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in April 1990, Nestor Aparicio interviewed Anthony Kiedis of the Red Hot Chili Peppers, who were promoting their "Mothers Milk" album and preparing for a show at the Painters Mill Theater. Kiedis discussed the band's evolution, their admiration for John Waters, and their experiences with fame, including legal issues and the death of bandmate Hillel Slovak. The post Anthony Kiedis and John Frusciante of Red Hot Chili Peppers speak hilariously of love of John Waters and Baltimore before Painters Mill show in April 1990 first appeared on Baltimore Positive WNST.
We finally got around to covering the finale of the boys and yes don't worry we brought Sly back to help us.Support the Show.
In a twist of irony, this episode was so gross it turned us all a little conservative! Ashley Barrett is here to stay, putting on quite the show in Tek-Knight's Tek-Cave. Homelander's imposter syndrome and the return of breastmilk kryptonite. Speaking of Mothers Milk, has M.M. been suppressing his powers this entire time?
Amazon Prime dropped three episodes of season 4 of the boys and we invited our good friend Sly to join us once again!Support the Show.
Nate Adamsky joins Chris and Harrison for a taste test they'll never forget.
This is our spoiler-free review for The Boys Season 4. With MIND BLOWING moments, an ensemble cast at their peak, and a consistent quality that just doesn't miss, we discuss how this season might just be the most DIABOLICAL season ever.The Boys Season 4 will launch worldwide with 3 episodes on Thursday June 13th, followed by weekly episodes available on Thursday leading up to the epic season finale on July 18th (8 episodes in total). Check out Geekcentric onYouTube | Instagram | Twitter | TikTokJoin the Geekcentric Discord HEREJoin Nate on Twitch at - twitch.tv/nateplaysgames
The Brothers look at the final four tracks on Mothers Milk, and give their thoughts on the album as whole. They also sing Soul to Squeeze in the operatic style.We are part of the Deep Dive Podcast Network: https://twitter.com/DeepDivePodNetFollow us on the good old socials:Twitter:Ben: https://twitter.com/universallyrhcpSam: https://twitter.com/stacktownsendInstagram:Ben: https://www.instagram.com/universallyspeakingrhcp_pod/Read ‘Me and My Friends' - The World's #1 RHCP Newsletter - Subscribe here: https://buttondown.email/rhcpsessions.Check out Red Hot Chili Riffs here: https://www.youtube.com/@RedHotChiliRiffsCheck out our Drum Ambassadors (Jack Johnson) projects here: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCdy0pbWSOg6f8vcYnngIQ0ACheck out our Bass Ambassadors (Aidan Hampson) projects here: http://aidanhampson.co.uk/Check out friend of the pod, Dan Boyd's Pop Shock Podcast - for all your pop culture needs! Audio: https://anchor.fm/popshockpod / Video: https://youtube.com/channel/UCHY5pXX_x7Kv4e8wJmHoK5AFor your vinyl needs please shop at Black Star Records: https://www.blackstarrecords.co.uk and Black Wax Coffee and Records: https://blackwaxcoffee.co.uk/
TTO-190 Omaha Dome Storm Charged Tornado, Damaged Houses, Insurance Farm Claims, Cloud Seeding Chemtrail Argue, Contrails Planes Floods, Sobe Bottle, Energy Drinks, 5800 Guess That Country, Hangover Cure, Thunderstorm Generator, Tesla Free Energy, Static Energy, Rockhounding Kit, Nebraska Land Magazine, Nebraska Waterfall Erosion, Alpaca Sex Into Uterus, Mad Max, Mothers Milk, Invincible, AI Priest Fr Justin Baptized in Gatorade, Man Vs Bear Debate
How we feed babies and young kids greatly impacts their health, growth, and future. This affects not only the children but also women and society. While baby formula has its uses, and it literally be a life saver in certain circumstances, it also comes with significant health, economic, and environmental costs. On the other hand, breastfeeding has proven health benefits for both mothers and babies in high-income and low-income settings alike. Despite that, according to the World Health Organization, less than half of babies and young children are breastfed as recommended. How did this happen? According to a three-paper series published in The Lancet in 2023, the lack of breastfeeding is due to multifaceted and highly effective strategies used by commercial formula manufacturers of infant formula. The strategies are designed to target and influence parents, health-care professionals, and policy-makers. This episode explores the roots of this problem: the infant formula industry in the early 20th century captured doctors and medical associations in order to sell their product. And when they reached the limit of infant formula market in the United States, they simply aggressively sold their powders to mothers in poor countries, with disastrous and deadly consequences. REFERENCES Breastfeeding 2023 https://www.thelancet.com/series/Breastfeeding-2023 Apple, Rima. Mothers and Medicine: A Social History of Infant Feeding, 1890–1950. University of Wisconsin Press, 1987. The Baby Killer (1974) https://waronwant.org/sites/default/files/THE%20BABY%20KILLER%201974.pdf Stevens EE, Patrick TE, Pickler R. A history of infant feeding. J Perinat Educ. 2009 Spring;18(2):32-9. doi: 10.1624/105812409X426314. PMID: 20190854; PMCID: PMC2684040. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2684040/ Why The Breastfeeding Vs. Formula Debate Is Especially Critical In Poor Countries https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2018/07/13/628105632/is-infant-formula-ever-a-good-option-in-poor-countries Ziegler EE. Adverse effects of cow's milk in infants. Nestle Nutr Workshop Ser Pediatr Program. 2007;60:185-199. doi: 10.1159/000106369. PMID: 17664905. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17664905/ APPLE, RIMA D. “‘TO BE USED ONLY UNDER THE DIRECTION OF A PHYSICIAN': COMMERCIAL INFANT FEEDING AND MEDICAL PRACTICE, 1870-1940.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine, vol. 54, no. 3, 1980, pp. 402–17. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/44441272. Walters DD, Phan LTH, Mathisen R. The cost of not breastfeeding: global results from a new tool. Health Policy Plan. 2019 Jul 1;34(6):407-417. doi: 10.1093/heapol/czz050. PMID: 31236559; PMCID: PMC6735804. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6735804/pdf/czz050.pdf Munblit, D., Crawley, H., Hyde, R., & Boyle, R. J. (2020). Health and nutrition claims for infant formula are poorly substantiated and potentially harmful. bmj, 369. https://www.bmj.com/content/bmj/369/bmj.m875.full.pdf Boatwright, M., Lawrence, M., Russell, C., Russ, K., McCoy, D., & Baker, P. (2022). The Politics of Regulating Foods for Infants and Young Children: A Case Study on the Framing and Contestation of Codex Standard-Setting Processes on Breast-Milk Substitutes. International Journal of Health Policy and Management, 11(11), 2422-2439. doi: 10.34172/ijhpm.2021.16 https://www.ijhpm.com/article_4169.html Nancy E. Zelman, The Nestle Infant Formula Controversy: Restricting the Marketing Practices of Multinational Corporations in the Third World, 3 Transnat'l Law. 697 (1990). https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/303871848.pdf Infant nutrition : a textbook of infant feeding for students and practitioners of medicine / by Williams McKim Marriott. https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/pdf/b29929453 Wattana, Melissa. The Baby Bottle and the Bottom Line: Corporate Strategies and the Infant Formula Controversy in the 1970s (2016) https://hshm.yale.edu/sites/default/files/files/Wattana%20senior%20essay%202016.pdf
On this week's season five finale episode, cofounder of Mothers Milk, Jennifer Roman-Matito, tells us about an epic night out that features appearances by Kid Cudi, Drake, after-hours bars, dancing, a 7am diner breakfast, and more!Check out Jennifer on Instagram and Mothers MilkHave fun like JenniferDonate to Project BarkadaThis week's Rachel's Rec: our Season Five Finale Party, come! And a pic of my Citi Bike suitcase setup...WE'LL BE BACK FOR SEASON SIX ON MARCH 6TH DON'T FORGET ABOUT US!They Had Fun on Instagram, Youtube, and our website
Guest: Rebecca Heinrich, Mother’s Milk Bank Director Mothers Milk Bank work with neo-natal intensive care units (NICUs) at hospitals across the country to provide donor human milk for babies in need of its life-saving nourishment. The demand for human milk is on the rise. The fall is usually the time with human milk is needed the most. They have seen a 10% increase from last year. Only human milk offers hundreds of critical vitamins and nutrients, donor human milk is evidenced to dramatically reduce the occurrence of necrotizing enterocolitis, a life-threatening disease that affects premature infants. Human milk that is donated is tested for infectious disease and it is pasteurized, additionally they do follow up testing on the milk to make sure everything is as pure as possible for the infants. www.milkbankcolorado.org
In this weeks episode, Billy reminisces getting threatened by Britney's bouncer, Danny becomes an expert on animals udders and we're asking: what's the worst an ex has done to embarrass you?For more from Danny & Billy and to watch some of the shows highlights, follow us on Instagram & TikTok: @gossipgayspodShare with Danny and Billy your craziest, dirtiest and most shameful confessions! They could be your own saucy tales or the goss you have on your friends! Link Below:https://forms.gle/5uwNGBb9QAkgXKKz5And you can even get in touch via Whatsapp! Texts/ voice notes, go wild! If you wish to remain anon, just say. We will never out you and can even disguise your voice. Whatsapp the show on: +447822010049 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Join us tonight as we talk about the Your Rights, P-IX, KUSA, Your Mama jokes and more on episode 515 of the We Like Shooting Show. Our CAST is Jeremy Pozderac, Savage1R, Aaron Krieger, Nick Lynch and my name is Shawn Herrin. Gear Chat Soviet Wood Folding Stock Gun Fights! If you'd like to get … WLS 515 – Mothers Milk Read More »
Join us tonight as we talk about the Your Rights, P-IX, KUSA, Your Mama jokes and more on episode 515 of the We Like Shooting Show. Our CAST is Jeremy Pozderac, Savage1R, Aaron Krieger, Nick Lynch and my name is Shawn Herrin. Gear Chat Soviet Wood Folding Stock Gun Fights! If you'd like to get … WLS 515 – Mothers Milk Read More »
ChristiTutionalist Politics podcast (Freedom OF Religion, not From Religion)CTP: Weekly (weekends) News/Opinion-cast from #1 Bestseller Author Joseph M LenardListen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify Support the showKeep The Shannon Joy Show ON THE Air By Supporting The Sponsors! Buy Physical gold and Silver with Augusta at a GREAT price!!!
Investing in books, classes, registry items and baby showers is often seen as a way to best prepare for pregnancy and birth. But when it comes to nursing, people don't always plan ahead despite the fact that breastfeeding can last anywhere from one to two years — much longer than pregnancy or birth. Fortunately, Natalie Johnson is here with us today to share her knowledge of nursing and to provide mothers with the guidance they need for a successful breastfeeding experience, which actually starts before birth. Natalie is back joining us again for her second episode on the podcast! She is a past labor and delivery nurse, a current lactation consultant here in Southern California, and she always brings enthusiasm, passion, and her amazing expertise to the table when she educates. Today, you'll learn things you likely didn't know that could make a huge difference in your success with nursing. You might be surprised to know that having too much IV fluids during labor has a negative impact on a sucessful start, and why putting your baby on a regular feeding schedule is actually a "big no-no" while nursing. Then there are other aspects you may not have considered — like finding clothing that is accommodating for nursing throughtout the years and stages ahead. Listening to Natalie will leave you feeling inspired and confident in your ability to nurse successfully. With her help, you'll be equipped with greater knowledge than the average mother! Find Natalie on Instagram and Facebook. Her breastfeeding virtual support group can be found HERE. SUBSCRIBE to the "Know Better | Do Better" Podcast newsletter for upcoming guest notifications and special info you can only get as a subsciber. FOLLOW Autumn on: Instagram: bit.ly/3TC5dgr Facebook: bit.ly/3O7NnAs TikTok: bit.ly/3O9xMR7
The Brothers discuss three more tracks from the classic 1989 album, Mothers Milk - Taste the Pain, Stone Cold Bush and Fire.We are part of the Deep Dive Podcast Network: https://twitter.com/DeepDivePodNetFollow us on the good old socials:Twitter:Ben: https://twitter.com/universallyrhcpSam: https://twitter.com/stacktownsendInstagram:Ben: https://www.instagram.com/universallyspeakingrhcp_pod/Read ‘Me and My Friends' - The World's #1 RHCP Newsletter - Subscribe here: https://buttondown.email/rhcpsessions.Check out our Drum Ambassadors (Jack Johnson) projects here: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCdy0pbWSOg6f8vcYnngIQ0ACheck out our Bass Ambassadors (Aidan Hampson) projects here: http://aidanhampson.co.uk/Check out friend of the pod, Dan Boyd's Pop Shock Podcast - for all your pop culture needs! Audio: https://anchor.fm/popshockpod / Video: https://youtube.com/channel/UCHY5pXX_x7Kv4e8wJmHoK5AFor your vinyl needs please shop at Black Star Records: https://www.blackstarrecords.co.uk and Black Wax Coffee and Records: https://blackwaxcoffee.co.uk/
Episode 22 is here! We are finishing our review of 1989's Mother's Milk by the Red Hot Chili Peppers. Trailer hitches? What's That About? What will be the final verdict?
Episode 21 is here! The Wheel has graced us with another outstanding pick in 1989's Mother's Milk by the Red Hot Chili Peppers. What does a Dolphin, a Giraffe and Wham! have to do with this episode?
This week we have a FL man that gets a little bitey on a bondage date. We have a funeral home director charged for selling body parts. We have a couple EMS workers being charged with murder. These stories and a whole lot more when you tune into the news you didn't know you needed to hear. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/chente-ornelas/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/chente-ornelas/support
This episode looks at the 1984 debut novel by Bret Easton Ellis, and its 1987 film adaptation. ----more---- Hello, and welcome to The 80s Movies Podcast. I am your host, Edward Havens. Thank you for listening today. On this episode, we're going to talk about 80s author Bret Easton Ellis and his 1985 novel Less Than Zero, the literal polar opposite of last week's subjects, Jay McInerney and his 1984 novel Bright Lights, Big City. As I mentioned last week, McInerney was twenty-nine when he published Bright Lights, Big City. What I forgot to mention was that he was born and raised in Hartford, Connecticut, halfway between Boston and New York City, and he would a part of that elite East Coast community that befits the upper class child of a corporate executive. Bret Easton Ellis was born and raised in Los Angeles. His father was a property developer, and his parents would divorce when he was 18. He would attend high school at The Buckley School, a college prep school in nearby Sherman Oaks, whose other famous alumni include a who's who of modern pop culture history, including Paul Thomas Anderson, Tucker Carlson, Laura Dern, Paris Hilton, Kim Kardashian, Alyssa Milano, Matthew Perry, and Nicole Richie. So they both grew up fairly well off. And they both would attend tony colleges in New England. Ellis would attend Bennington College in Vermont, a private liberal arts college whose alumni include fellow writers Jonathan Lethem and Donna Tartt, who would both graduate from Bennington the same year as Ellis, 1986. While still attending The Buckley School, the then sixteen year old Ellis would start writing the book he would call Less Than Zero, after the Elvis Costello song. The story would follow a protagonist not unlike Bret Easton Ellis and his adventures through a high school not unlike Buckley. Unlike the final product, Ellis's first draft of Less Than Zero wore its heart on its sleeve, and was written in the third person. Ellis would do a couple of rewrites of the novel during his final years at Buckley and his first years at Bennington, until his creative writing professor, true crime novelist Joe McGinness, suggested to the young writer that he revert his story back to the first person, which Ellis was at first hesitant to do. But once he did start to rewrite the story as a traditional novel, everything seemed to click. Ellis would have his book finished by the end of the year, and McGinniss was so impressed with the final product that he would submit it to his own agent to send out to publishers. Bret Easton Ellis was only a second year student at the time. And because timing is everything in life, Less Than Zero was being submitted to publishers just as Bright Lights, Big City was tearing up the best seller charts, and the publisher Simon and Schuster would purchase the rights to the book for $5,000. When the book was published in June 1985, Ellis just finished his third year at Bennington. He was only twenty-one years and three months old. Oh… also… before the book was published, the film producer Marvin Worth, whose credits included Bob Fosse's 1974 doc-drama about Lenny Bruce starring Dustin Hoffman, 1979's musical drama The Rose, Bette Midler's breakthrough film as an actress, and the 1983 Dudley Moore comedy Unfaithfully Yours, would purchase the rights to make the novel into a movie, for $7,500. The film would be produced at Twentieth Century-Fox, under the supervision of the studio's then vice president of production, Scott Rudin. The book would become a success upon its release, with young readers gravitating towards Clay and his aimless, meandering tour of the rich and decadent young adults in Los Angeles circa Christmas 1984, bouncing through parties and conversations and sex and drugs and shopping malls. One of those readers who became obsessed with the book was a then-seventeen year old Los Angeles native who had just returned to the city after three years of high school in Northern California. Me. I read Less Than Zero easily three times that summer, enraptured not only with Ellis's minimalist prose but with Clay specifically. Although I was neither bisexual nor a user of drugs, Clay was the closest thing I had ever seen to myself in a book before. I had kept in touch with my school friends from junior high while I lived in Santa Cruz, and I found myself to have drifted far away from them during my time away from them. And then when I went back to Santa Cruz shortly after Christmas in 1985, I had a similar feeling of isolation from a number of my friends there, not six months after leaving high school. I also loved how Ellis threw in a number of then-current Los Angeles-specific references, including two mentions of KROQ DJ Richard Blade, who was the coolest guy in radio on the planet. And thanks to Sirius XM and its First Wave channel, I can still listen to Richard Blade almost daily, but now from wherever I might be in the world. But I digress. My bond with Less Than Zero only deepened the next time I read it in early 1986. One of the things I used to do as a young would-be screenwriter living in Los Angeles was to try and write adaptation of novels when I wasn't going to school, going to movies, or working as a file clerk at a law firm. But one book I couldn't adapt for the life of me was Less Than Zero. Sure, there was a story there, but its episodic nature made it difficult to create a coherent storyline. Fox felt the same way, so they would hire Michael Cristofer, a Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright, to do the first draft of the script. Cristofer had just finished writing the adaptation of John Updike's The Witches of Eastwick that Mad Max director George Miller was about to direct, and he would do a literal adaptation of Ellis's book, with all the drugs and sex and violence, except for a slight rehabilitation of the lead character's sexuality. Although it was still the 1980s, with one part of the nation dramatically shifting its perspective on many types of sexuality, it was still Ronald Reagan's 1980s America, and maybe it wasn't a good idea to have the lead character be openly bisexual in a major studio motion picture. Cristofer would complete his first draft of the script in just one month, and producer Marvin Worth really loved it. Problem was, the Fox executives hated it. In a November 18th, 1987, New York Times article about the adaptation, Worth would tell writer Allen Harmetz that he thought Cristofer's script was highly commercial, because “it had something gripping to say about the dilemma of a generation to whom nothing matters.” Which, as someone who had just turned twenty years old eight days after the movie's release and four days before this article came out, I absolutely disagree with. My generation cared about a great many things. We cared about human rights. We cared about ending apartheid. We cared about ending AIDS and what was happening politically and economically. Yeah, we also cared about puffy jean jackets and neon colored clothes and other non-sensical things to take our minds off all the other junk we were dealing with, but it would be typical of a forty something screenwriter and a fiftysomething producer to thing we didn't give a damn about anything. But again, I digress. Worth and the studio would agree on one thing. It wasn't really a drug film, but about young people being destroyed by the privilege of having everything you ever wanted available to you. But the studio would want the movie version of the book to be a bit more sanitized for mainstream consumption. Goodbye, Marvin Worth. Hello, Jon Avnet. In 1986, Jon Avnet was mostly a producer of low-budget films for television, with titles like Between Two Women and Calendar Girl Murders, but he had struck gold in 1983 with a lower-budgeted studio movie with a first-time director and a little known lead actor. That movie was Risky Business, and it made that little known lead actor, Tom Cruise, a bona-fide star. Avnet, wanting to make the move out of television and onto the big screen, would hire Harley Peyton, a former script reader for former Columbia Pictures and MGM/UA head David Begelman, who you might remember from several of our previous episodes, and six-time Oscar nominated producer/screenwriter Ernest Lehman. Peyton would spend weeks in Avnet's office, pouring over every page of the book, deciding what to keep, what to toss, and what to change. Two of the first things to go were the screening of a “snuff” film on the beach, and a scene where a twelve year old girl is tied to a bedpost and raped by one of the main characters. Julian would still hustle himself out to men for money to buy drugs, but Clay would a committed heterosexual. Casting on the film would see many of Hollywood's leading younger male actors looked at for Clay, including a twenty-three year old recent transplant from Oklahoma looking not only for his first leading role, but his first speaking role on screen. Brad Pitt. The producers would instead go with twenty-four year old Andrew McCarthy, an amiable-enough actor who had already made a name for himself with such films as St. Elmo's Fire and Pretty in Pink, and who would have another hit film in Mannequin between being cast as Clay and the start of production. For Blair, they would cast Jami Gertz, who had spent years on the cusp of stardom, between her co-starring role as Muffy Tepperman on the iconic 1982 CBS series Square Pegs, to movies such as Quicksilver and Crossroads that were expected to be bigger than they ended up being. The ace up her sleeve was the upcoming vampire horror/comedy film The Lost Boys, which Warner Brothers was so certain was going to be a huge hit, they would actually move it away from its original Spring 1987 release date to a prime mid-July release. The third point in the triangle, Julian, would see Robert Downey Jr. get cast. Today, it's hard to understand just how not famous Downey was at the time. He had been featured in movies like Weird Science and Tuff Turf, and spent a year as a Not Ready For Prime Time Player on what most people agree was the single worst season of Saturday Night Live, but his star was starting to rise. What the producers did not know, and Downey did not elaborate on, was that, like Julian, Downey was falling down a spiral of drug use, which would make his performance more method-like than anyone could have guessed. The Red Hot Chili Peppers, who were hot in the Los Angeles music scene but were still a couple years from the release of their breakout album, 1989's Mothers Milk, were cast to play a band in one of the party scenes, and additional cast members would include James Spader and Lisanne Falk, who would become semi-famous two years later as one of the Heathers. Impressed with a 1984 British historical drama called Another Country featuring Colin Firth, Cary Elwes and Rupert Everett, Avnet would hire that film's 35 year old director, Marek Kanievska, to make his American directing debut. But Kanievska would be in for a major culture shock when he learned just how different the American studio system was to the British production system. Shooting on the film was set to begin in Los Angeles on May 6th, 1987, and the film was already scheduled to open in theatres barely six months later. One major element that would help keep the movie moving along was cinematographer Ed Lachman. Lachman had been working as a cinematographer for nearly 15 years, and had shot movies like Jonathan Demme's Last Embrace, Susan Sideman's Desperately Seeking Susan, and David Byrne's True Stories. Lachman knew how to keep things on track for lower budgeted movies, and at only $8m, Less Than Zero was the second lowest budgeted film for Twentieth Century-Fox for the entire year. Not that having a lower budget was going to stop Kanievska and Lachman from trying make the best film they could. They would stage the film in the garish neon lighting the 80s would be best known for, with cool flairs like lighting a poolside discussion between Clay and Julian where the ripples of the water and the underwater lights create an effect on the characters' faces that highlight Julian's literal drowning in his problems. There's also one very awesome shot where Clay's convertible, parked in the middle of a street with its top down, as we see Clay and Blair making out while scores of motorcycles loudly pass by them on either side. And there's a Steadicam shot during the party scene featuring the Chili Peppers which is supposed to be out of this world, but it's likely we'll never see it. Once the film was finished shooting and Kanievska turned in his assembly cut, the studio was not happy with the film. It was edgier than they wanted, and they had a problem with the party scene with the Peppers. Specifically, that the band was jumping around on screen, extremely sweaty, without their shirts on. It also didn't help that Larry Gordon, the President of Fox who had approved the purchase of the book, had been let go before production on the film began, and his replacement, Alan Horn, who did give the final go-ahead on the film, had also been summarily dismissed. His replacement, Leonard Goldberg, really hated the material, thought it was distasteful, but Barry Diller, the chairman of the studio, was still a supporter of the project. During all this infighting, the director, Kanievska, had been released from the film. Before any test screenings. Test screenings had really become a part of the studio modus operandi in the 1980s, and Fox would often hold their test screenings on the Fox Studio Lot in Century City. There are several screenings rooms on the Fox lot, from the 53 seat William Fox Theatre, to the 476 seat Darryl Zanuck Theatre. Most of the Less Than Zero test screenings would be held in the 120 seat Little Theatre, so that audience reactions would be easier to gauge, and should they want to keep some of the audience over for a post-screening Q&A, it would be easier to recruit eight or ten audience members. That first test screening did not go over well. Even though the screening room was filled with young people between the ages of 15 and 24, and many of them were recruited from nearby malls like the Century City Mall and the Beverly Center based off a stated liking of Andrew McCarthy, they really didn't like Jami Hertz's character, and they really hated Robert Downey Jr's. Several of the harder scenes of drug use with their characters would be toned down, either through judicious editing, or new scenes were shot, such as when Blair is seen dumping her cocaine into a bathroom sink, which was filmed without a director by the cinematographer, Ed Lachman. They'd also shoot a flashback scene to the trio's high school graduation, meant to show them in happier times. The film would be completed three weeks before its November 6th release date, and Fox would book the film into 871 theatres., going up against no less than seven other new movies, including a Shelley Long comedy, Hello Again, the fourth entry in the Death Wish series, yet another Jon Cryer high school movie, Hiding Out, a weird Patrick Swayze sci-fi movie called Steel Dawn, a relatively tame fantasy romance film from Alan Rudolph called Made in Heaven, and a movie called Ruskies which starred a very young Joaquin Phoenix when he was still known as Leaf Phoenix, while also contending with movies like Fatal Attraction, Baby Boom and Dirty Dancing, which were all still doing very well two to four months in theatres. The reviews for the film were mostly bad. If there was any saving grace critically, it would be the praise heaped upon Downey for his raw performance as a drug addict, but of course, no one knew he actually was a drug addict at that time. The film would open in fourth place with $3.01m in ticket sales, less than half of what Fatal Attraction grossed that weekend, in its eighth week of release. And the following weeks' drops would be swift and merciless. Down 36% in its second week, another 41% in its third, and had one of the worst drops in its fourth week, the four day Thanksgiving holiday weekend, when many movies were up in ticket sales. By early December, the film was mostly playing in dollar houses, and by the first of the year, Fox had already stopped tracking it, with slightly less than $12.4m in tickets sold. As of the writing of this episode, at the end of November 2022, you cannot find Less Than Zero streaming anywhere, although if you do want to see it online, it's not that hard to find. But it has been available for streaming in the past on sites like Amazon Prime and The Roku Channel, so hopefully it will find its way back to streaming in the future. Or you can find a copy of the 21 year old DVD on Amazon. Thank you for listening. We'll talk again real soon, when our final episode of 2022, Episode 96, on Michael Jackson's Thriller, is released. Remember to visit this episode's page on our website, The80sMoviePodcast.com, for extra materials about Less Than Zero the movie and the novel, and its author, Bret Easton Ellis. The 80s Movies Podcast has been researched, written, narrated and edited by Edward Havens for Idiosyncratic Entertainment. Thank you again. Good night.
This episode looks at the 1984 debut novel by Bret Easton Ellis, and its 1987 film adaptation. ----more---- Hello, and welcome to The 80s Movies Podcast. I am your host, Edward Havens. Thank you for listening today. On this episode, we're going to talk about 80s author Bret Easton Ellis and his 1985 novel Less Than Zero, the literal polar opposite of last week's subjects, Jay McInerney and his 1984 novel Bright Lights, Big City. As I mentioned last week, McInerney was twenty-nine when he published Bright Lights, Big City. What I forgot to mention was that he was born and raised in Hartford, Connecticut, halfway between Boston and New York City, and he would a part of that elite East Coast community that befits the upper class child of a corporate executive. Bret Easton Ellis was born and raised in Los Angeles. His father was a property developer, and his parents would divorce when he was 18. He would attend high school at The Buckley School, a college prep school in nearby Sherman Oaks, whose other famous alumni include a who's who of modern pop culture history, including Paul Thomas Anderson, Tucker Carlson, Laura Dern, Paris Hilton, Kim Kardashian, Alyssa Milano, Matthew Perry, and Nicole Richie. So they both grew up fairly well off. And they both would attend tony colleges in New England. Ellis would attend Bennington College in Vermont, a private liberal arts college whose alumni include fellow writers Jonathan Lethem and Donna Tartt, who would both graduate from Bennington the same year as Ellis, 1986. While still attending The Buckley School, the then sixteen year old Ellis would start writing the book he would call Less Than Zero, after the Elvis Costello song. The story would follow a protagonist not unlike Bret Easton Ellis and his adventures through a high school not unlike Buckley. Unlike the final product, Ellis's first draft of Less Than Zero wore its heart on its sleeve, and was written in the third person. Ellis would do a couple of rewrites of the novel during his final years at Buckley and his first years at Bennington, until his creative writing professor, true crime novelist Joe McGinness, suggested to the young writer that he revert his story back to the first person, which Ellis was at first hesitant to do. But once he did start to rewrite the story as a traditional novel, everything seemed to click. Ellis would have his book finished by the end of the year, and McGinniss was so impressed with the final product that he would submit it to his own agent to send out to publishers. Bret Easton Ellis was only a second year student at the time. And because timing is everything in life, Less Than Zero was being submitted to publishers just as Bright Lights, Big City was tearing up the best seller charts, and the publisher Simon and Schuster would purchase the rights to the book for $5,000. When the book was published in June 1985, Ellis just finished his third year at Bennington. He was only twenty-one years and three months old. Oh… also… before the book was published, the film producer Marvin Worth, whose credits included Bob Fosse's 1974 doc-drama about Lenny Bruce starring Dustin Hoffman, 1979's musical drama The Rose, Bette Midler's breakthrough film as an actress, and the 1983 Dudley Moore comedy Unfaithfully Yours, would purchase the rights to make the novel into a movie, for $7,500. The film would be produced at Twentieth Century-Fox, under the supervision of the studio's then vice president of production, Scott Rudin. The book would become a success upon its release, with young readers gravitating towards Clay and his aimless, meandering tour of the rich and decadent young adults in Los Angeles circa Christmas 1984, bouncing through parties and conversations and sex and drugs and shopping malls. One of those readers who became obsessed with the book was a then-seventeen year old Los Angeles native who had just returned to the city after three years of high school in Northern California. Me. I read Less Than Zero easily three times that summer, enraptured not only with Ellis's minimalist prose but with Clay specifically. Although I was neither bisexual nor a user of drugs, Clay was the closest thing I had ever seen to myself in a book before. I had kept in touch with my school friends from junior high while I lived in Santa Cruz, and I found myself to have drifted far away from them during my time away from them. And then when I went back to Santa Cruz shortly after Christmas in 1985, I had a similar feeling of isolation from a number of my friends there, not six months after leaving high school. I also loved how Ellis threw in a number of then-current Los Angeles-specific references, including two mentions of KROQ DJ Richard Blade, who was the coolest guy in radio on the planet. And thanks to Sirius XM and its First Wave channel, I can still listen to Richard Blade almost daily, but now from wherever I might be in the world. But I digress. My bond with Less Than Zero only deepened the next time I read it in early 1986. One of the things I used to do as a young would-be screenwriter living in Los Angeles was to try and write adaptation of novels when I wasn't going to school, going to movies, or working as a file clerk at a law firm. But one book I couldn't adapt for the life of me was Less Than Zero. Sure, there was a story there, but its episodic nature made it difficult to create a coherent storyline. Fox felt the same way, so they would hire Michael Cristofer, a Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright, to do the first draft of the script. Cristofer had just finished writing the adaptation of John Updike's The Witches of Eastwick that Mad Max director George Miller was about to direct, and he would do a literal adaptation of Ellis's book, with all the drugs and sex and violence, except for a slight rehabilitation of the lead character's sexuality. Although it was still the 1980s, with one part of the nation dramatically shifting its perspective on many types of sexuality, it was still Ronald Reagan's 1980s America, and maybe it wasn't a good idea to have the lead character be openly bisexual in a major studio motion picture. Cristofer would complete his first draft of the script in just one month, and producer Marvin Worth really loved it. Problem was, the Fox executives hated it. In a November 18th, 1987, New York Times article about the adaptation, Worth would tell writer Allen Harmetz that he thought Cristofer's script was highly commercial, because “it had something gripping to say about the dilemma of a generation to whom nothing matters.” Which, as someone who had just turned twenty years old eight days after the movie's release and four days before this article came out, I absolutely disagree with. My generation cared about a great many things. We cared about human rights. We cared about ending apartheid. We cared about ending AIDS and what was happening politically and economically. Yeah, we also cared about puffy jean jackets and neon colored clothes and other non-sensical things to take our minds off all the other junk we were dealing with, but it would be typical of a forty something screenwriter and a fiftysomething producer to thing we didn't give a damn about anything. But again, I digress. Worth and the studio would agree on one thing. It wasn't really a drug film, but about young people being destroyed by the privilege of having everything you ever wanted available to you. But the studio would want the movie version of the book to be a bit more sanitized for mainstream consumption. Goodbye, Marvin Worth. Hello, Jon Avnet. In 1986, Jon Avnet was mostly a producer of low-budget films for television, with titles like Between Two Women and Calendar Girl Murders, but he had struck gold in 1983 with a lower-budgeted studio movie with a first-time director and a little known lead actor. That movie was Risky Business, and it made that little known lead actor, Tom Cruise, a bona-fide star. Avnet, wanting to make the move out of television and onto the big screen, would hire Harley Peyton, a former script reader for former Columbia Pictures and MGM/UA head David Begelman, who you might remember from several of our previous episodes, and six-time Oscar nominated producer/screenwriter Ernest Lehman. Peyton would spend weeks in Avnet's office, pouring over every page of the book, deciding what to keep, what to toss, and what to change. Two of the first things to go were the screening of a “snuff” film on the beach, and a scene where a twelve year old girl is tied to a bedpost and raped by one of the main characters. Julian would still hustle himself out to men for money to buy drugs, but Clay would a committed heterosexual. Casting on the film would see many of Hollywood's leading younger male actors looked at for Clay, including a twenty-three year old recent transplant from Oklahoma looking not only for his first leading role, but his first speaking role on screen. Brad Pitt. The producers would instead go with twenty-four year old Andrew McCarthy, an amiable-enough actor who had already made a name for himself with such films as St. Elmo's Fire and Pretty in Pink, and who would have another hit film in Mannequin between being cast as Clay and the start of production. For Blair, they would cast Jami Gertz, who had spent years on the cusp of stardom, between her co-starring role as Muffy Tepperman on the iconic 1982 CBS series Square Pegs, to movies such as Quicksilver and Crossroads that were expected to be bigger than they ended up being. The ace up her sleeve was the upcoming vampire horror/comedy film The Lost Boys, which Warner Brothers was so certain was going to be a huge hit, they would actually move it away from its original Spring 1987 release date to a prime mid-July release. The third point in the triangle, Julian, would see Robert Downey Jr. get cast. Today, it's hard to understand just how not famous Downey was at the time. He had been featured in movies like Weird Science and Tuff Turf, and spent a year as a Not Ready For Prime Time Player on what most people agree was the single worst season of Saturday Night Live, but his star was starting to rise. What the producers did not know, and Downey did not elaborate on, was that, like Julian, Downey was falling down a spiral of drug use, which would make his performance more method-like than anyone could have guessed. The Red Hot Chili Peppers, who were hot in the Los Angeles music scene but were still a couple years from the release of their breakout album, 1989's Mothers Milk, were cast to play a band in one of the party scenes, and additional cast members would include James Spader and Lisanne Falk, who would become semi-famous two years later as one of the Heathers. Impressed with a 1984 British historical drama called Another Country featuring Colin Firth, Cary Elwes and Rupert Everett, Avnet would hire that film's 35 year old director, Marek Kanievska, to make his American directing debut. But Kanievska would be in for a major culture shock when he learned just how different the American studio system was to the British production system. Shooting on the film was set to begin in Los Angeles on May 6th, 1987, and the film was already scheduled to open in theatres barely six months later. One major element that would help keep the movie moving along was cinematographer Ed Lachman. Lachman had been working as a cinematographer for nearly 15 years, and had shot movies like Jonathan Demme's Last Embrace, Susan Sideman's Desperately Seeking Susan, and David Byrne's True Stories. Lachman knew how to keep things on track for lower budgeted movies, and at only $8m, Less Than Zero was the second lowest budgeted film for Twentieth Century-Fox for the entire year. Not that having a lower budget was going to stop Kanievska and Lachman from trying make the best film they could. They would stage the film in the garish neon lighting the 80s would be best known for, with cool flairs like lighting a poolside discussion between Clay and Julian where the ripples of the water and the underwater lights create an effect on the characters' faces that highlight Julian's literal drowning in his problems. There's also one very awesome shot where Clay's convertible, parked in the middle of a street with its top down, as we see Clay and Blair making out while scores of motorcycles loudly pass by them on either side. And there's a Steadicam shot during the party scene featuring the Chili Peppers which is supposed to be out of this world, but it's likely we'll never see it. Once the film was finished shooting and Kanievska turned in his assembly cut, the studio was not happy with the film. It was edgier than they wanted, and they had a problem with the party scene with the Peppers. Specifically, that the band was jumping around on screen, extremely sweaty, without their shirts on. It also didn't help that Larry Gordon, the President of Fox who had approved the purchase of the book, had been let go before production on the film began, and his replacement, Alan Horn, who did give the final go-ahead on the film, had also been summarily dismissed. His replacement, Leonard Goldberg, really hated the material, thought it was distasteful, but Barry Diller, the chairman of the studio, was still a supporter of the project. During all this infighting, the director, Kanievska, had been released from the film. Before any test screenings. Test screenings had really become a part of the studio modus operandi in the 1980s, and Fox would often hold their test screenings on the Fox Studio Lot in Century City. There are several screenings rooms on the Fox lot, from the 53 seat William Fox Theatre, to the 476 seat Darryl Zanuck Theatre. Most of the Less Than Zero test screenings would be held in the 120 seat Little Theatre, so that audience reactions would be easier to gauge, and should they want to keep some of the audience over for a post-screening Q&A, it would be easier to recruit eight or ten audience members. That first test screening did not go over well. Even though the screening room was filled with young people between the ages of 15 and 24, and many of them were recruited from nearby malls like the Century City Mall and the Beverly Center based off a stated liking of Andrew McCarthy, they really didn't like Jami Hertz's character, and they really hated Robert Downey Jr's. Several of the harder scenes of drug use with their characters would be toned down, either through judicious editing, or new scenes were shot, such as when Blair is seen dumping her cocaine into a bathroom sink, which was filmed without a director by the cinematographer, Ed Lachman. They'd also shoot a flashback scene to the trio's high school graduation, meant to show them in happier times. The film would be completed three weeks before its November 6th release date, and Fox would book the film into 871 theatres., going up against no less than seven other new movies, including a Shelley Long comedy, Hello Again, the fourth entry in the Death Wish series, yet another Jon Cryer high school movie, Hiding Out, a weird Patrick Swayze sci-fi movie called Steel Dawn, a relatively tame fantasy romance film from Alan Rudolph called Made in Heaven, and a movie called Ruskies which starred a very young Joaquin Phoenix when he was still known as Leaf Phoenix, while also contending with movies like Fatal Attraction, Baby Boom and Dirty Dancing, which were all still doing very well two to four months in theatres. The reviews for the film were mostly bad. If there was any saving grace critically, it would be the praise heaped upon Downey for his raw performance as a drug addict, but of course, no one knew he actually was a drug addict at that time. The film would open in fourth place with $3.01m in ticket sales, less than half of what Fatal Attraction grossed that weekend, in its eighth week of release. And the following weeks' drops would be swift and merciless. Down 36% in its second week, another 41% in its third, and had one of the worst drops in its fourth week, the four day Thanksgiving holiday weekend, when many movies were up in ticket sales. By early December, the film was mostly playing in dollar houses, and by the first of the year, Fox had already stopped tracking it, with slightly less than $12.4m in tickets sold. As of the writing of this episode, at the end of November 2022, you cannot find Less Than Zero streaming anywhere, although if you do want to see it online, it's not that hard to find. But it has been available for streaming in the past on sites like Amazon Prime and The Roku Channel, so hopefully it will find its way back to streaming in the future. Or you can find a copy of the 21 year old DVD on Amazon. Thank you for listening. We'll talk again real soon, when our final episode of 2022, Episode 96, on Michael Jackson's Thriller, is released. Remember to visit this episode's page on our website, The80sMoviePodcast.com, for extra materials about Less Than Zero the movie and the novel, and its author, Bret Easton Ellis. The 80s Movies Podcast has been researched, written, narrated and edited by Edward Havens for Idiosyncratic Entertainment. Thank you again. Good night.
Harmony Baby is focussing on developing and producing baby formula that does not come from cows, nor from plants with a horrible taste and smell. Their product is over 60% comparable to a mother's milk, with a taste babies will love and will be a healthy alternative to the real thing.
Speaker: Norma Escobar, IBCLCDescription: Breastfeeding for birthing people with substance use disorders is a much debated topic. Tune in to this episode of Just Us to hear a certified lactation consultant set the story straight! You are bound to learn something new in this episode!We would appreciate if you can provide feedback by filling out the following survey:https://redcap.mahec.net/redcap/surveys/?s=XTM8T3RPNK Show Notes: Lact Med: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK501922/ MothertoBaby: https://mothertobaby.orgInfant Risk Center: https://www.infantrisk.com/
Join us for a jeopisode! Find the secret phase and send it to theguessroompodcast@gmail.com and support us on Patreon to keep us guessing!Bustin' Chops & Callin' ShotsEach week Josh and Jon sit down to give their take on travel sports and everything in...Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify Support the show
The Brothers enjoy a lovely glass (can) of Milk (Beer) and talk about songs 4-6 on the classic album, Mothers Milk.We are part of the Deep Dive Podcast Network: https://twitter.com/DeepDivePodNetFollow us on the good old socials:Twitter:Ben: https://twitter.com/universallyrhcpSam: https://twitter.com/stacktownsendInstagram:Ben: https://www.instagram.com/universallyspeakingrhcp_pod/Read ‘Me and My Friends' - The World's #1 RHCP Newsletter - Subscribe here: https://buttondown.email/rhcpsessions.Check out our Drum Ambassadors (Jack Johnson) projects here: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCdy0pbWSOg6f8vcYnngIQ0ACheck out our Bass Ambassadors (Aidan Hampson) projects here: http://aidanhampson.co.uk/Check out friend of the pod, Dan Boyd's Pop Shock Podcast - for all your pop culture needs! Audio: https://anchor.fm/popshockpod / Video: https://youtube.com/channel/UCHY5pXX_x7Kv4e8wJmHoK5AFor your vinyl needs please shop at Black Star Records: https://www.blackstarrecords.co.uk and Black Wax Coffee and Records: https://blackwaxcoffee.co.uk/
Mortal Sin: Mothers Milk | THE BRENDAN OPTION 092 by Immaculata Productions
Hi Listener, so in this Episode we discuss The Boys TV Series on Amazon Prime. Character Analysis about (M.M.) Mothers Milk, Homelander, Butcher & Soldier Boy! **(Season 3 of the Boys: So Spoiler Alerts)** --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/5amdamiendixon/message
Love it or be disgusted by it, this one pushed many boundaries and we chat all about The Boys Season 3 Episode 6 Herogasm this week. The Boys Season 3 Episode 6 Herogasm Synopsis Head Writer and Developed by - Eric Kripke Based on the comic series from Garth Ennis and Darick Robertson Executive Producers Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg. Episode written by: Jessica Chou Episode directed by: Nelson Cragg Spoiler filled Synopsis: With Crimson Countess checked off his list, Soldier Boy moves on to his next targets The TNT Twins - Tommy and Tessa. The only thing standing in his way is "Herogasm". The annual depraved supe sex party…where any hole is a goal and no supe power is off limits. Meanwhile, having learnt of the return of Soldier Boy and his involvement in the murder of Crimson Countess, Homelander and Vought try desperately to keep the truth hidden as they move against Soldier Boy. Elsewhere Nina puts Frenchie through the ringer as he tries to make him choose whether to kill Kimiko or Cherie. But even without her powers Kimiko saves them all.As Soldier Boy and a suped up Billy and Hughie scope out the party, Homelander has sent The Deep to wait for them and warn TNT; while A-Train has also arrived looking for the racist Blue Hawk, after his pleas to Ashley for justice were rebuked. Greeted at the door by Love Sausage, Starlight and Mothers Milk, soon to be covered in Mans Milk, also arrive to try to stop Soldier Boy's revenge attack on TNT and the inevitable collateral damage that will follow. Soldier Boy takes out TNT, learning that Black Noir and by extension Vought were behind the plan to take him out. In the devastating aftermath A-Train takes his own swift revenge, and Homelander arrives. Homelander faces down Soldier Boy, Billy Butcher and Hughie and almost loses the fight. Pinned down by Butcher and Hughie, and with Soldier Boy powering up, Homelander manages to escape to safety albeit bruised and shaken. As Mothers Milk and Starlight help the injured victims, Starlight speaks to her social media following telling them the truth about Vought, Homelander, Queen Maeve and Soldier Boy as she quits the Seven. Episode Cast Karl Urban as Billy ButcherJack Quaid as HughieAntony Starr as Homelander/Annie JanuaryErin Moriarty as StarlightDominique McElligott as Queen MeaveJessie T. Usher as A-TrainLaz Alonso as Mother's MilkChace Crawford as The DeepTomer Capone as FrenchieKaren Fukuhara as Kimiko MiyashiroNathan Mitchell as Black NoirColby Minifie as Ashley BarrettClaudia Doumit as Victoria NeumanJensen Ackles as Soldier BoyAnd Giancarlo Esposito as Stan Edgar The Boys Season 3 Pub Quiz During each podcast we'll ask a question about each episode in our Boys Season 3 Pub Quiz. You can send in your answers each week to feedback@tvpodcastindustries.com At the end of the eight episode series the listener with the most correct answers will be in with the chance of getting their hands on some The Boys goodies. All questions will be updated on: https://www.tvpodcastindustries.com Question 6: Why did the picture go to jail? Feedback to TV Podcast Industries We'd love to hear about your favourite moments, any thoughts, theories and Easter Eggs that you see in the episodes that we might have missed. Email us at feedback@tvpodcastindustries.com with either an MP3 recording of your thoughts or an email for each episode. Subscribe to TV Podcast Industries If you want to keep up with us and all of our podcasts please subscribe to the podcast over at https://tvpodcastindustries.com where we will continue to podcast about multiple TV shows we hope you'll love. Next Time on The Boys Podcast Thanks so much for joining us for The Boys Season 3 Episode 6 "Herogasm". We'll be back with The Boys Season 3 Episode 7 next week after it airs on Prime Video. We'll be covering lots more comics related content this month on TV Podcast Industries including Ms.
Chris returns to join Derek to chat about The Boys Season 3 Episode 2 Barbary Coast. We discuss the flashback and a new state of mind for Homelander as we go into full spoiler filled detail. The Boys Season 3 Episode 3 Barbary Coast Synopsis Head Writer and Developed by - Eric Kripke Based on the comic series from Garth Ennis and Darick Robertson Executive Producers Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg. Episode written by: Anslem Richardson and Geoff Aull Episode directed by: Julian Holmes Spoiler filled Synopsis: Following his confrontational birthday speech on live TV, Homelander's stock has gone up 21 points particularly with disaffected white males in the rust belt. But this boost has given him new confidence as popularity equals power at Vought Industries. Homelander goes against his co-captain Starlight's wishes and brings The Deep back into the Seven. But Deep has to pay his dues and show Homelander he's willing to play ball by having his octopus friend Timothy for dinner. With The Deep's return and the addition of American Hero winner Supersonic to the team, the Seven are now complete. But Homelander has one twist to announce to the public. He and Starlight are now a couple. With a clenched fist and gritted teeth Starlight goes with this new storyline. #Homelight Elsewhere Billy, Mothers Milk, Hughie and Kamiko confront Grace Mallory about her operations in Nicaragua and dealings with Soldier Boy, the former head of Payback. While Mallory was running a government sanctioned drug running operation in 1984 a young Stan Edgar brought the supe team with him as his first test of his idea for Supes in the military. When Russian forces attack Mallory's camp Edgar's test quickly fails. Untrained and untested, Payback create havok, killing half of Mallory's team and their own. Black Noir is left permanently scarred and Soldier Boy is captured, taken deep into Russian territory. As Butcher takes in the story and the seeming betrayal of Grace Mallory he recovers from his experience with V24. But his supe step son Ryan realises there is something very wrong with him as he detects Billy's faster heartbeat and smells the V in his blood. Billy lashes out pushing the boy away and telling him it's too dangerous to see him again. Meanwhile after being contacted by his old flame Cherie, Frenchie has a meeting with Russian gangster Little Nina. In exchange for keeping Cherie safe Nina wants him to work for her again. Frenchie negotiates his way out of there but Billy needs the Russian connection and forces him to go back and arrange a meeting. Episode Cast Karl Urban as Billy ButcherJack Quaid as HughieAntony Starr as HomelanderErin Moriarty as StarlightDominique McElligott as Queen MeaveJessie T. Usher as A-TrainLaz Alonso as Mother's MilkChace Crawford as The DeepTomer Capone as FrenchieKaren Fukuhara as Kimiko MiyashiroNathan Mitchell as Black NoirColby Minifie as Ashley BarrettClaudia Doumit as Victoria NeumanJensen Ackles as Soldier BoyAnd Giancarlo Esposito as Stan Edgar The Boys Season 3 Pub Quiz During each podcast we'll ask a question about each episode in our Boys Season 3 Pub Quiz. You can send in your answers each week to feedback@tvpodcastindustries.com At the end of the eight episode series the listener with the most correct answers will be in with the chance of getting their hands on some The Boys goodies. All questions will be updated on: https://www.tvpodcastindustries.com Question 3: In the camp in Nicaragua what song is being covered on the radio? This song also featured in Moon Knight. Feedback to TV Podcast Industries We'd love to hear about your favourite moments, any thoughts, theories and Easter Eggs that you see in the episodes that we might have missed. Email us at feedback@tvpodcastindustries.com with either an MP3 recording of your thoughts or an email for each episode. Subscribe to TV Podcast Industries
A new host joins Keb & St. Joe to talk about current events, Marathons, and a old friend joins for a Taco.
It's Hughie and Vas - a.k.a. Love Sausage - alone against the might of Russian Organized Crime. Meanwhile, Butcher organizes one surprise for Little Nina and an even bigger one for everyone else. Twitter: @comicrundown Instagram: @comicbookrundown Email: comicbookrundown@gmail.com Hosted by Joe Janero and Ron Hanes Edited by Joe Janero Theme song provided by one of the Sex Turtles (Joe Cubas) Find our t-shirts at Redbubble and TeePublic https://www.redbubble.com/shop/comic+book+rundown?ref=search_box http://tee.pub/lic/vBbIJZ4eLQ0c
Little Nina's backers are revealed and the Boys find something nasty in the borscht. Can Hughie finish the job alone? And is he ready for the secret of Love Sausage? Twitter: @comicrundown Instagram: @comicbookrundown Email: comicbookrundown@gmail.com Hosted by Joe Janero and Ron Hanes Edited by Joe Janero Theme song provided by one of the Sex Turtles (Joe Cubas) Find our t-shirts at Redbubble and TeePublic https://www.redbubble.com/shop/comic+book+rundown?ref=search_box http://tee.pub/lic/vBbIJZ4eLQ0c
The plot thickens as Little Nina's backers are revealed, and the Boys dig deeper into the mystery of the exploding supes. Hughie learns the delicate art of prisoner interrogation. Twitter: @comicrundown Instagram: @comicbookrundown Email: comicbookrundown@gmail.com Hosted by Joe Janero and Ron Hanes Edited by Joe Janero Theme song provided by one of the Sex Turtles (Joe Cubas) Find our t-shirts at Redbubble and TeePublic https://www.redbubble.com/shop/comic+book+rundown?ref=search_box http://tee.pub/lic/vBbIJZ4eLQ0c
The Boys travel to Moscow, where the local supes are falling foul of a mysterious and violent enemy. An old ally awaits our heroes in the former Soviet Union - and with the brutal Russian mafia involved, they'll need all the help they can get. Twitter: @comicrundown Instagram: @comicbookrundown Email: comicbookrundown@gmail.com Hosted by Joe Janero and Ron Hanes Edited by Joe Janero Theme song provided by one of the Sex Turtles (Joe Cubas) Find our t-shirts at Redbubble and TeePublic https://www.redbubble.com/shop/comic+book+rundown?ref=search_box http://tee.pub/lic/vBbIJZ4eLQ0c
Hughie has pieced together the mysterious death of a young man, and a super-human is to blame... but is apprehension of the culprit going to be possible? Twitter: @comicrundown Instagram: @comicbookrundown Email: comicbookrundown@gmail.com Hosted by Joe Janero and Ron Hanes Edited by Joe Janero Theme song provided by one of the Sex Turtles (Joe Cubas) Find our t-shirts at Redbubble and TeePublic https://www.redbubble.com/shop/comic+book+rundown?ref=search_box http://tee.pub/lic/vBbIJZ4eLQ0c
The game is afootas Hughie and Butcher's murder investigation delves deeper into the Tek Knight's background. The deeper they dig, though, the bigger the mystery. Twitter: @comicrundown Instagram: @comicbookrundown Email: comicbookrundown@gmail.com Hosted by Joe Janero and Ron Hanes Edited by Joe Janero Theme song provided by one of the Sex Turtles (Joe Cubas) Find our t-shirts at Redbubble and TeePublic https://www.redbubble.com/shop/comic+book+rundown?ref=search_box http://tee.pub/lic/vBbIJZ4eLQ0c
The Legend has The Boys investigating the murder of a relative, apparently at the hands of a super... but the winding trail will take many turns, and all roads lead to the Tek Knight! Twitter: @comicrundown Instagram: @comicbookrundown Email: comicbookrundown@gmail.com Hosted by Joe Janero and Ron Hanes Edited by Joe Janero Theme song provided by one of the Sex Turtles (Joe Cubas) Find our t-shirts at Redbubble and TeePublic https://www.redbubble.com/shop/comic+book+rundown?ref=search_box http://tee.pub/lic/vBbIJZ4eLQ0c
The series continues as Butcher takes Wee Hughie to meet the Boys' greatest weapon against the Supes: a man called 'The Legend.' Plus, meet the troubled hero Tek Knight. Twitter: @comicrundown Instagram: @comicbookrundown Email: comicbookrundown@gmail.com Hosted by Joe Janero and Ron Hanes Edited by Joe Janero Theme song provided by one of the Sex Turtles (Joe Cubas) Find our t-shirts at Redbubble and TeePublic https://www.redbubble.com/shop/comic+book+rundown?ref=search_box http://tee.pub/lic/vBbIJZ4eLQ0c
This episode has been a long time coming...and not just because human infants feeding on mothers' milk has been a thing since the dawn of time (ish)! This week, Jenn sits down with Marie Van Blaricum, founder and CEO of Milk & Fire, to debunk the myths of this very human experience. From her own challenges of an infant with food allergies to the Covid-19 pandemic and more, Jenn and Marie answer your burning questions—the ones moms google at 2am. Whether you had your kids already, may have kids in the future or simply know people with the potential to birth babies, listen in. It's another area of women's health discussed too little. Until now... Outline:Welcome back & intro today's topicMeet Marie Van Blaricum, founder & CEO of Milk & FireMarie's storyThe lack of research & information for postpartum momsWhy we don't have research to answer our questionsProfitChallenges of controlled environmentsLack of support for postpartum women in the USGender disparity in scienceMajor myths around breastfeeding & mothers' milkDiet & diet's ability to increase supplySupply changes throughout the day & baby waking at night"It should be easy"Our best source of informationA pressure to breastfeedFormula as a really important inventionThe movement toward formula in the 1980s Working momsIntergenerational supportAnswers for the 2am Google searchNutrient transfer to babyAntibodies transfer to baby generally and with Covid-19Burning calories from breastfeedingWhat to expect for supply & what questions to ask the pediatricianStorage & shelf-lifeFear of suffocating babyHow long a nursing session can takeFor how long to keep breastmilk as part of a child's nutrition?Managing expectationsBreastmilk banks, donating & moreThe mission of Milk & FireWhat to track in this new yearHow we're taught to cope with emotions...by eatingThe emotional pantryWhat it isPast beliefsCurrent triggersThe way you view foodShifting the powerTriggers, learned habits, current circumstancesDismantling "what I eat is who I am"Tools to clean your emotional pantryStarting pointThe path - trial & error, journaling, photosReplacing negative thoughtsThe bird perspectiveHow to believe you know your body bestLinks:Become a MemberConnect with us! FB Page & Private FB Group & Jenn's InstagramTake the free Weight Loss Profile, Jenn will send you a Menu PlanMilk & Fire on IG, FB, & WebsiteQuotes:"It's endemic in the US, being ill-informed about postpartum, postpartum health and especially about breastfeeding ." – Marie Van Blaricum"52% of maternal deaths happen up to a year postpartum and 2/3 of those deaths are considered preventable causes." – Marie Van Blaricum"Every baby and mother's relationship is different and it's not necessarily easy." – Marie Van Blaricum"This is a personal choice between you and your child. Every situation is different." – Marie Van Blaricum"Breastmilk composition changes when the baby is ill or fighting something off." – Marie Van Blaricum"Nursing moms are athletes!" – Marie Van Blaricum "Let your body lead the way." – Marie Van Blaricum"There's a national shortage of mothers' milk...it's not just food, it's medicine." – Marie Van Blaricum
This time around we get to meet our favourite Mofo, Mothers Milk, after we discuss Hughie's surprisingly clean clothes. Find us on Twitter: @rantsmono, Instagram: MonoRants_The_Boys or send your own rants to monorantspodcast@gmail.com
Welcome and say hello to Adrianna first-time mom lifetime friend. We talk about her journey into motherhood and all of her experiences. From miscarriage to what she is hoping to accomplish as a mom.
On this week's episode of the Speaker Geekers Podcast, Tommy T and StevoSteve hold it down for the silent G as they interview the host of the new podcast “Mothers Milk”. Join StevoSteve and Tommy T as the discuss Mother’s Milk with Artieka and Krystal. They take a deep dive into what the new show will focus on, how it came about, and the importance of Motherhood and Breastfeeding. We also look at what’s been in everyone’s speakers and the news for the week. Please like, share, subscribe, comment, and most importantly enjoy.
The boys go down the rabbit hole that is our fellow man and now that we've been locked down to be let out, well there's a lot to behold folks. Take a ride on the Sticks & Stones bus cause shit's about to get crazy Thank you to all those have been on this ride we've reached double digits and we aren't stopping anytime soon! THANK YOU Good Suspected poacher killed by elephants at South African national park https://abcnews.go.com/International/suspected-poacher-killed-elephants-south-african-national-park/story?id=77151086&cid=clicksource_4380645_5_three_posts_card_hed Bad She out here spraying WHAT https://www.ladbible.com/news/viral-bizarre-video-shows-woman-spraying-her-breast-milk-around-at-festival-20210416 Casino gets hacked through a fish tank? https://www.entrepreneur.com/article/368943 Heart failure in a can BAYYYBAYYY https://news.sky.com/story/21-year-old-suffered-heart-failure-after-having-four-cans-of-energy-drink-every-day-for-two-years-12276705 Ugly https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/teacher-killed-old-western-shootout-after-trying-rob-mexican-drug-n1264151?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=news_tab&utm_content=algorithm FYF https://www.reddit.com/r/PublicFreakout/comments/mtu80j/a_pointsman_in_mumbai_division_india_mayur/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3 Q&A Would you rather have a golden voice or a silver tongue? Would you rather be married to a 10 with a bad personality or a 6 with an amazing personality? Would you rather have edible spaghetti hair that regrows every night or sweat maple syrup? Would you rather there be a perpetual water balloon war going on in your city/town or a perpetual food fight? --- 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/sticksstonespodcast/message
You guys don't read this nonsense anyway, so why bother... We talk about stuff, so just listen and take a ride babyyy! Go down the rabbit hole
Jannette Festival and her team at NorthernStar have created a real community in Calgary, in Alberta and across Canada comprised of hospital and healthcare workers, mothers and infants that benefit from breast milk that otherwise would not have been readily available had she not taken the decision to pivot from her career in oil and gas. The serendipity of her decision to get a nursing degree led Jannette to work at the Foothills Hospital which lead her to visit a milk bank facility in Austin, Texas to finding mothers to donate their milk. There are a few other stages in between that Jannette shared during our chat. To find out more about the NorthernStar Mothers Milk Bank, click on one or more of the links below: §§§ NorthernStar Mothers Milk Bank website | https://www.northernstarmilkbank.ca/ NorthernStar Mothers Milk Bank on Instagram | @northernstarmilkbank NorthernStar Mothers Milk Bank on LinkedIn | https://www.linkedin.com/company/northernstar-mothers-milk-bank/ §§§ Jannette Festival on LinkedIn | https://www.linkedin.com/in/jannette-festival-7b4a9391/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/allen-wazny/message
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Links Instagram Twitter Facebook Our Website
Stone the crows! Lily and Hannah chat Gen-X golden gods, rock heroes and an classic ingenues in this episode of the podcast, all wrapped up in the charming, cheeky and cheerful letter C! It's like, so dope. Whatever. Cameron Crowe, Fast Times at Ridgemont High, 1982, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Pheobe Cates, Judge Reinhold, Sean Penn, Jackson Browne, Somebody's Baby, Led Zeppelin, Kashmir, Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers, American Girl, No Doubt, Just a Girl, Tragic Kingdom 1995, The Mighty Mighty Bosstones, Someday I Suppose, Radiohead, Fake Plastic Trees, The Bends 1995, The Eagles, Life in the Fast Lane, Hotel California 1976, Guns N' Roses, Paradise City, Appetite for Destruction 1987, David Newman, Back to School, Heathers 1989, Can't Hardly Wait, The Replacements, Pleased to Meet Me 1987, Can't Hardly Wait 1998, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Taste The Pain, Mothers Milk 1989, Coolio, Rollin' With My Homies, Almost Famous 2000, Kate Hudson, Billy Crudup, Patrick Fugit, Jason Lee, Todd Rundgren, It Wouldn't Have Made Any Difference, Aerosmith, Cryin', Get A Grip 1993, Living Colour, Cult of Personality, Pride 1988, Stillwater, Feverdog, Allman Brothers Band, One Way Out, 1971, Clueless 1995,Brittany Murphy, Stacey Dash, Alicia Silverstone, Paul Rudd, Donald Faison, Breckin Meyer, Jeremy Piven, Twink Caplan, Amy Heckerling, Soundtrack --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/societyowesmeagenxpodcast/message
Mothers Milk enters the scene, Sparks fly between Hughie and Annie, heads explode, and Compound-V is bad mmmk.