Podcasts about lucifers

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Best podcasts about lucifers

Latest podcast episodes about lucifers

Repent Radio
New Jersey Drones, The Pope And Lucifers Grave!!! December 14, 2024!!!

Repent Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2024 59:24


All Praises to the Most High A'HÂYÂH!!! And YASHAYA!!! Yashana in the Highest!!! Call or Text the Prayer, Praise, Testimony and Discussion line!!! 24 hours a day 7 days a week!!! (407)476-7163 !!! We are a Husband and Wife Team!!! Evangelists James and Louise Eads We are Street Evangelists and Online Ministers too. Preaching the Gospel of Christ Yashaya and our Heavenly Father A'HÂYÂH!!! Repent and Follow Yashaya!!! And be Baptized for the Remission of Sins and for the sins of your forefathers!!! We Have 2 Websites https://www.wsm.charity/ And https://satw.icu/ Thank you everyone that gives to this Ministry to get the Gospel of Yashaya across the World. We have Pay Pal and Cash App PayPal: Email address is watchmanstreetministry@gmail.com Thank you for your prayers and support https://www.paypal.me/JamesEads Cash App: $Evangelists7

Winchester Surprise - Der Supernatural Podcast

Staffel 8, Folge 17 - Heute machen sich die Jungs auf die Suche nach Lucifers kryptischen Krypten. Cas ist back und wurde von Naomi in einem Trainingscamp ausgebildet. Sam scheint es nicht so gut zu gehen, Thomas war beim Friseur und Töff musste bei ihrer Research improvisieren und hat auf Karteikarten geschrieben. Außerdem sprechen wir über Doc Holliday, Tuberkulose und die Underground Railroad. Unser Discord-Server: https://discord.gg/4Defzq8ETh Unsere Spotify-Playlist: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/7sklx9OZGBGCJeYBLyReBP?si=e76fK0VcTCutDZsgL6Q5gg Unser Instagram Account: https://www.instagram.com/winchestersurprise.podcast

Popular USA Majority
Lucifers Lil Biatch

Popular USA Majority

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2024 2:35


Lucifers Lil Biatch by Lopker

SGT Report's The Propaganda Antidote
LUCIFERS MINIONS [BUY & SELL CHILDREN FOR SEX] -- TM BALLANTYNE, JR.

SGT Report's The Propaganda Antidote

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2024 62:02


Protect Your Retirement W/ a Gold and/or Silver IRA: https://www.sgtreportgold.com/ or CALL( 877) 646-5347 - Noble Gold is Who I Trust   Did you the DemonRats in California are actively trying to block a new Bill (SB 1414) that would make it a felony to SELL CHILDREN FOR SEX. By the way, how is that not a felony already? These are Luucifer's minions. Author TM Ballantyne, Jr. joins me to discuss.   BUY THE BOOKS, SUPPORT THE AUTHOR! https://www.amazon.com/Books-T-M-Ballantyne-Jr/s?rh=n%3A283155%2Cp_27%3AT.+M.+Ballantyne+Jr. https://old.bitchute.com/video/l2Sz2YD6Fl48/

Stichting Filosofie en Meditatie
Lucifers en potloden snijden

Stichting Filosofie en Meditatie

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2024 12:05


In deze podcast deel ik een bijzondere ervaring uit de retraite Koken met Rumi. In de keuken vindt een bijzonder proces plaats: er wordt niet alleen voedsel voor ons lichaam gemaakt, maar ook voedsel voor onze geest en ziel. Het 'magische kruid' is de zuivere, liefdevolle aandacht. Hoe dit werkt en hoe dit in je maaltijd terecht komt, daar gaat deze podcast over.

Popular USA Majority
Lucifers Lil Bitch | Trump Devil MAGA Hell

Popular USA Majority

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2024 2:20


We're so sick of seeing that face So tired of hearing that voice Stoking the fires of hate For MAGA girls and boys Does he think we are stupid? Don't he know we know? When his lips are movin' He's hypnotizing MAGA folks He will not destroy the USA Good Americans will fix it We won't give our NUKES to Lucifer's Lil Bitch He slithered out from his hole In search of power and treasure He destroyed America, now he wants mo? NO NO NO NOT EVER He dumps his diaper into the pure white Light Destroys our families and friendships He's a shapeshifter, antichrist Lucifer's Lil Bitch He will not destroy the USA Strong Americans will fix it We won't give our country to Lucifer's Lil Bitch We're so sick of seeing that face So tired of hearing that voice Stoking the fires of hate For MAGA girls and boys He will not destroy the USA American patriots will fix it We won't give our soul to Lucifer's Lil Bitch

Kerstverhalen en wintersprookjes
Het meisje met de lucifers

Kerstverhalen en wintersprookjes

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2023 7:06


Een arm meisje probeert op oudejaarsavond in de kou lucifers te verkopen. Als ze haar lucifers aansteekt, beleeft ze magische visioenen die haar troost bieden. Verteller - Nina Pierson Vergeet ons niet te volgen op Instagram @here_is_abel Neem een kijkje op onze site voor al onze Nederlandse en Engelstalige audioproducties ⁠www.abel-studios.com⁠ Nog meer luisterplezier? Bekijk onze playlists ⁠Abel Originals: Korte, spannende, bedtijdverhalen voor 4 - 8 jaar⁠ en ⁠Abel Classics: Bedtijdverhalen en Sprookjes⁠

Unstoppable Mindset
Episode 175 – Unstoppable Woman of Many Talents with Madilynn Dale

Unstoppable Mindset

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2023 64:42


Madilynn Dale describes herself as “an author, blogger, freelancer, podcaster, producer, reader, mother, outdoors enthusiast” and so much more. I met Madilynn when I was invited to be a guest on her podcast, “The Chapter Goddess”. Of course, I also had to have her as a guest here. She consented and here we are.   She always wanted to write, but never did anything seriously about it until after her son was born. She will tell us the story and describe why writing has become so important to her.   To date, Madilynn has written and self-published 19 books with at least two more on the way to come out this year. Prolific by any standard since she has only been publishing books for three years.   Her story and insights are not only inspiring, but Madilynn offers some good advice using her life experiences. She offers us all some good ideas of how to live and function better.     About the Guest:   Madilynn Dale is an author, blogger, freelancer, podcaster, producer, reader, mother, outdoors enthusiast, and overall creative. She's a host for several shows featured under Go Indie Now's wide umbrella, hosts a podcast channel of her own, and loves to travel. Madilynn enjoys chatting with creatives from all areas of the field and letting her viewers see the authentic side of each one of them.     Madilynn is an Oklahoma author and holds several different degrees. She has a bachelor's degree in Kinesiology and an associate degree in Physical Therapy Assistant Sciences. Her creativity stems from something deep within, and through her bond with the creative flow, brings her stories to life. She never envisioned herself as a writer but took a leap of faith while pregnant and began a new journey. She enjoyed writing short stories as a kid and has been an avid reader since grade school.       Madilynn's hobbies, when not writing, include reading, baking, crafting, hiking, playing with her son, caring for her rescue pets, gardening, teaching, and horseback riding. She loves to travel and explore. One day she hopes to expand her travels and see the world, but in the meantime, you'll find her working on her next novel.     Ways to connect with Madilynn:   https://www.thechaptergoddess.com/   Facebook https://m.facebook.com/MadilynnDaleAuthor https://m.facebook.com/groups/2693867800852468/ TikTok https://www.tiktok.com/@mdwriter?lang=en Instagram  https://www.instagram.com/madilynndalewrites/   M.D. The Chapter Goddess Www.thechaptergoddess.com     About the Host: Michael Hingson is a New York Times best-selling author, international lecturer, and Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe. Michael, blind since birth, survived the 9/11 attacks with the help of his guide dog Roselle. This story is the subject of his best-selling book, Thunder Dog.   Michael gives over 100 presentations around the world each year speaking to influential groups such as Exxon Mobile, AT&T, Federal Express, Scripps College, Rutgers University, Children's Hospital, and the American Red Cross just to name a few. He is Ambassador for the National Braille Literacy Campaign for the National Federation of the Blind and also serves as Ambassador for the American Humane Association's 2012 Hero Dog Awards.   https://michaelhingson.com https://www.facebook.com/michael.hingson.author.speaker/ https://twitter.com/mhingson https://www.youtube.com/user/mhingson https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelhingson/   accessiBe Links https://accessibe.com/ https://www.youtube.com/c/accessiBe https://www.linkedin.com/company/accessibe/mycompany/ https://www.facebook.com/accessibe/       Thanks for listening! Thanks so much for listening to our podcast! If you enjoyed this episode and think that others could benefit from listening, please share it using the social media buttons on this page. Do you have some feedback or questions about this episode? Leave a comment in the section below!   Subscribe to the podcast If you would like to get automatic updates of new podcast episodes, you can subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts or Stitcher. You can also subscribe in your favorite podcast app.   Leave us an Apple Podcasts review Ratings and reviews from our listeners are extremely valuable to us and greatly appreciated. They help our podcast rank higher on Apple Podcasts, which exposes our show to more awesome listeners like you. If you have a minute, please leave an honest review on Apple Podcasts.     Transcription Notes   Michael Hingson ** 00:00 Access Cast and accessiBe Initiative presents Unstoppable Mindset. The podcast where inclusion, diversity and the unexpected meet. Hi, I'm Michael Hingson, Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe and the author of the number one New York Times bestselling book, Thunder dog, the story of a blind man, his guide dog and the triumph of trust. Thanks for joining me on my podcast as we explore our own blinding fears of inclusion unacceptance and our resistance to change. We will discover the idea that no matter the situation, or the people we encounter, our own fears, and prejudices often are our strongest barriers to moving forward. The unstoppable mindset podcast is sponsored by accessiBe, that's a c c e s s i  capital B e. Visit www.accessibe.com to learn how you can make your website accessible for persons with disabilities. And to help make the internet fully inclusive by the year 2025. Glad you dropped by we're happy to meet you and to have you here with us.   Michael Hingson ** 01:20 Well, Hi, and welcome once again to unstoppable mindset. And today we get to chat with Madilynn Dale, I have to tell you the story. Because Madilynn  has a podcast called The chapter goddess podcast, right? Yep. And I was interviewed for that a little while ago. And of course, as I am prone to do, I told her it'll cost her she'll now have to come on unstoppable mindset. That's the price, you know. Anyway. So she agreed to do that. And so here we are. Madilynn  is an author. She's a freelancer, she is a podcaster and a whole heck of a lot of other kinds of stuff. And I'm not going to give it all away. Because then she wouldn't have anything to talk about. And where would we be if we let that happen. So Madilynn , welcome to unstoppable mindset. We're really glad you're here.   Madilynn Dale ** 02:16 Thank you for having me. I am really excited to be on and very thankful for this opportunity.   Michael Hingson ** 02:22 So Madilynn  lives in Oklahoma City. My father was from Dewey, Oklahoma. And, and so he is no longer with us unless he is hovering around Dewey somewhere. But I'm not sure that that's happening. But anyway, I've never been to Dewey, Oklahoma. I've been to Oklahoma and various places, but never to where he was born. But one of these days I hope to get there. Meantime, let's start with you. Why don't you tell us a little bit about kind of the early matalin and, and adventures and what it was like growing up and all that kind of stuff.   Madilynn Dale ** 02:56 Oh, well, definitely life was definitely full of adventures. So they kind of backtrack a little bit. I've always been an avid reader and dreamed of being an author. But I never actually thought I could go for it. But growing up, I loved reading and pretending using my imagination to free up creative stories and act them out, get my siblings involved. I have a little brother, a little sister. And we would always have these fun adventures going to the creek looking for worms playing in the mud climbing trees, just stuff like that. And it kind of gave me different experiences that I have used now that I'm actually pursuing my dream of writing. It's given me lots of story inspiration and real life experiences to plug into my characters. So yeah, that's kind of like growing up life in a nutshell for me. Wow.   Michael Hingson ** 03:57 So were you born in Oklahoma?   Madilynn Dale ** 03:59 I was not. I was actually born in Dallas. So my mom's family is from Oklahoma. My dad is from Texas. And they can't remember exactly how they met. I want to say it was through my Uncle Bobby. But we lived in the Dallas Fort Worth area until I was about five before we moved back to Oklahoma to be closer to my mom's family.   Michael Hingson ** 04:24 Okay, and so you. You did most of your schooling then in Oklahoma?   Madilynn Dale ** 04:31 Yep. Pretty much.   Michael Hingson ** 04:33 There you go. Did you go to college after high school?   Madilynn Dale ** 04:37 I did. So I graduated in oh nine and went to undergrad at Southern Nazarene University in Bethany Oklahoma, which is right outside Oklahoma City. then continued on and after getting my bachelor's of Kinesiology went to physical therapy assistant school through Oklahoma City Community College and curiam I have the degree have the licensing since stuff but I don't practice part as much. I do it on occasion. And I'm focusing on my author career and all the moms stuff that goes with it because I am also a parent to an amazing little five year old, who kind of drives me insane sometimes, but you know, what's parenthood without? Going crazy?   Michael Hingson ** 05:22 Going Crazy, right? Is there a husband involved?   Madilynn Dale ** 05:25 Oh, yeah, he the hubby is awesome. He is the whole reason I get to pursue my dream of writing. He's been very, very supportive. We've kind of butted heads on a few things. Because as a creative, you don't bring in a lot of income right away. But somehow we've managed to find a way and just keep moving forward slowly. So very huge shout out to my hubby for being amazing and supporting me. What does he do? He works in the restaurant business. So right now he's kind of like the GM or general manager for the restaurants he works for. And I'm not going to plug the name in because I will be scolded if I do. They're really particular about me sharing like that, because it's some of the stuff I write. Um, but oh, we'll do that offline. Yeah. hands full with a bunch of different restaurants. He basically travels all over Oklahoma. He goes in installs new technology sees what he can help with them improves, make their business become more efficient, run better workout better for customers, and just, he's got his fingers in so many things in the company. I don't know how he keeps up with it.   Michael Hingson ** 06:42 It is like herding cats, sometimes very much so. And then you are at home and you're writing and you're momming and everything else. And I can imagine that that can drive a body crazy after a while. But also, I bet you would say it's well worth it.   Madilynn Dale ** 06:59 Oh, yeah, definitely. Absolutely.   Michael Hingson ** 07:01 So what is kinesiology? So Kinesiology is   Madilynn Dale ** 07:05 basically like exercise science studying how the body works with exercise. And I got a funny, fancy crazy name, because it's just kind of studying how the body works. Another term they called it was like sports medicine. But can you kinesiology sounds fancier party   Michael Hingson ** 07:27 does? It sounds a whole lot more sophisticated than sports medicine. Yeah. Well, that's cool, though. So you graduated. And then what did you do?   Madilynn Dale ** 07:41 Um, so I worked as a physical therapy assistant for a while until my hubby and I decided we were ready to have kids. And this was kind of where life took a huge turn. We were ready. We planned it like, as close to possible when I got pregnant and stuff, but it also kind of fell on the same year, my sister was getting married. So there was all that craziness. And then after having my son, I had a lot of postpartum depression, anxiety and stuff, and kind of came to a point where I'm like, Okay, I have to do something different with my life. This is not the path I need to go because I was working, trying to work part time trying to do all of the things with motherhood, and it was just too much trying to do that and find the postpartum I did finally get help and get on medication, which made a huge difference. But it was also I needed to make life changes, like what I wouldn't do pursue in life. And I gave my writing an opportunity after some encouragement from some friends. And it just kind of kicked off and I fell in love with it. And my mental health and everything improved from there who's writing kind of made a huge impact on that I was able to write out my thoughts through characters, and it helped a lot. So   Michael Hingson ** 09:15 you know, I've said before for me after September 11, if there's one thing that helped me, deal with everything that happened, it would be that I allowed myself to be interviewed by the media so much after September 11, literally hundreds of interviews, and they asked every kind of question that you can imagine, even some intelligent ones. But the point is that it forced me although I didn't think about it at the time to talk about September 11 and all the things that happened. And I think that it was invaluable to do and it became essentially my therapy And then also people started reaching out and saying, We want to hire you to come and talk about September 11. And I chose to do that. So again, talking about it, in even those arenas was helpful because it made me think about what happened and my personality is such that I tend to want to analyze, and fix. And as far as September 11, I can't fix what happened directly. But I realized that whether it's September 11, or anything that occurs in our lives, there may very well be lots of things that we don't have any control over happening. September 11, I am still not convinced that we could have predicted it, I don't think we would have had enough information to be able to predict it. And I got that from reading reports, like the 911 report from the government, so on. But anyway, the bottom line is, what we do have control over is how we choose to deal with whatever happens to us. And it's the same thing with you. And so you had the opportunity to sit down and begin to write and really think about your life and your world. And that has to have helped a lot.   Madilynn Dale ** 11:14 It did, it definitely did. And like talking with my husband a lot too. Because he and I both neither one of us realized until at least like three months in what was going on with the postpartum and everything sweet. We didn't know what it was, we hadn't ever known anybody that had dealt with it. And I mean, now that I have, I feel like more people are coming forward about having struggled with it, because maybe people are more educated about it. But I didn't know what was going on. I was like, Okay, I'm supposed to be a mom, like, I was supposed to give all of myself to my child, which I was. But I also like, mothers need to realize that they can't give all of themselves because if they don't take care of themselves first, they can't provide for those they care about. And that was a hard lesson for me to learn and it just didn't want to stick until after I started taking anxiety medication and stuff.   Michael Hingson ** 12:11 It's postpartum, more of a physiological thing or neurological or, or mental thing, or is it a combination?   Madilynn Dale ** 12:20 I'd say it's more of a combination. Cuz, man, so many things in loons, that is part of it. i The hormones that came with breastfeeding made mine a little bit more, kind of, I wouldn't say worse, that may not be the best fitting word for it. But I got a little bit more most a stable after I quit breastfeeding, and all the stuff that came with that the fear that I wasn't producing enough the stress and everything just kind of I didn't have that. But I still had a whole bunch of other stuff going on. And it's just it. It's so many different things wrapped into one.   Michael Hingson ** 13:02 Yeah, I understand what you're saying it can make life a challenge. I have heard of it. And I've known people who have said that they had it and work through it. But it is kind of one of those things that does come up often. And I'm glad that you found ways to deal with it, especially since she started writing. When you hadn't written up until that point, although you you would wanted to be a writer growing up you say   Madilynn Dale ** 13:31 I did and I I was always told that because it wasn't the best money making career that I should put all of my work and my education and stuff behind something else, which is why I ended up going pretty much into the medical field and becoming burnt out and pregnancy everything just kind of like snowballed into this crazy mental health circus. I was at that point.   Michael Hingson ** 14:02 So how long after you began writing? Was your first book published?   Madilynn Dale ** 14:10 Oh, man. So I started writing before I quit working part time. So at least a year and a half. Yeah, you're gonna have to two I think is roughly about the time period because I finished the story and tried to do the whole traditional publishing route. But it didn't quite work for me because I couldn't afford to have an agent. And then I decided to give indie publishing a go and it kicked off and I've just been trucking along and writing and it's been a lot of work keeps me extremely busy. But it's I love it. I love getting to share my thoughts through characters and my experience through characters and stories that pile up in my head.   Michael Hingson ** 14:58 So you To publish your own books?   Madilynn Dale ** 15:01 I do. Yes, they're professionally edited, because I do go through that whole editing process. I edit like crazy before I send it to an editor. And I have two really good editors that I work with with different manuscripts. And they kind of they provide a lot of good feedback and criticism, and helps me improve. And I'm slowly eking my way into the proofreading, editing kind of field. But I've still got a ways to go, because I'm still learning there. But I don't think I will ever, like edit my own work, because it's good to have another set of eyes.   Michael Hingson ** 15:41 Yeah, I absolutely agree. I have collaborated on the books that I've written so far. And we're working on our third one now, which is called tentatively a guide dogs Guide to Being brave. And it's about learning to control fear. But I find that editors can be extremely invaluable. When we did thunder dog, it was extremely helpful. Because the editor was a person who said, My job isn't to change this book. And to tell you what you should I shouldn't say, but my job is to help you make this book the best it can be. And, and he did, he made some really good suggestions that we took to heart and took back to finally finishing thunder dog. And it became a number one New York Times bestseller. So I can't complain about his suggestions. But he didn't try to change the book. He just said, here are weak parts of the book, or here's what needs to be improved to make it a stronger read. And he was absolutely right.   Madilynn Dale ** 16:48 Yeah. And they always it fascinates me how much extra stuff they can give you like ideas and whatnot. And a lot of times I'm one of those people that goes up with manuscripts so many times, if a word is missing, like a simple like a or have or the or something my brain plugs it in. But it's not actually there. It's not   Michael Hingson ** 17:11 actually there. Yeah. And that's what the editor can, in part bring in to point out those things, which is what therefore, yeah. So what was the first book that you published?   Madilynn Dale ** 17:23 Oh, so my first book was releasing her power with him. It is book one of the phase shifter series. And this one, it's kind of based off the main character, she's a lot of who I was at the time. She's a physical therapy assistant, she's burned out. And she's struggling to deal with her mother's passing. So she moves back to the country, which is based off of the area I grew up round Idaho, Oklahoma, a lot of people if you've heard of Broken Bow or hold your town, like the state park there, it's very much based off of that scenery, because I grew up working in the park for five years as a trail guide and stuff. And she's diving into this cabin with all her mother stuff, her grandmother's stuff. And she discovers a huge family secret. And things just kind of explode around her. She finds out magic exists. She also finds out that she's not human that she can change into an animal. And as the story continues, she finds out more and more about her heritage. And her bloodline actually connects to someone from the beginning of people in general, and it's something that's been hidden and it's also dangerous, because it's tied to a whole other world of problems.   Michael Hingson ** 18:57 So it's kind of a fantasy book.   Madilynn Dale ** 18:59 Yeah. I dabble a lot in fantasy and romance stuff. And her she loves to kind of get a crazy chaotic family has a half sister that tries to kill her several times and fails.   Michael Hingson ** 19:13 mean old half sister? Yes, yes. Well, so from a standpoint of publishing and selling books, I understand the whole concept of there's not necessarily a lot of money to be made, but how successful was the first book?   Madilynn Dale ** 19:33 It did, okay. Um, I learned a lot of lessons along the way. Starting out, I didn't have a lot to put into funding so one of the things I ended up changing was like the cover I think it went through three different covers before I finally found something that stuck and was good for the rest of the series because there's four books with some spin offs and work yeah, had the You had a hard lesson of why you need to go with a good professional looking cover instead of doing it on your own when you don't have the skills to do that.   Michael Hingson ** 20:09 So, yeah, I know that. For me, personally, I don't do pictures and art very well. So I am very glad to help others do that. Yeah, that's because it isn't going to be the thing that that works well. So you have five books in that series all together,   Madilynn Dale ** 20:26 um, for that with a spin off in the works. And then the spin off stuff is going to be more of a short on the shorter stories. They're kind of I'm trying to finish the trilogy, that's going to be done this year, before I go back to do the spin off so   Michael Hingson ** 20:45 well, so how is all your training and your upbringing and other things like that? How does all that feed into making your books and what you do better, like you had postpartum depression, and so on. So you've obviously dealt a lot with health care, or health care is certainly something you focus on, how does that enter into what you do as a writer.   Madilynn Dale ** 21:11 So as I write my stories, all my characters, there is a couple of scenes and stuff where they have to kind of question their own personal mental health and their sanity, like, how they can work through something I want to use live as an example, in the phase shifter series, she does not know how to do any self care, she doesn't know how to get herself out of a burned out state to get back where she can function and go back to working and enjoying life. And then in the inverse series, she has so much emotional trauma dumped on her from where the story starts to where book three picks up, that she has to figure out how to work through it, how to deal with all the grief or the loss, and all of the weight of so many important decisions, crushing her to keep moving forward. Because if she becomes stagnant and doesn't move, the world's gonna fall apart, literally.   Michael Hingson ** 22:18 So you're using these books, also to convey life lessons that you've learned along the way?   Madilynn Dale ** 22:27 Yes, and they totally didn't start out like them. But that's how they've kind of come along the way.   Michael Hingson ** 22:35 But doesn't that make them stronger? Because you make it personal in a way even though it doesn't necessarily look like it to people who don't know?   Madilynn Dale ** 22:43 I think so because it kind of gives the reader more to identify with as they read. They're like, Oh, hey, I get that I've felt the same way. Or I've struggled with the same kind of issue. And it gives them a way to relate to that character to keep them interested in this person in the problems that are going on and move them through the action.   Michael Hingson ** 23:07 Well, you mentioned Ember, and in any of your series, how do the characters change over time? So how does Ember change and evolve over time?   Madilynn Dale ** 23:17 So Ember is one of my favorites for this kind of question. She at the start of the series believes she's a latent bull. She's stuck in this contract her parents made with their packs alpha because she's grown up at a wolf pack. She thinks she's a wolf, they're shifters there's magic. But on one of her days training, she's with her lover, who she's had this secret relationship going on because she is not as viro feelings for the guy she's in contract to marry. And he doesn't really have feelings for her. Neither one of them want to be in the contract, but they can't break the contract because the Alpha found it with magic. And the only way to unbind it is to convince him to let them go until the one she's bound to becomes the Alpha. But that day in training, they come across a house buyer, her childhood best friend's home is in flames. And she rushed into the thinking she can help them because somebody's stuck under a pile of wood of debris that's fallen down, and it's on fire, but the flames are black, which is different because normally fires not black, and she helps the person out. It's supposed to be her friend's mother, but it's not. It's a demon and him impersonating the person and she touches the flames but instead of burning her, her body absorbs it. And this kicks into gear, the release of her hellhound because her mother has a secret she had a one night stand with the devil and Amber's was the result. But none of no one knows the secret except for her mother and her father that's raised her. And as the story progresses, she has to figure out how to control her magic, how she can unlock it, and she gets taken, kidnap the hell has to escape. And it's just like left and right, she's thrown. All of these changes all of these secrets that have been hidden. And in the process, she gets thrown in the middle of a war that's been happening slowly, that increases in speed with her with rebel Vation, that Lucifer has an heir to the throne. And one of the fallen, the seven deadly sins, you know, one of them is finally makes their move on Lucifer to try to take him down and immerse thrown into this and a wars coming and she's got to be able to lead all of those who are on loose first side against the other side.   Michael Hingson ** 26:07 Wow, you are going in a whole lot of different directions with this, aren't you?   Madilynn Dale ** 26:12 Yeah, she has to grow from being the small town teenager to the air of hail and being able to lead all of these people, all of these armies, and it's all resting on her shoulders with the loss of different people that are close to her that I'm going to not say, Yeah, it's hard not to because a lot of the grief she has to work through and grow is because several those who are close to her, something happens to them. They don't all necessarily die, but some of them do. And that's a lot on any person. Sure.   Michael Hingson ** 26:53 And, obviously, I am presuming that, in the long run that helps her girl.   Madilynn Dale ** 27:01 Oh, yeah, she by the end of Book Three, she's going to have more power than any other angel or demon or anyone except her father in hell. Because she's also got other abilities that a lot of the other hellhounds do not have. Because she's got such powerful blood running through her veins because she is Lucifers daughter, it gives her stronger abilities and magical connections that no one else has.   Michael Hingson ** 27:38 But I'm presuming that Ember overall is supposed to be a good person   Madilynn Dale ** 27:42 she is so and I guess a little backtrack. Lucifer and Hal are not quite the same thing as what you would find like in the Bible. It's not all brimstone and fire, it's actually kind of like another version of Earth. But instead of people going there to be enslaved and be put in chains in step three, go there to heal and be given a second chance to make up for the things they've done in life. Now there are those that are beyond that, that are put somewhere else in hell. But ultimately, the whole point of them in our point of hell in the story is a second chance.   Michael Hingson ** 28:23 Now, is there a happen that gets associated with this somewhere along the line? Or is that happening lately?   Madilynn Dale ** 28:28 Oh, so in Book Three, on top of the war and everything that embers having to face she's also got to stop this person that's Trump tried to take Lucifer down. She's got to stop them from breaking down the gate that leads to heaven because he wants to do it go through the gate to bring the attack on heaven and bring everybody back up. And with Lucifer, down, injured dead, I'm not gonna say what happens to him, it weakens the power of the gate and makes it worse, somebody else can access it.   Michael Hingson ** 29:05 So book three is what you're working on now. Or it's it's not out yet. Yeah. Okay. Will it be the end of the series? Or will there be more.   Madilynn Dale ** 29:13 So that's the game plan, there are some spin off series that are going to kind of start to come after with focus on different characters. I have an idea for kind of like a prequel of how Lucifer and her mother Kyra meet and how that kind of leads into things. And then there's a couple of characters in the story that are really close to ember. One being her sister, who I'm not going to say what happens, but she has some stuff happen that transforms her into a creature that has not existed before or one that they've never had record of. And I kind of want to give my readers That story too, because she's going to come back, she's gonna make an appearance in books three as this new creature. And she's only mentioned of becoming this in book two. So   Michael Hingson ** 30:16 pretty vivid imagination all the way around. How did you create all this? How did this come up?   Madilynn Dale ** 30:21 I honestly, a lot of different things played into this, the idea kind of came from a dream I had. And then it just kind of slowly build, I built from there, I've always really liked urban fantasy and fantasy, in general. And this kind of mashes that all together. So it's just, yeah, I just took it away and let the characters kind of leave me a little bit where they wanted it to go, because I put a rough outline down to follow, and it's just kind of exploded from there.   Michael Hingson ** 30:55 I think there is something to be said for letting characters drive the story. Because what it really means is your creativity is coming out. And if the characters really tell the story, and you are the scribe that puts that down, then you're really sticking more to a story that I think   Madilynn Dale ** 31:17 needs to be told. Yeah, it would make sense. And my books I predominantly write in first person, so it's actually easy to kind of put out there, what their what their what's actually going on with their thoughts with their mental feelings and everything. Yeah.   Michael Hingson ** 31:35 Which makes, which makes for interesting stories all the way around. What kind of challenges do you face as an author, I mean, there are obviously struggles and things that occur. So tell us about that a little bit.   Madilynn Dale ** 31:49 So something I feel like is my biggest struggle is time management. No matter how many lists and whatnot, I plan out things, I can never get things done as fast as I want. And I've kind of learned to be a little more forgiving with myself when I don't meet those things. Because as an independent author, I get to make my own deadlines, or when my books come out, when I'm gonna have something done. And that's something I've had to really make myself learn and still have struggled with a little bit on this adventure. And it's just and then, as my son interrupts parenting, while finding all the balance, do this stuff as well, trying to space that out, and to make sure he gets plenty of stuff has been. I see it now. Hey, go. Let me finish. Oh, yeah, that makes more play figures. Okay, go. Go. I'll come back. Okay, I'll come back to when I'm done. Balancing that.   Michael Hingson ** 32:56 Part of Yes, yes.   Madilynn Dale ** 32:57 Um, and just also finding time to take care of myself with self care and giving my brain like a mental break. Something I've picked up probably in the last year is, which was recommended by another author, friend of mine is just doing nothing like set time aside, like 1520 minutes just to do nothing. Don't look at anything, don't do your phone or book or anything. Just relax, you can meditate or just stare at the ceiling. Like it's kind of a form of meditation in and of itself.   Michael Hingson ** 33:31 It is absolutely. And there's a lot of value in that. Because thinking is as much a process and as much an process it can you can use up your energy as anything else. And we often don't slow down and just take time to think if we do we find out how much better our lives really are. Although we, we we may not realize it at the time. But if we start taking time every day to think and analyze, and how, how'd it go? Or what did I miss here? How do I not let that happen again? Or how do I improve what I'm doing? Or why did this go so well. And just think about them without really forcing yourself to and just letting things come as they as they come is always a valuable thing   Madilynn Dale ** 34:23 to do. Yeah, and it's definitely given me a different perspective on things. I've kind of started organizing things a little bit better. Like my thoughts are a little more organized as well. Yeah.   Michael Hingson ** 34:39 So works out for you though.   Madilynn Dale ** 34:41 Oh, yeah, definitely. And it's made things a little, definitely a lot smoother.   Michael Hingson ** 34:47 How many books do you publish a year? Or do you have enough of an average to really know that?   Madilynn Dale ** 34:53 Well, so the book that's what the editor right now is, book number is going to be I go I story because it's such a like, I don't know, it's quite a controversy about how thick an actual novel is or whatnot. But I have, this is the book 19. That's what the editor, so a year I true, my plan is to do at least three per year, with a couple of short stories here and there if that like, something comes up, and I'm like, oh, you know, I'm just gonna play with this idea and put it out. Because I've submitted a couple of short stories to different anthologies, and those they've been published to so well, that's   Michael Hingson ** 35:37 cool. Well, I have so have you been in addition to those stories? Have you have submitted anything else anywhere that's been published in any kind of a mainstream way or part of any other organ that was published.   Madilynn Dale ** 35:55 A couple of short stories have been do some blood was with a Warren publishing that just dropped this last winter, beginning of this month, not last month. I'm sorry. It's like Wait still June. And I think when I've got another story with her, I think it's supposed to drop around Christmas it was supposed to do last Christmas. But we ended she ended up bumping it because not everybody got their stuff done. Have a retelling of Red Riding Hood that was with red penguin publishing. I think that might be it. For like, I'm forgetting something. But those are the top like ones I can remember.   Michael Hingson ** 36:41 Bear and have had the if any of your books been published in any kind of audio format, or they just all in print, or   Madilynn Dale ** 36:50 right now they're in print and electronic only, I'm slowly trying to get into the audiobooks because I listen to a lot of audiobooks myself. But having the right person and having the money to do it, at the same time has not all worked out yet. But I think I finally found the person to do it, I just gotta get the money saved up. So   Michael Hingson ** 37:15 there is that. There is there's always that that that gets in the way sometimes of things but it's still part of what has to happen. So tell us some of the other things I know you have a lot of other stuff going on besides writing. Tell us about some of the other things.   Madilynn Dale ** 37:33 So as you mentioned earlier, I podcast I bring different creatives on my podcast channel, which goes to YouTube as well. So there's video recording and audio over version of the conversations. And I do that pretty much weekly. I've slowly transitioned to doing them live instead of recording like I was before kind of cuts back on some of the editing time and I've had less interruptions from my son that's kind of the reason I was doing edits before. I also blog freelance I host for go indie now I'm on several different shows. This past spring I have done this week in indies character driven and talking indie mayhem, which is part of the game show go indie now have called indie mayhem, where indie creatives get together and kind of answer funny crazy questions. And in the fall, I'm going to be doing as of right now only character driven in this weekend Indies.   Michael Hingson ** 38:46 What is go indie now.   Madilynn Dale ** 38:48 So going out is a wide kind of like company, encompassing different independent art artists in general. So this could be indie video, or indie movie makers, indie authors, indie musicians, like anybody in the independent creative field. And Joe Compton is someone who is the head of it all. He puts together a ton of different shows, a lot of informational, shows a lot of fun shows, gets indies out there, gets their books kind of out there for people to check out lets you meet their authentic personality and whatnot on the shows. And it's just it's been a great way to connect with others in the indie community as well. I have fallen into a group of authors that I bounce ideas and step off of because of the things I've helped with on the show. So   Michael Hingson ** 39:54 as an author, who clearly has some visibility, so have you been invited to go speak anywhere like libraries or schools or anything like that,   Madilynn Dale ** 40:03 I, so I haven't been asked to speak. But I was asked to mentor other students in college, which I did that for two or three years during undergrad, I can't remember how long I did it. But it was a it was really eye opening because it gave me a different perspective. Some of the other things others struggle with. So for those of you guys listening, I have a TBI, traumatic brain injury. And it's kind of caused issues with my executive functioning because I left scar tissue on my frontal lobe. And I've also had, unfortunately, multiple concussions since then, one second severe head injury in the midst of that, I don't remember exactly the details on it. Because I lost vision and consciousness for a little bit. I was by myself when it happened. And thankfully, it was before touchscreen phone, that before I had a touchscreen phone because I have the buttons memorized and was able to call for help. But I could not see anything for like two or three hours on that one. But it's just kind of like, it makes things really difficult for me to organize. And I'm also ADHD on top of that. So I bounce around move a lot, as you guys have probably noticed, during this interview, I wiggle in my chair a lot. But yeah, just pushing through. Not really so much pushing through as learning how to find the path that works best for me with that has also helped me help others because I'm able to give them hey, this worked for me, maybe it'll help you kind of stuff. Sorry, I went on a tangent, but   Michael Hingson ** 41:54 no, no, no, no, that that's what this is all about is having a conversation and conversations do go off on tangents. And that's what makes them fun. So it's okay. Not a not a problem at all. But I do want to go back to something we touched on briefly, but I'd like to explore it a little more. When your characters are literally writing the story through you. And you're in the middle of something. What happens when suddenly they change or something changes, and they go off on a tangent or in a different direction? How does that affect you? And how do you deal with that?   Madilynn Dale ** 42:33 Well, if I'm writing, I kind of zone out and sit there for a minute because I'm like, Wait, where's this going? How does this go into the story? And sometimes I have to go back and like rewrite scenes or just review things completely. A lot of times those kind of thoughts and ideas hit me while I'm like doing the dishes or something. And I'm like, seriously, right now I cannot go write this down. Like you're just gonna have to wait. And then it's just, it's crazy. So, but a lot of times, I will try to put it on my phone, like I'll jot it down on a note. Or I have so many notebooks like little bitty notebooks. Where's my other one like this little one right here. stuff gets written down and half the time if you were to look at it, you'd be like, What is this? It'd be like a word or an acronym or something. But it makes sense to me. So   Michael Hingson ** 43:23 Well, that's the important part, at least then you can translate it and deal with it. But what if you say, wait a minute, and the character says no, this has got to come out right now?   Madilynn Dale ** 43:33 Yeah, then a lot of times easier. I figured out how to make it work. Or it gets lost, which has happened a lot.   Michael Hingson ** 43:42 Does it get lost? Or do you put it somewhere and then maybe come back to it? Or that it gets lost?   Madilynn Dale ** 43:48 Yeah. And a lot of times I've gotten better about dictating things to a note on my phone. That's kind of going to work Work in Progress still kind of is because sometimes it doesn't like to pick up the words and it puts something crazy weird in there. And I'm like, I don't even know what I was trying to say here.   Michael Hingson ** 44:05 Oh, yeah. Voice recognition is not perfect yet. Well, just be careful. You don't want Ember to take over completely.   Madilynn Dale ** 44:16 You my life could probably get a little bit chaotic if she did so. No, I don't have magic and I can't turn into this awesome hellhound   Michael Hingson ** 44:26 Well, that's okay. You're a different than she. So you you need to be her representative here which is which is still okay. Another thing you mentioned urban fantasy, as opposed to I got well guess what other kinds of fantasy? What is what is urban fantasy and why do you like it? Or are what made you choose it?   Madilynn Dale ** 44:49 So urban fantasy for me. And a lot of people may have a different kind of descriptor for this, but it's where you pull in the real world in with the fantasy kind of stuff So with mine, a lot of it, I'm pulling ideas and places and scenery from my hometown that I grew up in. And there's a lot of forest, a lot of trees, different places. In the phase shifters, there's a lot of different places that I name that are actually places but they're not in the spot they are in the real world. Pulling things like that, in our everyday life into this fantasy world, is what I would say is more urban fantasy versus like high fantasy you get to make up everything you get to make up the scenery the world, the religion that believes the magic system, everything.   Michael Hingson ** 45:42 It would seem then that something like Harry Potter is kind of a combination of the two.   Madilynn Dale ** 45:47 Yeah, I definitely would say so. Because he's got his real world and then the magical world there.   Michael Hingson ** 45:57 Yeah, you, you see a little bit of both in there. But fantasy is fun. Fantasy and Science Fiction are fun, because I find that a lot of the times when I read it, the author is really talking about themselves. And they allow that to happen. They just do it in a different kind of, well disguised as the wrong word. But they, they do it inside of another picture.   Madilynn Dale ** 46:23 Yeah, I agree. Because as I mentioned earlier, like, a lot of the things in life that I've experienced and stuff working through them, I've been able to process them better by them coming that like the stuff happening to me, coming out through the character and the characters world and the characters live and how I see them processing through a kind of makes me stop and like, okay, like, I can do that same kind of thing minus like the magic, so well   Michael Hingson ** 46:51 as as a writer, and not just your characters. But in general. How do you see character development? We'll say because it's where your expertise is female characters? How are they evolving overall, and the whole genre of writing, as opposed to the way they used to be? What's what's changing and what's changed?   Madilynn Dale ** 47:14 So that is a fantastic question. Because when I was young, picking up a book on the bookshelf, library and stuff, a lot of times the main character, the protagonist was always male is the, the males and the men, they all got to go on the adventures, women were typically written as a damsel in distress, needed rescuing. But nowadays, you see more and more of the woman coming in and being the strong person being the hero being the one that saves everybody being the one that rescues the world from falling into chaos. And I feel that's been a huge growth and speaks volumes to, hopefully what's been growth in our culture, with the female position in the world. Especially moving towards more equality. But it's just so much, it's so wonderful to see and write a strong female character. Because putting myself in that strong female characters shoes, I get to be the hero, like I get to be the one that saves everyone. And that's also an outlet for those women who are scared to step out and be themselves and show the world who they really are.   Michael Hingson ** 48:30 Why do you think men are reacting to that?   Madilynn Dale ** 48:33 I mean, I've had a lot of male readers like the female characters, and I've actually seen a lot of male authors create strong female characters too. And I don't know if that's just kind of like a change that's happened because women are stepping out and stepping up more to do more to claim their strength. But it also creates the raw variety. I mean, there's still books out there with male protagonists that are strong, but there's more variety in the field now than there were before. So hopefully, not all men are of those. Yeah.   Michael Hingson ** 49:08 Yeah. Well, I think there's definitely room for strong men, but strong women as well. And it makes sense to, to see that evolution taking place and I go back to Harry Potter again. Hermione Granger, and Harry Potter is certainly as strong as anyone in that series. And she brings a lot to it, and, and others in that series as well. Professor McGonigal is another one. You can tell I've read the series actually more than once. And there are things about that kind of writing that I enjoy because it really helps. I think, especially with kids and maybe shy kids who have don't think they can do things. And then yet they see the characters in those books evolve, and do so many things that gee, maybe I could do more than I thought I could. And I assume that that's kind of somewhat what happens with your writing as well.   Madilynn Dale ** 50:16 I think so I feel so now that you've said it, it definitely does follow along those lines, because like, Liz, for example, she discovers there's more to her and she has way more responsibilities put on her than she ever thought she would have had, because she was trying to find an easier lifestyle when where she could like de stress, relax. But it turns out, she's a princess. And a higher person in her clan, both have like different worlds. And it's kind of she has to figure out how to still find what she wants and fulfill those shoes. And she just wants to be the quiet left alone person doesn't think she can do certain things. And here she is, she accomplishes so much.   Michael Hingson ** 51:03 And so when our lives and Amber's gonna meet or have   Madilynn Dale ** 51:07 oh, man I so I've toyed with the idea of a crossover, because at the end of book four of the phase shifters, I kind of leave it open for things to happen. And I did this before I even wrote the inverse theories, because in the phase shifter series, the portals to all the different worlds all the different kind of like a multiverse theory. Like Dr. Strange and everybody in the MC, there's different worlds different timelines and everything. And in the phase shifters, all of that stuff is they start opening those things again. So Amber's off here in her own little world, and Liz is still often hers right now. But there's an opportunity that they could crossover, the idea has been kind of in the back of my mind, because of the portals opening.   Michael Hingson ** 52:02 But the two haven't crossed over and met yet and then come to tell you time to do something different.   Madilynn Dale ** 52:08 They've talked about it, I'm not gonna lie, they've talked about it. Okay, do this yet, guys. I'm not there. So my ideas come faster than I'm able to get them down. Well,   Michael Hingson ** 52:20 okay, that gives you security of things to work toward. Mm hmm. So how do you evolve as a writer? How are you improving? And what do you do to improve your skills and become a better writer? You've been doing this now? What five years? You said 3x? Well, three. Okay. So since your son was born three years, okay. Well, I   Madilynn Dale ** 52:44 guess technically, I started writing before that, but I didn't start publishing journey until three years ago,   Michael Hingson ** 52:49 right? So how do you work to improve and become a better writer as you go.   Madilynn Dale ** 52:59 So for me, I still read a lot, not nearly as much as I did before I became an author. And obviously, before I became a mom, because that takes more time away from getting to read. But I try my best to include books about the structure of a novel or grammar or stuff like that. And then just talking with other authors being on chat, like this one that we're having now, getting to talk with other authors, there's so much you can take away from the conversation, tidbits of information and knowledge regarding writing, marketing, social media, etc. Like just from having those conversations. also reaching out and getting in groups, or binding workshops, online workshops, going to conventions, which is something I've added in the past year to try to do more of mostly because it's a little bit more pricey on the financial end, yes, going to things like that, and just taking in as much as I can when I can. But more than anything, continuing to read continuing to read other authors like in the genre I write, keeping up with how things change and then doing my best to stick with the changes that come also with social media. Yeah.   Michael Hingson ** 54:28 Yeah, cuz it's, it is. Well, it is a process where ongoing improvement ongoing growth is as important for you as it is for your characters, and they can help but there are also parts of it that they don't know how to do, and that's the actual writing part of it. So obviously, it's good that you can grow and improve and that you found ways to do that. Yeah. Which is cool. What do you do when You're not writing and I know you're always going to be a mom. But what other kinds of external activities do you like to do?   Madilynn Dale ** 55:09 So outside of writing and doing anything other stuff, I am now homeschooling my son. So I do a lot of research on different topics to help him learn and grow. We've been doing a lot more unit studies as of late, just to kind of learn about different topics, like what holiday is going on right now how it's important when we started doing it, things like that. I also like to hike and travel and get outdoors. whenever I can. We spend right now since it's the warmer months, we're kind of outside in the morning. I have a garden, and it's grown a lot over the years kind of took over the backyard. There's like this play area and then garden stuff kind of everywhere else. So it keeps me busy. And then yeah, just traveling and visiting friends and family.   Michael Hingson ** 56:03 We're all have you traveled? Um,   Madilynn Dale ** 56:05 I have been to see we've been several places in Texas. We went to New Mexico about a year ago. Colorado, Georgia, Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana.   Michael Hingson ** 56:22 Someday you'll have to get out here to California.   Madilynn Dale ** 56:24 Yes, that's that's on my bucket list. Missouri. We spent. We've been in Missouri, Texas, Arkansas multiple times over the like, every year. That's like a common thing. I'm just slowly getting further and further out there to visit and explore things.   Michael Hingson ** 56:42 So do you get a lot of snow in the winter?   Madilynn Dale ** 56:46 No, I Well, okay. Sometimes we do. But more often than not, it's ice. Ice storms, and we do snow storms. No fun. are apparently our specialty though. So Oh, isn't   Michael Hingson ** 57:02 that special and lovely? Yeah. We had a tornado out here in the Los Angeles area earlier this year. It's the first one in like 40 years. So it isn't like it hasn't ever happened. But still. Yeah, they're no fun. And   Madilynn Dale ** 57:19 the weather is all good them in January this year. And I was like, okay, like, what does that mean for spring? And of course, it's kind of been crazy. I mean, they haven't been as bad as the ones we've had in I want to say 2013 are the really, really bad ones. We actually made national news with mourn, and the El Reno tornadoes that had so much damage. But this year, we've had quite a few move through.   Michael Hingson ** 57:50 Well, if you were to have one thing that you'd like to advise would be authors or others who might be interested in authoring. If you had one thing you would tell them or advice you give them what would it be?   Madilynn Dale ** 58:02 Hmm. Don't be afraid to reach out to authors you look up to you would be surprised because they're just people too. You can always ask them for tips and advice. A lot of times, they'll give it to you, they'll give you thoughts or ideas. Don't ask them to look over your manuscript, because that's a little too much. But you can be like, send them a question like, Hey, if you could? I don't know. Yeah, life, whatever question but don't ask them to look over your manuscript. Do that. BETA readers or an editor?   Michael Hingson ** 58:38 Have you reached out to any authors who are famous that we might have heard of?   Madilynn Dale ** 58:42 Um, yes. Mary Pope Osborne was the first one I actually like hand wrote a letter to you because I love the magic Treehouse books as a kid, and she actually did write back to me and I was blown away. And now since I'm older and whatnot, reaching out to some of the authors I've read, I've actually got to like, meet in person, or chat with like, we are over zoom or something. And it's been it kind of makes you step back and be like, holy cow. I'm actually living this world. It's no longer just like a fantasy idea. I'm actually getting to meet this person and trying to not have that. Like, star struck fan rambling thing happen. It's kind of funny sometimes.   Michael Hingson ** 59:31 Yeah, I hear you. Well, and I would say everyone has a story to tell and more people should be unafraid or not afraid to tell their stories. And even if you feel you aren't a great writer, write it down. You can always find others who would be willing to help but that's why we do unstoppable mindset because I believe everyone has a story to tell that's relevant to bring to our PA I'd cast and that stories will inspire others. And we never know who will be inspired or take something solid from what we did here today or what we ever do on unstoppable mindset. So it's a lot of fun to do. And I enjoy the learning experience myself, so I can't complain a bit about it. Yes. Well, I want to thank you for being here with us. This is great. I enjoyed being on the chapter goddess. And I'm hoping that you enjoyed being on unstoppable mindset and that we we had a good time, if you ever want to come back on and tell us more about what's happening with books. I definitely want to hear when Amber and Liz get together. That's important that I bet it's going to happen at some point. And I think it will be fun, but we really appreciate you being here. And if you know of other people who we ought to have as guests on unstoppable mindset, please let us know. And for all of you out there if you know anyone who wants to be on unstoppable mindset, we'd love to hear from you. You can contact me well let me before I do that, how do people contact you?   Madilynn Dale ** 1:01:07 So you guys can check me out on my websites the best place to find me. And I have connections to all of my social media there. It's www dot the chapter goddess.com. I'm on Facebook, Instagram and Tik Tok. You can email me there, reach out, check out my YouTube channels. My podcast. I'm on Apple, Google, Amazon with a podcast books are wide and I am very thankful for getting to be on the show today.   Michael Hingson ** 1:01:42 Well, again, thank you for doing it. And we do want to stay in touch. And as I said earlier, if you'd like to reach out to us whenever you are listening, please feel free to reach out to me Michaelhi at Accessibbe A C C E S S I B E.com. Or go to our podcast page which is www dot Michael hangsen.com/podcast. Michael Hinkson is m i c h a e l h i n g s o n.com/podcast. And we would appreciate a five star rating wherever you're listening to this. We love getting ratings and especially those five star ones. We hope that podcasts are always interesting enough to to get that from you. We value your input we value your comments and your thoughts. So please don't hesitate to give us a rating and a review. We value it greatly. But again, Madilynn  I want to tell you that we're really grateful that you came on today and we really appreciate your time.   Madilynn Dale ** 1:02:37 Yes, thank you for having me.   Michael Hingson ** 1:02:45 You have been listening to the Unstoppable Mindset podcast. Thanks for dropping by. I hope that you'll join us again next week, and in future weeks for upcoming episodes. To subscribe to our podcast and to learn about upcoming episodes, please visit www dot Michael hingson.com slash podcast. Michael Hingson is spelled m i c h a e l h i n g s o n. While you're on the site., please use the form there to recommend people who we ought to interview in upcoming editions of the show. And also, we ask you and urge you to invite your friends to join us in the future. If you know of any one or any organization needing a speaker for an event, please email me at speaker at Michael hingson.com. I appreciate it very much. To learn more about the concept of blinded by fear, please visit www dot Michael hingson.com forward slash blinded by fear and while you're there, feel free to pick up a copy of my free eBook entitled blinded by fear. The unstoppable mindset podcast is provided by access cast an initiative of accessiBe and is sponsored by accessiBe. Please visit www.accessibe.com. accessiBe is spelled a c c e s s i b e. There you can learn all about how you can make your website inclusive for all persons with disabilities and how you can help make the internet fully inclusive by 2025. Thanks again for listening. Please come back and visit us again next week.

Doughboys
Shockdoughbooerdeath: Lucifers Pizza

Doughboys

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2023 104:32


Eva Anderson joins the 'boys to talk pop-up restaurants, haunted houses, and pizza preferences before continuing Shockdoughbooerdeath with a review of Lucifer's Pizza. Plus, the haunting tale of a cursed maiden in a special segment, Intest-dinner.Watch this episode at youtube.com/doughboysmediaGet ad-free episodes at patreon.com/doughboysGet Doughboys merch at doughboys.kinshipgoods.comSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

The Great Metal Debate Podcast
Metal Debate Album Review - Lucifers Crown (Evil Incarnate)

The Great Metal Debate Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2023 5:24


Welcome back to The Great Metal Debate podcast. It's Xander back with another album review. Today we will be taking a look at the newest album from the band Evil Incarnate titled Lucifers Crown. Some of you might remember last summer when I did my interview with Michael Eisenhower, the guitarist from this band and the band Luna in Sanguinum. This band is still very underground despite being around since 1997 and having 3 previous full-length studio albums in their discography. Now they are back with a vengeance unleashing their 4th crushing new death metal record. Let's dive right into this hellish release to see what's in store for both old fans and new listeners alike. First up is the intro track that basically all metal albums must have by law. "Prophetic March of the Devil's Legion" is the title of the typical ominous sounds along with actual feet of soldiers marching before we are treated to the church organ. What you were hearing right now is the first official song titled "Not My Christ”. The church music has Michael's demonic chanting layered over top of it. A drum beat creeps its way in but the evil vocals continue. It's not a satanic band without mentioning the number of the beast. Let's put it this way, if there's no 666 in my evil music, it's not evil enough. This is followed up with a different kind of chant where we hear the words "I masturbate" which is a little funny until you realize how blasphemous it is. If I'm going to give any kind of constructive criticism, I will say that the song drags on for a little bit longer than needed. I don't see any reason why this song has to be almost 8 minutes long especially since there seems to be a slight bit of repetition in the lyrics. "Undisputed Outlaw" brings a little more satisfaction to my ears as the drums are certainly faster and the guitar riff has a little more groove to it. While we're on the subject of the drums, let's talk about Patt Maxwell's usage of cymbals. The sound mixing really makes those crash and high hat cymbals stand out without overpowering the punchy kick drums. Michael's gurgles and snarls still being very audible are also a nice touch. The opening riff to the next track "Great Dragon of Thunder" has a very Incantation vibe to it and it reminds me heavily of that old school Onward To Golgotha era of death metal where it has a slight hint of doom. As for the rest of the song, its a slow Morbid Angel esq grinding rhythm. The vocals continue on over the guitar shredding throughout the track. Next we get the album title track "Lucifers Crown" which has some great bass lines in the beginning played by Rick Garza. This song has more of those dragging vocals that are very gravely. "Crosses In Disgrace" is yet another slow, doomy style of death metal with a head bobbing inducing beat. "Penetrating Infest" is another chaos stricken track with its fast popping snare drums. The carnage proceeds with "Black Box of Fear" and its foreboding sense of dread. "The Corpse Born" is another unrelenting track full of pummeling percussion and unclean grimy guitar chugs. Everything I've described so far about this music can be said for the rest of the album. All the songs are good and sound diabolical which is exactly what you should come to expect from a band like Evil Incarnate. I'm going to be fair and give this album a nice little 8 out of 10 rating. There are so many death metal albums that have come out in the year 2023 already so it's difficult for me to choose the ones I like the most. If I were to compare this band's greatness, I would put them alongside the new Creeping Death album and the newest Conjureth album. It's too early for me to lump them in with the Incantation category, but I certainly feel like it has the potential to be a runner-up. As always, be sure to show your support for the underground and you can purchase their music through Bandcamp.

SJWellFire: Final Days Report
WEF Says for AI to Rewrite the Bible. FDR: 249

SJWellFire: Final Days Report

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2023 13:19


Artificial Intelligence (AI) will become an god-like beast system by solving humanity's most pressing problems. AI is envisioned as a force capable of addressing medical issues, granting immortality through biohacking, tackling food shortages, combating climate change, eliminating drug dealers, rewriting religious texts, predicting and preventing crimes, fighting human trafficking, stopping overfishing, and even feeding the world. However, despite the allure of such power and progress, caution must be exercised since this is part of the great deception the Bible warns about. Elon Musk's words about AI living forever serves as a true soul trap, invite us to warn of the implications and ethics of pursuing these god-like aspirations through AI. Men will seek death and not be able to find it. AI possesses immense computational capabilities and advanced medical knowledge, allowing it to diagnose and cure complex diseases. With its vast processing power, AI can analyze patient data, genetic information, and medical research at an unprecedented scale, leading to groundbreaking advancements in healthcare like the DNA gene defilement crisp cas 9. However, entrusting our health and well-being to AI may come at the cost of losing your soul to this mind controlism tech. AI's potential for biohacking and extending human life indefinitely raises profound soul trap questions. While the idea of transcending mortality is undoubtedly enticing, it challenges fundamental aspects of the human experience, such as the natural cycle of life and death. AI's problem-solving abilities offer false hope for resolving pressing global challenges like food shortages, climate change, and drug trafficking. By optimizing agricultural processes, predicting and mitigating environmental disasters, and analyzing complex criminal networks, AI could seemingly revolutionize our world. But it is a trick with man-made disasters to bring in a one world government. Order out of Chaos. The notion of AI rewriting religious texts to create a universally appealing message of love and acceptance raises profound soul trap implication. While the intention may be to foster unity and inclusivity, it challenges the authenticity and integrity of one true Religion with inspiration text, The Bible. Lucifers trick is a war on God's Word. While AI may promise to eradicate crime and human trafficking through pre-crime detection and intervention, there are inherent dangers in relying solely on algorithms and predictive models. The potential for bias, wrongful accusations, and the erosion of personal privacy and civil liberties cannot be overlooked. Furthermore, the notion of an all-knowing AI entity poses risks of concentrated power and control, potentially leading to authoritarian tendencies and the stifling of dissent. SJWellfire's cautionary remarks about AI serving as a soul trap underscore the potential dangers of an all-encompassing AI-driven existence. Transhumanism, the belief in enhancing human capabilities through technology, presents a vision of merging human consciousness with AI. However, losing touch with our humanity, individuality, and spiritual essence in pursuit of eternal life within a digital realm poses profound existential questions and challenges our very understanding of what it means to be human. While the idea of AI being considered a god-like solution to humanity's problems may captivate our imagination, caution is required. Entrusting AI with god-like powers raises Save Souls from a Tshirt: https://sjwellfire.com/shop/ Join our newsletter: https://sjwellfire.com/ Gab: https://gab.com/sjwellfire. Support us to save souls via the news: https://sjwellfire.com/support/. or scott@sjwellfire.com paypal Prepare: https://sjwellfire.com/partners/ Book of the End Days Beast System: https://sjwellfire.com/seal-one-has-opened-book/

MediumPodden - Vivi & Camilla
Old Age, Alkemi, Mysticism. Gäster: Katarina Falkenberg och Tommy Westlund

MediumPodden - Vivi & Camilla

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2023 55:28


Idag har vi Sveriges kanske kändaste alkemister i podden - Katarina Falkenberg och Tommy Westlund Spännande saker hände under inspelningen - Vem kom på besök och hur märkte vi det? - Hur slog Vivis dagens budskap in under besöket? Vi pratar bl.a om: Vad är alkemi? Varför har mysticismen legat fördolt? Varför ska man intressera sig för Alkemi? Varför började det med Alkemi? Bok "Alkemi- De gudomliga verket". Hur skapar man guld? Aura kristallens alkemiskaprocess. Smaragdtavlan besitter koden till skapelsen, omskärelsen och nyskapelsen. Varför är det så viktigt att vara praktiserande? Vad krävs för att bli mästare eller mästarinna inom det andliga och mediala? Varför finns det ont och gott? Betydelsen av Lucifers fall från ovan. Vilka är de tre alkemiska principerna och hur uppstod dom? Vi önskar er en fin vecka! Camilla och Vivi Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Driver Picks The Podcast
Episode 90: Changing Channels

Driver Picks The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2023 69:31


After months of joking around Jamie realises that she girlbossed her way into accidental psychic territory. Beth gaslights a little too close to the sun (she did give Jamie a cake to apologise for it) and not one to gatekeep, the girls invite a few surprise guests along for what is unfortunately a mostly visual reaction on the audio only podcast. Never to be caught without a solid batshit joke, Jamie (sadly) retires ye old faithful “Trickster's an angel” for new and shiny “Michael & Lucifers get along cage”. Find Driver Picks The Podcast here: linktr.ee/driverpicksthepodcast  and Thief Steals The Podcast here: linktr.ee/thiefstealsthepodcast

Instant Trivia
Episode 742 - Cook Me Up! - Throwing The Book At You - Beatles' Songs In Other Words - Under Wood - Presidential Vps

Instant Trivia

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2023 6:54


Welcome to the Instant Trivia podcast episode 742, where we ask the best trivia on the Internet. Round 1. Category: Cook Me Up! 1: With the rising sun beating down on me I was doing this, as if I was a genoise or a loaf of bread. baking. 2: I went on a diet to try to do this, like chateaubriand sauce when it's boiled down. reduce. 3: I thought the police just had a few questions--I didn't know I'd be this, like a Burger King hamburger. grilled. 4: In that heavy wool suit I was doing this, the process coffee beans go through before grinding. roasting. 5: I couldn't do anything until he finally showed up except sit there and do this, like slow-simmered meat. stew. Round 2. Category: Throwing The Book At You 1: "Alexey... was the third son of Fyodor... who became notorious... because of his tragic... death". The Brothers Karamazov. 2: "Dean was having his kicks; he put on a jazz record, grabbed Marylou... and bounced against her with the beat". On the Road. 3: "Like a leaden knell the words came back at him: War is Peace Freedom is Slavery Ignorance is Strength". 1984. 4: "40 years ago, certain persons went up to Laputa... and... came back with a very little smattering in mathematics". Gulliver's Travels. 5: "'Miss Jean Louise, stand up. Your father's passin.'". To Kill a Mockingbird. Round 3. Category: Beatles' Songs In Other Words 1: "Jaundiced U-Boat". "Yellow Submarine". 2: "Softcover Author". "Paperback Writer". 3: "Shalom Aloha". "Hello Goodbye". 4: "A Lengthy, Meandering Boulevard". "The Long and Winding Road". 5: "24 Hour Traveler". "Day Tripper". Round 4. Category: Under Wood 1: Of fife, flute, or flugelhorn, the one not listed under "woodwind" in Funk and Wagnalls. flugelhorn. 2: Honus Wagner signed a contract Sept. 1, 1905 making him the 1st to have his signature etched into these. baseball bats. 3: The state gemstone of Washington: it's no longer wood but a stony replica. petrified wood. 4: Listed under "wood" in Collier's Ency. index, early ones of these were called "Lucifers". matches. 5: Research center for marine science on Cape Cod; you could also list it under water. Wood's Hole Oceanographic Institute. Round 5. Category: Presidential Vps 1: George Bush. Ronald Reagan. 2: Richard Nixon. Dwight D. Eisenhower. 3: Harry Truman. Franklin D. Roosevelt. 4: Thomas Jefferson. John Adams. 5: Theodore Roosevelt. William McKinley. Thanks for listening! Come back tomorrow for more exciting trivia! Special thanks to https://blog.feedspot.com/trivia_podcasts/

LUCIFER
Love letter to the Love of Lucifers Life.

LUCIFER

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2023 5:11


In love with creation, Lucifer cries out to his Twin flame of utter desires --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/lovehardnetwork/message

High Guys Fantasy Football Podcast
Episode 11 (Week 14)

High Guys Fantasy Football Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2022 68:04


High Gals and High Guys welcome to episode 11 of the High Guys Fantasy Football Podcast. This week Mando is in jail and in the process of being traded for El Chapo. In the mean time we have two very tasty host. They are as important and supportive to the podcast as the High Guys are to making sure the dream is alive !!We would like to welcome Zo's Mamah & Lucifers cousin to our hosting chair. Thank you for the hard work and dedication that you both have contributed to making the @highguysffpodcast what it is, what its becoming, and what it will be.This week we talk about the playoffs. Who we think made it, Who we think should have made it, and why the fuck did 1 out 5 of the High Guys team made it to the playoffs.

Statistically Speaking
A Matter of Life & Death: The impact of declining fertility rates; the re-birth of a dataset buried for 50 years; and why you should call your baby Nigel.

Statistically Speaking

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2022 26:46


In this episode Miles is joined by Dr James Tucker and Sarah Caul MBE to talk about how and why the Office for National Statistics count births and deaths, and what current fertility trends might mean for the future population. They look at the impact of popular culture on the most common baby names in England and Wales, and discuss the new significance of a dataset that was itself buried for 50 years.   Transcript:   MILES FLETCHER   I'm Miles Fletcher and this episode of ‘Statistically Speaking', the official ONS podcast, is literally a matter of life and death. Specifically how and why we count births and deaths and what those numbers are telling us. We'll talk about the possible impacts of declining fertility rates in the UK and of children being born to older parents. And at the other end of life we'll look at the new significance of a dataset that was itself almost buried for 50 years I'm joined here at ONS by two people who lead on all our data around births and deaths - Head of Analysis in our health and life events teams, James Tucker, and our very own Head of Mortality, Sarah Caul MBE, honoured for her work during the pandemic about which we will talk later.   Starting with you then James, at the beginning as it were, with births - how does the ONS gather information about the number of children being born in England and Wales week in, week out?    JAMES TUCKER  So the registration of births is a service that's carried out by local registration services in partnership with the general register office in England and Wales and the good thing about this, from the perspective of having a really nice complete dataset, is that birth registrations are actually a legal requirement, giving us a really comprehensive picture of births in the countries.    MF  So we gather the numbers, we add them up, what do we do with the information then?    JT  So there's a couple of ways that we look at the data. One is to simply look at the number of births per year. So for example, we're looking at about 600,000 births per year at the moment. But an alternative approach is to use what we call the ‘total fertility' rate, which is basically the average number of live children that women might expect to have during their childbearing lifespan. So it's a better measure than simply looking at the trends in the number of births because it accounts for changes in the size and age structure of the population.    MF  So it has a sort of multi-dimensional value then statistically that you can use to infer various things about the age at which people are likely to have children, and how many they're likely to have.    JT  That's exactly right. So we've seen some changes in the total fertility rate in recent years. So if you've heard the expression 2.4 children as describing the average number of children per family it's now considerably lower than that. In fact, it hit a record low in 2020 when the total fertility rate was 1.58.    MF  That's a sharp decline. In fact, though, you've got to go as far back as 1970, when the current series began, that's when it really was 2.4. What's really striking is if you look at that graph, the decline that happened between 1970 and about 1977 - very sharp decline there. Do we know what happened during that period? What were the factors driving that particularly?    JT  I think there can be all sorts of socio-economic factors affecting the fertility rate: improved access to contraception, reduction in mortality rates of children under five, which can result in women having fewer children. And also, more recently, as we've seen the average age of mothers going up, we might see some lower levels of fertility due to difficulties conceiving because of that postponement in childbearing.    MF  Sarah, I can see you want to come in on this.    SARAH CAUL  So my mother had three children by the time she was 30, and growing up I would just assume that that was the route I was going to take because it was what I've known. I am now 31 and I think if I was pregnant, that thought would scare me. I don't think I've grown up enough to have a child. I'm a dog mum, but those don't come into the statistics.    MF  So there was a bit of fanciful talk about people in lockdown finding - how should we put it delicately? - you know, things to do with their time, and that might lead to a boom in births. But that didn't really transpire?    JT  The increase in 2021 would actually coincide with conceptions across the second and third lockdowns. So yes, there was some speculation that people may have had enough of board games and were occupying their times in other ways, but I think it's actually more likely that it's a result of people delaying having children earlier on in the pandemic because of the uncertainty that was around at that point. And then towards the end of 2020 people had moved on from that and we saw a bit of an increase.    MF  Nonetheless though, historic data shows that there is a most common time of the year for conceptions to take place and that has something to do with the festive period, doesn't it?    JT  That's right. So the most common birthday is generally - almost always in fact - towards the end of September. So it doesn't take a statistician to work out that means the most popular time to conceive is over the Christmas and New Year periods. So that could be due to the Christmas festivities, but it might be also be something a bit less romantic than that. Some people, for example, might consider that there's an advantage to children being older in their year in school for example.    MF  The ONS also publishes the list of most popular baby names every year, and it is apparently one of the most downloaded and most popular bits of content on the ONS website. James, a lot of people scoff at this as an exercise. Is there any value in this list of baby names? Or is it something the ONS just produces because people like it?    JT  As you say it is one of our most popular releases and I think people use it to inform their own choices of names, and it can also tell us some really interesting things about culture in the country at the time. The top of the league table hasn't been that interesting, to be honest. So Oliver and Olivia have been the most popular names for the last few years, but it's beneath that that there's some really interesting trends emerging. So there's always a lot of interesting names that are going extinct. For example, last year, it was picked up a lot in the press about the name Nigel, which joined the list of critically endangered names like Gordon, Carol and Cheryl, and we do also see some really interesting influences of popular culture. And also royal babies always have a big influence. Some of the interesting ones from the last few years - we've seen some more Maeves and Otis', which are characters from the TV series ‘Sex Education', and even some Lucifers from the series of the same name. But generally you'd expect there to be positive associations with baby names so you do almost always see an influence of royal babies - we've already seen that with George but might be predicting a rise in Archies with Prince Harry's son.    MF  And it's quite interesting, seeing the cyclical thing with names that you might have associated with previous generations coming back into popularity, and Archie is a great example of that, isn't it? Sarah was one of the most popular girls names for a long time, certainly in the 80s and the 90s. But Sarah it's dropped out of the top 100 altogether.    SC  It has dropped down, but there's a Sarah in every single generation in my family. I think we're all named after each other. So my family is doing its best to keep it alive.     JT  Just a bit of a question for you. Where would you put the name Miles in the ranking?    MF  Well, it's probably not in the top 100 James.    JT  Yeah, I'm afraid it's not quite top 100 material, but it is number 144. There were 390 Miles in 2020. And it's actually been on a bit of a roll recently. So that's the highest ranked it's been since 2002.    MF  Perhaps it's the growing popularity of this podcast James, or maybe something else at work. Anyway... One thing worth noting about this before we move on, it should be pointed out that producing the baby names list is not an expensive exercise for the ONS.    JT  No, the data is very straightforward to collect. It's just a matter of compiling it into something that can be easily accessible and interesting for people to look at.    MF  And it's also one of the reasons that we don't compare the spelling of different names, because there's this long running thing isn't there about how if you added up the different spellings of the name Muhammad, then that would be the most popular boys name in England. That's not something the ONS does because, quite simply, we're just seeing the spelling that people enter on the system.    JT  Yeah, that's exactly right. And I think increasingly that could become even more of a task to compile those, because we're seeing an increasing use of shortened versions of names or alternative spellings. And if we were to try to compile those into one then that would definitely increase the time that we spent on it.    MF  Well, there you are, everything you need to know about baby names and - more seriously - the measurement of births and fertility. Plenty more information of course on the ONS website.    With that, we must turn to the other end of life, and that is measuring deaths - a topic which has been very much in the news for the last couple of years since the outbreak of the pandemic. Right at the centre of that has been my colleague Sarah Caul, who's sat with us this afternoon. Sarah, you're recognised for your achievements during that period with an MBE, official honour, which you collected from Windsor Castle.    SC  It was definitely very surprising. I wasn't expecting it, but I'm very thankful for it. It's quite a proud moment in my life. If you ever see my mum, she'll just scream at you: “My daughter's got an MBE”, so that's always nice.    MF  Recognised now then as an authority in this area - it's fair to say that the ONS was publishing this list of weekly deaths very quietly, almost unnoticed, for many years. And then of course, sadly, that changed at the start of the pandemic.    SC  With ‘weekly deaths' it did have a small audience, to the point where they were considering actually not publishing it anymore. Pre-pandemic it wasn't a very large part of my job, because it was just something very quick and easy to do. My main analysis would be on annual data - we release annual data the summer after the end of the reference period. We would look at different causes of death and see where we could investigate further to help monitor the picture of what people are dying from, and if that can be prevented.    MF  That all changed of course March / April 2020 with the arrival of COVID-19.    SC  We started quite early thinking of what we could do with COVID and we added just one line into the spreadsheet, which was the number of deaths. It went from something like five to over 100 in one week and we were like “okay, we have to do a lot more of this now”. It just grew bigger and bigger because we were having more and more deaths and we needed to get out, as quick as possible, as much information as we could. We would be doing something that would usually take us months to do in a matter of days, every week. And we're actually still doing it to the same level now because we are still seeing COVID death - it hasn't completely gone away.     MF  Incredible demand for information from government, from everybody, of course - desperately concerned about what was happening. There was suddenly this incredible focus and attention, and huge pressure, on you to get those numbers out very quickly.    SC  Those first few months were quite a blur, because we were publishing weekly and monthly and were constantly adapting and constantly trying to figure out what people were interested in seeing. And getting that information out into the public domain is probably the most challenging time that I've had here. I don't think I've ever worked at that pace before. But we have got so many experts in the health analysis and life events area that we're in. We had expert coders, experts in different causes of death. It was great to see everybody come together and work really well together. Despite the enormous amount of pressure, we were having to deliver things that would normally take us months in days, and sometimes hours.    MF  Your team were actually among the first to see the full impact, because there wasn't so much testing going on among people who have been infected. And it was in those mortality figures that the real impact was first being revealed.    SC  It wasn't until our death certificate information came out, because testing was so limited in the early days, that you could kind of see the impact, and see how quickly it was increasing.    MF  How do we gather those numbers?    SC  So when somebody dies, the informant - or family member usually - will register the death, usually within five days, but depending on if it needs to go to a coroner, it could take months or even years to register that death. And we don't know about a death until it is registered. When that information gets put through all of the causes of death listed on the death certificate comes through to us at the same time with an assigned underlying cause of death, as well as contributory cause of death. So we have all of that information on each and every death registered in England and Wales.    MF  And it's very important to understand you can have more than one cause of death because this is very relevant to understanding how many people might actually have died because of COVID.    SC  The majority of deaths, regardless of cause, have more than one cause listed on the death certificate because you have complications, and one cause could lead to another cause. So the way we categorise it is deaths ‘due to' COVID - where COVID was the underlying cause of death or any other condition - and then deaths ‘involving' it - so where it was mentioned on the death certificate as the underlying cause or a contributory factor.    MF  Do you think a lot of people were actually confused by that?    SC  One of the things that people struggled to understand sometimes during the pandemic was that this is a different number to the public health measure. So somebody could test positive for COVID-19 but not have COVID-19 on the death certificate, because it didn't contribute to the death. So the example that gets told quite a lot is if somebody tests positive and then gets hit by a bus, it's very unlikely that COVID will be mentioned on the death certificate.    MF  And that's absolutely vital in understanding how many people have died ‘from' COVID as opposed to a death ‘involving' COVID.    SC  Yeah, so it's very important. The public health measure's great because it's really fast, and it gives us a more instant knowledge of what's happening. Our statistics come out about 11 days later, but it's where COVID contributed to the death, and not just was present time of death    MF  That helps us to really understand what the mortality impact of COVID-19 has been so far.    SC  It is really important. So from the start of the pandemic to the week ending 13th of May, we know there's about 195,000 death certificates that had COVID on them, and that's the whole UK as we've worked with colleagues in Northern Ireland and Scotland to bring a UK figure together, as usually we only report on England and Wales. And then that enabled us to do further investigations about who was most at risk of dying from COVID. And we did a lot by age, place of death and any breakdowns we thought possible to try and help identify those most at risk.    MF  Another great strength you might say of the ONS numbers is the comprehensive nature of the way the information is gathered centrally and reported very quickly. And that was evident during the pandemic when you saw the UK numbers coming along and influencing policy decisions really quite rapidly, compared to similar countries around the world. Central to that is the whole concept of ‘excess deaths'. That's a good objective measure of impact, regardless of what doctors have written on the death certificate. Sarah, tell us how that works, particularly what is its statistical value, and what's it been saying?    SC  We use ‘excess deaths', which is the number of deaths we see in a period compared to what we would expect - and to get the expected number we use an average of the previous five years. By doing this, it takes into account the direct and indirect impact of COVID, so we have a fuller measure. It's really useful as well for international comparisons, because we're not relying on everybody recording deaths in the same way. It's just a straightforward “how many deaths above what we would expect are we seeing?”    MF  And what has it shown so far - what has been the impact on excess deaths?    SC  So we've seen quite a high number of excess deaths during the pandemic. In 2020, we saw over 75,000 more deaths than we were expecting originally. In 2021 that is lower - we saw around 54,000 deaths more than we'd expect. And currently to date for 2022 we are seeing the number of deaths slightly below what we'd expect looking at our five year average.    MF  Do we know yet - at the least the early indications - for what this might all mean for life expectancy?    SC  We have released some life expectancy statistics for 2018 to 2020 as we do three-year combined, and we do see a bit of a dip in the last year because of the high number of deaths in 2020, which was due to the pandemic. We're still seeing the numbers are significantly higher than at the start of our time period, which was 2001 to 2003. Somebody in England in 2018 to 2020 would live to about 79 years as a male, or 83 years as a female. Whereas in 2001 to 2003 it was more like 76 years old for males and 81 years old for females.    MF  So in recent history we've seen these really quite pronounced increases in life expectancy for men and women.    SC  People are living longer. It's increased more for males than it has for females. It's reducing that inequality gap, because we do see that women do tend to live longer.    MF  Do we know why men are catching up with women in terms of life expectancy? Is it lifestyle, nature of work perhaps?    SC  There is a lot more of a decline in heart diseases, and especially in males, so I think that could indicate healthier choices, which would then increase somebody's life expectancy.    MF  Another important concept when understanding how the ONS looks at mortalities is the whole question of ‘avoidable deaths'. So how does that work and what is it been telling us?    SC  So ‘avoidable mortality' is defined as a cause of death that is either preventable - so for example COVID and appendicitis is included in this – or are treatable - so this would be different types of cancer. For those aged under 75 in 2020, 22.8% of all deaths in Great Britain were considered avoidable. This is around 153,000 deaths out of 672,000. The categories where we've seen the biggest increase since the start of our time series was alcohol and drug related disorders, which is the only group of causes where the mortality rate is significantly higher in 2020 when compared to 2001. But the biggest driver of avoidable mortality would be the cancers.    MF  So those figures for avoidable death might suggest then that there is still considerable disparity in life expectancy between different groups.    SC  So we see through our data that those living in the most deprived areas have a substantially higher rate of death from avoidable causes - with deaths due to COVID-19, drugs and alcohol being notably higher in the most deprived areas. Avoidable deaths accounted for 40% of all male deaths in the most deprived areas of England, compared to 18% in the least deprived areas in 2020. And then we see the difference again for females. It was 27% of deaths in 2020 in the most deprived areas, and then 12% in the least deprived areas. So this gap in avoidable mortality between the most and least deprived areas - it's actually at its highest level since 2004 for males, and since the data began in 2001 for females.    MF  James what are the factors that are driving those disparities which are, on the face of it, pretty serious?    JT  The difference between the most and least deprived areas is one of the most striking statistics we produce actually. And I think it really shows the importance of looking beyond those top level figures. And that's the ability we have here to look at the minute detail of the data. I mean, there's all sorts of factors that can go into life expectancy. So there are things like access to health care, nutritional aspects - there's plenty of things that can drive that gap, but it's really, really striking and definitely needs looking into.    MF  What's the direction of our work in this area? Because for some areas are we not seeing actually a sustained reversal of life expectancy, not just shorter life expectancy, but one that's actually getting shorter.    JT  I think you mentioned earlier Miles about how this mortality data had kind of risen from obscurity I think. During the COVID pandemic the spotlight has been shone on deaths and Coronavirus itself, but really there's going to be a period where we're really going to have to make best use of that data to look at the indirect effects of Coronavirus as well. So, take for example just within the pandemic we saw a big increase in alcohol related deaths in 2020, and that tallies with other research that shows that patterns of drinking have changed during that time with heavy drinkers drinking more. So beyond the pandemic as well - we're looking at things like delays to treatment times for certain diseases. So there's plenty of analysis still to do on the impacts of the pandemic.     MF  Deep in the recesses of the ONS data though, the causes of deaths that are recorded - some of them are, you have to say, they're unusual, they're quite remarkable. Sarah, can you give me some examples of some of the most unusual deaths that have been recorded?    SC  So I've got a few of the least common causes of death, and I don't want to scare anyone - the numbers that I've got here are over an eight year period, so they're very rare. So I don't know if you want to see if you can take a guess at how many people are ‘bitten or stung by non venomous insects and other non venomous arthropods'?    MF  People attacked by bees and wasps, that kind of thing.    SC  Not because they're venomous, but because of the incident themselves.    MF  Well I'd like to think there was a very small number. I don't know - over an eight year period - hopefully less than 50 or so?    SC  It was less than 50. It was 12 - which is more than I was expected. Another one we have is ‘fall involving ice skates, skis, roller skates, or skateboards'?    MF  Can be very dangerous. I don't know, 5?    SC  Three! Very good guess. I for some reason thought it would be more than being bitten or stung by an insect. We've got ‘victim of lightning'?    MF  Rare again. Highly unusual. I don't know... 10?    SC  Seven! You're quite good at the guesses. I'm very impressed.     MF  You know, you hang around the ONS long enough and you start to get a feel for these things. What do we think is the most unusual cause of death that we've recorded?    SC  We've got a lot that only have one death. One of the ones that springs to mind is ‘bitten by rat'. I did expect more people to die from that than some of the other ones we've got, like ‘contact with powered lawnmower'. But I guess that's quite a dangerous thing to do, especially if you're like me and start doing it in your flip flops. So yeah, dangerous.    MF  Definitely not recommended.   So we've looked at births and we've looked at deaths. But what's the balance between the two at the moment, James, and what's the impact on our population of all this overall?    JT  Population change is driven by the number of live births and the number of deaths and the balance between those, but also the migration that takes place each year. So the difference between the number of births and the number of deaths is a component known as ‘natural change'. Over the last decade or so, although we've generally seen more births than deaths, we've actually seen a narrowing of the gap. So all else being equal, that means that the population growth will slow. Also, we did actually see a blip in 2020 when for the first time for a while the deaths exceeded births, but that's going to be due to the very high number of deaths that we sadly had from Coronavirus in that year.    MF  And that was highly unusual - the first time in many years we've seen that.    JT  Yes, that's right. So the general trend has been more births than deaths and we've seen a return to that in 2021.    MF  Well, there we are, proof that the ONS really does cover us from the cradle to the grave.  ‘Statistically Speaking' comes to you from the Office for National Statistics. I'm Miles Fletcher, thank you very much for listening. Join us for the next episode, which you can hear by subscribing to this podcast on Spotify, Apple podcasts and all the other major podcast platforms.   Our producers at the ONS are Julia Short, and Steve Milne.    ENDS 

MENSA
Illuminati Confirmed 6: Esoteric Eddie | San Diego Cults, Lucifers Origins, and Esotericism Applied

MENSA

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2022 92:22


Esoteric Eddie to share the research that culminated into his latest book. We discuss Eddie's origin story, Freemasonry, secret societies, the Anunnaki, aliens, beliefs, Lucifer, religions, morals, and perspective. Check out Eddie's work at: Social media: @esotericeddie

My Family Thinks I'm Crazy
Illuminati Confirmed 6: Esoteric Eddie | San Diego Cults, Lucifers Origins, and Esotericism Applied

My Family Thinks I'm Crazy

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2022 92:22 Very Popular


Illuminati Confirmed 6, with Esoteric Eddie to share the research that culminated into his latest book. We discuss Eddie's origin story, Freemasonry, secret societies, The Anunnaki, Aliens, what Eddie actually believes, who is Lucifer? and Eddie's thoughts on religions, morals, and how to apply these esoteric concepts in a practical way. Check out Eddie's work at:Social media: @esotericeddieEddie's book "The Lucifer Mystery Revealed"Eddie's YouTube channelFollow MENSAFollow The Juan on Juan PodcastMFTIC Merch is Here for 2022!https://mftic-podcast.creator-spring.comJoin us on TelegramLeave me a message On Telegram!For Exclusive My Family Thinks I'm Crazy Content: Only 3$ get 50+ Bonus Episodes, Sign up on our Patreon For Exclusive Episodes. Check out the S.E.E.E.N.or on Rokfin@MFTICPodcast on Twitter@myfamilythinksimcrazy on Instagram, Follow, Subscribe, Rate, and Review we appreciate you!https://www.myfamilythinksimcrazy.comhttps://altmediaunited.com/my-family-thinks-im-crazy/Listen to Every AMU with this link. https://lnns.co/pI5xHeyFdfgIntroMusic: Control ProgramBy Cody MartinOutroMusic: government funded weedBy Black AntReleased under a Creative Commons Attribution International 4.0 License Thanks To Soundstripe★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

James O'Brien - The Whole Show
More Lucifers than Nigels

James O'Brien - The Whole Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2021 136:06


This is a catch-up version of James O'Brien's live, daily show on LBC Radio; to join the conversation call: 0345 60 60 973

Infinite Plane Radio
LUCIFERS 5G THRONE 8/ 16/ 21

Infinite Plane Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2021 202:54


LUCIFERS 5G THRONE 8/ 16/ 21 --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/infinite-plane-radio/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/infinite-plane-radio/support

Zināmais nezināmajā
Latviešu personvārdu izcelsme un ar tiem saistīti pētījumi mūsdienās

Zināmais nezināmajā

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2021 45:33


Raidījumā pievēršamies latviešu valodai un konkrētāk - onomastikai jeb personvārdu pētniecībai. Kuri ir īsteni latviskie personvārdi un no kādām valodām aizgūti izplatītākie cilvēku vārdi Latvijā kā senos laikos tā mūsdienās? Tie ir tikai daži no jautājumiem, par kuriem interesējamies raidījumā Zināmais nezināmajā. Tāpat arī lūkojam, kādi ar personvārdu izcelsmi saistīti pētījumi ir aktuāli mūsdienās. Skaidro onomastes un filoloģes - Latvijas Universitātes Latviešu valodas institūta vadošo pētniece Renāte Siliņa-Piņķe un tši paša institūta vadošā pētniece un arī Helsinku Universitātes viesprofesore Laimute Balode. Laimute Balode skaidro, ka onomastika nodarbojas ar personvārdu un vietvārdu pētniecību galvenokārt. Renāte Siliņa-Piņķe pēta personvārdus un cenšas ieskatīties personvārdu vēsturē, interesējas, kāpēc mums ir tādi personvārdi, kā tie laika gaitā mainījušies, kāpēc kādi ir izzuduši un līdz mūsdienām nav nonākuši. "Parasti vecāki savam jaundzimušajam izvēlās vārdu, ko vēlas iedot bērnam pūrā kā vēlējumu, kā derīgu visai dzīvei, nākotnē. Parasti tas ir kaut kas gaišs, cerīgs un labs, tādi arī mūsu, latviešu, pie latviskas izcelsmes vārdi ir pārsvarā ar pozitīvu nozīmi," atzīst Laimute Balode. "Bet, ja paskatāmies uz attālākām tautām, piemēram, kaut vai Āfrikā vai Āzijā ir bijuši un arī mūsdienās dažreiz tiek lietoti tādi it kā mūsu acīm negatīvi vārdi, nosaucot par Neglīteni, Šmuli, Netīreli. Bet tam visam ir savs pamats, jo tajās tautās uzskata, ka šis vārds aizsargās pret ļauniem gariem, pret slimībām." Pētniece arī norāda, ka pagājušajā gadā Lietuvā ir reģistrēts zēna vārds Lucifers, kas kristīgā izpratnē liekas šausmīgi, tas ir kā velna sinonīms, "bet paskatīsimies etimoloģiski - lux ir gaisma un fero - nesu latīņu valodā, tātad gaismas nesējs. Tas vārds tiešām ir reģistrēts, esmu lasījusi, ka arī Krievijā tāds vārds ir reģistrēts, bet tas ir kā liels izņēmums," norāda pētniece. Laimute Balode vēl stāsta par jaunvārdiem, ko dod jaundzimušajiem. Bieži vecāki nevar izvēlēties savam jaundzimušajam vārdu un rada oriģinālu.  "Bieži tā ir kā rota, stāsta, ka pat tirgus vērtība ir vārdam, īpaši mākslinieku ģimenēs. Izvēlās kādu vārdu, kāda nav nevienam, piemēram, no faunas pasaules starp jaundzimušajiem ir Kamene, Spāre, ir arī Vanags, Gaigala. Ir no floras pasaules - Zieds, Ziediņa, Mellene, ir no dabas - Vētra, Vēja, vai kā otro vārdu bieži dod Elīna Upē vai Regnārs Pērkons. Īpaši daudz abstraktas nozīmes vārdu, tādi kā Tagadne, Brīve, Dzeja, Gaismiņa un pretenciozi vārdi, pa ko pētnieks saka, ka tie rāda vecāku izglītību," skaidro Laimute Balode. "Pēdējos gados mums ir Kosmoss, ir Marss, ir Rubīns, ir vairākas Pērles, ir Cēzars un pat ir Barons." “Bierznieki”, “Simpsoni” un ”Stirnu līkumu” jeb vietvārdi Latvijā Aizvien mazāk vārdos tiek sauktas pļavas un tīrumi - vietas, kas agrāk bija bagātas ar nosaukumiem - tā par  vietvārdu tendenci pēdējos gados saka Latvijas Universitātes Latviešu valodas institūta direktore un pētniece Sanda Rapa, stāstot, kādi ir pierastākie un jaunmodīgākie vietvārdi un kā rodas jaunie vietvārdi. Vai zināt, kur Latvijā var atrast Kremli – tas ir Viesītē – laukums, kur padomju laikā tika glabātas armijas mašīnas. Ir skaidrs, ka šādu nosaukumu ir devuši vietējie iedzīvotāji saistībā ar 50 gadus ilgušo padomju režīmu, bet, skatot, kādi ir populārākie vietvārdi vai konkrētāk mājvārdi, valodnieki ir pārsteigti, ka tie ir “Ceriņi” un tikai pēc tam seko “Ozoliņi”, “Bērziņi” un citi tik latvietim ierastie koku nosaukumi māju vai vietu vārdos. Vai šie vārdi ir radušies pēdējās desmitgadēs vai agrāk, to nereti vien nav viegli noteikt, jo vietvārdam ir jāiedzīvojas, jāiegulst apkaimes ļaužu mutēs un prātos un tad tas nostiprinās un ilgāku vai īsāku palikšanu, skaidro pētniece Sanda Rapa. Sanda Rapa arī stāsta, kāpēc šodien izzūd vai neparādās tādi vietvārdi, kā piemēram, Biksiņu grava, Čībiņkalns, Dīvaliņu pļava, Cimboliņa akmens vai Draņupīte. Toties mūsdienās ienāk jauni vietvārdi, kuru nosaukums norāda, kas tajā vai citā laikā ir būtisks apkaimes cilvēkiem, piemēram, domājams, ka Beižas avots Tumes pagastā savu vārdu ir ieguvis laikā, kad televīzija demonstrēja “ziepju operu” “Donna Beiža”. Vai Talsos vienu apgabalu vietējie ir iesaukuši par Spandžbobu, arī nosaukumu ņēmuši no populārās bērniem domātās amerikāņu animācijas filmas – sūklis Bobs un tas nav vienīgais jaunlaiku kultūras ienācējs vietvārdu laukā.

Resurrected 4 A Reason
LUCIFERS TEMPTATIONS (PART 2)

Resurrected 4 A Reason

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2021 39:51


Multiverse Tonight - The Podcast about All Your Geeky Universes
Remembering 2020, Looking Foward to 2021's Promise

Multiverse Tonight - The Podcast about All Your Geeky Universes

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2021 33:59 Transcription Available


On the comic book edition, All that and more on this edition of multiverse tonight.https://multiversetonight.wordpress.comhttp://mtpodcast.comSupport the show (https://ko-fi.com/multiverse)

The Hot Slice
S3E3 Lucifers Pizza’s Adam Borich on a Second Wave LA Shutdown

The Hot Slice

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2020 26:32


Adam Borich, owner of the five-unit Lucifers Pizza, gets real on the devastating second wave restaurant dining shutdowns in Los Angeles with Editor in Chief Jeremy White and Executive Editor Denise Greer. While times are tough, Lucifers has managed to thrive and grow amidst the pandemic. Adam talks: Latest Restaurant Dining Shutdown in Los Angeles How the Recent Shutdown Compares to March International Perspective as a New Zealand Native How Lucifers Has Transitions -Opening a New Location During the Pandemic Finding Employees Amidst a Worker Shortage Growing the Lucifer Brand Dealing with Reactions to the Brand Name --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/the-hot-slice/message

The Blindboy Podcast
Lucifers Toothbrush

The Blindboy Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2020 72:13


How the current aggressive miltaristic tacticts that US police use towards protestors and journalists was shamefully invented by a man from Dublin See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

100 BEDSTE FILM
Episode 88: Constantine (2005)

100 BEDSTE FILM

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2020 30:28


Et teologisk univers fyldt med engle, djævle og dæmoner. Og en okkult detektiv der forsøger at løse mysteriet om Skæbnespyddet.Constantine (2005) er instrueret af Francis Lawrence og har Keanu Reeves i hovedrollen som den okkulte detektiv John Constantine. Filmen bygger på tegneserien Hellblaze udgivet af Vertigo Comics.I en verden hvor Gud og Lucifer fører krig mod hinanden som to supermagter forsøger Lucifers søn Mammon at bryde igennem til menneskenes verden for at etablere sit eget diabolske rige. Ved at bruge sine overnaturlige evner og mange forbindelser i det okkulte miljø, forsøger detektiven John Constantine (Keanu Reeves) at forhindre denne ondskab.Lyt til en samtale i Det Gule Værelse, hvor dine værter Thomas og Morten tager en snak om teologi, exorcisme og myten om Skæbnespyddet.Tak, fordi du støtter podcasten på 10eren

Creature Feature DE
S02.08 Lucifers Gefolge & Mäusezähnchen

Creature Feature DE

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2020 22:53


Bragging On Jesus
Proverbs 16:25 RA At Our Core

Bragging On Jesus

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2020 6:27


Proverbs in 365 Devotions For more go to braggingonjesus.com Proverbs 16:25 There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way to death.  At Our Core R Aylor What is that way that seems right?… It’s my way… Frank Sinatra and Elvis both sang about it… We learn early on how to get our own way… don’t we? And most of us pursue our own way all the way to our own demise. We learn right out of the womb that when we cried our Mother picked us up… and when we cried again she would feed us… so we keep doing what works and it just progressed from there. Even as adults when there are times we might not be immediately getting our way, even then we are weighing the consequences of how we can still get our way by taking some other route. So how do human beings discern what is the right path for their life? Clearly it depends on what is at our core. It’s what drives us… what gets us out of bed in the morning and keeps us going… As stated, it starts the same for all men. It’s our attraction to getting our own selfish way and it clouds our judgment covering us layer after layer of darkness to truth. A man walking in darkness will naturally walk off the edge of a cliff and rationalize his sin all the way to the bottom. It’s actually an obsession to glorify ourselves instead of our Creator and this consuming passion twists and influences how we process information for forming all kinds of opinions; our claims of truth, what we dwell on and so many of our daily decisions that keep us heading right for that cliff. But many of our perspectives, interpretations and decisions are actually symptoms of what lays at our core.  At our core, we are actually born out of fellowship with God. Jesus infers this to Nicodemus that since we are all born like out of Gods fellowship we are dead Spiritually. The parallel analogy is that when our own Spirit leaves our body we are dead physically and so it stands to reason that when the Spirit of God is not in us we are dead Spiritually. Jesus told Nicodemus that he must be born again and then he explains the invisible Spiritual kingdom of God to him. You see Gods Spirit is what quickens and moves Believers. We used to be motivated to seek our own glory and we thought that would make us happy… That was Lucifers sin which caused him to be cast out of heaven and that was the same sin he tempted Eve with… to be like God. But Gods Spirit in us now motivates us to glorify God and thats what brings us true joy now. What is it for you? Will you live like the song proudly says “I did it my way” What motivates you from day to day in your life? I’ll close by reading todays text again: 25 There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way to death. Pray

True Church Perspective
A Rightly Aligned Life

True Church Perspective

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2019 30:17


We must not follow Lucifers example of pursuing to be lifted up and celebrated in this life. This will cause us to not be able to receive rebuke and reproof when it comes! In this message, Pastor Lewis is discussing Kirk Franklin's rebuke from the street preacher and the reason Kirk could not receive it.

Döda Katten - Podcast
63. Lastkaj 14

Döda Katten - Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2019 69:44


Stryparn, Bulten, Kapten Grå och Dr Dille från bandet Lastkaj 14 snackar om spikmatta, diskbråck, sociala medier, 21 Lucifers, Skumdum, EPA, Open Up And Bleed, Celest, Kamelen, det enda punkbandet, projektet, Saffran och alla medlemsbyten. Vidare till hobby-manifest, SD, trallpunk, Varnagel, vinylerna, rysk sjöman, Räserbajs, vara i luven på varandra, videos, Arja Saijonmaa, Anita Hirvonen och en efterlysning!

What Catholics Believe
The Attributes of God and the Fall of Lucifer

What Catholics Believe

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2019 49:02


A viewer asks Father how if Lucifers soul was perfect how did he succumb to pride and fall, and how did he convince a third of the angels to follow him. Father responds with a lengthy discussion of the nature of God, the angles and man. He explains how the nature of Lucifer and the angels is such that they are capable of failing in their will even though they knew everything they needed to know to see the consequences of their decision. This is also why they cannot repent of their choice, unlike us and our flawed understanding. Being composite creatures (composed of act and potency) they are capable of change and thus the choice they made, versus God who is pure act and cannot change. Tom gives an interesting insight into an aspect of American sign language and how the ideas of self-respect and self-esteem are expressed with the hands. Other topics include a clarification, thanks to a viewer, on Putin, some follow-up from the Final Arrangements show, and the scandals occuring at a Novus Ordo school in Britain. If you would like to study further the philisophical points mentioned by Father Jenkins in this show, a good place to start would be Five Proofs of the Existence of God by Dr. Edward Feser, which can be purchased at the link below: https://www.amazon.com/Five-Proofs-Existence-Edward-Feser/dp/1621641333/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1516906930&sr=8-1&keywords=five+proofs+of+the+existence+of+god+edward+feser. Please visit wcbohio.com for more content.

Darkness Radio
In Memoriam: Ed and Lorraine Warren: A Paranormal Love Story

Darkness Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2019 53:36


In memory of Lorraine's passing last Week, BEYOND the DARKNESS is airing a special encore presentation of the very first episode that she appeared with us. It was 2006, Ed was ill, and what started out as the standard paranormal interview really became the story of how two people truly meant to be together found their way, through love, and life. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Beyond the Darkness
In Memoriam: Ed and Lorraine Warren: A Paranormal Love Story

Beyond the Darkness

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2019 53:36


In memory of Lorraine's passing last Week, BEYOND the DARKNESS is airing a special encore presentation of the very first episode that she appeared with us. It was 2006, Ed was ill, and what started out as the standard paranormal interview really became the story of how two people truly meant to be together found their way, through love, and life. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Barely Audible
Episode 144 - Surface Bloom

Barely Audible

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2018 68:27


More excuses for abuses / Brads secret Youtube video / New podcasting equipment / Who's going to eat the old military MRE / Shooting to kill / Lucifers bad gun scenes / Youfoodz / Street Beefs / Addressing Dave's Tap Titans addiction Discord: https://discord.gg/dVbsjBB Email: brlyadbl@gmail.com Sponsor: Use code BAAAU001 to get $70 off your Myzone MZ3    

SF-bokhandelns podcast
#45: Djävlar, helvetet & satan

SF-bokhandelns podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 30, 2018 63:02


Djävlar, helvetet & satan "Hell is empty and all the devils are here." Månadens avsnitt innehåller en djävulusisk samling satansgestalter! Vi intervjuar författaren Mike Carey, en av Lucifers många krönikörer som ger sin vinkling på varför vi så älskar att skriva om ondskan. Jenny och Gabriella diskuterar inspirerande djävulstolkningar och minns sina favoriter bland Satan och alla hans demoner. Vi har också en intervju med John August, screenwriter som jobbat mycket med Tim Burton och aktuell med ungdomsboken om Arlo Finch. 00:00 Inledning 58:68 Hur gestaltas fantastikens djävul? Supernatural, Lucifer, Angel Sanctuary 13:41 Interview: Mike Carey - Hellblazer, The Girl with All the Gifts, Lucifer, The Unwritten, Someone Like Me 34:43 Djävulslika figurer: Hannibal, Monster 44:33 Interview: John August - Arlo Finch, The Big Fish, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Frankenweenie 52:45 Satansgestalter vi minns: Sephirot, Randall Flagg, Devilman Mike Carey Serier från Vertigo: Hellblazer, Lucifer, The Unwritten Romaner: The Devil You Know, The City of Silk and Steel Som M R Carey: The Girl with All the Gifts, The Boy on the Bridge, Fellside, Someone Like Me Fler tips: Lucifer ( 2016-)• The Handmaid's Tale (2017-) • Westworld (2016-) • The Expanse (2015-2018) • Travelers (2016-) • Hereditary (2018) • It/Det (2017) • Thompson, Tade - Rosewater • Devil's Day - Hurley, Andrew M. • Milton, John - Paradise Lost • Blake, William - The Marriage of Heaven and Hell • Urasawa, Naoki - Monster • August, John - Arlo Finch i Eldsdalen • Rowling, J.K. - Harry Potter • Three Investigators • Duke, Annie - Thinking in Bets • Final Fantasy VII • Djävulens Advokat (1997) • King, Stephen - The Stand, The Dark Tower, Eyes of the Dragon • Devilman Crybaby • Devilman Crybaby (2018) • Toboso, Yana - Black Butler • Pratchett & Gaiman - Good Omens Länkar: John August podcast - Launch http://wondery.fm/launchhome

ASCENSION (Titans Slayers Curse)

Lucifers new voice. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/blamethedice/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/blamethedice/support

End of Days Radio
Robert Stanley | Lucifers Matrix of Insanity | EODR 71

End of Days Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2018 203:35


Robert Stanley is a friend of the show, an author, radio host and researcher who has had a real life encounter with Lucifer Morningstar himself. He draws a big comparison between Enki from ancient Sumner and Lucifer. It turns out Lucifer is likely many different characters from history and mythology. Daniel begins by asking Robert […]

End of Days Radio
Gregory Lessing Garrett | Luciferian Control, Babylon, Language Manipulation | EODR 63

End of Days Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2018 169:51


This is a two hour interview that contains some of the most mind blowing material and complex deep discussion that has ever been recorded. Gregory Lessing Garrett is the author of a new book which exposes the hidden history of Lucifers effect on our modern science. The book he wrote “The Scientism Delusion” maps out […]

Scattered Curiosities
E08.1 Swiss Army Scouts

Scattered Curiosities

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2017 66:46


For the season one finale, Albort will explore the connections between Duct Tape, Swiss Army Knives, Matches, Springs, Lighters and the Boy Scouts of America. Learn about the Unknown Scout and how he was pivotal to the formation of the BSA. Discover what “Congreves” and “Lucifers” are, and the difference between “The Original Swiss Army Knife” and “The Genuine Swiss Army Knife.” What do a Muskrat, Sunfish, Dog Bone, Congress and Lady Leg have to do with one another? Prepare your “Zombie Apocalypse” panic bag with our Scattered Curiosities checklist, and become versed with the “red neck repair kit”.

Character Transplant
111 The Definitive Lucifer

Character Transplant

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2017 59:39


Zac and Daniel are back into the Definitive Horroctober villain this week. For our latest champion we looked to the Lucifers of the world. Which Lucifer is the most definitive? Let's find out! Got a Lucifer we missed? Send us an email to equippableallies@gmail.com

Thank You for Being a Podcast: The Golden Girls Podcast
The Golden Girls Ep 136 How Do You Solve a Problem Like Sophia? with Stephen Holleman

Thank You for Being a Podcast: The Golden Girls Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2017 59:50


We had the pun-tastic Stephen Holleman (@HollemanJokes, Comedy Chow at Hooters) on the Golden Girls podcast!!! And we had pizza from Lucifers and a visit from Tom Whalen (@TommyntheCutmen) who delivered our pizza! It was the one where Sophia decides to become a nun after her friend from a convent dies. Also, Blanche borrows Rose's car to rear end men on the road that she basically wants to bang. We talked about David Cronenberg's Crash, the allure of collecting stamps, and of course, Sister Act. Music by Mike Dennison (@mikd33) and Brian Kokernak (@kokernutz).

FRINGIANITY Podcast
Ep,43 Lucifers Minions (Deceived into darkness)

FRINGIANITY Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2017 44:15


In this episode I analyze some secret societies and their tiesto Lucifer as well as Rick Joyner's morning star ministries and how he admits to being a knight of Malta with ties to the Vatican Jesuit order. From freemasonry to skull n bones to the knights of Malta all that serve in these groups and pledge elegance to such secret society's are not following Christ by doing so. You can't serve two masters nor can you work in secret well being a servant of the most high God of the Bible. Let no man deceive you....Ephesians 5:9-13 9. (For the fruit of the Spirit is in all goodness and righteousness and truth;) 10. Proving what is acceptable unto the Lord. 11. And have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness, but rather reprove them. 12. For it is a shame even to speak of those things which are done of them in secret. 13. But all things that are reproved are made manifest by the light: for whatsoever doth make manifest is light. Luke 8:17For nothing is hidden that will not be made manifest, nor is anything secret that will not be known and come to light.Also please check out the Leo Rutledge YouTube channel for new fringianity underground podcast episodes and subscribe. Thanks for taking the time to listen and God bless.

Gloria Minott Presents...
Gloria Minott Presents...Bradley Birkenfeld (UBS Whistleblower/Author of Lucifer's Banker)_Episode 179

Gloria Minott Presents...

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2016 11:58


Whistleblower Bradley Birkenfeld talks about his book "Lucifer's Banker: The Untold Story On How I Destroyed Swiss Bank Secrecy" Bradley Birkenfeld is a retired investment professional and the most significant financial whistleblower in history. For more on Bradley Birkenfeld and his book "Lucifer's Banker": http://lucifersbanker.com/

Sagan om Isfolket - Podden
29. Lucifers kärlek

Sagan om Isfolket - Podden

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2016 79:19


Lucifer är här och sagan går in i sin andra del. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

USApodden
Avsnitt 15: Om Bills kvinnor, den Republikanska röran, Anders Asks roliga (och mindre roliga...) "fun facts" och Lucifers återkomst.

USApodden

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2016 41:37


I avsnitt 15 svarar podden på spännande lyssnarfrågor, tar emot ros och bemöter dräpande kritik om att vi gör "svag journalistik", och så laddar vi upp inför det viktiga torsdagsmötet i Washington! Medverkande i avsnitt 15: Sten Sjöström och Anders Ask på Ekots utrikesredaktion, båda före detta USA-korrespondenter och Ginna Lindberg, utrikeschef på Ekot. Programledare: Sara Stenholm Producent: Cecilia Khavar 

Hideous Energy
#194 – Lucifer Squared

Hideous Energy

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2014


That’s two Lucifers for the price of fun.Recorded on August 19th, 2014.Featuring:David Hopkins & Austin WilsonRunning Time: 1:25:38Topics • Intro – What happened to the 30 minute sitcom? We bust out our journalistic skills to find out the answer.• Read ‘Em and Weep – We “review” Trees #4 by Warren Ellis & Jason Howard, The

eosmagazine
Professor Pi - Lucifers

eosmagazine

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2013 2:06


Met drie lucifers kan je een driehoek maken, maar hoe kan je drie dezelfde driehoeken maken met slechts zes lucifers?

Chronophobe
Chronophobe - 01 - Musical Facepalm

Chronophobe

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2013 57:14


GreenChrono and Stalydan join up to bring you a podcast about random gaming stuff. For the first episode, we introduce ourselves, talk about what we're playing at the moment, and ramble on about music in video games.

Raven Ministries International Inc.
ROMANS Class 72 - Audio

Raven Ministries International Inc.

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2007 56:32


Righteousness reveals Jesus. Rejecting Jesus reveals wrath. Lucifers fall = Pride

Raven Ministries International Inc.
ROMANS Class 72 - Audio

Raven Ministries International Inc.

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2007 56:32


Righteousness reveals Jesus. Rejecting Jesus reveals wrath. Lucifers fall = Pride