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The guys are talking about a big "What If" scenario of FOX not extending their current deal with the PBA. Jeff Richgels in his article on 11thframe.com talks about how its been pretty quiet on both the PBA and Lucky Strikes side of things and might be a little worrisome for the future of the PBA. The guys talk hypothetically on what would happen if the PBA had to look for a new tv home.
We're taking a commercial break from the One Shot Derby -- sponsored by Lucky Strikes, the only cigarette that makes you strong. Eric wanted to know more about Brindlewood Bay, so he reached out to writer Jason Cordova about the game's postmodern fiction sensibilities and how it works in actual play.Find Us Online- website: jointhepartypod.com- patreon: patreon.com/jointhepartypod- instagram: instagram.com/jointhepartypod- bluesky: bsky.app/profile/jointhepartypod.com- twitter: twitter.com/jointhepartypod- tumblr: jointhepartypod.tumblr.com- facebook: facebook.com/jointhepartypod- merch & music: jointhepartypod.com/merchCast & Crew- Game Master, Co-Producer: Eric Silver- One Shot Derby edited by: Mischa Stanton- Artwork: Allyson Wakeman- Multitude Podcasts: https://multitude.productionsAbout UsJoin the Party is an actual play podcast with tangible worlds, genre-pushing storytelling, and collaborators who make each other laugh each week. We welcome everyone to the table, from longtime players to folks who've never touched a roleplaying game before. Hop into our current campaign, a pirate story set in a world of plant- and bug-folk, or marathon our completed stories with the Camp-Paign, a MOTW game set in a weird summer camp, Campaign 2 for a modern superhero game, and Campaign 1 for a high fantasy story. And once a month we release the Afterparty, where we answer your questions about the show and how we play the game. New episodes every Tuesday.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
On this week's episode of Grease the wheels, Uncle Jimmy ventures into pseudo actual journalism talking about the recent cyber attack and ransomware woes of CDK. This one was a big one- big ransome and big outage. This has completely crippled thousands of shops and dealerships across the country being locked out of the software that they use to run the business both front and back, as the articles seemed to have forgotten about the back of the house. Being a solutions oriented person like all of you are, we knew the answer was simple: go back to analogue! Even the fact that the sales manager is chain smoking Lucky Strikes out of pure stress is right out of 1977! Handwritten Repair Orders and sales documents are back, for now at least. This is an interesting opportunity for all of the Reynolds shops as well, because this could definitely happen to any cloud based customer resource software. The business opportunities for R&R just shot through the roof too, because no one wants to be without this technology for long. We just sincerely hope that it doesn't result in payroll errors, which cause shops all around to hear the greasing of wheels.Also Uncle Jimmy is fully prepped to work at “Kaczynski Chevrolet” and murders corporate press releases.
Show #1046 Blues With Horns Vol. 5 01. Deanna Bogart - Collarbone (4:32) (Just A Wish Away, Blind Pig Records, 2014) 02. Mark May Band & The Soul Satyr Horns - Garden Of Truth (6:50) (Blues Heaven, Connor Ray Music, 2016) 03. Eilen Jewell - Hooked (2:26) (Queen Of The Minor Key, Signature Sound Recordings, 2011) 04. Cryin' Out Loud - You Can Dance To The Blues (4:34) (Play Loud & Smoke Often, Pilot Light Records, 2024) 05. Blue Largo - Fine And Mellow (6:50) (What A Day!, self-release, 2000) 06. Dan Dubien - Dizzy Eyes (4:23) (Empty Roads, self-release, 2013) 07. Kern Pratt - Something's Gone Wrong (6:38) (Greenville MS...What About You?, Endless Blues Records, 2019) 08. Kalo - Pay To Play (3:51) (Wild Change, Something Blue Records, 2017) 09. Wily Bo Walker - Moon Over Indigo (6:03) (Almost Transparent Blues, Mescal Canyon Records, 2018) 10. David Bromberg Band - Dyin' Crapshooter's Blues (3:38) (How Late'll Ya Play 'Til?, Fantasy Records, 1976) 11. Billy & the Beaters - Strange Things Happen (3:40) (Billy & the Beaters, Alfa Records, 1981) 12. Dr. John - I Thought I Heard New Orleans Say (4:25) (Tango Palace, Horizon Records, 1979) 13. Altered Five Blues Band - Don't Tell Me I Can't (3:44) (Testifyin', Blind Pig Record, 2024) 14. Robin Banks - My Baby Loves Me (4:51) (Modern Classic, self-release, 2014) 15. Bywater Call - Over And Over (3:49) (Bywater Call, Gypsy Soul Records, 2019) 16. Maureen & The Mercury 5 - Gimme Mo (2:56) (Gimme Mo!, Catty Town Records, 2017) 19. Josh White - I Had To Stoop To Conquer You [1956] (2:49) (In Memoriam, MArble Arch Records, 1970) 18. Doug Sahm - I'll Take Care Of You (4:15) (Hell Of A Spell, Takoma Records, 1980) 19. Joe Williams & Count Basie - It's A Low Down Dirty Shame (5:19) (Everyday I Have The Blues, Roulette Records, 1959) 20. Lucky Peterson - Funky Ray (5:29) (Lucky Strikes, Alligator Records, 1989) Bandana Blues is and will always be a labor of love. Please help Spinner deal with the costs of hosting & bandwidth. Visit www.bandanablues.com and hit the tipjar. Any amount is much appreciated, no matter how small. Thank you.
Thought you were over Cauley Woodrow? WRONG. We're re-opening fresh wounds against Luton in a timely bumper pre-Forest refresher. There's plenty more covered by Alex, Bobby and Bruno as they unpack financial news, a big youth transfer update, Palace's internationals and plenty more. There's even room for a quick game and a horrendous jingle...Not following us? We're the online hub for all things Palace, delivering articles, podcasts, and more.SOCIALS (X/Twitter):TPW - @ThePalaceWayTPW News - @CPFCTransfersHQAlex: @puncheonsbeltBobby: @manzi_bobbyYou can check out our website at thepalaceway.com for analysis, Wardle, player features and a whole lot more!Leave us a review if you can on your favourite podcast platform - it helps others to find us!Thanks for listening. Stay safe and up the Palace!
Robert Page, a professor in the Departments of Clinical Pharmacy and Physical Medicine at the University of Colorado, joins Tim to talk about some new developments in determining significant cardiovascular risks associated with marijuana use, regardless of the reason. He's the lead author on a new paper from the American Heart Association that exposes major risks. We talk about his paper, some of the myths surrounding medical marijuana usage, and what it all means. https://traffic.libsyn.com/forcedn/shapingopinion/Robert_Page_-_Weed_and_Heart_Health_auphonic.mp3 If I were to use a term with you, a propaganda term, do you think you'd fall for it? Let's give it a shot. So, here's the term. What do you think of when I say, “medical marijuana?” Now, before we go any further, I need to give you a quick history lesson on the field where I work. I work in public relations. The founding fathers of this field actually called it the practice of propaganda back in those early days. And they weren't wrong. Some 100 years ago, propagandists sold everything from war bonds to cigarettes, from oil and gasoline to railroad travel. And when something went wrong, they became spin doctors. They played with the truth, and it wasn't always ethical. Since then, the field has done much to improve its own image by establishing ethical standards, but this doesn't mean that “spin” has just faded away. The battle over the truth is never-ending. If you can believe this, back in the 1930s and 40s, the advertising and public relations fields convinced Americans that smoking cigarettes was actually good for their health. At that time, the medical community had not yet discovered the link between smoking and lung cancer or lung disease. In fact, most doctors smoked cigarettes. Of course, there was evidence all around them that lung cancer was on the rise, but no one blamed cigarettes at first. Some tobacco companies even used doctors in their ads. American Tobacco was the maker of Lucky Strike cigarettes. In 1930, the company created an ad that said, “20,679 Physicians say ‘LUCKIES are less irritating'” to the throat of a smoker. To arrive at this conclusion, American Tobacco's advertising agency sent cartons of Lucky Strike cigarettes to doctors along with a letter. That letter asked those doctors whether they believed Lucky Strike cigarettes were “less irritating to sensitive and tender throats than other cigarettes.” To make sure they got the results they wanted, the letter that “a good many people” had already said Lucky Strikes were less irritating. In the end, millions of Americans came to believe that cigarettes have a medicinal effect. By 1937, the Philip Morris weighed in with an ad in the Saturday Evening Post. Keep in mind, that magazine was extremely dominant and powerful in influencing public opinion throughout the United States at the time. The Philip Morris ad said the company did a study that showed “when smokers changed to Philip Morris, every case of irritation cleared completely and definitely improved.” The ad never mentioned the business relationship the company had with those doctors. For years, tobacco companies made claims in their advertising and marketing that smoking cigarettes are healthy, and if not good for you, the ads certainly never hinted that cigarettes could be bad for you. The R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company even created a Medical Relations Division and promoted it through medical journals. That company paid for its own research to demonstrate the medicinal benefits of cigarette smoking. In 1946, R.J. Reynolds created a new ad campaign under the slogan, “More doctors smoke Camels than any other cigarette.” We talk to someone who knows a lot more than I do on this. Robert Page is the lead author on a new scientific paper called: “Medical Marijuana, Recreational Cannabis, and Cardiovascular Health: A Scientific Statement from the American Heart Association.”
Barry and Abigail discuss We Sing. We Dance. We Steal Things. by Jason Mraz and sample Lucky Strikes, Echoes of Sacrificial Voices, and Basking In the Glow from Petty Thieves Brewing Co. in Charlotte, North Carolina. We want to thank Barry's college and medical school colleague, Dr. Michael McCrohan, for helping us obtain this fabulous beer, and for his “contribution to the arts.” Lucky Strikes is a collaboration with Cabarrus Brewing Co in Concord, North Carolina. The names of the beers we sampled today reminded Abigail of the names of the beers we sampled at Burial Beer Company in Asheville, North Carolina: Prophetmaker, A Canvas of Fragmented Memoirs, A Space For Sacrilege, and Of A Fading Season. Listen to our full episode at Burial, Consumers of the Barley (The Raconteurs and Burial Beer Co.). We make a lot of comparisons to Andy Grammer by Andy Grammer, which we reviewed in our episode Mind Your Grammer (Andy Grammer and Deadwords Brewing). Watch one of the TikToks Abigail referenced poking fun at artists including “raw audio” in their songs. Your Love is My Drug by Kesha is a great example of this phenomenon. Lucky features Colbie Caillat, whose song I Do appears on our family playlist of favorite love songs from 2011. Abigail's choice on that playlist was The Bird and the Worm by Owl City, and Barry's was Maybe I'm Amazed by Paul McCartney. Abigail contends that Butterfly is no more explicit than Swimming In Your Ocean by Crash Test Dummies. Listen to our full discussion of Crash Test Dummies, Pops Shuffled His Feet (Crash Test Dummies and Toll Road Brewing). Details in the Fabric features James Morrison. We shared a little bit of his song Under the Influence. Up next… Four by Blues Traveler Jingles are by our friend Pete Coe. Visit Anosmia Awareness for more information on Barry's condition. Follow Barry or Abigail on Untappd to see what we're drinking when we're not on mic! Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | YouTube | Website | Email us | Virtual Jukebox --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/pops-on-hops-podcast/message
There's a lucky Cazimi in family-oriented cancer this weekend, so you could put a long-standing argument with your relations to bed. Jupiter – the sign of expansion – also makes a fortunate appearance and could help you set your financial intentions for the next 12 months. That and more astrology for the weekend of June 30. +++ Astrology Coach is hosted by Natasha Weber – you can follow AstroTash on Instagram, TikTok and Twitter, or check out her website www.astrotash.com. Your personal tarot reading is adapted from tarot card interpretations by Jessica Adams, @jessicacadams on Twitter. Astrology Coach is a podcast from the iHeartPodcast Network Australia and Deadset Studios. We acknowledge Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the First Australians and Traditional Custodians of the lands on which this show was made. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
A huge thanks to Seth White for the awesome music! Thanks to Palmtoptiger17 for the beautiful logo: https://www.instagram.com/palmtoptiger17/ Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/thewayfourth/?modal=admin_todo_tour YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTd3KlRte86eG9U40ncZ4XA?view_as=subscriber Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theway4th/ Kingdom Outpost: https://kingdomoutpost.org/ My Reading List Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/21940220.J_G_Elliot Propaganda Season Outline: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1xa4MhYMAg2Ohc5Nvya4g9MHxXWlxo6haT2Nj8Hlws8M/edit?usp=sharing Episode Outline/Transcript: https://docs.google.com/document/d/131_02boxbdq67ynpxH4qTo08lhpHWJKEdPsXRC0Z2xk/edit?usp=sharing Manipulating the Masses: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/53232641-manipulating-the-masses?ac=1&from_search=true&qid=H9uIM5Aqi4&rank=1 C.D. Jackson: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/18968778-c-d-jackson?ac=1&from_search=true&qid=4v8VJbnSUA&rank=4 The Brass Check: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/54850.The_Brass_Check?ac=1&from_search=true&qid=31QD9Z05ST&rank=1 What to the Slave is the 4th of July: https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/speeches-african-american-history/1852-frederick-douglass-what-slave-fourth-july/ Dawn of Everything: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/56269264-the-dawn-of-everything?ac=1&from_search=true&qid=f8V35Ghqol&rank=1 War is a Racket: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/198259.War_is_a_Racket?ac=1&from_search=true&qid=hAmz9Yhokm&rank=1 Taking the Risk Out of Democracy: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1120159.Taking_the_Risk_Out_of_Democracy?ac=1&from_search=true&qid=dXT2Mj1LU2&rank=1 The Fine Print song: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vvANy49Kqhw The Technological Society: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/274827.The_Technological_Society?ac=1&from_search=true&qid=rgzFLjmZo6&rank=2 Propaganda: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/274826.Propaganda?ac=1&from_search=true&qid=MJ0Jt4z7sR&rank=1 Supreme Injustice chapter on Citizens United: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/110285.Supreme_Injustice?ac=1&from_search=true&qid=HesBhL4UNC&rank=1 The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/74176.The_Protestant_Ethic_and_the_Spirit_of_Capitalism?ac=1&from_search=true&qid=FMaV9bgi7L&rank=2 Corruption is legal in America: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5tu32CCA_Ig&t=248s The Persuaders: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GRv8syM-zy8 HUME QUOTE: Nothing appears more surprizing to those, who consider human affairs with a philosophical eye, than the easiness with which the many are governed by the few; and the implicit submission, with which men resign their own sentiments and passions to those of their rulers. When we enquire by what means this wonder is effected, we shall find, that, as Force is always on the side of the governed, the governors have nothing to support them but opinion. It is therefore, on opinion only that government is founded; and this maxim extends to the most despotic and most military governments, as well as to the most free and most popular. The soldan of Egypt, or the emperor of Rome, might drive his harmless subjects, like brute beasts, against their sentiments and inclination: But he must, at least, have led his mamalukes, or prætorian bands, like men, by their opinion.DOUGLAS QUOTE: But a change has now come over the affairs of mankind. Walled cities and empires have become unfashionable. The arm of commerce has borne away the gates of the strong city. Intelligence is penetrating the darkest corners of the globe. It makes its pathway over and under the sea, as well as on the earth. Wind, steam, and lightning are its chartered agents. Oceans no longer divide, but link nations together. From Boston to London is now a holiday excursion. Space is comparatively annihilated. -- Thoughts expressed on one side of the Atlantic are distinctly heard on the other.The far off and almost fabulous Pacific rolls in grandeur at our feet. The Celestial Empire, the mystery of ages, is being solved. The fiat of the Almighty, "Let there be Light," has not yet spent its force. No abuse, no outrage whether in taste, sport or avarice, can now hide itself from the all-pervading light.SELECTED WIMBERLY QUOTES: - Most individuals are quick to note that they are no dupes and harbor many suspicious and critical thoughts about propaganda. But, in trying to evaluate the impact of propaganda, it has to be remembered that propagandists have almost no interest in the individual. Propagandists focused on mass subjectivities—human beings in their collective social relationships and actions. It is perfectly possible that an individual might feel as an individual that she is critical and little impacted by propaganda: after all, does not she know that it is all smoke and mirrors? However, what we are judging is not what the individual thinks but what the public does. An individual may think whatever she wants, but if in her collective actions (e.g., as an 18- to 34-year-old television watcher, an automobile consumer, or a corporate or university worker) she acts in the collective fashion the propagandists create (e.g., watches the television, buys a nice midsized SUV, or completes the university administration–mandated course assessment work), then what do the rebellious thoughts of the individual matter to the propagandist who is measuring TV viewership, automobile sales, or how well a university serves its core customer base? Put otherwise, the propagandist seeks to forge mass subjectivities, which it calls the publics, to carry out the conduct their clients want, not to focus on the beliefs of individuals: “Very frequently propaganda is described as a manipulation for the purpose of changing ideas or opinions… . This is completely wrong… . The aim of modern propagandist is no longer to modify ideas, but to provoke action.”If the terms of mass subjectivities, large groupings of psychologically bonded individuals, give no room for those individual rebellions to crystallize into collective social action but instead reliably lead to the conduct corporations want, then one can perfectly well feel as an individual untouched, critical, or even radicalized but nonetheless still remain massively governed. In fact, isn't it all the better that individuals believe themselves ungoverned, critical, and unaffected if that results in complacency and a lack of motivation for action? The point is that the thoughts of the individual and the conduct of the publics have to be distinguished: though one might feel critical as an individual, the question is how social and public relationships of subjects are constituted and conduct themselves. If a radical still buys the dress, movie ticket, or 12-piece dinner set, what does it matter that it is a radical who buys it when there is no room for that radicalism to manifest itself in the public? Propagandists would tell us that the appropriateness of the language of subjectification versus modification has to be judged at the level of the conduct of the public, not at the level of the thoughts of the individual.- Certainly, authors like Stanley (epistemological interpretation) and Marcuse (ideological interpretation) are both correct insofar as propaganda does lie and repress. However, I will argue that these functions are subsidiaries of a much more threatening function of propaganda: its ability to shape human beings' “body and soul and spirit” in the quest to produce the relationships that would sustain corporate growth.1The stakes in misinterpreting propaganda are high. If you take propaganda to present a problem of belief, then the solution is to replace false belief with true. If you take propaganda to be ideological, covering over true human desire with false and destructive desires, then the solution is to recover true desire and banish the chimera of the false. Both of these ways of interpreting propaganda place true belief or true desire as the untouched savoir of contemporary life; the true remains present and unaltered whatever the deceptions propagandists foment and it is the critic's job to recover them. But if the aim of propaganda is to produce new subjects who will cooperatively and spontaneously adopt the wanted relationships with corporations, then there is no going back: the subject is not deceived but transformed, and the task of combatting propaganda will not be best conceived as a project of enlightenment but of subjectivation. The future will have to be created by producing new subjects and not through recovering what has been supposedly hidden but is better described as lost. Without grasping the impact of propaganda, attempts to counter it are unlikely to be effective.- For instance, when Bernays wanted to get women to smoke Lucky Strikes, he had to change not only the image of cigarettes but also the self-image of the women who would smoke them. Bernays and psychoanalyst A. A. Brill determined that women would smoke if cigarettes if women viewed themselves as crusaders for liberation and the cigarette was positioned as a symbol of equality, freedom, and pleasure. To get women to smoke, Bernays guided women into thinking of smoking as an act of defiance and empowerment that would make them revolutionaries. Every woman could conceive of herself as contributing to women's liberation, just by smoking a Lucky Strike. Bernays kicked off this campaign on Easter Sunday in 1929, when he recruited women to break the law against public smoking by women in New York by smoking Lucky Strikes in the Easter Day Parade. He used this symbolic gesture to link smoking to the liberation of choice, pleasure, and voice and as an act of resistance against patriarchy. Feminist Ruth Hale encouraged women to join in, saying, “Women! Light another torch of freedom! Fight another sex taboo!”72 The aim was to get women to regard themselves and cigarettes differently such that women would form the relationship to cigarettes that Lucky Strike wanted (e.g. as avid and fierce consumers)...Bernays wanted to redirect drives—the true drives—to point at new ends; he did not falsify desires but rechanneled them from their source. He created objects of desire as true as any by working with their unconscious sources. Thanks to our monthly supporters Michael de Nijs ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
Matthew Ablakan's journey began at a very young age where trading Pokémon cards began to teach him a variety of skills such as how to Negotiate and the importance of Demand and Supply. As he entered High School, Matthew began to sell Jansport Backpacks, Hair Straighteners and Dog-Tags to his peers. He began to dabble into Mutual Funds on a small scale and began learning more about Investing. Upon entering University, Matthew worked part-time jobs as a cook, waiter and manager of a couple of restaurants in order to help pay for his tuition. Chuck E Cheese, Johnny Rockets and Lucky Strikes taught Matthew many valuable lessons in communication, hard-work, honesty and transparency. It was in those early years that Matthew began to learn more about Real Estate and Invested in his first Pre-Construction Condo at the age of 19 with zero help from his immigrant parents, using a flexible deposit payment plan and part of his student loan. Matthew is the Founder & Owner of the Millennial's Choice Group of Companies; a Real Estate, Mortgages, Insurance and Education brand. To better benefit his clients, Matthew has earned numerous degrees including, a Bachelors in Education, a Honourary Degree in Law & Society, a Real Estate Brokers License, a Mortgage Brokers License, & a Life Insurance Agent License. Education & Financial Literacy are important facets to the success of Millennial's Choice. Matthew's track record exudes his professionalism, experience, & most important, his persistent care for each and every one of his clients. What You Will Learn: Who is Matthew Ablakan? How did he enter the Real Estate industry? How he was able to start his company? Mathew shares how he is able to learn and broaden his knowledge about real estate. What is investing? What are the basic rules people must learn? In real estate investing, do not wait and buy, but instead, buy and wait. How does a bank in Canada differ from the US? What is a Foreign Buyer's Program? What are the services of Millennial's Choice? Matthew shares how he can be contacted. Additional Resources from Matthew Ablakan: Website: www.FinancialFreedomClub.ca/ebook, www.FinancialFreedomClub.ca and www.MillennialsChoice.com Phone: 1 (647) 937- 6455 Email: mablakan@millennialschoice.ca Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/matthew.ablakan/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/matthewablakan/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/matthewablakan Attention Investors and Agents Are you looking to grow your business? Need to connect with aggressive like-minded people like yourself? We have all the right tools, knowledge, and coaching to positively effect your bottom line. Visit:http://globalinvestoragent.com/join-gia-team to see what we can offer and to schedule your FREE consultation! Our NEW book is out...order yours NOW! Global Investor Agent: How Do You Thrive Not Just Survive in a Market Shift? Get your copy here: https://amzn.to/3SV0khX HEY! You should be in class this coming Monday (MNL). It's Free and packed with actions you should take now! Here's the link to register: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_sNMjT-5DTIakCFO2ronDCg
This episode is Part Twenty-One of the epilogue for Stanley's letters, "Dearest Ones," that he wrote to his family throughout his Second World War. Michael G. Sievers, the writer, producer and creator of "The Silver King's War" podcast series, discusses his work and father's war. The King has arrived at A-72 (397th Bomb Group, 597th Bomb Squadron) north of Paris. They occupy a former German airfield. He's fine, his crew will fly intact, and his steady requests for smokes and food begin as he receives a first letter from Birmingham in six weeks. He's a Lucky Strikes man. Contact us: thesilverkingswar@gmail.com Please review "The Silver King's War" on Apple Podcasts Share our hero, The Silver King, with family & friends Thank you for listening to our podcast
Today on Unstoppable REI Wealth our guest Matthew Ablakan. Our first Canadian to join the show. Matt's journey began at a very young age where trading Pokémon cards began to teach him a variety of skills such as how to Negotiate and the importance of Demand and Supply. He began to dabble into Mutual Funds on a small scale and began learning more about Investing.Upon entering University, Matthew worked part-time jobs as a cook, waiter and manager of a couple of restaurants in order to help pay for his tuition. Chuck E Cheese, Johnny Rockets and Lucky Strikes taught Matthew many valuable lessons in communication, hard-work, honesty and transparency. It was in those early years that Matthew began to learn more about Real Estate and Invested in his first Pre-Construction Condo at the age of 19 with zero help from his immigrant parents, using a flexible deposit payment plan and part of his student loan. Matthew is the Founder & Owner of the Millennial's Choice Group of Companies; a Real Estate, Mortgages, Insurance and Education brand. To better benefit his clients, Matthew has earned numerous degrees including, a Bachelors in Education, an Honorary Degree in Law & Society, a Real Estate Brokers License, a Mortgage Brokers License, & a Life Insurance Agent License. Education & Financial Literacy are important facets to the success of Millennial's Choice. Matthew's track record exudes his professionalism, experience, & most important, his persistent care for each and every one of his clients.Get your free ebook from Matthewhttps://financialfreedomclub.ca/ebookConnect with Matthew https://millennialschoice.ca/https://www.instagram.com/matthewablakan/And after that head on over to...https://easysell411.comhttps://billyalvaro.comhttps://billyssecrets.comWho knows maybe you will be our next partner?To get some neat (and FREE) Tools | Tips | Tricks to help you in REI!
Matthew Ablakan's journey began at a very young age where trading Pokémon cards began to teach him a variety of skills such as how to Negotiate and the importance of Demand and Supply. As he entered High School, Matthew began to sell Jansport Backpacks, Hair Straighteners and Dog-Tags to his peers. He began to dabble into Mutual Funds on a small scale and began learning more about Investing. Upon entering University, Matthew worked part-time jobs as a cook, waiter and manager of a couple of restaurants in order to help pay for his tuition. Chuck E Cheese, Johnny Rockets and Lucky Strikes taught Matthew many valuable lessons in communication, hard-work, honesty and transparency. It was in those early years that Matthew began to learn more about Real Estate and Invested in his first Pre-Construction Condo at the age of 19 with zero help from his immigrant parents, using a flexible deposit payment plan and part of his student loan.Matthew is the Founder & Owner of the Millennial's Choice Group of Companies; a Real Estate, Mortgages, Insurance and Education brand. To better benefit his clients, Matthew has earned numerous degrees including, a Bachelors in Education, a Honourary Degree in Law & Society, a Real Estate Brokers License, a Mortgage Brokers License, & a Life Insurance Agent License. Education & Financial Literacy are important facets to the success of Millennial's Choice. Matthew's track record exudes his professionalism, experience, & most important, his persistent care for each and every one of his clients.Learn more: https://millennialschoice.ca/https://financialfreedomclub.ca/ebookInfluential Entrepreneurs with Mike Saundershttps://businessinnovatorsradio.com/influential-entrepreneurs-with-mike-saunders/Source: https://businessinnovatorsradio.com/interview-with-matthew-ablakan-founder-owner-of-the-millennials-choice-group
Matthew Ablakan's journey began at a very young age where trading Pokémon cards began to teach him a variety of skills such as how to Negotiate and the importance of Demand and Supply. As he entered High School, Matthew began to sell Jansport Backpacks, Hair Straighteners and Dog-Tags to his peers. He began to dabble into Mutual Funds on a small scale and began learning more about Investing. Upon entering University, Matthew worked part-time jobs as a cook, waiter and manager of a couple of restaurants in order to help pay for his tuition. Chuck E Cheese, Johnny Rockets and Lucky Strikes taught Matthew many valuable lessons in communication, hard-work, honesty and transparency. It was in those early years that Matthew began to learn more about Real Estate and Invested in his first Pre-Construction Condo at the age of 19 with zero help from his immigrant parents, using a flexible deposit payment plan and part of his student loan.Matthew is the Founder & Owner of the Millennial's Choice Group of Companies; a Real Estate, Mortgages, Insurance and Education brand. To better benefit his clients, Matthew has earned numerous degrees including, a Bachelors in Education, a Honourary Degree in Law & Society, a Real Estate Brokers License, a Mortgage Brokers License, & a Life Insurance Agent License. Education & Financial Literacy are important facets to the success of Millennial's Choice. Matthew's track record exudes his professionalism, experience, & most important, his persistent care for each and every one of his clients.Learn more: https://millennialschoice.ca/https://financialfreedomclub.ca/ebookInfluential Entrepreneurs with Mike Saundershttps://businessinnovatorsradio.com/influential-entrepreneurs-with-mike-saunders/Source: https://businessinnovatorsradio.com/interview-with-matthew-ablakan-founder-owner-of-the-millennials-choice-group
Prepare yourself to join another motivational episode as Matthew Ablakan is here to share his unique story of how he started investing in real estate! If you're a young aspiring investor, you're in the right place as he talks about the impact of early exposure to entrepreneurship and an investment strategy that led his business to success. Hit the play button 'coz this is a fun and exciting conversation!Key Takeaways To Listen ForAdvantages of getting yourself exposed to entrepreneurship at a young agePre-construction: How this concept works and how to make profits out of itThe good thing about doing business with repeat clients and referrals in real estateWhat people don't know about some of the successful people in real estate?Why people should look at real estate as a necessity in the current market conditionThe mentality you must have as a new investor in the businessResources Mentioned In This EpisodeAchieve by Matthew Ablakan | Free Digital CopyFree Apartment Syndication Due Diligence Checklist for Passive Investor About Matthew AblakanMatthew began his adventure by trading Pokemon cards at a very young age, which started to teach him a range of skills like how to bargain and the significance of Demand and Supply. As he started high school, Matthew started selling dog tags, hair straighteners, and Jansport backpacks to his classmates. He started learning more about investing and dabbled in mutual funds on a limited basis.In order to help pay for his tuition, Matthew worked part-time jobs as a cook, waiter, and manager of a few restaurants when he first started college. Matthew learned a lot from Chuck E. Cheese, Johnny Rockets, and Lucky Strikes about cooperation, perseverance, honesty, and openness. In those early years, Matthew started to study more about real estate. At the age of 19, he invested in his first pre-construction condo without the assistance of his immigrant parents, using a flexible deposit payment plan and a portion of a student loan.The Millenial's Choice Group of Companies, which includes brands for real estate, mortgages, insurance, and education, was founded and is owned by Matthew. Matthew has multiple degrees, including a Bachelor's in Education, an Honorary Degree in Law and Society, a Real Estate Brokers License, a Mortgage Brokers License, and a Life Insurance Agent License, all of which will be to his client's advantage.The success of Millenial's Choice is heavily dependent on both education and financial literacy. The track record Matthew demonstrates in his expertise, professionalism, and, most significantly, his steadfast concern for each and every one of his clients.Connect with MatthewInstagram: Matthew AblakanYoutube: The Millenial's Choice ChannelWebsite: Millennials ChoiceTo Connect With UsPlease visit our website: www.bonavestcapital.com and please click here, to leave a rating and review!SponsorsGrow Your Show, LLCThinking About Creating and Growing Your Own Podcast But Not Sure Where To Start?Visit GrowYourShow.com and Schedule a call with Adam A. Adams.
A corroded diving bell descends amidst a ruined podcast studio and the Assassin emerges from it to explore a labyrinth of bizarre diatribes spoken by its freakish, opinionated denizens. On Episode 517 of Trick or Treat Radio we discuss a film 30 years in the making, Phil Tippet's stop motion magnum opus, Mad God! There are arguments, there are poignant observations, and even a little historical filibustering?! So grab your puppets, put them into just the right position, take a single photo, rinse, repeat, and strap on for the world's most dangerous podcast!Stuff we talk about: BJ's, Costco, Red Stripe, Lucky Strikes, Festus, Raccacoonie, Vulcan, Hephaestus, Elongated Man, the 10 Year Anniversary Show, OTC Industries, AEW Forbidden Door, Jeff Hardy, Johnny Gargano, Claudio CSRO, Christian Cage, Luke Perry, Chapter 1 of Stranger Things Season 4, Obi-Wan Kenobi Series Finale, Star Wars, Michael Ravenshadow 20-whatever-the-fuck: You Could Do Worse!, Everything Everywhere All At Once, Happy Birthday Corny, History Filibuster with Michael Ravenshadow, David Harbour, Cumby's Shaming, Royal Farms, Wawa, Sheetz, getting invited to a wedding, Mina's wedding, Ray Harryhausen, Clash of the Titans, stop motion animation, Tim Burton, Henry Selick, Phil Tippet, Mad God, a masterpiece of grotesque dark poetry, Grand Guignol, religious iconography, Dark Teletubbies, Ralph Bakshi, Panic Room, Twilight, David Cronenberg, Crimes of the Future, Videodrome, Spencer, The Fly, eXistenZ, Rabid, Shivers, A Man Called Hawk, Dario Argento, Dark Glasses, Dracula 3D, The Sadness, Reddit Horror filmmaking, Jim from The Office's sloppy seconds, Aquaman, Michael Shannon, Blood Pigs, Brian Paulin, Morbid Vision Films, MonsterZero, what benefits do witch doctors cover?, Papa Shango, and Red Stripes and Lucky Strikes.Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/trickortreatradioJoin our Discord Community: discord.trickortreatradio.comSend Email/Voicemail: mailto:podcast@trickortreatradio.comVisit our website: http://trickortreatradio.comStart your own podcast: https://www.buzzsprout.com/?referrer_id=386Use our Amazon link: http://amzn.to/2CTdZzKFB Group: http://www.facebook.com/groups/trickortreatradioTwitter: http://twitter.com/TrickTreatRadioFacebook: http://facebook.com/TrickOrTreatRadioYouTube: http://youtube.com/TrickOrTreatRadioInstagram: http://instagram.com/TrickorTreatRadioSupport the show
In this episode the boys Speak on Silverados, Stealing, and Scoliosis. -A proper series 2.-Regrettable technical difficulties.-The truck is dead.-Fast food breakdowns.-Getting sweet on a gal.-Old school advertising.-New fat.-Blake needs an ass whooping too?-Tyler commited a hate crime. The Regrettable Podcast brought to you by Laura Lindly Attorney at Law.Check us out on social media,... The post Episode 75: Lucky Strikes first appeared on The Ouachita Podcasts.
Steve crushes the Ready 2 Love Senior Edition idea real fast. Along with that, we get Danielle and them Lucky Strikes no filter. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this episode, Michael Amidei and Clifford Brooks interview author Louis Bayard. Louis Bayard (www.LouisBayard.com) In the words of the New York Times, Louis Bayard “reinvigorates historical fiction,” rendering the past “as if he'd witnessed it firsthand.” His acclaimed novels include The Pale Blue Eye, soon to be a Netflix motion picture starring Christian Bale, the national bestseller Courting Mr. Lincoln, Roosevelt's Beast, The School of Night, The Black Tower, and Mr. Timothy, as well as the highly praised young-adult novel, Lucky Strikes. A New York Times Notable author, he has been nominated for both the Edgar and Dagger awards, and his story, “Banana Triangle Six,” was chosen for The Best American Mystery Stories. His reviews and articles have appeared in the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times and Salon. An instructor at George Washington University, he is the chair of the PEN/Faulkner Awards and was the author of the popular Downton Abbey recaps for the New York Times.
Louis Bayard: In the words of the New York Times, Louis Bayard “reinvigorates historical fiction,” rendering the past “as if he'd witnessed it firsthand.” His acclaimed novels include The Pale Blue Eye, soon to be a Netflix motion picture starring Christian Bale, the national bestseller Courting Mr. Lincoln, Roosevelt's Beast, The School of Night, The Black Tower, and Mr. Timothy, as well as the highly praised young-adult novel, Lucky Strikes. A New York Times Notable author, he has been nominated for both the Edgar and Dagger awards, and his story, “Banana Triangle Six,” was chosen for The Best American Mystery Stories. His reviews and articles have appeared in the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times and Salon. An instructor at George Washington University, he is the chair of the PEN/Faulkner Awards and was the author of the popular Downton Abbey recaps for the New York Times. Ryan Stasik, November 13th, 1976, came into this world bleeding black & gold. His Pittsburgh roots run deep despite moving to Kalamazoo, Michigan at the tender age 12 as Appetite for Destruction hit the shelves. Ryan began playing piano at 5, learned guitar shortly thereafter, and after meeting Bayliss offered to switch to bass since the band had no one holding down the bottom end. Even from the beginning, he was a team player. Against all odds, this plan worked out. Equal parts trained pianist and self-taught rocker, Ryan Stasik the bassist is a confluence of musical forces. As a student at the University of Notre Dame, he co-founded Umphrey's McGee, known as much for their irreverent stage presence as their complex musicality. Ryan is truly a musician knowing no boundaries. As the toe-tapping backbeat of Umphrey's legendary live shows, Stasik pulls inspiration from anybody and anything that get hips ‘a swaying. Though devoted to studying the likes of Dan Kurtz, Nick Blasky, and Mike Bendy, Ryan leaves plenty of room for Hall & Oates, Iron Maiden, and Sade. In the end, if it takes to a Budweiser and a good laugh, it's welcome in the web of rhythm Ryan calls his repertoire. Music: “Gimme Some Lovin'” The Spencer Davis Group “My Morning Song” The Black Crowes “Small Strides” Umphrey's McGee Special Thanks Goes to: Woodbridge Inn: www.woodbridgeinnjasper.com Autism Speaks: www.autismspeaks.org Mostly Mutts: www.mostlymutts.org Meadowbrook Inn: www.meadowbrook-inn.com The Red Phone Booth: www.redphonebooth.com The host, Clifford Brooks, The Draw of Broken Eyes & Whirling Metaphysics and Athena Departs are available everywhere books are sold. His chapbook, Exiles of Eden, is only available through my website. To find them all, please reach out to him at: cliffordbrooks@southerncollectiveexperience.com Check out his Teachable courses on thriving with autism and creative writing as a profession here: www.brooks-sessions.teachable.com
It's here, as promised: The Final. A year of episodes leads us to the epic conclusion of Season 2. Haters will say it was premeditated, but we've got Cohost Cody facing off against Peanut, the Creator. Steven drops in to keep us focused on the important things, like Stan Van Gundy quotes. This ep has it all, boy does it deliver. We're talking babies, Spike Lee, blood oaths, Lucky Strikes ads, someone fights a bear, Cody wins a bat, Peanut goes full Bobby Knight, and at the end of it all we crown a champion. Thanks for listening, ya'll.
Matthew Ablakan's joins us on Discovering Multifamily to discuss his journey as an entrepreneur, which began at a very young age where trading Pokémon cards began to teach him a variety of skills such as how to negotiate and the importance of supply & demand. As he entered High School, Matthew began to sell Jansport Backpacks, Hair Straighteners and Dog-Tags to his peers. He began to dabble into Mutual Funds on a small scale and began learning more about Investing. Upon entering University, Matthew worked part-time jobs as a cook, waiter and manager of a couple of restaurants in order to help pay for his tuition. Chuck E Cheese, Johnny Rockets and Lucky Strikes taught Matthew many valuable lessons in communication, hard-work, honesty and transparency. It was in those early years that Matthew began to learn more about Real Estate and Invested in his first Pre-Construction Condo at the age of 19 with zero help from his immigrant parents, using a flexible deposit payment plan and part of his student loan.Matthew is now the Founder & Owner of the Millennial's Choice Group of Companies; a Real Estate, Mortgages, Insurance and Education brand. To better benefit his clients, Matthew has earned numerous degrees including, a Bachelors in Education, a Honorary Degree in Law & Society, a Real Estate Brokers License, a Mortgage Brokers License, & a Life Insurance Agent License. Education & Financial Literacy are important facets to the success of Millennial's Choice. Matthew's track record exudes his professionalism, experience, & most important, his persistent care for each and every one of his clients. YouTube: https://youtu.be/1xHk3vBoTNsWebsite: www.redknightproperties.com/media Spotify: https://lnkd.in/gfcVc3p #financialfreedom #passiveinvesting #activeinvesting #investsmart #investwisely #buildingwealth #multifamily #podcast #Red Knight Properties #Anthony Scandariato #Brian Leonard #investing in real estate #investing in multifamily #investing in syndication
This week we ask: what is a biopic if not well-funded RPF? Linday is gonna tell Tanner all about Joe Beyrle, an Amerikinski Komrade who went through a lot of stuff during WWII before ending up fighting alongside the Red Army. It's war, so it's hell, but there's also a lot of bureaucratic comedy to be found here. Our friendship promo this week is @Tinsel_Tunes! Our cover art is by Alex aka @ptchew, and her work can be found on ptchew.com. Our theme music is by Shawn Clake, who's contact info is available upon request. Our email is NotIfIRebootYouFirst@gmail.com. If you would like to send us a friendship promo, or just give general feedback, feel free to contact us! Join our Discord at https://discord.gg/Hf8Y2yEJPe. Claim this episode for yourself by donating to the North Central Family Centre (https://www.canadahelps.org/en/charities/north-central-family-centre-inc/)! Find us on twitter: @NIIRYFPod @LindsayM476 @SparkyUpstart
"Propaganda is the executive arm of the invisible government." - Edward Bernays SHOW NOTES: Music by: Intro: Wild Wild West, by Julius H Outro: Upbeat Uplifting Inspiring Corporate, by Asepirawan Both music selections are royalty free on Pixabay LINKS: Clay Travis on Twitter: "Joe Biden ran his entire 2020 campaign from his basement arguing he'd make the country safe from covid by following the “science.” Yet more Americans have now died of covid in 2021 under his administration than in 2020 under Trump. https://t.co/9wTQilIyQ4" / Twitter Tom Cotton on Twitter: "Joe Biden promised not to raise taxes on anyone earning less than $400,000. But he wants to give the IRS access to your personal bank account if you have just $600. Once again, Biden is not telling the truth." / Twitter Robby Starbuck on Twitter: "Democrats: We won't tax the middle class *fingers crossed behind their back* Reality: Inflation is the largest tax that the middle class has been hit with in modern times. It's tax by a different name. https://t.co/jGjEQIwZ2B" / Twitter Montana Republican Party on Twitter: "Tell me you're trying to gerrymander congressional districts, without telling me you're trying to gerrymander congressional districts. Dems on the MT Districting and Apportionment Commission will go first. https://t.co/sl0kvaSWsP" / Twitter From Zero to Zillion, Who Still Cares About the National Debt? (freethepeople.org) Partnership Among Federal, State, Local, Tribal and Territorial Law Enforcement to Address Threats Against School Administrators, Board Members, Teachers, and Staff (justice.gov) Steve Daines on Twitter: "Labeling parents as threats because they hold elected school board members accountable for what's going on in the classroom is a clear attempt to silence political opposition." / Twitter Matt Rosendale on Twitter: "I am outraged that the Biden Administration has directed the FBI to investigate parents for daring to oppose the teaching of Critical Race Theory to their children. What's next for this administration? Threatening to send concerned parents to Gitmo?" / Twitter Disclaimer: These podcasts are in NO way endorsed by the creators of the media used within, nor are they intended to undermine or compete with any material existing or forthcoming material. Copyright Disclaimer under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976 - allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute, that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. No copyright infringement is intended. All audio clips used in these podcasts are not intended to infringe.
This is it - the penultimate episode of Amerikan Tabloid. See the crows alight on telephone poles like emissaries from the underworld as we follow this broken road into the dark heart of post-war Americana, ash in our eyes and smoke in our lungs. First, we dig on shakedown artist, bagman, fixer and private investigator Robert Maheu, tracking his work for the CIA and Howard Hughes, before dropping in on the Kennedys as Bobby launches a crusade against organized crime and Jack contemplates a presidential run. We then look at the mafia war of the 1950s and the Appalachin farce that humiliated J. Edgar Hoover. Shortly afterwards, the Cuban Revolution leaves American mobsters and businessmen alike out of pocket and looking for payback. Meanwhile, some geek with delusions of grandeur splits from the US Marines and fetches up in the USSR. I hear they call him Lee Harvey Oswald. This one goes well with neat Scotch and a fresh pack of Lucky Strikes. You do not want to miss it, so get some. Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/GhostStoriesForTheEnd Communiques: ghoststoriesend@gmail.com Music courtesy of Veins Full of Static: https://veinsfullofstatic.bandcamp.com/ Twitter: @ghoststoriesend Deep state ambiance: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/1K5u6jESjv9snQgdiuUTKB
Good morning, afternoon, and/or evening! This week I’m joined by original Wings drummer Denny Seiwell to talk about his new project “Ram On”, which is a tribute to the classic McCartney album “Ram”, which Denny played on, and is celebrating it’s 50th anniversary at the moment. My other guest is M G Boulter, whose new album “Clifftown” is utterly brilliant. Matt grew up, and lives in the same area as me, and I’ve seen him play with his band The Lucky Strikes a lot over the years. He’s fantastic company; warm, eloquent, and very interesting. Matt gives us a track-by-track tour of “Clifftown” and we ponder what it means to grow up and stay put in a seaside town. I hope you enjoy our conversation as much as I did. Twitter: @signalspodcastInstagram: @sendingsignalspodcastmgboulter.co.ukdennyseiwell.com
"My dad is considered to be one of the few, maybe the only American G.I. who in World War II fought against the Germans in both the American and the Soviet armies …. He hid out for a couple of days until a Russian Tank Unit rolled into the small village, and then very carefully – my dad was a very shrewd guy – he found the right time to present himself to the Russian soldiers. He had a pack of Lucky Strikes cigarettes, and he knew a few words of Russian, two of which were amerikanskii tovarish, American comrade. Well, the Russian Soviet soldiers looked at him like he just dropped off of a Martian spaceship: 'Who is this guy? Where did he come from?'" - Ambassador John Beyrle The Ambassadorial Series is a one-of-a-kind docuseries featuring in-depth interviews with eight of the living former U.S. ambassadors to Russia and the Soviet Union. In eight, hour-long podcast episodes, the ambassadors recall their experiences in strikingly personal terms. They share insights from high-stakes negotiations and reflections on the challenges and dangers they sometimes faced. The ambassadors discuss a range of geopolitical issues from their decades of experience, including the Soviet Union's breakup and the tense months that preceded it, the 1991 attempted coup, President Yeltsin's 1993 standoff, the early years of President Vladimir Putin, Russia's response to the 9/11 terrorist attacks, and the 2008 Russo-Georgian war. The ambassadors also discuss nuclear, cyber, and economic cooperation, the impact of sanctions, and how social media and other technology changed their ability to communicate with the Russian people, among much else.
Roc Roberts brings the week to a close by covering three captivating stories. First, holiday trends surprise with Valentines numbers exceeding expectations. Secondly, Chris Webber & JW Asset Management creates $100M fund for people of color, in the cannabis industry. Third, Lucky-Strikes parent company is jumping deeper in to CBD growth. Lastly, quick recap on last weeks historical stock market gains.
Stonks, Lucky Strikes, Cum-Filled Hotdog buns
Welcome to Episode 113 of Profiling Criminal Minds where we discuss the dumbest episode of Criminal Minds, the second-dumbest episode of Criminal Minds, and prepping!
In Episode 45 of the 1409 Podcast, GualaMeetsWorld and KT discuss a Detroit Black Entrepreneur Launching the First Ever Mobile Bowling Alley, an Orange County runner finishing a mile in under 6 minutes while 9 months pregnant, Lisa Raye starting an Onlyfans., TI vs Jeezy and more. Follow 1409 Podcast on IG: @1409podcast Facebook: 1409 Podcast Leave a Text or voice mail at 917-524-6392 This Episode is available to stream now on: Apple Podcasts iHeartRadio Amazon Music Google Podcasts Spotify Anchor And many more podcast platforms --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/1409/support
Lucky Strikes and a mid-day scotch with your lunch is a thing of the past. Join Victor and Ian on this week's episode as they discuss the way generations have been turning on each other. The world is going through some very tense moments and now is the time to stick together! Big corporations are starting to get rid of older workers and replacing them with the younger generation. Some are having trouble dealing with this fact and it may be for a good reason. Despite the ups and downs brought on by the bashing of generations is a positive outlook that is worth noting. Millennials have introduced a healthier lifestyle to the world and crowds are starting to follow. Even the older, crankier generation is starting to adapt to this trend as the world brings new ways to extend our lifespan. Remember that progression does not have to be political! The community would love to hear YOUR perspective on this topic! Send us an email @strictlyprohibited3@gmail.com or visit the website link below. Website: http://strictlyprohibited.orgBurton Custom Guitars Instagram: @burtoncustomguitars57
Alex Deutsch, bassist for jangle pop band Modern Strangers, recommends some of the best music Western North Carolina has to offer. We recommend these songs to download because you're going to want to listen to them over and over. Here are a couple of easy links to download these songs- https://open.spotify.com/track/3MQGLhrG58yQw0zA7lzdy1?si=iljoC4ZzTv6kL_eG20p1ow https://open.spotify.com/track/1Ax5fQrVYacoYmhp4GubEJ?si=5il3b13JRvuVoG7BOHMMiQ Special guest reviewer Landon Gray is leader of the band Landon Gray and the Lucky Strikes and hosts the The First Gray Music Pod on YouTube https://www.instagram.com/landogray/ Songs Worth Downloading is hosted by Alex Deutsch Listen Here iTunes/Apple Stitcher Spotify Mp3 Download Our Group Page - https://bit.ly/WNCOMGroup Visit our compilation album from WNC Musicians for Change https://wncoriginalmusic.bandcamp.com/album/until-the-job-is-done More From Andrew Thelston Band https://www.facebook.com/andrewthelstonmusic/ More from Who I Are https://www.facebook.com/whoiaretheband/ Subscribe to the podcast https://gopod.me/wncom Follow on Social Media Facebook wncoriginalmusic.com Instagram Theme song by Modern Strangers www.modernstrangers.com All music used by permission
Patti grew up in Quincy, MA, the eldest of nine children. Her father was second-generation Irish from Dorchester and an all-Navy boxer. Her mother, a Micmac Indian. As a young adult, she worked as a nurse's aid at Quincy City Hospital, filling her non-working hours with beer and kitty whist. Unhappy, overweight, and smoking two packs of Lucky Strikes a day, Patti was stuck. It didn't take her long to realize that at twenty three years old, she was stuck in a pit. She found a book by Dr. Ken Cooper called Aerobics. In this book, Cooper said that there were 3500 calories in a pound, and jogging burned 700 calories an hour. Doing some fast math in her kitchen, Patti deduced that by the end of the week, she would lose twenty pounds. This, she decided, would be the fastest way to be happy. She ran seven laps around the Quincy Cemetery, which was nearly a seven mile run. And she didn't lose twenty pounds by the end of the week—in fact, she could barely walk for two weeks afterwards. But as soon as she could run, she went out and did it again. This led to an astonishing career in athletics that helped pioneer women's marathoning. With no background in highschool track or college running, she went on to set a world record in the 5 mile (25:48). She set the American record for the 10k four times, ending with a 32:08. Patti was the first American woman to go under 33 minutes in the 10k, and the first American woman to break 50 minutes in the 15k (49:42). She set a world record in the 20k, 30k, and half marathon, and won the Newport marathon 5 times, setting a course record each time. She also won the Honolulu marathon 4 times, also setting a course record each time. Patti placed 2nd in the Boston marathon three times, and also placed 2nd in the NYC marathon. She was one of the first American women to sign a pro-contract with Nike. In 52 weeks, she ran 48 races, winning 44 of them.
"You know where I was on VE Day? I was in Washington DC. The streets were so crowded the buses couldn't run" Rather than listen to us talk about WWII, we interview three people about their experiences in the war.Ann Fuqua, who worked at the Navy Department in DCMona McNeese, whose husband was a Japanese POWWaldo Beck, a Marine pilot stateside on VE Day waiting for orders to the Pacific. These interviews were recorded on Zoom and flip phones, so the quality isn't always the best. We've included the transcript below.Support Tour Guide Tell All on our Patreon Page: www.patreon.com/tourguidetellall or follow us on twitter @tourguidetellComments or Questions? Or have an idea for future episodes? Email us tourguidetellall@gmail.comYou're Listening To: Becca GrawlAmateur Sound Editing: Canden ArciniegaTranscriptions: Rebecca FachnerIntro/Outro Music: Well-Seasoned from Audio HeroINTERVIEW TRANSCRIPTS:Rebecca Grawl (RG): But I just wanted to ask you a couple of questions about WW2, what you remember, what it was like and if you remember VE Day, which was May 8?Ann Fuqua (AF): You know where I was on VE Day?RG: Where?AF: I was in the city of Washington, DC, the streets were so full of people the buses could not run.RG: wowAF: I watched a big bottle of alcohol of some kind start way down the street and passed it hand by hand down the street til it was all cold.RG: What were you doing in DC?AF: I worked there for the Navy Department.RG: Oh wow, what did you do there, can I ask?AF: uhh, a little bit of this, a little bit of that, but the funny thing about it is that, uhh, when we went there to work, they told us, the people that we worked with, we never talked about that, we never talked about what we did, it all stayed inside that building and you know, I think that’s what happened, we didn’t have people checking us out or anything, we just did it.RG: Well of course, during war time, you had to keep everything hush hushAF: yeah yeahRG: What was it like living in DC during the War?AF: well, I like all the museums of course, we made it a point every weekend we spent it somewhere in a museum, but when we went out to the museum, but when we went out to the museum, it was all full of servicemen from everywhere. At the end of the day, we had to go to the museums together, and they’d buy their lunch, we’d buy our lunch and when the day was over, they went their way and we went ours. It was different.RG: There were a lot of service members kind of coming through DC on their way to and from?AF: Oh yeah. Well, you see, they had a big marine base there, they also had a big navy base there, and so we saw a lot of them. Some of them had already been overseas in action, and some of them, MOST of them had already been and had come back to Washington for some reason, I don’t know what.RG: DO you remember things like; was there a lot of rationing in DC, where you had to ration food and supplies?AF: Yes, we did. The navy department found us a place to live when they hired us, they told us they’d find us a place to live. And we lived with, it was a grandmother, a daughter and her daughter. Three generations in the house but yet they found room to rent a room to us. We hadn’t been there long and the grandmother approached me one day and she says “ Girls, I know you’re not eating your supper” right, and she says “If you will write home and get your ration books I’ll cook your meal at nighttime for 25 cents.” So course, we wrote home and got em mother didn’t need em and she was so proud, we could not have give (given) her a gift of any kind that was as good as our ration books. And she did cook, she was a great cook, yeah. So that was the only way it bothered us, we didn’t need gas, we didn’t need anything. She got our ration cards and we enjoyed it.RG: Where we you from originally?AF: (unintelligible), Mississippi RG: Oh excellent. So was it a big change, moving to the city of DC?AF: (Laughs) oh yeah, the furthest I’d been away from home was about a hundred miles away to Memphis and that was it. We rode up on a Pullman train and spent the night on the train and it was the first time I had ever seen the link sausage, that was the first time. They served them to us for breakfast, and oh I thought that was the best thing that I had ever had. Yeah, it was greenhorns going up there. Another one of my classmates went the same time as I did, and both of us was just as green as grass. We didn’t know anything, but we learned. RG: If there was one thing you wanted young people today to know about WW2 or understand about that time in our country, what would you want them to know or to remember?AF: Well, see I was in high school and we had a lot of men that was drafted out of high school, cuz when they turned 18, you know they could draft them. And I think what sticks with me now is they took those kids that had been just like me, just here, and that’s all, and they left here as boys, you might say but then when they came home they were men after they had fought through all of that. So I think that was about the biggest thing. And I don’t know as it really hit me til after it was all over. But that was kinda sad, it just took their youth away from them.RG: That’s really interesting. Is there anything else you want to tell me about the war, about your experience during that time?AF: I think one of the things that hit me the hardest, was when they opened up the concentration camps in Germany that they made pictures and they put them on boards almost as big as plywood, blew em up big, and set them at a lot of the entrances. They had them there at the Navy Department as we went in, that was sad. Now, I mean, with all the bombings and everything else, that was one of the saddest things that I saw. It was awful and of course they were blown up, they were bigger than what they really were but it was awful.RG: I find it interesting that they actually had them for you guys to see at the Navy Department so that people would know of the atrocities and would know what had happened.AF: They did. They even had the one, you know the Japanese had the little plane that one person, it was a bomb really, and one person sat in that plane and when he dove his plane into a ship, he went too, it was suicide, I think maybe they called them suicide bombers. They got one and they parked it in front of the Navy Department, and there his shoes was, down on the floor and they were made out of steel or something, and they were bolted to the floor, so they meant for them to stay with it. It was, it was a pretty big thing.RG: Well, I really do appreciate you taking the time to share a little big about your experience, I’m a tour guide here in DC and we are preparing some videos and some information to share online with some of the students that can’t come to DC that would normally come this time of year to go to the WW2 and the Holocaust museum and those thingsAF: Well there is one other thing, while I was up there, I worked on Massachusetts Avenue, you know it was Embassy Row. I worked in Lars Andersson’s mansion, which now is a museum, but they had everything taken out of it. I was the receptionist and none of the statues and none of that was there. But I worked there for a long time while I was there, and my grandson went back later, he lives up there now, and they were having a tour, so he got there one day just in time as they were having a tour group go through and so as the guide was talking about, and he told them, he said you know, my grandmother worked here during World War 2 and she says in all the years that I have been a tour guide, you are the first person that knew anybody that worked in this building, and of course now they’ve got it fixed up, the tapestries and all that in there.RG: Yes, I sometimes take groups along Embassy Row and I’ve seen that building and its hard to image it as an office or a work site, but I know during World War 2 that was very common, a lot of these buildings were converted into government.AF: It was a beautiful building, you went out back and there was a big garden out there in the back, you know, we used to went out there and ate our lunch every day.RG: Not a bad place to go to workAF: (Laughs) It wasn’t much work to it, I just answered the phone and checked everybody that came in. But that was quite an experience. Well, its been a pleasure to talk to you.RG: Miss Ann, it has been so nice to speak to you, I so appreciate you sharing your experiences. You know this year marks the 75th anniversary of the end of the war and there was supposed to be a lot of celebrations to honor all those men who served and of course with the virus we can’t do that, so you being willing to talk online let me record you, I really appreciate that. I’ll email Gloria anything we use that includes what we talked about.AF: Ok, well I tell you what it was quite an experience. It was quite an experience. But I wouldn’t take anything apart, but I just don’t want people to forget what those men went through during World War 2. You take now, they can get on computer and see em and hear from them all time, if we heard from them twice a month we were lucky. All we knew is if they had a new york address they were in Europe, if they had a California address they were in the South Pacific and that’s all we knew. We just didn’t know very much. RG: A very important time. Well, thank you so much Miss Ann, please stay safe, please thank Rhonda for setting up the call for me.AF: I sure will, cuz I don’t know a thing about this kinda stuff. RG: Well thank you so much, you stay safe! AF: ok, bye! -----SECOND INTERVIEW WITH MONA MCNEESE---- RG: Hi, So I’m Rebecca, I’m with a company in DC called Free Tours by Foot and we’re talking to a few people about their World War 2 experience, and your son thought that you might like to talk to me for a few minutes.MM: Well, (unintelligible) information, my husband didn’t talk very much about what happened to him and its true now that I probably forgot, but id be happy to help in any way that I can.RG: Of course, well can you tell me a little bit about where your husband was from and where he served?MM: Well, he was from, you want to know where he was from? RG: Yeah, was he from Mississippi like you?MM: He was from Quincy, Mississippi. Q-U-I-N-C-Y.RG: And did he volunteer, was he drafted?MM: He volunteered, very young.RG: Did you know him then, or did you meet him after the war?MM: I knew him after the war in 1945RG: And do you know what branch he served in? MM: He was in, I don’t know if they called it the cavalry but that’s what he started out, riding horses wherever he was stationed at, but anyway he was in the army to start out with. And I don’t know if at that time they called it the Army Air Corps or if it was just the Army, because in 1947 the Army Air Force split and you either had to go into the Army of the Air Force and he chose the Air force at that time.RG: now during World War 2, how old were you during the war? MM: How old was he? RG: I was going to ask how old you were during the warMM: I was 15, well now lets see. In 41 I was 11 years old. I was born in 1930.RG: DO you remember what life was like on the home front during the war?MM: Well, it was hard, but it wasn’t compared to what other countries went through. They rationed. Do you want to hear what they rationed at that time? RG: Sure yes.MM: We could not get nylon hose, and shoes was hard to find because of the leather they used, you know and they couldn’t kill horses. I reckon they (unintelligible) shoes, I don’t know why, but anyway, you had to have a coupon to get shoes. We got it seems like 2 coupons a year for shoes and sugar was rationed. You had to have coupons to get thee ones, sugar and nylon hose and lets see what else, I forgot. There were probably other things that were rationed but I can’t remember what it was.RG: And do you remember, were you able to get a lot of news about the war, were there letters or was a lot of it hard to find out about what was going on?MM: We couldn’t, we were poor people, farmers growing up and we didn’t get a newspaper and most of the time we had a radio and sometimes we were tenant farmers so we moved around from house to house and sometimes we wouldn’t have electricity so we didn’t always have a radio, but we did most of the time and that’s the way we got our news.RG: Tomorrow will mark the 75th anniversary of VE Day when the war was won in Europe, do you remember VE Day back in 1945. Can you tell me what you remember about that day or about that time?MM: Well, all that I can say is that is just very happy it was over and thankful that, we were just so happy that man had made it through that we knew that there was a lot that was killed, but we knew that my husband was stuck in these prison for 39 months. Now I didn’t know him at that time, I knew him after he got back home.RG: SO he was held a Japanese prisoner of war, did he ever talk about that?MM: No, not at all. He didn’t talk about any of that. You know they didn’t get therapy when they come home like they do now. You know, if something happens to them they give them therapy, they just always told them just try to forget what had happened to them. And they just, I just hear different things, he was on Corregidor Island when he was captured and then a plane ride with their commander and he was captured near them. DO you need all this?RG: No, this is wonderful.MM: Anyway, they stayed on that island and I’ve read, I’ve got a book on it, they ate everything, all the leaves off the trees and they ate all horses over there. They were defending Pearl Harbor but they were on horses to get around on that island and they even had to kill the horses to eat them and they said one day about a mile from there they had ate the leaves off the trees, worms, every insect that they could find, any insects. It was bad.RG: And you said he was held for 39 months.MM: uh huh. When he was liberated he weighed 105 pounds, he was 5 foot 10, probably he was mainly skin and bones. Now the Japanese came in there and got him or got him captured and I don’t think they carried him by boat. How they got him to Formosa and I think they have changed the name of Formosa, now its something else. Anyway, he just about starved to death. But he didn’t hold it against them, the Japanese, because he said they were starving to death too. So, just something they had to go through withRG: What a kind person to be able to not hold it against someone like that, that’s really lovelyMM: Yeah, you have to forgive people and he thinks a lot of the Japanese people. He said they fought them, but they were just like what he did, they taught to do that, they had to kill and were taught to kill Americans and American were taught to kill them and they couldn’t blame the ones that was fighting. But he just didn’t talk about it, he just tried bury all that, what we got out of him, you usually had to pick it out of him, ask him questions.RG: I know that many of the men from World War 2 they didn’t want to talk about their experiences, which is why I appreciate you sharing what you know and what you remember.MM: Well, he just tried to keep it all to himself and it was the wrong thing to do.RG: We are doing this project to try to create some material for students and teachers this year, since this year marks the 75th anniversary of the end of the war and many of the commemorations aren’t going to take place because of the virus so is there anything you would want young people today to know about the war, to know about the men who served, or about what it was like in the country?MM: Well, it… I really don’t know how to put it into words, you just, every week you would hear of one of your neighbors children getting killed, their son and some of them would be in the navy and some in the army, some of them would go down on a ship and some just fighting and it was so sad, you know, for this to happen and all of us too we would get word that some of our neighbors son would get killed and we had a Christian teacher at that time and she would always have us stand and have prayer and it was, it was hard to know that those people that had given their lives.RG: Absolutely. Well I’m so appreciative Miss Mona of your time, and of you speaking with me today. I talked with your son yesterday and I know that your husband has passed on, and I’m sorry to hear that and it sounds to me like he was a real hero, so I really appreciate you talking today.MM: Well, I’m sorry I can’t give you… I forget things, some of its my age and some of it is just my head RG: Everything you shared with me is wonderful information and I think going to be very valuable to young people who maybe don’t have anybody in their family from this generation any more to talk to, so I really appreciate it.MM: Well, I appreciate you for doing this. -----THIRD INTERVIEW WITH WALDO BECK----WB: Hello?RG: Hi is this Mr. Beck? Hi this is Rebecca Grawl I’m with Free Tours by Foot, I wanted to talk to you about World War 2.WB: Yeah Donna told me you did. You know its interesting, she said you wanted to know about the end of the war, and I don’t know much about the end of the war in Europe, so I will tell you what I do know, whatever your questions are, but I was sitting out at El Centro, California waiting for orders to go to the South Pacific, and so we were more interested in the end of the Japanese conflict than the European conflict, although we were very excited when it happened, but we were not a part of the celebration, if that makes sense.RG: well that’s fine, I would love to hear about what the experience was like for you during the war.WB: You’d like to hear about what now?RG: Well, I’d like to hear about what your experience was likeWB: Oh, well, it was not exactly as I intended it, you know, I graduated from Corpus Christi in 44 and I thought I was going to ask for torpedo bombers and I don’t know what else, but instead of what I asked for, I got instructor duty so I spent the next year as a flight instructor at Bunker Hill, Indiana, and when I finished that they said: well you’ve forgotten everything you knew about operational aircraft so they sent me back to Pensacola and that’s when they put me in twin engines which was transports, mostly, AB wise and things like that so I ended in a transport squadron in El Centro that had orders to go overseas to the Pacific when they dropped the bomb on Tokyo and so that put everything on hold and so we just sat there for a couple of months before they finally gave us orders to go home. Which was interesting, but one of the interesting things that, when I was at Bunker Hill, the British did not have air superiority over the British Isles and so as a result they couldn’t train the young men to (unintelligible) and so what happened, they sent em over to us and so we had British cadets over at Bunker Hill and what we did is teach em to fly …. And then we sent em back to England and but put them in spit bus to go fight the Germans, and our bombers that were going over Germany. I had several good friends that were flying B24s and B29s over Germany, bombing. And it was a long drawn out experience for all of us and all of us were hoping and praying that the thing would get over before we got wiped out, you know. Another interesting thing that has nothing to do with me but we lived in Fredericksburg and I was at Hampton Sydney and I spent 2 years and then the draft was breathing down my throat and so I left and went to Washington and signed up for the navy flight training program. But AP Hill which was a mammoth training ground in almost a whole county in Virginia right near Fredericksburg and the 29th division was maneuvering at AP Hill and I think I was at Hampton Sidney when it happened but mom and dad lived on College Avenue and they said that they released the entire division for a weekend R and R and Fredericksburg got completely wiped out of food, every restaurant was cleaned out, there was nothing to eat in the whole town and so my dad, who was with the chamber of commerce at the time, as well he’d had a bakery, but he and the mayor went down and talked to the commanding general and he promised him he would only let a battalion at a time come to Fredericksburg or get out on leave but that it was the whole town was just covered with soldiers. (unintelligible) But anyway, I don’t know a lot about, we were all as happy as we could possibly be, but we were not a part of the celebration because we were all concerned with the Pacific war which if I remember correctly, was about six months later.RG: Yes sir, later that summer. WB: yeah anyway, it’s a lot of interesting memories, I tell ya. I don’t know whether there is anything I could tell you that would be different or interesting.RG: Well, what you’ve told me already has been interesting, I actually went to college at Randolph Macon Women’s CollegeWB: So did my wife.RG: I know Hampton Sidney very wellWB: anyway, my wife, you may know her. My first wife went to Mary Washington and she died, we were married 40 years and then I married Joanne and she had gone to Randolph Macon in Lynchburg and ended up going University (unclear) Medical College and getting her PhD in microbiology, I think. Anyway, I’m trying to think what year she was there, it would have been in the late 60s that she was at Randolph Macon.RG: I graduated in 2007.WB: 2007, oh so you’re a kid, that’s interesting. Well she’s also Randolph Macon, and some of her class are trying to get together this summer, I don’t know if it will happen. Course, Hampton Sidney we met Randolph Macon girls all the time.RG: that was still the case when I was there, we went to Hampton Sidney for formals and mixers.WB: Yeah it was fun. After the war I couldn’t go back to Hampton Sidney, cuz I was married and I had a kid, so back to college was out of the questions, so I never did graduate. There are 3 things in my life that I think made an impact and one is the boy scouts and the second is Hampton Sidney and the third is the Marine Corps. Those are the 3 things that have reacted and helped me all my life.RG: Could you tell me a little bit about what it was like when you were in college but before you joined up, was there already rationing of food, was all the talk on campus about the war?WB: Rationing was a beginning, the heavy rationing was beginning about the time I left to go into the service which was…. 1941, maybe. And rationing was already, my wife worked at the ration board and they issued little books of tickets, butter was rationed you could get a pound of butter about every couple weeks. All meats were rationed and cigarettes were rationed, course nobody worries about that today, back then it was a pretty serious thing. Gasoline was rationed, you couldn’t get but 5 gallons a week of gas and so there were just lots of things that were just rationed. You had to have a little book, you got a coupon in the book you had to give the merchants the coupons in exchange for whatever you wanted. See I was at Bunker Hill, Indiana and my wife’s aunt was a Lucky Strikes smoker, a heavy smoker and so she would send me a tinker toy, you know one of those little round tinker toy boxes full of cookies and it was just the perfect size for a carton of cigarettes and I would go to the exchange and buy cigarettes for something like a dollar twenty a carton, I think a pack is about triple that amount now. I’d buy the cigarettes and stick them in the tinker toy box and send them back to her and so we had a good exchange going there for quite a while, I got cookies and she got cigarettes, but they were rationed and we didn’t have any problems at all getting stuff like that at the commissary and in the navy exchange, but everybody else was having a problem. RG: Did you have any flying experience before you joined up with the flight training?WB: No, no I didn’t. As a matter of fact, I was concerned about my ability because I as a youngster, I had a tendency to get car sick and I was afraid that if I got started, but it was an option that I tackled you know, I didn’t want to be drafted and the opportunity came for me to join the navy air training program so I found out years later that as long as I was a pilot, if I was a passenger I still had a tendency to get a little woozy but as long as I was a pilot, I was ok so it was an interesting thing. But anyway, you know in 1944 I was 14 years old and the world jamboree was in Bloomenthal, Holland for boy scouts, and I don’t know why they did but my mother and father worked to let me go and of course, there were no flights across the Atlantic then, there were only boats and so I went to New York on the train, our whole troop which was 22 boys from Richmond and Fredericksburg and we went to New York caught the Berengaria which was a five and a half day trip. To England and we spent the night in England, and the next day we took a little boat over to Holland where the jamboree was. Anyway and when we went after the jamboree we went into Germany and at that time you could see the effet of the German preparation because little kids, 14 and 15 years old were marching in the street and so it was inevitable, we knew what was going on. That was in 1937. But anyway it was an unbelievable trip for a 14, well all of the kids were 14, 15 years old in our troop. But we had a great time, it was a wonderful experience. But that was before…RG: I’m sorry, I was just going to ask if you stayed in the service after the war in the pacific had ended?WB: Well, you know I got out of the Marine Corps after World War 2 and came home and about, 5, 6 years later, I got a registered letter. The Marine Corps doesn’t discharge you, they release you from active duty, but no I did have to go back and the same squadron and everything.RG: So a lot of the men you went back with, same squadron, they had also served in World War 2 or been active in World War 2?WB: Yes. And I spent three more years and then I joined the reserve unit when I got home after that and so I got 26 years, which allowed me to get a little bit of retirement income from the Marine Corps, which is great.RG: Have you had a chance to come to DC and see the Marine Corps Memorial?WB: I’ve seen the one at QuanticoRG: Oh excellent.WB: yeah its Quantico, its just off US 95, I haven’t been to Washington for a long time.RG: Well, I appreciate you taking the time to talk to me, Mr. Beck, is there anything else you would want to share, we are hoping to share this with students, young people so they can maybe understand World War 2 a little better, so is there anything else you’d like to share with me?WB: You know, I think the thing that young people should realize that its just everything isn’t easy and you know everything is not a piece of cake.
Episode 64 - Interviews and performances with the best of Austin's hard-working musicians being interviewed by local comedians. Sometimes strange, sometimes serious, but always sincere. Brought to you by Music Firsthand. Zac Brooks and BeckiJo Neill hang with Craig Marshall in episode 63 where they reminisced of being 13 and talk fohawks, bad band names, The Lucky Strikes, Craig's new album 'Turnaround', songwriting, loquats, the taco yuke, saging yourself, being robbed on 6th St. and they introduce a new Mad Libs segment! Plus, a great live performance by Craig and Rich Baur! Enjoy and go sage yourself! Check out the full video on YouTube and remember to support the artist by giving it a like! Enjoy y'all! Recorded live November 27, 2018 from Austin Eastciders Collaboratory in Austin, Texas Sponsored by Austin Eastciders Collaboratory and Nine Banded Whiskey! This show is made possible because of generous patrons! Become a patron for as little as $1 and get access to rewards, bonus content and exclusive features. Join the club: Comedians Interviewing Musicians Vodcast Podcast Hosts: BeckiJo Neill and Zac Brooks Check out the live video and subscribe to our YouTube channel. Hire a local band with our live music booking app that matches you based on lifestyle and brand. Request the app here: Music Firsthand. Keep up with the Austin music news for free with the Austin Music Firsthand Magazine on Flipboard.
Show #798 Havin' A Ball Spinner is havin' a ball because the Dutch-American connection of Bandana Blues is nicely reflected in the Women's Soccer World Championship Final with the American Women soccer team playing against the Dutch Women soccer team. He produced a great episode with new and party music before the game was played, so he couldn't know the USA Women would win the world cup. 01. Blues Company - Having A Ball (3:23) (Then And Now, Inakustik, 2001) 02. Katarina Pejak - Sex Kills (4:39) (Roads That Cross, Ruf Records, 2019) 03. The Kat Kings - Poppin'at Party Time (3:05) (Swinging In The Swamp, Kool Kat Records, 2016) 04. Tom Euler - More To Life (3:41) (Blues Got My Back, self-release, 2019) 05. Voodoo Boogie - Party Man (3:58) (Losing My Cool, Naked, 2008) 06. BB King Blues Band - Taking Care Of Business (3:17) (The Soul Of The King, Ruf Records, 2019) 07. John Cocuzzi - Ballin' the Jack (3:25) (Ding Dong Daddy, EllerSoul Records, 2015) 08. Johnny & Jaaleen - Let's Have A Party (2:37) (Johnny & Jaaleen, Rip Cat Records, 2018) 09. Mutagénicos - Autocontrol (2:38) (3, Dirty Water Records, 2019) 10. Michael Falzarano - We Got A Party Going On (4:44) (I Got Blues For Ya, Hypnotation, 2015) 11. Robert Ealey - Havin' A Party (3:32) (If You Need Me, Topcat Records, 1994) 12. Billy Branch & The Sons of Blues - Roller Coaster (3:15) (Roots And Branches, Alligator Records, 2019) 13. Dave Duncan - Ballin' In Nawlins (4:42) (I Don't Know If It's True, 15 South Records, 2000) 14. Rattlebone - Party In The Street (6:37) (World's Gone Crazy, Rattlebone Records, 2019) 15. Paula Harris - Trouble Maker (4:07) (Speakeasy, Blu Gruv Music, 2019) 16. Johnny Hiland - Party Time (3:32) (All Fired Up, ADA UK, 2012) 17. Lucky Peterson - Lucky Strikes (4:01) (Lucky Strikes, Alligator Records, 1989) 18. Jeremiah Johnson - Everybody Party (4:24) (Blues Heart Attack, Connor Ray Music, 2016) 19. Smoke Wagon Blues Band - The Ballad of Albert Johnson (4:33) (Digital Download Single, self-release, 2019) 20. Andy Santana - What A Party! (3:45) (Take Me With you, self-release, 2007) 21. Mindi Abair & the Boneshakers - You Better Run (2:53) (No Good Deed, Pretty Good For A Girl Records, 2019) 22. Chris Duarte Group - Let's Have a Party (3:20) (Vantage Point, Blues Bureau, 2008) 23. Forty Fours - Cuttin' Deep (3:22) (Twist The Knife, Rip Cat Records, 2019) Bandana Blues is and will always be a labor of love. Please help Spinner deal with the costs of hosting & bandwidth. Visit www.bandanablues.com and hit the tipjar. Any amount is much appreciated, no matter how small. Thank you.
Grab a pack of Lucky Strikes and a stiff drink. It's Noir Week -- Niorch Week, to be exact. First, two gun-obsessed lovers go on a crime spree after meeting at the circus -- as you do -- in "Gun Crazy" from 1950. Next, Humphrey Bogart is a angry, jaded writer who's accused of murder and only the love of a brassy dame can fix him. Or can it? "In a Lonely Place" from 1950. Finally, a Harlem robbery leads to a falling house of cards and a bunch of racism-filled murder sprees in "Across 110th Street" from 1972. All this plus Nerd News, Voice Mails, DVDs, will Parker boycott Captain Marvel? How sleepy is Kevin exactly? And who among us is guilty of Freado picking? Direct Donloyd. Got a movie suggestion for the show, or better yet an opinion on next week's movies? Drop us a line at JFDPodcast@gmail.com. Or leave us a voicemail: 347-746-JUNK (5865). Add it to your telephone now! JOIN THE CONVERSATION!Also, if you like the show, please take a minute and subscribe and/or comment on us on iTunes, Stitcher, Blubrry or Podfeed.net. Check us out on Facebook and Twitter! We'd love to see some of your love on Patreon - it's super easy and fun to sign up for the extra bonus content. We'll see the first 16 Brains for your love and support. Please avoid checking out this embarrassing merchandise!
In 1954, the Chicago Outfit found it lucrative to hijack trucks filled with cartons of cigarettes. They had dozens of corner stores who did not question the history of a case of Lucky Strikes if the... The post Frank Schwiehs Hijacker appeared first on Gangland Wire.
What's up, fellow workers! On this episode we sit down and talk about: Gettin spanked by yr boss // the snakes in HR // "no strike clauses" = bull pucky // no smoking contracts and public housing // + more… Check out Kamiyada+, their music and all their links here: https://soundcloud.com/kamiyada Find Us on Twitter: @MandatoryOt // @WestVirginiaIWW Crack a cold one, we got your back, and enjoy the chat :)
Awarded – “2016 SONGWRITER OF THE YEAR”! by the Austin Songwriters Group Craig Marshall moved to Austin early 1990s leading popular Sinatra-style jazz-swing outfit The Lucky Strikes. Over the past two decades, he's built personally-charged music that's as emotionally resonant as it is catchy. Along the way, his songs were picked up for film / TV soundtracks and covered by a variety of artists
The bowling alley is a place that looms large in the minds of our friendos, so Ann and Christy decide it’s time to grab our custom bowling shoes and hipster mustaches, as we take a trip back in time (and cleanliness) to explore TBTL’s love of the good ol’ American bowling alley. We mourn the changing city landscape that leaves no room for the alleys of our youth, agree with Luke that Lucky Strikes are terrible, and debate whether we need to expand our knowledge of bowling movies. Christy gets the nervous sweats from a classic Burbank Big Dog story, while Ann tries desperately not to sound like a One Percenter as she describes her childhood bowling experiences. Plus, bowling fashion, gutter bumpers, and one of the best listener emails ever.
The bowling alley is a place that looms large in the minds of our friendos, so Ann and Christy decide it’s time to grab our custom bowling shoes and hipster mustaches, as we take a trip back in time (and cleanliness) to explore TBTL’s love of the good ol’ American bowling alley. We mourn the changing city landscape that leaves no room for the alleys of our youth, agree with Luke that Lucky Strikes are terrible, and debate whether we need to expand our knowledge of bowling movies. Christy gets the nervous sweats from a classic Burbank Big Dog story, while Ann tries desperately not to sound like a One Percenter as she describes her childhood bowling experiences. Plus, bowling fashion, gutter bumpers, and one of the best listener emails ever.
Show #714 Drastic Fantastic BANDANA BLUES show #714 is "drastic fantastic" ... in other words: just another eclectic mix of great music - new & old(er). 01. Biscuit Miller - Monday Morning Blues (4:32) (Wishbone, self-release, 2016) 02. Al Basile - Who's Gonna Close My Eyes? (6:14) (Quiet Money, Sweetspot Records, 2017) 03. Steve Strongman - good times (3:42) (No Time Like Now, Sonic Unyon Records, 2017) 04. The Moochers - Hide And Seek (4:22) (Play The Game, Klate, 2005) 05. Gene Vincent - Up A Lazy River [1956] (2:22) (Be Bob A Lula, Saga, 2007) 06. Leon Redbone - Gotta Shake That Thing (2:36) (Up A Lazy River, Rounder, 1992)07. Steve Krase - Should've Seen It Coming (7:45) (Should've Seen It Coming, Connor Ray, 2017) 08. King King - Long Time Running (4:48) (Exile & Grace, Manhaton Records, 2017) 09. Chuck Berry - No Money Down [1955] (2:59) (Roll Over Beethoven: The Singles '55-'56, Saga, 2007) 10. Treasa Levasseur - Big Fat Mouth (3:29) (Low Fidelity, Slim Chicken, 2010) 11. 61 Ghost - World Gone Crazy (5:31) (To The Edge, self-release, 2017) 12. Vince & the Sun Boppers - Frank's Barber Shop (2:31) (Spinnin' Around, Rhythm Bomb Records, 2017) 13. Antry - Get Up (4:06) (Devil Don't Care, Tres Lobas Enterprises, 2017)14. Dave van Ronk - That Will Never Happen No More [1967] (4:15) (Live At Sir George Williams University, Just A Memory Records, 1997) 15. Mo Al Jaz & Friends - It Ain't Right (3:00) (The Blues Of Little Walter, Rhythm Bomb Records, 2017) 16. Louis Jordan - Ration Blues [1943] (Is You Is Or Is You Ain't, Jazztory, 1996) 17. Memphis Slim - Don't Ration My Love [1946] (Ambassador Of The Blues, Indigo, 2002) 18. Shinbone Star - Six More Days (5:18) (Whiskey & Gin, self-release, 2017) 19. Blair Crimmins & the Hookers - It Don't Have To Rain (4:04) (Sing-A-Longs, New Rag Records, 2013)20. Lucky Peterson - Funky Ray (5:29) (Lucky Strikes, Alligator, 1989
show#692 05/20/17 As Spinner Would say: "Guut Music!" 1. Todd Rundgren - Cool Jerk from A Wizard A True Star 1973 Rhino (2:35) 2. Brandon Santini - This Time Another Year from Live And Extended! 2015 Vizztone (6:01) 3. Jarkka Rissanen & Sons of the Desert - Big Water from Hybrid Soul 2017 Humu Records (5:24) 4. Katie Webster - I'm Still Leaving You from Two-Fisted Mama! 1989 Alligator (3:36) 5. Bobby Rue - I Like The Days from Homestead Volume One 2017 Bobby Rue (3:06) 6. Ted Quinlan Trio - Wes Blues from Portraits In Jazz - A Tribute To Wes Montgomery 2007 7 Arts (5:20) 7. Corky Siegel's Chamber Blues - Angel Food Cake from Different Voices 2017 Dawnserly (5:08) 8. Siegel-Schwall Band - Angel Food Cake from Siegel-Schwall 70 1970 Vanguard (5:31) 9. Travelin' Men - Mr Judge Man from Barfly Blues 2002 self-release (5:15) 10. Nina Simone - Mood Indigo from Little Girl Blue 1958 Bethlehem Records (4:06) 11. Tom Waits - All The Time from Orphans & Brawlers 2006 Anti- (4:33) 12. Squirrel Nut Zippers - Fat Cat Keeps Getting Fatter from Perennial Favorites 1998 Mammoth (2:47) 13. Fleetwood Mac - If You Be My Baby from Mr. Wonderful 1968 Blue Horizon (3:53) 14. David Migden - Easy Money from Little Stranger 2005 Dekkor (3:19) 15. Micki Free - Greens & Barbeque from Tattoo Burn-Redux 2017 Mysterium Blues Records (3:53) 16. Lucky Peterson - Funky Ray from Lucky Strikes 1989 Alligator (5:29) 17. Lonnie Brooks - Hush Mouth Money from Wound Up Tight 1986 Alligator (4:01) 18. Anthony Rosano And The Conqueroos - Revolve from Anthony Rosano And The Conqueroos 2017 self-release (3:06) 19. Gaetano Letizia & The Underworld Blues Band - Hot & Cold Woman from Resurrection 2016 CD Baby (3:18) 20. Big Dave McLean - Don't Get Mad, Get Even from Faded But Not Gone 2014 Black Hen Music (4:39) 21. Trampled Under Foot - Two Go Down from Badlands 2013 Telarc (4:14) 22. Arno - Dance Like A Goose from Human Incognito 2015 Pias (3:43) 23. Beth McKee - Already Mine from Next to Nowhere 2011 Swampgirl Music (4:12) 24. Ray Bonneville - Run Jolee Run from Goin' by Feel 2007 Red House (4:45) 25. The Jimmys - Cold Women from Live From Transylvania at Sighisoara Blues Festival 2016 Brown Cow Productions (6:51) 26. The Texas Horns - Kick Me Again from Blues Gotta Holda Me 2015 Vizztone (4:02) 27. Little G Weevil - Real Men Don`t Dance from The Teaser 2011 Apple Picker Music (3:23)
Lou and Chad continue their series on number ones by decade. This week it's the 50's. You know Johnny Ray and the 4 Lads, Elvis Presley and Sheb Wooley to name a few. We discuss what is good and what isn't so much in our opinion. Put on your boot cut jeans, a white T-Shirt and grab your Lucky Strikes and see if you are Musically Challenged.Couple ways to reach us if you so desire. First by email at musicchallengepodcast@gmail.com or on Facebook @poinetwork or @musicallychallengedpodcast Any way you want to do it, we look forward to hearing from you.
Discutimos o infame, ambicioso e pioneiro jogo do Casseta & Planeta e entrevistamos seu diretor, Eduardo Mace, para tentar entender como esta pérola brasileira veio a existir!E o que você tem a dizer?Deixe seu feedback acessando o post deste podcast, ou mande um e-mail para contato@jogabilida.deLinks Comentados: Conheça a Promobit! Contribua com nosso Patreon | Padrim A Busca do Quarto Integrante Escute: Jogatina BG Trailer: Noite Animal Leia: Estudo da Abragames Assista: Paralelos Imagem: Policial Miriam Ficher Blocos do Podcast: 00:02:54: Promobit 00:07:20: Recados 00:12:16: Noite Animal Trilha do Podcast: "Helix Nebula", por Anamanaguchi "Life Will Change", por Shoji Meguro "Victory", por Shoji Meguro "Beneath the Mask (Instrumental)", por Shoji Meguro "Mãe é Mãe", por Casseta & Planeta "Tô Tristão", por Casseta & Planeta "Com Tanta Gente Passando Fome", por Casseta & Planeta "Lucky Strikes", por Aloe Island Posse "Adelaide", por Aloe Island Posse "Tô Tristão", por Casseta & Planeta
Welcome back to The Townies Podcast: Something like a mix between The Moth and Prairie Home Companion... if Lake Wobegon were real. Introduction read by Townie, Lavonne Theriault Episode Three Features (in order of appearance): Lucky Strikes by Anabel Roca-Lezra Comfort Food by Noah Lashly No, Now by Amanda Lezra French Boy by Amaury Saugrain Letting Go by Jeanette Stampfli House On The Corner Of The Street by Saul Gordillo II Musical Interlude by Green Man A hometown kind-of-storytelling podcast featuring the original stories of the Ventura County residents who have been in Kim Maxwell's writing & performance class over the last 25 years. Some of her students are professionals, some have never been on a stage before. All stories were written, performed and recorded at Kim Maxwell Studio in Ojai, CA. Created by Kim Maxwell Co-Produced by Lily Brown, Ken Eros & Asa Learmonth Studio Engineering & Mixing by Eros Creative & Sound Theme Song Written & Performed by Rain Perry Recorded & Mixed by Martin Young Mastered by Mark Hallman at The Congress House
Episode #66: Mad Men - “Christmas Comes But Once A Year” Original Release Date: December 5, 2016 This week, Patrick and Kat's journey into televised nostalgia lands them in 1960s New York City via a 2010 episode of Mad Men. It's Christmas time on Madison Avenue and the people of Sterling, Cooper, Draper, Pryce are scrambling to entertain that dude from Lucky Strikes. Plus, Patrick and Kat mourn the loss of Florence Henderson, Jon Hamm comes clean about his penis size, Big Brother 12, Shark Week, and conga lines! We have some great stuff coming up, so don't forget to subscribe, rate, and review us on iTunes. Website: http://averyspecialpodcast.com Twitter: @VeryPodcast Starring: Patrick M. Dunn and Kat Halstead
Your Hit Parade. December 29, 1945.The first commercial is about Houston, saying nothing about Lucky Strikes! The #1 tune is, "It Might As Well Be Spring." Joan Edwards, Dick Todd, Mark Warnow and His Orchestra, F. E. Boone (tobacco auctioneer), Lyn Murray, The Hit Paraders, Kenny Delmar (announcer), Basil Ruysdael (commercial spokesman), L. A. Speed Riggs (tobacco auctioneer). oldtimeradiodvd.com
This week's playlist: • Color-Blind Angel by Robin Rogers, from Treat Me Right (2008); available from the store at Robin's site, Blind Pig Records and the iTunes Music Store. Visit RobinRogers.com for more information. • One Rock by The Rev. Jimmie Bratcher, from The Electric Rev (2008); available from the store at Jimmie's site. Visit JimmieBratcher.com for more information. • Hard Luck Woman by Sean Costello, from We Can Get Together (2008); available from Delta Groove Music and the iTMS. Visit SeanCostello.com and this page at the Delta Groove Productions site for more information. • Can't Get No Loving On The Telephone by Lucky Peterson, from Lucky Strikes (1989); available from Alligator Records and the iTMS. Visit this page at the Alligator Records site for more information. • Spider In My Stew, Let Me Love You and Crosseyed Cat, all by Magic Slim & The Teardrops, and all from Midnight Blues (2008); available from Blind Pig Records and the iTMS. Visit this page at the Blind Pig Records site for more information. • You Were A Long Time Coming and Bye Bye Baby by Nappy Brown, both from Long Time Coming (2007); available from Blind Pig Records and the iTMS. Visit this page at the Blind Pig Records site, and the Nappy Brown article at Wikipedia for more information. • Last Night Baby And The Night Before by Papa Don McMinn, from Home Blues (2008); available from LocoBop.com. Visit DonMcMinn.com for more information. Mentioned during this show: to find me in Facebook, go here; in MySpace, go here; and to find me in Twitter, go here. Excellent resources for more information about the blues: The Blues Foundation and the Delta Blues Museum; be sure to download and listen to the DBM's top-notch (and free) podcast, the Uncensored History of the Blues; BluesRevue.com, the online home of Blues Revue magazine; BigCityBluesMag.com, the online home of Big City Blues magazine; BluesCritic.com. Be sure to read Today's Chicago Blues by Karen Hanson, an excellent guide to all things blues in present-day Chicago. For up-to-the-minute news about things to do in Chicago: TheLocalTourist.com. (Music on Murphy's Saloon #141 courtesy of the artists, their labels, and one of the following: the Podsafe Music Network, IODA PROMONET, Download.com or Garageband.com)