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Hoy os ofrecemos la primera parte de una conferencia impartida por el profesor Francisco Grande Covián, titulada, “Necesidades diarias de lípidos”. La conferencia tiene una duración aproximada de una hora, que emitiremos en dos programas correlativos de Quilo de Ciencia in Memoriam. Como estoy seguro de que podréis apreciar, la conferencia tiene un considerable valor histórico, en primer lugar, porque forma ya parte de la historia de la ciencia en sí misma, y, en segundo lugar, porque aborda interesantes aspectos de la historia de la ciencia de la nutrición y de la bioquímica. No obstante, la conferencia no solo es historia; es también ciencia y contiene una serie de notables conocimientos sobre la importancia de los lípidos en la nutrición humana que siguen siendo completamente válidos.
Hoy os ofrecemos la primera parte de una conferencia impartida por el profesor Francisco Grande Covián, titulada, “Necesidades diarias de lípidos”. La conferencia tiene una duración aproximada de una hora, que emitiremos en dos programas correlativos de Quilo de Ciencia in Memoriam. Como estoy seguro de que podréis apreciar, la conferencia tiene un considerable valor histórico, en primer lugar, porque forma ya parte de la historia de la ciencia en sí misma, y, en segundo lugar, porque aborda interesantes aspectos de la historia de la ciencia de la nutrición y de la bioquímica. No obstante, la conferencia no solo es historia; es también ciencia y contiene una serie de notables conocimientos sobre la importancia de los lípidos en la nutrición humana que siguen siendo completamente válidos.
Albert One - Turbo Diesel Brand Image - Love In A Summer Night My Mine - Hipnotic Tango Josep María Castells – Max Mix 4 Evelyn Thomas – High Energy Pino D'Angiò - Ma Quale Idea Lime - Babe We're Gonna Love Tonight La Bionda - I Wanna Be Your Lover Mirage - No More No War Felli - Diamond In The Night Max Coveri - One More Time Donna Summer & Giorgio Moroder - I Feel Love Patrick Cowley – Menergy Baccara (María Mendiola) – No Sir Don´t Say Goodbye Tino Casal – Embrujada Mr. Me - I Go Down (Sa Sa Sa) Kelly Brown - Only You Can Duke Lake - Dance Tonight Max Him - Lady Fantasy Periccko´s Band – Star 80´s Theme
On March 22, 2019, this podcast featured Shannah Boiteau who disappeared from St. Cloud, MN while on a trip to California during June 2016. In April 2025, Shannah's remains were found not far from where she was last seen. Today we remember Shannah while I go over why I got this disappearance wrong. Map Video: https://youtu.be/-w9wOFLoR4s Article: https://www.nbcnews.com/dateline/missing-in-america/remains-found-shannah-boiteau-rcna203595 Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCz4bh2ppqACeF7BdKw_93eA/join --Unfound plays on Spotify, iTunes, Stitcher, Instagram, Twitter, Podbean, Deezer, Google Play and many other podcast platforms. --on Monday nights at 9pm ET, please join us on the Unfound Podcast Channel for the Unfound Live Show. All of you can talk with me and I can answer your questions. --Contribute to Unfound at Patreon.com/unfoundpodcast. You can also contribute at Paypal: paypal.me/unfoundpodcast --email address: unfoundpodcast@gmail.com --the website: https://theunfoundpodcast.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The legendary international relations scholar Joseph Nye passed away on May 7th at the age of 88. He's best known, of course, for developing and advancing the idea of “soft power”—the ability to influence others and shape outcomes through attraction, persuasion, and cultural or ideological appeal rather than coercion or force. But over his singularly illustrious career, he authored hundreds of scholarly articles and dozens of books on international relations. To honor is legacy and memory, I wanted to share our conversation from way back in 2014. We began our conversation talking about Russia's (then recent) annexation of Crimea and occupation Ukraine, and what it suggests about long held ideas in international relations theory. We then pivot to his personal story, including his childhood in New Jersey and how his entry into the world of international relations was as an Africanist—he wrote an award-winning thesis as a Rhodes Scholar on decolonization in East Africa. Of course, we also discussed at length how he came up with the idea of “soft power,” which, as he explains, stemmed from an “a-ha!” moment while sitting in his kitchen.
In this installment of the Detroit City Sports Cast, Matt joins up with Garret and Adam to share their insights on the Pistons' early playoff departure and the overall strides the team has taken in 2025.(2:12) How we are feeling after the weekend(17:12) Who had their stock go up or go down? (40:12) Looking ahead to the off season
On 21st April 2025, Pope Francis, the head of the Catholic Church, died. His funeral took place on 26th April, with thousands of mourners crowding into St Peter's Square to pay their respects. Following the death of a Pope, there are centuries-old traditions and rituals that must be followed, and that got the Unexpected Elements team thinking about the science surrounding loss. First up, we delve into the thorny issue of when early humans started to carry out funerary rituals, before turning our attention to graveyards and the life that thrives within these sacred environments. Next, we are joined Carl Öhman from Uppsala University in Sweden, who reveals what happens to our data when we die and why we should care about it. Plus, we discuss the precious materials hiding in our old devices, and find out whether animals mourn. All that, plus many more Unexpected Elements. Presenter: Marnie Chesterton, with Andrada Fiscutean and Edd Gent Producers: Margaret Sessa Hawkins, with Alice Lipscombe-Southwell, Robbie Wojciechowski and Minnie Harrop
In deze uitzending overlopen we verder de apostolische reizen van paus Franciscus en kijken we naar de pastorale bezoeken die hij aflegde in Italië en dit alles in de periode tussen 2020 en 2024. De Bijbelvers voor vandaag is: Wij moeten alleen de armen gedenken, en ik heb daarvoor mijn best gedaan. – Gal 2, […]
In deze uitzending overlopen we de eerste apostolische reizen van paus Franciscus en kijken we naar de pastorale bezoeken die hij aflegde in Italië en dit alles in de periode tussen 2013, het jaar van zijn verkiezing, en 2019. De Bijbelvers voor vandaag is: De Heer doet nooit iets zonder dat Hij zijn besluit onthult […]
Andy Whale and Bolt Thrower defined a genre. Even in 2025 those names are said with reverence and massive respect. There is only one Bolt Thrower, and only one Andy Whale. However, Andy's career did not stop with Bolt Thrower as he also played with Memoriam, Darkened, and DeathCollector. Now, Andy is creating electronic music, drumming for the fun of it, and enjoying family time. Join us as we discuss touring, the metal scene in Birmingham, The Grindcrusher tour, and Andy's love/hate relationship with the drums.@mynameiswhale1964 @deathcollector_official @memoriamuk @darkeneddeathmetal --------------------Hosts: Jason Walton and Nick Wusz."I Hate Music" theme by Marius Sjoli, cover image by Jori Apedaile, intro video by Fredz.Produced by Jason Walton for Earth in Sound Productions.--------------------Support the podcast by becoming a Patreon member here: IHM PatreonFollow us on socials, donate to support the podcast, listen to our playlist on Spotify, and visit us online: I Hate Music LinktreeEmail and listener suggestions to: hate.pod.music@gmail.com#ihatemusicpodcast- Part of the Distorted Paths Podcast Network -
In this homily, Fr Edward Looney reflects on the Easter candle, Pope Francis and his devotion to Mary, and how we are called to proclaim and live the joy of the gospel.
Join us this Good Friday for a powerful, immersive experience as we reflect on the final hours of Jesus' life. Through dramatic monologues, music, and Scripture, we will journey alongside those who knew Him best—friends, family, and followers—each grappling with the weight of loss, confusion, and love. Come prepared to pause, to feel, and to remember. This will be a night of deep reflection and reverence you won't want to miss. ----------------------------------- TAKE YOUR NEXT STEP ----------------------------------- Let us know that you were watching with us and you will be entered to receive a free prize by completing our Connection Card: http://dsf.church/ecard Give Online: https://www.simplechurchgiving.net/App/Giving/dsf Message Notes: https://www.dayspringfellowship.com/messages Like, comment & subscribe to stay updated! Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dayspringkeizer Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DayspringKeizer YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/dayspringfellowship Website: http://dsf.church #dayspringkeizer #dayspringfellowship #2025sermon ___________________ Thanks for watching Dayspring Fellowship's worship service! At Dayspring Fellowship, we believe there is nothing more important than your spiritual growth.
In deze uitzending overlopen we de laatste 5 jaar van het pontificaat van Paus Franciscus. De Bijbelvers voor vandaag is: Wie Mij ziet, ziet de Vader, zegt Jezus. – Joh 14, 9
Giethoorn, 9 januari 1965 – Bonaire, 23 april 2025In memoriam: Jonnie Boer - host Petra Possel gedenkt chefkok (***) Jonnie Boer van restaurant De Librije in Zwolle.Een persoonlijke herinnering, vastgelegd in een verhaal van en verteld door Petra.En er is de troost van eten: gewoon, een bordje aardappelpuree met de gehaktballen van Jonnie.
This week, Taylor and Taddea discuss the A1 Memo, Doug's malfeasance, new Arch-Enemy Joe Donahue, Hailey Joe Osment's recent behavior, Robin Williams' heinous act, the death of Pope Francis and much, much more! Another installment of Our Week's: in Memoriam debuts with less important celebrity deaths.
We luisteren naar een gesprek met kardinaal De Kesel die we hebben opgenomen op dinsdag 22 april, net voor dat hij naar Rome vertrok. Ook overlopen we verder het pontificaat van Paus Franciscus! Het Bijbelvers voor vandaag: Ik zal u met weldaden overladen. – Gn 32, 13
In episode 276 of The Batman Universe Podcast, Ian (@ibmmiller) and BJ (@bjshea33) decided to try… The post TBU Podcast Episode 276: Batman Forever – In Memoriam: Val Kilmer appeared first on The Batman Universe.
LAyA 219 - In memoriam - Santos Mercado Reyes
We overlopen de eerste jaren van het pontificaat van Paus Franciscus, van zijn benoeming in 2013 tot het jaar 2015. We beluisteren natuurlijk ook verschillende fragmenten. De Bijbelvers voor vandaag: De leerlingen waren vervuld van vreugde toen zij de Heer zagen. – Joh 20, 20
Capitol Ideas: The Washington State House Democratic Caucus Podcast
Sen. Bill Ramos, who was Rep. Bill Ramos for six years before his election to the Senate last fall, died suddenly Saturday evening. Bill's voice being silenced is a loss for his 5th district, and for the people of Washington. Today's Capitol Ideas is a repost of a conversation that originally ran in early 2024.
In deze bijzonder aflevering van Radio Vaticaan blikken we dankbaar terug op het leven van paus Franciscus. De Heilige Vader overleed op 21 april 2025 om 7u35 in het Casa Santa Martha in Vaticaanstad. We willen mede op deze wijze afscheid nemen van deze paus die gedurende iets langer dan 12 jaar het Petrusambt gedragen […]
Remembering Dr. Mike Groff Find the video of this conversation at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RcAgM4jdK0E Find the NREF Groff Family Memorial Fund at https://nref.org/groff-family-memorial-fund/
Hey there faithful and brave conscient listeners, Welcome to the second conscient roundtable conversation. This one was recorded on Sunday, March 16, 2025 in Vancouver. In a minute you'll hear an acknowledgement about the original stewards of these lands followed by a minute of silent contemplation.Normally, conscient roundtables feature a group of artists and cultural workers talking about their passions, fears and dreams and, in fact, we did do this, but this was a special episode of the conscient podcast : e216 in memoriam tracey friesen. Tracey left us on January 6, 2025 at age 58.Who was Tracey Friesen, you ask? It's a good question. Many of you have not had the pleasure. Tracey was many things, including a media producer and media strategist, most recently Managing Vice President of the BC Branch of the Canadian Media Producers Association but I knew her as climate champion with the SCALE-LeSAUT and as a trusted friend. I had a conversation in 2021 on this podcast, e85, where she said:What's starting to interest me is stories of resilience for a post-carbon world. What are we going to need for our emotional well-being? It's going to be a different world, not long from now. If we do this, and we must do this, this transition has to happen and there's going to be a sense of loss and sacrifice and challenge, not just with what's happening externally from a climate point of view, but in how we're going to have to make changes to our lives and reorient our energies in terms of our advocacy. I feel like there's an opportunity for artists - I'm more connected to the film and television sector and the documentary community - but throughout the system, to be able to provide realistic and yet reassuring narratives about what the upside of all this might be.You can also check out an amazing celebration of life that took place on February 22nd, 2025 in Vancouver, see Livestream of Tracey Friesen Celebration of Life - Live at 12:45pm Feb 22nd, 2025.So I turned to my friend Jai Djwa help me bring together some of Tracey's closest friends in Vancouver friends and we talked for 70-minutes about everything. You'll hear Jai, of course, also Amir Niroumand, Liz Shorten, Sue Biely and Lucia Dekleer. Sadly a few others were not able to attend but I think there will be other opportunities. You'll hear us talk about how Tracey was an exceptional person and how she influenced our lives: anecdotes, stories, funny moments, sad moments. Tracey really believed in storytelling, as witnessed by her book: Story Money Impact. So I think kind of public mourning and celebration is a topic of interest to us all: how do we deal the untimely loss of a friend or family member? How do honour the memory of a loved one? How can we carry their work forward? I want to thank this group of friends for their generosity, courage and wisdom. If you want to comment on what you hear please go to conscient.ca and use any of the conscient podcast social media to share your thoughts.If you like what you hear then I invite you to share it within your networks and-or give conscient podcast a review on Apple podcasts. All of this helps to get these conversations to circulate. My email is claude@conscient.caSo, I invite you to sit back, relax – maybe grab a drink - and enjoy e216 roundtable - in memoriam tracey friesen. *END NOTES FOR ALL EPISODESHey conscient listeners, I've been producing the conscient podcast as a learning and unlearning journey since May 2020 on un-ceded Anishinaabe Algonquin territory (Ottawa). It's my way to give back.In parallel with the production of the conscient podcast and its francophone counterpart, balado conscient, I publish a Substack newsletter called ‘a calm presence' see https://acalmpresence.substack.com. Your feedback is always welcome at claude@conscient.ca and/or on social media: Facebook, Instagram, Linkedin, Threads or BlueSky.I am grateful and accountable to the earth and the human labour that provided me with the privilege of producing this podcast, including the toxic materials and extractive processes behind the computers, recorders, transportation systems and infrastructure that made this production possible. Claude SchryerLatest update on March 26, 2025
Val Kilmer, in memoriam El 1 de abril de 2025 el mundo del cine recibió una noticia realmente triste. Val Kilmer, uno de los actores más populares en Hollywood, había fallecido. Kilmer poseía un carisma muy particular. Fue una estrella que se diferenció siempre del resto de las estrellas, no sólo por su físico sino por su capacidad para entrar y salir de todo tipo de géneros: el de acción, la comedia, el western, las biopics, la fantasía, el neo noir, ciencia ficción… Iceman, Jim Morrison, Wyatt Earp, Batman, Simon Templar. Los nombres de sus personajes son prueba de su capacidad tanto para actuar como para transformarse… Y al utilizar esa capacidad transformó, a su vez, la vida de miles y miles de cinéfilos en todo el mundo. Lamentando enormemente su muerte y en pleno año 11 del podcast Cinegarage invitamos a nuestro querido amigo Cha, bajista estelar de varios grupos de rock desde Fobia hasta Gran Sur, a revisar la carrera y el legado del inigualable y muy querido Val Kilmer. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
We pay tribute to a celebrity animal that has passed on. Today we toast Roxie the gorilla from the Colorado zoo!
[HECMWorld] The reverse mortgage community recently lost these two men. [Housing Wire] Finance of America's CEO gives an update on the status of the HMBS 2.0 program. [HECMWorld] Mutual of Omaha Mortgage released this new private or proprietary reverse mortgage. Here's what we know... [HECMWorld] FHA HECM data is back online! Watch our video podcast here!
I discuss the career of Val Kilmer, a character actor with leading man charisma.
It's that time again, folks - It Happened One Year has (nearly) reached the end of another season, and so it's time to again honor those lost in the subject year. Listen as Sarah & Joe discuss a wide range of celebrities who said goodbye some forty-one years ago now, including Richard Burton, Peter Lawford, Ethel Merman, Indira Gandhi, Truman Capote, Francois Truffaut, Jackie Wilson, Count Basie, James Mason, and many more!
Hello, media consumers! Bryan and Joel are back with the second edition of The Press Box's 25 for 25. Today, they look back at the publications lost in the 21st century—including ESPN the Magazine, Gawker, and many others—and ask: What do we lose when a media company disappears? And how should we remember them, if at all? Hosts: Bryan Curtis and Joel D. Anderson Producer: Brian H. Waters Additional Production: Conor Nevins Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
In Memory of Marty Callner August 25, 1946-March 17, 2025In this classic and exclusive episode of Industry Standard, Marty Callner shares the story of his rise to show business success, from beginning as a local news director in Ohio, then on to directing Celtics broadcasts, before moving to Los Angeles where he directed numerous classic comedy specials for comedian like Robin Williams, Chris Rock, George Carlin, Jerry Seinfeld, and more, as well as directing iconic music videos for Aerosmith, Cher, Fleetwood Mac, Twisted SIster and more. Marty also reveals his proudest achievement in entertainment: creating the NFL x HBO series Hard Knocks. Marty also offers his advice for aspiring directors, producer and comedians working towards success in the entertainment industry.Blueprint for SuccessAre you a comedian, actor, writer, director, producer, manager, host, podcaster or agent? Would you like personalized help to reach all of your goals in the entertainment business? Click the link to learn more & join our FREE industry networking group full of decades of experience!Barry Katz Entertainmentbarrykatz.com
This week, Vanessa and Casper explore the theme of Boundaries in Chapter 2 of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows! They discuss Dumbledore's many secrets, Dudley's misunderstood act of kindness, and Hedwig's cage! Throughout the episode we consider the question: how do our boundaries change over time?Thank you to Chelsea for this week's voicemail! Next week we're reading Chapter 3, The Dursleys Departing, through the theme of Vulnerability.Harry Potter and the Sacred Text is a Not Sorry ProductionFind us at our website | Follow us on Instagram--It's two sickles to join S.P.E.W., and only five dollars to join our Patreon for extra content every week! Please consider helping us fill our Gringotts vault so we can continue to make this show. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Look up the word “mainstay,” and you’ll find such strong synonyms as backbone, linchpin, pillar, sustainer… and good right arm.
In honor of the recent passing of the late, great George Foreman, here's an encore presentation of my interview with George from 2009.
Zoe McLane joins me this week as we reflect on the careers and lives of the Twin Peaks cast that we lost in 2024. We talk about the unwavering dedication of Don Murray (Bushnell Mullins) to anti-war pacifism, the kindness of Victoria Catlin (Blackie O'Reilly) and her drive to help other through non-profit organizations and how John Sclimenti (production assistant for David Lynch) exemplified the close-knit environment that Lynch maintained on set. While this episode focuses primarily on those we lost in 2024, Zoe and I reflect on the loss of David Lynch last January and the tremendous impact he made on countless people throughout the world. Zoe McLane on Social Media: https://www.instagram.com/zoemclane/ https://bsky.app/profile/zoemclane.bsky.social Intro/Outro song: "The World Spins" by Luca De Paoli
Michael Proctor's Career of Alleged Cover-Ups In Memoriam Michael Proctor had everything a cop could want—respect, power, and a reputation that, for years, seemed untouchable. But by March 2025, he wasn't just out of a job—he was a liability. Fired. Disgraced. Publicly humiliated in a way few law enforcement officers ever are. And it all comes back to one thing: the way he handled the Karen Read case. Or rather, how spectacularly he mishandled it. Proctor's downfall wasn't a quick and clean dismissal. This wasn't one of those “effective immediately” situations where a cop gets caught doing something catastrophic and is gone by the next morning. No, this was a slow-motion train wreck. A case study in watching someone who thought they were untouchable get tangled in their own arrogance, their own bias, and their own mistakes. It started with a mistrial in July 2024—a high-profile, publicly scrutinized moment where Proctor didn't just look bad on the stand, he became the story. His testimony wasn't just shaky; it was an unmitigated disaster. Prosecutors must have known it was coming because the moment his text messages came out, it was game over. These weren't just any texts. Proctor, the lead investigator in the Karen Read case, the man responsible for gathering evidence and ensuring a fair and unbiased investigation, repeatedly called the defendant a "wack-job ct," openly mocked her, laughed about digging through her phone for nude photos, and, in one of the most damning moments, said he hoped she would kill herself.** Think about that for a second. The guy responsible for finding out what actually happened had already made up his mind before the investigation even started. And he wasn't keeping that bias to himself—he was texting it to people. Joking about it. Making it impossible to argue that he had conducted an objective investigation. And that wasn't even the worst of it. Proctor had undisclosed personal connections to key people involved in the case. His own sister was friends with members of the Albert family—the same family that owned the house where John O'Keefe was last seen alive. His family knew them socially. And yet, he never disclosed this. He took the case, took control of the evidence, and built a case against Karen Read while having direct ties to the very people who could have been alternative suspects. Then there was the taillight evidence. The prosecution's whole theory hinged on the idea that Karen Read backed into John O'Keefe with her SUV, breaking her taillight and leaving him outside to die in the snow. But the glass fragments that allegedly proved this theory didn't make it to the crime lab for six weeks. Six weeks. And guess who was in charge of that evidence? Michael Proctor. When asked about the delay, there was no good answer. No chain of custody explanation that made sense. No reasonable justification for why a critical piece of forensic evidence in a high-profile murder case sat around for over a month before it was analyzed. The defense didn't even need to prove that the evidence had been planted—they just had to point out how incompetent and sloppy the investigation was. And Proctor had done all of their work for them. The mistrial was a disaster. But the fallout was worse. Within hours of the decision, Proctor was suspended. That was the first clue that even his own department knew he was a problem. The Massachusetts State Police don't just throw their own under the bus. It takes serious misconduct for them to cut someone loose. And by this point, they had no choice. Because once Proctor went down, he took a whole lot of other cases with him. One of the first dominoes to fall? The Ana Walshe murder trial. This was another major case where Proctor had been deeply involved—investigating the disappearance and presumed murder of Walshe by her husband, Brian. But after the Read mistrial, prosecutors dropped Proctor from their witness list. They weren't even willing to put him on the stand. Think about what that means. Prosecutors, who normally go to great lengths to protect their investigators, decided it was better to move forward without their lead detective rather than risk having him testify. Then came the defense attorneys lining up to challenge other convictions. Proctor had worked on multiple murder cases, and now, anyone convicted in those cases had a potential argument for appeal. If Proctor had lied, manipulated evidence, or acted with bias in the Read case, who's to say he hadn't done it before? By late 2024, the Massachusetts State Police were scrambling. They launched internal investigations not just into Proctor, but **into his superiors—**the people who had allowed him to operate without oversight. They needed to figure out who knew what and when. And once they started digging, it became clear that Proctor wasn't the only problem. The truth is, he was never operating alone. And that brings us back to Sandra Birchmore. Sandra Birchmore was 23 years old, pregnant, and terrified. She had been manipulated for years by a man with a badge—Officer Matthew Farwell, a cop she had known since she was a teenager, a man who had groomed her since she was 13 or 14 years old under the guise of a police mentorship program. By 2021, she was pregnant with Farwell's child. Days later, she was found dead in her apartment. The official cause? Suicide. The police wasted no time shutting the case down. No suspicious circumstances. No deep dive into her relationship with Farwell. Just a quick, convenient conclusion that kept everything under wraps. And guess who oversaw that investigation? The same Massachusetts State Police unit that Michael Proctor worked for. It would take three years for the truth to come out. When federal investigators finally stepped in, they re-examined the crime scene, the autopsy, and Birchmore's relationship with Farwell. What they found contradicted the original ruling completely. Sandra Birchmore hadn't died by suicide. She had been strangled. Her death had been staged. The scene manipulated to look like something it wasn't. And when that became undeniable, Matthew Farwell was arrested and charged with murder in August 2024. This should have been the moment when the Massachusetts State Police admitted failure. But instead, they scrambled to explain how they had gotten it so wrong. And that's where things start to look uncomfortably familiar. The same people involved in burying the Birchmore case had direct ties to the Read investigation. Lieutenant John Fanning, Detective Brian Tully, and Sergeant Yuri Bukhenik—all senior officers **in Proctor's chain of command during the Read case—**had connections to the Stoughton Police Department, the same department where Farwell worked. This wasn't a coincidence. By the time Proctor was fired in March 2025, it wasn't about just him anymore. It was about all the people who had allowed him to operate unchecked for years. And the fallout was just beginning. Because once people started asking who had protected Proctor, they started realizing he was just one piece of a much bigger problem. A problem that wasn't going away. Want to listen to ALL of our podcasts AD-FREE? Subscribe through APPLE PODCASTS, and try it for three days free: https://tinyurl.com/ycw626tj Follow Our Other Cases: https://www.truecrimetodaypod.com The latest on The Downfall of Diddy, The Trial of Karen Read, The Murder Of Maddie Soto, Catching the Long Island Serial Killer, Awaiting Admission: BTK's Unconfessed Crimes, Delphi Murders: Inside the Crime, Chad & Lori Daybell, The Murder of Ana Walshe, Alex Murdaugh, Bryan Kohberger, Lucy Letby, Kouri Richins, Malevolent Mormon Mommys, The Menendez Brothers: Quest For Justice, The Murder of Stephen Smith, The Murder of Madeline Kingsbury, The Murder Of Sandra Birchmore, and much more! Listen at https://www.truecrimetodaypod.com
Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski | True Crime News & Commentary
Michael Proctor's Career of Alleged Cover-Ups In Memoriam Michael Proctor had everything a cop could want—respect, power, and a reputation that, for years, seemed untouchable. But by March 2025, he wasn't just out of a job—he was a liability. Fired. Disgraced. Publicly humiliated in a way few law enforcement officers ever are. And it all comes back to one thing: the way he handled the Karen Read case. Or rather, how spectacularly he mishandled it. Proctor's downfall wasn't a quick and clean dismissal. This wasn't one of those “effective immediately” situations where a cop gets caught doing something catastrophic and is gone by the next morning. No, this was a slow-motion train wreck. A case study in watching someone who thought they were untouchable get tangled in their own arrogance, their own bias, and their own mistakes. It started with a mistrial in July 2024—a high-profile, publicly scrutinized moment where Proctor didn't just look bad on the stand, he became the story. His testimony wasn't just shaky; it was an unmitigated disaster. Prosecutors must have known it was coming because the moment his text messages came out, it was game over. These weren't just any texts. Proctor, the lead investigator in the Karen Read case, the man responsible for gathering evidence and ensuring a fair and unbiased investigation, repeatedly called the defendant a "wack-job ct," openly mocked her, laughed about digging through her phone for nude photos, and, in one of the most damning moments, said he hoped she would kill herself.** Think about that for a second. The guy responsible for finding out what actually happened had already made up his mind before the investigation even started. And he wasn't keeping that bias to himself—he was texting it to people. Joking about it. Making it impossible to argue that he had conducted an objective investigation. And that wasn't even the worst of it. Proctor had undisclosed personal connections to key people involved in the case. His own sister was friends with members of the Albert family—the same family that owned the house where John O'Keefe was last seen alive. His family knew them socially. And yet, he never disclosed this. He took the case, took control of the evidence, and built a case against Karen Read while having direct ties to the very people who could have been alternative suspects. Then there was the taillight evidence. The prosecution's whole theory hinged on the idea that Karen Read backed into John O'Keefe with her SUV, breaking her taillight and leaving him outside to die in the snow. But the glass fragments that allegedly proved this theory didn't make it to the crime lab for six weeks. Six weeks. And guess who was in charge of that evidence? Michael Proctor. When asked about the delay, there was no good answer. No chain of custody explanation that made sense. No reasonable justification for why a critical piece of forensic evidence in a high-profile murder case sat around for over a month before it was analyzed. The defense didn't even need to prove that the evidence had been planted—they just had to point out how incompetent and sloppy the investigation was. And Proctor had done all of their work for them. The mistrial was a disaster. But the fallout was worse. Within hours of the decision, Proctor was suspended. That was the first clue that even his own department knew he was a problem. The Massachusetts State Police don't just throw their own under the bus. It takes serious misconduct for them to cut someone loose. And by this point, they had no choice. Because once Proctor went down, he took a whole lot of other cases with him. One of the first dominoes to fall? The Ana Walshe murder trial. This was another major case where Proctor had been deeply involved—investigating the disappearance and presumed murder of Walshe by her husband, Brian. But after the Read mistrial, prosecutors dropped Proctor from their witness list. They weren't even willing to put him on the stand. Think about what that means. Prosecutors, who normally go to great lengths to protect their investigators, decided it was better to move forward without their lead detective rather than risk having him testify. Then came the defense attorneys lining up to challenge other convictions. Proctor had worked on multiple murder cases, and now, anyone convicted in those cases had a potential argument for appeal. If Proctor had lied, manipulated evidence, or acted with bias in the Read case, who's to say he hadn't done it before? By late 2024, the Massachusetts State Police were scrambling. They launched internal investigations not just into Proctor, but **into his superiors—**the people who had allowed him to operate without oversight. They needed to figure out who knew what and when. And once they started digging, it became clear that Proctor wasn't the only problem. The truth is, he was never operating alone. And that brings us back to Sandra Birchmore. Sandra Birchmore was 23 years old, pregnant, and terrified. She had been manipulated for years by a man with a badge—Officer Matthew Farwell, a cop she had known since she was a teenager, a man who had groomed her since she was 13 or 14 years old under the guise of a police mentorship program. By 2021, she was pregnant with Farwell's child. Days later, she was found dead in her apartment. The official cause? Suicide. The police wasted no time shutting the case down. No suspicious circumstances. No deep dive into her relationship with Farwell. Just a quick, convenient conclusion that kept everything under wraps. And guess who oversaw that investigation? The same Massachusetts State Police unit that Michael Proctor worked for. It would take three years for the truth to come out. When federal investigators finally stepped in, they re-examined the crime scene, the autopsy, and Birchmore's relationship with Farwell. What they found contradicted the original ruling completely. Sandra Birchmore hadn't died by suicide. She had been strangled. Her death had been staged. The scene manipulated to look like something it wasn't. And when that became undeniable, Matthew Farwell was arrested and charged with murder in August 2024. This should have been the moment when the Massachusetts State Police admitted failure. But instead, they scrambled to explain how they had gotten it so wrong. And that's where things start to look uncomfortably familiar. The same people involved in burying the Birchmore case had direct ties to the Read investigation. Lieutenant John Fanning, Detective Brian Tully, and Sergeant Yuri Bukhenik—all senior officers **in Proctor's chain of command during the Read case—**had connections to the Stoughton Police Department, the same department where Farwell worked. This wasn't a coincidence. By the time Proctor was fired in March 2025, it wasn't about just him anymore. It was about all the people who had allowed him to operate unchecked for years. And the fallout was just beginning. Because once people started asking who had protected Proctor, they started realizing he was just one piece of a much bigger problem. A problem that wasn't going away. Want to listen to ALL of our podcasts AD-FREE? Subscribe through APPLE PODCASTS, and try it for three days free: https://tinyurl.com/ycw626tj Follow Our Other Cases: https://www.truecrimetodaypod.com The latest on The Downfall of Diddy, The Trial of Karen Read, The Murder Of Maddie Soto, Catching the Long Island Serial Killer, Awaiting Admission: BTK's Unconfessed Crimes, Delphi Murders: Inside the Crime, Chad & Lori Daybell, The Murder of Ana Walshe, Alex Murdaugh, Bryan Kohberger, Lucy Letby, Kouri Richins, Malevolent Mormon Mommys, The Menendez Brothers: Quest For Justice, The Murder of Stephen Smith, The Murder of Madeline Kingsbury, The Murder Of Sandra Birchmore, and much more! Listen at https://www.truecrimetodaypod.com
Michael Proctor had everything a cop could want—respect, power, and a reputation that, for years, seemed untouchable. But by March 2025, he wasn't just out of a job—he was a liability. Fired. Disgraced. Publicly humiliated in a way few law enforcement officers ever are. And it all comes back to one thing: the way he handled the Karen Read case. Or rather, how spectacularly he mishandled it. Proctor's downfall wasn't a quick and clean dismissal. This wasn't one of those “effective immediately” situations where a cop gets caught doing something catastrophic and is gone by the next morning. No, this was a slow-motion train wreck. A case study in watching someone who thought they were untouchable get tangled in their own arrogance, their own bias, and their own mistakes. It started with a mistrial in July 2024—a high-profile, publicly scrutinized moment where Proctor didn't just look bad on the stand, he became the story. His testimony wasn't just shaky; it was an unmitigated disaster. Prosecutors must have known it was coming because the moment his text messages came out, it was game over. These weren't just any texts. Proctor, the lead investigator in the Karen Read case, the man responsible for gathering evidence and ensuring a fair and unbiased investigation, repeatedly called the defendant a "wack-job ct," openly mocked her, laughed about digging through her phone for nude photos, and, in one of the most damning moments, said he hoped she would kill herself.** Think about that for a second. The guy responsible for finding out what actually happened had already made up his mind before the investigation even started. And he wasn't keeping that bias to himself—he was texting it to people. Joking about it. Making it impossible to argue that he had conducted an objective investigation. And that wasn't even the worst of it. Proctor had undisclosed personal connections to key people involved in the case. His own sister was friends with members of the Albert family—the same family that owned the house where John O'Keefe was last seen alive. His family knew them socially. And yet, he never disclosed this. He took the case, took control of the evidence, and built a case against Karen Read while having direct ties to the very people who could have been alternative suspects. Then there was the taillight evidence. The prosecution's whole theory hinged on the idea that Karen Read backed into John O'Keefe with her SUV, breaking her taillight and leaving him outside to die in the snow. But the glass fragments that allegedly proved this theory didn't make it to the crime lab for six weeks. Six weeks. And guess who was in charge of that evidence? Michael Proctor. When asked about the delay, there was no good answer. No chain of custody explanation that made sense. No reasonable justification for why a critical piece of forensic evidence in a high-profile murder case sat around for over a month before it was analyzed. The defense didn't even need to prove that the evidence had been planted—they just had to point out how incompetent and sloppy the investigation was. And Proctor had done all of their work for them. The mistrial was a disaster. But the fallout was worse. Within hours of the decision, Proctor was suspended. That was the first clue that even his own department knew he was a problem. The Massachusetts State Police don't just throw their own under the bus. It takes serious misconduct for them to cut someone loose. And by this point, they had no choice. Because once Proctor went down, he took a whole lot of other cases with him. One of the first dominoes to fall? The Ana Walshe murder trial. This was another major case where Proctor had been deeply involved—investigating the disappearance and presumed murder of Walshe by her husband, Brian. But after the Read mistrial, prosecutors dropped Proctor from their witness list. They weren't even willing to put him on the stand. Think about what that means. Prosecutors, who normally go to great lengths to protect their investigators, decided it was better to move forward without their lead detective rather than risk having him testify. Then came the defense attorneys lining up to challenge other convictions. Proctor had worked on multiple murder cases, and now, anyone convicted in those cases had a potential argument for appeal. If Proctor had lied, manipulated evidence, or acted with bias in the Read case, who's to say he hadn't done it before? By late 2024, the Massachusetts State Police were scrambling. They launched internal investigations not just into Proctor, but **into his superiors—**the people who had allowed him to operate without oversight. They needed to figure out who knew what and when. And once they started digging, it became clear that Proctor wasn't the only problem. The truth is, he was never operating alone. And that brings us back to Sandra Birchmore. Sandra Birchmore was 23 years old, pregnant, and terrified. She had been manipulated for years by a man with a badge—Officer Matthew Farwell, a cop she had known since she was a teenager, a man who had groomed her since she was 13 or 14 years old under the guise of a police mentorship program. By 2021, she was pregnant with Farwell's child. Days later, she was found dead in her apartment. The official cause? Suicide. The police wasted no time shutting the case down. No suspicious circumstances. No deep dive into her relationship with Farwell. Just a quick, convenient conclusion that kept everything under wraps. And guess who oversaw that investigation? The same Massachusetts State Police unit that Michael Proctor worked for. It would take three years for the truth to come out. When federal investigators finally stepped in, they re-examined the crime scene, the autopsy, and Birchmore's relationship with Farwell. What they found contradicted the original ruling completely. Sandra Birchmore hadn't died by suicide. She had been strangled. Her death had been staged. The scene manipulated to look like something it wasn't. And when that became undeniable, Matthew Farwell was arrested and charged with murder in August 2024. This should have been the moment when the Massachusetts State Police admitted failure. But instead, they scrambled to explain how they had gotten it so wrong. And that's where things start to look uncomfortably familiar. The same people involved in burying the Birchmore case had direct ties to the Read investigation. Lieutenant John Fanning, Detective Brian Tully, and Sergeant Yuri Bukhenik—all senior officers **in Proctor's chain of command during the Read case—**had connections to the Stoughton Police Department, the same department where Farwell worked. This wasn't a coincidence. By the time Proctor was fired in March 2025, it wasn't about just him anymore. It was about all the people who had allowed him to operate unchecked for years. And the fallout was just beginning. Because once people started asking who had protected Proctor, they started realizing he was just one piece of a much bigger problem. A problem that wasn't going away. Want to listen to ALL of our podcasts AD-FREE? Subscribe through APPLE PODCASTS, and try it for three days free: https://tinyurl.com/ycw626tj Follow Our Other Cases: https://www.truecrimetodaypod.com The latest on The Downfall of Diddy, The Trial of Karen Read, The Murder Of Maddie Soto, Catching the Long Island Serial Killer, Awaiting Admission: BTK's Unconfessed Crimes, Delphi Murders: Inside the Crime, Chad & Lori Daybell, The Murder of Ana Walshe, Alex Murdaugh, Bryan Kohberger, Lucy Letby, Kouri Richins, Malevolent Mormon Mommys, The Menendez Brothers: Quest For Justice, The Murder of Stephen Smith, The Murder of Madeline Kingsbury, The Murder Of Sandra Birchmore, and much more! Listen at https://www.truecrimetodaypod.com
Some legends have gone to glory leaving us with those who wrongfully yearn to be glorified. Listen in as we cackle thru current crash outs and uplift those that have left indelible marks on music.Go watch them Youtube episodes while you at it :)Follow us everywhere @thepsycepodcast.Like comment subscribe!!!!!!!
It is always tough to say goodbye to a celebrity animal after they have given us so much joy! Even harder when it is close to home, join us in saying so long to Barney the seal at the Seattle aquarium!
CJ's interview with outstanding author and longtime freind John Feinstein from 3-6-20. Thanks to all my partners: Dr. Daniel Lapidus & Larry Ackerman, Dr. Brad Kurgis of Kurgis Dermatology, California Fresh Markets, The SLO Wellness Center, Avila Bay Athletic Club & Spa, Joy of Shell Beach, Michael Moore Sports Recovery, Gymnazo, and SLO Big Brothers Big Sisters. Read More Read More Read More Read More Read More
John Feinstein, whose career as a columnist and bestselling author of books about sports made him one of the most notable sportswriters of his time, died Thursday. He was 69. John Feinstein was a regular sports columnist for the Post was a frequent contributor to a variety of radio programs, with a regular stint on National Public Radio. He joined our program often and it was already a treat to talk with him. Our final conversation was late last fall. We are a portion of that interview now, in memoriam.
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What a gut punch this last week has been. The world lost Michelle Trachtenberg and the boys do their best to remember her properly… and then take a Buffy Buzzfeed Quiz.Take the Quiz with us:https://www.buzzfeed.com/evelinamedina/buffy-the-vampire-slayer-character-quiz Like the show? Leave us a 5 star review and subscribe!Send us a tweet at @Namely90s.bsky.social Discuss the show on Instagram @Namely90sFind us online at Namely90s.comConsider joining our Patreon at Patreon.com/Namely90sFollow Brandon on Bluesky at @bschwitty.bsky.socialFollow Andrew on Bluesky at @therocdoc.bsky.socialOutro:Pixelland by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4222-pixelland License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
In Memoriam - Microsoft gasi Skype 5. svibnja, 14 godina nakon što je kupio tvrtku za 8,5 milijardi dolara. Skype, pionir internetskih komunikacija, otvorio je put platformama poput Zooma i WhatsAppa, a osnovali su ga prije 21 godinu danski i švedski poduzetnici te estonski inženjera._______________0:00 Uvod 0:40 Zašto je Skype bio toliko revolucionaran?4:50 Razlozi propadanja Skypea su vrijedne lekcije!13:00 Softver koji je pretvorio Estoniju u startup scenu, a ovo su lekcije za Hrvatsku20:00 Na internetu ima više zlonamjernih botova nego ljudi!TOP i FLOP23:20 Zašto je Nebojša Slijepčević nezasluženo izgubio?24:53 AI se koristi u ratovanju25:50 TikTok postaje televizija28:40 YouTube se bori protiv kockarskog sadržaja_______________
This week, Colt, Pat and Wenzel are talking business. Specifically the loss of one of Earth's greatest heroes: Business Baby. They also talk about Invincible, Demon Slayer, My Hero Spin-Off Vigilantes manga, recent theater watches and a little Split Fiction. Slight spoilers ahead so time stamps will be available below! ----------------------------------- Time Stamps: Invincible Show Talk: 2 min to 35 min 7 sec Demon Slayer Anime Talk: 35 min 7 sec to 1 hr More Invincible Discourse: 1 hr 5 min to 1 hr 13 min Pat's Piss Break: 1 hr 13 min 15 sec to 1 hr 16 min Colt & Wenzel's Third Triple Theater Feature for 2025: 1 hr 16 min 8 sec to 1 hr 50 min My Hero Vigilantes Manga Talk: 1 hr 50 min 25 sec to 2 hr 4 min 15 sec Pat's Gambling Addiction: 2 hr 4 min 15 sec to 2 hr 16 min 50 sec Split Fiction Talk: 2 hr 16 min 50 sec to 2 hr 24 min 50 sec ----------------------------------- Episode image created by Wenzel ----------------------------------- Catch up on all of Season 8's episodes here: soundcloud.com/aychpodcast/sets/aych-season-8-2024 ----------------------------------- Check out the entire AYCH Podcast Network! ► Caging Greatness - Nicolas Cage movie review Podcast podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/cagi…ss/id1553303334 Want even more AYCH shows? Check out our full catalog playlists! soundcloud.com/aychpodcast/sets ►►► Backlog BoyZ: Video Game Discussion Podcast! ►►► The Instruction Booklet: Video Game History Podcast! ----------------------------------- Twitch/Podcast Archive YT: www.youtube.com/@AYCHPodcast If you like what we're doing here, don't forget to leave us a review! You can also follow us on all of our social media below and tell us how we're doing: -- Bluesky: @aychpodcast.bsky.social -- Instagram: @aychpodcast -- TikTok: @aychpodcast -- Twitch: AllYouCanHear Leave us some suggestions in our Suggestion Box as well! goo.gl/forms/AHetCWQ2m7tHDigg1
In this week's episode, we talk about the loss of Gene Hackman, a Pop Culture icon, along with the passing of another pop culture great Michelle Trachtenberg. Before that, we talk updates for Avatar: The Last Airbender, Dennis' newest video game obsession, Lu's latest TV binge, and Harold's penchant for only watching Basketball Documentaries. Then to wrap up the episode, the Boyz talk which people in pop culture they would be devastated by if they were to pass away.
The world reacts to the Trump/Zelensky meeting turning into shouting a match. Michelle Trachtenberg, Shannen Doherty, Tony Todd among those omitted from the Oscars in Memoriam segment and much more. Host: Dr. Rashad Richey (@IndisputableTYT) Guest host: Jackson White *** SUBSCRIBE on YOUTUBE ☞ https://www.youtube.com/IndisputableTYT FOLLOW US ON: FACEBOOK ☞ https://www.facebook.com/IndisputableTYT TWITTER ☞ https://www.twitter.com/IndisputableTYT INSTAGRAM ☞ https://www.instagram.com/IndisputableTYT Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
What Is This Episode - Top of Show . OSCARS 2025 RECAP EPISODE: Red Carpet Fashion Takes From 2 UnFashionable Mikes - 1:53 Pros/Cons of the Broadcast - 7:53 . Show Open/Conan's Monologue - 15:46 Culkin Finishes His Supporting Actor Sweep - 20:51 Video Packages for BP Noms - 23:04 Flow Upsets in Animated Feature - 24:12 A 50:1 Winner in Animated Short!!! - 27:12 . Paul Tazewell Makes Costume Design History - 28:55 Catholics vs Convicts Foreshadowed After Screenplay, MUAH wins - 31:22 The Bond Tribute Miss & Conan Movie Theater Video Hit - 33:51 Sean Baker wins his 2nd on the night for Editing - 36:29 . Zoe Saldana wins & we put the Emilia Perez controversies to rest - 38:59 Ben Stiller & Mick Jagger both kill for PD & Score + Diane loses again - 41:43 Docs make fools us & LA Firefighters get their due, but not enough applause - 45:45 Dune Part Two + Live Action short wins secured by Mike1 & Radiohead - 52:38 A moving, but oddly constructed in Memoriam - 55:53 . Everything Brutalist was long, but Cinematography Fab 5 was great - 57:09 Broadcast Speeds Up for Brazil's big moment, Brutalist Score & The Whiz! - 58:45 Adrien Brody big times the play-off music - 1:02:08 Sean Baker wins Director & AM echoes his pro indie theater speech - 1:05:40 Mikey Madison over Demi Moore in Lead Actress - 1:10:12 Anora wins Best Picture! - 1:12:56 . Tallies, Stats, Our Predictions + a string of history making Best Pictures - 1:15:07 . . OUTRO: 1:18:57 - What's coming next includes lots of great guests and potential early 2026 contending films that come out this spring. Our Oscars thank you speech includes our heartfelt gratitude to all of our guests, our sponsors, and most of all, all of our listeners.
Michelle Tractenberg was left out of The Oscars memoriam and fans were displeased with Doja Cats performance during The Oscars.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Former President Jimmy Carter has died at his home in Plains, Georgia. He was 100 years old, a modest man with an unforgettable ear-to-ear grin. Carter was the country's 39th president, serving only one term from 1977 to 1981. His years in the White House were difficult. He faced enormous problems at home and abroad and struggled to prove that he was a strong and capable leader. But once he left office, Carter became an almost unstoppable force for peacekeeping and humanitarian efforts. In this special episode of Up First, we consider the legacy of the man widely called "America's greatest former president."Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy