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In this episode of Friday Field Notes, Ryan Michler dives into the powerful concept of the stories men tell themselves and how these narratives shape their identity, success, and outlook on life. Ryan challenges listeners to rewrite negative scripts, adopt a victor mindset, and use their inner dialogue to build resilience and purpose. He emphasizes the importance of self-talk, taking responsibility, and reframing experiences as opportunities for growth. This inspiring episode will leave you reflecting on your own story and the impact it has on who you are and who you're becoming. SHOW HIGHLIGHTS 00:00 Introduction 02:30 The impact of stories on identity 04:50 Reframing negative narratives 09:10 Self-talk and identity shaping 15:50 Victim vs. victor mindset 22:25 Lessons from the words we use 31:50 Changing old stories 36:25 Closing thoughts Battle Planners: Pick yours up today! Order Ryan's new book, The Masculinity Manifesto. For more information on the Iron Council brotherhood. Want maximum health, wealth, relationships, and abundance in your life? Sign up for our free course, 30 Days to Battle Ready
Unlock the secret to unwavering composure and master the art of staying calm even in the most challenging situations. In this episode of Friday Field Notes, Ryan Michler offers eight actionable tips to cultivate calmness, teaching you how to manage emotional regulation effectively. Harness this skill to enhance decision-making and leadership capabilities, ensuring you navigate crises and emotional exchanges confidently and clearly. Understanding and managing personal triggers is crucial for maintaining a stress-free life. Ryan discusses techniques for identifying triggers and minimizing their impact, allowing you to control reactions and avoid overwhelm. Simplifying your life becomes the pathway to success, as we emphasize setting boundaries and focusing on key objectives. SHOW HIGHLIGHTS (00:00) Episode Intro (00:28) Maintaining Calm in Difficult Situations (04:20) Living Your Life With Purpose (17:04) Identifying and Managing Triggers (20:59) Simplifying Life for Success (31:50) The Iron Council for Brotherhood Battle Planners: Pick yours up today! Order Ryan's new book, The Masculinity Manifesto. For more information on the Iron Council brotherhood. Want maximum health, wealth, relationships, and abundance in your life? Sign up for our free course, 30 Days to Battle Ready
Anti-emperyalizm, Anti-Trumpizm ve "Man Friday"
Unlock the keys to unshakable confidence and self-assurance in this episode of Friday Field Notes, where Ryan Michlers tells us how to harness the power of self-validation over external approval. Discover the profound impact of honoring personal commitments and how they lay the foundation for integrity and resilience, propelling you toward genuine influence and opportunity. Ryan deep dives into the importance of understanding the motives behind your successes and the true value of building confidence through self-awareness and introspection. Expect actionable insights that will help you reflect on your journey and steer it toward self-growth and improvement. SHOW HIGHLIGHTS (00:00) Episode Intro (00:50) Building Confidence and Security as Men (15:21) Strengthening Confidence and Security (22:43) MensForge Battle Planners: Pick yours up today! Order Ryan's new book, The Masculinity Manifesto. For more information on the Iron Council brotherhood. Want maximum health, wealth, relationships, and abundance in your life? Sign up for our free course, 30 Days to Battle Ready
Olympic boxing is embroiled in gender controversy, as a female boxer gets absolutely pummeled by what seems like a male opponent. Plus, two illegal immigrants from the Middle East are released on bail after attempting to break into a military base. And finally, Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg says crime decreased under Joe Biden and increased under President Trump - we debunk his ridiculous crime claim.Guest Host: Riley LewisGuests:Valentina Gomez | Candidate, Missouri Secretary of State & Former NCAA Division I Collegiate SwimmerTerry Newsome | President, Parents Involved in Education, Illinois Chapter & Podcast Co-Host, Behind Enemy LinesDr. John Lott | President, Crime Prevention Research CenterJim Nelles | Author & Supply Chain Consultant
In this episode of Friday Field Notes, Ryan Michler unlocks the secrets to mastering respectful and effective conversations. Learn the "10 Commandments of Healthy Conversation" and understand how to navigate complex topics like the transgender movement and COVID-19 without falling prey to the allure of popular opinions. Through real-world examples, Ryan highlights how critical thinking can safeguard your discussions from resentment and animosity. Ryan tackles the nuanced concept of the burden of proof, addressing its significance in debates on contentious issues such as transgenderism and healthcare. Discover why those making bold claims must back them up with solid evidence and how this principle applies to political and scientific conversations. Personal anecdotes and notable examples, including reflections on Dr. Fauci, serve to illustrate the dangers of arguing from ignorance and the importance of informed debate. Finally, Ryan offers practical advice on avoiding logical fallacies in both decision-making and debate. From understanding false dichotomies to steering clear of straw man arguments, this episode equips you with the tools you need for intelligent, honest discourse. Join us to enhance your communication skills, build credibility, and engage in more meaningful, respectful dialogues. SHOW HIGHLIGHTS (00:00) - Episode Intro (02:18) - The 10 Commandments of Healthy Conversation (12:40) - Burden of Proof and Ignorance (21:26) - Avoiding Logical Fallacies in Decision Making (33:14) - Avoiding Logical Fallacies in Debate (38:32) - Communicating Like a Logical Man (43:22) - Enhancing Communication for Success Battle Planners: Pick yours up today! Order Ryan's new book, The Masculinity Manifesto. For more information on the Iron Council brotherhood. Want maximum health, wealth, relationships, and abundance in your life? Sign up for our free course, 30 Days to Battle Ready
In this week's FRIDAY FIELD NOTES, Ryan Michler unlocks the key to a confident and fulfilling life, where hard-hitting truths every man must embrace are confronted. Discover why men aren't inherently entitled to anything and the critical importance of continuously proving worth through performance and value. Learn how to build more meaningful relationships and endeavors by making significant contributions that truly count. Find out how true strength lies in humility and honesty as conventional ideas of vulnerability are challenged. Ryan delves into the power of openly addressing struggles without falling into victimhood. Understand the crucial value of presenting solutions and maintaining control over circumstances to foster stronger personal relationships and an unshakeable sense of self-worth. Embrace the liberating power of focusing on what can be controlled and letting go of what can't. Discover practical advice on personal growth, skill enhancement, and nurturing meaningful relationships to lead a more adaptable and resilient life. SHOW HIGHLIGHTS - (00:00) - Episode Intro - (00:40) - 10 Harsh Truths Every Man Needs - (12:24) - The Power of Humility and Honesty - (24:22) - Letting Go and Accepting Life's Realities - (38:21) - Join IronCouncil Battle Planners: Pick yours up today! Order Ryan's new book, The Masculinity Manifesto. For more information on the Iron Council brotherhood. Want maximum health, wealth, relationships, and abundance in your life? Sign up for our free course, 30 Days to Battle Ready
This episode of Unbound with Ricardo features amazing Dis, producers and musicians from the Middle East, Brazil, USA, Canada, UK, France and Australia. expect past, present and future classic Disco, Boogie, house, and Dance music from Discotecas, Flying Mojito Bros, Seamus Haji & Phebe Edwards, Crown Heights Affair, Raze, Man Friday, Hysteric and more…Keep it locked.This is Unbound with Ricardo for The Face Radio, sharing past, present and future classic dance music from around the world and back...keep it locked first and third Wednesday of every month. Next Unbound: 1/5/2024 For more info and tracklisting, visit: https://thefaceradio.com/unboundTune into new broadcasts of Unbound LIVE, Opposite Wednesdays from 10 PM - Midnight EST / 3 - 5 AM GMT (Thursday).//Dig this show? Please consider supporting The Face Radio: http://support.thefaceradio.com Support The Face Radio with PatreonSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/thefaceradio. Join the family at https://plus.acast.com/s/thefaceradio. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this somber edition of Florida Man Friday, we delve into the heart-wrenching stories that stretch far beyond the state's sunlit shores. Our host Ky guides us through a trio of cases that challenge the lighter tone we've come to expect from the Sunshine State.First, we unravel the peculiar disappearance of 52-year-old Marlene Lopez, last seen at her Florida home only to be discovered days later, trapped in a shipping container with no memory of how she got there. The mystery deepens as we contemplate the circumstances that led her to this strange predicament.Next, we descend into the depths of a storm drain where 43-year-old Lindsey Jane Kennedy was found after being reported missing. Naked, disoriented, and claiming to have wandered the sewers for weeks, her story raises questions about the intersection of mental health and the choices that lead us into darkness.Finally, we confront the raw reality of suicide as we honor the memory of two law enforcement officers, Clayton Osteen and Victoria Pacheco, whose tragic end left behind an infant son. Their story is a poignant reminder of the silent battles fought by those who serve and the urgent need for open discussions about mental health in high-stress professions.This episode is not just a recount of events; it's a call to awareness, a plea for compassion, and a spotlight on the critical need for suicide prevention resources. While there are no polls or lighthearted banter today, Ky invites listeners to share their experiences and thoughts on these profound issues.Remember, if you or someone you know is struggling, there is help available. Reach out, speak up, and let's continue the conversation. Tune in as we navigate the complex tapestry of Love and Murder, where not all tales are told with a smile, but all are shared with heart.
Christian Huff is a follower of Christ, a husband to Sadie Robertson Huff, a father of 2, a mentor to Many, & the most JACKED man in the state of Louisiana. In 2021, he started a podcast called 4:8 men. The podcast is based on 1 Timothy 4:8, which reads "For physical training is of some value, but godliness has value for all things, holding promise for both the present life and the life to come." In this episode, we talk a lot about physical and spiritual training. We particularly discuss how young men these days are being influenced in the gym. While it's great to be physically fit, it can easily turn into an idolization of yourself. Christian gives some great advice on how to focus on God instead of yourself in life and while in the gym. We also discuss his new 4:8 Man Challenge, which is a 30 day devo and workout program. Don't miss this one! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/hampton-dortch/message
How can you be poor and yet rich? Does that make any sense? This week we are studying a story from the Bible about a poor man who was rich. He had money, he had honor, and to everyone around him it appeared that he had it all...but...something was missing. He knew it. When he asked Jesus what he was missing, Jesus tried to help him understand that the money wasn't the problem, it was the LOVE of money that came between him and God. Would he give it up so he could be saved in God's kingdom??? We'll find out! Year C Quarter 1 Week 10All Bible verses are from the NKJVWrite to Ms. Katie: seedpod@startingwithjesus.comKatie's Korner: https://startingwithjesus.com/katies-korner/Find the Lessons Here: Kindergarten https://bit.ly/SeedPodKLessonsPrimary https://bit.ly/SeedPodPLessonsConnect with Us:Website: https://startingwithjesus.comStarting With Jesus - YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/StartingWithJesusSeedPod - YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCCvU2FBPEL5-Zi2QW0STVLg Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/startingwithjesusFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/startingwithjesusAcknowledgments:Bible Readings this week: Nailah Podcast Producer: Katie ChitwoodSound Engineer: Dillon AustinMy Bible First, https://bit.ly/SeedPodLesson for use of their Bible Lesson curriculum.AudioVerse, https://www.audioverse.org/ for partnering with us and supporting our ministry.Lindsey Mills, for writing and performing our SeedPod Kids Theme Song & Background Music. To learn more about her music or to get her CD, email her: lindsey@startingwithjesus.com
Today’s episode of Friday Flashbacks was originally Episode-562- Dave Canterbury on Survivability for the Common Man and was originally recorded on 11-30-10. In this episode we talked to Dave about what you need to know before spending time off the … Continue reading →
In this week's FRIDAY FIELD NOTES, Ryan Michler discusses adversity and shares 5 different mindsets you can incorporate in order to combat and overcome this year's inevitable challenges and hardships like a man. Hit Ryan up on Instagram at @ryanmichler and share what's working in your life. SHOW HIGHLIGHTS FIVE tips to help overcome adversity Our energy is infectious Adversity comes and goes Adversity is opportunity Realizing our triggers and where they come from Emotions are a factor, not the only factor Battle Planners are back in stock. Pick yours up today! Order Ryan's new book, The Masculinity Manifesto. For more information on the Iron Council brotherhood. Want maximum health, wealth, relationships, and abundance in your life? Sign up for our free course, 30 Days to Battle Ready
Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe原文Chapter Seven: Man FridayFor two years I never went anywhere without my gun.I felt lonely and afraid, and had many sleepless nights.One night there was a very bad storm, and I thought I heard the sound of guns out at sea.The next morning I looked out, and saw a ship.It was lying on its side not far from the shore.Quickly, I put my little boat in the water and sailed out to it.There were two dead men on the ship, but no one alive.The bodies of the other sailors were lost in the sea.I took some clothes and tools, and also a box of Spanish gold and silver money.I was a rich man now, but what use was money to me?I could not buy anything with it.I wanted people, a friend, somebody to talk to ... somebody who could help me escape from my island.One morning I woke up and made a plan.'I'll try to catch one of the prisoners of the wild men,' I said to myself. 'He'll be happy to be alive and perhaps he'll help me to escape.'I watched day and night, but for a year and a half there were no boats.Then one day five boats came.There were about thirty men and they had two prisoners.They made their fire on the sand and danced round it.Then they killed one of the prisoners and began to cook their terrible meal.The second prisoner waited under the trees, with two men to watch him.Suddenly, the prisoner turned and ran.The two men ran after him, but the other wild men were busy round the fire and did not see what was happening.The prisoner ran like a wild goat, and soon I saw that he was coming near the bottom of my hill.As fast as I could, I ran down the hill and jumped out of the trees between the prisoner and the two wild men.I hit the first man with the wooden end of my gun and he fell down, but I had to shoot the second man.The poor prisoner did not move.He was afraid of the noise of my gun.I called to him and tried to show him that I was friendly.Slowly, he moved nearer to me, but just then the first wild man began to get up from the ground.Then the prisoner spoke and I understood that he wanted my sword.How happy I was to hear words again!I gave him my sword, and at once he cut off the head of his enemy.Hurriedly, we hid the dead bodies under some leaves, and then left quickly.I took my prisoner to my secret cave on the other side of the island and gave him food and drink.After that, he went to sleep.He was a fine young man, about twenty-five years old, tall and well-built, with a kind face and a nice smile.He had a brown skin, black hair, bright eyes and strong white teeth.I decided to give him the name of 'Man Friday', because I first saw him on a Friday.When he woke up in the morning, he ran out to me.I was milking my goats in the field, and he got down on the ground and put his head near my foot.I understood that he was thanking me, and I tried to show him that I was his friend.I began to teach him to speak English, and soon he could say his name, 'Master', and 'Yes' and 'No'.How good it was to hear a man's voice again!Later that day we went back to my first house.We went carefully along the beach, but there were no boats and no wild men.Just blood and bones all over the sand.I felt ill, but Friday wanted to eat the pieces of men's bodies which were still on the ground.I showed him that this was terrible for me, and he understood.When we got to my house, I gave Man Friday some trousers, and I made him a coat and a hat.He liked his new clothes very much.Then I made him a little tent to sleep in, but for a few weeks I always took my gun to bed with me.Perhaps Friday was still a wild man and would try to kill me in the night.At first, Friday was very afraid of my gun.Sometimes he talked to it, and asked it not to kill him.Friday was a quick learner and his English got better day by day.I told him the story of my adventures and about life in England, and he told me about his country and his people.One day we were at the top of the highest hill on the island, and we were looking out to sea.It was a very clear day and we could see a long way.Suddenly, Friday began to jump up and down, very excited.'What's the matter?' I said.'Look, Master, look!' Friday cried. 'I can see my country. Look over there!'I looked, and there to the north-west, between the sea and the sky, was a long thin piece of land.I looked, and there to the north-west, between the sea and the sky, was a long thin piece of land.I began to think again about escape.Perhaps Friday wanted to go home too.Perhaps together we could get to his country.But what then?Would Friday still be my friend, or would his people kill me and eat me?I took Friday to the other side of the island and showed him my big canoe.It still lay under the trees.It was very old now, and there were holes in the wood.'Could a boat like this sail to your country, Friday?' I asked him.'Oh yes,' he answered. 'A boat like this can carry a lot of food and drink.''Then we'll make another canoe like it, and you can go home in it,'I said.But Friday looked very unhappy.'Why are you angry with me?' he asked. 'What have I done? Why do you want to send me home?''But I thought you wanted to go home,' I said. 'Yes. But you must come with me. Kill me if you want, but don't send me away fromyou!'Then I saw that Friday was a true friend, and so I agreed to go with him.We began work on the canoe at once.Friday chose the tree himself - he understood wood better than I did - and we cut it down.We worked hard and in a month the boat was finished.Two weeks later it was in the sea, and we began to get ready for our long journey.
In this week's FRIDAY FIELD NOTES, Ryan Michler discusses the importance of resilience, in all circumstances, and provides FOUR steps to help men become more resilient. Hit Ryan up on Instagram at @ryanmichler and share what's working in your life. SHOW HIGHLIGHTS Accept our role and calling as men (to protect, provide, and preside) Realize that people are watching us “Respond” instead of “react” Recognize that “struggle” is subjective Order Ryan's new book, The Masculinity Manifesto. For more information on the Iron Council brotherhood. Want maximum health, wealth, relationships, and abundance in your life? Sign up for our free course, 30 Days to Battle Ready ⠀ Download the NEW Order of Man Twelve-Week Battle Planner App and maximize your week.
In this week's FRIDAY FIELD NOTES, Ryan Michler breaks down the definition of a “real man” and discusses the 3 key areas where men should focus. Hit Ryan up on Instagram at @ryanmichler and share what's working in your life. SHOW HIGHLIGHTS Definition of a man: A real man is an adult male who who is on the path to effectively protect, provide, and preside. To Protect: A man protects his family, his possessions, and his community Be on the path to health Be on the path to defend To Provide: Provide for basic needs, but also to provide emotional support and be emotionally stable Be on the path to building skill sets Keep emotions in check To Preside: Have a vision and communicate that vision Lead by example Get back on the path when you falter The IRON COUNCIL is now open for a limited time. For more information on the Iron Council brotherhood. Order Ryan's new book, The Masculinity Manifesto. Want maximum health, wealth, relationships, and abundance in your life? Sign up for our free course, 30 Days to Battle Ready ⠀ Download the NEW Order of Man Twelve-Week Battle Planner App and maximize your week.
Now for a roundup of accessible arts events as RNIB Connect Radio's Toby Davey catches up with Jess Beal from VocalEyes, the national audio description charity providing access to the arts for blind and partially sighted people to share some of the accessible events that are featured in their weekly email newsletter. Audio described shows and events included: The Ocean at the End of The Lane - Wednesday 8 February 7.30pm, touch tour 5.30pm, curve Theatre, Leicester The Mirror Crack'd - Thursday 9 February, 7.30pm, touch tour 6pm,Wycombe Swan Theatre, High Wycombe The King and I - Saturday 11 February, 2.30pm, Marlowe Theatre, Canterbury Choir of Man - Friday 17 February, 3.30pm, Arts Theatre, London Birmingham Royal Ballet: Swan Lake - Saturday 18 February, 2.30pm, touch tour 12.15pm, Birmingham Hippodrome To find out more about these and other up-coming audio-described arts events as well as details about how to sign up to the VocalEyes weekly email newsletter do visit the VocalEyes website - https://vocaleyes.co.uk (Image shows the VocalEyes logo. A speech bubble with 'VOCALEYES' written in bold black letters next to it)
FOR ZION'S SAKE - A Whole Hearted Man - FridaySupport the show: https://shellyandjunevolk.com/product/partner-with-us-psalm-127-fund/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
It's time for some countdowns and list based entertainment! Todays TOPic (you see what I did there?) AQUATOBER is heading to CAMP, so make sure and pack everything you could possibly need: Electronic Football/Corkscrews/Potato Sacks/Chocalate/A girl that knows the ROBOT/MAP of NY (TORONTO) Ok Maybe you only need these things if you're going to CAMP CRYSTAL LAKE, but that is EXACTLY where we are going! Jonnie is going to rank all 12 films in the FRIDAY FRANCHISE...and in less than one hour!!!
1) Grandma knew by L (narrated by Linda) Grandma knew the exact year that she'll leave this world. Leaving letters and notes behind for her loved ones. But how does she knows? 2) Limping old man by Anony An old man asked the confessor for a smoke and stayed a little while for a chat, followed by some weird question. When the confessor turned away for 5 seconds, the limping old man was gone, vanished into thin air. 3) Old man by Marc MJX (narrated by Angela) A friend claimed she saw something in her rented unit. The confessor bravely offered to spend a night with her, but ended up also spending time with a ghostly old man who stood staring at them by the bed. Know Your Hantu - a north-eastern Thailand ghost Links: BUY US COFFEE! https://www.buymeacoffee.com/scfridaylive Full video, click here: Youtube/SupernaturalConfessions You can submit your confession here: Supernatural Confessions You can join our Facebook group here: SC Private Group, It must be the Hantu
1) Video of family member pouring their mother's ash into a flowing stream, it then formed what seem to be the word, "love" 2) The shadow man by Anon (narrated by Arnold) Yet another classic shadow man sighting. Could there be more to this than purely the power of suggestion? 3) Unpaid Debt by Hady (narrated by Desmond) Promises are binding in the supernatural world. When you ask for a favour by do not honour your promise. something will come back to claim the debt one form or another. Know Your Hantu - Man with a Hat Links: BUY US COFFEE! https://www.buymeacoffee.com/scfridaylive Full video, click here: Youtube/SupernaturalConfessions You can submit your confession here: Supernatural Confessions You can join our Facebook group here: SC Private Group, It must be the Hantu
You've probably heard of the Twelveth Man from a certain Maroon school, but did you know about the Fourth Man? Listen and learn, and be blessed! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/eradio-valverde/support
MP3 Link Play via Mixcloud Dave and John in the chair for this week's show with an ace selection of soul, funk, jazz, disco, boogie, house, balearica and loads more. Featuring tracks by Hannah Williams, Man Friday, Lorca, Frank & Tony, Lex, Mark Capanni, Lighthouse Family, Magnum Force, Leon 'Ndugu' Chancler, and many, many more. Enjoy. RSS Feed: 6MS Sessions
On today's Florida Man Friday we discuss a horny teacher who was grabbing asses in class (00:14:17), Panama City Beach Man tries to eat and flush his massive supply of Fentanyl (00:50:10), and so much more… (00:00:00) - Timestamps (00:00:36) - A Discussion About the Potency of Florida Men and Facial Hair Styles 6-Pack of Florida Man Stories (00:14:17) - New Port Richey - Culinary Arts Teacher Raymond James Webb got caught slapping asses and making students lube up too many sausages in class… (00:25:55) - Port Richey - Driving Instructor Hudson's Gregory Sorensen got busted for a DUI in his “Student Driver” car with a BAC over .20! (00:34:26) - Florida Woman awarded over $5 Million for Wrongful Impregnation from a Vermont Doctor Using his Own Sperm (00:41:58) - Marion County Walmart - Incredible Tazing Video of Meth'd Up Woman Wielding Knife (00:50:10) - Panama City Beach - 50 Year-old Fentanyl Dealer Steven Michael Haley Arrested While Trying to Eat and Flush Drugs (00:55:08) - Miami Gardens - JV “Catwoman” Attempts to Rob Bulletproof Store at Gunpoint These stories, and much more, brought to you by our incredible sponsors: Harry's - New Harry's customers can redeem a Starter Set. You get a five-blade razor, a weighted handle, foaming shave gel with aloe, and a travel cover to protect your blades when you're on the go. That's a $13 value for just $3. http://Harrys.com/HARDFACTOR to try Harry's today. Caliper CBD - Get flavorless with Caliper CBD! Get 20% off your first order with promo code FACTOR at http://trycaliper.com/FACTOR. Go to store.hardfactor.com and patreon.com/hardfactor to support the pod with incredible merch and bonus podcasts Leave us a Voicemail at 512-270-1480, send us a voice memo to hardfactorvoicemail@gmail.com, and/or leave a 5-Star review on Apple Podcasts to hear it on Friday's show Other Places to Listen: Spotify, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, Lots More... Watch Full Episodes on YouTube
In this week's FRIDAY FIELD NOTES, Ryan Michler breaks down FIVE tips to help you lead your wife and family more effectively. Hit Ryan up on Instagram at @ryanmichler and share what's working in your life. SHOW HIGHLIGHTS Lead yourself more effectively Communicate and uphold boundaries and expectations Hear and understand your spouse Serve her Cast your vision for the future Want maximum health, wealth, relationships, and abundance in your life? Sign up for our free course, 30 Days to Battle Ready ⠀ Download the NEW Order of Man Twelve-Week Battle Planner App and maximize your week.
The far more censored version of the award-winning and unparalleled "A Mediocre Time with Tom and Dan." - "A Corporate Time" is a daily companion and terrestrial radio show heard nationally on iHeartRadio. It's silly.
Comedian Jimmy Clitheroe played the titular character of a cheeky schoolboy living with his family in the North of England in this radio comedy produced by the BBC. The show also stared Peter Sinclair, Patricia Burke, and Diana Day. GSMC Classics presents some of the greatest classic radio broadcasts, classic novels, dramas, comedies, mysteries, and theatrical presentations from a bygone era. The GSMC Classics collection is the embodiment of the best of the golden age of radio. Let Golden State Media Concepts take you on a ride through the classic age of radio, with this compiled collection of episodes from a wide variety of old programs. ***PLEASE NOTE*** GSMC Podcast Network presents these shows as historical content and have brought them to you unedited. Remember that times have changed and some shows might not reflect the standards of today's politically correct society. The shows do not necessarily reflect the views, standards, or beliefs of Golden State Media Concepts or the GSMC Podcast Network. Our goal is to entertain, educate give you a glimpse into the past.
The guys are on Remote and talk with Austin Eckler and Tim Conway Jr!
The guys are out on Remote Santa Monica and talk about their history on remotes and Kevin Harlan joins them to preview the Super Bowl.
The Guys are on remote and talk with Eric Dickerson along with Kevin Harlan join the show!
Derry Clarke is one of Irelands most recognized celebrity chefs ... Derry has also been a reality television judge, alongside names like Bibi Baskin and Sammy Leslie on RTÉ One reality television series Fáilte Towers, and he has appeared on other programmes such as The Restaurant, The Afternoon Show and The Panel (in 2008. Derry's professional career began at the age of sixteen years. He started his career in 1972, with Peter Barry, known for The Man Friday. He came back to Dublin in 1977 and worked in Le Coq Hardi in Dublin for four years, under John Howard. He also worked for eight years in Le Bon Appetit in Dublin. Derry Clarke has received international recognition, having been inducted into Food & Wine Magazine's "Hall of Fame" and been granted a five-star review by The New York Times. The newspaper described his restaurant as "superb" and "a good spot to linger" whilst in Dublin.
Botox, bum fillers, Operation Transformation, what men and women are REALLY thinking, aging gracefully and confidently…this episode has it all. Elaine Crowley one of those great characters that make an impression the moment you meet her - funny, sparky, honest, and so easy to talk to. She's also really interested in people, which is why her long running tv show in Virgin Media One was such a success. The Elaine Show aired its final show recently, which naturally Elaine was very disappointed about. We chat about what it was all about and what it meant to her, and so many other things besides. We had so much fun recording this episode. EXCLUSIVE COMEDY: Looking forward to the excitement of Trick or Treaters calling to your door this Halloween? This year, you might get more than you bargained for… Enjoy! MarioProduced by Patrick Haughey, AudioBrand. | www.audiobrand.ie See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Welcome back to another episode! Today's film is all about menstruation and how it can lead to employment opportunities, either for making cloth pads or sanitary pads. Following the story of the film Pad Man, it conveys the message of how periods are stigmatized and considered as something impure. We follow the journey of a man who sets out to make low cost sanitary napkins as well as machines that manufacture them. It portrays the importance of hygienic sanitary products and its access to millions of women.
In this week's FRIDAY FIELD NOTES, Ryan Michler shares seven points to help maintain your frame as a man. Hit Ryan up on Instagram at @ryanmichler and share what's working in your life. SHOW HIGHLIGHTS #1 People will work against you #2 Evaluate other people's motives #3 Establish, communicate, and uphold boundaries #4 Disengage or defend your position #5 Stop unnecessary emotion #6 Maintain the long-term perspective #7 Eliminate your ego Want maximum health, wealth, relationships, and abundance in your life? Sign up for our free course, 30 Days to Battle Ready Download the NEW Order of Man Twelve-Week Battle Planner App and maximize your week.
In this week's FRIDAY FIELD NOTES, Ryan Michler shares the origin of Order of Man and four lessons he learned along the way. Hit Ryan up on Instagram at @ryanmichler and share what's working in your life. SHOW HIGHLIGHTS #1 Humble Yourself #2 Pursue Your Interests #3 Don't Burn The Boat #4 Minimum Viable Product Want maximum health, wealth, relationships, and abundance in your life? Sign up for our free course, 30 Days to Battle Ready Download the NEW Order of Man Twelve-Week Battle Planner App and maximize your week.
Man vs nature is kind of the theme of this (spoiler lite) instalment of Film Club, as we cast our attention towards three very different reinterpretations of the basic Robinson Crusoe story: Cast Away, Man Friday and Swiss Army Man.
Welcome to the Instant Trivia podcast episode 120, where we ask the best trivia on the Internet. Round 1. Category: Beauty Queens 1: The Miss America Pageant stopped giving this award for friendliness in 1974. Miss Congeniality Award. 2: Ex-Miss New Orleans who went down the "Road" with Bing and Bob. Dorothy Lamourr. 3: She was 1st runner-up in the 1940 Miss Venice Beach Contest -- she didn't look like Lily Munster yet. Yvonne De Carlo. 4: She won Miss World-USA in '73 --but the headband, bracelets and red, white and blue costume came later. Lynda Carter. 5: This Miss Sweden of 1951 was Fellini's femme fatale in 1959's "La dolce vita". Anita Ekberg. Round 2. Category: Driving Don'ts 1: "Piggish" term for an aggressive driver who invades the lanes of other drivers. "Road Hog". 2: This phrase describes an accident in which the driver flees the scene. Hit-and-run. 3: Don't gun the engine and pop this pedal. Clutch. 4: To make your tires squeak and leave blackmarks is called "burning" this. Rubber. 5: It's the term for what you're doing if you can read an "If you can read this you're too close" bumper sticker. Tailgating. Round 3. Category: British Authors 1: Princess Di's step-grandmother, this "Queen of Romance" passed away in 2000 at the age of 98. Barbara Cartland. 2: Peter Rabbit and Benjamin Bunny are just a few of this British author's hare-brained protagonists. Beatrix Potter. 3: His professor, Dr. Joseph Bell, a master of diagnostic deduction, was his model for Sherlock Holmes. Conan Doyle. 4: In a Robert Browning title, "The Book" is paired with this object -- but not the one Robert gave Elizabeth. Ring (but not the ring he gave her). 5: From the early 1900s, his "The First Men in the Moon" and "The War in the Air" proved eerily prophetic. H.G. Wells. Round 4. Category: The Category Of Daniel 1: In 1775 this pioneering American blazed the Wilderness Road. Daniel Boone. 2: One of his literary works gave us the term "Man Friday". Daniel Defoe. 3: On the big screen he's been Gerry Conlon, Hawkeye and Christy Brown. Daniel Day-Lewis. 4: One of his best-known orations is the Bunker Hill speech of 1825. Daniel Webster. 5: The Pentagon Papers he gave to the N.Y. Times in 1971 revealed deceptions about Vietnam dating back to the 1940s. Daniel Ellsberg. Round 5. Category: "C"Omedians 1: He teamed with Cheech on numerous comedy albums. Tommy Chong. 2: Some of his "Seven Words You Can't Say on TV" are now said on TV, especially cable. George Carlin. 3: "The Best Second Banana in the Business", he gained undying fame as sewer worker Ed Norton. Art Carney. 4: She was the first original member of "Saturday Night Live" to score a success with a second TV series. Jane Curtin. 5: This understated comedian played Mr. Peepers and was the voice of Underdog. Wally Cox. Thanks for listening! Come back tomorrow for more exciting trivia!
Do you like the band Queen? I do: For good or bad, they maximized the potential of the modern recording studio with repeated vocal passes until the magnetic tape was almost transparent, pushing the envelope literally to the breaking point. They never EVER limited themselves to one style. One need only listen to the first four tracks of “A Night at the Opera”. From almost prog changes in “Death on Two Legs” to the underrated, brave, funny, and effortless whimsy of “Lazing on a Sunday Afternoon” to Roger Taylor’s best Queen song, “I’m In Love With My Car” to the light, breezy but taut pop masterpiece “You’re My Best Friend”. I didn’t even mention what would come on Side Two. No Band Rocked Harder. Go back and listen to “Tie Your Mother Down” or “Killer Queen” (my first Queen record) and they effortlessly mastered style after style. And surprisingly, in the time of Glam, they weren’t Glam. Sure, they looked it. But looks were part of the contradiction. Freddie Mercury never took himself too seriously. We all knew he was gay, but we didn’t care. In 1975, Elton John was flamboyant, but Freddie was gay. And the reason it never hurt him was because he didn’t care, at all, about what we thought of that. Think about how many gay pop singers had come out before that. Besides John Lennon, I mean. Hits, hits, more hits. All styles. You just never knew what was going to come out of that radio. Every member wrote and every member wrote hits (in England, anyhow). And those hits were big, never cheap, never gimmicky. They had a joy and a sense of daring that no one since The Beatles had tried. I cannot emphasise enough how many chances they took. Some, like “Mustapha”, didn’t land, but some most assuredly did. I will also add that no member released anything remotely approaching solo success or artistic transcendance. I think this speaks to an overall undefinable chemistry. For a band, this is a GOOD THING. I don’t: Queen had the pretension to put the words, “No synths!” in their liner notes. Isn’t multi-tracking guitars until you gag pretty much the same thing? And making your vocal arrangements dense and multi-tracked to the point of sounding like a chorale, to me, was the same cheat. I said no band rocked harder. But they were severely limited by their drummer. They couldn’t swing. Cheap Trick, Led Zeppelin, The Beatles...they could swing. I never heard a Hammond organ on a Queen record or soul of any kind. Or real emotion except for rage, lust, and occasional whimsy. There was nothing...whiter...than a Queen album. Roger Taylor should not have been allowed to put his own songs on Queen albums. Those songs were all pretty much dreck, sounding like the opposite of the good things about Queen. They sounded like studio jam sessions. I never liked a single one. His boring solo records bear this out. Queen is the bonafide best example of “live album as placeholder”. By no means were they the only ones. But if you’re the hottest band in the world (and would continue your run) why break your momentum with one of the worst, most lifeless live albums of the ‘70? It could only be as a money grab. This is a theme with Queen. In fact, by the end, Queen, like Journey, became a money-making Queen tribute band. I HATED HATED HATED that movie. We’ll never truly know how it went down since Roger Taylor and Brian May had control of the way the story was told. But as an amateur movie critic, I would have really liked a bio that discussed the band less and just focused on Freddie’s amazing life, warts and all. That IS the remaining member’s fault. Reinventing the history, even of a band, does a disservice to Freddie Mercury. I think by now we can handle the dissonance and contradictions. “The Game”, from 1980 was their only #1 album in the US. None of their subsequent albums reached even the Top 20. Sales don’t necessarily reflect quality, but I can assure you, young reader, in this case, the dearth of subsequent sales tells the story. Queen was decidedly on the downswing in America. Queen had 2 #1 songs in the US. Both from “The Game”. And “The Game” was their sole #1 album on Billboard. Ironically, it was the first album on which they DID use synths. “Another One Bites The Dust” and “Crazy Little Thing Called Love” were both departures. Almost parodies of styles derived from Black music. This podcast is all Queen but very little...QUEEN. Every member is represented (including Paul Rodgers, but only one Bad Company song) but like I said, Queen was an unidentifiable mix of talents, and not only that, their chemistry was never duplicated...by them, anyhow. Queen’s trajectory was closer to The Doors than The Beatles in that every one of their albums had some pretty bad songs to go with the ringers. I saw them for the “Jazz” tour, Buffalo, NY. 1979. They were ok. So...I like Queen. For their constant bravery, which cannot be faked. For their daring use of harmony. For their very underrated bassist John Deacon. And because, like The Doors, those singles were like nothing before or since. Who would dare? Man Friday & Jive Junior - Picking Up Sounds (1983) Man Friday is a former member of Funkapolitan who did this one 45 with John Deacon, which was produced by Wham! guitarist Robert Ahwai. Queen - Fun It (1979) A precursor to "Another One Bites The Dust", no? Freddie Mercury - In My Defence (1986) From Wikipedia: Dave Clark...wrote a science fiction stage musical, Time, which debuted in 1986. It played for two years in London's West End, starring Cliff Richard (replaced later by David Cassidy). The musical also launched a concept album called Time which featured Richard, Freddie Mercury, Leo Sayer, Stevie Wonder, and Dionne Warwick. Two million copies were sold and it spun off several hit singles. In the UK. Not so much in the US. Clark was by Mercury's bedside when he died on 24 November 1991. The Opposition (John Deacon) - Sunny (1970) Deacon's pre-Queen band. Michael Jackson & Freddie Mercury - State of Shock (1983) Brian May & Friends - Star Fleet Project (1983) Larry Lurex - I Can Hear Music (1973) Free - Heavy Load (1970) Queen - Tenement Funster - Sheer Heart Attack - Lyrics (1974) Roger Taylor - Fun in Space (1981) Roger Taylor - Future Management (1981) Bad Company - Burnin' Sky (1976) Roger Taylor - Killing Time (1984) Larry Lurex - Goin Back (1973) John Deacon & The Immortals - No Turning Back (1986) Roger Taylor - I Wanna Testify (1977) Freddie Mercury - Time Waits For No One (1986) Queen - Mother Love (1991) Queen - The Loser in the End (1974) Roger Taylor - Masters of War (1984) Brian May - Let Me Out (1984)
#53 - I have another episode today for the What Am I Going To Do With My Life Series.In case you are new to this show, every once in a while I will have a guest who talks about possible career choices. I like doing these interviews because you never know what just might resonate with someone. A chance comment can potentially be the answer to a question you might have.So here is another one for you. Are you super-organized? Are you dependable? Are you good with the details? Do you get the job done? Well, maybe you might consider being an executive assistant? In this interview, I am speaking with Jess Lindgren, who is the right-hand woman for Pat Flynn of Smart Passive Income. Pat is a very big name in the online entrepreneurial world and you may have heard me mention that he has been a huge influence and inspiration in my own online journey. Jess is right there to make sure he keeps on track in his mission of helping others. He could not do it alone. You are not just an assistant. An executive assistant is crucial to the success of any CEO. Lots of good stuff was mentioned in this episode and it can all be found at:howtolife.com/053
Don't take candy from strangers, and apparently sometimes you shouldn't take some from people you know. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
How about a comedy this week? We watch the fast-talking "His Girl Friday" and ponder its hilarity. Is it a true chuckling experience, or just a lot of bad sexist jokes?
Today, I share the two factors that make a male a man. Hit me up on Instagram at @ryanmichler and share with me what’s working in your life. Join our exclusive brotherhood, the Iron Council. Subscribe to our YouTube channel at www.youtube.com/orderofman Connect with us on Instagram and Twitter Please leave us a rating and review Support Order of Man by picking up some new merchandise in our store
Monday and the day Bruce Forsyth didn't play his cards right, community swimming pools and dirty rain. The daily Podcast diary of a British couple in Lockdown Spain, phase 2. Find out more: https://www.thesecretspain.com Day 78 Brucie Bonus Monday oh how I loathe you, but only because it rained last night for 10 minutes, but it was that dirty calima rain, the brown sand from the Sahara fell and covered everywhere in a sticky glaze. So we spent an hour this morning clearing it up from the outside terraces. If you don’t it finds its way into you home and gets trodden onto the tiles like Man Friday footprints. Phase 2 here in Granada Province, more restaurants are now opening, the beaches are opening, you can get married and go to a funeral. I think that’s about it, I am confused. We have kinda got into a pattern now, so are quite happy to make minimal journey’s and eat at home, for the moment. We are lucky we have outdoor space and a pool, for many Spanish living in small flats with large families – it must have been purgatory, at least now they can socialise. Even our friend Carmen was out with her friends yesterday, finally celebrating her birthday. I have never been that good in confined spaces, I think years of working in radio studios haven’t helped. When LBC was run by the TV news people ITN our studios were tiny, they were in the lower basement, although you were forbidden to call it that. The Management liked you to say lower atrium. But in reality the basement, next to the big pump that pumped the poo out of the building up to the London sewer. The building looks quite swish on the TV, if you have ever watched Channel Four news, all that glass and lit offices is real. Sadly, their studio is where the original canteen was. The canteen was amazing, there was a roast of the day, at least two mains and a veggie dish and desserts to die for. Infact where Jon Snow reads the news is where the dessert cart used to sit, I can’t watch the news without remembering the delicious spotted dick that they served in that canteen. The toilets in the building were another matter, the Architect Norman Foster built the ITN studios and had a love of Italian sanitaryware, so he designed these Italianesque bogs, complete with Italian plumbing and highly polished marble floors. Now Italian plumbing and British plumbing are a marriage made in hell, our pipes are 1mm larger than the Italians, so the loos leaked. Worse was if you were hoping for any kind of privacy whilst you were on the throne, there was no chance as the marble floors reflected you and your business to anyone standing by the sinks or urinals. Also, less glamorous was that ITN only had one dressing room, usually reserved for the female newsreader. So, the male newsreader would make-up in the toilet. Nothing is odder than seeing Dermot Murnaghan putting eye shadow on and turning to you as you are washing your hands to ask you if he had put too much on! So, I like to avoid working in small places, even though I am recording this in a cupboard right now. I also think the trauma of once getting stuck in the ITN lift with Julia Somerville. We had a stilted conversation about films for twenty long minutes of my life. The famous lifts of ITN appear on Channel Four news, they were fast and glass, anybody with a nervous disposition would be better off using the stairs that were oddly hidden behind a false door, - another Norman Foster idea, I guess. Chris remembers once Bruce Forsyth jumping into the ITN lift, Bruce stood beside him asking if the lift was going up to the ITV programme centre? Unfortunately, it was going down to the basement. Chris couldn’t help himself and turned to Bruce and did a Brucie “No Bruce you want to go higher, higher!” Bruce laughed, sadly it wasn’t his day, because they had summoned him to the ITV office to sack him on the grounds, he was too old for Play Your Cards Right. So, he went back to the BBC and Presented Strictly Come Dancing and took his audience with him. Monday and a Skype with a client, and a discussion about the community swimming pool. The complex measures to keep the pool social distance safe, hiring a member of staff and the fact that the pool pump needs maintenance, means our Estate will not open the swimming pool this year. I think a lot of communities are going to struggle to adequately fulfil the rules that the local and national Government have laid down, the local main town beaches open tomorrow, I hope people do a better job at social distancing than Southend-on-Sea has managed these last few days. This year the summer is going to look a much different place to that of a normal Spanish summer. I don’t think we will see the usual numbers of tourists coming this year. Flying will be far more complex, it was miserable enough before passing through airport security, add the extra sanitary measures, temperature taking and the like, not the best or most glamorous way to start your holiday. We shall see, but if you do make it to Spain, you will receive a warm welcome, enjoy good food, beautiful coastline and countryside, that much has not changed in the new normal.
On our 47th episode we have been to the cinema to try and see 'The Invisible Man', we have a special guest in our Something to scream about section and this episodes movie from the vault Paul is going for synergy as we watch 'Friday the 13th'00:30 - Into 05:20 - News 14:56 - 'The Invisible Man' 46:08 - Something to Scream About 01:15:50 - Movie From the Vault
Firstly, please ignore the background noise / disturbances in this episode, the source of which I cannot place to rectify. I’m still getting the hang of this thing! This one is about a person. One of many who was there for me when the chips were down. And oh how thankful I am for each and every one of them! Connect with me on LinkedIn or on Instagram @TruthAbtNobody / Twitter or write to me at thetruthaboutnobody.gmail.com - I'd love to hear from you! Oh, and do check out my other podcast "The Good Comms Podcast with Preeti Singh" on Anchor, Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts and your other favorite listening platforms! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/ps193/message
Today, I discuss how you can become a more compelling man. Hit me up on Instagram at @ryanmichler and share with me what’s working in your life. Join our exclusive brotherhood, the Iron Council. Subscribe to our YouTube channel at www.youtube.com/orderofman Connect with us on Instagram and Twitter Please leave us a rating and review Support Order of Man by picking up some new merchandise in our store
Whether you like it or not, we're back with Chapter 2! This episode sees Yitzhak having a very private moment interrupted, before a lover's argument ensues with our heroine! We learn of their relationship and dig a little deeper into just what our Man Friday-through-Thursday is all about. Joining us to kick wig heads all over the motel are podcaster Heidi Bennett and singer/musician Adam Schreiner! The next episode will be 'Chapter 3: Bilgewater’s Restaurant, St. Louis: The Tour Begins'. Join us on Facebook at Hedwig's Wicked Little Town! Buy our merchandise at TeePublic! Donate to us on Patreon! (Rewards coming soon) Today's intro and outro music was a cover of 'Wig in a Box' by Samantha Aaron. Your host has been: Jonfen - Twitter - Instagram Today's guests: Heidi Bennett - Website - Twitter Vibrant Visionaries - Website - Twitter - Instagram Spinal Tap Minute - Website - Facebook - Twitter - Instagram Cabin Minute Cast - Website - Facebook - Twitter - Instagram Adam Schreiner - Twitter - Instagram Ralph - Spotify - Facebook - Twitter - Instagram
Published in 1714 by Daniel Defoe, a notoriously controversial political pamphleteer, Robinson Crusoe marked the beginning of realistic fiction as a literary genre. Before the end of the year, the first volume had run through four editions. Now, that’s some 18th century bestselling! From Tom Hanks in Cast Away to Ridley Scott’s The Martian, Robinson Crusoe has had such an endless legacy that there is a word dedicated to its descendants to mark a genre: Robinsonade. It is a profound commentary on society, a tale of isolation and new beginnings, but Ol’ Matty dares to say that this is not a colonialist fairy tale, unwittingly locking horns with many critics including James Joyce. I think you can take him, bud.After a brush with death in the form of vengeance crazed unicycling bears and angry tribes, Ol’ Matty finds himself safe in a fellow castaway’s hideout. As his friend makes the bread, hunts the meat and gathers the other ingredients, Ol’ Matty makes himself useful, somehow, by regaling the tale of Robinson Crusoe, the tale of a young Englishman who defies the will of his parents, rejects the comforts of civilisation to become an adventurer, and finds himself alone and desolate on a deserted island, struggling turn the wilderness into his own utopia, or even, perhaps, a communist commune. Depends how generous you’re feeling.I’m noticing that every time Ol’ Matty tries to tell a ripper story, he just can’t find the right audience. Rob seemed downright bored by the telling of Robinson Crusoe, and leaves to investigate some riff raff armed with muskets, despite the M16 wielding grizzly hunting our hero outside. Ol’ Matty followed, armed with a club (sandwich), discovering that Rob had declared war against a group of invading pirates. There was no time to lose.I mean, of course Ol’ Matty joined the pirates. Who was this Rob guy anyway? It’s not like Rob has the ability of Crusoe and can defeat castaways and pirates alike by mastering fate and the island itself! After all, if Rob and Crusoe were one and the same, that would completely throw our deep and gritty story’s canon. In the first battle for island supremacy of many, I’m sure (knowing Ol’ Matty), our hero and his bafflingly loyal band of buccaneers do battle against some Rob dude and even an older enemy. Look at us, we’ve got recurring characters and intrigue!All the same, Ol' Matty has created a wonderfully tropical, topical and delicious word sandwich with all the perseverance and self-reflection of Defoe’s landmark novel, salvaging the shipwreak that is 18th century history (bread), swimming deeply into introspective story (meat), meeting nuanced and individualistic characters (cheese), foraging through thoughtful themes (sauce) and whatever he apparently feels fit the setting. I think it’s his way of making sure he adds salad. Well, he can’t seem to make friends even when he’s one of the few options, but he can make an effort.Robinson Crusoe (1719) is a confessional novel by Daniel Defoe. I say confessional for Defoe was quite cheeky, as the story is written as the journal of the titular character and his castaway adventures. Indeed, the first edition credited the work's protagonist Robinson Crusoe as its author, leading many readers to believe he was a real person and the book a travelogue of true incidents. It was not a hard sell, as this is a contender for the first English novel of all time. And yet Ol’ Matty has the audacity to claim Defoe is as relatable as a university student! I told him not to drink the seawater.Crusoe is the archetypal story of the castaway on a desert island, a wasteland turned to personal kingdom ripe with grapes and scrapes of all kinds, including pirates, cannibals, and the wrath of nature itself. I think there was some Grenache somewhere, too. That’s a kind of grape, right? Not that it’s in the book, just Ol’ Matty was drinking it while reading Crusoe on the island, and during his adventures on the island and also when recording on the island. I wonder if the island has AA?Love stories? Love hearing about the tales of old with Ol' Matty but want to know them yourself? Want to join the Book Club Sandwich but don't have the time or desire to sit down and read? Well, you dolt, check out Audible, where you can drive to your destination and faraway lands all at once. P.S. Audible, please sponsor me.For more short stories like the one featured here, Dandelion by Lore Segal, see The New Yorker either online or subscribe to have the magazine delivered for those delectable morning reads. You sponsor me too, New Yorker.I have only ever read the book with my own eyeballs so I can't personally vouch for any version on Audible, however there is an Amazon Classics Edition that I think the reader matches the tone of Crusoe in an entertaining way. This is Robinson Crusoe, narrated by Steve West.In terms of film adaptations, in my opinion, Cast Away with Tom Hanks is your best bet, along with The Martian if you want a version IN SPAACE (that’s not 1964’s Robinson Crusoe on Mars). If you want to see the traditional Crusoe in action, there’s the TV Show Crusoe, which I thought was pretty neat as a tike (but have not since revisited), Man Friday, as mentioned, is an alternate version of the story that reverses the roles of Crusoe and Friday to make a criticism against Western Civilisation, and one of my favourite filmmakers of all time, Luis Buñuel, made an adaptation in 1954.Until next time, my Quixotes!Ol' Matty's sources:https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2019/03/25/dandelionhttps://www.sbs.com.au/movies/article/2015/10/02/how-george-clooneys-o-brother-where-art-thou-accent-was-family-affair> - O’Brother Where Art Thou, George Clooney’s Accent’s origin - An overall biography of Daniel Defoe.https://www.undiscoveredscotland.co.uk/usbiography/s/alexanderselkirk.html – The potential source material, most likely, of Robinson Crusoehttps://www.theguardian.com/books/2019/apr/19/robinson-crusoe-at-300-its-time-to-let-go-of-this-toxic-colonial-fairytale – The Guardian’s attacking article, attacking interpretation of the text rather than the text itself.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robinson_Crusoe - Robinson Crusoe, good ol’ Wikipediahttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7rPXjCy83zg – Man Friday, the full film on YouTube.Find us on FACEBOOK, TWITTER, or EMAIL us on deliciouswordsandwichpodcast@gmail.comwww.thatsnotcanonproductions.com
Daniel Hahn considers language in the relationship between Robinson Crusoe and Man Friday, and how two meeting cultures communicate In this series of Essays, recorded in front of an audience at the 2019 Hay Festival, five writers respond to the themes of Daniel Defoe's ‘Robinson Crusoe'. Often described as the first novel, it's a story which still resonates, three hundred years after it was written, but also preserves the attitudes of its time. Fiona Stafford, Horatio Clare, Alex Wheatle, Alys Conran and Daniel Hahn reflect on the novel as a tale of exotic adventure, a study of isolation and a fantasy of colonial encounter.
Happy Friday~又到周五了!开熏!今天要教大家一个和「周五」有关的词汇:man Friday!什么意思呢?来听听今天的节目就知道啦~获取节目完整音频和笔记,请关注微信公众号「早安英文」,回复"笔记”即可。更多有意思的英语干货等着你! —————— 「微信」或者「微博」搜索关注[早安英文],查看更多有趣实用的中英双语节目。
It would be remiss of me not to express my gratitude this weekend for you and the other blessings I've enjoyed this year. I also want to talk with you about some of the problems I see in society, who this movement is for, and my vision for the future of Order of Man. www.orderofman.com Please leave us a rating and review!
**It's The Relax With Rendell Show Replay On Trax FM & Rendell Radio. This Week Rendell Played Tracks From Bruni Pagan, Donna Summer, The Four Tops, Man Friday, Sam Cooke, Slave, Steve Arrington, Sylvestor, …..& More. Catch Rendell Every Saturday From 7PM UK Time The Stations: Trax FM & Rendell Radio #traxfm #rendellradio #soul #funk #70ssoul #80ssoul #60s #boogie #disco #easylistening #soulclassics #reggae #nusoul Free Trax FM Android App: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=net.traxfmradio.ba.a6bcb The Trax FM Facebook Page : https://www.facebook.com/original103.3/ **
There is a difference between simply being a good man and being good at being a man. Today, I talk about the differences and why it's critical we learn to embrace the performative excellence that comes with the active role of being good at being a man. www.orderofman.com Please leave us a rating and review!
Robinson Crusoe lives on a desert island with Man Friday. There's no need for money. But then Woman Saturday comes along, selling goods that both men want to acquire, and they devise the concept of money, which she quickly grabs the lions share of. Next, they discover a large village on the other side of the island. How does that change the value of their three-person economy when they introduce an island-wide currency? Then, when they find a neighbouring island with a very productive economy, what is their money worth now? Phil Dobbie takes Prof Steve Keen through a series of hypotheticals, to understand the role money plays, right from its origins. Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.
Robinson Crusoe lives on a desert island with Man Friday. There’s no need for money. But then Woman Saturday comes along, selling goods that both men want to acquire, and they devise the concept of money, which she quickly grabs the lions share of. Next, they discover a large village on the other side of the island. How does that change the value of their three-person economy when they introduce an island-wide currency? Then, when they find a neighbouring island with a very productive economy, what is their money worth now? Phil Dobbie takes Prof Steve Keen through a series of hypotheticals, to understand the role money plays, right from its origins. To hear the full version subscribe by picking a plan in the right column of the Debunking Economics website (not the mobile app). Or become a patron at https://www.patreon.com/ProfSteveKeen
A Way with Words — language, linguistics, and callers from all over
How do languages change and grow? Does every language acquire new words in the same way? Martha and Grant focus on how that process happens in English and Spanish. Plus, the stories behind the Spanish word "gringo" and the old instruction to elementary school students to sit "Indian Style." Finally, the English equivalents of German sayings provide clever ways to think about naps, procrastination, lemons, and more. Also: catawampus, raunchy, awful vs. awesome, Man Friday, and no-see-ums. Listen to all episodes for free: https://waywordradio.org/ Support the show to keep episodes coming: https://waywordradio.org/donate Your responses, questions, and comments are welcomed at any time! https://waywordradio.org/contact words@waywordradio.org Listener line 1 (877) 929-9673 toll-free in the US and Canada Text/SMS +1 (619) 567-9673 Copyright Wayword, Inc., a 501(c)(3) corporation. All rights reserved.
Frog Man Friday on PMS. DVR with Dave Vassegh. Mr. Papadakis.
A Frog Man Friday on PMS. Minor Sports Stories. Great Sports Talk.
Well… after an amazing debut, I’ve missed posting the last 2 weeks due to being under the weather. But before I went down, I found a great mixtape I had… Continue reading "Uncle Eddy’s Mixtapes Vol. II – Take Me Back to C’Stone ’96"
A Way with Words — language, linguistics, and callers from all over
How do languages change and grow? Does every language acquire new words in the same way? Martha and Grant focus on how that process happens in English and Spanish. Plus, the stories behind the Spanish word "gringo" and the old instruction to elementary school students to sit "Indian Style." Finally, the English equivalents of German sayings provide clever ways to think about naps, procrastination, lemons, and more. Also: catawampus, raunchy, awful vs. awesome, Man Friday, and no-see-ums. FULL DETAILS If you're looking forlorn and at a loss, a German speaker might describe you with a phrase that translates as "ordered but not picked up." It's as if you're a forgotten pizza sitting on a restaurant counter. Sitting on the floor Indian style, with one's legs crossed, is a reference to Native Americans' habit of sitting that way, a practice recorded early in this country's history in the journals of French traders. Increasingly, though, schools across the United States are replacing this expression with the term criss-cross applesauce. In the United Kingdom, however, this way of sitting is more commonly known as Turkish style or tailor style. A nine-year-old from Yuma, Arizona, wants to know the origin of catawampus. So do etymologists. Catawampus means "askew," "awry," or "crooked." We do know the word has been around for more than a century, and is spelled many different ways, such as cattywampus and caddywampus. It may derive from the Scots word wampish, meaning to "wriggle," "twist," or "swerve." How sour is it? If you speak German, you might answer with a phrase that translates as "That's so sour it will pull the holes in your socks together." A sixth-grade teacher in San Antonio, Texas, is skeptical about a story that the gringo derives from a song lyric. He's right. The most likely source of this word is the Spanish word for "Greek," griego, a term applied to foreigners much the same way that English speakers might say that an unintelligible language is Greek to me. The ancient Greeks, on the other hand, imitated the sound of foreigners with the word barbaroi, the source of our own word barbarian. The board game Clue inspired this week's puzzle from our Quiz Guy John Chaneski. It also inspired him to create an online petition to give Mrs. White a doctor's degree. What's the meaning of the word raunchy? A woman in Indianapolis, Indiana, thinks it means something naughty or ribald, but to her husband's family, the word can mean "icky" or otherwise "unpleasant." She learned this when one of them mentioned that her husband's grandfather was feeling raunchy. What they mean was that he had a bad cold. The word raunchy has undergone a transformation over the years, from merely "unkempt" or "sloppy" to "coarse" and "vulgar." A German idiom for "I'm going to take a nap" translates as "I have to take a look at myself from the inside." A native of Colombia wants to know: Do different languages add new words in similar ways? He believes that Spanish, for example, is far less open to innovation than English. Awesome and awful may have the same root, but they've evolved opposite meanings. Awful goes back more than a thousand years, originally meaning "full of awe" and later, "causing dread." Awesome showed up later and fulfills a different semantic role, meaning "fantastic" or "wonderful." More listeners weigh in on our earlier discussion about the word gypsy, and whether it's to be avoided. A listener in Norwich, Connecticut, is going through a trove of love letters her parents sent each other during World War II. In one of them, her father repeatedly used the word hideous in an ironic way to mean "wonderful." Is that part of the slang of the time? An astute German phrase about procrastination translates as "In the evening, lazy people get busy." A young woman is puzzled when her boyfriend's father says he was looking for someone who needs a Good Boy Friday. It's most likely a reference to Daniel Defoe's 1719 novel Robinson Crusoe. The title character spends 30 years on a remote tropical island, and eventually saves the life of an islander who becomes his helper. Crusoe decides to call him Friday, since that's the day of the week when they first encountered each other. Over time, English speakers began using the term Man Friday to mean a manservant or valet, and later the term Girl Friday came to mean an office assistant or secretary. The term no-see-ums refers to those pesky gnats that come out in the heat and humidity and are so tiny they're almost invisible. The term goes back at least as far as the 1830's, and is heard particularly in the Northeastern United States. This episode is hosted by Martha Barnette and Grant Barrett. -- A Way with Words is funded by its listeners: http://waywordradio.org/donate Get your language question answered on the air! Call or write with your questions at any time: Email: words@waywordradio.org Phone: United States and Canada toll-free (877) WAY-WORD/(877) 929-9673 London +44 20 7193 2113 Mexico City +52 55 8421 9771 Donate: http://waywordradio.org/donate Site: http://waywordradio.org/ Podcast: http://waywordradio.org/podcast/ Forums: http://waywordradio.org/discussion/ Newsletter: http://waywordradio.org/newsletter/ Twitter: http://twitter.com/wayword/ Skype: skype://waywordradio Copyright 2017, Wayword LLC.
Well… after an amazing debut, I’ve missed posting the last 2 weeks due to being under the weather. But before I went down, I found a great mixtape I had… Continue reading "Uncle Eddy’s Mixtapes Vol. II – Take Me Back to C’Stone ’96"
For the first two and half years of Dragnet, Sgt. Joe Friday was partnered with Ben Romero, an older mentor and family man voiced by radio veteran Barton Yarborough. With his friendly Texas drawl, Yarborough created a memorable character and a good counterpart to Friday’s terse, no-nonsense style. We’ll hear Yarborough in action as Ben Romero, alongside Jack Webb as Joe Friday, in “The Big Picture” (originally aired on NBC on December 7, 1950) and “The Big In-Laws” (originally aired on NBC on August 23, 1951).
A Way with Words — language, linguistics, and callers from all over
How do languages change and grow? Does every language acquire new words in the same way? Martha and Grant focus on how that process happens in English and Spanish. Plus, the stories behind the Spanish word "gringo" and the old instruction to elementary school students to sit "Indian Style." Finally, the English equivalents of German sayings provide clever ways to think about naps, procrastination, lemons, and more. Also: catawampus, raunchy, awful vs. awesome, Man Friday, and no-see-ums.FULL DETAILSIf you're looking forlorn and at a loss, a German speaker might describe you with a phrase that translates as "ordered but not picked up." It's as if you're a forgotten pizza sitting on a restaurant counter.Sitting on the floor Indian style, with one's legs crossed, is a reference to Native Americans' habit of sitting that way, a practice recorded early in this country's history in the journals of French traders. Increasingly, though, schools across the United States are replacing this expression with the term criss-cross applesauce. In the United Kingdom, however, this way of sitting is more commonly known as Turkish style or tailor style. A nine-year-old from Yuma, Arizona, wants to know the origin of catawampus. So do etymologists. Catawampus means "askew," "awry," or "crooked." We do know the word has been around for more than a century, and is spelled many different ways, such as cattywampus and caddywampus. It may derive from the Scots word wampish, meaning to "wriggle," "twist," or "swerve."How sour is it? If you speak German, you might answer with a phrase that translates as "That's so sour it will pull the holes in your socks together."A sixth-grade teacher in San Antonio, Texas, is skeptical about a story that the gringo derives from a song lyric. He's right. The most likely source of this word is the Spanish word for "Greek," griego, a term applied to foreigners much the same way that English speakers might say that an unintelligible language is Greek to me. The ancient Greeks, on the other hand, imitated the sound of foreigners with the word barbaroi, the source of our own word barbarian.The board game Clue inspired this week's puzzle from our Quiz Guy John Chaneski. It also inspired him to create an online petition to give Mrs. White a doctor's degree.What's the meaning of the word raunchy? A woman in Indianapolis, Indiana, thinks it means something naughty or ribald, but to her husband's family, the word can mean "icky" or otherwise "unpleasant." She learned this when one of them mentioned that her husband's grandfather was feeling raunchy. What they mean was that he had a bad cold. The word raunchy has undergone a transformation over the years, from merely "unkempt" or "sloppy" to "coarse" and "vulgar." A German idiom for "I'm going to take a nap" translates as "I have to take a look at myself from the inside."A native of Colombia wants to know: Do different languages add new words in similar ways? He believes that Spanish, for example, is far less open to innovation than English.Awesome and awful may have the same root, but they've evolved opposite meanings. Awful goes back more than a thousand years, originally meaning "full of awe" and later, "causing dread." Awesome showed up later and fulfills a different semantic role, meaning "fantastic" or "wonderful." More listeners weigh in on our earlier discussion about the word gypsy, and whether it's to be avoided.A listener in Norwich, Connecticut, is going through a trove of love letters her parents sent each other during World War II. In one of them, her father repeatedly used the word hideous in an ironic way to mean "wonderful." Is that part of the slang of the time?An astute German phrase about procrastination translates as "In the evening, lazy people get busy."A young woman is puzzled when her boyfriend's father says he was looking for someone who needs a Good Boy Friday. It's most likely a reference to Daniel Defoe's 1719 novel Robinson Crusoe. The title character spends 30 years on a remote tropical island, and eventually saves the life of an islander who becomes his helper. Crusoe decides to call him Friday, since that's the day of the week when they first encountered each other. Over time, English speakers began using the term Man Friday to mean a manservant or valet, and later the term Girl Friday came to mean an office assistant or secretary. The term no-see-ums refers to those pesky gnats that come out in the heat and humidity and are so tiny they're almost invisible. The term goes back at least as far as the 1830's, and is heard particularly in the Northeastern United States. This episode is hosted by Martha Barnette and Grant Barrett.--A Way with Words is funded by its listeners: http://waywordradio.org/donateGet your language question answered on the air! Call or write with your questions at any time:Email: words@waywordradio.orgPhone: United States and Canada toll-free (877) WAY-WORD/(877) 929-9673London +44 20 7193 2113Mexico City +52 55 8421 9771Donate: http://waywordradio.org/donateSite: http://waywordradio.org/Podcast: http://waywordradio.org/podcast/Forums: http://waywordradio.org/discussion/Newsletter: http://waywordradio.org/newsletter/Twitter: http://twitter.com/wayword/Skype: skype://waywordradio Copyright 2016, Wayword LLC.
1! 1 Movie! Ah-ah-ah! But no, that's TWO! TWO MOVIES! Ah-ah-ah! No, I read that wrong, it's uh, 2 MINUTE MOVIE REVIEWS! TOO MANY MOVIES TO COUNT!! AH-AH-AH-AH ok I'll stop now. After talking about a newscaster in 1982 ruining the end of a classic film, and what makes the hosts unnerved watching a movie, a bevvy of horror movies are discussed by Andrew (listen up MARIO BAVA fans!), while Jack checks out a slate of new (mostly independent) releases. Oh, and there's that dude with the ants... After 10 minutes in: ANT-MAN - AMY - BLOOD AND BLACK LACE - MAGIC MIKE XXL - THE TENANT - SELF/LESS - CUJO - DOPE - BLACK SUNDAY - PALO ALTO - FRIDAY THE 13TH (1980)- JOHN CARPENTER'S THE THING email at: wagesofcinema@gmail.com Song featured: "Jubilee Stomp" by Duke Ellington and "I'm Cool Like That" by Digable Planets from the movie "Dope" (Fair Use and Public Domain)
Ain't payback a bitch? This week, Don repays you for the technical issue in the studio that prevented the podcast from getting posted. And this episode is PAID IN FULL. Consider it a gesture of good will. Now let's get back to the program... Tracklist for March 11, 2015 01 :: Man Friday feat. Larry Levan - Real Love (The Paradise Garage Mix) 02 :: Animotion - Obsession (Dance Remix) 03 :: Connie Case - Get Down 04 :: Tom Tom Club - Wordy Rappinghood (Special 12" Version) 05 :: Tribe - Coke ...
Alex, Pat and Bruce check in with Eagles 7s Coach Mike Friday and discuss the new coach’s picks for Gold Coast.
NYC based Comedian Nancy Lombardo host a cornucopia of terrific guests. Mixing it up with comedians, authors, musicians, professionals. Nancy Lombardo has performed her unique comedy from coast to coast and is the creator of "Momedy" (tm) "COLOR ME CRAZY" AVAILABLE ON CD BABY. Watch the NANCY LOMBARDO SHOW Fridays 7pm EST www.mnn.org or in NYC channel 83 RCN 56 TW 34 Fios. Follow Comedy Concepts on Blog Talk Radio and join the chat room. Support the arts by supporting the arts. Buy stuff. http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/nancylombardo
Mickey Mouse - Mickeys Man Friday
Mickey Mouse - Mickeys Man Friday
Stanley Bennett Clay received 2 NAACP Theatre Awards and 2 Drama-logueAwards for writing and directing the stage play “Ritual.” The film version, starring Clarence Williams III and Denise Nicholas, marks Clay’s film writing/directorial debut and was voted The Jury Award at the 2000 Pan African Film Festival. Clay produced on stage the GLAAD, L.A. Weekly, L.A. Times and NAACPAward-winning musical “Children of the Night” and the world premiere ofJames Graham Bronson’s “Willie & Esther.” That production received2 L.A. Weekly Awards as Best Play and Best Ensemble Performance.Clay wrote, directed, and composed “Street Nativity” (commissioned by the National Council of Negro Women for the Black Family Reunion Festival), wrote/directed the play “Lovers,” (Theatre of Arts) directed west coast premieres of “Jonin’” at The Harmon Theatre (Drama-logue Award/Direction) and “The First Breeze of Summer” (Theatre of Arts). He is the author of three novels, “Diva” (Holloway House), “In Search Of Pretty Young Men” and “Looker,” (Simon & Schuster/Atria Books). “Search” won the 2004 N.Y. Hotep Society Book Award for Best Gay Novel. Former Editor-In-Chief of Black Beat magazine and American Correspondent for London’s Blues and Soul magazine, Clay published and edited SBC magazine for 10 years (1991-2001), at the time the most widely distributed periodical for the black LGBT community.A Los Angeles-based actor, he starred, guest-starred, and/or has been featured in over 200 TV episodes, films and commercials, including “Good Times,” “Cannonball,” “Minstrel Man,” “Man Friday” and “Cheers.”His received the NAACP Best Actor Image Award for his stage performance in the Inner City Cultural Center’s production of “Anna Lucasta” and was nominated for the same award (and won another Drama-logue Award) for his performance in the Lafayette Players West’s production of “Zooman and the Sign.” Other stage performances include “Or” by Felton Perry (One Flight Up), “So
Stanley Bennett Clay received 2 NAACP Theatre Awards and 2 Drama-logueAwards for writing and directing the stage play “Ritual.” The film version, starring Clarence Williams III and Denise Nicholas, marks Clay’s film writing/directorial debut and was voted The Jury Award at the 2000 Pan African Film Festival. Clay produced on stage the GLAAD, L.A. Weekly, L.A. Times and NAACPAward-winning musical “Children of the Night” and the world premiere ofJames Graham Bronson’s “Willie & Esther.” That production received2 L.A. Weekly Awards as Best Play and Best Ensemble Performance.Clay wrote, directed, and composed “Street Nativity” (commissioned by the National Council of Negro Women for the Black Family Reunion Festival), wrote/directed the play “Lovers,” (Theatre of Arts) directed west coast premieres of “Jonin’” at The Harmon Theatre (Drama-logue Award/Direction) and “The First Breeze of Summer” (Theatre of Arts). He is the author of three novels, “Diva” (Holloway House), “In Search Of Pretty Young Men” and “Looker,” (Simon & Schuster/Atria Books). “Search” won the 2004 N.Y. Hotep Society Book Award for Best Gay Novel. Former Editor-In-Chief of Black Beat magazine and American Correspondent for London’s Blues and Soul magazine, Clay published and edited SBC magazine for 10 years (1991-2001), at the time the most widely distributed periodical for the black LGBT community.A Los Angeles-based actor, he starred, guest-starred, and/or has been featured in over 200 TV episodes, films and commercials, including “Good Times,” “Cannonball,” “Minstrel Man,” “Man Friday” and “Cheers.”His received the NAACP Best Actor Image Award for his stage performance in the Inner City Cultural Center’s production of “Anna Lucasta” and was nominated for the same award (and won another Drama-logue Award) for his performance in the Lafayette Players West’s production of “Zooman and the Sign.” Other stage performances include “Or” by Felton Perry (One Flight Up), “So
The castaway in Desert Island Discs this week is Marianne Faithfull. Singer and actress, she was the original 1960s wild child.At the age of 17, when she was still a convent schoolgirl in Reading, she shot to fame with the hit single As Tears Go By; written for her by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards. She was Mick Jagger's mistress, she hung out with Bob Dylan and Jimi Hendrix, she was young, beautiful and rich and she seemed to have it all. But the glamorous life of the pop star turned into a nightmare of drugs, homelessness, suicide attempts and broken marriages.The daughter of an Austrian baroness, her life has been full of myths and legends. She'll be telling Sue Lawley about the years of recovery, how she's found happiness in Ireland and her hopes for a Man Friday on her desert island. [Taken from the original programme material for this archive edition of Desert Island Discs] Favourite track: Small Axe by Bob Marley & The Wailers Book: Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe Luxury: Pen from Aspreys with attached magnifying glass
The castaway in Desert Island Discs this week is Marianne Faithfull. Singer and actress, she was the original 1960s wild child. At the age of 17, when she was still a convent schoolgirl in Reading, she shot to fame with the hit single As Tears Go By; written for her by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards. She was Mick Jagger's mistress, she hung out with Bob Dylan and Jimi Hendrix, she was young, beautiful and rich and she seemed to have it all. But the glamorous life of the pop star turned into a nightmare of drugs, homelessness, suicide attempts and broken marriages. The daughter of an Austrian baroness, her life has been full of myths and legends. She'll be telling Sue Lawley about the years of recovery, how she's found happiness in Ireland and her hopes for a Man Friday on her desert island. [Taken from the original programme material for this archive edition of Desert Island Discs] Favourite track: Small Axe by Bob Marley & The Wailers Book: Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe Luxury: Pen from Aspreys with attached magnifying glass