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Welcome to Episode 058, live from Matera, Italy!This episode was recorded at a cute little coffee shop in Matera. To see the view, check out Episode 58 on YOUTUBE.Pure Stimulation is a WEEKLY podcast mix by Athenz. Featuring the hottest most stimulating house hits Athenz is jamming to for the week.Available on Apple Podcasts SoundCloud && YouTube !Stay tuned to hear what Athenz finds stimulating next week!
Matera - 4ème acteur sur le marché de la copro en France- nous ouvre ses portes aujourd'hui
Pour découvrir l'épisode en entier tapez " #322 - Raphaël Di Meglio - Matera - 35M€ levés et 8 procès plus tard : du chaos des syndics à l'harmonie des copros " sur votre plateforme d'écoute.
Une Assemblée Générale qui se déroule dans la joie et la bonne humeur ? Si, si, c'est possible. Qui n'y croit pas n'a pas testé Matera, l'outil de gestion qui permet à 70 000 copropriétés d'accomplir cet exploit, en France et en Allemagne. À sa tête : Raphaël Di Meglio, qui en 2017 et à tout juste 25 ans, a visé juste en montant sa première boîte dans un secteur - à priori -pas très sexy. Et pourtant, en un coup de plateforme tech, saupoudrée des paillettes d'une campagne de com' réussie, il offre enfin aux copropriétaires la possibilité de gérer directement leurs dépenses. Un sursaut d'efficacité pour les syndics de copropriété : Matera, valorisée 120 millions d'euros, en a levé 35 en juin 2021. Désormais passionné de copro (si, si, ça aussi c'est possible), Raphaël porte un regard, certes pratique sur l'impact de son entreprise, mais aussi politique. Une vision engagée qui s'oppose aux coulisses “à l'ancienne” de ce marché, qu'il souhaite humaniser en redonnant le contrôle de leur logement aux copropriétaires. Et étant donné la farandole de procès que ces mastodontes lui font endurer, c'est bien parti. Dans cet épisode, vous entendrez parler de : L'Italie, ses produits culinaires et ses îles ; Du “merveilleux secteur des syndics de propriété” ; Du rapport tech x logement x démocratie x écologie ; Procès à la David contre Goliath, version syndic ; Le difficile calcul du ROI d'une grosse campagne de com ; L'importance de résoudre des problèmes quand on entreprend. Je vous ai négocié un code promo sur Matera.eu : tapez “DOIT” pour obtenir 34% de réduction sur la première année. TIMELINE : 00:00:00 - Introduction 00:04:56 - Les racines italiennes de Raphaël 00:05:32 - “Le secteur merveilleux des syndics de copropriété” 00:19:24 - La genèse de l'entreprise et ses chiffres-clés 01:01:42 - La concurrence et les campagnes de com' 01:21:22 - Les avenirs possibles pour Matera 01:32:33 - Les grands apprentissages de l'entreprise 02:01:00 - Les grands défis : l'international, les offres, le marché immobilier et la rénovation énergétique 02:20:48 - L'environnement financier des entreprises tech 02:24:03 - Comment appréhender une vague de départs ? 02:33:38 - Matthieu et twitter, Raphaël et Churchill, retour en Italie On a cité avec Raphaël plusieurs anciens épisodes de GDIY : #294 - Victor Augais - La Casa - Importer le foot en salle en France et révolutionner l'habitat partagé #284 - Pierre-Édouard Stérin - Otium Capital - Milliardaire et Saint dans une même vie #263 - Jean-Marc Jancovici - Carbone 4 - Décroissance, nucléaire, innovation : agir sous la contrainte ou par cas de conscience ? #212 - Adrien Aumont - KissKissBankBank et Midnight Train - Réinventer le train de nuit après avoir inventé le crowdfunding #322 - Georges-Olivier Reymond - Pasqal - Et si le leader mondial du Quantum Computing était Français ? Avec Raphaël, on a parlé de : Matera Sarah Partouche, Social Media Manager de Matera Oussama Ammar et The Family Sunday Trackpay Finary Hard Things de Ben Horowitz Le TikTok de Matera LinkedIN de Raphaël di Meglio LinkedIn de Matera Raphaël vous recommande de lire : Les mémoires de guerre de Winston Churchill Si vous avez apprécié cet épisode, laissez un commentaire sur nos posts LinkedIn ou Instagram. Si vous voulez faire découvrir cet épisode, taguez un ami. La musique du générique vous plaît ? C'est à Morgan Prudhomme que je la dois ! Contactez-le sur : https://studio-module.com. Vous souhaitez sponsoriser Génération Do It Yourself ou nous proposer un partenariat ? Contactez mon label Orso Media via ce formulaire. Vous pouvez suivre Raphaël sur LinkedIn.
Australian singer-songwriter Joe Matera comes on the Goldmine Podcast to talk about his latest release, The Lone Runner, a soothing tapestry of upbeat instrumentals. It is somewhat of a departure from Matera's guitar-driven albums of previous years. Goldmine columnist Warren Kurtz (Fabulous Flip Sides) joins in the conversation to give his opinion and feedback as well. It's all in the family, as Joe Matera is a columnist for Goldmine (Search For Vinyl Gold), too! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In the second installment of our series on Pix, Carlos Netto, CEO and Co-Founder of Matera and Sarah Hoisington, Vice-President of Strategy and Marketing discuss what makes Pix “tick", and the challenges and opportunities presented to the banks responsible to implement this new payment system.
Chris Matera is a civil engineer, and the founder of Massachusetts Forest Watch, which works to protect forests everywhere, but with a greater focus on protecting Northeastern Public Forests From Logging.
Les paillettes vont tenter de convaincre Clément de mater leur série culte du moment. Ensuite, après un blind-test « musique de films » un peu pérave de Nico mais fait avec le cœur, on balance les Top 3 des villes préférées des pailloules. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
El presidente AMLO afirmó que la nueva marcha en defensa del INE del próximo domingo no la realizarán los ciudadanosEl titular de la Profeco, Ricardo Sheiffield, aseguró que hay una baja en los precios de la canasta básicaEn Italia localizaron nuevos fragmentos de un meteorito que cayó la semana pasada en la ciudad de Matera y que tendría 45 mil millones de años, tantos como el sistema solar…
Tampa Bay Buccaneers insider Matt Matera from Pewter Report calls in for his weekly segment on The Pat & Aaron Show. He first begins by talking about the state of the coaching staff, and how he thinks things are going. Then he breaks down how each playoff scenario would be for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and who he thinks they should play.. The segment ends with Matt Matera breaking down the latest going on in the Ryan Jensen Saga!
Simonetta Sciandivasci"I figli che non voglio"https://mondadori.itInverno demografico: e davanti a noi si stendono pianure infeconde e ghiacciate da far impallidire Il Trono di Spade, nella mente risuonano echi di tragedie shakespeariane.In Italia non si fanno più figli, dove andrà a finire la nostra civiltà, ma soprattutto: chi pagherà le nostre pensioni? Ma che senso ha insistere a credere che l'unico modo per tenere in piedi il sistema sia procreare, anche laddove le donne – per la precisione una minoranza di donne quantificata dall'Istat nel 5 per cento – pur essendo nelle condizioni di fare figli, non li vuole? Rispetto al tema della maternità spesso vincono gli schematismi e le donne si trovano rappresentate o come vittime di un Paese in cui fare figli è un privilegio- la precarietà del lavoro, gli stipendi bassi, gli asili inaccessibili, lo stato sociale che non provvede come dovrebbe -, o come un manipolo di ciniche, superficiali, carrieriste e future pentite destinate a una vecchiaia solitaria e amareggiata dal rimpianto di non essersi riprodotte. Tra questi due poli ci sono le persone vere, a cui danno voce gli interventi raccolti in questo libro. Tante donne, ma anche alcuni uomini, che hanno raccolto la sfida lanciata da Simonetta Sciandivasci con lucidità e ironia sulle pagine dello “Specchio”, inserto culturale della “Stampa”, una sfida a interrogarsi sui motivi per cui si diventa genitori oppure no, a ragionare sulle diverse possibili fisionomie di una famiglia.C'è chi si dichiara fautrice dell'agnosticismo procreativo, perché diventare genitore è qualcosa di così intimo e personale da rendere impossibili posizioni di principio, chi insiste sulla necessità di rendere più semplice l'adozione per i genitori single, chi accusa il peso dei condizionamenti del passato e chi prova a sostenere le ragioni dell'incoscienza. Chi valuta il congelamento degli ovuli prima di intraprendere un percorso di transizione da donna a uomo, chi sostiene che i padri siano ben felici di non avere la parità genitoriale e chi patisce l'onnipotenza delle madri in caso di separazione. Ci sono donne che chiedono più rispetto per la scelta di non essere madri, uomini che provano a smontare i narcisismi, le fragilità, le contraddizioni dell'essere padre.E poi ci sono doti che attendono pazienti nei bauli, nonne e madri che attendono nipoti da figlie che con noncuranza varcano la soglia dei trentacinque anni…Una carrellata di interventi non ortodossi, pieni di intelligenza e senso critico, un vademecum fondamentale per chiunque sia interessato all'argomento. Un dibattito che ci fornisce ottimi strumenti per “smettere di pensare che l'inverno demografico sia una questione morale o economica: è, invece, una questione di prospettiva, che impone nuove lenti; è una questione di geografia politica e riorganizzazione del mondo secondo nuovi criteri”.Con i contributi di:Viola Ardone • Sandro Bonvissuto • Maria Cafagna Elisa Casseri • Francesco Ditaranto • Marco Franzoso Flavia Gasperetti • Loredana Lipperini • Elena Loewenthal Andrea Malaguti • Michela Marzano • Daniele Mencarelli Assia Neumann Dayan • Gianluca Nicoletti • Raffaele Notaro Melissa Panarello • Veronica Pivetti • Silvia Ranfagni Francesca Sforza • Caterina Soffici • Giorgia Soleri Elena Stancanelli • Giorgia Surina • Nadia Terranova Maria Sole Tognazzi • Alec Trenta • Carlotta Vagnoli • Ester Viola.Simonetta Sciandivasci è nata a Tricarico nel 1985 ed è cresciuta a Matera. Lavora alla redazione cultura della “Stampa”. Ha scritto per “Il Foglio”, “Linkiesta”, “Rolling Stone”, “La Verità”, “la Repubblica”. Ha collaborato con la Rai, in radio e in tv, come consulente e autrice. Collabora con la Scuola Holden e l'Accademia Molly Bloom. È redattrice di “Nuovi Argomenti”.IL POSTO DELLE PAROLEAscoltare fa Pensarehttps://ilpostodelleparole.it
We celebrate a victory Tuesday with Matt Matera of Pewter Report to talk all things Bucs as we discuss Sunday's win over the Panthers, Todd Bowles, Tom Brady, and Mike Evans too!
REDIFF - Lee Morrison, le responsable des cascades du film, a eu recours au soda pour préparer une poursuite spectaculaire à moto au début de "Mourir peut attendre". Comme la route du village italien de Matera où elle se déroulait était faite de pavés glissants, pour éviter que Daniel Craig se gamelle, il a fait déverser sur le sol 32.000 litres de Coca-cola. Les Grosses Têtes vous proposent de découvrir ou redécouvrir le nouveau podcast de Florian Gazan. Dans "Ah Ouais ?", Florian Gazan répond en une minute chrono à toutes les questions essentielles, existentielles, parfois complètement absurdes, qui vous traversent la tête. Un podcast RTL Originals. Découvrez la page Facebook Officielle des "Grosses Têtes" : https://www.facebook.com/lesgrossestetesrtl/ Retrouvez vos "Grosses Têtes" sur Instagram : https://bit.ly/2hSBiAo Découvrez le compte Twitter Officiel des "Grosses Têtes" : https://bit.ly/2PXSkkz Toutes les vidéos des "Grosses Têtes" sont sur YouTube : https://bit.ly/2DdUyGg
REDIFF - En fait c'est Lee Morrison, le responsable des cascades du film, qui a eu recours au soda pour préparer une poursuite spectaculaire à moto au début de Mourir peut attendre, avec notamment un saut vertigineux à plus de 100 km/h. Comme la route du village italien de Matera où elle se déroulait était faite de pavés glissants, pour éviter que James Bond (Daniel Craig) se gamelle, il a fait déverser sur le sol 32.000 litres de Coca-cola. Dans "Ah Ouais ?", Florian Gazan répond en une minute chrono à toutes les questions essentielles, existentielles, parfois complètement absurdes, qui vous traversent la tête. Un podcast RTL Originals.
Matt Matera of Pewter Report joined us on Tuesday to talk all things Bucs, their win over the Cardinals, and more!
This is Play That Rock'n'Roll's interview with music journalist Joe Matera, about his new book, "BACKSTAGE PASS: The Grit and the Glamour". Joe has previously been published in magazines like Guitar World, Guitar Player, Metal Edge, Goldmine, and others. His new book is an anthology of stories from his time working as a music journalist, and it includes interactions with some legendary figures in rock history. In this conversation, we talk about his career as a music journalist, what his goals for an interview are, and his interactions with rock legends like Lemmy Kilmister (from Motorhead), Steve Lukather (from Toto), Steve Howe & Rick Wakeman (from Yes) and even Sir George Martin (producer for The Beatles). See more at: https://joematera.com/ Follow us on Twitter at: https://twitter.com/playthatpodcast Find us on facebook at: https://www.facebook.com/playthatpodcast
Abbiamo deciso di trascorrere questo weekend di Natale in quello che è un vero e proprio presepe a cielo aperto. Siamo a Matera, la 3^città più antica del mondo, dopo Aleppo e Gerico, con oltre 10.000 anni di storia. Intanto, per il cenone della Vigilia, abbiamo pensato di sederci a tavola dallo chef più stellato d'Italia: Enrico Bartolini ci racconta le sue dodici Stelle Michelin. I Re Magi seguivano la stella cometa, noi seguiamo la Stella Michelin che invece, in quel presepe dei Sassi di Matera, si è posata sul ristorante di chef Vitantonio Lombardo. Natale col delivery? Un trend in crescita in città. Ce ne parla Stefano Manili, CEO & Founder di Cosaporto.it, gift-tech che ha fatto della selezione di brand e prodotti di altissima qualità, affiancati dalla comodità del delivery, la sua mission. E' festa e le scuole sono chiuse, ma la preside Carmelina Gallipoli dell'Istituto alberghiero "Turi" di Matera farà una piccola eccezione per noi, per farci conoscere una chicca natalizia di questa città, i "porcelli di Natale". Nessun piatto può essere apprezzato come merita senza il gustoso Pane di Matera Igp proposto nelle forme a cornetto o a pane alto, che rimanda alla conformazione del paesaggio della Murgia materana. Ne parliamo con Massimo Cifarelli, giovane titolare del Panificio Cifarelli, dal 1947 storici artigiani del pane da 3 generazioni.
Our guy, Matt Matera, joined us to talk all things Bucs, the second-half implosion, and more. Tune in!
Check it out as Matt Matera from Pewter Report calls into The Pat & Aaron Show for his weekly segment. He first talks about what the Tampa Bay Buccaneers needs to do to beat the Cincinnati Bengals. He also talks about Rick Stroud's question to Tom Brady, and more!
Paul Daugherty joins the show for his usual segment. Matt Matera of PewterReport.com joins the show to talk about Sunday's upcoming Bengals/Bucs game. Thom, Casey, and Paul spend the show discussing the Bengals, college basketball, and more.
In this show, we cover Aglianico - the best red grape you may have never heard of. Widely considered one of Italy's top three red grapes with Sangiovese and Nebbiolo, many consider the wines of Aglianico some of the world's top bottles too. That said, because Aglianico is a grape of the more obscure regions in southern Italy (Campania and Basilicata, mainly), the wine hasn't gotten its due. It is much less expensive than top Barolos and Barbarescos or Chiantis and Brunellos – although it is slowly catching up. It is a grape well-suited to warm Mediterranean climates, and for the changing climates of once cooler growing areas like regions of California and Australia. Aglianico is historic, yet modern and there has never been a better time to get acquainted with the wines of this beautiful grape. Photo: Aglianico Source: Taub Family Selections, Mastroberardino Page Here are the show notes: We cover the history of the grape and discuss possible origins. Aglianico is considered to be one of Italy's oldest grapes and it was always thought to be an import from the Greeks who colonized Campania and other parts of southern Italy. Today, Attilio Scienza, the foremost Italian grape scientist, has changed that theory. He believes the grape is native to southern Italy and the name is related to the Spanish word for plains “llano” (ll=gli, both sounds like y sound in canyon). The grape may have been domesticated from grapes growing on the plains We discuss how the grape was nearly extinct after phylloxera, and how Antonio Mastroberardino - preserved and propagated Aglianico to make one of the best red wines in Italian history – the 1968 Mastroberardino Taurasi Riserva. The D'Angelo family revived Aglianico around Monte Vulture in Basilicata around the same time. The success of these two families on the world stage, encouraged others to start making wines from Aglianico, and today there are many great examples of wines from the grape Photo: 1968 Mastroberardino Taurasi Riserva, widely considered one of Italy's best wines Aglianico Viticulture: Aglianico produces medium to small, compact bunches. The individual berries are small, round, and dark blue-black with quite thick skins. The grape requires a long, warm growing season with a warm fall to fully develop flavors and calm tannins and acidity. It is early budding and late ripening. Overly cool or overly hot conditions don't do good things for the grape. Aglianico is one of the latest harvests in Italy, with Vulture often starting harvest in mid to late November According to Ian d'Agata, the top English-speaking writer on Italian wine, Aglianico has three biotypes (variations of the same grape, but not different enough to be clones): Taurasi, with small berries, less vigorous, and sensitivity to spring weather that may reduce the harvest Taburno (also called Aglianico Amaro -- but not because it's amaro /bitter, rather because it's higher in acidity) is less fertile with big bunches. It is earlier ripening, with higher alcohol and higher acidity del Vulture is most intensely flavored biotype, with strong fruit aromas and flavors, and it seems to have fewer viticultural issues The grape also has clones, the most popular of which are used to create bolder, darker wines Terroir Aglianico prefers volcanic soils. The Campania DOCGs are on extinct volcanoes or have influence from nearby Vesuvius. The volcanic activity makes these soils rich in nutrients, well-drained, and very complex. The grape loves elevation and it thrives in spots where other grapes can't ripen. Although Aglianico needs dry climates with abundant sun, it must have diurnal temperature swings at night so it can retain its acidity and build flavor slowly Photo: Mastroberardino's Aglianico vineyards Source: Taub Family Selections, Mastroberardino Page Styles: Generally, Aglianico has the following characteristics: Very high acidity and tannin. Floral (red roses), red fruit (sour cherries), plum (esp. from Vulture), leather and herbs (esp. from Taburno), smoke, and mineral notes. The wines are always savory. It is capable of long aging. Regardless of where the grape grows, these characteristics seem to be present. Some styles are lighter and more floral with higher acidity, while others are deep, earthy, fuller, and complex with tobacco, licorice, iron ore, and coffee notes. Aglianico needs age. It can be tough in its youth, with harsh tannin and acidity, since the grape has naturally high tartaric acid Other styles: IGT wines – blended with Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot or other native grapes Passito: Similar to Amarone from Veneto, these wines are made from partially dehydrated grapes. This style is very rare Sparkling: Made in the IGP classification. These wines often display red cherry, strawberries, and spice flavors and aromas Regions The grape is almost exclusively in southern Italy, mostly in Campania in the provinces of Avellino, Benevento, Sannio, and Caserta. In Basilicata, wines are mainly made around Potenza and Matera. All these areas are in cool, dry, sunny spots in the mountains The three main areas for high quality Aglianico in Italy are: Taurasi (1993 DOCG), which is near Avellino, is mountainous and therefore at altitude, has volcanic soils and has an ideal climate -- hot, sunny days, and cool nights to slow ripening and build flavor. Up to 15% other red grapes are permitted in the blend to soften Aglianico (often Piedirosso, the native aromatic grape, which is lighter than Aglianico, is used) Flavor profile: Black cherry, raspberry, cigar, coffee, earth, leather. High acidity, high tannin, high alcohol, medium bodied. Riserva: has higher alcohol levels is aged longer Producers: Mastroberardino, Feudi di San Gregorio, Ponte, Terre degli Svevi, Re Manfredi, Quintodecimo, Donnachiara, Antionio Caggiano, Salvatore Molettieri, Perillo, Luigi Tecce, Terrdora, Urciolo The wine we were drinking during the show, 2013 Feudi di San Gregorio Taurasi. Here is a link to the show I did with owner Antonio Capaldo, ep 337 Aglianico del Taburno (2011 DOCG) is near Benevento. These wines are less famed than Taurasi because the region was used for bulk wine until the 1980s. The region consists of 14 towns on the eastern side of the Taburno mountain. Rather than pure volcanic or a volcanic mix, soils are clay -limestone. Taburno has bigger diurnals than Taurasi, and is generally cooler than Taurasi leading to higher acidity. Flavor profile: Pepper, black fruit, figs, leather, and herbs. High acidity, high tannin, high alcohol, medium body Producers: Cantina del Taburno, Cantine Tora, La Rivolta Other Campania DOCS include: Cilento, Sannio, Gallucio, Irpinia, Falerno del Massico Aglianico Del Vulture (we did a whole podcast on this) is located in Basilicata, just around the province of Potenza in the north. The wine region borders Campania and Puglia. The wine is required to be 100% Aglianico. Aglianico del Vulture DOC and Aglianico del Vulture Superiore DOCGs are on volcanic, mineral rich, well-drained soils around the extinct volcano. The elevation of Monte Vulture and the rain shadow it creates make perfect conditions for Aglianico – it gets its long, cool growing season, where it can develop flavors and aromas over time Flavor profile: black plum, coffee, dried herbs, smoke, dark chocolate. These wines have lower acidity than the wines of Campania. They still have high tannin, and high alcohol Producers: Cantine del Notaio, Elena Fucci, Pasternoster, Macarico, Basilisco, Cantina di Venosa, Bisceglia, D'Angelo Aglianico can also be found in: Abruzzo & Molise, where it is blended with Montepulciano Lazio, Calabria, Puglia, where it is sometimes blended with Primitivo New World Regions Australia: Adelaide Hills, Barossa, Langhorne Creek, Mudgee, McLaren Vale, Riverina, Northern Tasmania– cool and warmer regions! The wines are apparently less acidic and tannic, and quite high quality USA: California: Many regions grow the grape but Caparone in Paso Robles was the first in 1992. It shows promise as the climate warms. Other US: Texas, New Mexico Argentina and Mexico are also having some success We end with a discussion of food pairings and encouragement to go out and try this gem! Main resource: "Native Wine Grapes of Italy" by Ian D'Agata _______________________________________________________________ Thanks to our sponsors this week: Wine Spies uncovers incredible wines at unreal prices - on every type of wine in a variety of price points. It's not a club and there's no obligation to buy. Sign up for their daily email and buy what you want, when you want it. They have a build-a-case option, so you can mix and match wines while enjoying free shipping on every purchase. Visit www.winespies.com/normal you'll get $20 credit to use on your first order! Check them out today! If you think our podcast is worth the price of a bottle or two of wine a year, please become a member of Patreon... you'll get even more great content, live interactions and classes! www.patreon.com/winefornormalpeople To register for an AWESOME, LIVE WFNP class with Elizabeth go to: www.winefornormalpeople.com/classes Bonus: Here's the cat "iron throne" we talked about...
On Mondays, we talk with Matt Matera of Pewter Report to get the inside scoop on the Buccaneers. Tune in!
Then it's Matt Matera from Pewter Report who calls in to talk all things Tampa Bay Buccaners. He first breaks down what they need to do to win the game against the San Francisco 49ers this weekend, and that he is worried that they won't! That and more in this week's segment.
Narodziny dziewczynki z niebieskim pasmem we włosach sprawiają, że ród kalijów ogarnia trwoga. Dziecko takie jest zwiastunem ciężkich czasów. Daje jednak również nadzieję na szczęśliwe zakończenie.Kalijowie, wsparci mądrością ksiąg, skupiają się właśnie na tej nadziei. Emi wzrasta otoczona miłością siostry i troską kalijskiej starszyzny, każdego dnia przygotowując się do misji, którą wyznaczyło jej życie. Której będzie musiała podjąć się szybciej, niż ktokolwiek przypuszcza.Niezwykle barwna opowieść o tolerancji, miłości, uczciwości i odwadze. O tym, że czyste serce, nieskażone pychą i wolne od uprzedzeń, może zmieniać świat.Jeśli chcesz poznać dalsze losy bohaterów, sięgnij po książkę Ewy Matery – „Emi i źródło Ekry”. Znajdziesz ją na stronie Wydawnictwa Literatura www.wydawnictwoliteratura.pl lub w swojej bibliotece. Bezpośredni link do książki znajduje się w opisie odcinka. Miłej lektury!
E' festa a Milano. Ma non ci fermiamo per il ponte. Parenzo manda a quel paese chi ascolta il podcast. Quelli ci costringono a venire a lavoro anche nei giorni di festa.Poi propone la querela da parte di Giovanni Floris nei confronti del conduttore. Perchè? Per un persino.Francesco da Matera è camionista e denunzia l'evasione del conduttore in un ristorante di Monte San Savino.E' di nuovo scontro con Lino Romano per Parenzo. "E' più uomo Cecchi Paone di te". Poi denuncia uno scandalo a Radio Zanzara.Mario Adinolfi è contro l'Ambrogino d'Oro a Marco Cappato. Poi critica la scelta della Commissione Europea che chiede di riconoscere coppie gay e figli. Ah, poi vuole arrestare gli omosessuali che "comprano" i figli.Il King della 104, Emanuel Cosmin Stoica, è in studio e ci parla di sesso e disabilità. Non ha una fidanzata, ma ci sono persone che gli hanno scritto e poi ci è andato a letto. Vuole proporre il kamasutra per disabili.Vittorio Sgarbi, sottosegretario alla Cultura, non era alla prima de La Scala. Perchè? C'è antipatia col sindaco Sala.
Check it out as Matt Matera from Pewter Report called in for his weekly segment on The Pat & Aaron Show, with Kasey Hudson as guest host for the segment as well. The guys first begin with a debate about Future and Drake, and who is a better rapper. Then the discussion transitions into how the Tampa Bay Buccaneers offense is going to have to have it's best game, and what the defense will need to do as well. Then Matt Matera calls out Todd Bowles for contradicting himself, and why he should of just owned up to it.
On Monday, Matt Matera joined us as he always does in order to talk about some Bucs football. How concerned is he with Tampa's loss to the Browns on Sunday?
The Buccaneers are coming off of their bye week and look forward to taking on the Cleveland Browns. We spoke with Matt Matera of Pewter Report regarding all things Bucs. Join us!
The one and only Matt Matera from Pewter Report calls into The Pat & Aaron Show for his weekly segment. He first explains how the Buccaneers need to keep it going after bye week, including consistency and stopping the run...especially against the Cleveland Browns. He also explains how he was impressed by how the Tampa Bay Buccaneers were able to close it out against the Seattle Seahawks. Matt Matera then explains why he wasn't a fan of what Bruce Arians said this week, and how Byron Leftwich has hurt his head coaching chances.
Pewter Report's Matt Matera joined us on this Victory Monday; how does he feel about the Bucs? Click play
Matt Matera from Pewter Report calls into The Pat & Aaron Show for his weekly segment. He first begins by explaining how he found it bizarre that Tom Brady criticized his team on his podcast. Then he explains why the offensive line is not what it used to be, and how the team will need to adjust to that. That and much more!
Pewter Report's Matt Matera joins us every Monday, and he did so today on a Victory Monday. Click play!
Matt Matera from Pewter Report called into The Pat & Aaron Show for his weekly segment. He first talks about all the drama surrounding Devin White, and what it is like at One Buc Place. Then Matt explains and breaks down what the Tampa Bay Buccaneers need to do to win the game against the LA Rams.
Matt Matera of Pewter Report joined us to talk all things Buccaneers ahead of Tuesday's NFL trade deadline. Click play to listen!
Il podcast di Alessandro Barbero: Lezioni e Conferenze di Storia
Una lezione di Storia dell'Europa registrata nel febbraio 2019 in occasione di Future Digs, progetto nell'ambito di Matera Capitale della Cultura 2019.«Quello romano non era un impero europeo: le zone che oggi per noi sono il cuore dell'Occidente, lungo il Reno e il Danubio, non erano per i cittadini di Roma che un'estrema periferia affacciata sul barbaricum. Un secolo e mezzo dopo, la vittoria di Carlo Martello a Poitiers mette fine all'espansione araba ed è celebrata da un cronista del tempo come una vittoria degli “europenses”; e il nipote di Carlo Martello, Carlo Magno, sarà acclamato come il “Re Padre dell'Europa”. Le province perdute dell'Impero, asservite dai barbari, avevano strutturato una propria forte identità e presto sarebbero partite alla conquista del mondo. “Quindi – conclude Barbero – i discendenti di quei barbari che hanno combattuto queste due battaglie siamo noi europei»Registrazione originale: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KjJ_JQZavzMCommunity & Palco del Mercoledì: https://barberopodcast.it/communityTwitter: https://twitter.com/barberopodcastFacebook: https://facebook.com/barberopodcastInstagram: https://instagram.com/barberopodcastGeorge Street Shuffle by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3800-george-street-shuffleLicense: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Alessandro Barbero al Festival della Mente: Lezioni e Conferenze di Storia
Una lezione di Storia dell'Europa registrata nel febbraio 2019 in occasione di Future Digs, progetto nell'ambito di Matera Capitale della Cultura 2019.«Quello romano non era un impero europeo: le zone che oggi per noi sono il cuore dell'Occidente, lungo il Reno e il Danubio, non erano per i cittadini di Roma che un'estrema periferia affacciata sul barbaricum. Un secolo e mezzo dopo, la vittoria di Carlo Martello a Poitiers mette fine all'espansione araba ed è celebrata da un cronista del tempo come una vittoria degli “europenses”; e il nipote di Carlo Martello, Carlo Magno, sarà acclamato come il “Re Padre dell'Europa”. Le province perdute dell'Impero, asservite dai barbari, avevano strutturato una propria forte identità e presto sarebbero partite alla conquista del mondo. “Quindi – conclude Barbero – i discendenti di quei barbari che hanno combattuto queste due battaglie siamo noi europei»Registrazione originale: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KjJ_JQZavzMCommunity & Palco del Mercoledì: https://barberopodcast.it/communityTwitter: https://twitter.com/barberopodcastFacebook: https://facebook.com/barberopodcastInstagram: https://instagram.com/barberopodcastGeorge Street Shuffle by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3800-george-street-shuffleLicense: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Pablo Matera is one of the best loose forwards in the world, he is the very passionate captain of his country Argentina and most importantly one of the great lads in the game. It was an honour to get Pablo on What a lad and go through his incredible journey so far. He's been everywhere, he's done it all. From playing in the UK with the Leicester Tigers, France with Stade Francais, NZ with the Crusaders and of course Argentina with the Jaguares and the national side. That's not to mention the next move to Japan with the Honda heat. With all that comes plenty of experiences and plenty of great stories that Pablo shares throughout this episode. Ultimately at the end of the day this podcast is about giving the listeners an insight into what these legends are like off the field and there is just no way you can't love the guy after this episode. If you enjoy this episode as much as I did please give it a share! This episode was sponsored by Swysh, the perfect gift for sport fans – Check them out Here Swysh If you're interested in more information about O-Studio from the legend Tim Bateman then click here O-Studio Finally if you enjoy your racing go and give champion trainer Regan Todd at Todds Racing a follow! Or DM me if you're keen to get in on What a Lad (the horse).
Las “necesidades más urgentes del mundo” fueron el centro de la alocución del Papa Francisco, en Matera, invocando la “intercesión maternal” de la Virgen María, “mujer eucarística”, antes de terminar la celebración que concluyó el 27º Congreso Eucarístico Nacional en Matera, con la oración del Ángelus este 25 de septiembre.OPARA ESCUCHARLA Y VERLO, PINCHA AQUI: https://youtu.be/1b-0EPOFDSg
On "EWTN News Nightly" tonight: The Biden Administration is lashing out at a judge's ruling that a ban on nearly all abortions in Arizona can be enforced, but one pro-life organization, Live Action, said “Every abortion murders an innocent, helpless human life” adding America must “defend our youngest and most vulnerable from violence!” A pro-life supporter who regularly prays outside of a Philadelphia abortion clinic is facing federal charges for allegedly assaulting a clinic escort. Washington Editor for the American Spectator, Amber Athey, joins to share what she knows about this story. And Pope Francis participated in 2 events over the weekend in 2 different Italian cities. EWTN Vatican Bureau Chief, Andreas Thonhauser, joins to tell us more about the weekend travels of the pope to Assisi and Matera. Meanwhile, with an eye on taking back the US House in the November mid-terms, Republicans introduced their blueprint for governing. From the origins of COVID, to the botched withdrawal from Afghanistan, to the crisis at the Southern border, House Republicans are planning a long-list of aggressive investigations against the Biden Administration. Finally this evening, a Catholic high school is the 1st religious school in Maine to receive state tuitions funds. Spokesperson for Defense of Freedom Institute, Angela Morabito, joins to share more about the Supreme Court case. Don't miss out on the latest news and analysis from a Catholic perspective. Get EWTN News Nightly delivered to your email: https://ewtn.com/enn
9/21/22 6am CT Hour John, Glen and Sarah chat about Russia, Puerto Rico and Aaron Judge breaking Babe Ruth's Homerun Record. Tim shares his process for sculpting Catholic statues and his latest project Padre Pio. Ashley reports on the Papal audience, Eucharistic Congress in Matera and the celebrations for the feast of St. Januarius, St. Matthew and Padre Pio. Joe explains what Catholic Extension is working on in the recovery effort for Puerto Rico from Hurricane Maria and Fiona.
John Matera, Executive Producer for Partisan Pictures presenting the PBS documentary "Ron Carter Finding the Right Notes," visited WQED-FM speaking with Jim Cunningham about the October broadcast on WQED13. John is a former Pittsburgher back in town for the opening concert September 16th at the August Wilson Cultural Center of the Pittsburgh Jazz Festival which stars the 85 year old bass superstar who started his career in the 1950's and has made more recordings than any other bassist with every major jazz star, Miles Davis, Aretha Franklin and many others totaling over 2,500 recordings. Why doesn't everyone know his name? Probably because of his gentle easy going nature. He started down the road of a classical bass player with a degree from the Eastman School of Music but making it in the orchestral world has never been easy for an African American as the film reveals.
Matera is one of the world's most ancient and fascinating cities and it's tucked away in a pocket of southern Italy that many people never reach. Resident and local guide Paulo Maragliulo joins us to share the many intriguing things to do in Matera, his adopted city. You'll discover that a quick day trip is not enough to uncover the layers of beauty of the old and new cities, the sassi cave dwellings and surrounding countryside.Join us in Matera and Puglia in 2023! Discover Puglia's hidden secrets, incredible local cuisine and deep culture with Untold Italy. Our small group tours depart from Bari in May and October 2023 and include a stay in a cave hotel in Matera > Puglia and Matera tour detailsRead the full episode show notes, including places mentioned here > untolditaly.com/141Want a deeper connection with Italy and help to plan your travels? Join the friends of the podcast here > untolditaly.com/amiciThe Untold Italy podcast is an independent production. Podcast Editing, Audio Production and Website Development by Mark Hatter. Production Assistance and Content Writing by the other Katie Clarke - yes there are two of us! Support the show
Matt Heath & James McOnie join ACC Head G Lane for another episode of The Agenda! In this episode, the guys review the Black Caps' latest humiliation against Australia and bring back an important support group, try to decipher what The Runny Bum said to Matera and question how the Warriors threw the game with less than 10 to go... Plus, 'Attendance Required' for the weekend! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
If you're looking for a spectacular and still undiscovered region in Italy to explore look no further than Basilicata. On author Karen Haid's website it says this about Basilicata: "Journey to the small, rocky region in the heart of the Italian south, to a land [with] world-class wine... edible hyacinth bulbs, [where] zip-lines parallel old mule trails, and the air is infused with the ideals of Roman poets and brigands. Best known for the evocative cave dwellings of Matera, Basilicata packs an incredible diversity into the unassuming instep of the Italian boot. To discover what makes this region tick [visit its] Alpine forests, medieval castles...attend folkloric festivals and sample earthy local cuisine, uncovering Basilicata past and present, from pre-Greek to the story of emigration that continues today."
Parti con Tara, Sara e Gianluca alla scoperta di luoghi fuori dal sentiero battuto.Dove sono le Langhe? Che cosa si può fare sul Lago d'Iseo? Cosa sono i “Sassi” di Matera? E perché Civita di Bagnoregio è chiamata la “città che muore”? Questo e molto altro ancora in una puntata ricca di consigli di viaggio!***La tua opinione è importante per noi! Partecipa al sondaggio: https://bit.ly/3xdR0Ox Bastano 5 minuti per aiutarci a migliorare i nostri podcast!*** Usa la trascrizione per seguire il testo dell'episodio e scopri contenuti interessanti: https://bit.ly/3oowXrEHai domande? Scrivi a podcasting@babbel.com
Francesco da Matera, Geco Supporto Microfono Baracchino, invoca il ritorno di Vittorio da Roma: tra i due finisce male. I "fratelli" africani Paco da Belluno (Spada di fuoco) e Nassef da Bergamo si scontrano sul tema della legittima difesa. Uno dei maggiori complottisti italiani come Gabriele Accornero spiega l'espavo a Parenzo. Resteremo col dubbio sull'elite pedosatanista e sui nomi dei signori della truffa. L'avvocatoMargherita Matrella attacca Mario Draghi e definisce maiali "quelli" del nuovo mondialismo. Francesca da Verona, giovanissima trentenne, cerca scambi di coppia insieme al fidanzato ma schifa gli anziani. Luiza, content creator su Only Fans, torna per una seconda puntata insieme al fidanzato: l'Avvocato dell'Atomo - Luca Romano
每日英語跟讀 Ep.K391: About Italy - Italian coffee shop fined $1,050 for failing to display price of espresso An Italian coffee shop owner is in hot water after being fined $1,050 for failing to display the cost of a $2.12 espresso. 義大利一家咖啡店老闆因為未標示一杯2.12美元的濃縮咖啡價格而惹上麻煩,被罰款1050美元。 The owner of the Ditta Artigianale cafe in Florence has been punished by police after a customer reported him at the end of April for not advertising his prices as legally required. 4月底一名顧客檢舉佛羅倫斯Ditta Artigianale咖啡店沒有依照法律要求標示價目後,該店老闆遭警方處罰。 Inspector Leonardo Magnolfi, of Florence local police, told CNN Thursday that a male customer reported the cafe for not displaying the price of the coffee behind the counter - as law dictates. 佛羅倫斯當地警方督察梅諾菲週四向美國有線電視新聞網(CNN)說,一名男性顧客檢舉這家咖啡店,沒有按照法律規定,在櫃台後方公布咖啡的價格。 Police followed up the complaint and fined the shop $1,050 after verifying that the price was indeed absent. 警方針對這起投訴採取行動,在確認店家確實沒有出示價目表後,對這家商店開罰1050美元。 Next Article Thieves use mechanical diggers to tear open Italian security van 盜賊用機械挖土機把義大利運鈔車大卸八塊 Thieves used mechanical diggers on Wednesday to prise open an armored van on a highway in southern Italy and made off with more than 2 million euros in cash, police said. 警方說,小偷週三利用機械挖土機,在義大利南部公路上撬開一輛運鈔車,帶著超過200萬歐元現金逃離。 The blue security van had left the city of Bari and was carrying pensions to be distributed in post offices in nearby Matera when it was blocked on the road by two lorries. 這輛藍色運鈔車從巴里市出發,在路上被兩輛貨車圍堵時,運著附近馬泰拉市各郵局有待發放的退休金。 Two diggers then tore open the vehicle, using their mechanical arms like can openers to gain access to the cash. 兩台挖土機接著用它們宛如開罐器的機器手臂,把那輛車大卸八塊,以拿取那些現金。 The lorries were then set ablaze as the hooded thieves escaped with their loot in a waiting car. The three guards in the van were unharmed. 蒙面盜賊對貨車縱火後,帶著掠奪的物品搭上接應車潛逃。那台運鈔車的3名保全並未受傷。Source article: https://features.ltn.com.tw/english/article/paper/1524281 ; https://news.ltn.com.tw/news/world/paper/1259107
What happens when scaffolding, such as a 504 plan or IEP, goes away at college? Some schools have transition programs, but many or most do not. We're talking with Dr. Dawn Matera, co-founder of an institution called Westport College Prep, about how to get neurodivergent kids ready for the changes ahead. Also, educators and school administrators who are looking for continuing education or professional development material for gifted/twice-exceptional programs should consider our new offering, a 15-hour, 6-module course called “Strategies for Supporting Twice-Exceptional Students,” by Emily Kircher-Morris. Learn more and sign up at the Neurodiversity University. ABOUT OUR GUEST - Dawn Matera is a Dr. of Education with over 25 years of experience. She holds a BS in Psychology, a MS in Special Education, and Doctorate in Educational Leadership. Upon completing a teacher training program and obtaining her Connecticut State Teaching Certification, she taught complex learners at specialty schools, including Eagle Hill and Winston Preparatory, for more than a decade. In 2008, Dr. Matera founded her first education company, A Way to Learn, which provides tutoring, executive function coaching, and test prep to students. Additionally, in 2013, she co-founded The Westport Day School, a Connecticut state-approved special education school for internalizing students in sixth through twelfth grades. You can support the podcast at www.patreon.com/neurodiversity. The Neurodiversity Podcast is on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and you're invited to join our Facebook Group. For more information go to www.NeurodiversityPodcast.com Thank you for caring about neurodivergent people.
Filmkulisse für den letzten James Bond-Film. Weltkulturerbe. Aber auch die ehemalige "Schande Italiens" und noch vor 70 Jahren ein Slum mit Cholera-Kranken: Matera in Süditalien ist eine faszinierende Stadt und eine der ältesten menschlichen Siedlungen der Welt. Autorin: Hildburg Heider Von Hildburg Heider.
Portlock Alaska & Other haunted ghost towns Today we're talking about a ghost town in Alaska that is rumored to have been abandoned because of…. Wait for it….a killer bigfoot!! dun dun duuuuuuuuuuun!!! We're going to look at Portlock Alaska and after that maybe take a look at other haunted and creepy ghost towns! History of Portlock: As per wikipedia Portlock is a ghost town in the U.S. state of Alaska, located on the southern edge of the Kenai Peninsula, around 16 miles south of Seldovia. It is located in Port Chatham bay, after which an adjacent community takes its namesake. Named after Nathaniel Portlock, Portlock was established in the Kenai Peninsula in the early-twentieth century as a cannery, particularly for salmon. It is thought to have been named after Captain Nathaniel Portlock, a British ship captain who sailed there in 1786. In 1921, a United States Post Office opened in the town. The population largely consisted of Russian-Aleuts, indigenous people of the Aleutian Islands. Both the Aleut people and the islands are divided between the US state of Alaska and the Russian administrative division of Kamchatka Krai. In the early 1900s there were a series of deaths and disappearances in the town. Many people started to blame this on a killer cryptid! It is said that this big bad beast is the reason behind the town being abandoned and left to become a legend. Nantiinaq: First off let's talk about the cryptid that is believed to be the cause of all of this mess. Nantinaq is a large Bigfoot-like creature that is believed to be a key factor in the abandonment of the Alaskan fishing village Portlock. Elders from the nearby town of Nanwalek have kept oral traditions of the creature alive since Portlock's abandonment in 1950. Stories differentiate Nantinaq from the North American Sasquatch or Bigfoot through its abilities, which many believe to be supernatural and evil in nature. The earliest descriptions and accounts of Nantinaq can be traced back to European expedition logs in the 1700's. When Native Alaskans began inhabiting the Portlock area stories and encounters with a mysterious creature began occurring with increasing regularity. In the early 20th century, as Portlock's population grew, local and national sources began to record unexplained occurrences in the area. An abnormally high number of disappearances, catastrophes, and deaths eventually lead to village elders to move the population to nearby Nanwalek. The physical characteristics of Nantinaq are typically described to be similar to the North American Sasquatch. Eye witnesses and historians describe the creature as being upwards of 8 feet tall and being covered in dark fur. Sharp claws capable of ripping mammals with ease have also been identified. Despite the creatures imposing physical characteristics, many locals identify Nantinaq more through its invisible traits. Strange illnesses, smells and noises have all been recorded in the Portlock area with no known explanation. This has led many locals and elders to believe Nantinaq is spiritual in nature. The craziness: Even before Portlock had even existed there had long been sinister stories told by the Natives of the area. They had long told of a creature stalking the wildernesses of the region, which they referred to as a Nantiinaq, roughly translating to “half man- half beast.” The Natives were apparently terrified of these creatures, and would avoid any area in which they were known to lurk. At first Portlock seemed safe, but whether the Nantiinaq had anything to do with it or not, strange things began happening in and around the area, not long after its settlement. In 1900, a group of hair-covered creatures ran at a prospector who had climbed a tree in an attempt to get his bearings near Thomas Bay. The prospector said they were, “the most hideous creatures. I couldn't call them anything but devils…” The prospector, upon seeing the creatures advancing on him, was able to drop down out of the tree, get to his canoe and make his escape in the nick of time. He had no doubt in his mind that, had he not seen the creatures when he did, they would have made short work of him. Another bizarre incident allegedly happened in as early as 1905, just a few years after the cannery had opened. At this time, many of the workers at the cannery suddenly stopped coming to work and refused to come back, but this wasn't due to poor pay or working conditions, but rather because the men were deeply spooked. They claimed that there was “something in the woods,” commonly reported by the men as being large dark shapes that would stare at them from the tree line at the shore and sometimes display menacing behavior. The workers were eventually convinced to come back the following season, but this was not the end of the town's problems. In the 1920s and 30s there were several mysterious deaths in the area that seemed to have been caused by something very large and powerful. The first was a local hunter by the name of Albert Petka, who was out hunting with his dogs in the 1920s when he came across a massive hairy creature that materialized from the trees to strike him in the chest, sending him flying. Petka's dogs allegedly managed to chase the beast off, and when rescuers arrived he explained what had happened, before dying from his wounds later. Natives at the time saw this as a bad sign, believing it to be evidence that a Nantiinaq had come to haunt the area. Rumors like this persisted for years, only further perpetuated by stories of miners, loggers, hunters, or cannery workers finding huge tracks in the woods, or of seeing fleeting large dark shapes and sometimes hearing eerie howls at night. Making it even more ominous is that there were some reports from frightened Natives that there was a ghostly entity in the area as well, which took the form of a woman wearing a long black dress and who would appear at the top of the cliffs near town to scream and moan before vanishing. Brian Weed is the co-founder of a group called Juneau's Hidden History that primarily keeps track of things through their Facebook page. He has traveled all over Juneau and many other Alaskan towns in search of natural history and stories. His group plans frequent hikes in the area to places that have some sort of story to tell or just to see the natural beauty of the state. He related another story of a mysterious death. "A logger was out working and something or someone hit him over the head with a huge piece of logging equipment, something that one man couldn't have lifted. When they found his body, there was blood on the equipment and there was no way that one person could have done it. He was a good ten feet from the logging equipment, so it's not like he slipped, fell, and hit his head. It looked more like someone picked it up and bonked him over the head." In 1940 it was reported that a search party had been sent out to look for one such missing hunter, which would claim that they had come across his body in a creek, mutilated and torn apart in a way not consistent with a bear attack. Other bodies would reportedly be found as well, apparently washed down from the mountains into a nearby lagoon, with others still discovered washed up on the shores of Port Chatham, all of them ripped apart and maimed as if by some immensely powerful animal. At the time there were so many people turning up in that lagoon dead that it began to truly freak out the locals, to the point that they spent much time cowering indoors away from those creepy ass woods. By the 1950s, locals were sick and tired of living in fear so they completely fled the town and left it abandoned. Years later when hunters returned, it is said that they reported seeing 18-inch long human-like footprints with patterns similar to a deer or wolf. Former Portlock resident Malania Helen Kehl was interviewed by Naomi Klouda of the Homer Tribune back in October of 2009 and said things in Portlock started out well enough but degenerated to such a point that the family left their home and fled to Nanwalek.The family had endured the murder of Malania's godfather, Andrew Kamluck in 1931. Kamluck was the logger who was killed when someone, or something, hit him over the head. "We left our houses and the school and started all new here (Nanwalek),” said Kehl. Port Graham elder, Simeon Kvasnikoff told of the unexplained disappearance of a gold miner near the village during this time. “He went up there one time and never came back,” said Kvasnikoff. “No one found any sign of him.” Another interesting aspect of the Portlock story was relayed to Klouda by an Anchorage paramedic who preferred to remain anonymous. “In 1990, while I was working as a paramedic in Anchorage, we got called out on an alarm for a man having a heart attack at the state jail in Eagle River. He was a Native man in his 70s, and after I got him stabilized with IVs, O2 and cardiac drugs, my partner and I began to transport him to the Native Hospital in Anchorage.” En route to the hospital, the paramedic and the Native man, an “Aleut'' from Port Graham, talked about hunting. The paramedic had been to DogFish Bay and was once stuck there due to bad weather. “This old man sat up on the gurney and grabbed me by the front of my shirt. He got right up to my face and said, ‘Did it bother you?' Well, with that question, the hair just stood up on the back of my head. I said, ‘Yes.' “Did you see it?” was his next question. I said, “No, did you see it?” He said “No, but my brother seen it. It chased him.” Ok so that's pretty jacked up….a killer bigfoot! That's one hell of a story. The town had been abandoned ever since and sightings continue to this day. In fact there is a TV series about this place called Alaskan Killer Bigfoot! The series followed a 40 day expedition to the area to try and see if they can get to the bottom of all the mystery! Moody hasn't watched it yet but I'm sure he'll get high and binge it soon. So on the side of fairness we do have to disclose an interview we found. The interview was with a woman named Sally Ash. Sally is Sugpiaq of Russian-Aleut descent. She has lived in Nanwalek for most of her life and continues to speak her native language Sugt'stun. Her mother was born in Dogfish Bay, near Port Chatham. “Our people were nomadic, went by the seasons, whatever was in season they would move from one place to another. They went through Port Chatham, Dogfish Bay, Seldovia, Homer, even to Kodiak.” "Portlock was kind of a creepy place,” she admitted. “They'd tell us don't go out on a foggy day. That's when he's walking around. You could run into him and you never know what he might do.” The ‘he' that she is talking about is their local form of Sasquatch, known as Nantiinaq. Nantiinaq pronounced ‘non-tee-nuck,' is not your typical, everyday Sasquatch brute. Nantiinaq is more of a supernatural being. “I think he is part-human,” Sally describes. “He lived with people and then didn't want to be around them anymore so he moved to the forest; away from everybody. He started growing hair and he looked like a bigfoot — scary… My uncles, my grandfathers, they all talked about him. They'd tell us they live far away from people. They don't mix with people.” “My brother went up to the lake. He was tying off his skiff. He started smelling something really bad in the bushes, so he opened it, moving the branches. Something's going on here. Then he looked in there and there was a man with his hands — in the back way (turned around). It looked like a man, but he was all hairy and he looked really scary. So he and our cousin took off running and didn't want to be up there. He wasn't sure if it was a bigfoot, but there was a horrible smell,” she said. “I think it's a he; he has been living for a long time,” Sally says. “He's old, he's tall, he's strong, he's hairy. It lives in the woods and you can tell when he's getting near. You can smell him. My mom used to talk about it a lot. She'd tell stories of the bigfoot, like in Dogfish area, her and her brother would talk about how bigfoot was around. They were getting too close to him and they would be nice to him. Respect him. Keep distance. They live with him but not so close. He moved around — he was quick.” Sally served as translator for her cousin, Malania Kehl during her historic interview for the Homer Tribune in 2009, that has since taken the bigfoot-believing world by storm. Malania told the reporter that the entire town evacuated Port Chatham in 1949 due to this murderous Nantiinaq. Her story has been perceived as being factual by authors, documentarians, and bigfoot buffs. Buuuuuuuuttttttt….. “My cousin Malania was being interviewed and we were sitting with her,” Sally recalls. “Malania kind of made up a story, because she was getting tired of people asking if this (story) is true. She made up this story about how Bigfoot was killing people. It wasn't true. Everybody knows that, but it was not our place to say nothing. We all knew but we couldn't just stop her. We were brought up in a way where we can't tell our elders they are wrong.” "And that was her story,” Sally giggles… “we knew it. There was me and my sisters and my cousins and we all just sat there. We couldn't tell her, ‘Don't say that Malania,' because she might get mad at us. We were younger than her and we were not allowed in front of her to say anything like that… Malania knew that we knew about her story that she made up and we all had a laugh about it with her.” Sally said the reason for the exodus from Port Chatham was more practical in nature. “People would see Nantiinaq, but that wasn't the reason why people moved this way to Seldovia and Nanwalek. They moved because of the economy, schools and the church. There really was no killing of people.” Well…that's disappointing…but we here at The train are gonna stick to the fact that there's a killer bigfoot to blame! Wow so that's fun! But you know what…it's not enough. We strive to bring you the best in podcast entertainment here so we're going to do some of our patented quick hitters and throw in some more crazy ghost towns for ya! Let's roll! First up we're off to Italy. The ghost town of Craco to be more specific. Craco is a ghost town and comune in the province of Matera, in the southern Italian region of Basilicata. Haunted, surreal and moving, it's not surprising that the Craco ghost town and the beautiful surrounding landscape was chosen as the setting for several movies such as Mel Gibson's The Passion of the Christ and 007 Quantum of Solace. The first written evidence of the town's existence shows that it was under the possession of a bishop named Arnaldo in 1060 A.D. The town's oldest building, the tall Torre Normanna, predates the bishop's documented ownership by 20 years. From 1154 to 1168, after the archbishop, the nobleman Eberto controlled the town, establishing Feudalistic rule, and then ownership passed onto Roberto di Pietrapertos in 1179. A university was established in the 13th century and the population kept growing, reaching 2,590 in the year 1561. By this time, the construction of four large plazas was completed. Craco had its first substantial landslide in 1600, but life went on, and the monastery of St. Peter went up in 1630. Then, another tragedy hit. In 1656, the Black Death began to spread. Hundreds died and the population dipped. But Craco wasn't down for the count quite yet. In 1799, the town successfully overthrew the feudal system — only to then fall to Napoleonic occupation. In 1815, a still-growing Craco was divided into two separate districts. After Italy's unification in the mid-19th century, the controversial gangster and folk hero Carmine Crocco briefly conquered the village. Mother Nature had more in store for Craco. Poor agricultural conditions caused a severe famine in the late 19th century. This spawned a mass migration of the population — about 1,300 people — to North America. Then came more landslides. Craco had a series of them — plus a flood in 1972 and an earthquake in 1980. Luckily, in 1963, the remaining 1,800 inhabitants were transferred down the mountain to a valley called Craco Peschiera. Not everyone was willing to move, however. One man native to the tiny town resisted the relocation, choosing to live the rest of his more than 100 years in his native land. Some houses still hold traces of the life that once was: old appliances, abandoned tools, a lonely chair in the middle of a room where no one will ever sit anymore. A few facades still bear the signs of their past beauty in what has remained of their decorations. And of course there are the tales of hauntings that come with most ghost towns. While there isn't a whole lot on a cursory search, if you dig a little you can find some stories of late night expeditions finding some interesting things. There are stories of groups seeing shadow people and apparitions. People hearing strange sounds. Pictures containing orbs and other anomalies. It's a great looking place, definitely check it out. Next up is Rhyolite Nevada. The ghost town of Rhyolite and its remnants are definitely a popular destination among those who like seeking out Nevada's abandoned places. Home to many of the town's original and now crumbling buildings, it's a fascinating place to see and think about Nevada's past. According to the national parks service This ghost town's origins were brought about by Shorty Harris and E. L. Cross, who were prospecting in the area in 1904. They found quartz all over a hill, and as Shorty describes it “... the quartz was just full of free gold... it was the original bullfrog rock... this banner is a crackerjack”! He declared, “The district is going to be the banner camp of Nevada. I say so once and I'll say it again.” At that time there was only one other person in the whole area: Old Man Beatty who lived in a ranch with his family five miles away. Soon the rush was on and several camps were set up including Bullfrog, the Amargosa and a settlement between them called Jumpertown. A townsite was laid out nearby and given the name Rhyolite from the silica-rich volcanic rock in the area. There were over 2000 claims covering everything in a 30 mile area from the Bullfrog district. The most promising was the Montgomery Shoshone mine, which prompted everyone to move to the Rhyolite townsite. The town immediately boomed with buildings springing up everywhere. One building was 3 stories tall and cost $90,000 to build. A stock exchange and Board of Trade were formed. The red light district drew women from as far away as San Francisco. There were hotels, stores, a school for 250 children, an ice plant, two electric plants, foundries and machine shops and even a miner's union hospital. The town citizens had an active social life including baseball games, dances, basket socials, whist parties, tennis, a symphony, Sunday school picnics, basketball games, Saturday night variety shows at the opera house, and pool tournaments. In 1906 Countess Morajeski opened the Alaska Glacier Ice Cream Parlor to the delight of the local citizenry. That same year an enterprising miner, Tom T. Kelly, built a Bottle House out of 50,000 beer and liquor bottles. In April 1907 electricity came to Rhyolite, and by August of that year a mill had been constructed to handle 300 tons of ore a day at the Montgomery Shoshone mine. It consisted of a crusher, 3 giant rollers, over a dozen cyanide tanks and a reduction furnace. The Montgomery Shoshone mine had become nationally known because Bob Montgomery once boasted he could take $10,000 a day in ore from the mine. It was later owned by Charles Schwab, who purchased it in 1906 for a reported 2 to 6 million dollars. The financial panic of 1907 took its toll on Rhyolite and was seen as the beginning of the end for the town. In the next few years mines started closing and banks failed. Newspapers went out of business, and by 1910 the production at the mill had slowed to $246,661 and there were only 611 residents in the town. On March 14, 1911 the directors voted to close down the Montgomery Shoshone mine and mill. In 1916 the light and power were finally turned off in the town. Today you can find several remnants of Rhyolite's glory days. Some of the walls of the 3 story bank building are still standing, as is part of the old jail. The train depot (privately owned) is one of the few complete buildings left in the town, as is the Bottle House. The Bottle House was restored by Paramount pictures in Jan, 1925. And according to only on your state, It also happens to be home to one of Nevada's spookiest cemeteries. After all, nothing says "creepy" like a ghost town graveyard! Known as the Bullfrog-Rhyolite Cemetery, it definitely looks the part of a haunted destination you probably shouldn't visit at night. The Bullfrog-Rhyolite Cemetery was actually shared between two towns. Home to just a handful of rugged graves, including some that look like nothing more than a human-shaped mound of rocks, it definitely has a serene type of beauty to it...during daylight, that is. There's no telling what kind of creepy experiences you could have in Rhyolite once the sun sets. In fact, paranormal enthusiasts make trips out here to challenge just that! Disembodied voices and orbs are often reported in this area. And while most of the action seems to be centered on this area there are also reports of the same strange goings on in the town itself. Strange sounds and voices and orbs, as well as strange shadows and apparitions. Sounds awesome to us! Next up we head to Calico California. Calico is a ghost town and former mining town in San Bernardino County, California, United States. Located in the Calico Mountains of the Mojave Desert region of Southern California, it was founded in 1881 as a silver mining town, and was later converted into a county park named Calico Ghost Town. Located off Interstate 15, it lies 3 miles (4.8 km) from Barstow and 3 miles from Yermo. Giant letters spelling CALICO are visible, from the highway, on the Calico Peaks behind it. Walter Knott purchased Calico in the 1950s, and architecturally restored all but the five remaining original buildings to look as they did in the 1880s. Calico received California Historical Landmark #782, and in 2005 was proclaimed by then-Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger to be California's Silver Rush Ghost Town. In 1881 four prospectors were leaving Grapevine Station (present day Barstow, California) for a mountain peak to the northeast. After they described the peak as "calico-colored", the peak, the mountain range to which it belonged, and the town that followed were all called Calico. The four prospectors discovered silver in the mountain and opened the Silver King Mine, which was California's largest silver producer in the mid-1880s. John C. King, who had grubstaked the prospectors who discovered the silver vein (the Silver King Mine was thus named after him), was the uncle of Walter Knott founder of Knott's Berry Farm. King was sheriff of San Bernardino County from 1879 to 1882. A post office at Calico was established in early 1882, and the Calico Print, a weekly newspaper, started publishing. The town soon supported three hotels, five general stores, a meat market, bars, brothels, and three restaurants and boarding houses. The county established a school district and a voting precinct. The town also had a deputy sheriff and two constables, two lawyers and a justice of the peace, five commissioners, and two doctors. There was also a Wells Fargo office and a telephone and telegraph service. At its height of silver production during 1883 and 1885, Calico had over 500 mines and a population of 1,200 people. Local badmen were buried in the Boot Hill cemetery An attempt to revive the town was made in about 1915, when a cyanide plant was built to recover silver from the unprocessed Silver King Mine's deposits. Walter Knott and his wife Cordelia, founders of Knott's Berry Farm, were homesteaded at Newberry Springs around this time, and Knott helped build the redwood cyanide tanks for the plant. The last owner of Calico as a mine was Zenda Mining Company. After building Ghost Town at Knott's Berry Farm in the 1940s, Walter Knott, his son, Russell, and Paul von Klieben, who was Knott's art director, made a road trip to Calico. The three of them came back filled with enthusiasm. If they could build an imaginary ghost town at Knott's Berry Farm, would it not be possible to restore a real ghost town? In 1951, Walter Knott purchased the town of Calico from the Zenda Mining Company and put Paul von Klieben in charge of restoring it to its original condition, referencing old photographs. Using the old photos, and Walter's memory and that of some old-timers who still lived in the area, von Klieben was able to not only restore existing structures, but also design and replace missing buildings. Knott spent $700,000 restoring Calico. Knott installed a longtime employee named Freddy "Calico Fred" Noller as resident caretaker and official greeter. In 1966 Walter Knott decided to donate the town to San Bernardino County, and Calico became a County Regional Park. The site is now a thriving tourist attraction, and is quite interesting to visit despite being neither original nor very atmospheric, as only about four of the buildings are largely unchanged from the mining era, and the whole place is rather commercialized. Some of the replica houses have only a frontage, as if part of a movie set. The best part?…yup…its friggin haunted. You can take ghost tours through the town to find out for yourself! According to Haunted Rooms. Com, Amid the claims of paranormal activity, there are 3 main entities who have been identified as residing in Calico Ghost Town and these are the ones that visitors should be on the lookout for. One of the most commonly spotted entities haunting Calico Ghost Town is said to be a woman by the name of Lucy Lane. History suggests that Lucy ran Calico's General Store alongside her husband John Robert Lane. Just like so many of the residents, the Lanes moved away from Calico when the town began rapidly depopulating. However, they ended up returning in 1916 after the town was abandoned and live the rest of their days in the town. Lucy was well into her 90s when she finally passed. It seems only natural then that she would want to stick around in the town where she lived and died. Visitors to Calico Ghost Town have frequently reported seeing Lucy walking between what was once her home and the General Store. She is easily recognizable by her attire – the beautiful black lace dress in which she was buried. Although most of the reports describe seeing Lucy Lane walking from her home to the General Store, there have also been sightings of her inside both buildings as well. Her former home is now a museum dedicated to Lucy and John Robert Lane and she is sometimes seen sitting in a rocking chair slowly rocking back and forth. Some visitors also claim to have seen Lucy behind the counter in the General Store. Another of the paranormal hotspots in the Calico Ghost Town is definitely the schoolhouse! The names of the teachers have long since been lost, but it is said to be their spirits who are responsible for the plethora of paranormal activity happening in the old schoolhouse. There are frequent reports that the teachers like to stand in the windows of the schoolhouse peering out at those passing by on the outside! There are also reports of a red ball of light moving around inside the schoolhouse. This phenomenon has been witnessed by many visitors to Calico Ghost Town. The former teachers are certainly not the only ones who are up to mischief! There have also been reports of various ghostly students in the schoolhouse as well. These children's spirits can be seen flitting around inside the building. They do seem to keep themselves to themselves most of the time, but there is one girl aged around 11 or 12 who is far more outgoing. However, she is most likely to appear to children and teens who will often comment on seeing her only for their parents to turn around and the girl to vanish! The most prominent ghost that roams around Calico Ghost Town is probably the entity known as ‘Tumbleweed' Harris. He is actually the last Marshal of Calico and it seems as though he has not yet stepped down from his duty! He is often seen by the boardwalks on Main Street and you will be able to recognize him by his large frame and long white beard. If you do visit Calico Ghost Town be sure to stop by Tumbleweed's gravestone and thank him for continuing to keep Calico's peace even in death. And finally we double back and head back to Alaska for one more ghost town. Kennecott Alaska is our final destination. In the summer of 1900, two prospectors, "Tarantula" Jack Smith and Clarence L. Warner, a group of prospectors associated with the McClellan party, spotted "a green patch far above them in an improbable location for a grass-green meadow." The green turned out to be malachite, located with chalcocite (aka "copper glance"), and the location of the Bonanza claim. A few days later, Arthur Coe Spencer, U.S. Geological Survey geologist independently found chalcocite at the same location. Stephen Birch, a mining engineer just out of school, was in Alaska looking for investment opportunities in minerals. He had the financial backing of the Havemeyer Family, and another investor named James Ralph, from his days in New York. Birch spent the winter of 1901-1902 acquiring the "McClellan group's interests" for the Alaska Copper Company of Birch, Havemeyer, Ralph and Schultz, later to become the Alaska Copper and Coal Company. In the summer of 1901, he visited the property and "spent months mapping and sampling." He confirmed the Bonanza mine and surrounding by deposits were, at the time, the richest known concentration of copper in the world. By 1905, Birch had successfully defended the legal challenges to his property and he began the search for capital to develop the area. On 28 June 1906, he entered into "an amalgamation" with the Daniel Guggenheim and J.P. Morgan & Co., known as the Alaska Syndicate, eventually securing over $30 million. The capital was to be used for constructing a railway, a steamship line, and development of the mines. In Nov. 1906, the Alaska Syndicate bought a 40 percent interest in the Bonanza Mine from the Alaska Copper and Coal Company and a 46.2 percent interest in the railroad plans of John Rosene's Northwestern Commercial Company. Political battles over the mining and subsequent railroad were fought in the office of U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt between conservationists and those having a financial interest in the copper. The Alaska Syndicate traded its Wrangell Mountains Mines assets for shares in the Kennecott Copper Corporation, a "new public company" formed on 29 April 1915. A similar transaction followed with the CR&NW railway and the Alaska Steamship Company. Birch was the managing partner for the Alaska operation. Kennecott Mines was named after the Kennicott Glacier in the valley below. The geologist Oscar Rohn named the glacier after Robert Kennicott during the 1899 US Army Abercrombie Survey. A "clerical error" resulted in the substitution of an "e" for the "i", supposedly by Stephen Birch himself. Kennecott had five mines: Bonanza, Jumbo, Mother Lode, Erie and Glacier. Glacier, which is really an ore extension of the Bonanza, was an open-pit mine and was only mined during the summer. Bonanza and Jumbo were on Bonanza Ridge about 3 mi (4.8 km) from Kennecott. The Mother Lode mine was located on the east side of the ridge from Kennecott. The Bonanza, Jumbo, Mother Lode and Erie mines were connected by tunnels. The Erie mine was perched on the northwest end of Bonanza Ridge overlooking Root Glacier about 3.7 mi (6.0 km) up a glacial trail from Kennecott. Ore was hoisted to Kennecott via the trams which head-ended at Bonanza and Jumbo. From Kennecott the ore was hauled mostly in 140-pound sacks on steel flat cars to Cordova, 196 rail miles away, via the Copper River and Northwestern Railway (CRNW). In 1911 the first shipment of ore by train transpired. Before completion, the steamship Chittyna carried ore to the Abercrombie landing by Miles Glacier. Initial ore shipments contained "72 percent copper and 18 oz. of silver per ton." In 1916, the peak year for production, the mines produced copper ore valued at $32.4 million. In 1925 a Kennecott geologist predicted that the end of the high-grade ore bodies was in sight. The highest grades of ore were largely depleted by the early 1930s. The Glacier Mine closed in 1929. The Mother Lode was next, closing at the end of July 1938. The final three, Erie, Jumbo and Bonanza, closed that September. The last train left Kennecott on November 10, 1938, leaving it a ghost town. From 1909 until 1938, except when it closed temporarily in 1932, Kennecott mines "produced over 4.6 million tons of ore that contained 1.183 billion pounds of copper mainly from three ore bodies: Bonanza, Jumbo and Mother Lode. The Kennecott operations reported gross revenues above $200 million and a net profit greater than $100 million. In 1938, Ernest Gruening proposed Kennecott be preserved as a National Park. A recommendation to President Franklin D. Roosevelt on 18 Jan. 1940 for the establishment of the Kennecott National Monument went nowhere. However, 2 Dec. 1980 saw the establishment of the Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve. From 1939 until the mid-1950s, Kennecott was deserted except for a family of three who served as the watchmen until about 1952. In the late 1960s, an attempt was made to reprocess the tailings and to transport the ore in aircraft. The cost of doing so made the idea unprofitable. Around the same time, the company with land rights ordered the destruction of the town to rid them of liability for potential accidents. A few structures were destroyed, but the job was never finished and most of the town was left standing. Visitors and nearby residents have stripped many of the small items and artifacts. Some have since been returned and are held in various archives. KCC sent a field party under the geologist Les Moon in 1955. They agreed with the 1938 conclusion, "no copper resource of a size and grade sufficient to interest KCC remained." The mill remains however. Most of this historical info came from an awesome article called A Kennecott Story by Charles Hawley in the University of Utah Press. So you know we love our history and we thought it was cool cus this was such an important town in Alaska's history and then boom…ghost town. But you know that's not why we're there…it's also haunted! Reports of paranormal activity along the abandoned train tracks abound and have for decades. That's not all that makes it one of the most haunted places in America. Some claim to have seen old tombstones along the route. The gravestones then vanish by the time the visitors make their return trip. Others have reported hearing disembodied voices and phantom children laughing. Reportedly, a 1990s construction project here halted after workers were scared away by spooky sounds and inexplicable events. Ok, last little tid bit of fact. There's actually a little town up in the far northwest territory of Alaska called Diomede which is located on the island of Little Diomede in the middle of the Bering Straight. During the winter months the water can freeze and you can actually walk… to Big Diomede … an island in Russia. The stretch of water between these two islands is only about 2.5 miles wide. There are two reported cases of people walking from Alaska to Russia in modern history. The last were Karl Bushby, and his American companion Dimitri Kieffer who in 2006 walked from Alaska to Russia over the Bering Straight in 14 days. So there you have it…killer bigfoot and some cool haunted ghost towns! Maybe we'll drive into some more ghost towns in a future episode! Bigfoot horror movies https://filmschoolrejects.com/bigfoot-horror/