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The summit in Beijing produced a "constructive strategic stability" framework and a warming of tone between the two presidents. But heads of state can announce a multi-year horizon; somebody else has to operationalize it. Does the United States have the people — the linguists, the regional experts, the long-haul institution-builders — to do that work?This week, I chatted with two Texans answering that question from very different directions. David Firestein is the inaugural president and CEO of the George H.W. Bush Foundation for U.S.-China Relations in Houston. A career State Department officer who served four administrations and spent five years in Beijing, he's one of the few Americans concurrently affiliated with both a Republican and a Democratic presidential legacy institution. Eddie Conger is a retired Marine major and the founder and superintendent of International Leadership of Texas (IL Texas) — a public charter network of 26 campuses serving 26,000 K-12 students and now the largest K-12 Chinese language program in the country. In January, IL Texas became the first-ever K-12 recipient of the Bush China Foundation's George H.W. Bush Award for Educational Excellence in U.S.-China Relations, joining past honorees including Jimmy Carter and Henry Kissinger.The conversation tackles what David calls the Texas paradox: the same state that just forced its cities to dissolve their sister-city ties with China, that pioneered the closure of Confucius Institutes, and that has restricted Chinese land purchases is also where the country's deepest K-12 Mandarin pipeline is taking root — and where the most institutionally Texan China foundation has chosen to plant its flag. David and Eddie talk through engagement honestly (no straw-man Jeffersonian-democracy fantasies), the erroneous strategic assumptions undergirding U.S. China policy, what real national-language capacity would look like operationally, what they each saw in the Trump–Xi summit, and what 5,000 IL Texas graduates are already doing in the world.05:40 — Eddie's path: Marine infantryman to fifth-grade math teacher to the country's largest K-12 Mandarin program09:12 — David on when the Nixon-through-Obama engagement consensus broke (fall 2017) and how the lexicon shifted13:30 — Engagement honestly defined: what its architects actually believed vs. the Jeffersonian-democracy straw man18:30 — The Texas paradox: HB 128, sister cities, Confucius Institutes — and the country's biggest Mandarin program in the same state31:26 — Texas business, Tim Dunn, faith, and the gap between political rhetoric and where Texans actually are41:54 — The Defense Department safety/security story: when one Chinese word ate an entire bilateral agreement46:16 — David's six (or seven) erroneous strategic assumptions: China doesn't want to be us, and it has benefited more than anyone from the current order52:28 — What real national-language capacity would actually look like: NSLI, WALARA, and why the pipeline still runs through one Marine major in Texas01:06:07 — Reading the Beijing summit: the warmth, the "constructive strategic stability" framing, and whether Trump's Taiwan call could blow it all up01:17:10 — Where 5,000 IL Texas graduates are now — White House interns, service academies, doctors, entrepreneurs, and one high-schooler who pulled a stranger out of the surfPaying it ForwardEddie: Carlos Carrasco; Emily, who is heading to Taiwan this fall on a one-year high-school program; and another student bound for the University of Texas at Austin who will be sent to South Korea for a semester as a freshman — a rarity at UT. And he closes with Miles, a high-school senior and Marine scholarship recipient who, just weeks ago at a national competition in Florida, heard someone screaming for help in the ocean, called for a boogie board, and swam out to save a drowning swimmer while a crowd of adults stood on the beach. "Others before self," as Eddie puts it — the IL Texas mission statement made flesh.David:Frank Zhou, who just graduated from Harvard and chaired the Harvard College China Forum; Selina Gong, a recent graduate of the Harvard Kennedy School involved in its annual China conference; and Dean Dai, a recent graduate of Columbia's SIPA who has been deeply involved in many of the most significant student-run China conferences in the country — and who, as it turns out, was one of the organizers of the University of Chicago U.S.-China Economy and Business Summit where Kaiser spoke earlier this month.Recommendations:Eddie: John Pomfret, The Beautiful Country and the Middle Kingdom: America and China, 1776 to the Present (Henry Holt, 2016)David: Stephen Roach, Accidental Conflict: America, China, and the Clash of False Narratives (Yale, 2022)Kaiser: David Grann, The Wager: A Tale of Shipwreck, Mutiny and Murder (Doubleday, 2023)Also mentioned: Stephen R. Platt, The Raider: The Untold Story of a Renegade Marine and the Birth of U.S. Special Forces in World War II (Knopf, 2024) See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Brit almost caused mutiny at a lovely wedding and we have celebrity gossip we are dying to tell you aboutSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
This powerful exploration of Judges 13-15 confronts us with one of Scripture's most challenging paradoxes: how God accomplishes His sovereign purposes even through deeply flawed people living in spiritual darkness. We encounter Samson, a man gifted by God yet consumed by self-interest, operating in a time when Israel had become so assimilated with their Philistine oppressors that they couldn't be distinguished from them. Using the vivid metaphor of a mutinous ship, we see how God remains at the helm of human history even when His own people have joined the rebellion. What's remarkable is that God doesn't wait for repentance or invitation—He intervenes with scandalous grace, raising up Samson not as a moral exemplar but as a catalyst for separation. This teaches us that giftedness doesn't equal spiritual maturity, and that God's faithfulness transcends our faithfulness. We're challenged to examine our own lives: Have we become so assimilated to the world around us that there's no distinction? Are we exercising spiritual gifts while lacking the fruit of the Spirit—love, joy, peace, patience, and kindness? Samson's story reminds us that only Jesus is the true hero of Scripture, and that our hope rests not in human strength but in God's relentless commitment to His redemptive plan.ChaptersChapter 1: Understanding God's Sovereignty and Human Free Will0:00 - 20:49We explore the challenging tension between God's sovereignty and human free will through the metaphor of a mutinous ship, setting the stage for understanding Samson's story.Chapter 2: The Miraculous Birth of a Consecrated Judge20:49 - 32:30We witness God's uninvited intervention through the miraculous announcement of Samson's birth and his designation as a lifelong Nazirite set apart for God's purposes.Chapter 3: Samson's Rebellion and God's Unlikely Strategy32:30 - 45:12We see Samson repeatedly violate his Nazirite vow through pursuing a Philistine woman, yet God uses even this sinful rebellion to create the confrontation needed to separate Israel from the Philistines.Chapter 4: Escalating Violence and Israel's Betrayal45:12 - 54:05We witness Samson's rage escalate into arson and mass slaughter, culminating in his own people betraying him to the Philistines, revealing how deeply Israel has assimilated.Chapter 5: Gifts Without Fruit: The Warning of Samson54:05 - 59:18We learn the sobering lesson that God can gift someone powerfully while they display zero fruit of the Spirit, pointing us to our need for Jesus and genuine spiritual maturity.
The Trump administration's push for a $1.8 billion “anti-weaponization” fund derailed Senate Republicans' plans to pass the president's priority immigration enforcement package Thursday. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Mutiny in the GOP. A remarkable moment as Trump's own party en masse stand up to him over his $1.8 billion anti-weaponization fund. Is this a turning point? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Former chief steward and union organizer Gordon Simmons joins Michael Stauch to discuss his new book on the history of labor struggles by public sector workers in West Virginia since 1969. With an emphasis on rank-and-file rebellion expressed through wildcat strikes and other job actions, Simmons provides a sweeping account of the past that has rich lessons for the present. Highlights include: ● A discussion of wildcat strikes and why West Virginia's public sector workers waged them, again and again, in this period; ● How a teacher wearing blue jeans sparked a battle over expressions of the counterculture in workplaces across West Virginia; ● Why New Democrats like Joe Manchin sided against rank-and-file rebellion among public sector workers in Virginia; ● How West Virginia public school teachers in 2018 used Facebook to organize a walkout that defied the union and won significant concessions from the state; ● The joy of participating in “collective hell-raising” with co-workers and friends. Guest: Gordon Simmons is a retired union organizer and president of the West Virginia Labor History Association. He is now employed as an investigator for the Human Rights Commission for the state of West Virginia and as an adjunct professor in philosophy at Marshall University. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
Former chief steward and union organizer Gordon Simmons joins Michael Stauch to discuss his new book on the history of labor struggles by public sector workers in West Virginia since 1969. With an emphasis on rank-and-file rebellion expressed through wildcat strikes and other job actions, Simmons provides a sweeping account of the past that has rich lessons for the present. Highlights include: ● A discussion of wildcat strikes and why West Virginia's public sector workers waged them, again and again, in this period; ● How a teacher wearing blue jeans sparked a battle over expressions of the counterculture in workplaces across West Virginia; ● Why New Democrats like Joe Manchin sided against rank-and-file rebellion among public sector workers in Virginia; ● How West Virginia public school teachers in 2018 used Facebook to organize a walkout that defied the union and won significant concessions from the state; ● The joy of participating in “collective hell-raising” with co-workers and friends. Guest: Gordon Simmons is a retired union organizer and president of the West Virginia Labor History Association. He is now employed as an investigator for the Human Rights Commission for the state of West Virginia and as an adjunct professor in philosophy at Marshall University. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/history
In this episode of the ProductLed Podcast, Wes Bush and Esben Friis-Jensen sit down with Jaleh Rezaei, co-founder and CEO of Mutiny, to unpack one of the boldest founder moves you'll hear this year. After building Mutiny into an eight-figure ARR SaaS company, Jaleh made the rare decision to shut down most of the original business and rebuild around AI agents. She shares why trying to run both a traditional SaaS company and an AI-native company at the same time created constant friction, slowed the team down, and made it impossible to move at the pace the market demanded. Jaleh walks through how she made the call, what gave her confidence to follow through, and what the first 90 days of the pivot actually looked like. That includes shrinking the team, moving to a smaller in-person setup, carefully migrating customers, and rebuilding company culture around speed, customer obsession, and founder-level context. The conversation also dives into why Mutiny shifted from sales-led to product-led growth, how self-serve products expose weaknesses faster, and why “showing” value beats explaining it, especially in AI. Jaleh also shares her view on what still counts as defensible in AI, why experience generation and analytics matter more than basic data movement, and how she personally uses AI across recruiting, meeting prep, and writing support. It's a candid look at conviction, timing, and what it really takes to rebuild for the next wave. Key Highlights: 01:41 - Why She Left 8-Figure ARR Behind Jaleh explains why combining a SaaS business with an AI-native business created roadmap, pricing, and execution conflicts that made a harder pivot inevitable. 05:01 - The Gut Check Behind a High-Stakes Pivot How she built conviction for a risky decision, what made “moving as fast as possible” the real north star, and the advice she gives founders facing the same choice. 11:13 - Reframing the Pivot as Mission, Not Failure Why walking away from a successful product did not feel like giving up, and how first-principles thinking helped her reconnect the company to its original vision. 15:05 - The First 90 Days of the Transition A behind-the-scenes look at shrinking the team, getting back to a small in-person setup, and creating the conditions needed to find product-market fit again. 17:01 - How Mutiny Migrated Customers Gracefully The detailed playbook for protecting customer trust during the transition, from partner selection and pricing negotiations to white-glove migration support. 23:03 - Building a Team for Startup Intensity Again How Jaleh thought about team size, in-office culture, and the level of intensity required to compete in the current AI market. 25:58 - What Founders Must Stop Delegating Pre-PMF Why founders need direct exposure to customer calls, onboarding, pricing conversations, and product friction if they want to move fast and make better decisions. 32:12 - Why the New Mutiny Had to Be Product-Led Jaleh shares why self-serve makes products better, how AI products benefit from instant hands-on proof, and why PLG also improved the sales-led motion. 40:22 - What a Real AI Moat Looks Like Her take on defensibility in AI, why simple data workflows will get commoditized, and why Mutiny is focused on experience generation, analytics, and self-improving systems. 45:15 - Jaleh's Highest-Leverage AI Workflows The practical ways she uses AI today across recruiting, meeting prep, and writing optimization, plus why she still believes strong writing needs a human point of view. Resources:
Former chief steward and union organizer Gordon Simmons joins Michael Stauch to discuss his new book on the history of labor struggles by public sector workers in West Virginia since 1969. With an emphasis on rank-and-file rebellion expressed through wildcat strikes and other job actions, Simmons provides a sweeping account of the past that has rich lessons for the present. Highlights include: ● A discussion of wildcat strikes and why West Virginia's public sector workers waged them, again and again, in this period; ● How a teacher wearing blue jeans sparked a battle over expressions of the counterculture in workplaces across West Virginia; ● Why New Democrats like Joe Manchin sided against rank-and-file rebellion among public sector workers in Virginia; ● How West Virginia public school teachers in 2018 used Facebook to organize a walkout that defied the union and won significant concessions from the state; ● The joy of participating in “collective hell-raising” with co-workers and friends. Guest: Gordon Simmons is a retired union organizer and president of the West Virginia Labor History Association. He is now employed as an investigator for the Human Rights Commission for the state of West Virginia and as an adjunct professor in philosophy at Marshall University. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/american-studies
Former chief steward and union organizer Gordon Simmons joins Michael Stauch to discuss his new book on the history of labor struggles by public sector workers in West Virginia since 1969. With an emphasis on rank-and-file rebellion expressed through wildcat strikes and other job actions, Simmons provides a sweeping account of the past that has rich lessons for the present. Highlights include: ● A discussion of wildcat strikes and why West Virginia's public sector workers waged them, again and again, in this period; ● How a teacher wearing blue jeans sparked a battle over expressions of the counterculture in workplaces across West Virginia; ● Why New Democrats like Joe Manchin sided against rank-and-file rebellion among public sector workers in Virginia; ● How West Virginia public school teachers in 2018 used Facebook to organize a walkout that defied the union and won significant concessions from the state; ● The joy of participating in “collective hell-raising” with co-workers and friends. Guest: Gordon Simmons is a retired union organizer and president of the West Virginia Labor History Association. He is now employed as an investigator for the Human Rights Commission for the state of West Virginia and as an adjunct professor in philosophy at Marshall University. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Former chief steward and union organizer Gordon Simmons joins Michael Stauch to discuss his new book on the history of labor struggles by public sector workers in West Virginia since 1969. With an emphasis on rank-and-file rebellion expressed through wildcat strikes and other job actions, Simmons provides a sweeping account of the past that has rich lessons for the present. Highlights include: ● A discussion of wildcat strikes and why West Virginia's public sector workers waged them, again and again, in this period; ● How a teacher wearing blue jeans sparked a battle over expressions of the counterculture in workplaces across West Virginia; ● Why New Democrats like Joe Manchin sided against rank-and-file rebellion among public sector workers in Virginia; ● How West Virginia public school teachers in 2018 used Facebook to organize a walkout that defied the union and won significant concessions from the state; ● The joy of participating in “collective hell-raising” with co-workers and friends. Guest: Gordon Simmons is a retired union organizer and president of the West Virginia Labor History Association. He is now employed as an investigator for the Human Rights Commission for the state of West Virginia and as an adjunct professor in philosophy at Marshall University. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
On this week's show, our panel of Dana, Steve, and Sam Adams are on the case. The case: is the movie Sheep Detectives a real movie and is it any good? The answer: it's a star-studded cozy murder mystery based on a best-selling book about ungulate sleuths… and yeah, it might just be the surprise word-of-mouth delight of the season. Next, they take up the proverbial conch shell to assess Lord of Flies, the new Netflix limited series adaptation of William Golding's classic novel from the creator of Adolescence.Finally, they're joined by longtime Slate book reviewer Laura Miller who understandably has some thoughts and feelings about the recent piece by New York Times book critic Dwight Garner “Where Have All the Book Reviews Gone?”In an exclusive bonus episode for Slate Plus subscribers, Laura sticks around to report back from her viewing of the strange mess that is the new Animal Farm adaptation.EndorsementsLaura: The new book by philosopher and polymath C. Thi Nguyen The Score: How To Stop Playing Somebody Else's Game. Steve: The music of the Brazilian recording artist Sessa and the chamber music piece Quartet for the End of Time by Olivier Messiaen.Sam: The Wager: A Tale of Shipwreck, Mutiny and Murder by David Grann.Dana: The audiobook Patrick Stewart Performs the Complete Sonnets of William Shakespeare. --Email us your thoughts at culturefest@slate.com. Podcast production by Benjamin Frisch. Production assistance by Daniel Hirsch. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
On this week's show, our panel of Dana, Steve, and Sam Adams are on the case. The case: is the movie Sheep Detectives a real movie and is it any good? The answer: it's a star-studded cozy murder mystery based on a best-selling book about ungulate sleuths… and yeah, it might just be the surprise word-of-mouth delight of the season. Next, they take up the proverbial conch shell to assess Lord of Flies, the new Netflix limited series adaptation of William Golding's classic novel from the creator of Adolescence.Finally, they're joined by longtime Slate book reviewer Laura Miller who understandably has some thoughts and feelings about the recent piece by New York Times book critic Dwight Garner “Where Have All the Book Reviews Gone?”In an exclusive bonus episode for Slate Plus subscribers, Laura sticks around to report back from her viewing of the strange mess that is the new Animal Farm adaptation.EndorsementsLaura: The new book by philosopher and polymath C. Thi Nguyen The Score: How To Stop Playing Somebody Else's Game. Steve: The music of the Brazilian recording artist Sessa and the chamber music piece Quartet for the End of Time by Olivier Messiaen.Sam: The Wager: A Tale of Shipwreck, Mutiny and Murder by David Grann.Dana: The audiobook Patrick Stewart Performs the Complete Sonnets of William Shakespeare. --Email us your thoughts at culturefest@slate.com. Podcast production by Benjamin Frisch. Production assistance by Daniel Hirsch. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Laura does the homework. Xhafer asks: "Baltar or Baby Shark?" This episode covers Battlestar Galactica Season 4, Episode 5: The Road Less Traveled.Discord: https://discord.gg/MUHKDDk6TNMerch: https://www.etsy.com/shop/WhatHappenedHerePods
On his final expedition in 1611, while still searching for the Northwest Passage, Henry Hudson became the first European to see the Hudson Strait and the immense Hudson Bay in Northern Canada, but then suddenly, most of his crew mutinied. Why? E220. Check out the YouTube version of this episode at https://youtu.be/iKDHWqSGLos which has accompanying visuals including maps, charts, timelines, photos, illustrations, and diagrams. Mark Vinet's HISTORICAL JESUS podcast is available at https://parthenonpodcast.com/historical-jesus Henry Hudson books available at https://amzn.to/3NkPW2a Hudson River books available at https://amzn.to/4363ogx Hudson's Bay books available at https://amzn.to/46n5V8Q ENJOY Ad-Free content, Bonus episodes, and Extra materials when joining our growing community on https://patreon.com/markvinet SUPPORT this channel by purchasing any product on Amazon using this FREE entry LINK https://amzn.to/3POlrUD (Amazon gives us credit at NO extra charge to you). Mark Vinet's HISTORICAL JESUS podcast at https://parthenonpodcast.com/historical-jesus Mark's TIMELINE video channel: https://youtube.com/c/TIMELINE_MarkVinet Website: https://markvinet.com/podcast Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mark.vinet.9 X (Twitter): https://twitter.com/MarkVinet_HNA Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/denarynovels Mark's books: https://amzn.to/3k8qrGM GONE podcast: An Explorer Adrift - Henry Hudson at (Parcast, Spotify Studios) https://open.spotify.com/show/1P5ywuAliiRdTKbZPTvf2p Audio excerpts reproduced under the Fair Use (Fair Dealings) Legal Doctrine for purposes such as criticism, comment, teaching, education, scholarship, research and news reporting. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Washington state Democrats feel hopeful, some are talking about winning a two-thirds supermajority, a real longshot this year. But first: they will look to fend off attacks from inside their own party.Thank you to the supporters of KUOW, you help make this show possible. If you want to help out, go to https://www.kuow.org/donate/soundpolitics/.Sound Politics is a production of KUOW in Seattle, a proud member of the NPR Network. Our editor is Catharine Smith. Our producer is Hans Anderson. Our hosts are Libby Denkmann and Scott Greenstone.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Send us Fan MailOh Heck! It's Hell Beach! Manchester (New Hampshire) minstrels Hell Beach are under the microscope this week.Their top boy, Jordan has visited MLPP towers to share their 2024 record "Beach World" with you all as well as discussing such diverse topics as: songs being bleeped unnecessarily, Manchester NH punk rock deep cuts, Keytars, bad high school memories and festivals. Once again, apologies to people from Blackpool, but it is a shithole, you can't argue with that.Tom and Danny Barrett tackle more key issues such as amateur chiropody, trips to the big cinema and excitement about future guests.Music is from Mad Tab, Mutiny!, Bad Religion, The Dawarves and Terror (Feat. Hot Water Music)
Keir Starmer has endured another bruising day as the saga surrounding Peter Mandelson's appointment as US ambassador continues. The prime minister faced harsh criticism from his own MPs over his efforts to stave off a privileges committee investigation, while his former chief of staff Morgan McSweeney admitted putting pressure on the foreign office to expedite Mandelson's posting in highly anticipated evidence to a parliamentary committee. So how much peril is the prime minister in? Lucy Hough speaks to policy editor and host of Politics Weekly, Kiran Stacey. Help support our independent journalism at theguardian.com/infocus
On this day, 28 April 1789, Fletcher Christian led the mutiny on the Royal Navy ship the Bounty against the bullying and oppressive Captain William Bligh. The crew seized control of the ship and set Bligh and 18 of his supporters adrift, who famously survived. Some of the mutineers were captured, but others eventually settled with some Polynesians they effectively enslaved in the previously unpopulated Pitcairn Islands, where their descendants live to this day. Later, the Polynesians would revolt against the mutineers.More information, sources and map: https://stories.workingclasshistory.com/article/9969/mutiny-on-the-bountyOur work is only possible because of support from you, our listeners on patreon. If you appreciate our work, please join us and access exclusive content and benefits at patreon.com/workingclasshistory.See all of our anniversaries each day, alongside sources and maps on the On This Day section of our Stories app: stories.workingclasshistory.com/date/todayBrowse all Stories by Date here on the Date index: https://stories.workingclasshistory.com/dateCheck out our Map of historical Stories: https://map.workingclasshistory.comCheck out books, posters, clothing and more in our online store, here: https://shop.workingclasshistory.comIf you enjoy this podcast, make sure to check out our flagship longform podcast, Working Class History
One of the greatest feats of navigation in history
National Superhero day. Entertainment from 1988. Maryland became 7th state, Mutiny on the Bounty happened, 1st free fall parachute jump. Todays birthdays - James Monroe, Oskar Schindler, Ann-Margret, Marcia Strassman, Jay Leno, Mary McDonnell, Bridget Moynahan, Jorge Garcia, Penelope Cruz, Jessica Alba. Jim Valvano died.Intro - God did good - Dianna Corcoran https://www.diannacorcoran.com/I am superman - REMWhere do broken hearts go - Whitney HoustonIt's such a small world - Rodney Crowell Rosanne CashBirthday - The BeatlesBirthdays - In da club - 50 Cent http://50cent.com/I just don't undeerstand - Ann-MargretGroovy world of Jack & Jill - Marcia StrassmanExit - Aint nothin else to do - Pat Waters https://www.patwaters.com/History & Factoids about today Playlist on SpotifyHistory & Factoids about today webpagecooolmedia.comcountryundergroundradio.com
AI Unraveled: Latest AI News & Trends, Master GPT, Gemini, Generative AI, LLMs, Prompting, GPT Store
Send us Fan MailIt's calm seas and second helpings of strawberries this week as the TGTPTU boys cover their third of four curated Edward Dmytryk films, the multiple Oscar-nominated picture THE CAINE MUTINY (1954). Saving its then “issues” producer (and subsequent to this movie an issues director) Stanley Kramer's bacon, Dmytryk delivered a bona fide hit picture adapting the already popular book by Herman Wouk about a fictional mutiny during WWII among American seaman upon the titular Caine. Deviating from the Broadway courtroom play starring Henry Fonda (who'll show up in next week's Dmytryk film), the movie hews closer to the novel depicting on screen and in glorious Technicolor events aboard the ship leading to the mutiny, leaving the theatrical adaptation's courtroom drama for the third act. The movie would also add Yosemite National Park as a romantic getaway between its Ivy League, very mid, blonde protagonist and POV character Ensign Willie Keith played by a now relatively unknown Robert Francis who died tragically at age 25 after a plane crash and his character's fiancée May Wynn played by May Wynn who changed her stage name to that of her character on the recommendation of Kramer. And for more on the plot, there's IMDB, Wikipedia, and further resources on the World Wide Web if you don't have a great-grandpa around to ask. The film would have seven Academy Awards nominations and no wins, with Bogart losing out to Brando (and Kramer to Spiegel) for On the Waterfront. This episode Ken and his metaphor get sweaty towards the ep's end; Ryan reveals the thuggish life of Joan Didion; and Gen Z'ers Jack and Thomas settle the TGTPTU style guide dispute over how to pronounce “gif.” And now for an important announcement:Despite what your lying ears have heard, there has never been a recorded mutiny on TGTPTU. The truths of each episode lie not in their incidents, but in the way these three hosts in the battle for the Pacific Northwest meet the crisis of their lives. Now sound the Star Trek Original Series whistle, we're coming onboard. THEME SONG BY: WEIRD A.I.Email: thegoodthepodandtheugly@gmail.comFacebook: https://m.facebook.com/TGTPTUInstagram: https://instagram.com/thegoodthepodandtheugly?igshid=um92md09kjg0Bluesky: @goodpodugly.bsky.socialYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC6mI2plrgJu-TB95bbJCW-gLetterboxd (follow us!):Podcast: goodpoduglyKen: Ken KoralRyan: Ryan Tobias
Send us Fan MailIn this sixteenth episode, Jackson, Lunar, Eek, and Jason discuss homebrewing adventures.Audio Credits:"Undercover Vampire Policeman" by Chris Zabriskie is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Source: http://chriszabriskie.com/uvp/Artist: http://chriszabriskie.com/Thanks for listening! You can find us on Twitter @25northpodcastYou can join our Discord community with this invite code "nBTZzTGZdA"You can send us an email at 25northpodcast@gmail.com if you wish
For decades, Americans were promised that a college degree guaranteed a secure spot in the middle class. But instead of entering corporate management, many graduates are finding themselves trapped in low-paying service roles with crippling debt. Is this widening gap between expectations and financial realities fundamentally reshaping the modern American workforce? New York Times reporter Noam Scheiber joins the podcast to unpack the core arguments of his new book “Mutiny: The Rise and Revolt of the College-Educated Working Class” about this labor shift. He argues that the psychological injury of these broken promises is sparking a unique wave of workplace activism. The systemic failure of the college wage premium poses urgent questions for the future of American capitalism. If millions of highly educated citizens feel cheated by the system, the resulting political and economic destabilization could be severe. Subscribe to our Youtube Channel Follow Capitalisn't on Instagram & TikTok Send us your questions or comments by emailing capitalisntpod@gmail.com Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
THIS IS A PREVIEW GET THE WHOLE EPISODE HERE: https://www.patreon.com/posts/bonus-episode-of-155659986
In this episode, we dive into the latest buzz in the world of film and TV! Jason Statham is at it again and it's time for a Mutiny! Netflix unveils the first look images at Brad Bird's newest upcoming animated feature, the Pussay Patrol may be back for a third Inbetweeners movie, the next Insidous movie takes thing out of the Further, there's trailers for Supergirl and The Punisher: One Last Kill to discuss, and Tales From the Crypt is coming to streaming for the first time. Tune in for all the hot takes and updates!
Finally getting caught up on another James Bond film. At the rate we had been going we were never going to finish all the James Bond films. One of us was more likely to get old, confused, and forgetful before we finished the franchise... Or is this a Bond film? The accent doesn't seem quite as English as I remember but my memory can be a little off as it is. Well this Bond like film is called Reflection in a Dead Diamond.Before we can talk Belgium Bond we have a few trailers that have caught our attention including Strawstalker, Mutiny, and The Backrooms.After that we think it's onto Reflection in a Dead Diamond where I think we let you know whether or not it is... A BLOODY GOOD FILM! We encourage everyone to watch along while you listen and make sure to comment and let us know what you think. If you haven't already please follow us on Facebook, TikTok, Threads and Instagram @bloodygoodfilmpodcast and remember...Keep it bloody buddies!!!https://linktr.ee/BloodyGoodFilmPodcast...#jamesbond #007 #notjamesbond #action #newepisode #reflectioninadeaddiamond #helenecattet #brunoforanzi
Linktree: https://linktr.ee/AnalyticJoin The Normandy For Ad-Free NME, Additional Bonus Audio And Visual Content For All Things Nme+! Join Here: https://ow.ly/msoH50WCu0KIn this segment of Notorious Mass Effect, Analytic Dreamz reacts to the official trailer for Mutiny (2026), the upcoming action thriller starring Jason Statham.Analytic Dreamz delivers a detailed breakdown of the high-stakes trailer, where Statham plays Cole Reed, a former special forces operative turned private security specialist. After witnessing the murder of his billionaire boss and being framed for the crime, Reed boards a cargo ship on a one-man mission for justice, only to uncover a dangerous international conspiracy.The segment covers the intense action sequences, the film's maritime setting, key cast members including Annabelle Wallis and Roland Møller, and director Jean-François Richet's vision for this Lionsgate release. Analytic Dreamz analyzes the trailer's pacing, Statham's signature style, and what Mutiny could mean for 2026 action cinema as it heads to theaters on August 21, 2026.This Notorious Mass Effect segment offers an in-depth reaction and first impressions of the Mutiny official trailer, exploring its potential as a high-octane revenge thriller on the high seas.Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
In this episode of Geeks Unleashed, hosts Mark, Tom, and Devaughn gear up for a high-octane breakdown of the week's biggest cinema news and hidden gems. Mark and Tom kick things off by dissecting a trio of high-stakes trailers, offering their first impressions on the high-seas tension of Mutiny, the unsettling mystery of The Invite, and the gritty, much-anticipated return of Frank Castle in PUNISHER: One Last Kill.Trailer Deep Dive: The panel weighs in on the action and atmosphere of the latest teasers for Mutiny, The Invite, and PUNISHER: One Last Kill.The Catch-Up: Tom and Mark swap notes on their recent watches, ranging from the cosmic whimsy of Super Mario Galaxy to the intense beats of The Drama, Fuze, and Undertone.Feature Review: Mark, Devaughn, and Tom join forces for a deep-dive review of the stunning animated masterpiece Weathering With You, discussing its breathtaking visuals and emotional core.You can follow us on X, Facebook and Instagram or if you would like to support us you can donate to our KoFi.
Spring has sprung and the dynamic duo have returned! Join Stace & Barry as they take a trip through time with Mike & Nick & Nick & Alice, end up fighting a War Machine, and get excited for some snazzy new movie trailers. All this, plus some music from The Afterparty, and a Mutiny occurs. Grab your breakfast of choice and enjoy Stace & Barry In The Morning!
Topics Include: Supergirl, The Invite, Lord Of The Flies, Straight Shot, Over Your Dead Body, Animal Farm, Swapped, Panda Plan 2, Mutiny, the Daily Wire's next movie, and the current state of Hollywood.
Make America Fuk Again!youtube.com/c/outonthatline
“Historically, when the college-educated become politically radicalised, that does tend to lead to real shifts.” — Noam ScheiberA university degree has always been seen as a passport out of the working class. But according to the New York Times' Noam Scheiber, the reverse is now true. In his new book, Mutiny, Scheiber argues that the good white-collar jobs college once promised have been quietly disappearing over the last fifteen years. The result, he argues, is the rise and revolt of what he calls a “college-educated” working class.Scheiber chose mutiny because it's a term to describe workers who have lost confidence in management. College graduates who once imagined themselves as management-adjacent now regard the people in charge with deep suspicion. The university itself has become extractive — charging the same tuition for an art history degree as for an engineering degree, marketing video game design programmes to thousands of students who will never make a living from them, lending federal money with no skin in the game.Scheiber warns that the ideological diploma divide has already closed. By 2020, college graduates were slightly to the left of non-college voters on taxation, regulation, and unions. Sympathy for socialism among college grads doubled between 2010 and 2020. Mamdani won eighty-five per cent of college graduates under thirty in New York City. When the educated radicalise and join forces with the traditional working class, Scheiber notes, the political order changes. This was as true in nineteenth-century China as in Russia in 1917, Iran 1979 and Poland in 1980.College grads have nothing to lose but their diplomas. Five Takeaways• Mutiny, Not Revolution: Scheiber chose the word deliberately. Mutiny is a workplace term. Sailors who have lost confidence in the captain take matters into their own hands. It taps into the changing sociology of college graduates who once imagined themselves as management-adjacent and now regard the people in charge with deep suspicion. This isn't a violent uprising. It's a workplace rebellion.• The Video Game Design Degree Is the Perfect Scam: Tens of thousands of students each year enrol in college programmes that promise to turn their hobby into a career at a major studio. Only a tiny fraction ever make a living designing games. The marketing isn't a lie — just a rosier picture than the reality. Universities charge the same tuition for an art history degree as for an engineering degree, even though we know the returns are vastly different. No other part of the economy works this way.• On Economics, the Diploma Divide Has Already Closed: Through the 1980s and 1990s, college graduates were significantly more conservative on economics. By 2012, college and non-college voters were in the exact same place. By 2020, college graduates were slightly to the left. Sympathy for socialism among college grads doubled from twenty to forty per cent between 2010 and 2020. The divide that remains is cultural. The economic majority is sitting out there waiting for a candidate who knows how to address it.• The 70/10 Gap: About seventy per cent of Americans support unions in principle. Only ten per cent are actually in one. American labour law gives employers enormous leeway to discourage organising. The gap means traditional unions cannot close the demand. Alternative forms of organising — the Alphabet Workers Union at Google, Amazon employees for climate justice, walkouts and petitions — are becoming the new shape of workplace power.• When the College-Educated Radicalise, Politics Disrupts: Nineteenth-century China. The Bolshevik Revolution. Iran 1979. Poland's Solidarity movement. Spain and Greece after the Great Recession. History shows that when a frustrated educated class joins forces with the traditional working class, the political order changes. The college-educated have agency. They vote, organise, donate, and show up. When they get angry, the political class notices. About the GuestNoam Scheiber is a labour and workplace reporter for The New York Times. A former Rhodes Scholar, he is the author of The Escape Artists: How Obama's Team Fumbled the Recovery and Mutiny: The Rise and Revolt of the College-Educated Working Class.References:• Mutiny: The Rise and Revolt of the College-Educated Working Class by Noam Scheiber — the book under discussion.• Episode 2861: The Joe Biden Tragedy — Julian Zelizer on the last New Deal president. The political vacuum Scheiber describes.• Episode 2859: Stop, Don't Do That — Peter Edelman on Bobby Kennedy. The progressive populism that could once unite Black and white workers.About Keen On AmericaNobody asks more awkward questions than the Anglo-American writer and filmmaker Andrew Keen. In Keen On America, Andrew brings his pointed Transatlantic wit to making sense of the United States — hosting daily interviews about the history and future of this now venerable Republic. With nearly 2,800 episodes since the show launched on TechCrunch in 2010, Keen On America is the most prolific intellectual interview show in the history of podcasting.WebsiteSubstackYouTubeApple PodcastsSpotify Chapters:(00:31) - Introduction: new book day, the betrayal of college graduates (02:46) - Why mutiny, not revolution: a workplace term (05:56) - The Rhodes Scholar who became a Starbucks organiser (10:10) - Generation morality without class consciousness (15:33) - Can the GOP become the party of workers? (18:00) - The convergence of college and non-college voters on immigration and crime (20:14) - What does betrayal feel like? (21:00) - The video game design degree scam (24:37) - The university as extractive system (27:15) - Was Biden a New Deal president in a post-New Deal age? (31:45) - Mamdani and the economic majority that's sitting out there (32:45) - The 70/10 gap: why traditional unions can't close it (35:02) - Tech workers, alternative organising, and the Alphabet Workers Union (38:50) - Has the decline of knowledge work begun? (40:00) - Luddites or Bolsheviks: when the college-educated radicalise (40:55) - Iran 1979, Poland's Solidarity, and the disruptive power of educated rage
JOIN OUR PATREON FOR HEAPS OF BONUS STUFF SPORT: MEGA NUFFS: Is this the final straw for Crows & Blues fans? AFL: A mutiny is forming against songs after goals. Giorgio pranks his fiancé with some good old weather chat. Josh is back from Vietnam and full of plane news. The latest from the NBL & March Madness. Italy fail to qualify for the World Cup AGAIN. Josh throws one of the biggest Easter tantrums anyone has ever seen. IF YOU SUBSCRIBE TO PATREON Apple adds $3 USD when buying through the Patreon app. So please if you do want to sign up buy on your browser OR on your desktop computer/laptop. That's $3 USD straight to Apple for nothing. It should be $5 USD//8.50 AUD at checkout. Apple and IOS are complete dogs. Feel free to cancel and restart if they got you already. PLANE & BEER HATS HERE Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
"Culture doesn't just happen; if you let it grow from the bottom, you're going to get weeds." Manny Palachuk joins Josh to explain why leadership must be the gardener of organizational culture. They dive into the "mutiny" that happens when communication breaks down and why keeping a high-performer with a toxic attitude is a mathematical mistake for your business. Josh and Manny explore the "Human Element" in corporate spaces, the difference between healthy tension and toxic dissent, and how to systematize your business so you can work on it, not just in it. Whether you're a startup of three or a corporation of three hundred, this episode provides the four pillars—Vision, Mission, Values, and the Human Element—needed to build a culture that thrives. In this episode, you'll learn: ✅ The Side-of-the-Mouth Dissent: How to spot the first signs of a culture shift after a meeting ends. ✅ The Brilliant Jerk: Why holding onto a technical expert with a bad attitude is "holding your company hostage." ✅ Three-Level Deep Coverage: The system that gives you the freedom to let toxic people go without tanking the business. ✅ Vision-Coupling vs. Leader-Coupling: Why the best organizations (like Zappos) survive even after the founder is gone. ✅ Working ON vs. IN the Business: Lessons from The E-Myth Revisited on systematizing for scale. ✅ The Human Element: How small shifts, like personalized cubicles and diverse thought, prevent the "dead building" syndrome. ✅ First Who, Then What: Why the "We" mindset is more powerful than the "I" mindset in leadership. Connect with Manny Palachuk: His Website: https://www.mannypalachuk.com/ Free Culture Assessment: https://www.mannypalachuk.com/culture... Contact Josh: leadinquarters@gmail.com Follow Leadership in Quarters: Instagram, YouTube & TikTok @leadinquarters Music: https://www.bensound.com/free-music-f... License code: M2UXD4PEZ9DVVQ9N Artist: : Marcus P. #LeadershipInQuarters #MannyPalachuk #Toxiculture #CompanyCulture #TheEMyth #ExtremeOwnership #BrilliantJerk #BusinessSystems #LeadershipDevelopment #JoshSeldin #YourGrowthAscent
Episode 5261: The Mutiny In NATO
Was Captain William Kidd a ruthless pirate or a pawn in a royal gamble gone wrong? Professor Suzannah Lipscomb and Debbie Kilroy trace his meteoric rise from privateer to pariah, backed by a secret syndicate of powerful men, including the king. Mutiny, murder, and betrayal follow as power and politics turn Kidd's royal commission into one of history's most dramatic downfalls.MORE:Women Pirates of the CaribbeanListen on AppleListen on SpotifyPirates of the Pacific & the Spanish EmpireListen on AppleListen on SpotifyPresented by Professor Suzannah Lipscomb. The researcher is Max Wintle, audio editor is Amy Haddow and the producer is Rob Weinberg. The senior producer is Anne-Marie Luff.All music courtesy of Epidemic Sounds.Not Just the Tudors is a History Hit podcastSign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries, with a new release every week and ad-free podcasts. Sign up at https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Crimson Desert came out and none of us are playing it but don't worry we have takes anyway.THINGS MENTIONED: 00:00 Welcome to our show + AI slop update09:01 Tori and Nathaniel's things: Crimson Desert talkFurther reading: Crimson Desert is what happens when you try to copy Zelda but don't understand Zelda - PolygonFurtherer reading: Do yourself a favour in Crimson Desert and play the game with a controller - PC Gamer30:48 Noah's item: New thing from Sunset Visitor??33:29 What Tori's playing48:08 What Nathaniel's playingLil Bill's second channel on YouTube01:24:00 What Noah's playingStop Playing Mainline Pokemon Games. Play These Instead - Pull to Refresh on YouTube01:35:53 Bye bye!!Tori's on instagram: v.dominguez.98 Nathaniel's on letterboxd: nathanbasedNoah's in our DiscordOur show is a proud member of The Worst Garbage network of podcasts. Find all the rest of the great shows on the network at TheWorstGarbage.online.Join The Worst Garbage Discord channel!Our intro/outro music are by GEIST and our show art is by@tristemegistus. We curate your gaming news together and Noah, Tori and Nathaniel take turns producing the show. You can follow the show on Twitter @Press_StartPod, on tumblr at press-startpod.tumblr.com and on bluesky @press-startpod. Email us what you wanna hear us talk about, game recs and other stuff at heypressstart@gmail.com. We'd also appreciate if you left us reviews on your podcast app of choice! Good text reviews will be read out on the show.
With our international correspondent Sara Tieman back in the States for a visit, the Book Club scheduled a quick get-together to discuss some of the latest books they’ve been reading. John Williams (weekdays 10am-2pm, including The Noon Business Lunch, plus the Mincing Rascals podcast) The Sea Captain’s Wife: A True Story of Mutiny, Love, and Adventure at the […]
With our international correspondent Sara Tieman back in the States for a visit, the Book Club scheduled a quick get-together to discuss some of the latest books they’ve been reading. John Williams (weekdays 10am-2pm, including The Noon Business Lunch, plus the Mincing Rascals podcast) The Sea Captain’s Wife: A True Story of Mutiny, Love, and Adventure at the […]
What's going on in Iran isn't the only reason MAGA has a mutiny on their hands. What one number does Alex think is the worst one he's seen for Trump in a while? And how fired is Kristi Noem? Very, as it turns out. How about Tuesday's primaries? Joe and Alex look at Texas and why one side ought to feel much better than the other... Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Clockwork Torgo: Joe vs The Volcano, AI, Monarch, Godzilla x Kong, Mr. Mercedes, Operation Bounce House, Journey to the Center of the Earth, La La Land, Van Helsing, 1776, The Mutiny, Improv, Diablo 2, Tacta, Southland, Dungeon Crawler Carl pinball, Hawkman, DC Universe, Paramount+ and HBO Max to combine, physical video game sales, Universal monsters, Game of Thrones movie, SLIME,
In 1856, Mary Ann Patten became the first woman to captain an American merchant vessel. She was only 19 years old. Historian Tilar Mazzeo's book tells the remarkable story.
Matt Rashleigh joins Derek to dip into another double feature with 1964's The Human Duplicators and Mutiny in Outer Space (dir. Hugo Grimaldi)! Plus Mark Matzke's Beta Capsule Review (Ultraman Taro)! Voicemail: (360) 524-2484 Email: monsterkidradio@gmail.com Monster Kid Radio on Patreon - https://www.patreon.com/c/monsterkidradio Monster Kid Radio on Twitch! - https://www.twitch.tv/monsterkidradio Monster Kid Radio on YouTube - http://youtube.com/monsterkidradio Follow Mark MatzkeMonster Study Group - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/monster-study-group/id1526013554 Small Town Monsters - https://www.smalltownmonsters.com Classic Horror Film Board - https://classichorrorfilmboard.com/ Executive Producer - https://www.podcascadia.com/ Deth Designs - https://dethdesigns.bigcartel.com/ "Waves of Steel" (Waves of Steel) provided courtesy of The Riptide Rats https://theriptiderats.bandcamp.com/ Bride of Monster Kid Radio is a Team Deth Production. All original content of Bride of Monster Kid Radio is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 International License. You can learn more about Team Deth, our other projects like Deth Merchant, Mail Order Zombie, Deth Writer, and more at www.teamdeth.com. Please rate and review Monster Kid Radio wherever you download your favorite podcasts. Next time on Bride of Monster Kid Radio: Follow us on Patreon to find out!
1. Guest: Richard Snow. Snow introduces the key figures of the Somers mutiny: Philip Spencer, the rebellious son of a cabinet member, and Captain Mackenzie, a disciplinarian author. Their conflict unfolds aboard a crowded, experimental naval school ship.