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Your host Andy, Ant and Dun feel a lot lighter than they did during the last podcast, after better football and better results, which is of course ,the Loveliest of All The Lovely Stuff.- Dun's on the beach and forgets to write the match report for Oxford!- A marked improvement from Madsen, 2 games, 2 assists - R's have a Field Day - We're just that much better with Sam- Own Goal's impressive season for the Rangers continues- QPR down to 10 men, then 11, then 10, then back to 11. - ...and let Oxford back into the game.- However, another timely Yangbang makes 11 minutes of injury time much more palatable.- Another point closer to safety vs the play off chasing Robins- First half great, second half just OK.- Dembele rises like a salmon to head home- Earthy soils Nardi's Clean Sheet- A scoreless homecoming for Dickie and Wells, with a cameo from Sinclair Armstrong.- Kolli sticks one away at the end...away in the Westfield Shopping Centre.- 50 points and almost safe, which is the Loveliest of all the lovely stuff- Cookie staying? Kelman, Larkeche and Pearman incoming!- Oskar Hinderance to be a help next season? - Bimbo Coles, Percy Pigs - Lovely Stuff. - The QPR NYC lads (and partners, and mums). NO! THIS IS THE LOVELIEST OF ALL THE LOVELY STUFF - Dun struggles to remember some lads.- A busy easter weekend may decide the QPR NYC Prediction competition. Who gets to take home the Schaffer Trophy? - Hives in the rain, and My Son The Doctor are laughing at the Park Rangers on their new albumRate, review, comment and donate your 5 stars.
The guest list at Bobby's Thanksgiving included Jim Norton, Big Jay, and their ladies. They made the trek up to his house in the mountains and enjoyed the holiday except for one person who passed out. They got to see the lavish accommodations that Bob's son Max enjoys. Jay brings authentic cheesesteaks back from Philly. A Boston vs Philly steak sandwich argument ensues. Bob has a problem with hot tomatoes also. *To hear the full show to go www.siriusxm.com/bonfire to learn more FOLLOW THE CREW ON SOCIAL MEDIA: @thebonfiresxm @louisjohnson @christinemevans @bigjayoakerson @robertkellylive @louwitzkee @jjbwolfSubscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ on Apple Podcasts to listen to new episodes ad-free and a whole week early.
Love and the Long Game with Bradley and Jennifer White
Psalm 84 Davey Walker August 18, 2024
TVC 655.6: Pioneering television writer Susan Silver (The Mary Tyler Moore Show, The Bob Newhart Show, Maude, Hot Pants in Hollywood, Susan Says with Susan Silver) shares a few memories of writing for Bob Newhart and Suzanne Pleshette on The Bob Newhart Show. Bob Newhart passed away on Thursday, July 18 at age ninety-four. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
In this last sermon of the series, Pastor Ricky shares from 1 Timothy 6 that the loveliest place is where grace is our shared resource for spiritual change.
The Loveliest Place is where money matters are part of our discipleship.
We worshiped together at Camp Hickory Hill and Pastor Ricky shared from 1 Timothy 6 on working with excellence.
The loveliest place is where there is a collective value on spiritual leadership.
Continuing the series The Loveliest Place, Pastor Ricky shares that the loveliest place is where family is our collective experience not a mere slogan.
Pastor Ricky continues the 1 Timothy series and in chapter 4 we are learning that The Loveliest Place is where our collective expectation for preaching aligned with God's.
This week Pastor Ricky shares a sermon from 1 Timothy 3:14-4:5 that The Loveliest Place is where the glory of God frames my everythings and everydays.
Pastor Ricky continues his sermon about Elders & Deacons in this Part 2 based on 1 Timothy 3:8-13. We learn that The Loveliest Place is where exemplary service is recognized and honored.
Pastor Ricky shares from 1 Timothy that God's church is to be led by spiritually qualified elders.
The loveliest place is where our weekly gatherings are shaped by timeless convictions.
Alfred Edward Housman was born in Fockbury, Worcestershire, England on March 26, 1859 and was the eldest of seven children. A year after his birth, Housman's family moved to nearby Bromsgrove, where the poet grew up and had his early education. In 1877, he attended St. John's College, Oxford and received first class honours in classical moderations.Housman became distracted, however, when he fell in love with his roommate, Moses Jackson. He unexpectedly failed his final exams, but managed to pass the final year and later took a position as clerk in the Patent Office in London for ten years.During this time, Housman studied Greek and Roman classics intensively, and, in 1892, he was appointed professor of Latin at University College, London. In 1911, he became professor of Latin at Trinity College, Cambridge, a post he held until his death. As a classicist, Housman gained renown for his editions of the Roman poets Juvenal, Lucan, and Manilius, as well as his meticulous and intelligent commentaries, and his disdain for the unscholarly.Housman only published two volumes of poetry during his life: A Shropshire Lad (1896) and Last Poems (1922). The majority of the poems in A Shropshire Lad, his cycle of sixty-three poems, were written after the death of Adalbert Jackson, Housman's friend and companion, in 1892. These poems center around themes of pastoral beauty, unrequited love, fleeting youth, grief, death, and the patriotism of the common soldier. After the manuscript had been turned down by several publishers, Housman decided to publish it at his own expense, much to the surprise of his colleagues and students.While A Shropshire Lad was slow to gain in popularity, the advent of war, first in the Boer War and then in World War I, gave the book widespread appeal due to its nostalgic depiction of brave English soldiers. Several composers created musical settings for Housman's work, deepening his popularity.Housman continued to focus on his teaching, but in the early 1920s, when his old friend Moses Jackson was dying, Housman chose to assemble his best unpublished poems so that Jackson might read them. These later poems, most of them written before 1910, exhibit a range of subject and form much greater than the talents displayed in A Shropshire Lad. When Last Poems was published in 1922, it was an immediate success. A third volume, More Poems, was released posthumously in 1936 by his brother, Laurence, as was an edition of Housman's Complete Poems (1939).Despite receiving acclaim as a scholar and a poet during his lifetime, Housman lived as a recluse, rejecting honors and avoiding the public eye. He died on April 30, 1936 in Cambridge.-bio via Academy of American Poets Get full access to The Daily Poem Podcast at dailypoempod.substack.com/subscribe
Pastor Ricky shares from 1 Timothy, 5 Gospel Glories that are fuel for courageous stewardship.
Join us as Pastor Seth Carter delivers a message titled "Loving the Loveliest Place on Earth" (Selected Scriptures)
Pastor Ricky continues the 1 Timothy series this week covering 1 Timothy 1:3-11. We learn that the loveliest place is where our gospel mission is clear and relentlessly protected.
About: Hosted by journalists Joan Summers and Matthew Lawson, Eating For Free is a weekly podcast that explores gossip and power in the pop culture landscape: Where it comes from, who wields it, and who suffers at the hands of it. Find out the stories behind the stories, as together they look beyond the headlines of troublesome YouTubers or scandal-ridden A-Listers, and delve deep into the inner workings of Hollywood's favorite pastime. The truth, they've found, is definitely stranger than any gossip. You can also find us on our website, Twitter, and Instagram. Or buy our merch! Any personal, business, or general inquires can be sent to eatingforfreepodcast@gmail.com Joan Summers' Twitter: @laracroftbarbie Matthew Lawson's Instagram: @_matthewlawson Sources [may cutoff in certain apps]: The Eat Sheet: ‘Real Housewives' Star Lisa Vanderpump Puts Her Stamp on West Hollywood Nightlife, 11/23/11 [THR] EXCLUSIVE VIDEO INTERVIEW: Lisa Vanderpump Named CNN Special Correspondent For Royal Wedding, 04/14/11 [Radar] Hear Scheana Marie's Single 'What I Like', 02/05/13 [Bravo] Lady Gaga Sounds Off on 'Vanderpump' Drama, 02/18/13 [Bravo TV] Happy NYE! Here's Another 'Vanderpump Rules' Song, 12/21/13 [Bustle] Our g***** goddess & cast member of Vanderpump Rules, Ariana Madix, open heartedly sat down with us to do a little Q&A. Let's just say she's more than just a pretty face! We love this girl! Enjoy loves!, 01/08/14 [Flower G******] 'VANDERPUMP RULES' STARS VIOLENT TV CATFIGHT WAS REAL, 01/29/14 [TMZ] Stassi Schroeder Serves Up A Reality Check, 04/09/14 [Pinky to Posh] Vanderpump Rules lothario Jax Taylor says his love life is a 'shambles', 10/11/14 [SMH] Pumped up: Melbourne's Ariana Madix joins 'Vanderpump Rules', 11/05/14 [Florida Today] I Chugged Sauv Blanc With Kristen, the Villain of Vanderpump Rules, 03/18/15 [Jezebel] The Los Angeles Resident Speaks of Her Experience on ‘Vanderpump Rules,' Taking a New Direction in Her Life, and Her Time as a Stalker, 04/15/15 [Millenium] Scheana Shay Isn't Afraid to Tell It Like It Is, 01/08/16 [Sharp] 'Vanderpump Rules' star Scheana Shay no longer just the 'other woman', 01/15/16 [FOX The Villain of 'Vanderpump Rules', 03/02/16 [Complex] We Asked Music Critics to Review Tom Sandoval's Single from 'Vanderpump Rules', 03/09/16 [Vice] EXCLUSIVE: Lisa Vanderpump - I will end slaughter of 10,000 dogs at Chinese festival where animals are tortured before death because it 'improves men's sexual performance', 03/26/16 [DM] ‘Vanderpump Rules' Star Tom Sandoval Shares His Blues Brothers-Esque Musical Ambitions, 04/28/16 [Billboard] Lisa Vanderpump on Vanderpump Rules and What Makes a Great Reality TV Star, 11/07/16 [TIME] We Asked Lisa Vanderpump If the 'Rules' Cast Actually Works at SUR, 11/07/16 [Thrillist] EXCLUSIVE: A Day in the Life of Stassi Schroeder, the Loveliest, Bitchiest, Realest Reality Star of Them All, 11/07/16 [ET] TALKING STYLE WITH STASSI SCHROEDER OF 'VANDERPUMP RULES', 11/08/16 [Fashionista] Kristen Doute on Slut-Shaming, Adderall, and Doing Vanderpump Rules Forever, 12/07/16 [The Cut] James Kennedy Reveals the Inspiration Behind His "Lit" New Single, 02/16/17 [Bravo] Beverly Hills Lifestyle Magazine Names Lisa Vanderpump New Editor-in-Chief, 03/08/17 [PR Newswire] How Pride Became the Cornerstone—and Emmy Hopeful—of Vanderpump Rules, 06/26/17 [VF] Reality TV star Lisa Vanderpump's latest L.A. venture is simply for the dogs, 08/26/17 [LA Times] Scheana, Ariana, and Lala Know ‘Vanderpump RULES' and SeaWorld SUCKS, 11/30/17 [PETA] Lala Kent Spills on Her New Lipgloss Line, ‘Vanderpump Rules' and Her Relationship Status (Exclusive), 12/04/17 [Us Weekly]
It's 2012. 5 people (& friends) are cast by Bravo on Lisa Vanderpump's new show, centered on her scandalous eatery SUR. The gaggle of models, actors and sketch comedians have no idea they're about to blow their lives up for fame, or even nothing at all! About: Hosted by journalists Joan Summers and Matthew Lawson, Eating For Free is a weekly podcast that explores gossip and power in the pop culture landscape: Where it comes from, who wields it, and who suffers at the hands of it. Find out the stories behind the stories, as together they look beyond the headlines of troublesome YouTubers or scandal-ridden A-Listers, and delve deep into the inner workings of Hollywood's favorite pastime. The truth, they've found, is definitely stranger than any gossip. You can also find us on our website, Twitter, and Instagram. Or buy our merch! Any personal, business, or general inquires can be sent to eatingforfreepodcast@gmail.com Joan Summers' Twitter: @laracroftbarbie Matthew Lawson's Instagram: @_matthewlawson Sources: Lisa Vanderpump Gets 'Real Housewives' Spin-Off, Jan 18, 2012 [HuffPost] ‘The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills' Lisa Vanderpump Dishes [Daily Beast] Love Lisa Vanderpump's Honesty? Wait 'Til You Read This! [OK!] The Vanderpump Rules Tell Us All the Behind-the-Scenes Gossip (Including the Crazy Story of How Jax and Stassi Met!) 02/13/13 [Glamour] “Meet Stassi” Video [Bravotv.com] EXCLUSIVE: A Day in the Life of Stassi Schroeder, the Loveliest, Bitchiest, Realest Reality Star of Them All, 11/07/16 [ET] 'Race' Preps One Family For Storm, 09/27/05 [CBS] Vanderpump Rules: Exclusive Interview with Katie Maloney, 02/14/13 [Reality Wanted] Utah actress lives a reality-TV life on 'Vanderpump Rules', 11/01/13 [SLT Tribune] Channing Tatum, Vanderpump Rules' Jax Taylor Were Roommates! [Us Weekly] 'Vanderpump Rules' Star Jax Taylor's ‘Boyfriend' Reveals The Truth About The Gay Rumors, 01/13/15 [Radar] Sorry, Jax! Taylor's ‘Vanderpump Rules' Costars Believe He Hooked Up With Male Roommate, 01/16/15, [Radar] Eddie Cibrian's Wife Splits! 07/21/09 [Extra] Meet John Mayer's New Gal Pal 04/24/09 [People] Scheana Marie Jancan: Former Aspiring Hooters Girl, 04/24/09 [THG] 'I lost everything I had': Brandi Glanville comes face-to-face with 'Eddie Cibrian's former mistress' in explosive confrontation, 01/08/13 [DM] Vanderpump Rules' Scheana Marie sits down with Jerry Nunn [Chicago Go Pride] What the Bartender Knows, 05/13/09 [New York] Mark Sanchez a flirting machine, 10/22/09 [Page Six] Ariana Madix: New York Majesty [Lingerie] Cute College Girl of the Week: Ariana Madix, 10/25/06 [College Humor] NYU recruiting for Web show, 10/31/09 [Page Six]
This week we start the new series: The Loveliest Place, a study on the book of 1 Timothy. Pastor Ricky leads this sermon series with the big idea that the loveliest place is where God's family lives out their identity and under God's authority.
Only one rose in the world can save the queen from her deathbed. But where can it be found and who has it? Hans Christian Andersen reveals the answer in his story, “The Loveliest Rose in the World.” Read by Lahelah Jefferson. Audio Technician was Jacob Gorsich. A Production of We Are One Body® Audio Theatre.
Mark Zhakevich • Selected Scriptures • Foundation
Pals, our journey through the works of Carly Rae Jepsen finally draws to a close for the time being with 2023's The Loveliest Time! Join us as we decide which record is the best and which one has CRJ's worst song on it according to me, Bleachers! Listen along at home at: https://open.spotify.com/album/4bRYGKmKOkXvKL1QBf0cGk Timestamps: 1. Anything to Be with You - 14:55 2. Kamikaze - 18:12 3. After Last Night - 21:12 4. Aeroplanes - 24:40 5. Shy Boy - 28:01 6. Kollage - 31:31 7. Shadow - 35:47 8. Psychedelic Switch - 38:37 9. So Right - 43:09 10. Come Over - 46:46 11. Put It to Rest - 49:40 12. Stadium Love - 53:00 13. Weekend Love - 55:50 Contact us at: twitter.com/the3rdonesucks the3rdonesucks@gmail.com This episode of The 3rd One Sucks: Sophomore Slump was hosted by Dan Ellis, Mark Beall and Jake Mason. Mixed and Edited by Mark Beall and Dan Ellis Intro/Outro Music by Dan Ellis. The 3rd One Sucks is a Retrograde Orbit Radio production. Find more great shows like this at www.retrogradeorbitradio.com
It's like a psychedelic switch!!! Hosts Justin and Kaela discuss Carly Rae's newest drop, The Loveliest Time.
This week on "I've Been Meaning to Listen To That" we listen to THE LOVELIEST TIME by CARLY RAE JEPSEN with special guest MIKE CABELLON (Mr. Mayor, Orange Is the New Black)! Follow Mike Cabellon on Instagram (@mikecabellon), Read Mike's article on dating as an Asian American Follow Andrew Ambrose Lee on Instagram (@andrewambroselee) Follow Michael Limentato on Twitter (@limentaco) & Instagram (@limentaco) Follow Harper Thomson on Instagram (@harpingabout) Follow Stenley Philippe on Instagram (@snapasten) Cover Art by Megan Rika Young (Twitter: @meganrika Instagram: @meganrika) Theme Song by OTNES (Twitter: @mxotnes Instagram: @mxotnes) Follow us at (@ibmtltt) on Tiktok & Instagram, and email us at ivebeenmeaningtolistentothat@gmail.com Leave us a rating or review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify! Have a good daaay! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/ibmtltt/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/ibmtltt/support
Daily Quote We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them. (Albert Einstein) Poem of the Day Loveliest of Trees Alfred Edward Housman Beauty of Words 绿河行 靳以
When a queen falls into a deep sleep, it is said that only the loveliest rose in the world can wake her. Can the it be found?See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The host of the FOX syndicated daily show 'EXTRA', Bily Bush joined us to talk:-Back hair-Hanging in Paris with his daughter & brother-Writer's strike is over-Britney Spears and the knives-Taylor Swift in Kansas City-Pete Davidson's secret to dating-Bruce Springsteen-Billy and the 'Golden Bachelor'-Lighting up NY's Empire State Building -NYC Summit
The Springs in the Desert Podcast: Catholic Accompaniment Through Infertility
On the podcast this week, we welcome Theresa from The Loveliest Masterpiece. Theresa shares with Springs team members, Jillian and Cassi, her story of infertility, miscarriage, and hope. Just like no two women's infertility journey's are the same, Theresa talks about the multiple crosses of infertility and loss she has carried. She also talks about her ministry called, The Loveliest Masterpiece, which creates specially curated gift boxes for women in various places on the path of motherhood. Theresa reminds us that by sharing our stories, we can bring healing to our lives and to others'. Links: The Loveliest Masterpiece Instagram The Loveliest Masterpiece Facebook The Loveliest Masterpiece Website Big Daddy Weave's My Story The Bearing Fruit Box Divine Mercy Care Amazon Wishlist Mary Bruno Sunday Bead Co. Saints Joachim & Anna Sticker --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/springsinthedesert/support
The panel of the best musicians in the UAE is back to join me in reviewing another new album release,. This time, we're taking a look at the seventh studio album of the Call Me Maybe singer Carlie Rae Jepsen, The Loveliest Time. Is it a lovely one? Music producer Phil Pendlebury, vocalist Emily Peacock, drummer extraordinaire Eddie Parsons and myself Mark Lloyd give our honest review. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Nastiest of Lyles and Loveliest of Emily's join the pod to see if the Commish made the right picks for a Phinnikier in need of a draft manager. We also talk RW3 losing the starting gig, Anthony Richardson matching the hype and whether Marvin Mims may be the greatest football player who ever lived.
For our 6th Carly episode (!!), we dive straight into the deep end of her newest effort, 'The Loveliest Time, which arrives less than a year after it's companion project 'The Loneliest Time'. Throughout our track-by-track, we discuss the similarities (and differences) between the two records, the evolution of Carly's 'Side B' releases, the inner-workings of her songwriting process, and why this album feels so different than her others. ALSO discussed: Hayden's BLACKPINK experience, the imminent return of ALLIE X, and our 8 picks for best pop songs of the year (so far...)! At the SPA: OLIVIA RODRIGO (Bad Idea Right?), SIGRID (The Hype), BONNIE MCKEE (Hot City), BOYS LIKE GIRLS (The Outside), TROYE SIVAN (Rush [Extended]), TOVE LO (Elevator Eyes), DUTTS (Pop), and CHAPPELL ROAN (Hot To Go!). NEXT WEEK: 10 Years of 'The Fame' by LADY GAGA!
Go on, make a "Call Me Maybe" joke. We dare you. This is THE LOVELIEST TIME by Carly Rae Jepsen.
Danny and Nate discuss most of the songs from the newest Carly Rae Jepsen album, The Loveliest Time.
In a preview of this week's Pop Pantheon: All Access episode, Service 95's Brennan Carley joins DJ Louie to discuss Carly Rae Jepsen's new album, The Loveliest Time, which dropped last week and serves as a companion piece to 2022's The Loneliest Time. Louie and Brennan dig into Carly's aesthetic stasis in recent years, the swings-and-misses from Loneliest's attempts to find new avenues for her music, and how Loveliest presents her loosest and most exciting batch of songs in a very long time, serving as a potential jumping off point for a new phase of Carly's career. To hear the rest of the this episode plus receive at least three episodes of the show per month, gain access to our Discord channel and so much more, subscribe to Pop Pantheon: All Access at the Icon Tier.
While we may be reviewing a B-side, this episode is anything but! This week we review Carly Rae Jepsen's The Loveliest Time with CRJ super-fan, Eddie Washington. Will her latest B-side album be her best or will it suffer the same fate as the A-side that inspired this album? You'll have to tune in to find out. guest: @mpls86 @boporfloppodcast @theehren @therealestsimon
SALT AIR AND THE RUST ON YOUR DOOR aqueles kkk Fizemos review sem spoiler, e na com spoilers não demos nenhum spoiler também kkkkk nunca prometemos consistência. Além dos filmes, falamos de dois álbuns do momento, The Loveliest Time, da Fadinha do Pop Carly Rae Jepsen, e AFTER, da Fadinha da Bandas Ao Vivo Pabllo Vittar, mas teve tanto lançamentão essa semana que eu vou ser obrigada a pedir pra que vocês ouçam Gabi Lins, com Meu 1º Apartamento, por aqui também. Stream em nós, streams na lenda. E não esquece de contar pra gente o seu papel na luta sindical em meio a essa greve de ônibus que parou a cidade aqui nos comentários! --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/farofaconceito/support
Put down the socks, forget the voucher. The Treasure Vox could be the nicest Fathers Day gift out there. Karen Tomkins spoke to Dermot and Dave about her very unique, and very clever, business.
A sermon by Jonathan Grubbs based on Exodus 37:10-29 preached on May 14th, 2023 for the West congregation of Veritas Community Church as part of sermon series called "The God Who Redeems : Exodus".
A sermon by Jonathan Grubbs based on Exodus 37:10-29 preached on May 14th, 2023 for the West congregation of Veritas Community Church as part of sermon series called "The God Who Redeems : Exodus".
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
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
Marielle Anzelone, urban botanist and ecologist and the founder of NYC Wildflower Week, tells us more about where to look and how to identify the trees in bloom now, as listeners share their favorites. →NYC Parks Tree Map →Brooklyn Botanic Garden's Cherry Watch What a treat to talk trees in bloom on @BrianLehrer today! If you'd like to see more local flora join me on a wildflower walk in NYC. Learn how to id a tree + recognize local species - and it's free! Check out details @ link + hope to see you outside 🌸https://t.co/8hvOornDNB https://t.co/wNeuGARacK pic.twitter.com/h2kZmvSBtG — Marielle 🌸 Anzelone (@nycbotanist) April 7, 2023 Loveliest of Trees by A. E. Housman - Poems | Academy of American Poets For the caller on @BrianLehrer abt his fav tree& poem🌸🌸🌸 https://t.co/TFerJaBc4W — diane lee (@dianberly712) April 7, 2023 @BrianLehrer from my window pic.twitter.com/RK9XyDeQGt — Elena Arena (@ElenaArena4) April 7, 2023 Some nice Blooming trees in Belfast today. Cherry Blossom always a favourite. pic.twitter.com/sxPjKhKTMx — Bel Taz (@beltaz666) April 7, 2023 My favorite are the weeping cherry although it is hard to choose. My favorite place to view is the NYBG. Shout out to the Magnolia Tree Center and their rare Magnolia for Brooklyn. Save the Magnolia Tree Center. — N'Maat Ankhmeni (@Irt24) April 7, 2023 Hi @BrianLehrer—for your flowering trees segment, here's a beautiful cherry tree from the Hudson River Cherry Walk. @WNYC https://t.co/DytOrGNi3X — Philip Turner (@philipsturner) April 7, 2023
Hello lovelies, Welcome to Episode 25 of the Get Knit Done podcast! Still not quite back to knitting chat but closing a knitting business is knitting adjacent so I'm going to go with it : ) There were a lot of factors that went into the decision to close the Loveliest Yarn Company but mostly it's because I can't do everything and nor do I want to. I also talk about how in time, I want to have a completely digital business that I can take home to Ireland with me and how teaching knitting is something I'm very passionate about! I think it's important to get to a point where you know what you want to do but most importantly what you are not going to do! For me it's been an important life lesson but also a knitting one. We all feel so much pressure to hustle all the time and I'm not sure that is good for any of us. In next week's episode, we will be back to knitting when I'll be talking about the Knit School Quiz (take it here now if you just can't wait!) and the Wheel of Knitting! Take care lovelies, now go Get Knit Done! Michelle x Don't forget to Subscribe! Visit the show notes on the Knit School site to get more details and download the free knitting resources!
Hello!: Get twice as many podcasts and longer editions of these ones, and support our print magazine, by joining the WSC Supporters' Club. Sign up here: www.patreon.com/whensaturdaycomesAvoiding heavy cake falling from the heavens, magazine editor Andy Lyons, writer Harry Pearson and host Daniel Gray discuss teams who have only appeared at one World Cup, from East Germany to the Dutch East Indies via Kuwait's loveliest camel and the Uruguay loophole. Record Breakers brings a desert disc, and we continue our sprightly feature, The Final Third, in which a guest contributes a match, a player and an object to the WSC Museum of Football. Joining Dan as our visiting curator this time is film director and Grimsby Town fan Jack Spring, whose new feature, Three Day Millionaire, is out now.Support the show
Kyle Worley is joined by Dr. Dustin Benge to answer the question, in a time when people are giving up on the church, where do you see the splendor of God in the life of His people?Questions Covered in This Episode:In a time when people are giving up on the church, where do you see the splendor of God in the life of His people?What is a good starting place in conversations when someone points out everything the church has done wrong?Guest Bio:Dr. Dustin Benge is Associate Professor of Biblical Spirituality and Historical Theology at the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary and the author of several books, including: The Loveliest Place: The Beauty and Glory of the Church and the American Puritans. And the recently released: Why should we love the local church?Resources Mentioned in This Episode:“The Loveliest Place” by Dustin BengeSong of Solomon 1:15, Ephesians 5:27Amazon affiliate links are used where appropriate. As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases, thank you for supporting Knowing Faith.Sponsors:Explore the Southern Seminary degree programs designed to equip you be more effective in full-time ministry or as a lay leader: SBTS.EDU/EXPLORE