Chicago's South Side to the complex communal powers of games like spades, mahjong, and pickup soccer. Thanks to Bryce Lucas for taking us on a tour of the Front Table this time. In this episode, you hear fragments of archival recordings of Sun Ra, including brief excerpts from his film Space is the Place and the track "If You Are Not A Myth" from his album The Sub-Dwellers. You also hear Aleksandar Hemon reading at the 2012 Grand Opening of the Co-op's current location. If you'd like to hear more from Hanif Abdurraqib, you might start with his appearance on Open Stacks in May of 2019, and then check out his own podcast, Object of Sound, or his 1980-focused season of the KCRW show Lost Notes. This episode's passage of the week comes from Philip Roth, by way of Alex at the Co-op. Have you read something recently that moved you, surprised you, made you laugh, or that you couldn't stop thinking about? Tell us about it, or just read it aloud. Open Stacks is hosted by Alena Jones and produced by Jackson Roach. This episode features music by Daniel Birch and Blue Dot Sessions. Find a complete list of every book mentioned in this episode on our website.
Preacher: Jeremy Herbert Text: 1 Timothy 2:1-7 Theme: Praying for the Lost Notes: Effective evangelism begins with praying for the lost. How to Pray “supplications, prayers, intercessions, and thanksgivings” (v.1) Pray with awareness of the need –supplications Pray as worship to God –prayers Pray with compassion for people –intercessions God-honoring prayer is not detached and … Continue reading
Hanif Abdurraqib is a poet, essayist and cultural critic. His book Go Ahead in the Rain blended criticism, history, memoir, and poetry to pay tribute to A Tribe Called Quest, and the upcoming A Little Devil in America (March 30) explores how Black performance is woven into American culture. His website, 68 to 05, is mapping the music that shaped him with personal playlists for each year—between 1968 and 2005. He is also the host and creator of Lost Notes: 1980, named one of 2020's best music podcasts by The New Yorker and The Atlantic. We had an opportunity to chat about Object of Sound, his latest podcast. It centres around topics such as what makes a great cover song? Or what you would include in a future playlist made during a Pandemic? Or Afrofuturism in music today? Here's the original article that was published at Under the Radar magazine's website. And links directly to Object of Sound and Driving The Green Book—a podcast I mentioned at the end.UnEdited is our off season mini-series featuring raw tape with Tastemakers, Podcasters and Cultural Critics. Under the Radar podcast is curently on hiatus. But we will be back next month for Season 2. To get in touch please join our Facebook group. Ask to be a member and I will welcome you with open arms. Or reach me on twitter and instagram. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
2020 was a pretty shabby year, societally speaking, but its podcast output was strong. Here I talk about a few that resonated with me, in the hope that you’ll go and look them up. Sixty Thousand is part of The Bear podcast and radio network; a collective of independent, passionate audio creators. https://thebear.live —————— The Stubborn Light of Things - https://melissaharrison.co.uk/podcast/ Rumble Strip - http://rumblestripvermont.com That Intimate Feeling - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/that-intimate-feeling/id1515806618 Goodbye to all This - https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p08t2vn3 Bilbcast - http://thegoodboy.cat/bilbcast In The Dark - https://features.apmreports.org/in-the-dark/season-two/ Imaginary Advice - https://www.imaginaryadvice.com/ Chart Music - https://chartmusiccouk.wordpress.com/ Lost Notes - https://www.kcrw.com/culture/shows/lost-notes A Good Service on all Other Lines - https://shows.acast.com/a-good-service-on-all-other-lines —————— Sixty Thousand on Patreon - https://www.patreon.com/sixtythousand?fan_landing=true Sixty Thousand on Ko-fi - https://ko-fi.com/darrenpod Sixty Thousand mug - https://www.redbubble.com/i/mug/SixtyThousand-Artwork-by-SixtyThousand/66829868.9Q0AD
I am honored to have on a great human and thoughtful music critic, author, podcast host and all around wordsmith, Hanif Abdurraqib. I felt compelled to reach out to him after loving his season of the incredible music podcast, Lost Notes, as I knew he had connections to our beautiful DIY punk/hardcore scene. We dive in to his life in Columbus, remembering to be a fan of music (as a critic) and the process of writing. LETS GO! Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
This week on Start Hear : Blindspot: The Road to 9/11 : Bringing to light the decade-long "shadow struggle" that preceded the attacks. Lost Notes: 1980 : A collection of the greatest music stories never told. Booklovers : Book suggestions by staff members from the Clermont County Public Library.
It’s December 10th. On this day in 1836, the final days of the “Great Toledo War,” a conflict over a strip of territory between the state of Ohio and the territory of Michigan. Jody and Niki are joined by Hanif Abdurraqib to discuss the origins of the battle, whether it qualifies as a “war,” and what to make of the ongoing Ohio-Michigan rivalry. Hanif is the host of the latest season of the excellent music podcast “Lost Notes.” Find a transcript of this episode at: https://tinyurl.com/esoterichistory This Day In Esoteric Political History is a proud member of Radiotopia from PRX. If you want to support the show directly, you can do so on our website: ThisDayPod.com Get in touch if you have any ideas for future topics, or just want to say hello. Our website is thisdaypod.com Follow us on social @thisdaypod
Hanif Abdurraqib is a poet, essayist, and cultural critic from Columbus, Ohio. His poetry has been published in Muzzle, Vinyl, PEN American, and various other journals. His essays and music criticism have been published in The FADER, Pitchfork, The New Yorker, and The New York Times. His first full length poetry collection, The Crown Ain't Worth Much, was released in June 2016 from Button Poetry. It was named a finalist for the Eric Hoffer Book Prize, and was nominated for a Hurston-Wright Legacy Award. With Big Lucks, he released a limited edition chapbook, Vintage Sadness, in summer 2017 (you cannot get it anymore and he is very sorry.) His first collection of essays, They Can't Kill Us Until They Kill Us, was released in winter 2017 by Two Dollar Radio and was named a book of the year by Buzzfeed, Esquire, NPR, Oprah Magazine, Paste, CBC, The Los Angeles Review, Pitchfork, and The Chicago Tribune, among others. He released Go Ahead In The Rain: Notes To A Tribe Called Quest with University of Texas press in February 2019. The book became a New York Times Bestseller, was a finalist for the Kirkus Prize, and was longlisted for the National Book Award. His second collection of poems, A Fortune For Your Disaster, was released in 2019 by Tin House, and won the 2020 Lenore Marshall Prize. In 2021, he will release the book A Little Devil In America with Random House. He is a graduate of Beechcroft High School.explores a single year: 1980 - the brilliant, awkward and sometimes heartbreaking opening to a monumental decade in popular music. He hosted the most recent season of KCRW's Lost Notes, a collection of the greatest music stories never told. This season explores a single year: 1980 - the brilliant, awkward and sometimes heartbreaking opening to a monumental decade in popular music. Learn more about Lyte. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Hanif Abdurraqib is a poet, essayist, and cultural critic from Columbus, Ohio. His poetry has been published in Muzzle, Vinyl, PEN American, and various other journals. His essays and music criticism have been published in The FADER, Pitchfork, The New Yorker, and The New York Times. His first full length poetry collection, The Crown Ain't Worth Much, was released in June 2016 from Button Poetry. It was named a finalist for the Eric Hoffer Book Prize, and was nominated for a Hurston-Wright Legacy Award. With Big Lucks, he released a limited edition chapbook, Vintage Sadness, in summer 2017 (you cannot get it anymore and he is very sorry.) His first collection of essays, They Can't Kill Us Until They Kill Us, was released in winter 2017 by Two Dollar Radio and was named a book of the year by Buzzfeed, Esquire, NPR, Oprah Magazine, Paste, CBC, The Los Angeles Review, Pitchfork, and The Chicago Tribune, among others. He released Go Ahead In The Rain: Notes To A Tribe Called Quest with University of Texas press in February 2019. The book became a New York Times Bestseller, was a finalist for the Kirkus Prize, and was longlisted for the National Book Award. His second collection of poems, A Fortune For Your Disaster, was released in 2019 by Tin House, and won the 2020 Lenore Marshall Prize. In 2021, he will release the book A Little Devil In America with Random House. He is a graduate of Beechcroft High School.explores a single year: 1980 - the brilliant, awkward and sometimes heartbreaking opening to a monumental decade in popular music. He hosted the most recent season of KCRW's Lost Notes, a collection of the greatest music stories never told. This season explores a single year: 1980 - the brilliant, awkward and sometimes heartbreaking opening to a monumental decade in popular music. Learn more about Lyte.
On the eve of a presidential election, hosts Greg Kot and Jim DeRogatis talk with the director of the new documentary, Jimmy Carter: Rock and Roll President about how Carter changed the way politicians interact with musicians. Plus, poet and music critic Hanif Abdurraqib talks about hosting the new season of the Lost Notes podcast on 1980.
The latest season of Lost Notes, KCRW’s anthology podcast unearthing great stories from the music world that are generally lost to time, is distinct in two ways: first, all of its narratives are pulled from the relatively unlikely year of 1980, and second, it’s curated and hosted by the poet, essayist, and critic Hanif Abdurraqib. The end result is utterly gorgeous. In this week’s episode, Nick talks to Abdurraqib about focusing on 1980, the nature of legacy and fandom, and how to love things critically. SIXTYEIGHT2OHFIVE Servant of Pod sponsors include: Get a ONE HUNDRED DOLLAR advertising credit toward your first LinkedIn campaign. Visit LinkedIn.com/SERVANT Learn more about podcast attribution at podsights.com Visit my exclusive link ExpressVPN.com/SERVANT and you can get an extra 3 months FREE on a one-year package. Raycon - get 15-percent off your order at buyraycon.com/servant
Back on something resembling a schedule, jessamyn and I chat about MetaFilter and also...other things? I am very punchy! This has been successfully posted! Have a great weekend!Helpful LinksPodcast FeedSubscribe with iTunesDirect mp3 downloadMisc - have a wild Sukkot everybody - did you vote for your favorite rocks in the Mineral Cup? Jobs - Help me pack a studio apartment in Oakland by pinochiette (via this AskMe) - Principal IT Architect, Commercial and Medical IT by jenkinsEar Projects - Chess Patch Notes by thomaspark - Automanic Pixie Dream Girl by Just this guy, y'know - Lost Notes: 1980 by mykescipark - Roadside New Mexico: a photographic journey by wev5280 - Places In Space by dng - What caused institutions to take Y2K seriously? by brainwane MetaFilter - So the DVD copy protection was cracked, by mathowie - I ate the Pope by Cardinal Fang - wltm fat bears by fight or flight - Mouth Dreams: 2020 Gives Back by CrystalDave - A $90,000 Dome Home To Give Your Life Purpose by medusa - "Burning down parts of the city was one of the most popular solutions" by jessamyn - #guessthepaint by bitteschoen - Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg has died. by bile and syntax - Trump Tests Positive for the Coronavirus by bertran - Genealogist helps lay WWI veteran to rest by wenestvedt Ask MetaFilter - SKELETON question by longhaultrucker - Road scholars by Not A Thing - Help with Chord Progressions for Lucky Sue by circular - Home High Holy Days Traditions by carrioncomfort - What's the deal with pro athlete pre-game luggage? by zebra - How is data transferred over the internet? by lewedswiver - What to say in job application when supervisor will speak unfavorably? by kingbuzzie - What was this post apocalyptic educational program in the 1980s? by chrchr MetaTalk - Metatalktail Hour: The Past Is a Different Country by Eyebrows McGee - Fucking fucks, fucking fucks, fuck this fucking shit by nakedmolerats
Dart Adams discusses his appearance on Season 3 of KCRW's Lost Notes podcast hosted by poet/author Hanif Abdurraqib, his struggles with trying to carve out a space for himself in a new arena, how he was woefully unprepared for the 2nd straight week in a row to record an episode of Dart Against Humanity but he fully plans to have a solid final 3 episodes to close things out and make up for it. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Stevie Wonder released seven albums from 1970 to 1976. It is an impenetrable run of albums and songs, one of the greatest in music history. Then, in 1979, he faced his first defeat of the decade. Reviews for “Stevie Wonder’s Journey Through The Secret Life of Plants” were harshly mixed. So in 1980 Stevie was due for a comeback. Lost Notes host Hanif Abdurraqib reflects on the album and Wonder’s call for the observation of Martin Luther King’s birthday as a national holiday.
Birthday boy AJ helped kick-off Yellowknife drive-in movie night 2 this past Friday as the night's MC...however he brought the wrong notes and had to wing it. TODAY hear the brilliant MC speech that you SHOULD'VE heard on Friday!
This season the poet and cultural critic Hanif Abdurraqib explores the year 1980. It was the brilliant, awkward and sometimes heartbreaking opening to a monumental decade in popular music.
Our second of two Lost Notes bonus episodes for this summer. This one is about The Student Teachers. In 1977, a group of music obsessed friends got together and decided to form a band. Most of them were still in high school and almost none of them had even picked up an instrument before, but they lived and breathed the New York City music scene and wanted nothing more than to be a part of it. They worked in record stores, ran fan clubs, and spent every second they could together, hanging in clubs like CBGB’s and Max’s Kansas City — clubs they’d eventually headline. Soon after they formed the band, they played a practice gig at one of their high schools and took off from there. They spent their days studying for physics tests and practicing for French finals and spent their nights drinking White Russians and rubbing elbows with their rock heroes. In their two years together, they headlined their favorite clubs, went on tour, made recordings, got interviewed on the radio, opened for Iggy Pop and hung with David Bowie in the recording studio. As the decade came to a close and they got a little older, their love for each other dwindled, and the band imploded. But what a beautiful and wild ride it was. This is the story of the Student Teachers, in their own words.
The new season of Lost Notes will be here in September. Meantime, this summer, we’re sharing a couple of bonus episodes. Fifty years ago, an unlikely musical group evolved out of the Oakland chapter of the Black Panther Party. They were called The Lumpen. And although they quickly gained a following for their air-tight funk, they were always meant to be much more than mere entertainment. Peter Gilstrap reports on the rise and fall of an unlikely R&B group born out of social upheaval.
1. More Tik Tok.2. Editing Podcasts.3. Conspiracies. 4. Lost Notes.
This is our Munchie May series on food documentaries. We watched Les Blank’s 1980 classic film Garlic Is As Good As Ten Mothers. Blank celebrates the virtues of garlic from Berkeley's Chez Panisse to the Gilroy Garlic festival. It’s a short but thorough look at the cultural stereotypes and medicinal qualities of the stinking rose, down the supply chain of farm workers. You can watch the film on the Criterion Channel.This doc was picked by our guest, Richard Parks the Third, a James Beard Award-nominated writer, filmmaker, cookbook author, and the host of Richard’s Famous Food Podcast.Richard is the co-author of the Guerrilla Tacos cookbook and The Boba Book. He’s written for Lucky Peach, the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, and produced radio stories for Snap Judgement, KCRW’s Lost Notes, and McSweeney’s, where he collaborated with The Flaming Lips’ Wayne Coyne.Richard also teaches us how to Spatchcock a chicken!This episode we shout out our friends at Hoppin Hot Sauce! Follow Richard on:Twitter: @reechardparksInstagram: @reechardparksFollow us on:Twitter: @supdocpodcastInstagram: @supdocpodcastFacebook: @supdocpodcastsign up for our mailing listAnd you can show your support to Sup Doc by donating on Patreon.
Author Stories - Author Interviews, Writing Advice, Book Reviews
Today’s author interview guest is Beau L’Amour, co-author of Louis L’Amour’s Lost Treasures: Mysterious Stories, Lost Notes, and Unfinished Manuscripts from One of the World’s Most Popular Novelists. “L’Amour is popular for all the right reasons. His books embody heroic […]
Summary: "You're supposed to be the leading lady of your own life, for god's sake!" This week, comedian, writer and actual twin Kerri Donaldson brings a fresh voice to year 5 of Andrea and Lisa arguing about The Holiday and incredibly, we have a bit of a breakthrough. Also discussed: the Promising Young Woman trailer, Lost Notes podcast, and Kumail Nanjiani getting ripped. Show notes: Kerri Donaldson on Instagram Kerri's comedy duo Brunch Comedy Kerri's podcast Nasty Women Comedy Pop This! Love Actually vs. The Holiday 1 Pop This! Love Actually vs. The Holiday 2 Pop This! Love Actually vs. The Holiday 3 Pop This! Love Actually vs. The Holiday 4 Pop This! Love Actually Live at the Rio Theatre! Jack Black forgot he was in a holiday movie for a second there (Variety) Recommendations: Andrea W.: You're Wrong About - The OJ Simpson Trial (podcast) Lisa: Lost Notes with Jessica Hopper (KCRW podcast) Kerri: Norman F***ing Rockwell by Lana Del Ray, I Think You Should Leave with Tim Robinson (Netflix) Music credits: "Nouvelle Noel" by Kevin MacLeod Music from https://filmmusic.io CC BY 4.0 "Ghost" by Podington Bear From Free Music Archive CC BY 3.0 Theme song "Pyro Flow" by Kevin Macleod From Incompetch CC BY 3.0 Intro bed:"OLPC" by Marco Raaphorst Courtesy of Free Music Archive CC BY-SA 3.0 NL Pop This! Links: Pop This! on TumblrPop This! on iTunes (please consider reviewing and rating us!) Pop This! on Stitcher (please consider reviewing and rating us!) Pop This! on Google PlayPop This! on TuneIn radioPop This! on TwitterPop This! on Instagram Logo design by Samantha Smith Pop This! is two women talking about pop culture. Lisa Christiansen is a broadcaster, journalist and longtime metal head. Andrea Warner is a music critic, author and former horoscopes columnist. Press play and come hang out with your two new best friends. Pop This! podcast is produced by Andrea Gin and recorded at the Vancouver Public Library's wonderful Inspiration Lab.
Gospel in Genesis: Joseph is our current series. Today, Genesis Genesis 41:1-28, 39-41. Pastor Scott Furrow and Pastor Randall Tonini are sharing the preaching responsibilities as FBC and Grace City Church consider a Strategic Alliance and merge congregations. Connect with the First Baptist Church of San Diego on Facebook: Facebook.com/FBCSD. Webpage: FBCSD.com Subscribe to this Podcast on iTunes
Wir sind wieder zu dritt und stellen uns gehörte Folgen vor. Christiane glänzt im Podcast-Intro-Raten und wir sprechen mit Hörer Marek über sein Engagement bei Extinction Rebellion. Am Ende erzählen wir von unserem ersten Geigerzähler. Warum, wissen wir nicht.
What is the significance of eating from the tree of knowledge of good and evil? We explore the consequences for Adam and Eve in Genesis 3.
What is the significance of eating from the tree of knowledge of good and evil? We explore the consequences for Adam and Eve in Genesis 3.
New iPhones! A shinier Apple Watch! So many camera lenses! On this week’s episode of Gadget Lab, it’s Apple week yet again. Lauren, Mike, and Arielle discuss all the new devices and services that made a splash in Cupertino. Also, they delve into the state of Apple events as a whole, and whether all the onstage excitement is a little removed from what’s happening in the rest of the world. In other news, California prepares to pass a law that would force ride-sharing companies like Uber and Lyft to classify their drivers as employees (and offer them a minimum wage, health benefits, and other worker protections). Also, social media companies experiment with removing the “likes” feature from their platforms, and nearly 300 email scammers are arrested in the biggest takedown of digital criminals ever. Show NotesRead about the new iPhones, Apple Watch, or follow all of WIRED’s Apple coverage here. Read Aarian Marshall’s story about Uber’s battle over its drivers here. Read Paris Martineau’s story about social media demetrication here. Read Lily Hay Newman’s story about email scammers here. Recommendations Arielle recommends the book Three Women by Lisa Taddeo. Lauren recommends that if you're in San Francisco, go see the art exhibit Pearl Jam: Live in Two Dimensions at the Haight Street Art Center. Michael recommends the podcast Lost Notes. Follow Michael Calore on Twitter at @snackfight. Lauren Goode is @laurengoode. Arielle Pardes can be found at @pardesoteric. Bling the main hotline at @GadgetLab. Our theme song is by Solar Keys. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
On the KRCW series Lost Notes, Jessica Hopper plumbs pop music history for the most important stories never told. She brings us a bevy of lost gems, from Fanny, an all-female quartet of rockers that was one of David Bowie's favorite bands, to the Freeze a late-70s punk outfit now coming to terms with the offensive lyrics of their youth. Tune in to discover another side of pop, one that's rarely been heard. Songs Discussed:Fanny - Charity Ball (Live Version)Fanny - Ain't that PeculiarThe Freeze - I Hate TouristsCat Power - The Greatest Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Lost Notes is a podcast from KCRW. It's about music, and artistic legacy, and people. Listen to this episode about David Bowie's favorite rock band, Fanny. Then, go subscribe in your podcast player. See you soon for more Welcome to LA.
Lost Notes is a podcast that we love. It’s about music. We think you should subscribe.
On this season of Lost Notes, the music journalist and author Jessica Hopper is looking at artist legacies. How do they hold up? How do they change over time? Learn how decades on a song can find new meaning, something different than when it was written. Find out what happens when we apply our 2019 politics to 1974’s songs. And hear from pioneering women who have been written out of music’s history.
This week, Garin and Dan open up the mailbag and answer listener questions. MORE IMPORTANTLY... THE LABBY AWARDS! Garin and Dan choose the best of the best supplements used in this year's episodes in the following categories: Best Race Supplement/ Race in a Supplement featured this year: Monstrous Races I - Tyler Kamstra (https://bit.ly/2EK1iLH) Monstrous Races II - Tyler Kamstra (https://bit.ly/2RjTKFY) Bear PC Sourcebook- Matthew Gravelyn (https://bit.ly/2CBMCNf) Constructs Compendium (Kemling) - Brandon Norris & Richie Root (https://bit.ly/2LBjWH5) Best Subclass Supplement featured this year: Elminster’s Guide to Divination (Prophecy Domain Cleric) - MT Black (https://bit.ly/2CBwUS7) Midgard Heroes Handbook (Beer Domain Cleric) - Kobold Press (https://bit.ly/2FP10Ri) Faiths of the Forgotten Realms (Oath of the Silent Path) - Scott Bean, Micah Watt, Alex Clippinger (https://bit.ly/2Q6mRbr) Teachings of the Inner Temple (Way of the Turning Circle)- David J Moore (https://bit.ly/2RaXx8L) Best "Pay What You Want" featured this year: 15 New Backgrounds - World Builder Blog Presents - James Introcaso (https://bit.ly/2Q3G1hM) Volos Complete Subrace Handbook - Clan Crafter Hralding (https://bit.ly/2MmyFnN) Angler, a Ranger Path- Steven Wood (https://bit.ly/2Ai3PcW) Dark Deeds: Character Backgrounds - Chris Bissette (https://bit.ly/2rUovTC) Best Unique Supplement Featured this year: Character Options: Talents - Dragonix (https://bit.ly/2Mp1GiZ) Epic Characters- Marching Modron Press (https://bit.ly/2PuvqgP) Faith of the Forgotten Realms - Scott Bean, Micah Watt, Alex Clippinger (https://bit.ly/2Q6mRbr) Hag’s Hexes- Tim Bannock, Matt Butler, Matthew Gravelyn, JVC Parry, Janek Sielicki (https://bit.ly/2Vc1VDi) Best of the Best in 2018: Midgard Heroes Handbook- Kobold Press (https://bit.ly/2FP10Ri) Faiths of the Forgotten Realms- Scott Bean, Micah Watt, Alex Clippinger (https://bit.ly/2Q6mRbr) Volos Complete Subrace Handbook - Clan Crafter Hralding (https://bit.ly/2MmyFnN) Xanathar’s Lost Notes to Everything Else- DMs Guild Adepts (https://bit.ly/2rSdGS4) Listen to hear who gets a labby! Patreon: patreon.com/dndcharacterlab DMsGuild Offerings: bit.ly/2MjFjQA Twitter: twitter.com/dndcharacterlab Facebook: facebook.com/dndcharacterlab Shirts and Merch: shop.spreadshirt.com/dndcharacterlab
It’s a hodge-podge of gastrocomedic stylings and quick-hit segments from around the United States! Eddie Tassin tours us through all 15 dining rooms at Antoine’s (NOLA), the oldest family-owned restaurant in the country. Clint Funk tells a story about Wendy’s “Carolina Burger,” which may have originated at The Blue Ridge Grill a.k.a. “The Grill” (Galax, VA). And we play a name-dropping drinking game with Ruben Rueda, the longest-standing bartender at the Musso & Frank Grill (Los Angeles), the oldest restaurant in Hollywood, frequented by Orson Welles, Steve McQueen (Ruben kicked him out), Bukowski, Keith Richards, Johnny Depp, and more. Plus: how to skin a squirrel, according to the 1953 edition of The Joy of Cooking. And also: the Great Unfinished RFFP Food Rap Song. CONNECT: Tweet to us @richardsfamous. Call our hotline with tips & grievances 323-81-FOOD-4. AND PLEASE: Rate & review us on iTunes. FEATURED VOICES: April Green, Eddie Tassin, Tammy Garcia, Clint Funk, Oscar Hall, Ruben Rueda FURTHER: Read a longer version of Richard’s interview with Ruben Rueda in VICE Munchies: https://munchies.vice.com/en_us/article/mgxn4q/las-longest-standing-bartender-has-86d-more-celebrities-than-you Listen to a longer version of Richard’s interview with Ruben Rueda on KCRW’s Good Food blog: https://soundcloud.com/kcrws-good-food/ruben-rueda-musso-franks-longest-serving-bartender Listen to Richard’s story “A Million Dollars Worth of Plastic,” about a family (including Tammy Garcia, featured in this episode) in Galax, VA (home of The Grill) that won a million dollars from McDonald’s in 1989, via KCRW’s Lost Notes: https://www.kcrw.com/news-culture/shows/lost-notes/a-million-dollars-worth-of-plastic PRODUCTION CREDITS: Produced/reported/voiced/conceived/sound designed by Richard Parks III Mixed by Rob Amjarv Mustachio'd pickle logo by James Braithwaite Theme song by Bobby Halvorson FRIENDS OF THE POD: Caitlin Esch, David Weinberg, Benedict Moran, Steven Berger, Bennett Barbakow, Matt Frassica, Elizabeth Parks Kibbey, Nick White, John Callaghan, Jorge Just, Vice Munchies, KCRW's Lost Notes, the Galax Old Fiddlers Convention VISIT THE RESTAURANTS FEATURED: Lucky Stop Po-Boys, formerly Danny & Clyde's (Thibodaux, LA) for poboys and muffulettas Antoine’s (New Orleans, LA) for shrimp and grits The Blue Ridge Grill a.k.a. “The Grill” (Galax, VA) for a cheese burger with chili The Musso & Frank Grill (Hollywood, CA) for martinis
Zachary Corsa joins Jack and Freddie to discuss Midnight Chats, Unexplained and Lost Notes.
Lost Notes: the strange tale of 'Louie, Louie'. Unearthing hidden histories: The Kitchen Sisters. 'Everyone Else': capturing chance encounters.
The Kingsmen's 1963 anthem 'Louie Louie' has become a soundtrack to raucous parties and good times; you might remember John Belushi beerily belting it out with the other frat boys in the 1978 film 'Animal House'. You can even try to discern what the lyrics say- like the FBI did when it investigated the song for obscenity- but you'll probably fail! And don't assume that The Kingsmen were the ones who actually wrote the track either. From KCRW's series 'Lost Notes', David Weinberg tells the story of 'Louie Louie: The Strange Journey of the Dirtiest Song Never Written'.
Richard Parks III is an author, journalist and man about town in LA. He's lived there his whole life (so far) and doesn't expect to be leaving anytime soon. He used to have a cool truck (see episode photo) and has been working on a few new cookbooks as well as some podcasts including an episode of "Lost Notes" on KCRW about the $1million McDonald's Flexi-disc. Feast Yr Ears is powered by Simplecast
The Organist is still in off-season hibernation, but we emerge for a moment in order to showcase KCRW’s newest podcast: Lost Notes. In this episode, writer Donnell Alexander examines the racial politics of a strange chapter of early 80s pop-music history. To white America, Boston’s music scene was synonymous with the hard rock of Aerosmith and J. Geils Band. But alongside rock and roll was a vital tradition of talent shows in Boston’s Roxbury neighborhood which birthed the careers of Donna Summer and New Edition—a group perhaps best known for launching Bobby Brown and Bell Biv DeVoe. Through the lens of New Edition’s tumultuous career, Donnell Alexander lovingly, trenchantly, and often hilariously describes the group’s collaboration with Monkees’ songwriter Bobby Hart; Michael Jackson’s offer of clemency when New Edition faced a career-ending copyright-infringement suit; and how the boy band’s perceived betrayal of their roots at the height of the Celtics-Lakers rivalry drove a painful wedge into their fanbase. The Organist will be back with new episodes on June 28, 2018. Produced by Donnell Alexander. Lost Notes is produced by Myke Dodge Weiskopf and hosted by Solomon Georgio. Its executive producer is Nick White.
We implore you, have you seen the six-part Netflix docu-series WILD WILD COUNTRY yet? If not, what are you waiting for?When the Rajneesh movement and their leader the Bhagwan came to rural Oregon in the 1980s was it just a clash of cultures (worldly orange-clad hippies vs. conservative townspeople) or a mafia-style hostile takeover? The directors Maclain and Chapman Way have crafted a twisting drama with unearthed videotape of the Rajneeshpuram saga, plus new interviews with many key players. While most of you reading this may not know the name Bhagwan Rajneesh, those who were around to watch the news in the early 1980s can tell you that he was a massive story around the country. That’s because Rajneesh and his followers spent $125 million back in 1981 to build Rajneeshpuram in in the Oregon desert, a 64,000-acre “utopia,” complete with a hospital, schools, restaurants, a shopping mall, and their own airport. What happened there and in the surrounding area is so far-fetched that you won’t believe it’s all true.One of the great things about the doc is the way the filmmakers weave footage from the actual events in alongside new interviews with the people involved.Our guest is journalist-podcaster/multi-hyphenate Los Angeles native, Richard Parks III. Richard has written for Lucky Peach, the New York Times, and McSweeney's. He has created a radio drama with Wayne Coyne, the short doc Music Man Murray, a documentary about Biosphere2, and contributed to Snap Judgement and KCRW’s Lost Notes.Follow Richard on:Twitter: @reechardparksInstagram: @reechardparksFollow us on:Twitter: @supdocpodcastInstagram: @supdocpodcastFacebook: @supdocpodcastsign up for our mailing listAnd you can show your support to Sup Doc by donating on Patreon.
Hear a preview of Lost Notes, an anthology of some of the greatest music stories never truly told. Top journalists present stand-alone audio documentaries that highlight music’s head, heart and beat, with host Solomon Georgio as your guide.
Welcome, brave adventurers...... to the third entry into the Heroes Rise chronicle. This episode was recorded on Saturday, 9th December 2017, and made available for download on Wednesday, 13th December 2017 at heroesrisepodcast.comRyu, Lennon and Ostron are back once again this week, despite Ryu having more mucus in her head than a gelatinous cube. Speaking of Ryu, first up she looks into her Adventurer’s Pack and brings us an app for players who prefer a more digital approach to their characters. Then we take a look at some D&D news as we bring you some Sage Advice and some Lost Notes from XGE.Next, we take a Short Rest and hear some Wisdom from the Masters who tell us all about Dying Players Everywhere; before finally finishing off the show by looking into the Scrying Pool to see what you have to say.Links5th Edition Character Sheet: Android | AppleSage Advice: November 2017No Unearthed Arcana or Sage Advice until JanuaryDMs Guild Adept programmeXanathar's Lost Notes to Everything ElseA Short Rest: Dying Players EverywhereDying Players EverywhereThis Week’s Community QuestionsWhat do you think the Next Big Thing will be for 5e D&D? Is there an older adventure you’d like to see remade? A setting that’s near-and-dear to you? Do you want to see D&D 5e move into a completely different setting entirely?Heroes Rise are always on the lookout for new team members that have a passion for Dungeons and Dragons. Please know that all of our positions are volunteer, but we do offer a well known outlet for your work. If you have a particular skill that you believe could enhance our content, then send your contact information and experience to sendingstone@heroesrisepodcast.comYou can also follow us on the social media sites! We’re on Facebook! Head over to facebook.com/heroesrisednd and say "hi", or check us out on Twitter via @heroesrisednd Support the show (http://patreon.com/heroesrisednd)
Please enjoy this episode of the new podcast series Lost Notes: Groupies which introduces you the bad ass ladies--and style icons-- of the legendary groupie scene of the 1960s and 70s. That includes the young women who made up the first all girl band of all girl groups, the GTO, also known as Girls Together Outrageously. Learn more about the podcast here Episode description: Venice Beach teen Dee Dee Keel was desperate to find out what was happening behind the scenes, in the clubs and hotel rooms of Hollywood: so she tracked an intriguing local rocker, Jim Morrison, on his way to the Strip. That's where she first saw Miss Pamela in all her groupie glamour.By 1969, Pamela Des Barres was no longer a Valley teenybopper; she had transformed into a rock icon-in-the-making. Her freaky clique of Laurel Canyon sprites were ordained by Frank Zappa to become the world's first all-girl band of all-girl groupies, the GTOs. Soon, they had the likes of the Flying Burrito Brothers, the Who, and Led Zeppelin taking notice, just as Rolling Stone dedicated an entire issue to the groupie phenomenon and made the GTOs its centerfold.Our Sponsors:* Check out Acorns: https://acorns.com/DRESSED* Check out Happy Mammoth and use my code DRESSED for a great deal: happymammoth.comSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/dressed-the-history-of-fashion/exclusive-contentAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
Writer/comedian/actor Solomon Georgio (Comedy Central, Conan, Drunk History, KCRW's Lost Notes) tells us why he's happy being single and takes an old Cosmo quiz. Follow Solomon on Instagram and Twitter at @solomongeorgio. If you enjoy the podcast, subscribe to our Patreon for bonus episodes: www.patreon.com/vsingleSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/v-single/donationsWant to advertise on this podcast? Go to https://redcircle.com/brands and sign up.