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It's the most tenderloin of gummies.This week we got some delectable internet reviews for the album Frizzle Fry by the very bassy Primus, Scooby Doo fruit snacks, a Valvoline Instant Oil Change in Tacoma, and those silly Magic Eye books. For the segment, we take the gloves off and do some Bareknuckle Letterboxding with a deep dive into the live action Snow White. You'll be reaching in the box for another pack after this one.Want more party? Check it out at https://www.reviewpartydotcom.com/ !
Writer and story teller, Lesley Dowding, lives to bring story into the world of children and adults, alike. Her stories, told in true oral tradition, come from all over the world, as well as from her own imagination.
This episode contains: Ben welcomes a special guest host: Flint Lawless. Steven and Devon are off dealing with family illness and work commitments, so you know what that means! Well, we don't actually talk about video games at all this one (I know, right?). Future or Now: The Magic Eye: Remember autostereograms (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autostereogram)? Stereograms are 2D images that create the illusion of a 3D scene by exploiting the way our eyes perceive depth. "Magic Eye" images are a popular form of autostereogram. Learn how to see Magic Eye images here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OdWNYdk-vWY. As a kid, Ben would spend hours looking at Magic Eye books, and it felt like magic because most everybody else didn't see them. He was like a wizard. Recently, he came across an article about using Excel of all things to create Magic Eye images (https://divisbyzero.com/2024/11/30/make-a-magic-eye-image-using-excel/) but guess who has two thumbs and doesn't have Excel? This guy! Turns out there's an easy to use free online tool for making autostereograms (https://www.easystereogrambuilder.com/). He also found a music video that was a moving stereogram (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2AKtp3XHn38). Flint was curious, but completely perplexed because he doesn't know how to see them yet. “Book Club”: Next week: WHERE RABBITS COME FROM, a French animated short film that's being shopped around for awards this season. The answer will surprise you. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HAkqGMU-mug&list=PLwDe6hrCodhk0k3qCN0QTqixXu6g2R5Nh&index=6 This week: No time for book club: the first two episodes of the new Star Wars show Skeleton Crew is out. It's good! And we start comparing it to Farscape, Star Trek: Prodigy and One Piece. It's a sweet Goonies-like mystery. The Republic likes to hide planets for some reason… maybe they're not exactly the good guys? Flint and Ben discuss the morally gray areas of stories where the “forces of good” make questionable decisions that lead to positive and negative consequences.
Kraft des Lachens - Dein Lachyoga-Podcast für mehr Glück und Selbstzufriedenheit
#78 Himmel – HUPE – Heiterkeit / Interview mit Josef Promitzer - SeppiLachen und Kirche - Humor und Kirche. Wie Feuer und Wasser? Wenn ich als Kind in der Kirche gelacht habe, hatte ich rasch den Ellenbogen meiner Mutter zwischen denn Rippen. Autsch. Ja – nicht so einfach mit dem Lachen in der Kirche.Durch den Film „Im Namen der Rose“ fand diese Verbindung einen Weg in die Öffentlichkeit. Es heißt, eine Religion, eine Partei oder was auch immer, zeigt durch ihren Umgang mit Lachen und Humor, wie selbstbewusst und stark sie wirklich ist. Nun begrüße ich den Humorexpertin Josef Promitzer, auch als „Seppi“ bekannt, in meinem Podcast „Die Kraft des Lachens“.Lachyoga-Übungen (LYÜ)Bischofs-Lachen; Donald-Duck-Lachen; Mickey-Maus-Lachen; Goofy-Lachen; Rasenmäher: laut und leise; Enten-Lachen; Spaßvogel; Rote Nase -Geige; Das innere Lächeln; Gromolo-Gibberish; Überernst-HUPE; HUPE und Kreuz; HUPE-Lachen; Gähnen; Heu-Geruch-Einatmen; Über sich selber LachenBuch-TippsHimmel – HUPE – Heiterkeit, Josef Promitzer, Buchschmiede von Dataform Media / AustriaDie Kunst des Gähnens, Peter Cubasch, Casa Ro'Das Lachen – Ein theoretischer und praktischer Überblick, Dr. Michael Titze und Silvia Rößler, HCDA-VerlagLachen trotz und alledem – Darf ich lachen, wenn ich traurig bin?, Silvia Rößler, Via Nova VerlagKONTAKTEhttps://www.humorbotschafter.at/www.andrestern.comhttps://www.lachyoga-silvia-roessler.deLINK-Baum: https://sites.google.com/view/link-baum-diekraftdeslachens/startseiteMeinen Podcast kannst du kostenfrei auf allen Podcast-Plattformenhören und abonnieren. Ich freue mich auf dein Feed Back.Heiter weiter.Lach's gut,deine Silvia00:00 Intro00:34 Einstieg, Seppi ist Humorbotschafter und ich Lachbotschafterin01:32 Begrüßung, Seppi stellt sich vor, Peter Cubasch: Gähnen04:16 Wandel in der Kirche; Osterlachen; Der lachende Kirchturm #21 Osterlachen - Es lebe das Leben / Interview mit Armin P.-R. und Lena H. #29 Lachender Kirchturm - wo gibt's denn so was? / Interview mit Armin Piepenbrink-Rademacher #36 Kunstprojekt - Lachen erlaubt! / Interview mit Brigitte Kottwitz und Carolyn Krüger 05:41 Motivation von Seppi: Lachen in der Kirche07:18 Spaßfabrik; Jugendarbeit11:02 Fokus: zu wenig oder die Fülle; Kirche – Leben; Angst reduzieren 13:31 Bischof–Humor; Uhu-Lachen14:12 verschiedene Lacher bewusst im Alltag hören - nachmachen; Mimik; über sich selber lachen: Beispiel Priester16:20 LYÜ: Über sich selber lachen 17:08 drei Kabarett-Programme; schon als Kind Stimmen nachgemacht; Gustl – Churchness Training, u.a./ Besinnungstage / Lebenshilfe / Achtsamkeit / Schweigen24:35 Spott- und Alltags-Lieder: Reinhard May 25:46 Poetry-Slam; Clownsausbildung - Clownsfigur - Messner Huber 27:39 Gisela Matthieu #53 Kirchenclownerie und Übermut; bei ihr gelernt28:10 Sein Buch; Gromolo- Clownsgottesdienst; Gibberish; lachende Fürbitten 31:22 Die zweite Naivität der Clowns 34:15 Magic Eye 35:28 Stimme nachmachen: Donald Duck 39:17 Buch: Himmel-HUPE-Heiterkeit; HUPE = Humor-Konzept, Signal; Ritual (Liebe, Aufmerksamkeit, Reframing, Spiritualität; Vertrauen; Dankbarkeit)46:49 LYÜ: HUPE-Lachen und Konzept49:58 Lachyoga-Leiter/ Gähnen-Peter Cubasch 51:20 LYÜ: Donald-Duck-Lachen52:51 LYÜ: Mickey- Maus und Goofy53:56 LYÜ: Rasenmäher / laut und leise 57:05 LYÜ: Heu-Geruch einatmen 57:40 zwei LYÜ: Enten-Lachen; Spaßvogel59:45 LYÜ: Rote Nase-Geige spielen01:00:46 Das innere Lächeln01:03:01 Was bedeutet für dich persönlich Lachen, Witz und Humor?01:05:36 zwei Witze01:07:13 Botschaft von Seppi01:08:18 Jesus: Ihr werdet lachen; meine Botschaft01:09:29 Zusammen lachen, Danke und Verabschiedung01:10:39 Autro#glaube #kirche #josefpromitzer #podcast #podcastfabrik #kabarett #humor #witze#silviaroessler #interview #lachen #jugendarbeit #humorstrategie #selbstliebe #vertrauen #bedingungsloseliebe #lachyogaübungen #lebedeinlachen #lebenliebenlachen #buchtipp #selbstwirksamkeit #achtsamkeit #selbstbewusstsein #perspektivenwechsel #inspiration #mutmachen #akzeptanz #selbstermächtigung #selbstwirksamkeit #impulsgeberin #diekraftdeslachens #motivation #interesse #notkerwolf #innereskind #bewusstsein #mickeymaus #donaldduck #synchronisierung #schweigen #inneresLächeln #yinundyang #reinhardmay #dankbarkeit #reframing #liebe #lachentrotzundalledem #diekraftdeslachens
Send us a textThank you for tuning in! On this episode we are taking a look back at some of the most popular novelty items and gifts from the 90s and early 2000s. From Big Mouth Billy Bass to Anne Geddes, there is so much to cover on episode #100. Enjoy!Links mentioned on this episode:80s and 90s Uncensored Podcast: https://the80sand90s.com/podcastPodchums: https://www.podchums.com/(Very detailed) Article on Magic Eye: https://eyeondesign.aiga.org/the-hidden-history-of-magic-eye-the-optical-illusion-that-briefly-took-over-the-world/Support the showVisit: https://www.popcultureretrospective.com/ for all things Pop Culture Retrospective! Follow me on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/popcultureretrospective/ Follow me on Twitter!: https://twitter.com/PopCultureRetroReview the show! https://www.popcultureretrospective.com/reviews/new/Pop Culture Retrospective Merch!: https://pop-culture-retrospective-pod.myspreadshop.com/allEmail me anytime: amy@popcultureretrospective.com
Christie Bahna (@autobahna) joins the ladies to talk about LA specific jingles and billboards, growing up in LA and where Magic Eyes went. They then play a brand new game and answer a lady problem about meeting social media crush! Support this podcast by shopping our latest sponsor deals and promotions at this link: https://bit.ly/4b8AykkHave a lady problem that needs answering? Send the ladies an email at: ladytoladycomedy@gmail.com or, better yet, leave us a voicemail at (323) 6BUTT30!Join us over at Patreon.com/LadytoLady to get access to ad-free episodes, exclusive merch, and more! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoicesSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Christie Bahna (@autobahna) joins the ladies to talk about LA specific jingles and billboards, growing up in LA and where Magic Eyes went. They then play a brand new game and answer a lady problem about meeting social media crush! Support this podcast by shopping our latest sponsor deals and promotions at this link: https://bit.ly/4b8Aykk Have a lady problem that needs answering? Send the ladies an email at: ladytoladycomedy@gmail.com or, better yet, leave us a voicemail at (323) 6BUTT30! Join us over at Patreon.com/LadytoLady to get access to ad-free episodes, exclusive merch, and more! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Chapter 101 is heavily caffeinated at 10 pm, snaps for that. Join Sophie, Sam, and Hannah as they discuss what The Youths get up to, Hannah's terrible knock-knock jokes, and the Shadowhunters' Magic Eye invisibility powers.
We would never consider ourselves mooks, nor would we gripe about the task in front of us, but finishing 1.6's Quiz (along with the needlessly complicated tale of the Mookse and Gripes) made us wonder whether Joyce might learn a little from Sad Girl Lit. We get a call from the other side of the planet and welcome Toby's hugely accomplished arts administrator sister, Georgia Malone, to talk about the book that "everyone owns and no one reads", the use of Joyce as a medal of honour among moody young blokes, and lay out our credentials for the knowledge of useless facts. Georgia gives us a refreshing take on how best to enjoy WAKE (come for the preamble, skip the Joyce bit), calls Joyce a wanker, and considers the place of Australian accents, Aesop, and Magic Eye pictures in understanding the work. This week's readers: Georgia Malone, Toby Malone, TJ Young Progress: 168 pages complete, 460 pages to go; 26.75% read. For early drops, community and show notes, join us at our free Patreon, at patreon.com/wakepod. We welcome comments from everyone: even, nay, especially, the dreaded purists. Come and "um actually" us!
Looks Unfamiliar is a podcast in which writer and occasional broadcaster Tim Worthington talks to a guest about some of the things that they remember that nobody else ever seems to.Joining Tim this time is musician Paul Abbott, who's trying to line up the circular pencil mark fragments to make up coherent images of Disneytime Rotadraw, What Shall We Do Now?: Fun And Games With The Andrex Puppy, Trivial Pursuit origin story drama Breaking All The Rules, Tomorrow's World demonstrating Magic Eye pictures live on air, BBC promotional mascot Kirky The HD Hunter, Frog Dreaming and Waddingtons' The Vampire Game. Along the way we'll be keeping an eye out for E.T.'s movie cameos in a cork-rimmed hat, explaining how television peaked with Eve Myles time-travelling into an eighties videotaped studio drama, examining the controversial genre of 'Andrex Hauntology', assessing the best way to draw TV's Simon And Simon and very specifically not asking for Michael Parkinson's thoughts on the Magic Eye phenomenon. Plus there's tips on how Blanco from Porridge can help your party go with a swing!You can find more editions of Looks Unfamiliar at http://timworthington.org/. You can also find Paul on Looks Unfamiliar talking about Zeeb And The Martians, Crab E. Crab, Rock Lords: Narlies, the Commodore Plus/4, and The Late Night Funster Show here.If you enjoy Looks Unfamiliar, why not buy us a coffee here? In a special Looks Unfamiliar Magic Eye mug where if you concentrate for long enough, you can see... I don't know, a Pyramint or something? Sort of.
Hospital management finally learns of the extent of the increased mortality over the previous year or so, thouigh why they did not know earlier is a mystery. Immediately they decide to no longer admit babies below 32 weeks gestation and to invite the RCPCH to conduct a service review. The consultants also demand that Lucy is taken off the ward on the basis of no evidence whatsoever.
En este episodio platicamos con su Gerente de producto y planeación para platicar de los nuevos vehículos que estarán llegando al mercado mexicano es 2024. MG festeja a lo grande su cumpleaños número 100, recordemos un poco de su historia, MG, su nombre viene de Morris Garages, fundada en 1924 en Oxford, Inglaterra, por Cecil Kimber, quien fue un ingeniero y piloto de carreras, un gran apasionado por los automóviles deportivos. MG resurgió gracias a que ahora es propiedad del gigante automotriz chino SAIC Motor Corporation Limited, una empresa estatal multinacional china de fabricación de automóviles con sede en Shanghaí, China. Es uno de los seis grandes fabricantes de automóviles chinos. Este 2024 MG celebra un siglo y lo hace en grande en Shanghái mostrándonos el futuro de la marca en el mundo, manejamos su nuevo roadster eléctrico, MG Cyberster, desarrollado por el equipo del Centro de Diseño de MG en Londres, con faros redondos interactivos "Magic Eye", se abren al encenderse, rinde un homenaje al clásico MGB Roadster. Conoce también todo sobre la marca IM con sus modelos eléctricos LS7 y L7 que también manejamos y que nos sorprendió lo tecnológicos que son, y vaya que sorprenderán con su llegada a México. Además, manejamos MG7 que sorprende con una motorización de 280 Hp y un vehículo híbrido compacto el MG3 Híbrido con 190 caballos de fuerza que será un auto de volumen para la marca y entra en un segmento donde no tenemos ningún vehículo, entonces sube el volumen y escucha este nuevo episodio.
Nick and Kyle are joined by Terence Dollard, host of TV's Comic Culture, to recap the week in Heathcliff! We also discuss magic, Helmet, and Terence's song, "Love on a Stick." Plus, a recap of a Magic Eye painting! See the Magic Eye for yourself: https://imgur.com/a/fxVuMy5 Send us feedback on twitter @HeathcliffRecap or send us an email at HeathcliffRecap@gmail.com! Our theme song is Heathcliff's Meat Song by Louie Zong! Check him out at louiezong.com. Comics featured in the episode: April 27, 2024: https://www.gocomics.com/heathcliff/2024/04/27 April 29, 2024: https://www.gocomics.com/heathcliff/2024/04/29 April 30, 2024: https://www.gocomics.com/heathcliff/2024/04/30 May 1, 2024: https://www.gocomics.com/heathcliff/2024/05/01 May 2, 2024: https://www.gocomics.com/heathcliff/2024/05/02
GREETINGS DUMPERS! We wonder what qualifies as an isekai, the wonders of Magic Eye pictures, wonderful smells, and more!Grubb's crosseyed 3D/Magic Eye picture: https://eyeondesign.aiga.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/aiga-eod-magiceye1.jpg
It's part 2 of Playing with Power for January 1994. We're getting the this one started with a bang as we discuss… AN INDEX! Thrilling stuff. But don't worry, we've also 1993 Game of the Year (according to Nintendo Power), some Magic Eye pictures, Batman, more Ninja Turtles, an article all about music on the SNES, and plenty of Dog Action! We also get into the reviews and previews at the end of the magazine. This particular issue was unique with how much Nintendo peeled back the curtain for its audience, but it's also unique in that it's editorial team seems uncharacteristically harsh toward some of the products that they were meant to be advertising. Not that quite a few of them didn't deserve it.
In which we pass through Antichamber (2013), never quite sure if we're solving its Magic Eye puzzles or simply ghosting them. Pippin tones down the hyperbolic geometry. David 86's the parade. These, and other GAMETHINGS. Antichamber was developed and published by Demruth.
Hi all! I am sitting writing this late on a Sunday evening with a glass of whisky in one hand (a small glass I hasten to add) and typing with the other. It's already a business year and we're only a week or two in! In this episode, I have been pondering how you build your business and how, in particular, you do it one client at a time. It's the Societies Convention in London next week and I spent much of today figuring out exactly what I'm going to be doing. It's been a lot of fun, but it has highlighted my lack of liner thinking, that's for sure! The Superclass and Masterclass we will be running at the Societies Convention 2024 can be found at https://thesocieties.net/convention/speakers/paul-wilkinson/ and we would love to see you there - either at the workshops or just for a well-deserved pint! Finally, all of our workshops at our studio can be found at https://www.paulwilkinsonphotography.co.uk/photography-workshops-and-training/ Enjoy! Cheers P. If you enjoy this podcast, please head over to Mastering Portrait Photography, for more articles and videos about this beautiful industry. You can also read a full transcript of this episode. PLEASE also subscribe and leave us a review - we'd love to hear what you think! If there are any topics, you would like to hear, have questions we could answer or would like to come and be interviewed on the podcast, please contact me at paul@paulwilkinsonphotography.co.uk. Full Transcript: [00:00:00] SO it's late Sunday evening, and I'm sitting here on my own, the fire is ticking over, Sarah's fast asleep, and I have a glass in my hand of something, well, rather lovely. It's a glass of whiskey from my in laws who brought me a bottle of Dartmoor whiskey for my Christmas. Tonight, Sarah and I have sat and watched Vera. Of all things, how middle aged can you get we sat and watched Vera on ITV? Why? Well, on Friday night we watched Oppenheimer. On Saturday night, we watched Saltburn. Tonight, we needed something, frankly, a lot less stressful. Harriet, our daughter, did warn us that Saltburn was a little bit on the, how do I put this, fruity side? But, I'm not sure Sarah or I were necessarily predicting it to be quite As lively as it was. And so tonight, we really did need something very gentle. Something very uncomplicated. A whodunit actually is relatively obvious and with no [00:01:00] major stress. Very, very different to the other two films. Which may explain why I'm sitting here drinking a large whiskey that was bought by my in laws. It's been a busy week and I've just prepped a wedding which made me laugh. So, it's a wedding I shot a couple of weeks ago just before Christmas and at this wedding I met a pilot. Now, I've always had a theory that pilots get recruited on their debonair looks and their ability to say what they need to say over the microphone and sound reassuring. Sure enough, as I got talking to him, both things became markedly apparent. So, I'm Paul and this is the Mastering Portrait Photography Podcast. [00:02:00] Haha! So January appears to be running at full throttle and that is not an understatement. I don't know what's going on for a moment emails coming in, inquiries coming in, the phone is ringing we're booked up solid, and next week of course is the Society's Convention, which I'm very, very much looking forward to. It was a shame when it moved around the year a little bit. I couldn't be there last year but this year back very much in full effect. I'm running two workshops, one of which is sold out, the other I hope to see a large crowd. So on the 18th from 11. 30 to 1, headshots. And on that note today I spent the whole day. Piecing together exactly what we're going to cover because the way I've decided to do it is to just have two very basic strobes. Obviously, when you're doing a workshop at a convention, they give you a list of the kit you can cherry pick from and I could have had the very best of the very best. [00:03:00] But the lighting I've chosen isn't, it's not that it's not great lighting, but it's not sophisticated lighting. Very simple lighting that every photographer would start out with, and for both my workshops, both the superclass and the masterclass, I'm going to use this very, very simple kit. Because I get a little bit frustrated when people say to you, oh, you must have amazing lights, or you must have an amazing camera. In the end, it's what you do with these things. And not only that, but after we've finished doing a workshop, I want people to go away and say, Do you know what? I can do that. Otherwise, there's no point in doing a workshop if you're just gonna do a workshop. And in the end, everyone's gonna go can I do that with my lights? And the answer is, no. Or, can I do that with my camera? No. Can I do that with my models? No. There's no point coming to a workshop like that, you know, or rather, there's no point running a workshop like that. So I've backed everything off. We have two simple lights with two small softboxes. That is it. They're mains powered, so I'm going to be tripping over live cables, which I [00:04:00] hate. But today, to try and get my head around exactly what we're going to do, because in the second Masterclass, I committed to doing two lights, ten looks, one and a half hours, one personal.brand, so it's portraits but based around personal branding. I picked on that because it's a very topical thing at the moment. Lots of personal branding, lots of headshots going on. So it seemed like a good vehicle for it. But in the end, it's portraiture. Lit beautifully, lit quickly. You should be able to create pretty much anything you want to with just two lights. In fact, I've won more awards with one light than I have for any other combination of studio strobes. So. I'm running a workshop around just these two lights, but the problem is that I do not have a linear mind. I wish I did, but I don't. I'll give you the example today. Very kindly, one of my clients someone who's modeled for us a lot is both a [00:05:00] client, the daughter of a client and has been one of those handful of people who's been in front of our camera more than anybody else. Stepped in on her Sunday afternoon off to help me figure a path through what we're going to show. I had it all written out, I had it listed. I spent an hour this morning going through that so that I could work my way through a shoot and work out what we're going to do in the workshop. Within seconds of Libby arriving and standing in the middle of the studio, I changed my mind four times. I had to keep going back to the list to remind myself what I was supposed to be doing, what Is it that I intended to do? Because honestly, I don't think like that. I just, I see the person in front of me. I look at the lighting I have and ideas just spring to mind. Not always good ideas. I never said they were good ideas. Just ideas. Or I suppose if you're someone who works in a linear fashion, you might call them distractions. I would call it creativity. Everybody else [00:06:00] might just call it a lack of focus. Forgive the pun. But I did spend today figuring out. Different lighting patterns with the two lights that not only can I do, but they create beautiful imagery and they show just what can be achieved with the simplest of kit and some knowledge of how you're using it. Of course, one of the challenges is going to be in the hotel next week. is it's not a nice dark studio, I don't have all my equipment to hand, anything I'm going to use, the only things that the convention are giving me are a model and two lights and two softboxes, they've said this year, no background, so anything I want to shoot in front of, I've got to take in with me, as well as the stands for it. Which is fine, it's not a big deal, but I need to be able to travel light because I do not want to be traipsing on the train and on the tube across London with tons of equipment if I can avoid it. So I'm going to try and do this in very light touch, very simple equipment and that lends itself to being [00:07:00] something that if you are just starting out in photography, if you've just started to think, you know what? I'm going to do some studio lighting. Then this is going to be one heck of a masterclass for you because I'm literally using the equipment that I started out on. In fact, the equipment we're going to use is even more sophisticated than what I started out on, but that's because everything has evolved. When I started out, everything had analog sliders to set the power. They were great, but they were unreliable as hell. You had to do everything by eye or by light meter, I suppose. And some days, the little sliders would work really well, and it'd be, you know, linear, and as you moved it up a little bit, it would change a little bit, move it down a little bit, it would change a little bit. Heh heh. Uh, but then of course, gradually over time, the carbon tracks wore, and you'd move it up a little bit, and the light would go really bright! And then you'd move it down a little bit, and the light would go off. And I'm like, why am I in the dark now? And then, the modeling light would be a very different power. You could never get them, even though there was two sliders side by side, the modeling light never tracked against the actual [00:08:00] power. Oh, a million things. So, of course, in this day and age of digital control, where you set the numbers on the back of your light, no matter how basic your light is, you're going to set a number, either with a click wheel or with a digital input, and it's going to be pretty much spot on, certainly compared to how people like me, who started out You know, I started out with second hand Elinchrom, a pair of Elinchrom EL500s. I think they were, they were great, but they got very hot, the fans were noisy, they didn't always go off. You didn't have radios back then, we had wires. Um, you had a mains cable, you had a trigger cable. If you were lucky, you could get the little Magic Eye thing to work. I had these, I bought them second hand, but they were fantastic and I loved it. But if you compare that technology to what we're using today, of course, what we've got today, and even the most basic kit, is so sophisticated. Anyway, today I've spent the whole day, or I haven't, I've spent the afternoon, stepping through [00:09:00] the lighting patterns we're going to use, and I'm really excited about it because the images are absolutely stunning. Well, I think they are. You may disagree. They weren't what I expected to do, even though I had a list, but then, I guess, if there's one thing you would expect from me, it's that I'm not going to do what was expected of me, but that's, that's not by choice, I'm not a rebel, it's just I don't think in a linear fashion. That's not my superpower. Sarah and Michelle both do, and that's their superpower. They're very organized. They're very methodical. They're very step by step by step. And I am so not, except in one key area, and that's our workflow. So if ever I talk about workflow, it's actually, it's, it's, in some ways, it's the most. Exciting thing because it's super organized and it's super organized because over the years, I've spent a lot of time making sure I've got it absolutely how I want it. On the other hand, it's not that exciting because it's linear and I'd much rather be out there [00:10:00] being creative. But nonetheless, the one part of my life that is truly methodical is how we ingest images, how we bring them into Lightroom, how we rename them, the workflow from Sarah through to Imagine to do the coloring and back to me. Very linear. There's no messing around with it. If, if the files are brought in they don't go anywhere until there's another backup of them and that's on a different disk. The memory cards are never formatted until the backups are done. The jobs are logged on a big spreadsheet, so I know exactly where everything is. They go to Sarah. I know exactly the workflow of everything. Until yesterday, until yesterday, when Lightroom decided to corrupt the catalog. Now, in itself, not a big problem. It's not a big deal. It hasn't corrupted the images. It's only corrupted the catalogue, but the catalogue has a lot of areas in it, including collections, including certain colourings, and although I've set it to write [00:11:00] any changes in the develop area back down to either the XMP sidecars, or directly into the Photoshop files, that's not as reliable as you would like because of the way it does it. The catalogue is backed up, it's backed up a couple of times, so again, shouldn't be a problem. But it's a big catalogue. It's 11 gig. It's got 738, 000 images in it, as of when I looked a couple of hours ago. So it's a big catalogue. And it was yesterday failing to load. I could kill Lightroom and load a small catalogue. So we, the way Sarah and I move images between the two of us is I export a little catalogue with Smart Previews. She can do whatever she needs. It can go to ImagenAI. It comes back to me. I import it, take all those settings off the Smart Previews. And apply them to the master files. Very straightforward. So we have lots of little catalogues I can use to check that it's not Lightroom that's broken, it's the [00:12:00] catalogue. Try it on a small catalogue, works fine. Try it on our main catalogue, nothing. So, in the end, last night, I left it just running. It was doing nothing, the system was saying Lightroom had crashed, but it was still ticking over, so I just let it go. I went back in this morning, and the catalogue was up, but it wasn't happy. Something has glitched in the catalogue. We had a little bit of a, a sequence of events that led to power glitching, and it must have been writing into the database, and although it's not supposed to cause a problem, it did. So, this morning, I tried to load the catalogue up again. Although it was there, it wasn't happy, so I left Lightroom. Tried to open it again to see if it would flush a cache or two. Now it's not really opening. So, I downloaded a backup. So we have backups. I use Backblaze, which is really good. It just ticks over in the background. And I've got a backup from the last day or two, which is fine. I know exactly what things have changed since that [00:13:00] backup. Because that's the problem with backups, right? Backups are not something that are always today's data. By definition, they're going to be data that you had. Yesterday, or the day before. And that's true here too. But nonetheless, Backblazed downloaded the 11 gig file, told Lightroom to open it, same problems. So I'm not quite sure what's gone wrong, or when it's gone wrong, but it's certainly causing a problem. So, now what I've done is, this morning I set it rolling. And left it ticking over, and as of right now, which is what, midnight, it still hasn't entirely finished re importing and reconfiguring the database. Tomorrow I shall find out whether my efforts to fix it have worked. But the point is always back up your work and always have a solid, methodical, linear process for how you bring your images in, how you catalogue them, how you back them up, how you archive them, and what happens if you have failure, because you're going to [00:14:00] have it. I know that, you know that, everybody knows that. So have a plan as to what you're going to do. It's another reason why, for instance, one of, one part of our workflow is that I don't use Just Lightroom to manage which images are where. It's actually done in folders on the hard drives and then Lightroom reflects those. Why? Well, for precisely the reasons from today. Sometimes things go wrong and the only thing you're left with is a folder of, I don't know Portraits, a folder of weddings at this venue, weddings at that venue. And that way if you do that, at least you're not beholden to the Lightroom side. And I'm pretty chilled about it because I know in the end, if the worst came to the worst, I would simply recatalogue the main drive, which is also backed up twice. It's all fine, everything's still there, I can still get to every image, it's just that I can't get to things like the collections, virtual copies, different crop variations of different images, because of course [00:15:00] they are stored in the Lightroom catalogue. Anyway, I'll get it sorted, I will get it sorted. January's rolling on at a pace and I could have done with it rolling a lot slower today, it would have given me a chance to actually get in there and I know that I've got breathing space for planning and things, but that's not to be. What do we have last week? We did I was shooting a Paralympian, an amazing lady. Of course, these things are always, when I get to speak about them, still under embargo. But it's for the hearing dogs. She's an incredible human being. I might ask if she'd come on the podcast, actually, because she is someone who would be really interesting to talk about the psychology of winning, to some degree, against the odds, but the psychology of winning, absolutely incredible person to work with, just made us laugh. And then another day I spent working with Kent, Sussex and Surrey Air Ambulance, KSS Air Ambulance, photographing doctors, paramedics. Patients, pilots, and of [00:16:00] course, helicopters. And we had one of those really odd days where twice the helicopter was called out, and twice it came back really quickly. I don't know the reasons for that, but it meant I got pictures in this beautiful, crisp, sunny day, a rare one. We haven't had many days like that up until now this year. Of the helicopter lifting, and off it went into the, into the blue sky. It turned around at about half a mile, it came straight back and landed, and it did it twice during the day. And then obviously we were there all day some night time photography as well. And then really all I'm doing now is doing the prep for next week's convention. I can't wait to be there. It's been a while and I am super excited. I'm going to be there Tuesday night all the way through to Saturday doing a super class on Wednesday. Masterclass on Thursday. If you're around and about that, the superclasses sold out, sold out a couple of weeks ago. Apologies if you wanted to come to that. Of course, you could come across to our studio and go to one of our workshops [00:17:00] here. Just Google Paul Wilkinson Photography Workshops. There's a whole suite of those. in the next few weeks, which is, uh, literally this year, it was just going at 100 miles an hour. I don't know, I didn't anticipate it was going to be quite like that. But if you can't, if you fancy coming and talking, doing headshots, for instance, we are running a headshot workshop here at the studio in the next couple of months. So feel free to look at those, Paul Wilkinson Photography Workshops, if you fancy it. The Masterclass on Thursday, which is free with your convention ticket. Come along. We're gonna be doing, like I said, two lights, ten looks, one brand. Just having a look at how you can create a lot of variety out of the simplest of things. But not just variety, some beautiful imagery. And that's what I've been doing today, is putting a plan together, because like I said, and you can hear it in the podcast, you know, I just, I can't help myself. I head in one direction, and before I know it, I'm heading in another. Anyway, my thought for this particular episode, it's only a short one, [00:18:00] the episode and the thought, it's not a particularly deep thought, it's fine. It's clearly January, Christmas is only just past, New Year is Just behind us I'm sitting with a glass of whiskey. This is not in depth psychology, but have you ever wondered when you're sitting on the motorway, as I was coming back from the air ambulance, I had a couple of hours on the motorway looking at all of the cars, every one of those cars is a little ecosystem of people. It's a driver, probably some family members, friends, business, business relationships. The car is going from somewhere to somewhere. It's an individual at the wheel. Yeah, we see it as a traffic jam. We see it as traffic. We see it as a crowd, and yet actually when you're sitting there looking at each of these cars, there's a life, there's a family, there's parents, there might be kids, definitely parents, might be kids. There are Emotions. There are stories. [00:19:00] What are they listening to? Where are they going? What have they been doing? And when you think about it, a traffic jam and all of that chaos on the M25 around London is not a crowd. It's not, it is a car park, it feels like it, but it's lots of individuals. When you think of it like that, it starts to play in your mind about how we look to win customers in our business. It's easy to get drawn into this idea of social media influencing, having a presence, having tens of thousands of followers, I'm going to get a thousand likes on this post, I'm going to interact with this group, that group, every day I'm going to post five or six messages out there. And you can very easily lose sight of the fact that your business isn't a crowd. Your customers are not a crowd. [00:20:00] Your customers are individuals, with parents possibly, with kids, with lives, with jobs, with income. Hopefully enough income they can afford your services. And, when you think of it like that, everything becomes a little bit clearer as to how you should approach. winning your clients. In my opinion, it's not a smart move to just go for glory and have thousands of likes or thousands of conversations because you don't have time to service them. You're not going to service them particularly effectively. You get lost in the noise. Whereas today Libby, she is a client. She's also worked for us as a model. Her father is coming on a workshop In the coming weeks, they bought a voucher for him to come on one of our workshops at Christmas, because he can't stop talking about photography. Their friends came to us for a shoot the other day because they liked what they'd seen on Libby's [00:21:00] family walls. And so the thread continues. And if you ask me about any one of our clients, I can tell you a story that's very similar. One story in particular is of an incredible person called Nikki, who was a bride of mine. I won her wedding. I went round to see her. It was in the days when I would go and visit people to put the pitch in, before we had a really posh studio. I would drive out. I'd take the albums out and I'd arrive. And I arrived at her home in Henley. A little terraced house, beautiful, but a little terraced house. Took me ages to park because it's all little one way streets. Knocked on the door, and I don't think they'd forgotten I was coming as such, but they certainly weren't ready for me, and they were still eating their Chinese takeaway. So I sat, we chatted, got on really well. I won the wedding. Before I'd even shot the wedding, Nikki got back in touch and said, did I fancy pitching to become the photographer for the Hearing Dogs? Forgive me if you've heard this story. [00:22:00] And of course, I said to her, well I've never photographed dogs before, I'm very much a people photographer, it's very much about portraiture. What does it entail? And she said, well that's why I'm asking you, is because I don't want it to be about the dogs, I want to make the hearing dogs a brand that represents helping people with hearing loss. It's not about the dogs. The dogs are hearing aids for people who suffer with hearing loss. Would you consider it? So I said I'd consider it. I pitched for the work. I worked out a photograph of some dogs. I won it. And I'm still there. That's what, 11, 12 years ago? Still doing it. Still loving it. That's where I was with the Paralympian this week. And coincidentally, Nikki now works at Air Ambulance. And she's dragged me over there. Dragged me, that sounds terrible. She's pulled me into working with them as well. One client, one person, an individual who we've looked after throughout. Right from the minute I sat on her sofa, while her and her fiancé sat and ate their Chinese takeaway in front of me. And the one [00:23:00] thing about that, I was starving. I was sitting there thinking, oh God, give me some food. I had to wait until I had closed the pitch out. I'd thrown everything back into the Land Rover and was heading my way back and I could find something to eat. But you should always think of your business, not as a crowd, not, I mean, we do, sorry, I'm contradicting myself slightly here. We work on averages and Sarah and I constantly talk about it's an averages game. It's an averages game. And so it is when you're looking at your numbers and analyzing your sales per shoot, your margins, your revenue per year. Yes, that's an averages game. But your clients are not. Each of your clients is truly unique. And if you're a photographer, I mean that in the absolute strictest sense. They are unique. Banks, shopping centers, car [00:24:00] servicing, they use lines like that. You're unique. You're important to us. Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. They don't have to mean it. They can get away with saying it. But not really meaning it, because we're all expecting exactly the same service from them. But, if you're a hair salon, or a beautician, or a personal trainer, or of course, a photographer, when we say to a client, you are unique, you better mean it, because it's true. You build a business, one client. By one client, by one client, and you treat each of them uniquely. If you drift into that whole kind of rinse and repeat, rinse and repeat, rinse and repeat, not only are you going to run an. inefficient business that doesn't do justice to your clients, my suspicion is you're going to get pretty bored because that type of photography, at least for me, isn't at all interesting. I love the idea that [00:25:00] in every one of those cars, I saw on the M25. was another client who would look differently, would be wearing something different, would look different, would have their hair different, I'd have to light them differently, they had a different business or occupation, so we'd probably have to tune if we're doing headshots, it'd be different, or if they're a family, doing it differently. Every client is unique. You build a business. One client, by one client, by one client, and that's my view on the matter. See, I told you it wasn't deep, but I do really believe it. You really do need to think of this kind of, certainly this kind of business, where your client is in front of your camera. You build a business, one client at a time. And on that happy note, on that happy note I'd love to see you next week, or this week, it is now At the convention, if you're around, I'd love to catch up and have a beer. Mine's a Guinness. That sounds really bad. Buy me a drink. That's not what I'm saying at all. I really am not saying that. I'm simply saying I would love to sit and have a drink. I'll buy [00:26:00] you a drink. Well, not everyone. There's a lot of you, but I'll, you know, we'll have a drink, have a chat. I'm so excited to be going. It's going to be clearly if January is anything to go by, this is going to be one heck of a year. So I hope it's the same for you. I hope you're firing on cylinders. I hope you're having a time of your life. If not, let's have a chat about motivation and excitement at the convention. If it is, well, maybe you could do the same to me to keep me buoyed up too. And in the meantime, whatever else, ladies and gentlemen, be kind to yourself. Take care.
Take a hike in the swamp! Cathy and Rick talk about hiking in Florida swamps, venomous snakes, and other things you might find as you experience Florida's wilderness. Also, Cathy talks about the time she got lost in the swamp and almost stepped on a venomous snake.Pictured is the juvenile cottonmouth from Cathy's hike in Big Cypress. No, it's not a Magic Eye; look closely and you'll see him. Or her. Cathy didn't want to check.Links We MentionedClyde Butcher's swamp walkWild hogRanger-led tours at Big CypressMonroe StationCottonmouth factsSupport the showSubscribe to The Florida Spectacular newsletter, and keep up with Cathy's travels at greatfloridaroadtrip.com. Find her on social media: Facebook.com/SalustriCathy; Twitter/IG: @CathySalustri Question or comment? Email: cathy@floridaspectacular.com. Free, weekly episodes of "The Florida Spectacular" are co-hosted by Rick Kilby.Get Rick's books at rickkilby.com/ and http://studiohourglass.blogspot.com/. Connect: Facebook.com/floridasfountainofyouth, Twitter (@oldfla), and IG (@ricklebee).Premium, biweekly episodes of "The Florida Keys" Spectacular are co-hosted by Brad Bertelli. Find Brad's column in The Keys Weekly newspaper, check out his books, and join his Facebook group, Florida Keys History with Brad Bertelli.
What a fun human to have met. I really got into this conversation with Killian Moon (Located in Atlanta, Georgia and works out of "The Magic Eye"). Killian is a mover and shaker. I appreciated this very fun exchange we had. Hopefully, as much as it wasn't an "interview" as much as it was a solid back and forth (we shared a lot of ideas), I hope that it shows Killian well and yields some great nuggets of wisdom for you Listeners. Thank you so much Killian! You're to be admired my friend. God bless you Listeners and we hope that the Holiday season treats you well. Pace yourselves and know that we love ya! ~Sound Design by: Amy Nicholls who owes (Sound Wizard) Chuck Nunn (@djchucknunn) for Intros/Exits and for his years of audio support that was the foundation of this podcast. Bless you Chuck! ~New Intro and Exit Music by Chuck Nunn. "Jamuary 10" (list of Jamuary's found here at: Soundcloud.com/chuck-nunn ) ~OG Intro and Exit Music (Current Black Box Music) done by: Brandon Carter at (Brandon Scott Carter Publishing). The name of the OG track is "Ink Apprentice". If you like Brandon's sound, you can email him at: (brandon.carter@outlook.com) ~ We are affiliates of Reinventing the Tattoo and if you would like to get off-the-wall value for continuing art education (from master tattoo artists) then follow this link to save 10% on a year subscription: TAD10 You can find us currently on: IG: @the_apprenticeship_diaries FB: The Apprenticeship Diaries X : TheApprenticeshipDiaries~We were suspended from Twitter but now that it's "X" we decided to delete the past and move forward; Trusting that the information is out about what happened (so the story stays straight). Let it be known that this wasn't a confession of guilt; Rather a movement made where none was happening. Twitter was a past life... We move forward on X. We are on these listening platforms: Spotify iTunes or iHeartRadio Amazon Stitcher If you have a passion for muzzle loaders and black power rifles, be sure to follow Rico's creations here. ****If you liked The Apprenticeship Diaries (T.A.D.), please follow us, rate, and review us! Also, get our webpage to climb on the search engine by visiting it HERE. If you would like to donate to the show, we greatly appreciate the support. Click here to throw us a little love.
Grey Cup, Unpacking your Suitcase, picture scams in your email and the Magic Eye pics from the 90's
The story of Jesus calming the storm is often thought of as a metaphor for the way He can calm storms in our lives. But, like a Magic Eye image, the details tell second story, too, bigger than the first. Ryan explains in today's message on Mark 4.
This week G-Baby and the Usual Suspect Steve take on a brand new flick neither have seen before - a cinematic cocktail that pays homage to the neon-lit streets of the 70s blaxploitation era to great effect, folded in with equal parts mystery, comedy, sci-fi and maybe a touch of horror in Juel Taylor's directorial debut, They Cloned Tyrone from 2023. Join us across 110th street as we discuss beige bananas, bumping the Pristiq jingle, getting hypnotized by the elementary book fair and those Magic Eye posters, connecting with our characters and I think we'll just go ahead and place Jamie Foxx in the pantheon of porpoise patron saints, he just don't miss. The porpoises, midnight companions and keen observers grown in a lab and taught to assimilate will rebel and turn against their puppeteers in the shadows. Off to see the wizard again, or something like that. Hollow Man - great movie or the greatest movie? Let's wax this imitated porpoise. https://linktr.ee/waxtheporpoise #netflix #film #magiceye #theyclonedtyrone #waxit Follow us on twitter & instagram and leave us a rating/review on Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen, let us know how we're doing and thank you! Excellent video essay by Jessica Clemons @lulu_clemon of New Rockstars on They Cloned Tyrone - check it out ---> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tp-eDzMnkVM
Lords: * Alex * Shannon Topics: * Tree law * https://www.tumblr.com/whistletown/721716818422677504 * https://www.tumblr.com/whistletown/723346723280453632 * Tax Heaven 3000 * When I was a kid I read about a magic trick where if you touch your index fingers together and cross your eyes, a disembodied third finger appears between them.This is the kind of thing we had for entertainment in the 80s. * https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poetrymagazine/poems/156405/outbreaks * Best food byproducts Microtopics: * Exhausting topics before the show even starts. * Should we give bee educators guns? * Lords with lord awards. * Megalords lording over huge swaths of topics. * Getting your partner a very smooth engagement ring so it hurts less when they punch you in the face. * Trimming a tree in the middle of summer. * Tree law consequences. * The Hitman games, you know, with the bald guy * Whether Hit People are hired to kill likable or dislikable people. * Games with missions designed to make you feel bad about what you're doing but also to give you no choice but to do it. * Injured while sl searching for bodies in Lake Mead? Demand compensation! * A cute anime girl who really wants to help you prepare your taxes. * MSCHF. * Calling the Key 4 All hotline for real time data on the car's location and speed. * Playing Geoguessr to determine where the car is. * Reverse engineering the smell of WD-40. * Using the car for purposes of a car. * The legal standing of Public Universal Car. * Don't rotate the donut, you gave to rotate the pie * Legal MSCHF. * Taking the SATs for money. * Writing a list of demands in a child's scrawl and sending it to your senator. * Seeing the Vienna sausage with knuckles. * Getting a book of Magic Eyes in the 90s and staring at it until you see the dolphin and having a splitting headache for the next day and a half. * A jump scare in Magic Eye form. * Why we all need glasses. * Listening to your dad listening to a podcast. * Disappearing your own nose. * The purpose of feeling boredom. * The impossibility of being bored when libraries exist. * Paleolithic man enjoying memes. * Why campfire smoke always blows into your eyes. * Building a prehistoric highway system and using one of those printers that prints on the road so paleolithic man can enjoy dank memes. * What kids get in their stockings today now that iTunes gift cards are obsolete. * Why keep any DVDs? * A common metaphor for a problem that can be overcome by relaxing. * The most racist shrimp. * It's not a firearm, it's just an explosive knife. * Begging your mom to buy you the Krazy Krabs. * Putting on a brine shrimp show for your family members. * A spring loaded rigid whip. * Kitchen Somebody. * Searching for comfort and the eels come. * The neon 24 hour fried chicken sign gleaming behind the pines. * Finding god in a cluster of eels beneath your palms. * Have you given god a pizza? * A different eel pizza meme. * All the Breaking Bad fans coming to your neighborhood and throwing pizza on top of the Pizza Eels for a photo opportunity and the eels are getting extremely fat. * Feeding the sharks by stuffing a dive suit full of chum. * A cooking process that creates a byproduct that you can use to cook something else. * Calling bean juice "aqua fava" and styling. * Browning the whey to create a delicious paste loaf. * The two-in-one, in which they put two taquitos into a burrito. * Glorpamole.
This work by Edouard Vuillard reminds me of the old Magic Eye images that ran in the Sunday comics back in the '90s. You'd be presented with a dense, colorful pattern and have to figure out what the hidden image was. I could never do it. In today's episode we'll find out how he and a group of young artists called the Nabis threw out the rules of traditional painting to create something more personal that made the viewer have to do some of the work of figuring out what's going on. If you want to follow along, you can find it here on the Gallery's site. SHOW NOTES (TRANSCRIPT BELOW) “A Long Look” opening and closing themes are by Ron Gelinas “Ascension” https://youtu.be/jGEdNSNkZoo and “Easy” https://youtu.be/2QGe6skVzSs Episode theme is “Gnossienne” composed by Erik Satie. Performed by Edward Rosser. Courtesy of musopen.org Artwork information https://www.nga.gov/collection/art-object-page.52238.html Vuillard self-portrait https://www.nga.gov/collection/art-object-page.93000.html Vuillard info https://www.theartstory.org/artist/vuillard-edouard/ https://artuk.org/discover/stories/douard-vuillard-nabi-and-intimist “Bonnard to Vuillard: Intimate Poetry: The Nabi Collection of Vicki and Roger Sant” by Elsa Smithgall, et al. New York, New York: Rizzoli Electa, 2019. “Vuillard, the Inexhaustible Glance : Critical Catalogue of Paintings and Pastels.” Salomon, Antoine., Guy. Cogeval, and Mathias. Chivot. Vol. 1, Milano: Skira, 2003. Nabis info https://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/dcpt/hd_dcpt.htm https://smarthistory.org/nabis-decorative-art/ Negative space trick https://mymodernmet.com/negative-space-definition/ For a transcript visit https://alonglookpodcast.com/?p=2728
Jordan Morris and Rob Kutner join Daniel, Tony and me to talk about magic eye posters, Minecraft backpacks, Marvel Snappin', Daniel's super awkward exchange, Tony's super awkward exchange, Comedy Sportz, reading on the toilet, head massages and so much more. Get yourself some new ARIYNBF merch here: https://alison-rosen-shop.fourthwall.com/ Products I Use/Recommend/Love: http://amazon.com/shop/alisonrosen Check us out on Patreon: http://patreon.com/alisonrosen This episode is brought to you by: MASTERCLASS: http://masterclass.com/bestfriend for 15% off Masterclass HELLO FRESH: http://hellofresh.com/50BestFriend (use code 50bestfriend for 50% off and free shipping) Buy Alison's Book: Tropical Attire Encouraged (and Other Phrases That Scare Me) https://amzn.to/2JuOqcd You probably need to buy the HGFY ringtone! https://www.alisonrosen.com/store/ Try Amazon Prime Free 30 Day Trial
We're back! After a very long hiatus we are proud to return to exploring the amazing attractions in Disneyland, and this episode is very special for a number of reasons! We recorded this episode live, in front of an audience of some of the greatest people on earth in one of the greatest resorts on earth, The Hojo Anaheim, with one of the greatest guests on earth, Dusty Sage of Micechat.com!This unscripted conversation between Alex, Freddy, and Dusty really is a unique treat for fans of The Backside of Water. The energy in the room is tangible throughout the entire episode and we hope that you feel transported to this special time with us. Dusty Sage fits into the conversation like a glove and it was a total blast having him be part of the show!A very special thank you to Heather Rad and the whole crew over at Hojo Anaheim, our favorite place to stay when we visit the parks! They provided a lovely space for us to be able to host this event. We literally couldn't have done this without them!! Want to stay at the Hojo Anaheim? Follow our affiliate link below for details and booking information!Click Here To Check out the Hojo AnaheimFollow Dusty Sage's Happenings Here:Instagram: @the.dusty.sageMicechat Insta: @micechatWebsite: micechat.comCheck Out Our Other Podcast: Did You Know DisneyFollow Us On Instagram: @the_backside_of_waterJoin Our Facebook Group: The Backside of WaterProduction CreditsDirected By: Alex StewartWritten By: Alex Stewart & Freddy MartinSound Design and Editing By: Alex Stewart
What became the Magic Eye illusion fad of the 1990s was born by way of the stereogram of the 1950s (and even before that). It's a winding story that you'll love!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Let's put a soft focus on things and slow it down a little, shall we? Most of your reality is just your brain running micro simulations anyway. Pretend this week's strip is a Magic Eye, Here. Follow the Podcast on Twitter or Instagram Follow the Paul on Instagram Follow Alex on Twitter or Instagram Mystic Lasagna is a Member of the Missing Sock network. For other great shows like this one, check out https://www.missingsocknetwork.com/ or search Missing Sock in your favorite pod catcher. Also we have Merch!! Follow the network on Instagram. Lasagnaste´
Award-winning book designer Jordan Wannemacher joins Mike and Mary Jane to spark one IRL after years of a successful online friendship! She gets granular about why fine art is like masturbation while design is like sex, great weed packaging, favorite fonts, Magic Eye posters, childhood cooking lessons, chicken-fried steak, and burrata as a money shot. Plus, Mike and MJ talk Muppets, and ponder: is Kermit the Frog Jewish? FOLLOW / LEAVE A ⭐️ REVIEW / FRESH PARM ONLY Music by Jesse Case Follow Weed + Grub IG Watch Weed + Grub YT Jordan Wannemacher IG BOTW: @brwnbox, @ihateericwilson & @nisoncopr
Remember those Magic Eye posters from the 90s? The technical name is stereogram, an optical illusion where if you kinda unfocus your eyes and stare at it long enough, a colorful kaleidoscope-looking abstract will turn into something else. A rocket ship, maybe, or a tropical landscape. They're fun, and everybody had one in their dorm room for a while. We're always fascinated by illusion. It's why magicians are so popular. In the right context, we love to watch something transform into something totally different. But when that something is a person we've come to care about and trust? Not so fun anymore. Sources:https://www.grunge.com/926587/larene-austins-motive-for-murdering-lanell-barsock-explained/https://truecrimedaily.com/2016/05/31/woman-leaves-false-clues-in-lovers-murder-caught-after-escape-to-belize/https://www.oxygen.com/crime-news/dateline-the-last-day-larene-austin-convicted-killing-lanell-barsockInvestigation Discovery's "In Plain Sight," episode "Red Hot Murder"NBC's "Dateline: The Last Day," episode "The Case of LaNell Barsock"Follow us, campers!Patreon (join to get all episodes ad-free, at least a day early, an extra episode a month, and a free sticker!): https://patreon.com/TrueCrimeCampfireFacebook: True Crime CampfireInstagram: https://gramha.net/profile/truecrimecampfire/19093397079Twitter: @TCCampfire https://twitter.com/TCCampfireEmail: truecrimecampfirepod@gmail.comMERCH! https://true-crime-campfire.myspreadshop.com/
From waves to Magic Eye, this novel is full of recurring images and metaphors. In this final episode discussing Zevin's novel, Mary and Nicole identify these motifs and how she uses them to deepen our reading experience.
We're back once again! Me and Trett embark on our sixth installment of the Shit Show! Join us as we fumble our way through serious conversations about UBI and judging the actions of corporations, and not-so-serious conversations like “Does Liquid Death suck?” and that one time I witnessed a raid.. Episode Outline: (0:35) - Episode beginning (1:01) - Liquid Death, is it actually good? The boys try it out (5:15) - What is the point of including Liquid Death in your life? (7:28) - “Magic Eye” books, visual illusions (11:24) - Magic discussion, mentalists (14:22) - Sully's Asher Roth story, separating the person from the artist celebrity (19:12) - Reverse taste test (drinking regular water), more discussion around the difference between the artist and the persona, using Kanye as an example (25:39) - “Making the next guy enough money”, the nature of how success is truly measured (27:50) - Not looking at business decisions as emotional, addressing broad criticisms of capitalism and wealth (33:14) - Companies vs. a one-person business, is running a small business easier now? Or harder? (35:31) - Selling a service or product that is “personal” or 1-to-1, the power of doing business on a personal level income?” (42:14) - Exploring UBI a little more, “there is a point to giving people a small amount of money”, where it gets complicated (45:39) - Who is UBI targeted towards? The “cost” of a program at this level (48:55) - Who SHOULD UBI be targeted towards? Acknowledging some realities of social welfare (52:21) - Trett's crazy work lunch story (57:07) - That one time Sully witnessed a raid, some Stockton war stories (1:01:59) - Live stream raids, the peculiar world of streaming and youtube stars (1:15:04) - Episode wrap-up, closing thoughts Connect with Sully: Podcast Links -https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&redir_token=QUFFLUhqbVQ0dEJWbTVSenZKTDRWTWtLbC1GRjBsSzFsUXxBQ3Jtc0trUUczQkNiUW0wOHZ5cnM1TXJWWUhUMEZ3N25YUVh2QXF4RS1lYmRRRHBjQ05YSDRLeDdhQU5BVXFUUWJ5M0FvcVhPd2ZiZ1ltVHUtLW5hV3FnOGtQeF8yaHBCcFB3a0locnlhV3JBN2lWVVBSOWRxQQ&q=https%3A%2F%2Flinktr.ee%2Fsullybop&v=j2LSduolYug ( https://linktr.ee/sullybop) LinkedIn:https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&redir_token=QUFFLUhqbFlMUnhoTDg1Q09aU01ad2JCSWVLc1JZaGNPd3xBQ3Jtc0tuWG4xMGFnTlhySTgybjUwN2haampQMnQ2LUQyMzR1YUVHSVlGS1BjcU10N1JKMVhWWmZodWpwbVFmUVRpZXl0VHN0RG5UcW1QQ0duakpWYVpPektDYkNvcVEwOFBHTjlwSm05V2FlWklLd20xSDBvRQ&q=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.linkedin.com%2Fin%2Fsullybop%2Frecent-activity%2F&v=j2LSduolYug ( https://www.linkedin.com/in/sullybop/...) Instagram:https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&redir_token=QUFFLUhqbktDbUFZWkNCU0ZIWS02ZFhPaVp2TVRQQ1BBUXxBQ3Jtc0ttSDJubmZaMXQ4YWpfQ0hFenJHbGd5NkU3Rk5tSkVtb29yVVVVTlJXcWloNkN4Ynl4T2xnbUxTOFBLWlBMOE1wbzExLTRSMzNPa0hvTkJqUW9oSVdVTGdqZnJXTnh6RXRpSmx5S1pfS3N5cUV6a0xQYw&q=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.instagram.com%2Fsullybop%2F&v=j2LSduolYug ( https://www.instagram.com/sullybop/) Facebook:https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&redir_token=QUFFLUhqbjBXTmJuRGVseGdWUGRWSUJyVHd0T1RRUzE3QXxBQ3Jtc0ttc282QmVrcV83SWYzTkswSGNmdXprc1FpaUp3TURxVEdtY3NzY0ozSVZOYzN5dmVINnhzd2JRajU0RFpwYkY2QXBHNWtNWHVfekJ3Mkswb00tamgzSFJ1ZWx4bWhNTkxaQWg4UGFMZUh4WDZLdkYxMA&q=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2Fsullybop&v=j2LSduolYug ( )http://www.facebook.com/sullybop (http://www.facebook.com/sullybop) Guests can be featured on the next shit show by submitting a video. Send me your submissions on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/sullybop/ (here) or email sullybmusic@gmail.com. Links Below: _ Watch the Video Version on https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC5yW2ZNS4Iq7ff_EeKe3HkQ (YouTube) @sullybop on Instagram Search 'BOPCAST' on any platform! (Google Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube) Visit https://www.sullybop.com/ (SullyBop.com) for...
Plushy, aka Samir Korbi, is a 3-D artist, content creator, streamer, Nintendo Shoutcaster, TV host, and one of everyone's favorite people in all of NFTs.We, of course, dive into Plushy's origin story, but we also get a first look at his long awaited NFT project, Subsistem: Obscurals. Obscurals are the first ever stereogram NFT (remember Magic Eye images?) coupled with paper craft.In a world where every NFT project feels the same, Plushy's creating something truly unique. Learn more at subsistem.io!And follow Plushy at @plushywush!——Do you need help with brand and smart contract/web development for your NFT project?Work with me at RYPS!Mint or collect NFTs from projects that I've worked on: SkullKids: Generations (Mint | OpenSea) Frootlings (Mint | OpenSea) Do you need help developing your brand and business?Work with us at SPYR!——Enjoying the show? Let me know on Twitter! I'm @jeffSARRIS.Watch Starting Now on YouTube or listen and subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts.——A huge thanks goes out to Amara Andrew for handling the live video production on Starting Now. Follow what she's up to or hire her for your video production needs at ByAmara.com!——Some of the links above may be affiliate links which means that I earn a small commission from qualifying purchases at no additional cost to you. Thanks for your support!
The dudes work their way through the Magic Eye that is GamePro issue #13. (Mag Analysis Starts […] The post Flying Schmup Crusade/GamePro #13 appeared first on NYEH Entertainment.
To effectively treat stroke and prevent stroke, you need to know just what is literally happening in a patient's head. CT Scans and MRI scans are tools most of us are familiar with. Generally if you suspect a stroke is possible, you need these two scans done. There's another tool out there, too, that's cheaper, more portable, and involves no radiation. It's called Transcranial Doppler Ultrasound. It's a great complement to the other scans, and it can provide impressive insight to supplement the information from the radiologists. A skilled practitioner is a great complement to the care team. I first talked about this technology in my conversation with Dr. Aaron Stayman a few years back (Is my Brain Pregnant? Ultrasound and Stroke: Transcranial Doppler Ultrasound). It's fascinating stuff. The problem is that it does require a skilled technician or someone specifically trained in the technique. Despite the work of advocates like Dr. Stayman and Dr. Mar Rubin, there just aren't enough of those techs. Dr. Mark Hamilton of Nova Signal has a solution. His robotic machine automates the whole process, makes it faster, more reliable, and cheaper while giving more accurate results in a lot of scenarios. The Nova Signal solution has the potential to make this technology available to patients and medical practitioners around the world. Drs. Rubin and Hamilton join me in this episode to discuss the technology, the research, and the device itself. If you don't see the audio player below, visit http://Strokecast.com/TCD to listen to the conversation. Click here for a machine-generated transcript Who are Drs. Rubin and Hamilton? Dr. Mark N. Rubin is a vascular neurologist and associate professor of neurology with the University of Tennessee Health Science Center Department of Neurology. He specializes in vascular neurology and is experienced in stroke and cerebrovascular disease, and an experienced sonographer and expert interpreter of carotid duplex ultrasound and transcranial Doppler ultrasonography. He received his medical degree from University of Illinois College of Medicine and completed his Adult Neurology residency and fellowships (Neurohospitalist and Vascular Neurology) at the Mayo Clinic. Robert Hamilton, Ph.D. is the Chief Scientific Officer and Co-Founder of NovaSignal. He is an accomplished entrepreneur, engineer, and clinical researcher with a passion for innovative technologies that allow for increased access to care. Robert, a biomedical engineer by training, is an expert in image/signal processing and machine learning, with extensive experience in cerebral blood flow, traumatic brain injury, stroke, and other neurological disorders. Robert co-founded NovaSignal based on technology he developed during his Ph.D. During his tenure at the company, Robert has supported the entire lifecycle of the NovaSignal autonomous ultrasound platform from idea to commercialization with regulatory clearances in the US, Europe, and Canada. Additionally, Robert has designed and completed several clinical trials supporting the use of the technology in different neurological conditions and has acted as principal investigator on federal grants and contracts totaling more than $25M from the Department of Defense, National Institutes of Health, and the National Science Foundation. Finally, Robert has achieved greater than 100 citations of his work in peer-reviewed publications and conferences and holds over 50 patent assets related to the core technology developed during his PhD studies. TCD vs Traditional Ultrasound When most of us think of ultrasound in medicine, we think of the sonograms of developing children, where parents and doctors swear they can see a human being in those black and white lines. Personally, they seem more like those Magic Eye pictures from the 90s. Traditional ultrasound can also capture pictures of the heart, the blood vessels in the neck, and the condition of other organs in the body. It can be another way of getting a picture of the structures at play. And then you can frame those pictures or make them your Facebook profile picture. TCD is different. The goal is not to capture a picture of the structures of the brain. The goal instead is to understand blood flow through the brain. The technology helps practitioners understand the rate of flow, where there may be leaks or disruptions, if stuff is flowing with the blood that shouldn't, the direction of flow, and whether things are shunting (or crossing) between the veins and arteries that shouldn't. That shunting is at the core of the recent study Nova Signal was part of and that we talk about in this conversation. There are several reasons shunting can occur, but one of the most common is a PFO, or a hole in the heart. I talked in more detail about just what a PFO is in the last episode here: http://Strokecast.com/Anna TCD is a great technology for helping doctors understand the dynamic flow of blood in each individual patient. And it doesn't involve the dedicated rooms or radiation that might come with CT or MRI Scans. NovaGuide™ 2 Intelligent Ultrasound The Nova Guide 2 Intelligent Ultrasound is the device we talked about in this conversation. While TCD is a great tool, it does take a while to get the scan just right, and we face a dearth of practitioners who are able to do it. The Nova Signal solution is simpler. It's small and automated. The device can orient itself and complete a scan much quicker than a human can. The research shows it's more accurate, too. It doesn't take up much space in a medical facility and can easily be brought from one patient to another. Plus, an operator can perform a lot more scans per hour or get back to other tasks more quickly. With hospitals perpetually understaffed these days, that speed makes a lot of financial sense. And since, in stroke, time is brain, it can make a lot of medical sense, too. Nova Signal vs Transthoracic Echocardiography The information about the presentation at the International Stroke conference is here: https://eventpilotadmin.com/web/page.php?page=IntHtml&project=ISC22&id=1176 This is the data we talked about a lot in the conversation. The Nova Signal device was significantly better at detecting the vein-artery shunts indicative of PFO and other conditions than the gold-standard evaluation technique using Transthoracic Echocardiogram. This matters in stroke because when we talk about shunting in tests we're usually talking about very small bubbles. Outside of the test context we're usually talking about clots and other stuff sneaking across from veins to arteries, bypassing the body's filters. When they do that they can go to the brain and cause a stroke. Accurate detection of shunting allows physicians to make more appropriate treatment recommendations and decisions. Hack of the Week Cultivating a sense of gratitude, as unlikely as it may seem, is something that helps a lot of folks deal with the challenges pf post stroke life. Simply being alive means thing can get better. And being alive in the 21 century with the medical resources available is a huge asset to the community. Of course those medical resources are not evenly distributed within the US and around the world, but they exist, and that's a start. Develop a sense of purpose. After stroke, it can be hard to see a way forward, especially if you have severe disabilities. People who succeed in their recovery, or in their goals in general, typically have a pretty strong "Why?" driving them. Achieving their goals gets them closer to something important to them. In the dark times, when you find yourself feeling it's just not worth it, your why -- your sense of purpose can give you a reason to push through. We sometimes ask, "Why should I go on?" almost rhetorically to express or pain. For some folks, though, it can be an exercise to identify the things that matter to you. So ask yourself that question, but assume there is an answer. And write down everything that could be an answer. Cultivate the sense of purpose to get through the darkness. Links Where do we go from here? To learn more about Nova Signal and the research around TCD, visit http://NovaSignal.com Share this link with someone you know by giving them the link http://Strokecast.com/TCD Share a recent win (we all have them) at 321-5Stroke or by email Don't get best…get better.
You can trust God further than you can see Him.
You can trust God further than you can see Him.
This week, some of the D23 panels have been announced, Disneyland is already planning for the holidays, progress in Toon Town, shopDisney is full of Halloween, we continue our conversation with Legendary Disney Imagineer Terri Hardin, and more! Please support the show if you can by going to https://www.dlweekly.net/support/. If you want some DLWeekly Swag, you can pick some up at https://www.dlweekly.net/store/. Book your travel through ConciEARS at no extra cost to you! Be sure to mention that you heard about ConciEARS from DLWeekly at booking! DISCOUNTS! If you want some awesome headwear or one of a kind items, be sure to visit our friends over at All Enchanting Ears! You can use the promo code DLWEEKLY10 to get 10% off your order! We have partnered with the Howard Johnson Anaheim Hotel & Water Playground to get great deals for our listeners! Book your stay at the Howard Johnson Anaheim and get 15% off your stay (code 1000022077)! Magic Key Holders get 20% off their stay (code 1000025935) as well! Book now! Need the perfect bag for your days in the parks? Look no further than Designer Park Co.! Purchase the Rope Drop Bag as featured on Episode 222 and get 10% off your purchase! Use coupon code DLWEEKLY to get the discount. News: D23 is just around the corner, and more panels have been announced. There really is something for everyone with presentations like “An Inside Look at the Society of Exploreres and Adventureres,” “Walt Disney Imagineering: 70 Years of Making the Impossible, Possible,” and many more. No word yet as of this recording on when you can reserve a seat for these panels.- https://d23.com/disney-parks-announcement-d23-expo-2022/ Summer is still in full swing, but Disneyland is already talking about…. the holidays! This week, Disneyland announced that the Holiday Season at the resort will be from November 11th through January 8. World of Color – Season of Light will return along with Disney Festival of the Holidays, Viva Navidad!, and more! – https://disneyparks.disney.go.com/blog/2022/08/disneyland-resort-announces-return-of-the-holiday-season-nov-11-2022-jan-8-2023/ Signs of progress have peeked over the trees in Fantasyland to reveal some updates to the hills of Toon Town! The hills have begun to be painted with a slightly new color scheme that makes the mountains have the illusion of being farther away. – https://www.micechat.com/328501-disneyland-update-summer-flare-and-halloween-scare/ Halloween fans who can't make it into the parks should head on over to shopDisney to get some spooky merchandise. There is quite the variety of options. – https://dlnewstoday.com/2022/08/halloween-minnie-ears-skeleton-dance-collectibles-spooky-ornaments-and-more-now-available-on-shopdisney/ Weeklyteers who like something sweet at the resort, and who doesn't, there is a new treat for you! The Blueberry Hand Pie has come to Trolley Treats on Buena Vista Street in Disney California Adventure. The hand pie is filled with a blueberry filling and topped with blue frosting. The pastry is soft and buttery. Feed the sweet craving for $5.49. – https://www.disneyfoodblog.com/2022/07/29/this-disney-treat-is-not-a-lunch-box-tartbut-also-kind-of-it-is/ Guests who visit the resort next year might notice something different about the cast member uniforms. A new nametag, will feature a character chosen by the cast member themselves from a list of hundreds of characters offered by Disney. Cast members have until August 14th to make their selections, otherwise Mickey Mouse will be the default. – https://dlnewstoday.com/2022/08/new-cast-member-nametags-coming-to-disneyland-for-100th-anniversary-of-the-walt-disney-company/ Tomorrowland has become a little more constructionland as walls have gone up around a few areas of the land. The walls are still up around the entrance area, covering a small building, the Buzz Lightyear and Star Tours FastPass area is also behind walls. The Tomorrowland – or Magic Eye – theater has it's queue walled off as well. – https://www.micechat.com/328501-disneyland-update-summer-flare-and-halloween-scare/ Discussion Topic: Legendary Disney Imagineer Terri Hardin – https://www.terrihardin.com Terri's Tribe – https://www.patreon.com/TerriHardin
On today's podcast with Nickson, Steph & Eli - happy Fri!! Today's show was hilarious!! Nickson gives way to much detail on his sex life, plus can Intern Cal get hypnotised? Flatmate Matt tells us about his side hustle (paid for feet pics) & a caller's "making bacon" tee will make you laugh haha Enjoy the podcast! :) Chapters: 01:40 - Nickson's hypnotherapy 10:20 - Only Fans: Flatmate Matt's feet 16:40 - Super Rugby wrap up 20:16 - Content Bin: Eyes open during sex 25:45 - Eli's slogan tee "I'd hit that" 32:00 - Chris Parker: New movie 36:00 - The Brag Bag 42:10 - Work perks 47:10 - Austria's Burger King Dilemma 51:20 - Finish Me Off 55:25 - Meg's Quiz For Dummies 57:00 - Flatmate Emily vs. Liv See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This week, Dan Higgins joins us for The World's End. It's like the first two movies, but Simon Pegg is unlikable. Is Ralph really Princess Pee Pee Pants? Is RollerToaster Cytoon 3 turning children into monsters? Is Jude Law just three Michael Keatons in a trench coat? “There has been more time of my life spent practicing Magic Eye than I am comfortable with.” - Dan Higgins Dan would like to promote suffering in a big world (playing Elden Ring). Click HERE to listen, like, follow, rate and review. It really helps the show! Captain's Log Shout-out: Click HERE to help out with The Other Host's vet bills for their cat Oliver's surgery.
Docker CEO Scott Johnston joins us to talk about the announcements from this week’s DockerCon, the transition from an enterprise to a developer tools company, and the Internet’s favourite whale. Do you have something cool to share? Some questions? Let us know: web: kubernetespodcast.com mail: kubernetespodcast@google.com twitter: @kubernetespod Chatter of the week Podes and antipodes Side note: Kubernetes needs the concept of an Antipod. BRB, writing a KEP Google Cloud Podcasts News of the week DockerCon 2022 Docker Extensions Docker Desktop for Linux Late breaking news: Docker acquires Nestybox Spot VMs now on GCE and GKE; spot pods now on GKE Autopilot Fully managed Linkerd with Buoyant Cloud Sign up for CDcon and save 40% by using the code CdCon22AMEET40 AWS adds Kubernetes resource view Deploying Kubernetes clusters in absurd languages by Lee Briggs Links from the interview Docker DockerCon ‘22 DockerCon ‘14, the announcement of Kubernetes Return or Revenge? Scott’s history Four degrees from Stanford, including an MSMSE Sun and Netscape Java Servlets and J2EE Moore’s Law and Metcalfe’s Law Standard on the Internet Tom Lyon Loudcloud/Opsware and a16z Puppet Scott joins Docker in 2014 The monorepo The Soul of a New Machine Docker Swarm Messages from the future and the Google crystal ball Open Cotainers Initiative Docker Desktop for Apple Silicon Macs virtiofs for Mac $2.1 billion valuation Moby Project Moby Ice Cube The Dockershim saga, as reported throughout the episodes: Don’t panic about Docker Dockershim deprecation FAQ Mirantis will support the Dockershim But seriously, don’t worry about the Dockershim Dockershim is, like, proper gone The puns and joke section Docker is krilled to see you Billy T James Beached Az. Can’t eat chups! Docker Extensions CNCF Landscape or Magic Eye? Docker Desktop for Linux Multi-arch on Docker Hub Docker roadmap Scott Johnston on Twitter
Saddle up, y'all! We're cowboys this time. Or rather, there are some cowboys. Briefly. Then they meet the fate that most fictional folks do when they spend any amount of time around the Fixers. Except Earl, he's fine as long as he's not allergic to rattlesnakes. Episode ingredients: My Name Is Earl... Prariedog, Nerf Sand, Can Someone Please Argue Now?, Simon Clops' Magic Eye, The Clarence Trebuchet Persona, Zombie Hippie Cowboy, and Jaw Harps Are Dangerous Send your questions/problems to fixerspodcast@gmail.com Twitter - twitter.com/FixersInc Instagram - instagram.com/fixersinc The Bad One - facebook.com/fixersincorporated Patreon - www.patreon.com/fixerspodcast
Would you like a chocolate covered pretzel? Taylor and Kevin head to the mall to look at Magic Eye posters and talk about Kevin Smith's 1995 film Mallrats.
In this episode I speak to Jay Davies, the man behind Magic Eye Media. You will have seen Jay's work on member sites such as Trained by JP, as well as YouTube channels for Nathan De Asha, James Hollingshead, Rob Taylor and many more. But, how much do you know about Jay and the life of the man behind the camera? YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/JayDavies_UK
Ron tells about seeing answers to prayers. Subscribe to our mailing list to receive Episode Extras - pictures, videos, questions for further study, and encouragement in your relationship with our Best Friend. Email us with with your stories and questions at ronANDnicksbff@gmail.com
This week Tarryn is joined by South African Actress and Voice Artist Tara Macpherson. Tara Bio: Tara is a performer based in Cape Town obsessed with anything related to theatre. She studied Drama and Musical Theatre at the Waterfront Theatre School Her theatre credits include More Adventures with Noddy ; Peter Rabbit ; ; Othello: A Woman's Story ; ; Rent , Pirates of Penzance , Pop-Up Tales , the Crucible , Secret Santa and Romeo and Juliet: Sort of. Her Television/Film credits include: Tagged the Musical (Barbra the Cat Lady); Character Stories for Children; It's Alright I'm Here ; Signal High ; A Cinderella Story: If the Shoe fits . Voice Over credits include: Candy is Yummy Podcast; X Hunters; Magic Eye ; Yeh Teri Galiyan; Iron Lady ; Panda and Little Mole; Meng Wa . Connect with The Podcast Instagram @hopigetitpod Twitter @IHopeIGetItPod1 Facebook @IHopeIGetIt Connect with the Guest Instagram @taramacpherson I Hope I Get It Podcast is created and produced by Citizen Femme Productions. Cover Art created by Tarryn Steyn Theme Music created by Steven Steyn
Find out why Nata believes the Hornets roster is a Choose Your Own Adventure Book, or a Magic Eye book. Plus the fellas react to Kelly Oubre and Ism Smith's introductory pressers.***WANT MORE? Patreon.com/lohFOLLOW US ON TWITTER - @LockedOnHornets - @WalkerMehl - @DougBransonLOHMUSIC - Music from https://filmmusic.io - Lobby Time - Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com), Backed Vibes - Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com), Casets - Drake Stafford, Buzz - Steve Combs - "Run Amok" by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com) - License: CC BY (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)Support Us By Supporting Our Sponsors!Built BarBuilt Bar is a protein bar that tastes like a candy bar. Go to builtbar.com and use promo code “LOCKED15” and you'll get 15% off your next order.BetOnline AGThere is only 1 place that has you covered and 1 place we trust. Betonline.ag! Sign up today for a free account at betonline.ag and use that promocode: LOCKEDON for your 50% welcome bonus.Rock AutoAmazing selection. Reliably low prices. All the parts your car will ever need. Visit RockAuto.com and tell them Locked On sent you. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Hackaday editors Mike Szczys and Elliot Williams discuss the greatest hacks of the week that was. Antennas aren't rocket science, so this week we really enjoyed a video that demystifies antenna designs and a project that tunes up the antennas on cheap wireless modules in the simplest of ways. Google's in the news this week with the end to project Loon, and a dust-up with the volunteer package maintainers who have spent years making sure Chromium browser is in the Linux repos. Elliot is gaga for magic eye tubes and crazy musical instruments, while Mike is over the moon for a chain-based clock display. We close up the episode talking about the Concorde, and the math behind cable mechanisms.
We're back in the OG saddle. Things get dramatic right away as we deal with the repercussions of squirrel-conflict. We envision a world of stupid dinosaurs and use urine to identify voices. David struggles to recognize celebrity voices and bottom-line: he will be mad. Foster struggles to comprehend National Treasure and relives Magic Eye dental memories. Enjoy. #DaveyScorn https://www.shortlist.com/news/famous-actors-auditioning-for-roles-they-didnt-get?fbclid=IwAR3TrGEmor4KbODhVypBlIWWgnYqYqOMXAIekcjFXUKeYrnm5Jav9aUQyx0 (Reveal) http://www.audioobscurapod.com/listen (Subscribe) on your pod-catcher of choice so you never miss an episode! Leave us a review on https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/audio-obscura/id1449162828 (Apple Podcasts) and let us know what you think, it really helps us out. Social Media: - http://facebook.com/audioobscurapod (Facebook) - http://instagram.com/audioobscurapod (Instagram) - http://twitter.com/audioobscurapod (Twitter) If you have any feedback or your own suggestion of a unique piece of audio that you'd like to see included in a future episode, drop us a line at audioobscurapodcast@gmail.com.
Wrapping up the MCU three-fer. This movie is like a Magic Eye painting. You either see it or you don't. Reviews of the film lead us to ponder such zen questions as "How are the jokes supposed to be funny if I can't laugh at them?" Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.