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Today's crossword was remarkably daunting. The grid consisted of three stacks of three answers, each stack spanning the width of the crossword. Constructing this must've been a bear, but Scott McMahon pulled it off. [He also managed to work most of his last name into the grid, in 2D, Capital and second-largest city of Minorca, MAHON, a very nice touch.] Both cohosts found today's crossword to be a straightforward solve -- no verbal abysses here -- but just a real joy, and we eagerly await Scott McMahon's second NYTimes offering.Show note imagery: Minorca, just off the coast of Spain. If you're looking for its capital and second largest city, MAHON, you'll find it on the east coast.We love feedback! Send us a text...Contact Info:We love listener mail! Drop us a line, crosswordpodcast@icloud.com.Also, we're on FaceBook, so feel free to drop by there and strike up a conversation!
La maionese è una salsa fredda a base di tuorlo d'uovo e olio, emulsionati fino a ottenere una consistenza cremosa. Le sue origini sono oggetto di dibattito tra Francia e Spagna, con diverse teorie che ne attribuiscono la paternità all'una o all'altra Nazione. Origine francese: la conquista di Mahón Una delle teorie più diffuse collega la nascita della maionese alla conquista del porto di Mahón, sull'isola di Minorca, da parte del duca di Richelieu nel 1756. Si narra che, in occasione di questa vittoria, il cuoco del duca abbia creato una nuova salsa, chiamata “mahonnaise” in onore della città conquistata. Questa versione è supportata da fonti che collegano l'etimologia del termine “mayonnaise” al porto di Mahón. Origine spagnola: l'antico manoscritto di Minorca D'altro canto, una scoperta più recente sembra avvalorare l'origine spagnola della maionese. Un manoscritto culinario della famiglia minorchina Caules de Mahón, datato fra il 1750 e il 1756, contiene una ricetta simile alla maionese, suggerendo che la salsa fosse già conosciuta e preparata a Minorca prima della conquista francese. Altre ipotesi sull'etimologia Esistono ulteriori teorie sull'etimologia del termine “maionese”. Alcuni suggeriscono che derivi dalla città di Bayonne, nel sud-ovest della Francia, mentre altri propongono un'origine legata al termine francese antico “moyeu”, che significa tuorlo d'uovo. Tuttavia, queste ipotesi sono meno supportate da evidenze storiche. L'origine della maionese rimane incerta, con Francia e Spagna che si contendono la paternità di questa popolare salsa. Le evidenze storiche suggeriscono una possibile origine spagnola, ma la diffusione e la popolarità della maionese in Francia hanno consolidato la sua associazione con la cucina francese nel corso dei secoli.
In this episode of the Poultry Keepers Podcast, host Rip Stalvey discusses various techniques and practices for keeping and breeding Minorca chickens with his guest John Tinsley. The conversation covers hatching schedules, chick identification methods, and the process of selecting and grooming birds for shows. John shares his experiences in breeding different varieties of Minorcas, including efforts to revive the Rose Comb White Minorca and his new project with Buff Minorcas. Listeners are provided with practical advice and insights on how to successfully manage and enjoy Minorca chickens.You can email us at - poultrykeeperspodcast@gmail.comJoin our Facebook Groups:Poultry Keepers Podcast - https://www.facebook.com/groups/907679597724837Poultry Keepers 360 - - https://www.facebook.com/groups/354973752688125Poultry Breeders Nutrition - https://www.facebook.com/groups/4908798409211973Check out the Poultry Kepers Podcast YouTube Channel - https://www.youtube.com/@PoultryKeepersPodcast/featured
Ep. 16 - Il caldo rovente colpisce i turisti in Grecia (e altrove) | I trend post-estate 2024 nelle destinazioni mediterranee | I residenti di Maiorca occupano le spiagge | PoliMi: Smart Destination DayQuesta settimana parleremo di turismo estivo nel Mediterraneo, andremo in Grecia, in Italia e nelle Baleari, ma parleremo anche di cinema e di novità in fatto di intelligenza artificiale, e per concludere abbiamo registrato un commento a margine dello Smart Destination Day, con Filippo Renga ed Eleonora Lorenzini degli Osservatori del Politecnico di Milano, sui temi del turismo e delle destinazioni smart.Io sono Mirko Lalli e questo è Data Appeal Byte-sized Trends, un podcast sul futuro del turismo, dedicato a tutte le innovazioni che stanno trasformando il modo di viaggiare. Gli spunti di questa settimana:Why some scientists think extreme heat could be behind people disappearing in GreeceTurismo estate 2024: cosa succede a settembre/ottobre in Europa?Inside Out 2: i personaggi diventano installazioni colorate sull'isola di Burano: le immagini spettacolari Anti-mass tourism protest in Calo des Moro Baleari, borgo di Minorca vuole chiudersi ai turisti. Referendum il 15 agosto. “800mila ospiti per 200 abitanti, insostenibile” - la Repubblica Sabre Hospitality deploys first generative AI tool | PhocusWire
Should you pursue happiness or success; or are they the same thing?Today I want to introduce you to Esther, Esther is a truly special human, one I got to meet a few years ago diving in Mexico. There are some people that you meet that make you feel as though you are enough, like you are seen, and that you are wanted; Esther is one such soulI've had the pleasure of camping and diving with her and other friends in Mexico, exploring the underwater caves of Minorca, and now working together for two weeks in BoliviaThere is something that happens to relationships when you spend 24 hours a day together, when you are hungry, tired, and have a to do list… well, with Esther I found her heart to be more visible, her gentleness, and kindness to be more genuine, and my appreciation for her friendship to only growEsther is a human that is full of joy, life, passion, and an ability to see beauty and adventure in every momentWe chat about what it means to preserver, to allow yourself space to always change, and why pursuing happiness is where success is truly foundShe shares why travel is one of the most important things you can do in life and how it allows you to see yourself and others with more appreciation and care, why pursuing life matters, but never at the expense of anotherWe chat about her love for her culture and the Spanish lifestyle, and the parts of her country that are a little less known, including what her father doesEsther is a human that I respect, admire, and treasure, and one that I know you will benefit from getting to knowSo tune in and meet Esther, someone who will make you smile, and remind you just how much joy there is in this worldAnd to you Esther thank you, thank you for how you have always treated me, even more how you have made me feel, for your sweet caring soul, for your genuine heart, for your passion and the way you have inspired me and encouraged me to push outside of my own fear. You are a friend I am grateful to know and one I look forward to seeing again soon
ma-io-né-se SIGNIFICATO Salsa a base di tuorli d'uovo, olio e aceto o succo di limone ETIMOLOGIA etimo incerto, forse dal nome della città di Mahón, capoluogo dell'isola di Minorca. Voce di Giorgio Moretti Montaggio di Stefano Riggi e Emanuele Pavese Sigla a cura di Emanuele Pavese Testi di unaparolaalgiorno.it Sito Instagram Una produzione Bonfire Sito Instagram Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this week's episode, we spotlight a classic Mediterranean beauty - the Minorca. In our Main Topic we share all of our tips for dealing with unwanted winter visitors who want to get to your chickens. This week's recipe is crazy good Hot Chocolate Cookies, and Retail Therapy is our favorite place to buy Comb Balm for dry winter wattles and combs.Grubbly Farms - click here for our affiliate link.https://www.anrdoezrs.net/click-100963304-15546963New Omega Mix!Bantam Coffee Roastershttps://bantamroasters.com/Use code FLUFFYBUTT for 10% off all items!Chicken Luv Box - use CWTCL50 for 50% off your first box of any multi-month subscription!https://www.chickenluv.com/Strong Animals Chicken Essentialshttps://www.getstronganimals.com/Breed Spotlight is sponsored by Murray McMurray Hatcheryhttps://www.mcmurrayhatchery.com/McMurray Hatchery - Minorcas Nestera UShttps://nestera.us/cwtclUse our affiliate link above for 5% off your purchase!Roosty'shttps://amzn.to/3yMDJHot Chocolate Cookieshttps://coffeewiththechickenladies.com/farm-fresh-egg-recipes/hot-chocolate-cookies/ CWTCL Websitehttps://coffeewiththechickenladies.com/CWTCL Etsy Shophttps://www.etsy.com/shop/CoffeeWChickenLadiesAs Amazon Influencers, we may receive a small commission from the sale of some items at no additional cost to consumers.CWTCL Amazon Recommendationshttps://www.amazon.com/shop Support the show
La prossima polemica arriverà con la prossima puntata di Report, potete metterci la firma. Il 14 gennaio la trasmissione condotta da Sigfrido Ranucci racconterà di Francesco Meloni, il padre della premier morto nel 2012. Come anticipato da Repubblica la trasmissione Rai indagherà sui rapporti Di Francesco - detto Franco Meloni - con il re della droga Michele Senese, boss campano con una fiorente attività nella capitale. A parlare in un'intervista è Nunzio Perrella, collaboratore di giustizia ed ex camorrista che ha fatto scattare diverse indagini sulla gestione dei rifiuti in Campania. Perrella ama le luci della ribalta: qualche anno fa si era prestato come “agente provocatore” per fare emergere alcuni funzionari corrotti nella pubblica amministrazione. Anche in quel caso, come spesso accade da noi, i cultori del garantismo peloso si interessarono più al pentito che aveva scoperchiato un sistema illecito che ai corrotti. Perrella sostiene di aver chiesto quantitativi di hashish al boss Michele Senese detto ‘O Pazzo e questo avrebbe fatto riferimento a un uomo che con una barca a vela faceva viaggi tra la Spagna e il Marocco fino all'Italia che il pentito riconosce in Francesco Meloni, arrestato il 25 settembre 1995 nel porto di Maò a Minorca con 1.500 chili di hashish. La responsabilità penale - lo sanno anche i sassi - è personale. La presidente del Consiglio Giorgia Meloni in diverse occasioni ha raccontato di non avere più voluto avere rapporti con il padre fin dall'età di 11 anni. Il giornalismo ha ovviamente il compito di indagare, meglio ancora se scopre. Ma vedrete che l'occasione sarà buona per randellare Report e Ranucci. E lo faranno gli stessi che difendono il diritto di appostarsi sotto casa di Fedez per le uova di Pasqua della moglie. #LaSveglia per La NotiziaDiventa un supporter di questo podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/show/il-buongiorno-di-giulio-cavalli_1/support.
Franco Meloni e le accuse di un collaboratore di giustizia. Il viaggio a Minorca con 1.500 chili di droga, e voi cosa ne pensate?
This interview was conducted in Punjabi, please see the transcript below if you would like to follow along in English. In this episode of Feel It In Your Soul Podcast Angelee sits down with global megastar, and her cousin, Kapil Sharma. They talk about Kapil's humble upbringing and how he strove to become the superstar he is today. Kapil opens up about his moments of doubt, but ultimately the belief he had in himself to become the King of Comedy. Kapil had a true make-or-break moment when he could either afford to return home or meet with a television studio. Kapil talks about passion, drive, and trusting yourself - this is truly a story about what it means to Feel It In Your Soul. In this episode you will hear: Kapil's early life trying to make it as a singer What Kapil did when he realised he could only afford the train fare home How Kapil convinced a TV studio to greenlight his show The time Angelee met Shah Rukh Khan How Kapil Sharma became a household name Follow Angelee on instagram: https://www.instagram.com/angeleesidar/ Kapil Sharma: https://www.instagram.com/kapilsharma/ Feel In Your Soul is a melting pot of amazing conversations and in-depth interviews with entrepreneurs, celebrities, actors, sporting icons, DJs and movie stars. Host Angelee Sidar sits down with her illustrious guests to delve into the true stories and anecdotes of those who have attained impressive levels of success to discover their journey and the key moments where their souls directed them towards their destiny. 00:00:00:12 - 00:00:34:18 Angelee Sidar So welcome to fill in your soul. Everyone who. So today I have a very special guest, someone very close to my heart introducing multi-award-winning comedian, presenter, actor, producer, amazing singer and a wonderful father, a loving husband, doting son, and honestly, a truly inspiring and loving brother. Welcome Kappu (Kapil) Sharma everyone. 00:00:34:20 - 00:00:47:00 Kapil Sharma Thank you. Angelee, for having me on your beautiful show. So let me tell our audience the one thing, that she's my cousin's sister. So in between the show, I will call her Dibi. So don't be that shocked. 00:00:47:20 - 00:00:49:17 Angelee Sidar I think everybody will start calling me Didi. 00:00:50:04 - 00:00:50:19 Kapil Sharma No, no, no. 00:00:53:04 - 00:01:08:05 Angelee Sidar So couple I want to say, first of all, a big, big. Thank you. Thank you. When I called you up and I said couple, I've got this idea in my mind that I want to do. And you said, Of course to do. Of course you can do it. So thank you for giving me the opportunity. 00:01:09:03 - 00:01:10:07 Kapil Sharma I'm so proud of you. Oh. 00:01:11:03 - 00:01:35:09 Angelee Sidar It came. It came in my mind, actually, over lockdown. I really start to think about just from my own personal journey, how things had changed at pivotal times in my life. And I thought, I really want to do a podcast which finds those moments where we listen to our soul and then we go and act on it and we can really change the trajectory of our life. 00:01:36:19 - 00:01:53:21 Angelee Sidar And the first person that came in my mind was you. So thank you for saying that. Honestly, thank you for. So I want to start with short a couple little Nicole couple running around them. Reza. What were you like when you were younger? 00:01:54:09 - 00:01:58:00 Kapil Sharma Both daughter? Well, I mean, to see. 00:01:58:00 - 00:01:59:15 Angelee Sidar Him develop and jump, people. 00:02:00:12 - 00:02:43:17 Kapil Sharma Would love to speak in Tamil in a moment ago on and I'm ready to oh so now I'm ready to is in the actually. So man you better when I'm bored but I mean yeah he madcap us and Carter or Kuki your article district give them a whole you know just regular time. That be three charities immediately be social media that whatever PBB what do you see you got immediately you know so many hospitals get grandma TV the acne to the meaning in the I'm in of my own sure arena yeah so how my generation going to do it peacefully so I'm I had the at a minor party no not the domain assembly itself 00:02:43:20 - 00:03:29:13 Kapil Sharma I just see someone the TV they can not tell it to the batsman may gunning on tell it, others will not tell it. Other uh Bucky Bucky Malcolm But I'm going to make Kappa Mudgee Bert Gay Film School. My school mate Mike. You know, Peak time it up a little bit now, which we didn't tell you but excited for this opportunity that normally that's a but to do so many father comedy you may act as dictator mission one was your brother of promote the but I support bigoted Aggie big school Meghan and Alia a college MC which college maj up to college middle academy The graduation letter on that you submitted the met function? 00:03:29:13 - 00:03:38:19 Kapil Sharma Yep. Kageyama There you go. But don't get too many other should do that so but here you to literally she's a girl but only got mama Angelique and jellyfish over bones get. 00:03:40:20 - 00:03:51:17 Angelee Sidar A thank you cover but I. I remember like also when that came out Fiji my three Punjabi very Hindi is like fluently Hindi like you see. 00:03:52:05 - 00:03:54:20 Kapil Sharma Another good looking. 00:03:55:16 - 00:04:01:14 Angelee Sidar Guy like you see like with my c g She loves singing. Do you think you got your musicality from her? 00:04:02:13 - 00:04:15:09 Kapil Sharma Actually guess. I mean, actually my media up and I had a musical Elder Sean Garner Yeah, all the cats he goes here for the Richie guys I'm in Punjabi, not for mommy. He got to listen. Give me. 00:04:15:10 - 00:04:15:14 Angelee Sidar The. 00:04:16:05 - 00:04:16:12 Kapil Sharma Leverage. 00:04:16:17 - 00:04:17:04 Angelee Sidar Yeah. 00:04:17:12 - 00:04:34:09 Kapil Sharma They meaning bus men, women will take on this one now at the one given a TV show which I'll get on, but I met him Monday That show minimum producer Mike for Google and digital magic. But bunch of my minions need to go in agony because I that the the lead the monumental video on the show Ogunlesi minute on. 00:04:35:17 - 00:04:36:03 Angelee Sidar Both Sony. 00:04:36:16 - 00:05:01:03 Kapil Sharma And Lala the met to look at a cute lead the new Lionel Mitchell two things are different that Bella what could you me now so I think huh you're not to to question whichever key key or the men on Netflix takes that look what is it you're mad is it going to get this lucky giraffe dreams he got him artist But now you share the miracle little dream music. 00:05:01:03 - 00:05:33:03 Kapil Sharma I made a father dream dreams ago. You know, all Mad men, no matter the quality, whichever don't have an opinion which photographs the Kenya. Yeah. Which all black identity. Oh, you go to measure the result of father we are to stay that the luggage of the refugees coming and call it a bit of songs by disparate guitar human folk from I admire the question Lindsay nitty to Sammy did the he played the piano I play the cake and give it articulate analogy they play they key to fail me and get with them. 00:05:33:03 - 00:05:34:17 Kapil Sharma Every artist here, maybe two. 00:05:35:16 - 00:05:35:22 Angelee Sidar Or. 00:05:35:22 - 00:05:36:09 Kapil Sharma All dream. 00:05:36:18 - 00:05:37:12 Angelee Sidar No, that's. 00:05:37:12 - 00:06:18:22 Kapil Sharma All fear all I think or dream or not obviously. Go get the nugget, the mirror, he said. Jockey. So momentum going back long cigar mamu dirty and a lot of them that much but opposite in a lot of this ego to me facilitating invisibility give anything like this a little bit good to have somebody the man bring it on and it cannot be made a shoulder which would be a surgical midwife did not so marital comedy to make it been Mary Mahbubani Joe the opening I me I think the undemanding massively the all good then I get the Mario shoulder which it to be another on the give you the necessary just study upbringings are 00:06:18:22 - 00:06:21:24 Kapil Sharma be we did this early Jeremy Jose all the. 00:06:22:12 - 00:06:22:23 Angelee Sidar And g. 00:06:23:09 - 00:06:36:24 Kapil Sharma Subdue personality duties on the any it's also figures of the whole community gone but younger or maybe mom and father of Bush oxycodone. But the artist shared how obviously being near there huh so. 00:06:38:11 - 00:06:45:12 Angelee Sidar No no no, absolutely not. In fact many other I remember when I first came to India. 00:06:46:00 - 00:06:52:02 Kapil Sharma It was, you know, the airport, the tricky to figure to either go to America really believes it straight. I was there. 00:06:53:07 - 00:07:21:05 Angelee Sidar Let's see. The London Open Job by Mary Bailey like experience was not in a city, Delhi or Mumbai. It was straight to Punjab, right? So to the my eyes, my first time in India, first time meeting my family. Right. And one thing that I really remember was the love. There was so much love there, even though I met for the first time when I was 24, when we other like Pooja, had a picture of me when I was a teenager. 00:07:21:05 - 00:07:41:06 Angelee Sidar I think my nanny Ma brought it and she had it in a room. She goes into the day, I have got your picture and we know and none of the jerk, even though was so appalled. Yeah, we live thousands of miles away. Still yours when the air. You think that's my family there? The other thing I remember is that we stayed at your house for a bit, and then we stayed in a hotel. 00:07:41:06 - 00:08:02:03 Angelee Sidar And I remember that you said, I'm going to bring some of my friends and we were going to with your band and you came with your bond and you were so good. Honestly, I mean, Sita, we sat there and went, Oh my God, so good, right? And then you said, Did you know somebody in London or what? You asked my mum What? 00:08:02:03 - 00:08:22:20 Angelee Sidar You don't look at that sun. But, but I could see that you had this thing in your I get I'll knock on as many doors as I need to, but I'm so like, laser focused, like this is what I want. Where did that come from? Where did that feeling come from, that or that kind of mindset that you're so focused? 00:08:23:14 - 00:08:44:19 Kapil Sharma Do the actor up on the If you do, we got too much on the map and if father on the job they were police the job any tank less job it agreed official shooting you know not even Sunday or even Diwali. Wow But mentally that could have been a bit of a joke. Family dinner. From there, we can see Bardem there. 00:08:45:03 - 00:09:06:20 Kapil Sharma Many other guys are definitely there which could be jump this thing Ibaka because I love Yahoo data, but the actual team is really good. Okay, Google dating year we're going to but then in that you got island off etc. so a minute ago key Monoshock so you're gonna feed Colette your community traditional to the middle of Gujarat. 00:09:07:05 - 00:09:07:11 Angelee Sidar You. 00:09:08:02 - 00:09:19:14 Kapil Sharma Get the delays we didn't come to deliver you we can let you do otherwise couldn't couldn't come was only as in ghetto so iqoo shark. This is a good jiggle to see. But your focus. 00:09:20:08 - 00:09:20:16 Angelee Sidar Yeah. 00:09:20:18 - 00:09:53:07 Kapil Sharma Keep Diana so I think Merkel option going easy. Gilkey There you got him. And you've got the North Korean city government, your military village of mislabeling, cholera and now competition. I mean, population is elegant region for me, no, but that's a good business to handle. And he did temper but I got to give you compared to the a nerve which we're not going to give you the broom but thanks every time that option is and you did a really job and I think we should be the one holding the Yeah. 00:09:53:15 - 00:10:26:04 Kapil Sharma The memory is you in like Italy. Erdogan I get one minute but I think I'm a little put you do we got a numbers up he got an hour You know the fear bus bomb which are funny those unable to remember the AC in Bombay on AC Milan in Bombay again. So when I first came to me I was 22, 21 to get ready to the minute actually killed because I had only 1200 rupees get a miracle to his he Oh my God, Those are the DNA, the phenomena that gave it. 00:10:26:07 - 00:10:50:18 Kapil Sharma He can do time. Colonel Carla nicknamed the timing of the bomb, which offered up on me. Which, Yes, alluded to keylogger going on. They didn't. She said if we do cornea it, go to the colony. Good job in colony. The time as I started with would you passing But Merkel had cut this up the other medical staff before put out us the fantasy instead of 3%. 00:10:50:18 - 00:10:52:05 Kapil Sharma But here and research on the bus. 00:10:52:08 - 00:10:53:01 Angelee Sidar While. 00:10:53:07 - 00:10:56:01 Kapil Sharma On the road it can get cold. 00:10:56:02 - 00:10:56:16 Angelee Sidar To see. 00:10:57:03 - 00:11:20:18 Kapil Sharma And yeah, it quickly got to see little get in the freezer to come grab Fritzi Charming Nero cash I telling you about the mummy Mary had on high Merriman didn't kill again so people could put the log out evil they but anyways at least you keep on this year could another one Nancy got the news or stop looking which additionally Brittany sure does. 00:11:20:20 - 00:11:28:06 Kapil Sharma Yeah yeah so audition we fear mineral to select guitar you remember by at a minimum integrity. 00:11:28:23 - 00:11:29:11 Angelee Sidar Oh wow. 00:11:29:11 - 00:11:30:14 Kapil Sharma So he's the same producer. 00:11:30:16 - 00:11:32:20 Angelee Sidar That the first time when going on a plane. 00:11:33:10 - 00:11:41:23 Kapil Sharma 2007. Wow they so you know right No he's the same blue said bit Selma little Marco Bonnie do you she has seen. 00:11:41:23 - 00:11:42:18 Angelee Sidar You throughout. 00:11:42:19 - 00:11:55:17 Kapil Sharma The way well showed of it to be able to sort of sing it so huh well somebody from the million dollar field, I think. Jeez, Antonia, is you in the way love below the first. 00:11:56:01 - 00:11:57:11 Angelee Sidar Oh, the first of. 00:11:57:21 - 00:12:07:11 Kapil Sharma The all men. I'd love to tell in Georgia. Bridget. I'm mean, one chance you got resettlement is really to get them petroleum illiterate dreams, particularly, I think so. But I. Here. 00:12:08:04 - 00:12:36:21 Angelee Sidar So actually, I wanted to ask you. So I remember when we left, I'm richer. We see the Legion, Nancy. Right. And then we got to Dili and I was speaking to my mom and she was very upset and I said, Mom, why are you so upset? And I didn't realize that my mother, she wasn't very well at that time, but she, she got very upset and she said and I'm not sure if I'm going to see Blue again. 00:12:37:07 - 00:13:02:19 Angelee Sidar And I remember how upset she got. And I just want to ask you, like, you know, I don't want to make get you upset, but what I do want to ask you is, as a young man, you know, you're in that bay of being 20. You're about to start like thinking about how am I going to do life and all these things of what am I going to plan that you also had so much responsibility and also going through a lot of emotions as well. 00:13:02:19 - 00:13:27:21 Angelee Sidar Personal emotions. Yeah. How did you navigate and how did you use that to kind of almost like use that energy so that you can actually put it even more into where you want to go? Like, you know, for a lot of people they would go maybe to give up or they think get emotionally to kind of like, I'm not going through so much emotion. 00:13:27:21 - 00:13:30:06 Angelee Sidar How do you think you coped with that? 00:13:31:17 - 00:13:59:09 Kapil Sharma Exactly the way my many other coaches engineered meals, how they had wasn't even beer but noodle advocate and not strong giving men who love to look at strong as a well, you know, I remember my father delivered Jed midway to the lottery last into the nice huge together. They admitted to you what they told you to delete in their name. 00:13:59:09 - 00:14:46:01 Kapil Sharma Sorry, but publicly spectacle. This American girl. Suddenly I don't always sleep a second, only to myocardial research has to do with your butt. Or do they? Oh, you know, I think. Yeah. So all. Did you do that? Did that to you know, to the serious series you man or would you do usually so what triggered this a year or anybody like amount was you bacteria or Medicare that you know gentleman that I knew some Milena but I you the carriers fresh pressure not to give you the hospital down on them and for now he up religious of PIMCO religious chairman global hospital to the disability good yeah what do I see huge or they unconsciously 00:14:46:22 - 00:15:18:04 Kapil Sharma the menu idea the larger but free that he can limit upon the time so on and again key players appear he's no more so Medicare I mean look at somebody me I'm a plus amount Korea man temporary retired as a Billy or hospital guy they made the cut that you know citing a former disputing I got really good China do you don't think you can really answer of the bill could any nominal room where we fit made it I think friend I was 21. 00:15:18:04 - 00:16:02:13 Kapil Sharma I don't see of going Maggie but surgery that you the Broadway committee in the academy in Braddock really thought about actually I don't know so many but the little M receptors account of busy months. He got a upstaged he got out. He's got a bill carrier singing. So I know the stage now, buddy. Sorry I stayed the got to me as a year they did not get arrested at of the American music eat the things I love Yeah so man although Cody we don't we can you heavy huh Listen Scott admitted or undeclared you'll get a dose of publicity with and or gunfire emoji Yeah the community on duty. 00:16:03:02 - 00:16:27:03 Kapil Sharma That too is a little tied into it the menu but I don't I It was Kirk. Yeah. You'll get your daddy this and Scott on top of the bracelet those phasing it police like individual police volunteer team and any extra time Sorry the minute you committed to a military man come Isaiah sent me my best argument to come on like a similar job but admitted it in the edges but amazing. 00:16:28:03 - 00:17:12:23 Kapil Sharma Those three? Yeah. He's sorry. Just. This is a good letter, Brandon. As he got the order to get a mental limit on the amount of the dosing, the variability. So anyways at all time of course he go but maybe ma on opening morning Mr. Lucado he'll be strongly he I see the fear be you know body are both here human to look at your time bus Alegria from immediately seem immediately pain between and I stopped over obviously let that be that so because he go but only could be obliterated they the expression me on the targets guess I demand to hear so but only I think the energy but only louder. 00:17:12:24 - 00:17:34:06 Angelee Sidar No no but I do also think there's a lot in that early years of couple kind of going through those early years of you know, the path that you were taking coming to Bombay. But I also think you took on a lot of responsibility as well because, you know, sometimes you start something, you see Jello even then getting on that. 00:17:34:14 - 00:17:52:09 Angelee Sidar But I think that focus that came is that you were like, this has to work. This has to work because I've got a lot of people, a lot of my, you know, that are close to my heart that are depending on me. And if I do this, it's not just going to affect my life, it's going to affect everyone's life, but. 00:17:52:23 - 00:17:53:19 Kapil Sharma This will help curb that. 00:17:53:20 - 00:17:54:24 Angelee Sidar Yeah, it's so true. 00:17:55:04 - 00:18:21:05 Kapil Sharma So do mentally believe me go to get you the easiest to the merits initiative. Uh, the other side. The solution that I. Yeah. Or what? Sorry, not pledge a bunch of cash legos you can put other up something about what? Again, it is harder than any of the other, but only kid. I manage it. But you had you do maybe sister the engagement now or the engagement to the way out of it. 00:18:21:05 - 00:18:26:23 Kapil Sharma Just one within a miracle. That's nothing strong there. You know, you're starting to cheer me up. 00:18:27:08 - 00:18:27:14 Angelee Sidar And. 00:18:27:21 - 00:18:51:00 Kapil Sharma Cheer me to the beach, which many will actually reality show do it. But we many, many shows like we should all be so prepared available online. 30 minutes to go over there. So do the iPad. You I, I and that is that I put only I already Katie but I made the arrangement to get by me and I sadly family there's summer delicacy you know. 00:18:51:05 - 00:18:51:20 Angelee Sidar Yeah. 00:18:51:20 - 00:19:01:21 Kapil Sharma The media side it is there but of course I guess you go get TV there I really don't care but I think of my own getting my own. Get it? And I want to let you do so. ORMAN Lucky, huh? 00:19:02:04 - 00:19:03:04 Angelee Sidar That was the universe. 00:19:04:02 - 00:19:05:16 Kapil Sharma I'm lucky to get it up. 00:19:06:09 - 00:19:06:15 Angelee Sidar And. 00:19:07:13 - 00:19:09:03 Kapil Sharma Get back and become great in the evening a. 00:19:09:06 - 00:19:09:15 Angelee Sidar Hundred. 00:19:09:15 - 00:19:11:02 Kapil Sharma Percent on the other. I don't. 00:19:13:01 - 00:19:33:21 Angelee Sidar Understand. Okay, So I want to get into the mindset of Kapil Sharma. Right. So when you were in Bombay and you've done the laughter challenge and you've won some awards, what was your kind of like? You know, it's a very competitive industry. Did you always are you the kind of person that thinks, How am I going to do this? 00:19:33:21 - 00:19:56:06 Angelee Sidar There's so much competition, or do you just think I'm just going to go out and do my best being in that set? Do you look at, do I have to be better than this person? Or how do I you know, there's so many people, how am I going to be seen? What is your mindset? Because I'm thinking of, you know, that person who's starting out, You know, when you're starting, there's so many people to see sort of map by step guide the level. 00:19:56:12 - 00:20:09:07 Angelee Sidar I'm nobody. Right? How how do you get into that winning mindset of kind of pushing away those negative thoughts and just going through and finding your own voice, you know, in this industry? 00:20:10:06 - 00:20:57:01 Kapil Sharma Julio Lopez Eleanor Go, girl. She'll finish. You're gonna win next year. Live shows till they're British foreign parliament for longer than just the minimum wage. Harvey Milk Remember the past silliness which I was summation by? Yeah, yeah. But. And numbers are getting to be messed up to support other earlier it's industries Yeah Tiger can only can get a commercial he'll join Comedy circus now they will show them chases and look at that to be never president but desperate to get that win for middle learn it but horribly exceeding dosage and paying season jobs in fancy meadows Mendoza's in the bedroom when I got to do figure work you'll remember the favorite to be with the 00:20:57:05 - 00:21:23:14 Kapil Sharma show The bitch leaning, please. The confusion. Carlo, let me I. Cedillo, come. We are our best. Everybody but guilty. Unless he gave him candy directly giving a large costume drama that exceeded our Phygital our next level key the manual to music, which is a key man at the Carolina I showed images struggle to need in the butcher told me when I'm out on a Saturday Myrtle hustle up and make it. 00:21:24:06 - 00:21:49:07 Kapil Sharma I needed to me to make the mandamus the exchange in many meetings based on an American law. One of them in blue, actually hosted a stick dancing show. The make up would be me because of air conditioning. You they got they give us every Mecha here. Get them with the camera. Give me two days. I will come back to you, Sean, if you go. 00:21:49:08 - 00:21:49:17 Angelee Sidar Oh, my. 00:21:49:17 - 00:22:05:21 Kapil Sharma God, I've got to get my list. Well, I mean, look, Commander, stand up menorah. You know, stand up shows. Got to give it to me to cheer to their one interaction. The a big portion of it. Okay. My costume, which we're not compatible. Americana interview. Sorry, Linda. 00:22:05:21 - 00:22:06:08 Angelee Sidar Oh, my God. 00:22:06:19 - 00:22:30:06 Kapil Sharma I love kids. Don't get tired of it, huh? So basically, Georgie, let's take a look at the mic. Okay? The show will open with my stand up. Then we will start costume drama. My dad, they will come. My husband or candy? Very good. Very good. The magic in this weekly banana candy only for 24 to 26 episode. So Baby show, a little bit of show is biweekly. 00:22:30:06 - 00:22:52:23 Kapil Sharma So in a month you have to produce eight episodes. The 30 minute issue. Okay, Megaman does episode orders are meaning me meaning was well episode on there were need bazooka to make them more do sir follow me Look it's an opportunity to service all of the other 24 to do so. Yeah so I'm sure tell us he got on that salary for this. 00:22:53:01 - 00:23:17:00 Kapil Sharma I can do so. Oh, so, man, did he look at the look? It's in a competition. A Maccabee. Really? So Chevy can keep Milwaukee due to see, you know, competition. Sit down and just, you know. Yeah, I know. Until you are able to see in order to look at it not happened here but let them know I don't know. 00:23:17:06 - 00:23:17:24 Angelee Sidar It's so true. 00:23:17:24 - 00:23:29:10 Kapil Sharma To the music of man met comedy community which got a momentum was on that committee but that the element must bring back your vehicle universally. Yeah now I've got. 00:23:29:10 - 00:23:47:08 Angelee Sidar To I totally agree it'll be when you're going to start something on the court. You know when I started my business Jim it but he's such a conservative and then I get I've got you know a business or whatever, you'd never start anything you actually have to which is a really good piece of advice of anybody starting. 00:23:47:08 - 00:24:09:08 Kapil Sharma Out problems on the any limit you give me that the we will not be easy to get past the middle of the best anybody. Yeah that's true sentiment that we of producer be thinking a lot about the producer Dick training on the episode yard limit zero have blue collar bank balance zero Wow You know when I was in instead of my goal yeah yeah. 00:24:09:08 - 00:24:09:16 Angelee Sidar Yeah I. 00:24:09:16 - 00:24:31:09 Kapil Sharma Remember give me like even giving him a depressing evil said if he got well you know or really minutes ago what if it if you love him Let me hear the example Sadako Mike love for Kalima caliber and me get beat. I'm like, Oh, good to give you. But I think what you want me to do schedule in life, I just face that model number. 00:24:31:12 - 00:24:32:07 Angelee Sidar It's so true. 00:24:32:16 - 00:25:12:19 Kapil Sharma They oppose him. The really lucky life to Hanna. But our challenge in the field today, you put a whole model up and that everything you look at me on butter same loan or just same on me. I see Sadako. She's energy. You're beat. Magary Yeah. So live, which is Kamiya. Did you know a youngster? A great video they can give you a liberty Is Carmena almost secured your and you get to develop that repeatable area that was you go look at map filming on and map I mean industrial Eagle Korea if we become what to talk to a hard worker taught our psycho bucket which is smarter we'll get the opinion images out. 00:25:12:19 - 00:25:13:18 Kapil Sharma You know I've got a little bill. 00:25:14:00 - 00:25:38:13 Angelee Sidar And I think your point I'd I'd 100% agree on this. Okay. When you have those moments the setbacks the closed door. Right. The perception of failure. And I think also, you know, it's being Indian. So whether you're an Indian from India or an Indian like me from England. Yeah, British born Indian. Right. We have this thing in us where failure is such a scary thing. 00:25:38:13 - 00:25:57:04 Angelee Sidar You know, from a young boy, you it's almost like people are afraid to fail. But the failure or something not working for us is our the biggest way we grow. Like you couldn't do so much. And then the point that it doesn't work and you find a way around and you come back, that is your biggest growth path, your biggest growth journey. 00:25:57:18 - 00:26:23:10 Kapil Sharma Through doing other up to this are an education system to see England for you and to the education system. Nothing better but education system to which Glasgow but to the morale and not all of this you know Yeah you know if you're in fifth standard you know you have eight subjects or nine subject whatever genuinely to know you have to be good in mathematics, you have to be good in English, you have to be put on a subject runner. 00:26:23:19 - 00:26:44:07 Kapil Sharma I said, You're a teacher, but I'm not subject. But on the side of the expected Kurdistan, studies suggest that another solution to a negative school division so this is illusory is a quote. You can't be talent. It's another marketable noun, but you are with the lucky man. But in life to build up an A-plus according to memory. But academic and now we add to question number I too many. 00:26:44:07 - 00:27:09:18 Kapil Sharma But you know I mean general interest only opportunity schools to engage in not as a forecast we will not only guarantee but at heart a mapping experience looking to give you look we could begin the ICT times ago. I am give judo a scholarship but those are no artist, not among them. You would be a hundred them and you need the data to be able to call this again. 00:27:09:18 - 00:27:32:15 Kapil Sharma You know, it's got a good millennium map or put build up the midterm chuckles. I love that, but I don't know any music anybody commander of rolled up those are committee me and I had a child in the middle as a mega and unique or what they are doing. You look at a party with their party with me, if you look at minimum there. 00:27:32:19 - 00:27:40:11 Angelee Sidar It's so true because I think as well know that time wouldn't people understand? I mean, if you want to be a content creator, it's a job now, you know. 00:27:40:22 - 00:27:41:21 Kapil Sharma Give me opportunities. 00:27:41:21 - 00:28:05:12 Angelee Sidar But there's so many opportunities. But back then, if you didn't fit into the the square box, then it's like a card that we keep. Where is it going to work? Is it too risky? Like, I totally understand that. So to kind of like take us to you know, I came to see you quite a few times. We've had a lot of fun times together, Tony. 00:28:05:12 - 00:28:31:04 Angelee Sidar Other that time that we went to see Shahrukh Khan. I have to talk about that time. I'm the cousin, by the way. Everybody who who turned up at Shah Rukh Khan's house. And I have to say, it wasn't entirely couple's fault because I'd come from London, right? And he goes up because in one of the court and you said I'd, you know, the there's a party on and there's a new film coming out and I said please couple, can we go with that please. 00:28:31:04 - 00:28:34:04 Angelee Sidar Can we go there? And he said, look, do you remember? 00:28:34:05 - 00:28:36:24 Kapil Sharma Yes, of course Milk is on at flicks are like, stand up, go. 00:28:36:24 - 00:28:37:07 Angelee Sidar Yeah. 00:28:37:14 - 00:28:41:08 Kapil Sharma Milk, juice and AC. So yes, she's my cousin. I'm your son. 00:28:42:11 - 00:29:01:10 Angelee Sidar I'm sorry, Mr. SRK. Not so much my. But I've got to say, when we turned up there, right, we were like, first of all, we were very excited. Yeah. And then we got there. The gates are there, and we both looked at each other and went, Oh my God. And then you said, And you did, even though we should have come, right? 00:29:01:10 - 00:29:04:20 Angelee Sidar But by that time, the security man came and he already recognized. 00:29:05:05 - 00:29:06:08 Kapil Sharma Inside you. 00:29:06:18 - 00:29:24:19 Angelee Sidar And he said a champ McKellen done the right to it to bed. I'll say hello, good luck on the movie and everything. Then I'll come back and go, right. So I'm sitting in the car thinking, okay, we should maybe shouldn't of come. Next thing the gates open, the big gates open. Right. And you're walking out like a movie, you know, slow motion. 00:29:25:01 - 00:29:26:16 Angelee Sidar You with Mr. SRK? 00:29:26:21 - 00:29:32:19 Kapil Sharma Oh, God. Oh, a shot of my late father, honestly. 00:29:33:02 - 00:29:34:23 Angelee Sidar And he opened the door, actually. 00:29:34:23 - 00:29:49:05 Kapil Sharma MAN Okay, I'm anti-America by many because of my you you. But one of the classic the to get a good old party. Yeah. Better get a little party. Look, finish your Jacuzzi, get out the time, David. 00:29:50:04 - 00:29:51:06 Angelee Sidar I go with you and I get. 00:29:51:09 - 00:29:58:14 Kapil Sharma To get the capillary because of MECO border. So all in all, Menubar let go up an incredibly too sweet guy. 00:29:58:15 - 00:30:16:11 Angelee Sidar It was so sweet. He opened the door, and the first thing he said was Hi. And you did the coke? Oh, my God. Like, literally, I was like, Oh my God. I opened the door and he goes, Come party with us. And I would let I honestly, I could not believe that moment. I was dressed in side in my Bombay. 00:30:16:19 - 00:30:19:15 Angelee Sidar He could take a get to pull up by a right. 00:30:19:16 - 00:30:20:04 Kapil Sharma No matter who. 00:30:20:17 - 00:30:37:07 Angelee Sidar But yeah, Did you look like some kind of exchange student? Some kind of like you know, backpacker with my trousers on a vest on. It was a full on out cocktail party, right? Everybody was so glamorous. We walked in, we would. 00:30:37:07 - 00:30:39:05 Kapil Sharma Go guest judge because it got taught. 00:30:39:05 - 00:31:08:17 Angelee Sidar I guess you guessed that I dance. You know the dance. We dance on the dance floor. And then at the end, I've got to say, all of us this my dizzy right at the end. And I have to say a special, you know, just going there. When I met Mr. SRK himself and Gauri, they were so lovely, such lovely humans and made us so new saag that time of year I was sitting there going, Is this actually happening? 00:31:09:22 - 00:31:30:02 Angelee Sidar And then at the end of the night we were all talking, it was so chilled and couple. I've got to say that you have this magic of couple, which is you make this level in a room where you feel like it's a safe space, right? No kind of it, you know, kind of like even your, your manner of joking, it's so warm, it's so loving. 00:31:30:19 - 00:31:40:07 Angelee Sidar And we would sit and we were sitting there and I'm not going to ask you how you do that, because I actually think that is the genius of all that. Honestly, that is the genius. 00:31:40:13 - 00:31:43:00 Kapil Sharma Made me look better. Yes. Wonderful. 00:31:43:06 - 00:31:44:11 Angelee Sidar Kiko, I know. 00:31:44:16 - 00:31:45:18 Kapil Sharma Which cancer kept on me. 00:31:46:04 - 00:32:08:02 Angelee Sidar I know. So funny. But you definitely you definitely have that. And I also actually I forgot to talk about which I, I did want to say it was a very proud moment. I went to go and watch this. So many proud moments. You know, as a family member, we've been watching you grow from, you know, of watching you come on our TV in London and we're going this couple and we're getting so, so. 00:32:08:09 - 00:32:09:04 Kapil Sharma Much in memory. 00:32:09:10 - 00:32:12:01 Angelee Sidar Yes. I saw your show in Wembley. You even called us. 00:32:12:16 - 00:32:13:06 Kapil Sharma And I'm sure. 00:32:13:22 - 00:32:34:23 Angelee Sidar Well, I did, but, you know, it got like it bonded us. Then you and you see it and you're on stage and you even give us a shout out. And everyone's like, Anyway, so another thing I wanted to say was on, you know, congratulations on your new movie that you, John Zagato. I went to go and see it and felt him cinema. 00:32:35:03 - 00:32:54:12 Angelee Sidar Anyone who's in London knows that cinema. And I actually went by myself. No, I know my mum and dad, but I turned up by myself and mum and Dad were there and Mommy, Daddy. Right. They had a big like a big bag which I never lost, although luckily I got to see me out. But. And this is in London, right. 00:32:54:12 - 00:33:18:11 Angelee Sidar Well you can't even take your own food in. Anyway, we went and we watched the movie and I felt really that a sense of pride as well, because it was one of those movies where those types of stories, I believe, need to be told. That kind of daily grind that people go through that sometimes we forget about how difficult life can be for people. 00:33:19:06 - 00:33:30:06 Angelee Sidar I thought you were superb in it. I really have to say that. And what made you take on a role like that? Because it was kind of a very unassuming role. 00:33:31:13 - 00:33:59:17 Kapil Sharma Do they actually do it? Credit? Sara Jarman And it does generally see yeah, or you don't map inequality, which we got a dziga at a comedy by chance. We actually met in a serious place, Goldfinger. And on the A by chance, we minamino did the McGarrity Monkey laugh about comedy circus comedy set because after all, we can make political comedy. 00:33:59:17 - 00:34:21:21 Kapil Sharma Film could be music. I mean, a serious any place card that anyone could seriously offer. So I don't know that's your comedy got to do it the the the penultimate Oscar getting a little well the other method man let's meet, huh? We're going to have something for you if you are interested. I can come over and meet among the men. 00:34:22:06 - 00:34:47:09 Kapil Sharma There are serious women on the menu. So would you make any of them believe it? And really good stories, Lena. 50%, the highest, obviously, because she is a very good filmmaker. Yeah, but very the actor we are so at that age, you know, to sleep under the hot Angelina, you're in safe hands. Good Director Gillette and the media eager to give me the fraudulent women's stories. 00:34:47:09 - 00:34:52:19 Kapil Sharma My story with this are but with the eighties I've got to be able. 00:34:53:15 - 00:34:59:17 Angelee Sidar Did you feel like you needed to get into character? How did you get yourself into that character mentally? 00:34:59:20 - 00:35:09:08 Kapil Sharma Helen is great about how I used to work in Coca-Cola and I'm just sort of capturing the loneliness again. But if I told you the maybe. 00:35:09:11 - 00:35:14:23 Angelee Sidar You use those memories, did you kind of like when you about, oh, did you start thinking about and tried to. 00:35:14:24 - 00:36:01:06 Kapil Sharma Be actually nostalgia and you love them? Yeah, all the perfume logic then the other lady to come to see me another the beach come he got to me that's the you know the competitive military come to the NNPC non Nigeria luggage come on they had a deep fragrance the smell dooby girl What do those bastards shoulder guitars you want to look at I a coming out of so you did not tajiri Yeah no liquor to keep petrol smell and of course you want this of Jimmy What speediness must I don't get those film the brand but this Albert in almost about Bombay I'll get the yellow Robin Italia pick up that but all film to 00:36:01:23 - 00:36:16:19 Kapil Sharma watch the can do correctly Mexico say are Magnum made me think we would know that you can say Amir bonded really what they businessmen the big German Punjabi ketchup made these you can a corona but the air will look right through the declares here. 00:36:17:13 - 00:36:46:05 Angelee Sidar And I think that's why people may be asking that question is because you played that role beautifully. It was so beautifully. Honestly, it really was. Okay. So closing tradition on the show, I'm saying tradition did that with any mechanic of. So I, I asked this question because I think the gift of hindsight or experience is a very wonderful thing, right? 00:36:46:21 - 00:37:02:01 Angelee Sidar Wooden experience. I get to see the exact then you can give yourself so much advice, but at the time you have to go through it for the first time yourself. So for some of my younger listeners who are going through something, what advice would you give your younger self. 00:37:05:01 - 00:37:37:01 Kapil Sharma To redeem another lucky jumper? Lukaku Due to the deluge of melodrama, Daniel Spar said he stood out here those earlier. Carlo he did due to the Manchurian Nina, not the ghetto or the jingle. If you're blessed, I'll play my personal sorrows. Other times we're going to give you the metaphor to steal the time. Zilla Yeah. So, Austan, would you like to, uh, banana or the Leo the hero? 00:37:37:01 - 00:38:21:00 Kapil Sharma You know, another billion, the Napoli Life Orchestra, you know, tackle guitar. Give me one classic on your Cher car the other day, Father Bernard So Mary, father of Minorca, says share them the diamond. Mimi Levin So sorry And me talking about the insecure Dhuniya Daddy, do sit here. So how often in Mama one time spend a year? Joe Dalton Which you can there be any MBA or not experience Get out never only carry they don't elevate just go give even the little thought about a little like entertainment visually on their welcome not or religion nicely they're so g to rock the Vienna Well a very sorry you know Saadiyat may match girl dances that we 00:38:21:00 - 00:38:34:07 Kapil Sharma are made Amir Gary Malcolm but the picture the intention with the only so another godly chakra so up and out and did not code Saturday or Kojo so as if we call you there and I you know at the last lecture letter that. 00:38:34:07 - 00:38:35:09 Angelee Sidar So hopefully that. 00:38:35:09 - 00:38:37:05 Kapil Sharma We can not that is. 00:38:37:14 - 00:38:46:05 Angelee Sidar Such beautiful advice that is a true feel it in your soul moment. I want to say thank you from the bottom of my heart. It's been such a pleasure. Thank you. Thank you so much. 00:38:46:06 - 00:38:46:18 Kapil Sharma Thank you. 00:38:48:12 - 00:38:49:15 Angelee Sidar Thank you. Thank you. 00:38:49:19 - 00:38:50:11 Kapil Sharma Thank you, guys. 00:38:50:17 - 00:38:52:12 Angelee Sidar Thank you guys for making me. 00:38:52:12 - 00:38:53:13 Kapil Sharma I've never. 00:38:54:00 - 00:38:55:07 Angelee Sidar Seen you, so. 00:38:56:16 - 00:38:57:15 Kapil Sharma Thank you. Bye.
Tune in to this inspiring episode as I sit down with Brian, a San Francisco Bay area native who now calls Minorca, Spain, home. Brian, a luxury travel curator, shares his captivating journey into the world of travel and reveals his deep passion for sustainability in travel and how he works to have a positive impact through exploration. Tune in to discover the incredible stories and experiences Brian has encountered while globe-trotting, and explore the meaningful role we all play as travelers in shaping a better world.
Que valor tem a sua vida? E a vida animal? Quanto vale um parque natural ou uma praia?É comum dizer-se que certas coisas ‘não têm preço'. Geralmente, a expressão pressupõe que o seu valor é incalculável; mas, economistas como Hugo Figueiredo, discordam, dizendo que a não atribuição de um valor provoca precisamente o efeito contrário: faz com que o mesmo passe a ser zero. Esta desvalorização tem efeitos profundos e acaba por se traduzir na maneira como respeitamos (ou não) a natureza, a vida humana e tantos outros. Em conversa com Hugo van der Ding, Hugo Figueiredo dá inúmeros exemplos e ajuda-nos a compreender como é possível fazer análises de custo/benefício e calcular o ‘preço' de tudo aquilo que nos parece impossível quantificar, mesmo quando os benefícios são imateriais. Parece-lhe demasiado duro e objetivo? Prepare-se: a sua vida vale muito mais do que provavelmente imagina. REFERÊNCIAS E LINKS ÚTEIS Quanto vale uma vida?Viscusi, W. (2018). Pricing lives: Guideposts for a safer society. Princeton University Press.Kniesner, T. J., & Viscusi, W. K. (2019). The Value of a Statistical Life. In Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Economics and Finance.Friedman, H. S. (2021). Ultimate price: The value we place on life. University of California Press. Thaler, R., & Rosen, S. (1976). The value of saving a life: evidence from the labor market.In Household production and consumption (pp. 265-302). NBER.Athey, S., Kremer, M., Snyder, C., & Tabarrok, A. (2020). In the race for a coronavirus vaccine, we must go big. really, really big. New York Times, 4. Avaliação de bens ambientais:Banzhaf, H. (2023). Pricing the Priceless: A History of Environmental Economics (Historical Perspectives on Modern Economics). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Riera, P., McConnell, K. E., Giergiczny, M., & Mahieu, P. A. (2011). Applying the travel cost method to Minorca beaches: some policy results. The international handbook on non-market environmental valuation, 60-73.Haefele, M., Loomis, J. B., & Bilmes, L. (2016). Total economic valuation of the National Park Service lands and programs: Results of a survey of the American public. Harvard Kennedy School Working Papers Number of, 48.Economistas: Kip ViscusiHoward FriedmanSpencer Banzhaf BIOSHUGO VAN DER DINGHugo van der Ding é muitas personagens. Locutor, criativo e desenhador acidental. Uma espécie de cartunista de sucesso instantâneo a quem bastou uma caneta Bic, uma boa ideia e uma folha em branco. Criador de personagens digitais de sucesso como a Criada Malcriada e Cavaca a Presidenta, também autor de um dos podcasts mais ouvidos em Portugal, Vamos Todos Morrer, podemos encontrá-lo, ou melhor ouvi-lo, todas as manhãs na Antena 3 ou por detrás dos bonecos que nos surgem todos os dias por aqui e ali. HUGO FIGUEIREDOÉ professor de Economia na Universidade de Aveiro, investigador do CIPES - Centro de Investigação em Políticas do Ensino Superior e colaborador do GOVCOPP – Unidade de Investigação em Governança, Competitividade e Políticas Públicas. É licenciado em Economia pela Universidade do Porto e doutorado em Ciências Empresariais pela Universidade de Manchester. Os seus interesses de investigação centram-se nas áreas da economia do trabalho, da educação e do ensino superior.
A burial cave on the Western Mediterranean island of Minorca dating to 1000 BCE contained 200 individuals and wooden boxes of dyed human hairs. The hairs were full of drugs, which leads our contestants to ask just what kind of parties were going on down there and why we weren't invited. A few flashbacks to the 1970s result.
Menorca, Spain: The best things to see and do on this Mediterranean island
Nata per caso, per mancanza di ingredienti e ora anche nel caffè di qualche americano buontempone! Sto parlando della maionese. Ma lo sapevi che il suo nome c'entra con la splendida isola di Minorca? Quindi cosa stai aspettando? Non ti resta che ascoltare, condividere la puntata e farmi sapere cosa ne pensi sui miei profili social in primis stefano_recrosio e Pillole di Alimentazione! Seguimi sulla nuova pagina Instagram di Pillole di Alimentazione e commenta o scrivimi se vuoi approfondire l'argomento o se vuoi scoprire i servizi di Pillole di Alimentazione a Milano o online e toccherai con mano il modo che sta rivoluzionando il mondo del fitness e dell'educazione alimentare per una maggior consapevolezza del viver sano! Sostieni il progetto del podcast e diventa un Patreon e avrai diritto a tanti vantaggi esclusivi, no, non mento! Clicca qui! --> Patreon --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
This week I'm coming to you from a little garden in a resort on the fabulous island of Menorca (or Minorca, as you prefer) where I'm sharing tips for sketching your family when you're all together somewhere beautiful, and where no one is watching the clock.
Benjamin is back from his European tour and fills Nate in on his Menorcan adventure featuring an exhibition of new work by Rashid Johnson at Hauser and Wirth, Menorca. We talk air travel (lie flat and other), caviar bumps. We also cover a certain art world romance covered in the Wall Street Journal, Jeff Koons on Hydra and a bunch more. All this on THE ONLY ART PODCAST --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/benjamin-godsill/support
A Violin Concerto in G minor, Opus 26, became the best-known work of the German composer Max Bruch. Originally written in 1866 it went through many revisions before finally being completed in 1867. It was performed extensively but having sold both the publishing and the manuscript Bruch died in relative obscurity in 1920. The Concerto would continue to be played around the world and the second movement in particular, the Adagio, became a much-loved favourite. Journalist Claire Read describes how much her Mother loved the piece after Claire learned and performed it in school, and how she would listen to it whilst being treated for cancer. Ukrainian violinist Kostia Lukyniuk recalls playing it with an orchestra in his home town aged 11, and how music still gives him strength as he plays for those battered by the Russian invasion of his home country. The second movement brings back fond memories for Archers actor June Spencer who listened to it with her husband and their friends on a veranda in Minorca. Leader of the Welsh National Opera David Adams was inspired to take-up the violin after listening to a recording of David Oistrakh playing this piece, and later performed it at the Fishguard Festival. It was a favourite of his Mum's and that recording was played at her funeral. The Carnegie Hall was the setting for violinist Shlomo Mintz's most treasured performance and he describes how it feels to play those soaring melodies. Curator Robinson McClellan at The Morgan Library & Museum in New York explains how the manuscript of this concerto made its way from Germany to the USA, and why this work would later become a source of resentment for this 'establishment' composer. Studio Manager: Ilse Lademann Produced for BBC Audio in Bristol by Toby Field.
Mọi người hầu như luôn nghĩ đến ra một cô gà mái bụ bẫm, bệ vệ, với bộ lông đẹp đẽ đang đi buôn trong chuồng như thể cô ta làm cho chủ nơi này và cứng cáp là không vội vàng! Như chúng ta sẽ thấy, Buff Orpington là một giống khá mới đây được tạo ra bởi tầm nhìn của một người đàn ông cảm thấy rằng sở hữu thể tạo ra một loài gà đa dụng lớn hơn và thấp hơn những giống hiện sở hữu. Bài viết này bàn bạc về tính khí, đặc điểm giống, khả năng đẻ trứng và các biến thể được công nhận của Buff Orpington, tập trung vào Buff Orpington càng ngày càng đa dạng. Xem thêm đá gà trực tiếp Lịch sử của Buff Orpington Vào cuối các năm 1880, ‘cơn sốt giết gà' ở Anh đã giảm dần. Con người đã chuyển trong khoảng cách thức nuôi và nuôi giữ đủ cái gà độc và lạ để tìm vui và gây tò mò sang nuôi một loài gà bổ ích và thiết thực hơn. 1 trong các người như vậy – một người đánh xe ngựa sống tại xã Buff Orpington thuộc hạt Kent, Anh. Ông không bắt đầu để ý đến gà cho đến tận cuối đời, nhưng ông đã bị cuốn hút bởi khả năng lai tạo ra 1 con gà phải chăng hơn cho cả bàn ăn và cung cấp trứng. Ông khởi đầu bằng cách chọn các con gà mang lớp phải chăng và với kích thước phù hợp có bàn. Ba giống chó ban sơ anh dùng là Minorca, Langshan và Plymouth Rocks. Năm 1886, ông ‘trình làng' giống Black Orpington – giống gà này đã thành công phần nhiều chỉ sau một đêm ở Anh nhờ sự công khai phổ biến. Nó được lai tạo để mang màu đen để che đi bụi bẩn và mồ hóng phổ biến ở các thị thành thời bấy giờ. Màu tiếp theo được tiết lộ là màu Buff, vẫn là màu ưa chuộng của gà Buff Orpington. Cũng theo sau, có các màu Trắng và Xanh lam, và Splash của con gà. lúc ông Cook bật mí các con gà của mình mang công chúng, ông đã nhận được phổ thông lời khen ngợi ở Anh. Nó mau chóng trở thành giống gà đa dạng nhất ở quốc gia này và trong vòng mười năm, nó đã được xuất khẩu sang các nước khác, bao gồm cả Mỹ. Thậm chí còn có một trang trại Buff Orpington ở Nam Phi! Lúc Cook tới Mỹ để bán những cái gà của mình, ông đã gặp thành công to. Rõ ràng, anh đó là một người bán hàng giỏi và rất chóng vánh lôi kéo được những người nông dân và các người chăn nuôi gia cầm để ý tới giống gà lưỡng dụng của anh đó.
Ale, premiato al Montecarlo Film Festival, ha avuto l'occasione di conoscere Ezio Greggio. Sulla scia della sua esperienza con la lingua del posto, si approfondisce il tema "difficoltà di interazione all'estero". In chiusura viene coinvolto anche Walter, disturbato nella sua vacanza a Minorca.
I'm joined in this episode by an incredibly intelligent and well spoken woman, Sophie McLean. She's calling in from Minorca, a tiny island of the coast of Barcelona, relocating from NYC's Upper East Side to write her second book. I took on the adventure of interviewing Sophie knowing that I'd really have to lean in to keep up! The deeper connections I've made to being present, a 'beginner's mind', and leadership have left me with a feeling of peace, in a currently chaotic world. By accepting the idea that we 'know almost nothing' is more freeing than I ever could have imagined. Connect with Sophie @ www.sophiemclean.com Connect with Nate @ www.nateleslie.ca About Sophia McLean Born in Algeria, educated in Morocco and France, with a professional career in the USA and UK, Sophie has led an eventful life. She has been a helicopter pilot, a teacher, a designer, a relief worker, a war refugee, a CEO, and served as a United Nations representative on The Commission on the Status of Women's Hunger Project. She has been shot at, shipwrecked, and widowed. She has lived on a farm, a boat, a penthouse, and in an ashram. As a wisdom teacher, Sophie has spent decades leading transformational seminars to over 80,000 people around the world, of all ethnicities, ages, religions and social backgrounds – all engaged with the universal existential questions of “Who and what am I?” and “What is my life about?” Sophie McLean's mission is to contribute to the creation of a new culture for humankind; or the shift from Homo Sapiens to Homo Spiritus, as Dr. David Hawkins so beautifully wrote. Sophie's seminar and podcast topics span both human and metaphysical dimensions – exposing and deconstructing the automatic ego, consciousness, freedom, love, stress, anxiety, fear, relationships, health, sex, money, ownership, leadership, spirituality, creation and evolution, the feminine and the masculine, responsibility, and making an effective, actionable difference in the world. Sophie engages people in a rigorous review of their life and a systematic questioning of their conclusions on the basis that without examining our network of ideas, beliefs, social and cultural judgments, and our assumptions about the world, those are transformed into constraints. Her interest is in the nature of what it means to be human. Sophie's book, The Elegance of Simplicity: A Wisdom Teacher's Epic Journey to Awareness, is a compelling, thought-provoking work of autobiographical fiction, one that communicates life-altering concepts proposing an effortless pathway to awareness. It's a deeply authentic and dramatic story of self-discovery, about what is possible when you take responsibility, own your power, and become one with life. In Sophie McLean's life and work, she strives to bring elegance, worldly experience, grit, courage, and insight leading to revelation and transformation. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/nathan-leslie/message
Ai microfoni dei nostri DeGiornalist, Fabiana e Claudio Chiari, giovedì 7 aprile è stato ospite Giancarlo Maretta specialista del turismo che ci ha parlato delle prossime mete estive e di qualche idea per poter fare una piccola valigia e partire. Tra le mete più gettonate dai giovani quest'anno: Valencia, Barcellona e la Spagna in generale. In Italia, i consigli per un piccolo weekend si sono concentrati sulla Bassa Toscana e il Lazio per i bellissimi posti: Sovana, Civita di Bagnoregio e Pitigliano. Finalmente, poi ci iniziamo a muovere e viaggiare e tra le mete suggerite per la prossima estate: Grecia con Karpatos e Creta per le famiglie o Spagna per la bellezza delle spiagge di Minorca.
In this episode we spotlight the beautiful Minorca chicken, have a fascinating chat with Tom and Ashley Watkins of Murray McMurray Hatchery, share our recipe for Stove Top Grits and Greens with Eggs, and finish up by hunting for vintage egg scales. Our sponsor, Grubbly Farms, is offering our listeners 20% off your purchase for first time buyers! That's a fantastic value! This offer does not apply to subscriptions and cannot be used with any other discounts. Click here for our affiliate link and use our code COFFEELADIES25 to get your discount.Chicken Luv Box - use CWTCL for $5 off your order!https://www.chickenluv.com/Minorca Chicken Club of the UKhttps://www.theminorcaclub.co.uk/Strong Animals Chicken Essentialshttps://www.getstronganimals.com/The Egg Carton Storehttps://eggcartonstore.com/Murray McMurray Hatcheryhttps://www.mcmurrayhatchery.com/index.htmlMurray McMurray on Instagramhttps://www.instagram.com/mcmurray_hatchery/?hl=enMurray McMurray on Facebookhttps://m.facebook.com/profile.php?id=105555319482179Stove Top Grits and Greens with EggsInternational Society of Antique Scale Collectorshttps://www.isasc.org/index.htmlISASC Article - Egg Scales: Focus of a Collectionhttps://www.isasc.org/Scale-Tales-Library/Egg-Scales-Focus-of-a-Collection-4-26-2018.htmlCWTCL Websitehttps://coffeewiththechickenladies.com/CWTCL Etsy Shophttps://www.etsy.com/shop/CoffeeWChickenLadiesCWTCL Amazon Recommendationshttps://www.amazon.com/shop/coffeewiththechickenladiesSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/coffeewiththechickenladies)
Admiral John Byng's execution for failing to “do his utmost” to relieve the British garrison on Minorca in 1756 is remembered today mainly for Voltaire's quip about the Royal Navy's use of Byng's death “to encourage the others.” In The Execution of Admiral John Byng as a Microhistory of Eighteenth-Century Britain (Routledge, 2021), Joseph J. Krulder uses the event as a window into the era. As Krulder shows, Byng's failure was the consequence of a number of decisions that reflected the priorities of Britain's military and political leadership, as well as the disruptions caused by the rapid onset of the war with France. These factors combined to send Byng to relieve an isolated and poorly-led Army garrison with an undermanned fleet facing heavy odds. News of the battle and Byng's subsequent court-martial prompted a popular reaction that was reflected in numerous ballads, pamphlets, and the new medium of newspapers, as well as in riots and other demonstrations. Much of this was subsequently obscured by the overwhelmingly macrohistorical focus on the event, one which overlooks many of the small details that Krulder shows are vital to understanding the dynamics of the affair. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
Admiral John Byng's execution for failing to “do his utmost” to relieve the British garrison on Minorca in 1756 is remembered today mainly for Voltaire's quip about the Royal Navy's use of Byng's death “to encourage the others.” In The Execution of Admiral John Byng as a Microhistory of Eighteenth-Century Britain (Routledge, 2021), Joseph J. Krulder uses the event as a window into the era. As Krulder shows, Byng's failure was the consequence of a number of decisions that reflected the priorities of Britain's military and political leadership, as well as the disruptions caused by the rapid onset of the war with France. These factors combined to send Byng to relieve an isolated and poorly-led Army garrison with an undermanned fleet facing heavy odds. News of the battle and Byng's subsequent court-martial prompted a popular reaction that was reflected in numerous ballads, pamphlets, and the new medium of newspapers, as well as in riots and other demonstrations. Much of this was subsequently obscured by the overwhelmingly macrohistorical focus on the event, one which overlooks many of the small details that Krulder shows are vital to understanding the dynamics of the affair. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/history
Admiral John Byng's execution for failing to “do his utmost” to relieve the British garrison on Minorca in 1756 is remembered today mainly for Voltaire's quip about the Royal Navy's use of Byng's death “to encourage the others.” In The Execution of Admiral John Byng as a Microhistory of Eighteenth-Century Britain (Routledge, 2021), Joseph J. Krulder uses the event as a window into the era. As Krulder shows, Byng's failure was the consequence of a number of decisions that reflected the priorities of Britain's military and political leadership, as well as the disruptions caused by the rapid onset of the war with France. These factors combined to send Byng to relieve an isolated and poorly-led Army garrison with an undermanned fleet facing heavy odds. News of the battle and Byng's subsequent court-martial prompted a popular reaction that was reflected in numerous ballads, pamphlets, and the new medium of newspapers, as well as in riots and other demonstrations. Much of this was subsequently obscured by the overwhelmingly macrohistorical focus on the event, one which overlooks many of the small details that Krulder shows are vital to understanding the dynamics of the affair. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/military-history
Admiral John Byng's execution for failing to “do his utmost” to relieve the British garrison on Minorca in 1756 is remembered today mainly for Voltaire's quip about the Royal Navy's use of Byng's death “to encourage the others.” In The Execution of Admiral John Byng as a Microhistory of Eighteenth-Century Britain (Routledge, 2021), Joseph J. Krulder uses the event as a window into the era. As Krulder shows, Byng's failure was the consequence of a number of decisions that reflected the priorities of Britain's military and political leadership, as well as the disruptions caused by the rapid onset of the war with France. These factors combined to send Byng to relieve an isolated and poorly-led Army garrison with an undermanned fleet facing heavy odds. News of the battle and Byng's subsequent court-martial prompted a popular reaction that was reflected in numerous ballads, pamphlets, and the new medium of newspapers, as well as in riots and other demonstrations. Much of this was subsequently obscured by the overwhelmingly macrohistorical focus on the event, one which overlooks many of the small details that Krulder shows are vital to understanding the dynamics of the affair. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Admiral John Byng's execution for failing to “do his utmost” to relieve the British garrison on Minorca in 1756 is remembered today mainly for Voltaire's quip about the Royal Navy's use of Byng's death “to encourage the others.” In The Execution of Admiral John Byng as a Microhistory of Eighteenth-Century Britain (Routledge, 2021), Joseph J. Krulder uses the event as a window into the era. As Krulder shows, Byng's failure was the consequence of a number of decisions that reflected the priorities of Britain's military and political leadership, as well as the disruptions caused by the rapid onset of the war with France. These factors combined to send Byng to relieve an isolated and poorly-led Army garrison with an undermanned fleet facing heavy odds. News of the battle and Byng's subsequent court-martial prompted a popular reaction that was reflected in numerous ballads, pamphlets, and the new medium of newspapers, as well as in riots and other demonstrations. Much of this was subsequently obscured by the overwhelmingly macrohistorical focus on the event, one which overlooks many of the small details that Krulder shows are vital to understanding the dynamics of the affair. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/british-studies
Oyku Dogan PEG Bedroom Producer Festival 2022 BIO Oyku Dogan is a singer/songwriter, jazz pianist, and composer born in Izmir, based in Italy. Writing songs, composing, playing instruments, and singing in different styles, have been a part of her education and her daily life since childhood. She took part in many kinds of music performances and activities. After graduating from an American high school, she moved to another Mediterranean country, Italy, and found it perfect for her intercultural aims in music. She graduated from Essex University and got a BA Hons degree in Music Performance. (Bologna Music Academy campus). She majored in jazz piano and continued her Classical Composition studies at the Giuseppe Nicolini Conservatory in Piacenza/Italy. In 2013, she made her first self-product album "Through the Dark We See the Light" as her thesis project, she wrote all the lyrics, composed the songs, and played the instruments. It was completely her production and has had some very positive feedback. In 2015, she started her professional career and released her debut single “Fade Away”. She won the Honorable Mention award at the Song of the Year International Contest with her song Fade Away (2015) and Time to Make a Move (2014). In 2016 she recorded two singles in Minorca, Spain with EDC 'Got the Looks' and 'Fell for you Anyway' and released them with official videos. In 2016 and 2017 she was a semi-finalist amongst 16.000 entries twice at the International Songwriting Competition. In 2019 she released her second self-product album called Moontide which is a mysterious and nocturnal album and most of the songs are so intimate: with piano and vocals only. In 2020 once again she became a semi-finalist at ISC among 26.000 entries with her song It Will be Alright. Currently, she's releasing and working on new music. https://www.instagram.com/iamoykudogan/ https://open.spotify.com/artist/3skDFTgh5xMjfwQBWduBXt?si=pt2L0n0BS329fyV_yN07tQ https://linktr.ee/iamoykudogan PEG 2022 Fade Away PEG 2021 1. It Can't be the End 2. Forget You 3. Fell for You Anyway 4. Moontide Song --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/phantom-electric/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/phantom-electric/support
Oggi parliamo di isole europee che, forse, non conoscete: Minorca (Spagna), Porto Santo (Portogallo), Anafi (Grecia), l'Isola di Man (Regno Unito), Sylt (Germania).Per offrirmi un caffè virtuale e sostenere il podcast: https://ko-fi.com/europagrandtourTrovi la trascrizione della puntata e oltre alle fonti, foto e eventuali approfondimenti su: https://www.europagrandtour.comDella stessa autrice: il podcast Storia D'Europa, https://www.storiadeuropa.com e il blog di cucina con audio-ricette https://www.cucinaeuropea.com
Isole Baleari: Maiorca, Minorca, Ibiza , Formentera
In this episode I am joined by Alicia Casals, one of the co-founders of Nomo Studio. We talk about their project, Villa Patio, located on the Spanish island of Minorca.It is a private residence that is very sculptural in form, the entire villa appears to be carved out of a block of white stone. The design concept is underlined by complex geometrical rules revolving around a pentagon, but don't worry, this one looks nothing like the one in Washington.I loved talking with Alicia and finding out about how the studio used geometry to respond to the orientation of the site, by making the most of good views, shielding the bad ones from view and providing protection from the strong Balearic winds. The result of their approach is a beautiful courtyard villa with amazing views of the Mediterranean.At the end of the episode, I ask Alicia the three questions I ask all my podcast guests;– what really annoys her about her home?– what house has she visited that has really inspired her?– and, if she could choose anyone to design her a new house, who would she choose?If you would like to find out more about Nomo Studio and their project Villa Patio, you can find more information on the episode page at anotherarchitecturepodcast.com, including images and links to some of the references in the interview.I hope you enjoy listening.
PEG Interviews Singer-Songwriter Oyku Dogan BIO: Oyku Dogan is a singer/songwriter, jazz pianist and composer born in Izmir, based in Italy. Writing songs, composing, playing instruments and singing in different styles, have been a part of her education and her daily life since childhood. She took part in many kinds of music performances and activities. After graduating from an American high school , she moved to another Mediterranean country, Italy, and found it perfect for her intercultural aims in music. She graduated from Essex University and got the BA Hons degree in Music Performance. (Bologna Music Academy campus). She majored in jazz piano and continued her Classical Composition studies at the Giuseppe Nicolini Conservatory in Piacenza/Italy. In 2013, she made her first self-product album "Through the Dark We See the Light" as her thesis project, she wrote all the lyrics, composed the songs, and played the instruments. It was completely her own production, and has had some very positive feedback. In 2015, she started her professional career and released her debut single “Fade Away”. She won the Honorable Mention award at the Song of the Year International Contest with her song Fade Away (2015) and Time to Make a Move (2014). In 2016 she recorded two singles in Minorca, Spain with EdC 'Got the Looks' and 'Fell for you Anyway' and released them with official videos. In 2016 and 2017 she was a semi-finalist amongst 16.000 entries twice at the International Songwriting Competition. In 2019 she released her second self-product album called Moontide which is a mysterious and nocturnal album and most of the songs are so intimate: with piano and vocals only. In 2020 once again she became a semi-finalist at ISC among 26.000 entries with her song It Will be Alright. Currently she's releasing and working on new music. Watch the video podcast on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VBHf4LgjmQI https://www.instagram.com/iamoykudogan/ https://open.spotify.com/artist/3skDFTgh5xMjfwQBWduBXt?si=pt2L0n0BS329fyV_yN07tQ https://linktr.ee/iamoykudogan YouTube: Moon Tide Song https://youtu.be/_ahSgHZ_StA Pre save links https://distrokid.com/hyperfollow/oykudogan/mi-ricordo ************************************************************** Keep our podcast free for artist to be interviewed Donate via PayPalMe https://found.ee/Donate_2_Phantom_Electric_Ghost_Via_PayPalMe Become an influencer: Check out WeSponsored.com https://found.ee/We_Sponsored_Influencer_Referral_Link --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/phantom-electric/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/phantom-electric/support
PEG Interviews Singer-Songwriter Oyku Dogan BIO: Oyku Dogan is a singer/songwriter, jazz pianist and composer born in Izmir, based in Italy. Writing songs, composing, playing instruments and singing in different styles, have been a part of her education and her daily life since childhood. She took part in many kinds of music performances and activities. After graduating from an American high school , she moved to another Mediterranean country, Italy, and found it perfect for her intercultural aims in music. She graduated from Essex University and got the BA Hons degree in Music Performance. (Bologna Music Academy campus). She majored in jazz piano and continued her Classical Composition studies at the Giuseppe Nicolini Conservatory in Piacenza/Italy. In 2013, she made her first self-product album "Through the Dark We See the Light" as her thesis project, she wrote all the lyrics, composed the songs, and played the instruments. It was completely her own production, and has had some very positive feedback. In 2015, she started her professional career and released her debut single “Fade Away”. She won the Honorable Mention award at the Song of the Year International Contest with her song Fade Away (2015) and Time to Make a Move (2014). In 2016 she recorded two singles in Minorca, Spain with EdC 'Got the Looks' and 'Fell for you Anyway' and released them with official videos. In 2016 and 2017 she was a semi-finalist amongst 16.000 entries twice at the International Songwriting Competition. In 2019 she released her second self-product album called Moontide which is a mysterious and nocturnal album and most of the songs are so intimate: with piano and vocals only. In 2020 once again she became a semi-finalist at ISC among 26.000 entries with her song It Will be Alright. Currently she's releasing and working on new music. Watch the video podcast on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VBHf4LgjmQI https://www.instagram.com/iamoykudogan/ https://open.spotify.com/artist/3skDFTgh5xMjfwQBWduBXt?si=pt2L0n0BS329fyV_yN07tQ https://linktr.ee/iamoykudogan YouTube: Moon Tide Song https://youtu.be/_ahSgHZ_StA Pre save links https://distrokid.com/hyperfollow/oykudogan/mi-ricordo ************************************************************** Keep our podcast free for artist to be interviewed Donate via PayPalMe https://found.ee/Donate_2_Phantom_Electric_Ghost_Via_PayPalMe Become an influencer: Check out WeSponsored.com https://found.ee/We_Sponsored_Influencer_Referral_Link --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/josephine-electric/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/josephine-electric/support
Michael is joined each week by Aussie historian, author & entertainer Jim Haynes, for his unique knowledge of the not-so-famous characters from Australia’s history. This week Jim shines the spotlight on… Joseph Samuel 'the man they couldn’t hang' Joseph Samuel (c. 1780 – April 1806) was an Englishman known for having survived his execution attempt. Convicted for robbery in 1795, he was sentenced in 1801 to transportation to Australia, one of 297 convicted felons aboard the vessels Nile, Canada and Minorca. In 1803 Samuel was sentenced to death for petty theft and aiding in the murder of the constable who chased him and his three cohorts. With another criminal he was taken in a cart to Parramatta where hundreds gathered to watch the hanging. After prayers were said and the ropes attached, the cart drove off, but the rope around Samuel’s neck snapped. But that was just the beginning of this most unusual true tale… See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Johnson's Guidebook of 1850 describes Laxey as a cluster of cottages down by the shore, with a dangerous, steep approach down from Fairy Cottage on the south side and Minorca on the north. Leech's Guide of 1861 shows a larger, bustling Laxey with a mining industry. Contemporary newspapers tell of the New Road, opened 28th February 1854, with its magnificent viaducts, giving travellers a view up to the Great Laxey Wheel. Our story is a Manx translation of an English translation from the original Spanish of Colombian writer, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, about a dentist and a mayor. As y kiaull ain - THE MOLLAG BAND - Graih foalsey MARIE-ALINE LAGADIC - A Kerity PHILIP FOWKE & RTE CONCERT ORCH, Cond Prionnsias O Duinn - The dream of Olwen SGOIL CHIUIL NA GAIDHEALTACHD - Tobair, tobair siolladh MEREDYDD EVANS - Cyri'r geifr BIRLINN JIARG - Animal farm PILOCHA - A fiandeira THE STATIONARY WILBERRIES - The Laxey wheel DAVEY & DYER - Dynamite Quay
La lentezza è un valore che abbiamo dimenticato, ma che negli ultimi anni stiamo provando a riscoprire. E' questo il caso di 15 studenti della London Metropolitan University che, grazie all'associazione “La Rivoluzione delle Seppie” si sono trasferiti per un semestre a Belmonte calabro, borgo da 2000 anime. Ci raccontata tutto Ian Bugarin, uno degli studenti. Vi raccontiamo anche la storia di Alessandro Castagna, veronese e fondatore di "voglioviverecosì", che ormai 20 anni fa ha deciso di trasferirsi a Minorca con la moglie per una vita all'insegna della natura e di ritmi a misura d'uomo. Sono più di 80 i comuni italiani che hanno deciso di riunirsi in Cittàslow l'associazione internazionale di comuni che promuovono uno stile di vita lento e combattono contro lo spopolamento dei piccoli centri. Il segretario generale Pier Giorgio Oliveti ci racconta alcune delle loro iniziative più significative. Lentezza è un concetto che abbraccia moltissimi campi e uno di questi è la tavola e il piacere di starci in compagnia di chi si ama. Ne parliamo con la foodblogger Barbara Toselli, presto in libreria con il libro "Il pranzo della domenica". Prima di salutarci, invece, parliamo con chi alla sua vita veloce non potrebbe mai rinunciare: il Milanese imbruttito. E' con Germano Lanzoni, l'attore che lo impersonifica e proviamo a capire se anche la sua vita privata è davvero all'insegna della corsa.
Furio Benussi del Fast and Furio Sailing team, vincitore assoluto nelle edizioni 2005, 2016, 2017 e 2018 della regata più partecipata del mondo. Avete esordito nella scorsa Barcolana, in un'edizione praticamente senza vento, con il vostro 100 piedi Wild Thing che avete recuperato qualche mese prima dismesso e abbandonato a Minorca, in poco più di un anno lo avete trasformato in uno dei 6/7 maxi più veloci al mondo. Vuoi raccontarci brevemente questo percorso? È stato un percorso alquanto difficile, l'emergenza Covid-19 ha dilatato i tempi del nostro programma, però siamo riusciti ad essere in acqua, abbiamo fatto undici giorni di allenamento prima del campionato mondiale Maxi, che poi un giorno prima è stato annullato, abbiamo fatto 2.500 miglia per andare e tornare dalla Sardegna, è stato un periodo un po' travagliato. Della barca devo dire che siamo soddisfatti, le modifiche che avevamo pensato stanno funzionando bene, qui a Trieste abbiamo messo a punto tutti gli ultimi dettagli degli impianti, sono impianti particolari, tecnologie di altissimo livello che vanno tenute costantemente sotto controllo. Dopo i test di fine settembre inizieremo finalmente a regatare. Sarà una Barcolana particolare, ma dopo l'esperienza del lockdown viverla sarà certamente emozionante come lo è stato poter tornare a fare vela. Come la immagini questa edizione 2020? La possibilità di andare in mare, di essere più barche possibili, di partecipare a questa grande festa, che per noi è un evento sportivo importante, è già un modo di ritrovare una certa serenità. Ci stiamo organizzano con tutte le procedure anti Covid-19, abbiamo un protocollo interno del team che dobbiamo rispettare per arrivare tutti sani all'evento. Barcolana sarà un momento comune di felicità, una possibilità di ripartire verso un futuro meno pesante rispetto a quello che abbiamo vissuto fino ad oggi. La gente ha voglia di vivere, ha voglia di partecipare a questo evento. Non so se saremo in tanti come gli anni passati, però l'importante è ripartire, anche da 1000 barche o più, è già un bel segnale. Io Barcolana la vedo quest'anno come l'inizio di un nuovo futuro. Questa emergenza ha evidenziato ancora di più l'importanza della difesa dell'ambiente e del mare, un messaggio di cui siete ambasciatori con One Ocean Foundation? One Ocean Foundation per noi è un progetto molto importante, oltre a questo tutte le bottigliette d'acqua che utilizzeremo verranno riciclate per produrre delle protesi particolari per bambini con delle malformazioni. Supportare queste grandi inziative per noi è importante, perché chi vive in mare si rende conto che è fondamentale educare i nostri figli al rispetto dell'ambiente, visto che noi adulti non siamo stati molto abili a farlo. Tornando a Barcolana52, e alla sfida in regata, siete pronti ad ambire al quinto successo della vostra carriera? Siamo pronti, sicuramente partiamo per quello, come abbiamo constatato l'anno scorso la Barcolana può essere anche particolarmente difficile da affrontare, per cui possiamo dire di essere pronti a tutto. Di certo la barca sarà molto più competitiva dello scorso anno, quando era stata messa in acqua giusto per cercare di rispettare gli accordi con l'equipaggio, con gli sponsor, con chi stava vicino a noi, quest'anno la barca sarà sicuramente una delle barche più veloci del Golfo, poi Barcolana è una regata, è un evento sportivo,può succedere di tutto.
更多英语知识,请关注微信公众号: VOA英语每日一听 Chris: Hi, Adelina. Tell me again, you're from Spain. Where exactly from Spain are you?Ade: I come from the south, a region called Andalucia.Chris: As we say, Andalusia?Ade: Yes.Chris: Where is this, that's the south, and then if you say south, everybody would think holiday, beach, staying up late, partying even.Ade: Yeah, they are right. We know how to enjoy life. And actually it's very like ... I don't know, but people go to island for summer holidays, but if they really want to know what the real Spain is, they should go to the south.Chris: Of course, because since you're from the south, that's why you say that.Ade: No, it's not because of that, it's because there is where the flamenco comes from, the bullfighting, and I don't know, we have more Spanish customs there.Chris: Okay. Now, so if you would have to say to somebody, if you have to tell a tourist, instead of always going to the same cities like Mallorca, Benidorm, Tenerife, if you would say three really good places in your country, where would you send someone?Ade: Well it depends what they like, if they are people who enjoy nature I will say ... I don't know, go to Granada and Sierra of Granada, name of Alpujarras, there you can find this little village, that they are so authentic. But Granada city also, they have a very nice castle name La Alhambra, is very, very beautiful. And you also have Sierra Nevada if you enjoy skiing and snowboarding. But if you are a city person I will recommend Barcelona of course, very nice in culture, in art, in shopping, in clubbing, is very, very nice city.Chris: Well I hope you're not going to say football now.Ade: No, no, no, not at all, I'm not a football girl.Chris: Okay, so Granada of course in winter must be beautiful for skiing holidays and everything, but in summer it must be really too hot there.Ade: Yes, it is, it's more a city to go and enjoy in wintertime.Chris: So you tell people to stay away from the beaches and visit the inside of the country?Ade: Yeah, you can also go to the beaches. But I mean like the...Chris: What beaches?Ade: I don't know, Mallorca is very nice, Minorca, Ibiza, all the islands are actually, but the problem is that this is ... these islands are so focused on tourism that they actually lose the real taste of Spain. It's too focused on tourism, because for example, if you go to any place on Mallorca you will find all the restaurants with all the menus writing down in German, in English, in all the languages but Spanish. In my point of view, I don't think it's nice because you go to a place where it's sunny but you find actually the same food and the same language and the same lifestyle that you find in your country or for eating. I don't think it's nice to have a holiday like this.Chris: So you mean that when you go somewhere you really want to know that you're in that place, so for example, if you're in China you want to see the menu in Chinese and that's it?Ade: Why not.Chris: Yeah, okay, you're right. Thank you.
更多英语知识,请关注微信公众号: VOA英语每日一听 Chris: Hi, Adelina. Tell me again, you're from Spain. Where exactly from Spain are you?Ade: I come from the south, a region called Andalucia.Chris: As we say, Andalusia?Ade: Yes.Chris: Where is this, that's the south, and then if you say south, everybody would think holiday, beach, staying up late, partying even.Ade: Yeah, they are right. We know how to enjoy life. And actually it's very like ... I don't know, but people go to island for summer holidays, but if they really want to know what the real Spain is, they should go to the south.Chris: Of course, because since you're from the south, that's why you say that.Ade: No, it's not because of that, it's because there is where the flamenco comes from, the bullfighting, and I don't know, we have more Spanish customs there.Chris: Okay. Now, so if you would have to say to somebody, if you have to tell a tourist, instead of always going to the same cities like Mallorca, Benidorm, Tenerife, if you would say three really good places in your country, where would you send someone?Ade: Well it depends what they like, if they are people who enjoy nature I will say ... I don't know, go to Granada and Sierra of Granada, name of Alpujarras, there you can find this little village, that they are so authentic. But Granada city also, they have a very nice castle name La Alhambra, is very, very beautiful. And you also have Sierra Nevada if you enjoy skiing and snowboarding. But if you are a city person I will recommend Barcelona of course, very nice in culture, in art, in shopping, in clubbing, is very, very nice city.Chris: Well I hope you're not going to say football now.Ade: No, no, no, not at all, I'm not a football girl.Chris: Okay, so Granada of course in winter must be beautiful for skiing holidays and everything, but in summer it must be really too hot there.Ade: Yes, it is, it's more a city to go and enjoy in wintertime.Chris: So you tell people to stay away from the beaches and visit the inside of the country?Ade: Yeah, you can also go to the beaches. But I mean like the...Chris: What beaches?Ade: I don't know, Mallorca is very nice, Minorca, Ibiza, all the islands are actually, but the problem is that this is ... these islands are so focused on tourism that they actually lose the real taste of Spain. It's too focused on tourism, because for example, if you go to any place on Mallorca you will find all the restaurants with all the menus writing down in German, in English, in all the languages but Spanish. In my point of view, I don't think it's nice because you go to a place where it's sunny but you find actually the same food and the same language and the same lifestyle that you find in your country or for eating. I don't think it's nice to have a holiday like this.Chris: So you mean that when you go somewhere you really want to know that you're in that place, so for example, if you're in China you want to see the menu in Chinese and that's it?Ade: Why not.Chris: Yeah, okay, you're right. Thank you.
更多英语知识,请关注微信公众号: VOA英语每日一听 Chris: Hi, Adelina. Tell me again, you're from Spain. Where exactly from Spain are you?Ade: I come from the south, a region called Andalucia.Chris: As we say, Andalusia?Ade: Yes.Chris: Where is this, that's the south, and then if you say south, everybody would think holiday, beach, staying up late, partying even.Ade: Yeah, they are right. We know how to enjoy life. And actually it's very like ... I don't know, but people go to island for summer holidays, but if they really want to know what the real Spain is, they should go to the south.Chris: Of course, because since you're from the south, that's why you say that.Ade: No, it's not because of that, it's because there is where the flamenco comes from, the bullfighting, and I don't know, we have more Spanish customs there.Chris: Okay. Now, so if you would have to say to somebody, if you have to tell a tourist, instead of always going to the same cities like Mallorca, Benidorm, Tenerife, if you would say three really good places in your country, where would you send someone?Ade: Well it depends what they like, if they are people who enjoy nature I will say ... I don't know, go to Granada and Sierra of Granada, name of Alpujarras, there you can find this little village, that they are so authentic. But Granada city also, they have a very nice castle name La Alhambra, is very, very beautiful. And you also have Sierra Nevada if you enjoy skiing and snowboarding. But if you are a city person I will recommend Barcelona of course, very nice in culture, in art, in shopping, in clubbing, is very, very nice city.Chris: Well I hope you're not going to say football now.Ade: No, no, no, not at all, I'm not a football girl.Chris: Okay, so Granada of course in winter must be beautiful for skiing holidays and everything, but in summer it must be really too hot there.Ade: Yes, it is, it's more a city to go and enjoy in wintertime.Chris: So you tell people to stay away from the beaches and visit the inside of the country?Ade: Yeah, you can also go to the beaches. But I mean like the...Chris: What beaches?Ade: I don't know, Mallorca is very nice, Minorca, Ibiza, all the islands are actually, but the problem is that this is ... these islands are so focused on tourism that they actually lose the real taste of Spain. It's too focused on tourism, because for example, if you go to any place on Mallorca you will find all the restaurants with all the menus writing down in German, in English, in all the languages but Spanish. In my point of view, I don't think it's nice because you go to a place where it's sunny but you find actually the same food and the same language and the same lifestyle that you find in your country or for eating. I don't think it's nice to have a holiday like this.Chris: So you mean that when you go somewhere you really want to know that you're in that place, so for example, if you're in China you want to see the menu in Chinese and that's it?Ade: Why not.Chris: Yeah, okay, you're right. Thank you.
Jackie Trent was a leading UK singer-songwriter during the '60's to the 80's -much of her success came during her partnership with husband Tony Hatch. They moved to Australia in 1982 and composed the theme song for the TV series, "Neighbours".For many years they were among the most popular club performers in Australia.Unfortunately, they divorced in 2002 and Jackie returned to the UK to star in the musical "High Society" before settling in Minorca, Spain with her second husband, Colin Gregory.Jackie sadly passed away in Spain during 2015, aged 74, but she left many musical memories for us to enjoy.
Il notiziario in Genere a cura di Lena Maggiaro e Barbara Schiavulli
Gloria Vanni è una giornalista professionista, blogger, copywriter e divulgatrice digitale e ideatrice di "less is sexy", blogzine in cui Gloria affronta argomenti che riguardano non solo comunicazione e digital ma aspetti della sua vita personale e delle sue passioni dalla nautica a alla crescita personale, dal benessere della persona a tutto tondo fino ad abbracciare tematiche che riguardano la sostenibilità ambientale.In questa bellissima chiacchierata, tra le tante cose, Gloria ci racconta di come sia riuscita a ricostruire se stessa dal punto di vista personale e professionale dopo essere stata licenziata all'età di cinquantuno anni dall'azienda nella quale lavorava da moltissimo tempo e di quale sia stato il percorso che l'ha portata a stravolgere, ancora una volta, la propria vita per andare a vivere a Minorca, isola sulla quale ha realizzato un sogno di nome Casa Bonita.Che cos'è Casa Bonita?È una struttura ricettiva, un B&B in cui Gloria esprime la sua idea di mondo e la propensione a prendersi cura degli altri mettendoci tutta se stessa.Ascolta la storia di Gloria e lasciati ispirare dalla sua energia e dal suo modo di interpretare la vita.
Gloria Vanni è una giornalista professionista, blogger, copywriter e divulgatrice digitale e ideatrice di "less is sexy", blogzine in cui Gloria affronta argomenti che riguardano non solo comunicazione e digital ma aspetti della sua vita personale e delle sue passioni dalla nautica a alla crescita personale, dal benessere della persona a tutto tondo fino ad abbracciare tematiche che riguardano la sostenibilità ambientale.In questa bellissima chiacchierata, tra le tante cose, Gloria ci racconta di come sia riuscita a ricostruire se stessa dal punto di vista personale e professionale dopo essere stata licenziata all'età di cinquantuno anni dall'azienda nella quale lavorava da moltissimo tempo e di quale sia stato il percorso che l'ha portata a stravolgere, ancora una volta, la propria vita per andare a vivere a Minorca, isola sulla quale ha realizzato un sogno di nome Casa Bonita.Che cos'è Casa Bonita?È una struttura ricettiva, un B&B in cui Gloria esprime la sua idea di mondo e la propensione a prendersi cura degli altri mettendoci tutta se stessa.Ascolta la storia di Gloria e lasciati ispirare dalla sua energia e dal suo modo di interpretare la vita.
OK. If this show lands on target many of our listeners will be driving in the sun, strolling on a white rocky beach or recovering from last night's paella and that extra shot of herbs… So with that in mind i'm going to keep this short. Welcome to the long-mooted and strategically timed Finders Keepers Balearic Especial. A show that does exactly what it says on the tin. Made from strictly indigenous secret ingredients with little need for preservatives or technological enhancements. For our fourteenth feature-length attempt at "Making Global Sound Local" regular Finders Keepers office dwellers and co-hosts Andy Votel, Pete Mitchell, Doug Shipton and Lee Janda use their unique brand of wax-anorak-geekery, dubious dad jokes and mountainous mispronunciations to unveil two hours of lesser-spotted Balearic uber-classics. From the islands and islets that link Majorca, Minorca, Ibiza and Formentera and continue to unite folk, funk, farmers, free-thinkers, fine food and fauna, The Finders Keepers radio hosts unearth a small selection of mid-Med microgroove discs with a trail of crumbs pointing back to the days when the first hippie communes welcomed jazzers, artists, actors and activists to those mythical retreats over 50 years ago. Including our all of our regular rigged competitions (!) and magazine features Finders Keepers also invite special guest and Manc blues prophet Victor bros who regales stories of the early days on Ibiza in the presence of a pre-Velvet Underground Nico while namedropping Don Cherry and the first free music ensembles and DJs to hit those unknown shores in the early 1960s.
This week The Johnny Vaughan 4 till 7 Thang Gang was back to normal - well as normal as they ever were. Dr Sunta Templeton returns with stories of Lanzarote and Little Si tries to convince us that Minorca with his parents was just as "rock and roll". There's also Swedish safe sex advice, Martin's Hot Tap and racing pigeon news. Enjoy! Hear Johnny on Radio X every weekday at 4pm across the UK on digital radio, 104.9 FM in London, 97.7 FM in Manchester, on your mobile or via www.radiox.co.uk.
From early in 1754 the Seven Year war started to bubble into full scale global conflict. In North America French and British colonists clashed over trade and disputed territory. In May 1756 the first naval action took place at Minorca in the Mediterranean where the British were forced to withdraw, opening up hostilities in Europe. In India the French and British East India Companies vied for influence over the region in a series for proxy conflicts as each would support local rulers against one another. At Plassey Robert Clive won a victory that would help secure the close relationship between Britain and India for the next 200 years. Dur: 16mins File: .mp3
This week, History of France in English wraps up our look at the roaming Gaul's eastern expansion and their establishment of Galatia in what would become Turkey. We also check out the French progress in the Med during the Seven Years War as they push the Brits off Minorca and keep them off for the whole war. Remember, this is a listener supported podcast. Visit us at historylab.ca/podcasts and leave us a comment or even better, go to iTunes and rank us there and leave a comment. If you want to contact me with ideas for future shows, comments or concerns, you can email me: tom@historylab.ca and I'll get back to you right away.
This week we look at the roaming Gauls as they head on over to Greece and Macedonia and meet Alexander the Great. Then they sack and pillage and finally get chased off and set up house in the area of the Hellespont. Cocktail Party Slapdown is about the sea battle for Minorca and the classic match between France and the British Royal Navy. France wins this even match and a British admiral is executed. If you have any thoughts, concerns, questions or ideas, email me at tom@historylab.ca and I'll get back to you.