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Sarah had a "tick fiasco" in the wilderness, and she'll never be the same. We get some updates from Susie about Pete Rose's eligibility for the Baseball Hall of Fame since his death and we hear the scandal involving the Napalm Girl image we discussed recently, and how the wrong photographer may have taken credit for the last fifty years. We hear actually useful happiness tips that are more fun than the usual ones we already know. We learn about scientists who trained parrots to video call each other, and why Sarah wants to know if they were actually "talking" to each other. And we hear how the social birds were also the most likeable. Plus, there is a pigeon thief in New York City, and some people think they're being stolen to be sold for a sport involving the birds in Pennsylvania.Listen to more podcasts like this: https://wavepodcastnetwork.comConnect with us on social media:BCP Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/braincandypodcastSusie's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/susiemeisterSarah's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/imsarahriceBCP on X: https://www.x.com/braincandypodSponsors:This episode is sponsored by/brought to you by BetterHelp. Our listeners get 10% off their first month at https://betterhelp.com/braincandyLuxury shouldn't be out of reach. Use code BRAINCANDY at https://cozyearth.com for 40% off best-selling sheets, pajamas, and more.Save 20% Off Honeylove by going to https://www.honeylove.com/braincandy #honeylovepodGet $10 off your first month's subscription and free shipping when you go to https://nutrafol.com and enter the promo code BRAINCANDYSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
In episode 368 UNP founder and curator Grant Scott is in his garage reflecting on the small and big things that impact on the everyday engagement we all have with photography. Dr.Grant Scott After fifteen years art directing photography books and magazines such as Elle and Tatler, Scott began to work as a photographer for a number of advertising and editorial clients in 2000. Alongside his photographic career Scott has art directed numerous advertising campaigns, worked as a creative director at Sotheby's, art directed foto8magazine, founded his own photographic gallery, edited Professional Photographer magazine and launched his own title for photographers and filmmakers Hungry Eye. He founded the United Nations of Photography in 2012, and is now a Senior Lecturer and Subject Co-ordinator: Photography at Oxford Brookes University, Oxford, and a BBC Radio contributor. Scott is the author of Professional Photography: The New Global Landscape Explained (Routledge 2014), The Essential Student Guide to Professional Photography (Routledge 2015), New Ways of Seeing: The Democratic Language of Photography (Routledge 2019), and What Does Photography Mean To You? (Bluecoat Press 2020). His photography has been published in At Home With The Makers of Style (Thames & Hudson 2006) and Crash Happy: A Night at The Bangers (Cafe Royal Books 2012). His film Do Not Bend: The Photographic Life of Bill Jay was premiered in 2018. Scott's book Inside Vogue House: One building, seven magazines, sixty years of stories, Orphans Publishing, is now on sale. © Grant Scott 2025
Susie went to a Micky Dolenz of the Monkees concert, and the next day a stranger stopped her at the grocery store to make a comment about something Susie did at the show. We learn why medical professionals and workers at senior facilities are being trained to stop using "elderspeak" with their patients. They say that the baby talk and cutesy language infantilizes older folks and causes greater resistance to care and more anti-psychotic prescriptions. We discuss the Carter family documentary and hear how the stardom of their sons Aaron and Nick contributed to strife, addiction, and death in the family. We talk about a man who intentionally injected himself with snake venom and willingly let snakes bite him hundreds of times with the hope of becoming immune to their poison, and somehow, someway, he actually did it. And he might end up being responsible for creating a universal anti-venom. We debate whether the Pulitzer prize-winning photo of the Vietnam War victim "Napalm Girl," who is running naked after being burned, should be allowed on social media or if it's pornographic.LIVE TRIVIA NIGHT: MAY 22nd 8PM - https://www.youtube.com/@BrainCandyPodcast/LiveListen to more podcasts like this: https://wavepodcastnetwork.comBCP Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/braincandypodcastSusie's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/susiemeisterSarah's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/imsarahriceBCP on X: https://www.x.com/braincandypodSponsors:For 20% off your order, head to https://www.harvesthosts.com and use code BRAINCANDY.Use code BRAINCANDY at https://cozyearth.com for 40% off best-selling sheets, pajamas, and more.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
durée : 00:03:19 - Va savoir - par : Chloé Leprince - Un conflit de paternité couvait quant au célébrissime cliché jusque-là attribué à Nick Ut, qui avait valu au photographe vietnamien d'Associated Press la renommée, le Pulitzer et le prix World Press 1973, pour cette image du 8 juin 1972. Le prix vient de retirer Nick Ut des crédits.
Watch or listen to Kim Phuc, known around the world as the girl in the 'Napalm Girl' photograph taken during the Vietnam War, being interviewed by veteran journalist Lorna Dueck. In this episode, Kim talks about the impact of being photographed after being caught in a Napalm bomb attack at the age of nine that left her terribly burned. After traversing a long and traumatic road to recovery, Kim discovered Scripture and found hope and healing. She is the founder of The KIM Foundation International, a nonprofit dedicated to providing funds to support the work of international organizations that provide free medical assistance to children who are victims of war, violence, and deprivation.Read the transcript: biblesociety.ca/transcript-scripture-untangled-s10-ep4---Learn more about the Canadian Bible Society: biblesociety.caHelp people hear God speak: biblesociety.ca/donateConnect with us on Instagram: @canadianbiblesocietyThe Bible Course offers a superb overview of the world's best-selling book. Watch the first session and learn more at biblecourse.ca. ---Kim Phuc Phan Thi is known around the world as “The Girl in the Picture.” In 1972, at the age of 9, she was immortalized in a Pulitzer Prize-winning photograph that shows her screaming and running naked down a road in Trang Bang, Vietnam, after having her clothing burned off by napalm. A living symbol of the atrocity of war, she is the founder of The KIM Foundation International, a nonprofit dedicated to providing funds to support the work of international organizations that provide free medical assistance to children who are victims of war, violence, and deprivation. Mrs. Phan Thi has suffered many hardships since that day in 1972 including several years of painful burn therapy, but her spirit has always remained strong. Inspired by the physicians who helped her survive, she decided to become a doctor; but her pre medical studies in Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon) were interrupted in 1982 when the Vietnamese government removed her from school to act as a “national symbol of the war.” Four years later the government permitted her to continue her studies in Cuba, but health issues put an end to her plans to become a doctor. It was in Cuba that Mrs. Phan Thi met her husband, Toan. They married on September 11, 1992. While on the way back to Havana after their honeymoon in Moscow, the couple defected to Canada during a one-hour layover in Newfoundland, Canada. They now live near Toronto, and Mrs. Phan Thi travels the world as a UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization) Goodwill Ambassador for the Culture of Peace. Kim Phuc Phan Thi has received seven honorary doctorate degrees from universities in Canada, Australia, the United States, and Mexico for her efforts to help children and end world conflict. She is an Honorary Member of Kingston Rotary, an Honorary Member of St. Albert Rotary, a Member of the Advisory Board for the Wheelchair Foundation, an Honorary Member of the Canadian Commission for UNESCO, a Member of the Advisory Board of Free Children's Foundation in Canada, and the World Children's Center in Atlanta, Georgia, USA. Mrs. Phan Thi is also a recipient of the Queen's Golden Jubilee Medal, the 2004 "Order of Ontario,” as well as the International Peace Prize presented in Dresden Germany, February 2019. Kim is the author of Fire Road, her personal memoir, which has been translated into ten languages.
In today's episode I cover the top stories for this week in the world of photography including the controversy around the Napalm Girl photo. You can find the show notes here. https://liamphotographypodcast.com/episodes/episode-453-arctic-wolves-zenfolio-napalm-girl-more
Host Noam Weissman reflects on one of the most devastating periods since October 7, 2023-- the past week, which brought us the deaths of Oded Lifshitz and 3/4 of the Bibas family. From the abduction of Yarden, Shiri, and their young sons Ariel and Kfir at Kibbutz Nir Oz to the deceptive handling of their remains, the brutal murders have left an indelible scar on Israel. The episode draws parallels with iconic historical images like Anne Frank and Napalm Girl and honors the legacy of peace activist Oded Lifshitz, whose life work exemplified hope amid violence. Join us as we reflect on these harrowing events, expose media manipulation, and call for a future where human dignity prevails over terror. IDF Spokesman Daniel Hagari's televised statement. Follow @jewishunpacked on Instagram and check us out on youtube. This podcast was brought to you by Unpacked, a division of OpenDor Media. ------------------- For other podcasts from Unpacked, check out: Jewish History Nerds Soulful Jewish Living Stars of David with Elon Gold Wondering Jews
Borgers, Michael www.deutschlandfunk.de, @mediasres
Picture a moment so powerful that it encapsulates the horrors of war and the resilience of the human spirit. Join me, Danny Mac, as we explore the extraordinary journey of Kim Phuc Phan Thai, famously known worldwide as the "Napalm Girl." This episode of Starting Right offers an intimate, compelling look into Kim's life beyond the photograph that defined a generation. From the depths of unimaginable pain and anger, Kim emerges with a story of redemption, faith, and forgiveness that will leave you inspired. Discover the pivotal moments that transformed her path, as she shares the raw, unfiltered emotions of her journey from suffering to salvation.We would love to hear your comments. Send us a Text MessageSupport the show
Kim Phuc Phan Thi is in Alaska this weekend. The name might not mean anything at first but you've almost certainly seen her picture. When she was 9 years old in 1972, she was the center of a photo called "The Terror of War." Reporter Georgina Fernandez sat down with her and talked about the day that picture was taken and what her life is like now. Here is the extended version of that interview. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Kim Phuc Phan Thi is in Alaska this weekend. The name might not mean anything at first but you've almost certainly seen her picture. When she was 9 years old in 1972, she was the center of a photo called "The Terror of War." Reporter Georgina Fernandez sat down with her and talked about the day that picture was taken and what her life is like now. Here is the extended version of that interview. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
It's been said that a picture is worth a thousand words. But when considering their historical or cultural significance, certain photographs are literally priceless. In this episode– the topic of which was suggested by listener and friend, Jefferson– we share fascinating behind-the-scenes stories related to 3 of the most celebrated and iconic photographs of the 20th century: The heart-breaking 1947 “Life” Picture of the Week entitled “The Most Beautiful Suicide” The jubilant “V-J Day Kiss” featuring the ‘Kissing Sailor' The disturbing, Pulitzer-Prize winning “Napalm Girl” photograph, with a backstory that ends up being surprisingly uplifting Berenice Abbott once said, “Photography helps people to see.” You won't want to miss this engaging episode where we explore 3 iconic photographs that have helped us all see the world in a slightly different way. The show is also available on your favorite podcatcher and the Scandal Water Podcast YouTube channel. You can support Scandal Water Podcast by rating, reviewing, and subscribing, as well as by visiting buymeacoffee.com/scandalwaterpod, where upon becoming a member, you will find access to our first Mini-sode featuring a conversation about Marilyn Monroe's (most iconic?) photo! #ScandalWaterPodcast #TuesdayTea #HistoricalPhotographs #FamousPhotographs #TimeMagazine #VJDay #TheKissingSailor #NapalmGirl #TheMostBeautifulSuicide #ListenerRequest #Photography #BlackandWhitePhotography #History
Learn more about Michael Wenderoth, Executive Coach: www.changwenderoth.com SHOW NOTES: How do you get heard, shape conversations, mobilize support, and ultimately get others to take action? Liz Banse shares why pictures -- much more than words – are the key to your communication success. An expert in visual storytelling and strategic communications at Resource Media, Liz breaks down the science and shows how “dialing in” your visual communications will accelerate your career, work and leadership. The critical pivot Resource Media and Liz made to serve their clients… and how that relates to upping your leadership game.The 3 things you need to be a great visual communicator (technical background is not one of them)What we can learn from National Geographic in how they hire their top photographers.Is visual storytelling more science or art?What does it mean to be beautiful?Presenting: much more than speaking to a room of peopleLiz's epiphany on leadership, sitting years back next to pioneer Dennis HayesGet comfortable with being uncomfortable, and “unlearning” if you want to shift and learn these skillsThe first question to ask yourself, before assessing what images to useWho has the power, and what do they care about?Liz geeks out on the neuroscience around setting “mental frames” (Key #1: “We are visual first and verbal second.”)The pictorial superiority affect, and how to use words for maximum impact (dual coding “yellow stick notes” theory)Key #2: Decisions are made in the brain's emotional regionMentors vs Sponsors – and how that ties to using visualsIs that manipulation -- or strategic?Key #3 when choosing your visual: What do you need people to feel to take action?Seeing the “emotional payoff”Liz turns the tables on Michael, asking how he marketed InvisalignBIO AND LINKS: Liz Banse is Senior Program Director of Resource Media, the leading communications firm focused on social change. She is author of Seeing is Believing, A Guide to Visual Storytelling Best Practices, and manages the Visual Story Lab, a Resource Media website that shares cutting edge approaches for issue-oriented visual storytelling. A veteran of Resource Media's Seattle office since 1999, Liz's practice areas span communications planning, traditional and online media strategy, opinion research, presentation skills and crisis communications. Before joining Resource Media, Liz worked with MWW/Savitt, where her expertise supported Starbucks and the (former – sniff) Seattle Supersonics. She holds a BA from Carleton College. Seeing is Believing: Resource Media's best practices guide on visual storytelling: https://resource-media.org/seeing-is-believing-report/Liz on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lizbanse/Liz on X (Twitter): https://twitter.com/lizbanseResource Media: https://www.resource-media.org (“Health, equity, justice and sustainability”)Visual Story Lab @ Resource Media: https://www.resource-media.org/visual-story-lab/Resource Media's Visual Story toolbox: https://www.resource-media.org/visual-story-lab/toolbox/“Napalm Girl” image: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phan_Thi_Kim_PhucTop books from the Health Brothers: Made to Stick, Switch, the Power of MomentsProf. Don Moore, on making better decisions and calibrating your confidence: https://redcircle.com/shows/97-effective/ep/06780ce7-2b31-422f-b5cf-4879c49aa4a5Blog: The Power of Imagery to Drive New Narratives: https://www.resource-media.org/thinking-with-our-eyes-the-power-of-imagery-to-drive-new-narratives/Michael's Book, Get Promoted: https://tinyurl.com/453txk74
Fifty years ago, Kim Phuc Phan Thi's life seemed simple; she lived with her family in the village of Trảng Bàng in Vietnam. The country was in the middle of a war, but as a nine-year-old child, nothing seemed out of the ordinary. Everything changed in June 1972 when several napalm bombs fell on her once peaceful village. Suddenly there was fire everywhere around her and her clothes burned off. In excruciating pain, Phuc ran down the main highway in her village and at that time, Associated Press photographer Nick Ut snapped a picture and the rest is history. On this episode Erica Vella takes a closer look at the Pulitzer Prize-winning photo, The Terror of War, which is commonly referred to as 'Napalm Girl'. She speaks with Kim Phuc, the young girl in the photo and learns about her miraculous survival. Contact: Email: erica.vella@globalnews.ca Kim Foundation http://www.kimfoundation.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
50 years ago, the world met Kim Phuc through the lense of a young photojournalist documenting the horrors of the Vietnam war. Since then, she's spent years giving a voice to the often voiceless survivors of war through the Kim Foundation International.
In 1972, a news photographer caught a picture of 9-year-old Kim Phuc Phan Thi, burned by napalm and running for her life. That girl is now a Canadian, living in Ontario, and joins us in moving conversation about the power of this photograph.
Naked, burnt and only nine years old. 50 years ago a child known as the ‘Napalm Girl' was on the front page of every major newspaper in the world. She was fleeing the village of Trang Bang in Vietnam. The actual title of the Pulitzer prize winning photograph is ‘The Terror of War'. And it is just that - laying bare the sheer horror.. the child victims. Kim Phuc was the little girl in that photograph and she joins me now - 50 years on… See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
เจาะชีวิต ‘Napalm Girl' เด็กผู้หญิงในภาพประวัติศาสตร์ เหยื่อระเบิดนาปาล์มในสงครามเวียดนาม ที่สะเทือนถึงสังคมอเมริกันออกมากดดันรัฐบาลยุติสงคราม ขณะที่ชีวิตจริงของผู้หญิงคนนี้ยังต้องเผชิญแรงกดดันในประเทศจนต้องขอลี้ภัยจากเวียดนามไปใช้ชีวิตที่แคนาดา
Should we look at the pictures of the victims of mass shootings? Are we too distanced from the carnage - and that distance allows us to not act to protect the children? The woman who was once the girl the world called "Napalm girl," whose picture of her naked body running from a napalm bomb changed public opinion of the Vietnam War, argued this week that we should see pictures of mass shootings, and if we don't, we'll never take the action that needs to be taken. KSL Newsradio's Amanda Dickson puts this question to her guests on A Woman's View. Her guests this week are Jill Atwood, Director of Communications for the Veterans Administration Rocky Mountain Network, and Luz Lewis-Perez, Director of Development for the Kidney Foundation for Utah and Idaho. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Queen's new Freddie Mercury track, Lil Nas X v. BET, KISS is on my lip sync list, Tom Brady's dong, F1's James Hunt loved the ladies, trouble for the Texans, Drew Crime: Groene Family Murders, no stopping college hazing, and the death of 1/2 of Seals & Crofts leads us down a soft music rabbit hole.Jim Bentley wants your call today!KISS got busted pulling a Milli Vanilli. Never forget that Gene Simmons had the worst sex tape (NSFW).Netflix is angry that Meghan and Not-a-Prince Harry didn't get the Lillbet money shot with the Queen.Prediction: some streaming service will give Ellen a $500,000,000 podcast/show deal.We turn to the 100% accurate and scientific Twitter poll to find out if Detroit Lions fans would like Deshaun Watson on their football team. Deshaun is back with the Houston Texans... as co-defendants.Drew defends a murderer."Your 301K is now a 201K." - BranDon.Tom Brady's want you to check out his dong by pretending to sell undies.The Flash Ezra Miller is being accused of grooming a girl from the time she was 12-years-old.Lil Nas X is beefing with BET.Ray J wants straight dudes to embrace gay dudes.Queen is dropping some new Freddie Mercury tunes that they just "found".Todd Rundgren dissed Trudi Daniels at Woodstock '94.Johnny Depp vs Amber Heard: Johnny's lawyers are making the rounds on the TV morning shows. Amber Heard is STILL popping off. The jury really hated and didn't believe Amber. Some people are saying she's going to be completely wiped out of Aquaman 2.The biggest bust in NFL history, JaMarcus Russell, is doing just fine.Protect yourself online with our NordVPN deal. Use our code DAMS for a huge discount off your NordVPN plan plus 1 additional month for free. You'll even get a bonus gift. It's risk free with Nord's 30 day money back guarantee.Father's Day is coming up: Freddie Hunt wants you to know his dad nailed 5,000 women including 35 flight attendants in one weekend. Nick Cannon had 3 kids last year and probably 3 kids this year. By our count he's at 9 kids with 5 women.Kelly Ripa gets a new game show that no one will watch.RIP Jim Seals. Tom Mazawey surprisingly is NOT a fan. This leads us down a path of the softest songs in the history of sound.Refrigerator Magnets: Looking for Hawaii, Iowa, Massachusetts, Mississippi, New Hampshire, New Jersey, North Dakota, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Utah, West Virginia and Wyoming.Some guy with a gun and knife arrested at Brett Kavanaugh's house at 1:30AM after turning himself in by calling 911.Phan Thi Kim Phuc (the Napalm Girl) finally gets a story after 50 years.The San Francisco DA has been BLOWN OUT by voters.Meta is facing a lawsuit because their platform screws with young girls.Hazing is alive and well at The University of Missouri.Queen Latifah is angry her doctor declared her obese.Yawn news: Paulina Porizkova is nude AGAIN.A Mexican mega-church leader headed to prison for 16 years for mega-sexual abuse.Drew Crime: People Magazine Investigates tells the tale of the Groene Family Murders.The housing market is about to change.Social media is dumb, but we're on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter (Drew and Mike Show, Marc Fellhauer, Trudi Daniels and BranDon).
There’s a lot competing for our attention these days, from the Jan. 6 committee hearings that get underway this week to the aftermath of the massacre in Uvalde, Texas. On the show today, we discuss whether our ability to turn away from seeing horrific images and witnessing history has a price. Plus, the Elon Musk-Twitter saga continues. Here’s everything we talked about today: “Trump on Trial: A Guide to the January 6 Hearings and the Question of Criminality” from the Brookings Institution Opinion | “It’s Been 50 Years. I Am Not ‘Napalm Girl’ Anymore.” from The New York Times Opinion | Nick Ut: I took the photo of Kim Phuc that helped end the Vietnam War. Photojournalism still matters today. from The Washington Post “Publishing Photos of Dead Children Could Backfire” from The Atlantic “Elon Musk Threatens to End Twitter Deal Over Lack of Information on Spam Accounts” from The Wall Street Journal Is the Swedengate hospitality controversy real? Long ago, maybe. from The Washington Post “Autonomous Mayflower Messes up Trip That Humans Successfully Completed Hundreds of Years Ago” from Jalopnik Let us know what you think about today’s show. Email us at makemesmart@marketplace.org or call us at (508) 827-6278 or (508) U-B- SMART.
There’s a lot competing for our attention these days, from the Jan. 6 committee hearings that get underway this week to the aftermath of the massacre in Uvalde, Texas. On the show today, we discuss whether our ability to turn away from seeing horrific images and witnessing history has a price. Plus, the Elon Musk-Twitter saga continues. Here’s everything we talked about today: “Trump on Trial: A Guide to the January 6 Hearings and the Question of Criminality” from the Brookings Institution Opinion | “It’s Been 50 Years. I Am Not ‘Napalm Girl’ Anymore.” from The New York Times Opinion | Nick Ut: I took the photo of Kim Phuc that helped end the Vietnam War. Photojournalism still matters today. from The Washington Post “Publishing Photos of Dead Children Could Backfire” from The Atlantic “Elon Musk Threatens to End Twitter Deal Over Lack of Information on Spam Accounts” from The Wall Street Journal Is the Swedengate hospitality controversy real? Long ago, maybe. from The Washington Post “Autonomous Mayflower Messes up Trip That Humans Successfully Completed Hundreds of Years Ago” from Jalopnik Let us know what you think about today’s show. Email us at makemesmart@marketplace.org or call us at (508) 827-6278 or (508) U-B- SMART.
Episode 2314 of the Vietnam Veteran News Podcast will feature a story about Kim Phuc, the “Napalm Girl” of the Vietnam War 50 years after that dark day. The featured story appeared in The Toronto Star and is titled: Vietnam's … Continue reading → The post Episode 2314 – The “Napalm Girl” 50 years later appeared first on .
The Vietnam War is one of the twentieth century's most well-known conflicts. It has become a buzzword for military failure, synonymous with the most horrific aspects of irregular warfare between states and guerilla forces, and has had a profound impact on politics and popular culture in the United States and around the world. But why did America get involved in the first place? Who were the Viet Cong and the Viet Minh? Why were there mass peace protests back in the US? And what lessons, if any, can be learned from the conflict? In this episode we were joined by Cerys Matthews - singer, songwriter, author, and BBC Radio 6 broadcaster, alongside Phan Thi Kim Phuc, better known as the ‘Napalm Girl', and renowned photographer Don McCullin. —------ CREDITS: Excerpt from ‘Eisenhower Two Vietnams' https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lPet4zFh4sI&ab_channel=M.D.Jones Excerpt from Lyndon B. Johnson-Speech on Vietnam (September 29, 1967) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Tf2xGb5Nsg&ab_channel=MCamericanpresident Excerpt from Kennedy Speaks On Vietnam (1962): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iph_KkKLfcA&ab_channel=BritishPath%C3%A9 Excerpt from Behind The Viet Cong Lines (1965) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s6sPC1YLIdM&ab_channel=NuclearVault Excerpt from NBC News Special Report, January 31, 1968 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wA8n114eYXc&ab_channel=NewsActive3 Excerpt from President Richard Nixon Address to the Nation on the War in Vietnam, November 3, 1969 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RPpOBu2LNCo&ab_channel=RichardNixonPresidentialLibrary Exerpt from 50 years ago: Walter Cronkite calls for the U.S. to get out of Vietnam https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dn2RjahTi3M&ab_channel=CBSEveningNews
Der Ukraine-Krieg wird wie alle modernen Kriege auch in Bildern ausgetragen. Manchmal können Bilder den Krieg sogar beeinflussen, wie das „Napalm Girl“, das die Akzeptanz des Vietnam-Kriegs veränderte. Ein Gespräch mit Kunsthistorikerin Charlotte Klonk. Von Charlotte Klonk.
If you ever saw her picture, you surely would remember it for the rest of your life. It gained notoriety in the 1970s as an antiwar icon when a photographer took her picture as she was running naked from a napalm attack in Vietnam.[1] The 9-year old girl whose picture was so riveting became known as the "Napalm Girl," and the picture appeared in newspapers and magazines around the world. As an adult, writing of the horrible and devastating event, Kim Phuc said, "I had not been targeted. I had simply been in the wrong place at the wrong time. Some 45 years after that dark, hideous day, Kim has recorded the story of her life--the pain, the fear, the hatred, as well as the transformation that eventually purged the anger, bitterness, and resentment toward those who caused her suffering in a book entitled, "Fire Road: The Napalm Girl's Journey Through the Horrors of War to Faith, Forgiveness, and Peace," published by Tyndale. [1] Publishers Weekly.com, Dec. 22, 2017
In the second part of two episodes on Kibera, Kenya, Dan and Sade discuss media ethics, the impact of photography, and how they feel about slum tourism. Photos mentioned will be posted on Instagram & our website! —— Please let us know your thoughts on the show by leaving us a review on any podcast platform, or by reaching out on social media. For more information and updates on the podcast, feel free to subscribe on whatever podcast platform you prefer, & follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/intergenerationalpod/ Check out our website here: https://www.intergenerationalpod.com/ for more in-depth episode breakdowns & information. —— Resources: The True Story Of Phan Thi Kim Phuc, The “Napalm Girl”: https://allthatsinteresting.com/napalm-girl Alan Kurdi's Story: Behind The Most Heartbreaking Photo of 2015: https://time.com/4162306/alan-kurdi-syria-drowned-boy-refugee-crisis/ The vulture and the little girl: https://rarehistoricalphotos.com/vulture-little-girl/ Famed 'Afghan Girl' Finally Gets a Home: https://www.nationalgeographic.com/pages/article/afghan-girl-home-afghanistan Fayemi Photography (Sade's grandfather): https://www.fayemiphotography.com/ Stories from Kibera (Brian Otieno): https://www.instagram.com/kiberastories/?hl=en The case against empathy: https://www.vox.com/conversations/2017/1/19/14266230/empathy-morality-ethics-psychology-compassion-paul-bloom Human Needs Project: http://www.humanneedsproject.org/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/intergenerational/support
Am 8. Juni 1972 macht Nick Uth die Aufnahme "Terror of War" die ihn zum jüngsten Gewinner des Pulitzerpreises in der Kategorie Pressefoto machen sollte. Wir kennen das Bild unter "Napalm Girl" und schreiben ihm zu den Verlauf des Krieges geändert zu haben. Heute erzähle ich die Geschichte des Bilds und gehe der Frage nach ob die Zuschreibung eigentlich stimmt...
On this day in 1972, photographer Nick Út took the Pulitzer Prize-winning image that became known as the "napalm girl" photo. / On this day in 1783 a volcanic fissure in Iceland called Laki began erupting. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com
This episode is also available as a blog post: http://cherrieswriter.com/2015/08/19/the-napalm-girl/
ถ้ามีใครสักคนทำให้คุณเจ็บปวดคุณจะให้อภัยเขาหรือไม่? ในปี 1972 ช่วงที่สงครามเวียดนามกำลังคุกรุ่น รูปถ่ายตีแผ่ความโหดร้ายของสงครามใบหนึ่งได้เปลี่ยนชีวิตของเด็กสาว และแนวคิดของคนทั้งโลกไปตลอดกาล เรื่องราวเบื้องหลังรูปภาพนั้นคืออะไร มาฟังกันใน "ทะยานหนึ่งภาพเล่าเรื่อง" กับคุณโธมัส พิชเยนทร์ หงษ์ภักดี ได้เลย
Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer, Nick Ut of "Napalm Girl" fame, received the National Medal of the Arts from President Trump. While many celebrated the achievement, a number of people expressed dismay over Ut's decision to accept it from the twice impeached President. In this episode, Allen and Sarah discuss the controversy, and also tackle the copyright grab at Penn State's Collegian, and Joe Biden's official White House photographer, Adam Schultz.
We are so excited to bring you this episode of It's Worth A Thought. We were joined by Mrs. Kim Bui (Phuc). She shared her incredible story of growing up in Vietnam, becoming known as the "Napalm Girl" or the "Girl in the Photo", and all that she has overcome in life since. Her life is an incredible example of grace and forgiveness and you will not want to miss the insight she shares with us tonight. For anyone struggling with any sort of past trauma, or struggling to find forgiveness in life this is a must listen. You can find Kim's book "Fire Road" and more information about her story by visiting her website: www.kimfoundation.com If you have any questions for us about this episode you can contact us by email at info@ourbiblebaptist.ca or by visiting our website: www.ourbiblebaptist.ca
Known as ‘Napalm Girl', Kim Phuc is recognised globally as the nine-year-old running from a napalm attack during the Vietnam War. The image was recently voted the most iconic photo of all time. In this in depth interview with Premier's Jess Lester, Kim shares her remarkable story of how she came
Host: Alex CrowGuest: Ken Crawford, U.S. CourtsRecorded on location at the Big Whig Studios in Washington, D.C.Thanks to our episode sponsor TeamPeople. For more information, visit - https://www.teampeople.tvFor the latest employment opportunities, visit the TeamPeople Job Board - https://teampeople.secure.force.com/careers/
In last week’s episode, we heard the gripping story of Kim Phuc’s life before being saved by Christ. We heard about her idyllic childhood being traumatically altered by the napalm attack which was captured in the world-famous “Napalm Girl” photo. We heard how her only dream was to be a doctor so she could save the lives of others just like the doctors of the Barski Unit that had saved her life. We heard how that dream was stolen from her by the communist government who used her as political propaganda. And ultimately, we heard how Christ miraculously saved this despairing young woman just two days before her planned suicide. When we left Kim, she was still living under the oppression of the Communist government, who had shutdown her church and imprisoned its pastors. So what became of Kim and her new faith? Did her faith survive spiritual isolation? Did Kim survive Communism at all? Better yet, could she escape these terrible circumstances as a young girl with no connections and no means to do so? In this episode, we pick Kim’s story back up and we will get answers to all these questions and more. Once again, you’re up for an unbelievable journey as the conclusion to this story is just as wild as the start. This episode is about how God miraculously saved Kim Phuc from Communism. One of the first significant steps the Lord took to save Kim from Communism was to miraculously create a friendship between the Vietnamese Prime Minister and herself. This friendship allowed Kim to leave Vietnam under the auspices of studying abroad in Cuba. Cuba was still a Communist country but at least moving there kept her away from the abusive hands of the Vietnamese Government as they continually objectified her as mere political propaganda. Kim was still without Christian fellowship for many years but it was in Cuba that Kim met her husband. She wasn’t sure if she’d ever be seem beautiful again to a man after her accident, but this man 100 committed to her. The two married and planned their honeymoon in another Communist country, which was the extent of where they were allowed to travel by the Communist regime. It was on this trip that God worked a series of major miracles in the couple’s life. The miracle that set off the whole chain of divine blessings happened while they were at a quick layover in the Toronto airport. Kim had been looking for a chance to defect from her country and the Lord revealed an opportunity to do just that as she waited in that airport. Kim told her husband, who wasn’t a believer, that she felt the Holy Spirit told her this was the time to defect and that she was going to obey what God had shared. Her husband thought she was seriously challenged, not knowing what to do, but ultimately his love for his wife was enough to take the chance. The couple did not get back on their plane. They instead hid and took a leap of faith asking someone what they should do. They didn’t know anyone in Canada and they didn’t have any resources to support themselves. All of this would be moot though if Canada wouldn’t let them enter the country. Kim’s husband was very scared as the consequences for their actions could be very severe. But the Holy Spirit assured Kim and she spoke to her husband confidently that everything was going to miraculously work out because God was taking care of them. Sure enough, divine appointment after divine appointment started revealing themselves. Perhaps the chief among the miracles was that this exact time happened to be during a very small, unprecedented window where Canada was allowing people in the couple’s situation to enter the country. Eventually God secured the couple housing, jobs and even a church. This last blessing was not only sweet for Kim who had been spiritually surviving only with her personal Bible and solitary prayer, but Kim’s husband had become a Christian as well. Once he had witnessed the miraculous way God had saved the couple from Communism, his eyes were opened and he gave his life to Christ. Listen to the episode above for the incredible full story of Kim Phúc’s life. Don’t miss part 1, as well, if you haven’t hear d it yet. HIGHLIGHTS Kim's parents, who were dedicated to the Cao Dai religion of her youth, have converted to Christianity and, by the grace of God, been able to move to Canada to be with their daughter's family. Kim lived in Cuba for six years. Today Kim has undergone advanced treatments that have relieved her of the lifelong pain caused by the napalm. The napalm attack actually perpetrated by the U.S. military. The attack was not supposed to be carried out but was an accident. Kim met the pilot later in life and he profusely apologized while Kim completely forgave him.
On June 8th, 1972, Vietnamese AP photographer, Nick Ut, snapped a photo that would become what is thought to be one of the most memorable photographs of the 20th century. The photo, which was later dubbed “The Napalm Girl,” captured a heart-wrenching scene that took place just after a Vietnam-War napalm attack. Children are fleeing toward the camera as their mouths make out visible screams. Soldiers follow close behind with smoke filling the whole of the background. But the center of the photograph is a little girl, naked, screaming out in pain from the napalm that had gripped hold of her skin. It’s a startling photograph to take in. Many attribute it helping end the Vietnam war as its powerful imagery made its way around the globe as front page news. The photograph was soon the recipient of the 1973 Pulitzer Prize, earning its place in our collective cultural memory as one of the most iconic images of its generation, but what about that little girl? What ever happened to her? What became of her injuries? Her life? Did she survive? Did she go on to live a healthy life or did she even live very long after the photograph was taken? The little girl’s name is Kim Phúc and her story was only beginning with the events captured in this photograph. Shortly after the attack, Kim found her way to a hospital where she was basically left for dead. Through a series of Divine miracles, she was rescued from this place and admitted into an exclusive hospital that specialized in cases like hers. Through excruciating pain, Kim was brought back from the brink of death, but the pain would torment her for decades. Ten years after the attack, when Kim was 19 years old, she was studying to become a doctor at a Vietnamese university. The dream to become a doctor and help others the way she was helped after the attack was the one hope that had pulled her through the continued suffering and lingering trauma. This dream was stolen from her by the communist Vietnamese government that discovered that the world-famous Napalm Girl was still alive. They saw in Kim a propaganda tool that could help advance their political and policy goals. The communists began pulling her out of class and ushering her off to press conferences packed with Western reporters. The reporters would ask questions and Kim would answer honestly in her native Vietnamese tongue, but the Communist interpreter would answer the party talking points instead of relaying Kim’s actual responses. Eventually, Kim was kicked out of school for missing so much class time as the Communists continued to interrupt her studies in pursuit of their political goals. Not only that, but the government assigned a minder to constantly monitor her and follow her around. Kim had lost her privacy and, most importantly to her, she had lost her dream to become a doctor. Kim was at the end of her will to live. She began to plan the taking of her own life. As she was hiding from her Communist minder a few days until her planned suicide, she sought refuge in the city library. She plopped down in the religion section and began to peruse books until she came across a New Testament written in Vietnamese. With curiosity, she began to devour the Scriptures until she landed upon the words of Jesus in John 14:6, ““I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Fatherexcept through me.” This contradicted everything Kim had learned from her universalist Eastern religion taught to her by her local Cao Dai priest. Jesus was a good moral teacher, how could He claim to be so exclusive? Yet, she persisted in wrestling with the Scripture and Jesus’ claims in them until God began to reveal the truth of Christ and His teachings of being the only way to God. At the same time, God sent a pastor into her life from a local church that would soon after be shutdown by the atheistic government. Though these leaders would soon be imprisoned, God used them to assist Kim in her journey to understand and accept the Gospel of Jesus. In the life of Jesus, Kim saw someone who knew suffering like she knew suffering and yet offered unadulterated hope. Kim found freedom from all her bitterness, pain and suffering in the Gospel of Jesus. In today’s episode, listen to Kim Phúc tell her amazing story of suffering and faith in Christ. Stay tuned next week for part 2 where we jump deeper into her story of how Christ helped Kim survive, and ultimately miraculously escape, Communism. HIGHLIGHTS Kim had a happy, idyllic childhood before the war. Kim's relatively well-off family were the benefactors of the local Cao Dai temple, where Kim learned the universalist religion of her childhood. The family was seeking refuge in the temple when the napalm attack took place and Kim was burned. The pastor who helped disciple Kim, just happened to come into her life right at the same time she had encountered the New Testament in the library. All of it adds up to God divinely pursuing Kim in her brokenness. LINKS John 14:6 Fire Road: The Napalm Girl’s Journey through the Horrors of War to Faith, Forgiveness, and Peace (Kim's Book)
The Pulitzer Prize-winning photograph of nine-year-old Kim Phuc running away from her village, naked and severely burned is one of the most iconic images of all time. Today, we are joined by Kim to hear the story behind the photo. Taken just months before the US pulled out of the Vietnam War, the image captures the catastrophic effect the war was having on civilians. Kim, also known as “Napalm girl,” shares what she has learned on her journey from tragedy to triumph and what it means for us. SHOW NOTES Growing up, the Vietnam War seemed far away from Kim’s carefree + joyful life in the village of Trảng Bàng. June 8, 1972: Kim watched as the planes flew overhead, dropping napalm bombs. Instantly, her clothes burned off + her left arm caught fire. She knew she’d no longer be “normal” and be viewed differently. As they were running from their burning village, a solider gave Kim water to drink + poured water over her skin. Three days after the bombing, her parents found her in the morgue of the hospital. Uncle Ut: Nick Ut is the photographer that captured the iconic photo + took Kim her to a nearby hospital. Kim spent 14 months in the hospital receiving 17 surgical procedures. The compassion and readiness of the doctors and nurses that treated Kim inspired her. While in medical school, the Vietnamese government arranged for journalists around the world to interview her which interrupted her studies leading her to have to drop out. The Girl in the Picture: While in the hospital, Kim was unaware the photograph existed. When she finally saw it, she was embarrassed that someone took her photo, naked and in agony. Later in life, the picture evoked emotion, motivating Kim to help children that are suffering. Finding peace: Kim has now learned to accept the picture + use it to promote peace. At 19 years old, Kim dealt with hatred, bitterness, pain, loss, negativity + hopelessness which was harder than dealing with the physical pain caused by napalm. Seeking purpose: Kim's physical suffering motivated her to find a purpose in religion. "Forgiveness made me free from hatred. I still have many scars on my body and severe pain most days but my heart is cleansed." "Naplam is very powerful but faith, forgiveness, and love are much more powerful. We would not have war at all if everyone could learn to live with true love, hope + forgiveness." "And if that little girl in the picture can find love, hope, and forgiveness. Then ask yourself, can you?" If you enjoyed hearing about Kim Phuc's story, you'll love my conversation with Carlotta Walls LaNier. As the youngest member of the "Little Rock Nine", Carlotta shares about her historic role in school integration + how she's been an inspirational leader for so many. Listen to Carlotta on ep. 56. Thank you to our Live Inspired community member + friend Marianne K. for recommending Kim Phuc as a guest for the Live Inspired Podcast. Share your guest recommendations with us at podcast@johnolearyinspires.com. KIM PHUC'S LIVE INSPIRED 7 1. What is the best book you’ve ever read? The Bible. 2. What is a characteristic or trait that you possessed as a child that you wish you still exhibited today? A princess! 3. Your house is on fire, all living things and people are out. You have the opportunity to run in and grab one item. What would it be? My Bible. 4. You are sitting on a bench overlooking a gorgeous beach. You have the opportunity to have a long conversation with anyone living or dead. Who would it be? My Lord. 5. What is the best advice you’ve ever received? Love His love. 6. What advice would you give your 20-year-old self? You love everything, but when you have God’s love you will have everything. 7. It’s been said that all great people can have their lives summed up in one sentence. How do you want yours to read? We cannot change history, but with love, we can heal the future. *** Did you enjoy today's episode? Share it with your friends! Then subscribe, rate + review on Apple Podcasts. Live Inspired with John daily on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, LinkedIn, Pinterest, Instagram + get his Monday Motivation email.
In episode 3 bespreken Sven en Jochem iconische foto’s. Van ‘Napalm girl’ tot ‘tankman’. Meer info kan je vinden op www.viewfinder.be/podcast instagram.com/Jochemherremans instagram.com/creativeboody
On this day in 1972, photographer Nick Út took the Pulitzer Prize-winning image that became known as the "napalm girl" photo. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
Espen Egil Hansen, Sjefsredaktør og Administerende direktør i Aftenposten ble verdenskjent da han bestemt sa fra om at de ikke kommer til å fjerne bilde av Napalm Girl, da Facebook mente at de brøt med deres regler. Vi diskuterer blant annet dette og hvordan Aftenposten driver gravende journalistikk.
Photojournalism often succeeds where words fail. From powerful, iconic, and polarizing images, like Nick Ut's Vietnam-era "Napalm Girl" to three-year-old Syrian refugee Aylan Kurdi lying face down on a sandy beach in Turkey - these images tell stories with vivid urgency. Constantine, author of the Exiled to Nowhere book and exhibit, discusses the challenges and ethical implications of documenting war and atrocity with WorldOregon's Tim DuRoche. Constantine has spent much of the past fifteen years living and working in Asia. In 2005, he began work on his long-term project, Nowhere People. Constantine has spent the past 10 years documenting stateless communities in eighteen countries, including Bangladesh, Myanmar, Nepal, Malaysia, Sri Lanka, Kenya, Ivory Coast, Dominican Republic, Ukraine, Serbia, Italy, Iraq, Kuwait, and Lebanon. His work has been featured in various publications including the New York Times, International Herald Tribune, Newsweek, The Atlantic, The New Republic, CNN, and Al-Jazeera.
Kim Phuc, subject of the famed “Napalm Girl” photograph, continues telling her miraculous story of forgiveness and healing.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Fire Road: The Napalm Girl’s Journey through the Horrors of War to Faith, Forgiveness, and Peace ... GUEST "Napalm girl” Kim Phuc (Girl in the Picture) ... she gained inadvertent fame as a 1970s antiwar icon when a photographer took a picture of her as she ran naked from a napalm attack in Vietnam ... Kim Phuc now provides the story behind the photo, chronicling her idyllic Vietnamese childhood in a prosperous home, the effects of the painful burns across her body, and her personal trials as she traveled from Vietnam to Cuba and then to Canada ... Her Christian conversion is central to her journey, and much of the memoir attests to God’s power in her life.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Fire Road: The Napalm Girl’s Journey through the Horrors of War to Faith, Forgiveness, and Peace ... GUEST "Napalm girl” Kim Phuc (Girl in the Picture) ... she gained inadvertent fame as a 1970s antiwar icon when a photographer took a picture of her as she ran naked from a napalm attack in Vietnam ... Kim Phuc now provides the story behind the photo, chronicling her idyllic Vietnamese childhood in a prosperous home, the effects of the painful burns across her body, and her personal trials as she traveled from Vietnam to Cuba and then to Canada ... Her Christian conversion is central to her journey, and much of the memoir attests to God’s power in her life.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Through the Lens: Nick Út on the Narratives and Photography of the Việt Nam War Quyên Ngô chats with Nick Út, Pullitzer prize-winning Associated Press Photojournalist of "Napalm Girl" fame, as he reflects on the visual interpretation of war in Việt Nam, 42 years after its conclusion. Rewind: Five News Stories to Know for April Giang Nguyễn rounds up some of Vietnam’s big headlines this month. Published April 27, 2017
The Napalm Girl photo on Facebook, 9/11 out of context, Apple stores and the iPhone 7 launch, the Doctor Strangelove trailer, Wiener-Dog, Pantsuit
This week on Fourth Estate the panel discuss how media should report new senator Derry Hinch's serious accusations under parliamentary privilege, why former Prime Ministers aren't happy with former Australian editor-in chief Chris Mitchell's tell-all memoir and how Facebook confused an iconic war photo for child porn. With Jonathan Holmes, Sean Kelly (The Monthly) and Jennifer Hewett (Australian Financial Review). Hosted by Marilyn Hetreles. Fourth Estate is produced by 2SER 107.3 in Sydney and is broadcast across the Community Radio Network in Australia.
On June 8, 1972, AP Photographer Nick Ut was covering a battle in South Vietnam when napalm meant for enemy fighters fell instead on civilians. Ut captured harrowing scenes of women and children fleeing and won a Pulitzer Prize for a haunting frame of a naked 9-year-old who would come to be known as “Napalm Girl.”