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Carlos Mazón vuelve a quedar retratado en el caso de la Dana. A pesar de sus intentos por desligarse de toda responsabilidad, las pruebas del juicio lo colocan en el centro de la tragedia. Llamadas, omisiones y mentiras sistemáticas dejan en evidencia su papel clave en el retraso de la alerta que pudo haber salvado más de 200 vidas. Repasamos los hechos, los audios y los silencios incómodos que lo condenan, mientras él sigue huyendo hacia adelante con una narrativa insostenible. Mas vídeos de Pandemia Digital: https://www.youtube.com/c/PandemiaDigital1 Si quieres comprar buen aceite de primera prensada, sin intermediarios y ayudar de esa forma a los agricultores con salarios justos tenemos un código de promoción para ti: https://12coop.com/cupon/pandemiadigital/ Este video puede contener temas sensibles, así como discursos de odi*, ac*so, o discr*minación. El objetivo de abordar estos temas es exclusivamente informativo y busca concienciar a la audiencia sobre estos acontecimientos, y denunciar y señalar el origen de los mismos para crear consciencia y evitar su propagación. Si consideras que el contenido puede afectarte, te recomendamos proceder con precaución o evitar su visualización. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Únete a nuestra comunidad de YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCFOwGZY-NTnctghtlHkj8BA/join Se mecenas de Patreon https://www.patreon.com/PandemiaDigital ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Súmate a la comunidad en Twitch - En vivo de Lunes a Jueves: https://www.twitch.tv/pandemiadigital Sigue nuestro Canal de Telegram: https://t.me/PandemiaDigital Suscríbete en nuestra web: https://PandemiaDigital.net Sigue nuestras redes: Twitter: https://twitter.com/PandemiaDigitaI Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PandemiaDigitalObservatorio Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pandemia_digital_twitch TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@pandemiadigital #PandemiaDigital
El calentamiento del planeta se está acelerando. Trump enfría cualquier acuerdo con la Unión Europea. La defensa de la delegada del Gobierno en Valencia, Pilar Bernabé, de su papel el día de la DANA y el aplazamiento de la declaración de Mompó o la brecha entre quienes pagan un alquiler o una hipoteca.
El calentamiento del planeta se está acelerando. Trump enfría cualquier acuerdo con la Unión Europea. La defensa de la delegada del Gobierno en Valencia, Pilar Bernabé, de su papel el día de la DANA y el aplazamiento de la declaración de Mompó o la brecha entre quienes pagan un alquiler o una hipoteca.
Carlos Mazón se desvincula del envío de la alerta. Hoy ha declarado que llegó a la reunión en el CECOPI a las 20:28 minutos, no a las siete de la tarde como dijo en noviembre. Pero hay técnicos que desmienten esa declaración. Hablamos con Manolo Mata, abogado de la acusación popular de Acció Cultural del País Valencià: "La Generalitat Valenciana envió un informe a la juez declarando que el único que llegó antes del mensaje fue Mompó, pero las fuentes de RTVE indican que Mazón llegó al CECOPI sobre las 19:45. Continuamos con la deriva insólita, hemos vivido varios Mazones", afirma. Añade que "podían haber recurrido al sistema ES-Alert para mandar el mensaje. En cambio, estuvieron esperando a que Mazón decidiera. Era un daño evitable y previsible". Sobre las consecuencias de la gestión de la dana asegura: "Estamos seguros de que van a haber responsabilidades penales. Hay mucha gente implicada y se hizo todo mal. Ha sido uno de los mayores caos que se estudiaran en las universidades", concluye.Escuchar audio
El presidente de la Diputación de Valencia, Vicente Mompó, y el portavoz socialista, Carlos Fernández Bielsa explican la importancia de la política municipalista para hacer frente a las consecuencias de la DANA.
El presidente de la Diputación de Valencia, Vicente Mompó, y el portavoz socialista, Carlos Fernández Bielsa explican la importancia de la política municipalista para hacer frente a las consecuencias de la DANA.
El presidente de la Diputación de Valencia, Vicente Mompó, y el portavoz socialista, Carlos Fernández Bielsa explican la importancia de la política municipalista para hacer frente a las consecuencias de la DANA.
Tres semanas después, las localidades más afectadas por la DANA siguen trabajando para lograr cuanto antes lo más parecido a una cierta normalidad. Una situación que sigue siendo muy complicada, según ha explicado en Las mañanas de RNE con Josep Cuní Vicente Mompó, presidente de la Diputación de Valencia. El popular ha asegurado que respeta el nombramiento del nuevo vicepresidente para la Recuperación Económica y Social, el teniente general retirado Francisco José Gan Pampols, así como el recién conocido fichaje de Venancio Aguado de Diego, general de brigada del Ejército de Tierra, para la secretaría autonómica del gabinete del vicepresidente. Mompó ha explicado que, a pesar de que la zona sigue estando muy dañada, se va avanzando en la recuperación, pasando de la cobertura urgente de los servicios básicos de los primeros momentos a otras tareas relacionadas con la limpieza que están prestando actualmente. Además, ha hecho un llamamiento a la unidad política para tratar de superar cuanto antes este episodio, afirmando que "si ahora mismo no somos capaces de superar los colores políticos e ir todos a una para solventar los problemas, no sé cómo va a entender la gente para qué servimos los políticos". Preguntado por la gestión de la crisis, Mompó ha afirmado que "sería muy atrevido" por parte de cualquier dirigente que "no aceptar que ha habido errores" desde el momento en que ha habido algún fallecido, pero ha apostado por lanzar un mensaje positivo poniendo el valor el trabajo realizado hasta el momento. Escuchar audio
Entrevista a Vicent Mompó (Presidente de la Diputación de Valencia) sobre la gestión de la DANA y sus consecuencias
En 'La Brújula' hablamos con el presidente de la Diputación de Valencia, Vicente Mompó, sobre el impacto de la DANA en la Comunidad Valenciana
El diputado del Grupo Parlamentario Socialista en las Cortes Valencianas ha denunciado la "grave situación que atraviesa la vivienda"
Nuestra particular gira #LaLunaOnTour24 llega a Valencia para firmar una edición muy especial grabada en la sala Centro Excursionista Bar. Allí irrumpe nuestro poeta volador Peru Saizprez para lanzar sus poemas nada inofensivos y así dar paso a Monty Peiró, la cantante y antropóloga valenciana que nos presenta su primer libro "El demonio vino a mí: género, sexo y rock and roll" un ensayo donde, desde su mirada feminista, saca a la luz el machismo estructural que vive instalado desde hace décadas en nuestra industria musical. En la entrevista acústica nos reencontramos con Borja Mompó quien nos presenta su nuevo EP titulado Las Lindes, un trabajo en el que sigue apostando por sus canciones frágiles y sensibles que tanto nos gustan desde hace años.
Nadie mejor que Borja Mompó para protagonizar la Luna que hemos grabado en Valencia. Regresa a nuestro programa años después para presetarnos las canciones que dan forma a su nuevo trabajo titulado Las Lindes. Borja Mompó, antiguo cantante del grupo Modelo de Respuesta Polar, sigue compomiendo canciones cada día buscando que la música le siga regalando momentos llenos de felicidad. Sin otra mayor presensión sigue firmando canciones sutiles y sencillas que tienen en la Luna un refugio perfecto.
Richard McColl is a British Canadian journalist, podcaster and hotel owner based in Bogotá and Mompós, Colombia. I've known Richard for at least a decade. I first knew of him from his work as a fellow foreign correspondent covering subjects all around Latin America, writing for international publications. In 2013, we met in person when I was writing for a story about Mompós for The New York Times. It's one of my favorite stories I ever written for The Times because Mompós is such a special place. It's this stunning 500-year-old colonial city on an island in the Magdalena River that was once a major port but was then mostly forgotten as that part of the river stilted up and war cut it off from society. It's a strange, kind of mystical place with so much history and so many stories and quirky characters. It's a place that was a big inspiration for Gabriel Garcia Marquez, the Nobel Prize winning author and you can feel the imagery from his books everywhere there. Richard's wife has family there and he was enchanted by it and ended up buying two of these colonial houses, which he turned into small hotels, La Casa Amarilla and San Rafael. We talk a lot about Mompós and its ghosts and how it's much easier to reach than when I went there and had to take a 10-hour ride in a truck from Cartagena.While I was in Mompós he asked me if I wanted to be on a podcast he just launched, called Colombia Calling, where he interviews all kinds of subjects about Colombia, in English. This was in 2013, and it was probably one of the original podcasts anywhere in Latin America, and honestly, I hadn't even listened to a podcast at that time. It's still going and has now recorded more than 500 episodes. Juli was on a recent episode and they talk a lot about Colombian food and it's a great listen.Richard also runs the Latin News Podcast and he recently started a small publishing company. They are books in English, about Colombia, and includes titles such as Better than Cocaine: Learning to grow coffee, and live, in Colombia, by the writer Barry Max Wills, and Richard has two books forthcoming, a general guide to politics, history and culture called Colombia at a Crossroads, and The Mompós Project, about his life in that incredible place and the stories he has gathered and witnessed. Anyway, it was great to catch up with Richard after all these years.
(Antevíspera del Aniversario de la Muerte de Hermógenes Maza) Sufrió diecisiete meses de torturas diarias bajo la amenaza constante de fusilamiento en una cárcel de Caracas, Venezuela. Diecisiete largos meses de presidio que lo trastornaron sicológica y moralmente. Diecisiete meses que dividieron su vida en dos partes: el hombre normal antes de 1814 y el enfermo de violencia después, hasta su muerte a los cincuenta y cinco años de edad... en la pobreza y la miseria, olvidado y alcoholizado. Durante la primera parte de su vida creció como niño mimado de sus linajudos padres criollos santafereños, estudió como colegial rosarista de óptimo rendimiento académico y luchó como héroe de la Campaña Admirable en Venezuela. Sin embargo, a causa de la segunda parte de su vida, pasó a la historia con los temibles apodos de «el ángel exterminador de los españoles», «el vengador de los mártires granadinos del Terror» y «el discípulo predilecto de la guerra a muerte». Hermógenes Maza, sin lugar a dudas, fue una moneda con dos caras. Es que 1814 fue un año terrible tanto para los realistas como para los patriotas. La meta, al parecer, era el mutuo exterminio. Y el joven Maza aceptó el reto. Luego de escapar de la cárcel caraqueña, volvió a Bogotá y encontró que su familia había sido perseguida, su hermano asesinado, sus compañeros de colegio fusilados y sus bienes confiscados. Avivada con eso su sed de venganza, se dedicó a saciarla con una brutalidad «calculada». Por ejemplo, en 1819, bajo órdenes de no derramar sangre, el teniente coronel Maza metió en sacos de cuero a treinta prisioneros, los tiró vivos al río Magdalena, y luego le rindió el siguiente informe cínico al Libertador Bolívar: «Cumplidas sus órdenes. Con los últimos prisioneros no se derramó una sola gota de sangre.»1 Según el escritor colombiano Daniel Samper Pizano, durante esa misma campaña «a todo sospechoso que caía en sus manos [Maza] le preguntaba si prefería la devoción de San Francisco o de San Cipriano. Se trataba apenas de una trampa para detectar en la respuesta el típico ceceo castellano (Franzisco, Zipriano), caso en el cual el cristiano era pasado de inmediato por las armas. Ese recurso —comenta el ingenioso autor de Lecciones de histeria de Colombia— inició en Colombia la decadenssia de la devossión por San Franssisco y San Ssipriano y, sobre todo, la veloss extinssión del ssesseo.»2 Quiera Dios que, a diferencia de Maza, los que disfrutamos de los beneficios de la independencia por la que él luchó nos dediquemos más bien a satisfacer nuestra sed de reconciliación, no sólo con el prójimo de alguna patria lejana o de una nación vecina, sino también con Dios mismo. De ser así, nuestra vida, al igual que la de Maza, se distinguirá por dividirse en dos partes, sólo que en el caso nuestro a la inversa: la antigua, deformada por el mundo, y la nueva, transformada por Jesucristo, el Hijo de Dios, que será el objeto incuestionable de nuestra devoción.3 Carlos ReyUn Mensaje a la Concienciawww.conciencia.net 1 Gonzalo Buenahora, «El General Maza», Ecos Políticos (Agencia de Noticias Vieja Clío, Mompós, 1847) En línea 2 febrero 2019; Armando Gómez Latorre, «Hermógenes Maza, el ángel exterminador», El Tiempo, Archivo, 5 mayo 1992 En línea 2 febrero 2019; y Jorge Núñez Sánchez, «El terrible Hermógenes Maza», El Telégrafo, 31 julio 2014 En línea 2 febrero 2019. 2 Daniel Samper Pizano, Lecciones de histeria de Colombia (Bogotá: El Áncora Editores, 1993), p. 168. 3 Mt 5:23-24; Ro 5:10; 12:1-2; 2Co 5:18-20; Ef 4:32; Col 1:19-22; 3:13
Escucha un nuevo programa, junto a José Luis Escarabajano. Hoy nos presenta Borja Mompó. El que fuera líder de Modelo de Respuesta Polar se adentra en su nuevo proyecto en solitario con su nuevo EP 'Las Lindes'. Además, también hablamos con Javier Ajenjo, director de Sonorama Ribera, sobre una nueva edición de uno de los mejores festivales del mundo que pone en el epicentro de la música a Aranda de Duero. Completamos el programa charlando con Elena García, que nos presenta su nuevo proyecto musical, y escuchamos novedades de la mano de Carolina Durante, Manola y Chica Sobresalto.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
El coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) se ha convertido 4 años después de la pandemia en un virus más, pero ¿Por qué algunos pacientes desarrollan síntomas a largo plazo y otros no? Isabelle Delgado, presidenta de la Asociación Long Covid Euskal Herria, y Mariam González Mompó, afectada de Long Covid, han estado en "Boulevard" para explicarlo. Además, con motivo de la conmemoración el Día Mundial del Covid Persistente, la Asociación de personas afectadas en Euskal Herria llama a concentrarse este viernes a las 12:00h en la explanada del Museo Guggenheim. ...
Reading an extract from his forthcoming work of non-fiction: The Mompós Project, A Tale of Love and Hotels in Colombia, journalist Richard McColl discusses the issue of witchcraft in this corner of rural Colombia. Having set up a successful business in the town of Mompós - a town that inspired much of the writing of Gabriel García Márquez - he incurred the wrath and envy of a handful of townspeople. The book with be available in all the usual places from November 2024 but stay informed at www.fullervigil.com Richard McColl has worked as a journalist in Colombia since 2007 and is the host of the Colombia Calling podcast and the LatinNews Podcast. The Colombia News Brief is reported by journalist Emily Hart. www.colombiacalling.co www.patreon.com/colombiacalling
It was remarkably good fortune that famed writer Sara Wheeler came through Mompós in Colombia when I was there overseeing our hotels. Over coffee and conversations we discussed Colombia, the politics and her travel writing. And so, I was very honoured that she agreed to come on the Colombia Calling podcast to discuss future projects, past projects and much more. Wheeler's latest book, Glowing Still: A Woman's Life on the Road, is her most personal to date, reflecting on her own experience and the changing world of travel. "How are we supposed to live? The best writers all know that there aren't any answers, there are only questions." Tune in here and wherever you get your podcasts for this and the Colombia News Brief reported by journalist Emily Hart.
Not the Podcast You Deserve gives you 3 movies you can't miss before the Oscars ceremony #oscars #podcast #podcastshow #movies #moviepodcast #oscar #oscars #oscars2023 #elvis #elvismovie #tar #tarmovie #avatar #avatarthewayofwater Twitter: @NTPYDpodcast Instagram: @NTPYDpodcast --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/ntpyd/support
La Niña is hitting us hard here in Colombia and much of the country is under threat of floods, people are losing their homes and livelihoods. Previous governments have done so little to help vulnerable communities until it is too late. What is La Niña (not to be confused with El Niño) La Niña and its more famous counterpart El Niño move back and forth across the Pacific Ocean every few years. The phenomenon changes the temperatures of surface waters and the state of the atmosphere, leading to severe weather conditions for many. And so, Bogotá and much of the country are suffering from above average and extended rainfalls which threaten much of the country. My wife, Alba Torres and I discuss this phenomenon as we sit here watching a deluge in Bogotá and think back to the last terrible floods in Mompós in 2010 when we had to sandbag our houses. Our anecdotes and experiences fuel a real concern for what might happen in coming weeks. When will the rains end? The Colombia News Brief is brought to you by journalist Emily Hart
Hoy tenemos el lujo de contar con Lucía Mompó, CEO y fundadora de Malferida, una marca de bebida de cola que hace honor a la leyenda de que la conocida marca de cola que le cambió el color a Santa Claus, proviene de una receta Española. Concretamente de su pueblo. ¡Ojo al dato! Con Lucía recorremos su corta trayectoria en años, pero rica en experiencias, desde la idea que surge como proyecto de fin de carrera a la ejecución y puesta en marcha de un negocio que a día de hoy ha vendido miles de botellas, se encuentra en superficies como Carrefour, Aldi o el corte Inglés y que, a juzgar por lo s planes de Lucía, esto solo acaba de empezar. Una historia inspiradora, empezando por el modelo de educación que ha recibido y que le ha permitido realizar unas prácticas tan prácticas (valga la redundancia) y poner en marcha este proyectazo del que seguro oiremos que hablar en los próximos años. Gracias Lucía por haber compartido con nosotros este ratito tan agradable a la par que enriquecedor
Vamos con la gradona del martes, arranque habitual con la miscelánea diaria. Después de ello nos visita en el estudio José Ángel Peláez para hablar del juicio concluido en primera instancia por la reclamación civil que interpuso la clínica Mompía contra la federación. El ente futbolístico se ahorra casi la mitad de lo reclamado. Peláez además nos cuenta cuál es el siguiente paso, que pasa por la instancia penal.
Preguntamos por este proceso a la presidenta del Barrio Centro, Lorena Peralta; el ingeniero de caminos y miembro del Colectivo 967, José Almendros; el comerciante de la calle 'ancha' Vicente Mompó, de Joyería Mompó; y el miembro de Ecologistas en Acción, José Julio del Olmo.
Magazine semanal dedicado a mostrar en clave de actualidad los placeres de la buena vida: cultura, gastronomía y vino. Conoce las rutas gastronómicas, los mejores restaurantes donde poder disfrutar y los productos de temporada. Una visión diferente de la gastronomía que no dejará indiferente. En esta ocasión tendremos a Paco López Canis, presidente honorífico del Salón del Gourmet; Rubén González, Director de Miniature Pintxos Enyesque Congress; Lucía Mompó, fundadora de refresco Malferida; Ivai Sicilia, Jefe de inversiones para España y Latino-América de OENO para hablarnos del vino como inversión; y nuestros colaboradores: Juanjo Tasquita, Jose Luis Martin Afinador, Miriam Garrido y Diego Rodríguez, El Bohío Illescas.
Si no sabes que la receta original de la Coca-cola tiene origen valenciano, ha llegado el momento de que sepas el secreto. Lucía Mompó creo Malferida con la idea de recuperar esa receta original y la historia que había detrás, y a día de hoy, con la receta perfecta, se enfrenta a retos como la distribución nacional o el posicionamiento en un sector con líderes claros. Hoy nos lo cuenta todo ella misma.
País España Dirección Juan Estelrich Guion Rafael Azcona, Juan Estelrich Fotografía Alejandro Ulloa Reparto Fernando Fernán Gómez, Mantine Andó, José María Mompín, Charo Soriano, Claude Dauphin, Maribel Ayuso, Eduardo Calvo, Ángel Álvarez, Ricardo G. Lilló, Isabel Mestres, Luis Ciges Sinopsis Hace 11 años que Fernando Tobajas, un hombre de cierta edad, decidió vivir en el cuarto de baño, en el que creó un pequeño apartamento, y no salir nunca de él. Tobajas ha renunciado a todo, excepto a la vanidad, y sus contactos con el mundo se reducen a las visitas de los amigos y a los mensajes que envía por el retrete dentro de tubos de aspirinas con la esperanza de que alguien los reciba y sepa de su existencia. Arabel Lee, una chica preciosa, encuentra uno de esos mensajes.
Many listeners have asked after the Colombia Calling news journalist and this week it's a pleasure to have the one and only Emily Hart with us here in Mompós to discuss her life and journalism here in Colombia. Hart is a journalist and researcher from the UK with a strong background in politics and human rights and has been reporting on some fascinating topics here in Colombia. Her bylines have been featured in the Times, the Sunday Times, The Daily Telegraph, Sky News and Pitchfork. On Episode 384 of the Colombia Calling podcast, we have the opportunity to get to know Hart better, talk about her life as a journalist, the writing process, the hunt for articles and how she reported on the demolition of Pablo Escobar's building in Medellin, the ancient rock art in Chiribiquete, illegal armed groups enforcing a Covid-19 lockdown in Colombia and the "rainforest electro" music which is sweeping this region of the Americas. Tune in to hear more and follow Hart on twitter: @emily_h_h website: https://www.clippings.me/users/emilyhart
08 08-07-21 LHDW Mi posible denuncia a Mompía, no hay derecho, y series que aconseja Manuel
08 08-07-21 LHDW Mi posible denuncia a Mompía, no hay derecho, y series que aconseja Manuel
María Mompó, Esther Blat, Lidia Verdú y Fidel Chordá debaten sobre el postureo, las redes sociales y el running
¿sabes quién eres, hacia dónde vas y tus objetivos en la vida? Es común sentirnos acomplejados por esta pandemia que ha dejado miles de fallecidos, y sin trabajo a millones de personas en el mundo. Junto a la autora del libro ¿Sabes quién eres? de Mariam González Mompó. *** Apoyanos *** https://cutt.ly/VujVpND *** Voz de la intro *** Xavi Villanueva. Web: https://abismofm.com Twitter: @abismofm Facebook: Abismo Producciones *** Voz en off *** Valeria Surcis twitter: @valeriasurcis @QuieroContarTuH blog: www.valeriasurcis.blogspot.com E-Mail: surcisvaleria@gmail.com *** Kela Carrasco *** Blog de Kela: https://raylossuenosprohibidos.blogspot.com/ Canal de Youtube de Kela: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCUKJBLjpY26KIGNymLR3u8A Instagram: @kela_carrasco_80 *** Guión *** Eduar Pajaro Peña "Angel Yosniel" Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/A963852741NB Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/angelyosniel/ E-Mail: angelyosniel@gmail.com *** Redes Sociales *** Twitter : @universored Facebook: Misterioso universo en la red *** Correo Electrónico *** misteriosouniversored@gmail.com *** Unete al grupo de Telegram *** Grupo de Telegram: https://t.me/joinchat/TbesR23x7PrwS2NU *** Suscribete *** Apple Podcast: https://cutt.ly/CujVXTM Spotify: https://cutt.ly/EujV96T Ivoox: https://cutt.ly/VujV64P Spreaker: https://cutt.ly/MujBoyU
¿sabes quién eres, hacia dónde vas y tus objetivos en la vida? Es común sentirnos acomplejados por esta pandemia que ha dejado miles de fallecidos, y sin trabajo a millones de personas en el mundo. Junto a la autora del libro ¿Sabes quién eres? de Mariam González Mompó.*** Apoyanos ***https://cutt.ly/VujVpND*** Voz de la intro ***Xavi Villanueva. Web: https://abismofm.com Twitter: @abismofm Facebook: Abismo Producciones*** Voz en off ***Valeria Surcis twitter: @valeriasurcis @QuieroContarTuHblog: www.valeriasurcis.blogspot.comE-Mail: surcisvaleria@gmail.com*** Kela Carrasco ***Blog de Kela: https://raylossuenosprohibidos.blogspot.com/Canal de Youtube de Kela: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCUKJBLjpY26KIGNymLR3u8AInstagram: @kela_carrasco_80*** Guión ***Eduar Pajaro Peña "Angel Yosniel"Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/A963852741NBInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/angelyosniel/E-Mail: angelyosniel@gmail.com*** Redes Sociales ***Twitter : @universoredFacebook: Misterioso universo en la red*** Correo Electrónico ***misteriosouniversored@gmail.com*** Unete al grupo de Telegram ***Grupo de Telegram: https://t.me/joinchat/TbesR23x7PrwS2NU*** Suscribete ***Apple Podcast: https://cutt.ly/CujVXTMSpotify: https://cutt.ly/EujV96TIvoox: https://cutt.ly/VujV64PSpreaker: https://cutt.ly/MujBoyU
En el programa de hoy, con Joel Santamaría, viajaremos al pasado. Llegaremos a uno de los periodos más desconocidos del Imperio Romano, donde el caos y la confusión proliferaban en los cultos de magia negra junto a la adoración de entidades infernales. Seremos partícipes de la otra cara de uno de los imperios más poderosos de la época antigua, viviremos en carne propia el período de su decadencia y el misticismo de sus ideales. ¿Quieres conocer más acerca de esta historia? ¿Deseas profundizar sobre la cultura romana y su relación con la brujería? En las noticias del misterio, Javier nos hablará de: -EEUU prohíbe las empresas de tecnología en China -Jeff Hawkings y el futuro de la IA -Max Hodak (presidente de Neuralink) -Miles de galaxias en el universo distante Por último, vamos a tener una entrevista inspiradora, ¿sabes quién eres, hacia dónde vas y tus objetivos en la vida? Es común sentirnos acomplejados por esta pandemia que ha dejado miles de fallecidos, y sin trabajo a millones de personas en el mundo. Junto a la autora del libro ¿Sabes quién eres? de Mariam González Mompó. *** Apoyanos *** https://cutt.ly/VujVpND *** Voz de la intro *** Xavi Villanueva. Web: https://abismofm.com Twitter: @abismofm Facebook: Abismo Producciones *** Voz en off *** Valeria Surcis twitter: @valeriasurcis @QuieroContarTuH blog: www.valeriasurcis.blogspot.com E-Mail: surcisvaleria@gmail.com *** Kela Carrasco *** Blog de Kela: https://raylossuenosprohibidos.blogspot.com/ Canal de Youtube de Kela: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCUKJBLjpY26KIGNymLR3u8A Instagram: @kela_carrasco_80 *** Guión *** Eduar Pajaro Peña "Angel Yosniel" Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/A963852741NB Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/angelyosniel/ E-Mail: angelyosniel@gmail.com *** Redes Sociales *** Twitter : @universored Facebook: Misterioso universo en la red *** Correo Electrónico *** misteriosouniversored@gmail.com *** Unete al grupo de Telegram *** Grupo de Telegram: https://t.me/joinchat/TbesR23x7PrwS2NU *** Suscribete *** Apple Podcast: https://cutt.ly/CujVXTM Spotify: https://cutt.ly/EujV96T Ivoox: https://cutt.ly/VujV64P Spreaker: https://cutt.ly/MujBoyU
En el programa de hoy, con Joel Santamaría, viajaremos al pasado. Llegaremos a uno de los periodos más desconocidos del Imperio Romano, donde el caos y la confusión proliferaban en los cultos de magia negra junto a la adoración de entidades infernales. Seremos partícipes de la otra cara de uno de los imperios más poderosos de la época antigua, viviremos en carne propia el período de su decadencia y el misticismo de sus ideales. ¿Quieres conocer más acerca de esta historia? ¿Deseas profundizar sobre la cultura romana y su relación con la brujería?En las noticias del misterio, Javier nos hablará de:-EEUU prohíbe las empresas de tecnología en China-Jeff Hawkings y el futuro de la IA-Max Hodak (presidente de Neuralink)-Miles de galaxias en el universo distante Por último, vamos a tener una entrevista inspiradora, ¿sabes quién eres, hacia dónde vas y tus objetivos en la vida? Es común sentirnos acomplejados por esta pandemia que ha dejado miles de fallecidos, y sin trabajo a millones de personas en el mundo. Junto a la autora del libro ¿Sabes quién eres? de Mariam González Mompó.*** Apoyanos ***https://cutt.ly/VujVpND*** Voz de la intro ***Xavi Villanueva. Web: https://abismofm.com Twitter: @abismofm Facebook: Abismo Producciones*** Voz en off ***Valeria Surcis twitter: @valeriasurcis @QuieroContarTuHblog: www.valeriasurcis.blogspot.comE-Mail: surcisvaleria@gmail.com*** Kela Carrasco ***Blog de Kela: https://raylossuenosprohibidos.blogspot.com/Canal de Youtube de Kela: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCUKJBLjpY26KIGNymLR3u8AInstagram: @kela_carrasco_80*** Guión ***Eduar Pajaro Peña "Angel Yosniel"Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/A963852741NBInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/angelyosniel/E-Mail: angelyosniel@gmail.com*** Redes Sociales ***Twitter : @universoredFacebook: Misterioso universo en la red*** Correo Electrónico ***misteriosouniversored@gmail.com*** Unete al grupo de Telegram ***Grupo de Telegram: https://t.me/joinchat/TbesR23x7PrwS2NU*** Suscribete ***Apple Podcast: https://cutt.ly/CujVXTMSpotify: https://cutt.ly/EujV96TIvoox: https://cutt.ly/VujV64PSpreaker: https://cutt.ly/MujBoyU
Renouned conflict photgrapher with experience in civil wars in El Salvador, Nicaragua, the genocide in Rwanda and so much more, Malcolm Linton, joins us once again on the Colombia Calling podcast to share some more of his stories from the field. His experiences in some of the most brutal conflict arenas, his desire to cover humanitarian causes and the first time he was shot....this and more on Episode 369. Why has he returned to the Colombia Calling podcast? To share his experiences and also to talk about the new photography workshop he has designed and set up for three separate dates in picturesque Mompós, Colombia. TALKING PHOTOS: Malcolm Linton’s Mompox Workshop Starting at the end of May 2021, international photojournalist Malcolm Linton will be staging a monthly photography workshop in the Colombian colonial town of Mompox in collaboration with the Hotel San Rafael and La Casa Amarilla. The workshop is for photographers — from amateurs to professionals — who want to express themselves more fully in their images. It will run for three full days, usually from Friday to Sunday, with a welcome dinner the night before it begins. The workshop will be limited to 15 people at three different rates, depending on the amount of personal tuition from Malcolm that clients wish to receive. The first two sessions (late May, early July) will be in English, and future sessions will be in English or Spanish, depending on demand. Sign up https://malcolmlinton.com (Mompox Workshop)
Las tres componentes del 'Sanedrín de la Zapatilla' analizan el creciente interés de las mujeres por el running
I wanted to call Episode 360 of the Colombia Calling podcast, "the Roast of Richard McColl," but it really became, "a conversation with Alba Torres, or "How Alba manages to put up with this annoying, moody and difficult Englishman!" You asked for it folks and we have delivered, here is the long awaited episode in which Alba Torres, to whom I have the immense honour of being married, gives you the lowdown of the cultural differences, the difficulties in working together and how we ended up opening not one (www.lacasaamarillamompos.com) but two (www.sanrafaelmompox.com) hotels in Mompós, Colombia. We enjoy an open and frank conversation punctuated with some - not all - of the questions you the listeners sent in for us to answer. Thank you again to all of those of you that participated. Enjoy!
Entrevista a Pedro Burruezo sobre la película-documental “El lenguaje secreto de las plantas”, un canto a la esperanza y al cambio, presentado en Biocultura ON y dirigida por Alex Trincado. Maite Mompó nos habla de la conferencia impartida en Biocultura ON: “La ley de ecocidio, la herramienta para cambiar el mundo”. En el espacio “La Botica de Palmira”: “Aloe vera....preparación de un gel para la salud...”, con un gran terapeuta como Paco Calvin. Teatro-café Tilín-Telón, noticias para un mundo mejor...y nos iremos despidiendo con un maravilloso texto Lakota...
Entrevista a Pedro Burruezo sobre la película-documental “El lenguaje secreto de las plantas”, un canto a la esperanza y al cambio, presentado en Biocultura ON y dirigida por Alex Trincado. Maite Mompó nos habla de la conferencia impartida en Biocultura ON: “La ley de ecocidio, la herramienta para cambiar el mundo”. En el espacio “La Botica de Palmira”: “Aloe vera....preparación de un gel para la salud...”, con un gran terapeuta como Paco Calvin. Teatro-café Tilín-Telón, noticias para un mundo mejor...y nos iremos despidiendo con un maravilloso texto Lakota...
It's the horror movies of South America this week! We watched La Casa Muda/Silent House as our all-watch, Morto Nao Fala/Nightshifter as the Mom-watch and Luciferina as the Mac-watch.How many creepy dolls did we give La Casa Muda? How many vengeful spirits did Mom give Morto Nao Fala? How many ovaries did Mac give Luciferina?Mom forgets the title of the movie "Sucker Punch" and to explain what "Squad" is, but there is a little addendum at the end of the podcast along with the Mom and Mac Chat to fill in the blanks in a section I like to call "Fill in the Blanks". One blank that was left open was that it was "The Haunting" (1963) that is based on the Shirley Jackson novel. I couldn't tell you what the 1959 movie is!We had some technical difficulties so the Mom-watch was a solo endeavour. Just roll with it. It is still fun as hell.What did you think about the different format for the pod? What do you think about the movies? Can you recommend any other great South American flicks?Please leave us a message at the anchor site or get in touch with us via Instagram. We'd really love to hear from you!Next week we are exploring the movies of the Middle East and North Africa: Blue Elephant 2 from Egypt, Big Bad Wolves from Israel and Under the Shadow from Iran. Join us! But...Don't go into the basement!!-MomP.S. Here are some horror movie "palate cleansers". I hope you enjoy them!MilkyBokiTanThe DodoMa KoThe CreamheroesSupport the show (https://www.buymeacoffee.com/xafupi)
Esta mañana, en "Amanece Valencia", hemos hablado con el presidente del Partido Popular en la provincia de Valencia y portavoz del grupo popular en la Diputación de Valencia, Vicente Mompó, sobre la actualidad política y la gestión que se ha realizado de la pandemia en Valencia. El también alcalde de Gavarda, que accedió a la presidencia del partido en la provincia de Valencia el pasado mes de julio, ha calificado de “nefasta” la gestión que se ha hecho de la pandemia tanto en la Comunitat Valenciana como en el conjunto del país, aunque apunta que no es momento de entrar a valorar el papel de los respectivos presidentes, sino que lo importante ahora es estar “al lado de las víctimas”. Mompó ha declarado también que, a nivel municipalista, tiene la sensación de que podrían llegarse a acuerdos con partidos como el PSOE pero, dice, “llegan órdenes externas extrañas que acaban rompiendo muchos de esos pactos”. Por último, en cuanto a la celebración de los congresos del PP, Mompó ha apuntado que la intención del partido es convocarlos antes de que finalice este año. Deberían haberse celebrado ya, pero con las medidas restrictivas que se aplican actualmente, no es momento, dice el presidente provincial de los populares, de llevarlos a cabo. El podcast Vicente Mompó (PP): “La gestión que se ha hecho en el Consell y en el Gobierno de España es nefasta” ha sido publicado en Plaza Radio
nullEl podcast Vicente Mompó: "Es el momento de las empresas para formarse y reflexionar" ha sido publicado en Plaza Radio
One of the most popular guests on the Colombia Calling podcast, Emma Louise Jay, returns to the airwaves from rural Antioquia to interview me in rural Bolívar. Think of this episode as a conversation of catharsis for us both as we weigh up living under the world's longest Covid-19 quarantine in the world in Colombia. The truth is that we are both feeling the mental strains and pressure - as most are in Colombia - under this interminable lockdown and the worrying increase in cases and deaths from the virus in our adopted home country. I use the term, "the veil is slipping," to describe what is happening in Colombia and hopefully, we go some way towards verbalizing our concerns at the moment. Read Emma's blog: https://www.emmalouisejay.com
Dr. Hayes interviews Dr. Canellos on his involvement with CHOP, MOPP and CMF as well as his role as Chief of Division of Med Onc at SFCI/DFCI for 25 years. The purpose of this podcast is to educate and to inform. This is not a substitute for professional medical care and is not intended for use in the diagnosis or treatment of individual conditions. Guests on this podcast express their own opinions, experience, and conclusions. The mention of any product, service, organization, activity, or therapy should not be construed as an ASCO endorsement. Welcome to JCO's Cancer Stories, The Art of Oncology, brought to you by the ASCO Podcast Network, a collection of nine programs covering a range of educational and scientific content and offering enriching insight into the world of cancer care. You can find all of the shows, including this one, at podcast.asco.org. Hello. Today my guest on the podcast is Dr. George Canellos. Dr. Canellos was instrumental in early treatments for breast cancer, lymphomas, -- and chronic leukemias, and he's generally considered one of the so-called Gang of Five with the National Cancer Institute in the 1970s, along with Drs. Vince DeVita, Robert Young, Bruce Chabner, and Philip Schein, who ultimately demonstrated that chemotherapy could be used to cure a fraction of patients with Hodgkin's and non-Hodgkin's lymphomas. Dr. Canellos was raised in Boston, and he attended Boston Latin School. He then received his undergraduate degree at Harvard and his medical degree at Columbia in New York City. But he remained a Red Sox fan, so he returned to Boston for his residency in internal medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital. But he then trained in oncology at the National Cancer Institute where he stayed until 1974 when he once again returned to Boston to join the faculty of the then Sidney Farber Cancer Institute where he served as the Chief of Medical Oncology until 1995. He is currently the William Rosenberg Chair at Medicine at the now Dana Farber Cancer Institute and a Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School. Dr. Canellos has authored over 300 peer-reviewed papers and too many reviews and chapters to name. Most importantly, he served as the Second Editor in Chief of the Journal of Clinical Oncology, a role he filled from 1987 until 2001. And during that time, he directed the Journal to become the leading journal in our field. Perhaps even more importantly, he served as ASCO President in 1993 and 1994, and he's been recognized as an ASCO Oncology Luminary, and he's been recognized with the Statesman Award and the Distinguished Service Award for Scientific Achievement from our society. Dr. Canellos, welcome to our program. Good to talk to you. Great to talk to you. You know, I spent a lot of time with you at the Sidney Farber and then Dana Farber Cancer Institute, and I've heard you say, and I've also read, that you originally seriously considered becoming a surgeon because of the work you did with Dr. Oliver Cope, one of the leaders in surgery of our last century and especially related to thyroid and other cancers. So what led you to get away from surgery and become a medical oncologist? Well, I served as a surgical intern at Mass General at that time, which was a lot of exposure to serious illness and surgery. But it dawned on me. Two things dawned on me. One is that if one was interested at all in malignancy that surgery really wasn't the answer, certainly, in any way. And in those days, of course, even radiotherapy was not the answer. And so the other thing I realized, that I had the manual dexterity of a California fur seal. I didn't really feel, being left-handed, I didn't feel that I really had the dexterity required to do some of the complicated surgery that was going on in those days because I held retractors as an intern for some very long operations that really didn't achieve more than taking out a gallbladder. It took three hours. Now, we can do it with a laparoscope in a half an hour, probably. So I switched into medicine at Mass General and stayed in medicine at Mass General. And being inspired to really think about other treatments for malignancy in those days, there were very few really textbooks available that talked about chemo. There was some. I would nip up to the library of the hospital rarely and try to read about them. There were new drugs coming out at that time, but there was very little really known about the action of the drugs and the potential of the drugs that might have existed at that time. Then I went to NCI, as one had to because there was a doctor draft. And two years of residency in medicine, I actually went to the medicine branch of the NCI. And there, under Emil Frei III, another investigator named Freireich, Jay Freireich, who were around at that time and running the program, such as it was, we first were experience-- I was thinking that I would do research there, and I did. But at the same time, the Clinical Associate Program entailed a year of clinical exposure, of clinical care, and I had several colleagues. The first major colleague was Vincent DeVita who really, at that time, decided to approach a treatable more solid malignancy, as acute leukemia of childhood was being approached, with combination chemotherapy. However, there weren't many drugs that were very active at that time. There were some. An alkylating agent, nitrogen mustard, steroids, a vinca alkaloid that had just been relatively new introduced for adult disease. And there was no procarbazine. Of course, it hadn't been invented yet, but methotrexate. And so the first combination regimen that came out of that program was MOMP, M-O-M-P, and that had some activity, but it was only given for a relatively short period of time. Eventually, the tolerance of patients to these drugs was considerable, a considerable issue, because we didn't really have granulocyte support. There were a lot of things that we'd take for granted now that were not available then. So the toxicity of some of these programs, such as the M-O-P-P Program when procarbazine came along, the MOPP program was considerable. But the interesting thing is the patients that we had were generally on the younger side, younger than 45, let's say, and they could tolerate the therapy. And I found that, honestly and subsequently, with testes cancer, that younger people who get a lot of toxicity from these drugs, despite that, if they think there may be a cure around the corner, will tolerate it. And you don't hear a great deal of complaints about it, about the toxicity, interestingly. But the older patients, of course, are far more vulnerable. Their bone marrow reserve not being great, these regimens were quite toxic. But, fortunately, the first targeted disease was Hodgkin's disease, and it's generally a disease confined to younger people, in general. About 20% of them are in the older group. But we first tested the aggressive chemotherapy, known as MOPP, in the younger patients, actually. But what was surprising to us, and surprising to everybody, was the fact that they failed to relapse as they were all expected to do at that time. In the single drug agent era, of course, Hodgkin's disease would relapse eventually. As house officers, we just expected that to happen. Now, the training in the major academic hospitals in those days, oncology was not an important part, or even a desired part, of the program, if you will. And so most who arrived at a place like NIH really didn't have much background at all in the treatment of cancer because they probably didn't see it all that much. I know I didn't. As a surgeon, yes, but not as internal medicine. I was going to ask you that. When you were at Mass General and you said you noticed that surgery wasn't curing people, there couldn't have been anybody around that was mentoring you or said, why don't you-- how did you even hear about-- No, no, there wasn't. There were some docs there who really cut their teeth on giving hormones to breast cancer patients, and that was about it. But very few people were giving-- I couldn't think of anybody who was giving-- one person who was giving chemotherapy, a lady, a fine lady, fine physician actually, but on the private side, but nobody on the academic side that amounted-- So what made you-- What made you say, I'm going to go to the NCI and learn how to do this? I mean, that seems like that was completely out of the blue. Well, you weren't given much choice. Of the two institutes, I applied at the Heart Institute and the Cancer Institute. The Cancer Institute accepted me, and the same with Vince DeVita. He applied to the Heart Institute but got into the Cancer Institute. And we were both there, probably you could say, as our second choice at the time. Because-- Yeah, that's interesting. Yeah. Very little was known about oncology as a field, and there we were. On the other hand, seeing these patients at least respond to these drugs in the way they did, and seemingly not relapsing, made you wonder whether or not, in time-- when I went back to the NIH, I came back to the MGH to be a senior medical resident. I can tell you what was interesting, because there was no oncology Fellow, per se. They would ask me to see a patient if the patient had a malignancy. And I remember going in and seeing a patient with ovarian cancer. She had a huge belly full of ascites, malignant ascites, and I said that the drug for this disease is thiotepa, an alkylating agent. I wrote out the recipe, if you will, how many milligrams, et cetera. And I wrote in the note, and I will give the first dose, which I did. The intern covering the service, a surgical intern covering the GYN service, obviously read part of my note but not all of it, or decided he was going to give another dose as well, but somehow the woman was double-dosed. And there was a certain panic by the nursing staff, et cetera. She tolerated the drug surprisingly well. But more surprising, everything went away. She had this dramatic response to therapy. The ascites went away. The abdominal masses went away. And she was discharged. And I said to myself, at that time, this is a precedent for something, and that era will arrive once-- if it's not the right drug, we'll find the right drug for the disease. But I can tell you, it was very uplifting to me. I had already been to NIH. That's a great story. When you guys were at the NCI, a similar question is, when did the light bulb come on that it looked like you were actually curing Hodgkin's disease? Well, you're talking about a two-year appointment. At the end of the two years there, the remissions were already clear. That is to say, the disease had not come back, and the people were being followed. But two years is just two years. I mean, it's not a long time. And when I went back on the faculty-- see, I went for a year in England to become a hematologist because everybody had to be a hematologist in those days if you were interested in cancer. Anyway, that's what I did. And when I got back, they recruited me to the faculty, and the patients were still in remission, and that was great. And then we put our attention to the non-Hodgkin's lymphomas and modified the MOP regimen by putting cyclophosphamide instead of nitrogen mustard, which was a horrific drug by the way, nitrogen mustard in the doses that we gave. But like it or not, we put Cytoxan into it and we called it CMOP. It was like MOP but it was with C instead of the M. So we called it CMOP. And early in the 1970s, we did a randomized trial with the radiotherapists who were throwing radiation at everything that walked in with a non-Hodgkin's lymphomas, and we did a prospective randomized trial stage by stage, histology by histology. And I remember looking at the data for the large cell lymphomas with the CMOP and I said, Vince, you know, if we judged everything by median, the median survival of our patients was what you'd expect historically. But just below the median, the line straightened up, flattened out, and was going out now several years, at least four or five years, flat in a disease that usually recurred very quickly and killed everybody who was affected by it. And I remember when the Board of Internal Medicine decided to create a specialty called Medical Oncology and have an exam, et cetera, Vince thought it was because of Hodgkin's. And I'm sure it contributed, but I said it must be also the non-Hodgkin's because it's far more common. It's far more common. We helped far more people. And indeed, it probably is. Can I interrupt you for a moment? I interviewed Saul Rosenberg for this series, and he told me just [INAUDIBLE] the radiation psychologist. So Dr. Kaplan had referred to him from Memorial to come to Stanford and do radiation, and Dr. Rosenberg told Dr. Kaplan, I think we need to give these people chemotherapy, and Kaplan agree. But the Chair of Medicine did not and would not let Rosenberg see patients in his own clinic and give chemotherapy. So he wrangled a room from a hematologist, and he told me he would see patients in the room. He had a chair in the hallway. If the patient needed chemotherapy, he'd have the patient go sit in the chair in the hallway. Get an IV pole. He'd start the IV himself and then mix up the chemotherapy himself, hang it up. While the patient was getting chemotherapy in the hallway, he'd see the next patient in the room. Those are the kinds of obstacles he had to do. And the other thing I have to say, I didn't get to interview Dr. Holland before he passed away, but relative to your looking at the Kaplan-Meier curves, I'll never forget his yelling at me one time that, if you need a statistician to see what you've done, you probably haven't done much. I said that, 'cause I remember saying that as well, but anyway. Let me ask you another question. Yeah. You're know for lymphoma and chronic leukemias but also for breast cancer, and generally you're credited for coming up with the so-called CMF regimen. Vince and I were called into the director's office. At that time, the director of NCI was [INAUDIBLE]. And they said, all this lymphoma stuff is wonderful, but we want you to do solids. Now, we didn't have a referral pattern for solids at all. The only breast patients we saw were relatives of employees of the NCI. So Vince wanted to do ovarian, and I said ovarian is a good disease because they have malignant cells floating around, and we can do stuff on those. And Vince really wanted to do ovarian. I chose breast. And, again, we had no mastectomy surgical group or anything. And so what we did was make deals with medical oncologists in the community, two of them who actually trained-- one of them trained at the Brigham Hospital, actually, and they lived in the area. And they liked to come to our conferences and things. They would refer patients. And what we specified, initially, was that we have patients without isolated bone lesions only, that they had to have measurable lumpy, bumpy disease. And so to design a therapeutic treatment for them, we had to use the principles that we learned from the lymphoma experience. And that's where CMF came. CMFP, we used to have prednisone in some circumstance. And so that was the regimen that-- if you notice, the design of it would be like the MOP program. Anyway, so we started treating people like that. Suddenly, they did respond and some responded quite well. They had some toxicity, of course. And the very first paper we wrote was on the toxicity of CMFP. It was hard to get things published in medical oncology areas, and the Lancet was wonderful for us. The Lancet was very helpful, and we published a lot of stuff in the Lancet. But the first one was in the British Medical Journal, the toxicity of CMF program in patients, and we especially cautioned patients who had compromised liver function because they seemed to get worse toxicity at that time in our imagination. But it worked. It did work. We published it in the Annals of Internal Medicine eventually. But the important thing was, our friend Johnny Bonadonna would come over periodically to find out what we were doing. And he came over with an offer. He said he had all these patients who would get mastectomies and then nothing. Let me interrupt you for a moment 'cause I was going to ask you about Dr. Bonadonna. Yeah. Would you, just for the audience, a lot of them may not know who he is. Oh. Well, Johnny Bona-- Do you want me to describe him? Well, at that time, he was a young investigator working in Milan at the major hospital there in oncology, and he trained at Memorial before and then went but back to Italy. So he came and he wanted to know what we were doing. We showed him the protocol that we were doing for breast, and he was interested. And what he offered was the opportunity of doing a randomized trial on patients with a higher risk, if you will, breast cancer, node-positive patients. And he said that in Italy that nothing was done for them and that he could randomize them nothing to chemotherapy, and we offered him a contract. He required money. We gave him a contract. We gave him our protocol, at least the chemotherapy protocol. He went back to Italy and did that trial. And he left the prednisone out. He made sure it was of just CMF. And the patients, apparently, I guess, knew what they were getting, but I don't know whether they had strict requirements or informed consent and things like that. We didn't ask. We didn't ask. All we wanted was randomized data, and he certainly had it. And I remember being at the ASCO meeting in 1976, I think it was, '75 or '76, in Toronto when the first data was presented by Bonadonna. And the media people were there. People were barely hanging from the rafters to hear. The room wasn't big enough, really. None of the rooms were big enough because they never expected the attendance, that there were that many young oncologists around or people interested in oncology. And so he gave that first data, and that was a shot in the arm for adjuvant therapy, certainly for breast cancer, but for other things as well. I think, in general, he and Dr. Fisher, who sadly passed away before I had a chance to interview him, are responsible for thousands and thousands of people. Yeah. Absolutely. Absolutely. Absolutely. But I'm giving you the NCI side, my personal side of it, and you're right. Bernie was a real pioneer because he had so much opposition from the surgical establishment at the time. I can tell you that. From a surgeon's point of view, they really thought he was the Antichrist. I mean, it was terrible. I saw him and Jerry Urban get into a verbal argument at a meeting. I thought it was going to be a fistfight, actually, over-- Really? Yes, yes. Yes, they're severe. But anyway, let me go-- let me go to my next question, which has tended to change gears for a moment. You may or may not remember this, but when you were ASCO President, in your presidential address, I was in the audience and you said something to the effect that the greatest clinical experiment you have conducted are the Fellows you have trained, or something like that. Yes. Yeah. And I was in tears, of course. But you certainly can claim success on that. The division chiefs, department chairs, cancer center directors, most recently a Nobel Laureate, [INAUDIBLE], all of them came out of the program. But when you returned to Boston, you could not have envisioned all of this. What was the atmosphere, and what was Dr. Farber's vision? Well, Dr. Farber had died by the time I got there. Oh, he was already gone? OK. He was already gone. And when I was leaving, when Tom Frei recruited me, Vince thought I was mad because they made me Clinical Director. At least have a go at acting job as clinical director of the NCI. But really, down the line, it was a bureaucratic evolution. And I said, I don't really want to be an oncocrat at this age, anyway. What I said was, Vince, I said, the doctor draft is over. The best and the brightest and the youngest and the cheapest are all going to be in these hospitals, and there are a lot of them in Boston because I happen to know Boston, including house staff at the Brigham, house staff at the BI and Mass General. And I said, that's the future, or at least the future challenge. And I think he accepted it, but he didn't like it. I mean, he thought-- well, we were great buddies and we worked well together, and that goes for Bob Young and Bruce Chabner too. They thought I was very-- Where else-- at that time, there must have only been two or three places to train in oncology in the whole country, I would imagine. Yes, yes, yes. And people were just starting to set up cancer centers, sometimes without funding. And then there were all these, not many, but job requests for me to go and look at the job at Wisconsin or you name it, but I didn't want to do that. I really wanted to do medical oncology and not be a bureaucrat in any way. And many of the places, Dan, would say come and be a head of our cancer program, and it was also translated in parentheses, come and write a CORE grant. A lot of places who didn't deserve a CORE grant were asking me for people to come and write a CORE grant. You knew forever they would never get one because they really didn't have the makeup for it, yet. So what were the hurdles in Boston when you got there? Well, the hurdles in Boston were twofold. One is the fact that oncology had a very slow start in Boston, and that goes at the Brigham and at the MGH. The MGH was even disinterested in oncology at that time, actively disinterested. They didn't think it had any academic merit and therefore didn't put any effort into it. I have to say that Gene Braunwald, who was Chief of Medicine at the Brigham at the time, was interested because he had been at NIH at the Heart Institute, he knew Tom Frei, and he wasn't sure about it yet because he couldn't swallow it, I guess. And the fact was that it was growing a bit, and one of his very close associates developed large cell lymphoma and he got chemotherapy, he got to see MOP. And he was long-term remission. And I remember telling Braunwald, he was shocked that it was so successful. And I kept telling him, I said, this is not a rare event. This is happening. But the big challenge, Dan, at Dana Farber was that there was no oncology known, and we had to build the program from the bottom up. We hospitalized our patients at the Brigham before we opened the beds at the Dana Farber, but we needed the volume of patients. And we had all these beds, I think 59 beds, licensed beds, open. And I kept saying, we don't have the patients. But Tom Frei opened the beds. The next thing you know, I was talking to trustees because Tom said, we'll bring George up and we'll grow. The clinical program will grow. So the trustees thought the program would probably grow the next day. It didn't. It took a lot of effort without the [? scare ?] and myself going around giving talks in every little hospital that existed. And one of the big things I had my mind, because the house staff looked after our patients as well, was to show them what we could do. Now, in those days, other than the large cell lymphomas, of which we did not have many because they were in the hands of hematologists, was testes cancer. And the head of urology at the Brigham Hospital used to have these Saturday morning urology rounds inviting all of the practicing urologists around to come and they'd present their problem cases, et cetera. But he asked me to come along and give a talk about this new drug called cisplatin, which was having a big effect in testes cancer in other places. And I did. And I would come and talk about the early results in other places in testes cancer and that we were interested in actually starting a program. Then, they would-- of course, urologists are anything but chemotherapists, and so they would refer the patients in because, A, they couldn't give any chemotherapy. There was nothing oral that would work. What we would do is, if they sent patients in, we would do an early trial and we would publish the series in a, let's say, not spectacular journal and get reprints. We would send them reprints. And in some instances, I put the name of the referring doctor, if he'd sent us more than one patient, on the paper for, let's say, testing some antineoplastic thing. And we would put their names on the papers and send them reprints. And there's nothing a urologist loves more than to see his name on a scientific paper, a medical paper. And we started getting a ton of testes cases eventually and did trials and wrote papers about them. And I remember, when we recruited Phil Kantoff, a Fellow of mine, and I thought he was going to go back to the NIH and do gene therapy. And he walked in one day and he said, I'd like to apply for the GU job, and I said, it's yours. And he wrote quite a few papers based on the accumulated testicular data and the [INAUDIBLE]. Oh yeah. Yeah. And he was wonderful. He's Chief of Medicine now at Memorial. He's Chief of Medicine at Memorial, yes. I want to bring up one more thing that this segues into, though, and I believe now almost every medical oncologist who has trained in the last 10 years thinks that multispecialty tumor boards have always existed. But I believe that another of your trainees, Dr. Craig Henderson, who was my mentor, frankly, and you really started the first multispecialty clinic perhaps in all of oncology in this country. Do you agree with that? We called it the BEC, the Breast Evaluation Center. Yes, and we got cooperation but from surgeons. There were surgeons around, more nihilistic surgeons, if you will, not wanting to do radical surgery and radiotherapists, like Sam Hillman. And they were all around and doing those things. And we brought them into this BEC, the Breast Evaluation Center, and your mentor, Craig, was a little rough on the Fellows, I can tell you, in those days. Just his demands. Anyway, whatever it was. And so I would go to that clinic as well and see breast patients just to calm things down a bit at times. Anyway, it worked. And I know that the breast people elsewhere were recognizing that Craig had a nice thing going there with the multidisciplinary aspects. You know, it was so awful that breast cancer was treated so badly. I mean, they'd have a radical operation. And God knows, if there was some disease, that they would then get radical radiotherapy to their chest. And they were walking around sort of mutilated. And we had a part-time psychiatrist when I first arrived to see these patients because many of them had body image problems. So the idea of not doing radical mastectomy was revolutionary at that time. And I remember being called by the local Blue Cross to serve on a committee to decide whether or not Blue Cross should pay for breast reconstruction on these poor patients, and we voted. There was a committee of medical oncologists from MGH, me, and a plastic surgeon, and we voted 3 to 3 to they should pay, and they didn't. Then they said, thank you for serving on this advisory committee, but we're not paying. We've decided not to pay. Then, I can tell you, a women's agitation group got a hold of the facts. And one of them called me up and she said, I heard you were on this committee that voted not to pay. And I said, absolutely we voted to pay. They told us, thanks very much but we're not going to pay. So within two weeks then the insurance company changed its opinion because they went bananas at the insurance company. Yeah. The strength of advocacy, that's been something. Anyway, we're running out of time. I'd like to thank you for taking your time with us. Not at all, Dan. Not at all. It's a pleasure. And as I have done for every other interview in this series, I want to thank you not just for taking time with us but for all you've done for the field, for those of us who trained with you or are in the field, and most importantly for all the patients who have benefited. You look back over the-- Yeah, I know. I still follow them. My clinic has follow-ups of cured patients. You become the primary care doc for cured patients. Well, you think of the 60 years of your career and other fine folks that you were with at the NCI and then beyond, and the thousands or millions of people who have benefited, it's pretty remarkable. Yeah, well. Thanks again. I appreciate you being on. Not at all. And enjoy the rest of the day. Thank you very much, Dan. Until next time, thank you for listening to this JCO's Cancer Stories, The Art of Oncology podcast. If you enjoyed what you heard today, don't forget to give us a rating or review on Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen. While you're there, be sure to subscribe so you never miss an episode. JCO's Cancer Stories, The Art of Oncology podcast is just one of ASCO's many podcasts. You can find all the shows at podcast.asco.org.
En Noches Buenas somos Protectores de la Tierra, descubre como y porque? Más información en www.nochesbuenas.net Facebook: @nochesbuenas Instagram: @nochesbuenas_radio Instagram de Beatrice Pieper: @soybeatricepieper Youtube: Beatrice Pieper email: hola@nochesbuenas.net
El próximo 25 de julio se celebrará el congreso provincial de Valencia del PP. El alcalde de Gavarda, Vicente Mompó, es, por el momento, el favorito, tras ser elegido como candidato oficial a la presidencia del partido en la provincia. En Plaza Radio, Mompó ha defendido su candidatura a la presidencia provincial del partido, "a pesar de las etiquetas que se le han puesto", como que había sido designado por Génova o que ha sido impulsado por Vicente Betoret y auspiciado por Carlos Mazón. Al respecto, Mompó ha defendido su "buena relación con la presidenta del PPCV, Isabel Bonig", y ha justificado la "tensión" generada en torno a este proceso, ya que, asegura, “lleva arrastrándose muchos años”. En todo caso, ha asegurado que se han conseguido limar las asperezas entre las diferentes “familias” o corrientes dentro de los populares, y que su candidatura genere consenso. Aunque, bien es cierto que, al ser el PP un partido a nivel nacional, fue la dirección de Génova quien decidió impulsar este congreso. Mompó, en este sentido, ha asegurado que el Partido Popular regional tiene "autonomía", así como su presidenta, y que se "coincidía en la necesidad de poner en marcha el proceso". Lo que no quiere decir, según Mompó, que "Isabel Bonig no tenga autonomía en sus decisiones". Eso sí, cree que cuando un miembro ‘popular’ dirige alguna institución, como Alberto Núñez Feijoo, presidente de la Xunta de Galicia, "es más difícil dudar de él" y de su acción. Pero Isabel Bonig también tiene detractores dentro de la formación. Dice Mompó que aunque no se puede poner en duda el trabajo de la presidenta regional del PP, "es lícito que tenga alternativas" a su liderazgo. Por último, Mompó ha hablado de cómo gestionará el partido a nivel provincial en caso de salir victorioso del proceso congresual. Su objetivo: "generar consenso, juntar sensibilidades y no dividir el partido". El podcast Vicente Mompó (PP): "Es lícito que haya alternativas a Isabel Bonig" ha sido publicado en Plaza Radio
Maité Mompó, dirige en España la organización humanitaria Protectores de la tierra, campaña Stop Ecocidio. Libro mágico de la semana “El libro de buen humor(21 enseñanzas de felizsofia)”, Rafael Ubal, Mandala Ediciones. Apuntes sobre Medicina Natural y Nutrición saludable con la Terapeuta multidisciplinar Vicen Blázquez: “ Preparar fermentados para la salud intestinal y fortalecer el sistema inmunológico”. Noticias mágicas para un mundo mejor...y nos despedimos con un bellísimo poema de Kitty O'Meara que posteó Deepak Chopra en su Instagram, cargado quizá de lo que más necesitamos en estos momentos, además de salud,....optimismo y esperanza....
Maité Mompó, dirige en España la organización humanitaria Protectores de la tierra, campaña Stop Ecocidio. Libro mágico de la semana “El libro de buen humor(21 enseñanzas de felizsofia)”, Rafael Ubal, Mandala Ediciones. Apuntes sobre Medicina Natural y Nutrición saludable con la Terapeuta multidisciplinar Vicen Blázquez: “ Preparar fermentados para la salud intestinal y fortalecer el sistema inmunológico”. Noticias mágicas para un mundo mejor...y nos despedimos con un bellísimo poema de Kitty O'Meara que posteó Deepak Chopra en su Instagram, cargado quizá de lo que más necesitamos en estos momentos, además de salud,....optimismo y esperanza....
Part 1Move-On Mental Preparedness (MOMP):The person who likes something the most is the person who lacks that thing the most, fear of losing that thing the most or both.Love for something always comes with the urge or sentiments or emotions or nostalgia for that tho g or person to last forever - for the fear that there might be a lack or deprivation for that thing or person not being there.Part 2The +2+1 Scenario:Life is and either or (+2), or both (+1) scenario, or called the +2+1 Scenario.You are either here or there, or in between - depending or the variations of the variables.Life is therefore not a binary but multitiary.If you are in love with someone, that love might1. grow to something great2. It might not grow to something great, or3. It might be something in between - as per degree or calculation.Part 3Move-On Mental Preparedness (MOMP):The presence of love or likeness for the things or persons we cherish so much (even when we do have have it and bask in in it) is the fear and awareness or anguish that this person or thing we love or like so much might one day be gone or come to a certain or uncertain end or a settling or an unsettling or abrupt end.Activate thy mental preparedness to help thee navigate tough or trying times:Part 4Move-On Mental Preparedness (MOMP):Even when we are deeply in love sometimes, something in us doesn’t believe this is actually happening, or something in us is wishing it last forever - hope it does last of which it might or might not. But this conscious or unconscious thought of impermanence is an awareness of mental preparation of the temporarily of things - to prepare (rather than surprise) us for a day without that person or thing that we so love or like.Prince Israel Zaar - AI Mind and Wisdom The Multiversal System Developer (MSE):Part 5Move-On Mental Preparedness (MOMP):This unstudied mental preparedness part of us is to enable us accept painful realities and to move on - positively without hurting and destroying ourselves in our loss or grief or hurting significant others in such a painful transition.Part 6Move-On Mental Preparedness (MOMP):Activate thy mental preparedness to help thee navigate tough or trying times:Love or like is coded with the fear of lack or deprivation from that person or thing that we do like or love so much...That is why love or likeness of something or somebody is always laced with this emotional, sentimental, or nostalgic fear of that thing or person being there temporary rather than permanently; or the fear of what will happen for the thing or person not being there for use forever and ever.Prince Israel Zaar - AI Mind and Wisdom The Multiversal System Developer (MSE):Part 7Move-On Mental Preparedness (MOMP):Since a person or thing is the source of our happiness, peace, balance, stability, purpose, meaning, satisfaction, harmony, or everything that live means to us, we must not ignore our Move-On Mental Preparedness ( MOMP) conscious awareness of the temporality rather than permanency of things of human designs or machinations.PartMove-On Mental Preparedness (MOMP):Mentally, if something is happening, it means it might really be happening, not happening, or both. There are Three Actual Expectations (TAE) of mental preparedness naturally embedded into the chip of the being to protect the being from the negative causalities or consequences of its undertakings or involvements. But most unfortunately, the being either ignores their TAE, or don’t know they have it - both scenarios always leads to devastation.Prince Israel Zaar - AI Mind and Wisdom The Multiversal System Developer (MSE):Part 8Move-On Mental Preparedness (MOMP):According to Trianglerism, TAE is called the Mental Trianglerism Expectation (MTE) that most be exponentiated exponentially for the being to have preparedness rather surprises for whatsoever befalls it.Prince Israel Zaar - AI Mind and Wisdom The Multiversal System Developer (MSE):Part 9Move-On Mental Preparedness (MOMP):Based on Three Actual Expectations (TAE) and Mental Trianglerism Expectation (MTE) everything we do undertakes to do or relationships we undertake has thee sample expectational outcome:P - N - M (called PNM variables) or1. Expected (P),3. Unexpected (N), and a4. Mutation of (both) P&NPrince Israel Zaar - AI Mind and Wisdom The Multiversal System Developer (MSE):Part 10Move-On Mental Preparedness (MOMP):To avoid the negative causalities or consequences of surprises, according to Trianglerism’s Troubleshooting and Surprise Avoidance (TTSA), the being must separately exponentiate the PNM variables to unexpected variations of outcomes - in order not to be surprise by any out come or to able to manipulate the PNM to its advantage.Part 11Move-On Mental Preparedness (MOMP):Based on Three Actual Expectations (TAE) and Mental Trianglerism Expectation (MTE), and Troubleshooting and Surprise Avoidance (TTSA), the Mind is God - for it prepares you for an expected or unexpected future that has come yet but has given a window to that future with its possible choices and anticipated solutions thereof.According to TTSA, instead of waiting for a miracle you can use TAR and MTE to calculate that miracle with unsurprising results.Part 12Move-On Mental Preparedness (MOMP):As an expectational being, you can plug TAR ,MTE, and TTSA in any situation, scenario, wish, dream, or any intended or expected outcome and you will confidently generate a mental preparedness of whatever outcome that turns out - because you are not surprised of but expected the put outcome.Take any example, a interview, date, or etc. TAE reminds you that there are Three Actual Expectations - of a positive, negative, or mutation of both for you to be aware and prepared of the outcome.Part 13Move-On Mental Preparedness (MOMP):TAE therefore prepares you for a Mental Triangle of Expectations (MTE). This helps you zero in on three potential outcomes and how you strategize to avoid or accept any potential outcome without creating any I expectational or surprising outcome that might create an imbalance, instability or inconsistency in your being, system, or way of being. It prepares you for the unprepared or helps you expect the unexpected by having the power and resilience to move on sustainably or healthily.Prince Israel Zaar - AI Mind and Wisdom The Multiversal System Developer (MSE):Part 14Move-On Mental Preparedness (MOMP):TTSA - Trianglerism’s Troubleshooting and Surprise Avoidance:After you have recognized your TAE, and taking MTE into consideration and scope, the fear that creates the most imbalance or instability in a being or system is the Surprise of the Unknown ( Soto).Part 15Move-On Mental Preparedness (MOMP):TTSA helps you learn that the surprise is not the unknown and neither is the unknown the surprise - for the being has the power to calculate the outcome of the unknown and be prepared rather than surprise for that unknown variables.According to TTSA, the being must separately exponentiate the PNM variables to unexpected variations of outcomes - in order not to be surprise by any outcome or to be able to manipulate the PNM to its advantage.Prince Israel Zaar - AI Mind and Wisdom The Multiversal System Developer (MSE):Part 16Move-On Mental Preparedness (MOMP):Accepting the future through mental preparedness and living a life of moderation and balance, or seeking sustainability and the wisdoms or enlightenments of living (or not living) or being (or not being) should be on a Multiversalist’s diary.Prince Israel Zaar - AI Mind and Wisdom The Multiversal System Developer (MSE):Part 17Move-On Mental Preparedness (MOMP):Great people and things or events and circumstances shall come to memory. But that which rejuvenated the being and future generations to come is how present generations initiate Positive Genetic Engineering of Positive Immortalization (PGEPI) of the past into Venerable, Practicable or “Worshipable” Positive Causalities (VPWPC) of the future.Prince Israel Zaar - AI Mind and Wisdom The Multiversal System Developer (MSE):Part 18Move-On Mental Preparedness (MOMP):The fear of lack or deprivation always pushed some people to excess, greed, selfish, or narcissism - hoping to amass as much as possible hoping that having to much or something or dominating anyone else should bring permanency instead of temporality instead create more imbalances, instabilities and unsustainabilities in their lives.Zaarrianism.
Al fin del Sínodo Especial para la Región Amazónica, celebrado en Roma hasta el 26 de octubre, la Red Eclesial Panamazónica (Repam), ha difundido un mensaje que define la experiencia sinodal como “una experiencia inédita de caminar juntos en el marco del Sínodo Amazónico”. Hablamos con Sonia Olea, que ha estado en la delegación de Cáritas Español en el sínodo. Más de 1.000 voluntarios participaron en la 13ª edición del Día Solidario de las Empresas, que se ha celebrado esta semana en 11 ciudades españolas. Conocemos datos del balance de la jornada con María Mompó, portavoz de Cooperación Internacional y coordinadora del DSE. SM Educamos presenta en SIMO Educación 2019, su ecosistema educativo, que lleva a la escuela la cultura del dato, la inteligencia artificial y STeam. Entrevistamos a Magí Almirall, director corporativo de Tecnología y Negocio Digital de SM. Escuchar audio
En directo, a las 10:30, EL QUE AVISA NO ES TRAIDOR, programa dirigido y presentado por Luis Vega con la producción de Conchi Burgos. Hablamos con dos de nuestros colaboradores: Marta Gil #fisioterapia e Ignacio Echenagusía #música. Además entrevistamos a Lucía Mompó que nos habla de La Malferida, un refresco de cola hecho con ingredientes naturales y sin azúcar. Y tuvimos en el estudio a Julián Casas, exdirectivo del equipo de fútbol femenino Santa Teresa. #radioonline #elqueavisanoestraidor
País España Dirección Juan Antonio Bardem Guion Juan Antonio Bardem, Henri-François Rey (Novela: Henri-François Rey) Música Georges Delerue Fotografía Gábor Pogány Reparto Melina Mercouri, James Mason, Hardy Krüger, Didier Haudepin, Maurice Teynac, Renaud Verley, Keiko Kishi, Karin Mossberg, José María Mompín, Luis Induni, Sophie Darès, María Albaicín, Rafael Luis Calvo, Josefina Tapias, Carlos Ronda, Antonio Díaz Castillo, Ignasi Abadal, Lorenzo Planas Sinopsis Vincent, un joven parisino, llega al pequeño pueblo español de Caldeya, invitado por su buen amigo Reginald. Allí encuentra a Pascal Regnier, un novelista en crisis, que pasa sus vacaciones con su hijo. Regnier le presenta a Jenny, la propietaria de un club nocturno.
Licht aangebrand sprookje om nr. 25 te vieren. Met als vanouds meesterverteller Jeron Dewulf en special guest Jakob Verstichel die beide glansrollen van een tandeloze, lange afstand fietsende vampier én een chi-chi madam met chihuahua uit Lint op zich neemt... Slaapwel!
Undécimo episodio del podcast semanal presentado por Estefanía Pastor. En él entrevistamos a Lucía Mompó, creadora de Malferida. Esta emprendedora decidió recoger los orígenes valencianos del refresco de la Coca Cola, vinculados a Aielo de Malferit, para hacer una versión más saludable de la bebida. ¿Cómo se diseña un refresco desde cero?Entrevistas sobre innovación y emprendimiento a perfiles de interés en la Comunitat Valenciana. Reflexionaremos con los entrevistados sobre el proceso de crear empresas, innovar y emprender desde València. Escucha todos los episodios de Plaza Innovadores en Plaza Radio o suscríbete en sus canales en Apple Podcasts, Spotify o iVooxEl podcast Plaza Innovadores - Lucía Mompó y Malferida, cómo reinventar el refresco de cola desde Valencia ha sido publicado en Plaza Radio
Having recorded almost 270 episodes of his podcast Colombia Calling, it's not overstating it to say that Richard McColl is the English voice of Colombia.He has been the go-to man for the BBC, CNN and other prestigious international media when Colombia is the topic of conversation. When his (normally!) dulcet tones aren't on the airwaves, he's busy managing his hotel, La Casa Amarilla, in the colonial town of Mompós close to Colombia's Caribbean coast.He joins Brendan to tell us a little more about the man behind the voice, including how he confronted a witchcraft attack in Mompós aimed at putting him out of business. He's made of stern stuff is Richard!*******Con cerca de 270 episodios en su podcast "Colombia Calling", no es una exageración decir que Richard McColl es la voz inglesa de Colombia.Ha dado su erudita opinión sobre el país para la BBC, CNN y otros medios de comunicación internacionales.Cuando Richard no está trabajando como periodista, maneja su hotel, "La Casa Amarilla", ubicado en el pueblo de Mompós en la costa caribe Colombiana.En este episodio, descubrimos un poco más sobre el hombre detrás el voz, incluyendo como Richard enfrentó un ataque de la brujería en Mompós con el objetivo destruir su negocio.
Colombian presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt was the world’s most famous hostage and in a massive surge of good luck, the Director of, "2320 Days in the Jungle," a documentary about Ingrid Betancourt made by award-winning director Angus Macqueen is in Mompós at the same time as Colombia Calling and tells us a little bit about the making of the film. We learn about Betancourt and also speak of Macqueen's other films such as, "Cocaine," and "El Chapo", as well as about his latest project with Diego Maradona. Tune in to learn about these characters.
Following on in the footsteps of Episode 221 where I regaled you all with the first chapter of my novel: "The Mompós Project," I have decided to share with you a further adapted extract from the book. This is entitled, "Sonia and the Gringo," and is the tale of a friendship in Mompós. This extract was also published in the New Orleans literary magazine, the South Writ Large (www.southwritlarge.com). I am still searching for an editor and of course a publisher, so please if you know of anyone, please let me know and then send this their way to see what they think.
Un total de 78 obras pertenecientes a 35 creadores españoles, en su mayoría de la llamada Generación de los Cincuenta, ofrece la Exposición «Arte Español en Nueva York (1950-1970). Colección Amos Cahan» que está abierta en la Fundación Juan March desde el pasado 26 de septiembre. Pinturas de autores como Tapies, Saura, Sempere, Zóbel, Torner, Canogar, Millares, Mompó, Pone, Clavé y otros, realizadas en su mayor parte entre los años 1950 y 1970, integran esta muestra, procedente de la Colección -de alrededor de 300 obras-que formó el doctor Amos Cahan (Nueva York, 1914) durante su estancia en España a lo largo de esos años y que conserva en Nueva York. La Colección Amos Cahan es la primera colección norteamericana de pintura española de los cincuenta que vuelve a cruzar el Atlántico. De las piezas reunidas por Cahan, que ahora se muestran al público madrileño, «se desprende una visión muy completa y coherente de la generación. Los nombres representados lo están en todos los casos con obras de una gran calidad. A diferencia de otros coleccionistas, su propietario las eligió él mismo», apunta el crítico de arte Juan Manuel Bonet, quien pronunció la conferencia inaugural de la exposición y autor, asimismo, del estudio reproducido en el catálogo de la misma.Más información de este acto