Genus of spiders
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Зимний аниме-сезон закончился. Что хотели — досмотрели, что не хотели — дропнули. Или досмотрели и пожалели, об этом тоже будет.00:00:00 - Начало00:01:38 - Дропы:Guild no Uketsukejou desu ga, Zangyou wa Iya nanode Boss woKono Kaisha ni Suki na Hito ga ImasuKuroiwa Medaka ni Watashi no Kawaii ga TsuujinaiClass no Daikirai na Joshi to Kekkon suru Koto ni Natta.Nihon e youkoso elf sanOkinawa de Suki ni Natta Ko ga Hougen Sugite Tsura SugiruНеоднозначные рекомендации:00:16:00 - Okinawa de Suki ni Natta Ko ga Hougen Sugite Tsura Sugiru00:20:45 - Amagami-san Chi no Enmusubi00:25:58 - Solo Leveling00:27:10 - Chi. Chikyuu no Undou ni Tsuite00:35:58 - Sorairo Utility00:41:37 - Tasokare Hotel00:46:33 - Ameku Takao no Suiri Karte00:54:13 - Ubel BlattОднозначные рекомендации:01:03:07 - Kusuriya no Hitorigoto 2nd Season01:03:48 - Hana wa Saku, Shura no Gotoku01:24:59 - Zenshuu01:40:40 - MedalistО наболевшем:01:52:20 - BanG Dream! Ave Mujica02:14:34 - ФиналНаш твиттерНаш телеграмМузыка:BGM: Artius - This Time (With You)Purple cat - Day's endPanic Ace's - Chill & To Be Alone Lo-Fi BeatLazyasskid - stay in the nightPerderte Lo-Fi de Marcos MambrinThe Calling - LudenzLazyasskid - DreamyMr. stone - Summer RoadsLAZYASSKID - Thinking About YouDC JC - BradburyYme Fresh - Lift Me UpVitxer - AscensionPanic Ace's - Nature Beastchillin_wolf - How about a Goodnight Kiss?LAZYASSKID - Alone In This WorldSchematist - Saturday CartoonsMr.Stone - Rain DropsSchematist - Vintage MemoriesSittic Beatz - Sensation Prod. EcroDeron
Un materiale rivoluzionario, una scoperta italiana premiata con il Nobel per la chimica nel 1963. Tutto merito di Giulio Natta, protagonista di questo episodio e “padre” del Moplen, il polipropilene isotattico, una plastica che ha rivoluzionato l'industria e che ha contribuito a mettere il turbo al boom economico del secondo dopoguerra. Un intreccio avvincente tra scienza, industria e futuro che vede tra i suoi protagonisti un Socio dell'Accademia delle Scienze di Torino.
Tjena Tjena allihopa! Här kommer veckans pödda!I nyhetsdelen så pratar Daniel och Calle om att Analogue försenar sin Nintendo 64 konsol 3D, nya rykten om att Hollow Knight Silksong är på G i år och Indiana Jones släppdatum till PS5 är ute.Assassins Creed Shadows är en riktig succé, Minecraft visar upp sin nya grafik uppdatering och en hel del mer.Ark DLC trailer i kontrovers, Rykten om nytt God of War och mycket, mycket mer,Självklart blir det intressanta spelsläpp!I lirat så har Calle lirat Golden Sun och Half Life 2 RTX, bägge har de spelat Beyond the Ice Palace 2.Daniel har köttat på rejält med , Scaravan DemoWreckfest 2 i early access, Ai Limit , Inayah Life after gods och Karma: The Dark World.Tack för att ni lyssnar! Utan er hade detta inte alls varit lika kul!Puss på er!!!➤ Stötta oss på Patreon!➤ YouTube➤ Gå med i vår Discord!
Både Donald og Melania Trump har lansert sine egne såkalte minnevalutaer. Over natten har memecoinsene blitt priset til et tresifret milliardbeløp i norske kroner. Siden lanseringen av myntene har også kryptovalutaer som bitcoin nådd nye toppnivåer. Med E24-kommentator Roar Valderhaug. Programleder Sindre Heyerdahl. Produsent Magne Antonsen. Ansvarlig redaktør Lars Håkon Grønning. Hør E24-podden der du hører podkast. Analyser, nyheter og innsikt i business og næringsliv, to ganger hver uke.
2025 is here! And we're kicking off with a romcom for our seasonal anime tie-in special, where I Got Married to the Girl I Hate Most in Class! Ah, back to the good ol' days of long titles that were just the premise. Did this make us fall in love and want to watch the anime? Or discover new depths of hatred? ~ Welcome to That Time I Started A Podcast To Read Trash Manga With My Friends And Actually Most Of Them Were Trash But Some Of Them Weren't! Or The Trash Manga Friends Podcast, for short. Each fortnight, our trio of Sean, Mike and Phil read the first two volumes (or equivalent) of a manga, webtoon, manhua or manhwa, analysing every little detail to discuss what's good, what's bad, and what's trash. And believe us, half a decade in, there's a lot of trash to discuss. So come listen to our book club slash neverending existential nightmare! ~ Follow us on social media! Links to all platforms on our site - https://trashmangafriends.carrd.co/ Sean, foreeeeveeeer host, is on Bluesky & Twitch - https://bsky.app/profile/slazo.bsky.social ~ https://www.twitch.tv/slazoking Mike, speedrunner and streamer extraordinaire, is everywhere @Bersekrer - https://bersekrer.carrd.co/ Phil, arbiter of trash, is on Twitter @PheNaxKian - https://twitter.com/PheNaxKian ~ Support the official release! I Got Married to the Girl I Hate Most in Class is licensed by Seven Seas Entertainment - https://sevenseasentertainment.com/series/i-got-married-to-the-girl-i-hate-most-in-class-manga/ Want to check out the anime? It's available via Crunchyroll - https://www.crunchyroll.com/
Kristine har laget film helt på egenhånd og denne finner du nå på patreonsiden vår. Robert har vært på kråkebollejakt, også det helt på egenhånd. Sammen har vi skutt opp til storvilt - selv om vi ikke jakter storvilt.Rypejakta fortsetter og nå har vi endelig fått oss en jakthund til! Klopp er blitt en fullverdig arvtaker og jakthund, sånn helt over natta! Dette synes vi er helt utrolig rart og vi må reflektere oss gjennom dette. I tillegg har det gått opp et lys for Robert rundt samarbeidet med Reborn, noe som tar praten vår inn i en ganske selvransakende retning. Men, det var altså håp for en mann midt i 40-årene, så da kan det være håp for flere som kanskje sliter med diverse samarbeidsproblemer med hunden sin.Jakten på lyden fortsetter siden ingen har funnet riktig svar. Fortsett å lytt og send oss en melding straks du tror du vet hva vi hører lyden av. Støtt podcasten vår og få eksklusivt innhold og rabatter i nettbutikken med Patreon Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Domenica sera la rassegna Degust-Arte che coniuga musica, vino e promozione del territorio fa tappa ad Alfiano Natta, alla Tenuta Castello di Razzano. Il programma della serata con il titolare Augusto Olearo.
Martedì in compagnia di Stefi parleremo di tanta musica, di europei e di aperitivi culturali. Come "Low Lake Como" alla Paninoteca civica, "Aperinatta" gli aperitivi culturali a casa Natta, "Festivalbeer" ad Albiolo, e in fine del "Villaggio dello sport a Milano"
Natt til søndag 14. april skjøt Iran flere hundre droner, missiler og krysserraketter mot mål i Israel. Fra rakettene ble skutt opp og til de kom frem tok det flere timer. I en ny samtale med Te'ena ben Haim forteller hun hvordan det var å skulle gå og legge seg og sove når man visste at rakettene var på vei. En urolig natt i bomberommet, en upopulær statsminister og spørsmålet om hvordan Israel bør reagere ovenfor Iran er tema for denne episoden av Nytt fra Jerusalem. Midt i det hele skal det gjøres klart til påske, som er årets store familiehøytid i Israel.
E hoje falamos do último anime feito por Jun Maeda com a P.A works que fez com que Maeda se afastasse da internret e dos animes por cometer o crime de fazer uma obra perfeitamente mediana E se você gostou do nosso podcast cogite em fazer uma doação no pix: Dentrodecaixas@gmail.com sigam no twitter @DDcaixaspodcast no tiktok: Dentrodecaixas e o youtube dentro de caixas --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/dentro-de-caixas/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/dentro-de-caixas/support
HUSK LIVE SHOW 19. JANUAR: BILLETTER VIL DU VÆRE GJEST PÅ ÅRETS JULE EPISODE SØNDAG 17. DESEMBER? VIPPS 50 KR OG FÅ EN GRATIS BILL TIL LIVE SHOWET I JANUAR! NB GJELDER KUN DE 50 FØRSTE Topics: Vi ble invitert til Netflix sin rød løper for The Crown, vi svarer på en del innsendte spørsmål, Ville du sloss mot en hane hver dag i 1 år eller en silverback gorilla en dag? Hjelp oss å nå 10 000 følgere på TIKTOK & INSTAGRAM Foto: Alandtic/Afterparty Media Har du spørsmål? Tips? Send gjerne en mail på guttegarderoben@gmail.com
Venerdì in compagnia di Lisa e Tamara che intervistano Martina e Michael di Informa Giovani che presentano l'evento "IL CORPO NELL'ERA DIGITALE" mercoledì 6 dicembre dalle 20.30 in via Natta, 16 a Como. Nella seconda parte, invece, intervistano Meda e Jashee che presentano il loro nuovo singolo "Questi non sanno".
Seb och Natta fortsätter gräva i Silvias värsta stunder som drottning. Ska eländet aldrig ta slut?! Den här veckan fokuserar vi på åren då Silvias äktenskap med kungen sattes på ett rejält prov.Musik: Epidemic SoundKlippning: Elin SamuelssonEn podd från Aller Media Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Drottning Silvia har levt ett långt och lyckligt liv. Men det har också varit tufft. I veckans avsnitt och nästa går Seb och Natta igenom Silvias tre stora kriser i livet – händelserna som skakat om drottningen på allvar.Musik: Epidemic SoundKlippning: Elin SamuelssonEn podd från Aller Media Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Paneldebatt fra Svarte Natta om rekruttering av mediefolk til Nord-Norge. Gjester: Redaktørene Nina Einem (NRK region nord) og Trond Haakensen (iTromsø), samt journalistene Gyda Katrine Hesla (NRK Finnmark) og Julie Trulsvik Rasmussen (Rana Blad). Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Questo e gli altri podcast gratuiti del Post sono possibili grazie a chi si abbona al Post e ne sostiene il lavoro. Se vuoi fare la tua parte, abbonati al Post. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Vad har hänt i den kungliga världen sedan Seb och Natta poddade sist? I det nya avsnittet går Natta igenom alla höjdpunkter sedan deras oannonserade paus.Musik: Epidemic SoundKlippning: Elin SamuelssonEn podd från Aller Media Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Fanny och Natta pratar om kraven på att vara that girl. Känslan av att aldrig göra tillräckligt samtidigt som vi hetsas till att leva upp till omöjliga utseendeideal. Kan man inte bara få slappna av och vara nöjd med sig själv? Dom berättar också om föreningens grundutbildning som är på gång och hur det kändes att själva gå den för två år sen.Som alltid - välkommen att höra av dig till Tjejjouren Ronja för stöd och råd:IG: tjejjourenronjaMail: tjejjouren-ronja@kvinnohuset-vasteras.orgTelefon: 021 - 12 70 10 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Något har förändrats hos Chris O'Neill de senaste åren, det vet alla med någorlunda koll på det svenska kungafamiljen. Men vad kan ha hänt med den glade, charmige Chris som vi alla älskar? Seb och Natta djupdyker i förvandlingen som hela landet skvallrar om. Musik: Epidemic SoundKlippning: Elin SamuelssonEn podd från Aller Media Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Durek Verrett kom som ett yrväder en aprilafton med en märklig new age-medaljong i ett band om halsen. Därefter blev det norska kungahuset aldrig sig likt igen. Natta har djupdykt i Dureks skandaler och letat fram det allra mest märkliga – och provokativa – som prinsessan Märtha Louises fästman hunnit med under sina år i rampljuset.Musik: Epidemic SoundKlippning: Elin SamuelssonEn podd från Aller Media Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Med bøkene Søsterklokkene og Hekneveven har Lars Mytting nådd titusenvis av lesere. Romanene blander sagn, myter og historiske hendelser i en bred fortelling om et land og ei bygd i brytningstiden mellom tradisjon og modernitet. Nå kommer tredje og siste bok: Skråpånatta. Mytting var gjest på Kapittelfestivalen 2023, hvor han samtalte med Åsmund Ådnøy. --- Innspilt i kinosal 1 i Sølvberget bibliotek og kulturhus. Medvirkende: Lars Mytting og Åsmund Ådnøy Teknikk: Åsmund Ådnøy
Det har skämtats OTALIGA gånger om kungahuset genom åren. Ibland snällt, ibland grövre. Men när har hovet tvingats säga ifrån? Seb och Natta gräver djupt i humorhistorien för att hitta övertrampen som skakat om på riktigt.Musik: Epidemic SoundKlippning: Elin SamuelssonEn podd från Aller Media Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Seb går i egenskap av far igenom hur vår kung egentligen är som pappa – från barnens förlossningar till vuxen ålder. Skulle han vinna priset som Årets papa? Det blir ilsken stämning i studion när Natta hör vad Seb tycker om hans faderskap.Musik: Epidemic SoundKlippning: Elin SamuelssonEn podd från Aller Media Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The inventor of plastic and the ethics of innovation. A presentation by Luca Cottini (PhD)* Oslo, December 10, 1963. The only Italian #scientist to receive a Nobel Prize in Chemistry* Achievement & fragility. From the invention of plastic to the management of waste* The imaginative mind of Giulio Natta. On #literature and #chemistry (Primo Levi)* A groundbreaking lab of innovation. Montecatini: from nylon to Moplen* The new material that God forgot to create. The birth and misuse of plastic* A new imagination of plastic. On the role of culture and ethics on innovationCheck out all the other episodes in the content library and make sure to join the newsletter of the show at www.italianinnovators.com. Don't forget to leave your comment here below and subscribe to the YouTube channel. Thanks for listening!
I förra avsnittet listade Natta de kungliga ögonblick som skakar om henne, får henne att gråta, gör att håret reser sig på hennes armar. Seb var inte jätteimponerad. I veckans avsnitt är det hans tur att langa fram ögonblick – och visa att han är kungen av gåshud. Klippning: Elin SamuelssonMusik: Epidemic SoundEn podd från Aller Media Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Natta blottar sig totalt och spelar upp klipp från kungliga ögonblick som skakat om henne i grunden, format henne som person. Men har de samma effekt på Seb? Well …Klippning: Elin SamuelssonMusik: Epidemic SoundEn podd från Aller Media Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
År 2010 skakades den kungliga världen – och landet – av uppgifter om att prinsessan Madeleine brutit förlovningen med Jonas Bergström. Ett samtal från norsk media skulle innebära slutet på sagoromansen, och Jonas Bergström skulle förlora sin prinsessa. I det sista avsnittet om Madeleines ex-pojkvänner tar Seb och Natta äntligen tag i den stora otrohetsskandalen som förändrade allt. En podd från Aller Media. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Några av Madeleines flammor hann göra mer avtryck än andra under sina 15 minuter i rampljuset. Seb och Natta berättar om paparazzibilden på Madeleine och exet Erik Granat som stoppade pressarna och fick kungen att rasa. Dessutom har Seb givetvis några namn kvar på den spektakulära listan över prinsessans romanser …En podd från Aller Media. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Prinsessan Madeleine fick epitetet ”partyprinsessan” av kvällstidningarna och blev snart löpsedlarnas bästa vän. Själv avskydde hon det. Hennes make Chris O'Neill likaså. I det andra avsnittet av tre om kungafamiljens krig om medierna lägger Seb och Natta fokus på prinsessparet, som gör allt för att undvika rampljuset.En podd från Aller Media. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Kungen har haft en spänd relation till pressen under hela sitt liv – men vid vissa tillfällen har den fullkomligen exploderat. Seb och Natta går igenom de värsta utbrotten, kriserna och bråken. I den första delen av tre om kungafamiljens krig mot medierna avhandlas även drottning Silvia och hennes märkliga brev till TV4 …En podd från Aller Media. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
En bild publiceras i pressen på prins Carl Philip och hans nya flickvän Sofia, som ska ha fått Madeleine att rasa. I del två av serien om det omskrivna prinsessbråket ger Seb och Natta dig det smaskigaste skvallret från insidan och vad som egentligen hände.En podd från Aller Media Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
I alla år har det ryktats om en infekterad konflikt mellan prinsessan Madeleine och svägerskan prinsessan Sofia. Seb och Natta djupdyker i alla vändningar på ett sätt som aldrig tidigare gjorts av media. I första delen av tre avhandlas exet som skulle ge upphov till ett svårdödat rykte om ett stökigt bråk i kungafamiljen.En podd från Aller Media. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Charlene Wittstock gifte sig in i ett av världens glamorösaste kungahus och gjorde sedan allt för att fly därifrån. Seb och Natta tar ett grepp om Charlene av Monaco, furstinnan som gjort sig känd för att aldrig le. Varför är hon så fruktansvärt ledsen hela tiden? Svaret får du i veckans avsnitt!En podd från Aller Media. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Det blev löpsedlar, extrasändningar och nyheter i hela världen när prins Carl Philip hamnade i slagsmål utanför en klubb på Franska rivieran. Men hur uppstod bråket? Och varför har hovet och andra vittnen två olika versioner av vad som egentligen hände? Seb och Natta reder ut.En podd från Aller Media. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Aristoteleen kantapäässä ruoditaan lasten leikkien vaihtelevaa nimistöä. Haastateltavana on leikkitutkija, filosofian tohtori Marjatta Kalliala. Ohjelmassa myös vastaanotetaan pajunköyttä ja pähkäillään miten murhan kuvaus voi liikauttaa veret. Toimittaja on Pasi Heikura.
En rapport från insidan av Stockholms exklusiva elitskolor, där prinsar och prinsessor förbereds för livets hårda skola och föräldrar gråter i telefonen för att få en plats till sina okungliga barn. Seb och Natta tar dig med bakom de låsta och topphemliga dörrarna på Campus Manilla. En podd från Aller Media. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
I det andra avsnittet av Du, Kungen! djupdyker Seb och Natta i prinsessan Sofias topphemliga dagbok från New York – som skrevs långt innan hon träffade Carl Philip. Vad gör hon egentligen på P. Diddys hotellrum? Varför dansar alla bugg? Och vad är Sofias tjejgängs mantra? En kunglig direktrapport från staden som ALDRIG sover.En podd från Aller Media. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
För drygt ett år sedan lamslogs hela journalist-Sverige av brännheta uppgifter: kronprinsessan Victoria och prins Daniel höll på att skiljas. Två veckor senare gick hovet ut med en officiell dementi. Vad hände under de här två veckorna, och hur uppstod ryktet till att börja med? Seb och Natta bjuder på hela berättelsen, från insidan!En podd från Aller Media Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
ART INTERVIEW lundi et jeudi à 14h. Le podcast qui dessine la scène picturale française. Julie Gabrielle Chaizemartin ou Stéphane Dubreuil rencontre un artiste ou un acteur du monde culturel. Stéphane Dubreil reçoit Marie-Christine Natta dont le livre montre que le dandysme est pour Gainsbourg bien davantage qu'un bel ornement : comme chez Barbey d'Aurevilly, Baudelaire et Oscar Wilde, il fonde sa personnalité, son esthétique et sa morale. Et le jazz, seul genre musical qui avait grâce à ses yeux, faisait partie de cette recherche de sophistication. Une gestuelle délicate, une intonation ironique, un mouvement de tête hautain, des Repetto blanches portées pieds nus, autant de détails qui valent à Serge Gainsbourg le titre mérité de dandy, dont on l'honore depuis le début de sa carrière jusqu'à la récente commémoration des trente ans de sa disparition. Il faut néanmoins aller au-delà du paraître de Gainsbourg, pour en révéler toute la profondeur. Par son orgueil, son obsessionnel souci du self-control, son goût pour l'artifice et la sophistication, son culte du beau et de l'originalité, le chanteur a toute sa place dans la famille sans chaleur des dandys du XIXe siècle, ceux qu'il préfère. En peuplant sa maison d'objets superflus, en achetant une Rolls qu'il laisse au garage, en perdant chaque matin deux ou trois heures à ne rien faire, Gainsbourg se laisse toucher par l'inutile qu'il appelle "la grâce des dieux"A lire : Serge Gainsbourg, Making of d'un dandy, Editions Passés Composés, 384 pages, 23 eurosTitres diffusés de Serge Gainsbourg :BaudelaireRock NervalLes femmes, c'est du chinois
Dette er historien om den natta som skulle forandre livet til Anja Lindgaard for alltid. En nådeløs historie om overgrep, menneskehandel og pornoindustrien.
La plastica è stata inventata dall'unico Premio Nobel italiano per la chimica: Giulio Natta. Allora, è stata una rivoluzione. Ora potrebbe distruggere il pianeta. Per salvarlo, Marco Astorri ha un piano che prevede cinque brevetti e una ex conigliera. Ascolta gli altri podcast di Will: https://shor.by/agwE
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NRK Nyheter stenger kommentarfeltet på Facebook. Er det sensur? Og hvorfor tror journalister at PR-rådgivere råder alle sine kunder til å svare som papegøyer? Vi gjestet journalistkonferansen Svarte Natta i Tromsø. Der fikk vi besøk av iTromsø- og VG-kommentator Egon Holstad, som beskriver seg selv som en «rotkuk». Han er musikk-elskeren uten utdannelse som nylig ble tildelt Riksmålsforbundets Gullpenn - fordi han ifølge juryen betrakter landet med «syrlig skråblikk i en befriende leken og uærbødig form og tone». See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Intellectuels, chefs d'entreprises, artistes, hommes et femmes politiques... Frédéric Taddeï reçoit des personnalités de tous horizons pour éclairer différemment et prendre du recul sur l'actualité de la semaine écoulée le samedi. Même recette le dimanche pour anticiper la semaine à venir. Un rendez-vous emblématique pour mieux comprendre l'air du temps et la complexité de notre monde.
Vi har nu lämnat Tulum och har tagit oss till Playa del carmen, skithögen från new york har skickat ett mindre trevligt meddelande
Hey Wicked Hunters! I'm so excited to chat with Christian Fletcher, one of the best photographer from Perth, Western Australia. He had won multiple international awards and he has a beautiful gallery in the Southwest region of Australia. In this podcast, Christian shared his journey to find the photography that he loves and the struggles that came with it. You can learn more about him by connecting in https://www.instagram.com/christianfletcher_gallery/ https://www.facebook.com/shopchristianfletcher https://christianfletcher.com.au/ Other ways to listen and subscribe to the podcast: Spotify - http://bit.ly/twhspotify Apple Podcast - https://bit.ly/Theartofphotography Google Podcast: https://bit.ly/TheArtOfPhotographyWithStanleyAr Website: podcast.thewickedhunt.com Tune In (Alexa) - https://bit.ly/TuneInTheArtOfPhotographyPodcastWithStanleyAr For those of you who want to see more of The Wicked Hunt Photography: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thewickedhunt/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thewickedhunt/ Masterclass: https://www.TheWickedHuntPhotography.com Photo print: https://www.TheWickedHunt.com/ Don't forget to let us know your favourite part of the Podcast on the comment below and subscribe -------------------------- Transcription: Christian Fletcher 0:00 I had a really hard time getting out of that. And my wife pushed me to get away from that fear and to start just pushing myself to do that Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt 0:20 hey, we can do this. Welcome back to The Art of Photography podcast. So first of all, happy new year to all of you. And you know, off, we'll have someone very excited is in this episode, and he is definitely one of the most senior photographer from Perth, Western Australia. And he is you have one of the most beautiful gallery who have won multiple different awards. So not only he won, you know, he may he gets some recognition from his photography, but he also get a lot of recognition from his gallery, and I'd like you to welcome Christian Fletcher, Christina, how you doing? Christian Fletcher 0:56 Hey, good. How are you? Thanks for having me on. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt 0:58 Oh, that's, yeah. So yeah, that title Christian Fletcher 1:02 of senior senior photographer. I have got a great handout. I'm actually getting a hiccup tomorrow, everybody. So sorry for it looking so bad. Just what it is, try to shape Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt 1:14 up a few years, once you cut up that hair. Yeah, that's Christian Fletcher 1:18 what I always say, I look younger when I've got this here. So and when I met my wife, I had hair that was down to here somewhere. And I had been dyed several times. So it was kind like a blondie orangey brown kind of colour was pretty awful, actually. And I looked a bit like a homeless person. So she, she sort of shake me up and every now and then I get back into this homelessness kind of look. Like it's alright. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt 1:39 That's really funny. Because when, when I have like a full, like, longer here, and then like, you know, a more beer, like, I don't really grow that much beer. But when I have a little bit more people actually thought I'm like four years old, and then I shaved them off. And then like, are you 20 years old? Like crazy. Alright, well, look, thanks a lot for for jumping in into podcasts. And it's great to have somebody who's been in the game for so long. And you have quite an interesting story on how you get into photography yourself. So do you want to just share with the listeners and a little bit walkthrough of what it's like on your early days when you first got exposed to photography? Christian Fletcher 2:22 Yeah, I got my first camera 15 Everyone talks about, I think every photographer says, I got my first camera at 10 I got my first camera at 12 I got my I got mine at 15. And didn't make me want to pick up the camera and take photos. It was just what was the cost was 150 bucks, it was a really flex sl 35. And it I went through it with my brother, my dad. So we put in 50 bucks each. And I don't even know where I got $50 as a 15 year old boy, maybe dad paid for the lot and just said, Hey, look, here's 50 Give it back to me out of my anyway, this thing because out of the box. And it's I remember being at home, but no one ever doing anything with it. So for that, that first few years after that I hadn't really even touched that camera and didn't even think anything about taking photographs. And then when I was 18, I was working in the government doing a clerical job just back this back before Photoshop before digital before computers before the internet, so it's quite a long time ago. I'm a pretty old guy, hence the grey here. And I had a I was on a holiday. So I had four weeks off of work. And I was into surfing so I would surf a lot. But on the in the first week I had a surfing accident, cut my leg and I couldn't get back in the water because I got infected with this is just a hole in my leg that didn't heal properly. And so I was so bored. I was like I was shot out three more weeks left, I'm not going to do what I want to do with Surf and I thought I'll just get that camera again and see what that's all about. And so I picked up the camera, put in some just negative film that I don't have the most important shot because you could buy film really easily back in those essence, that's all there was, and started saying if you've got them developed and just kind of enjoyed that process. And I remember it was a point where my sister said, Oh, your photos look really good Christian. I don't know why but you know, you take nice photos. So that was kind of my first compliment that I ever gotten from my system that was back when I was 18 which is I can't remember at all it is now it's 30 something years ago, 35 Six years ago. Anyway. From there, I sort of gained a bit of an interest and I took the camera to work and I would become I became the unofficial photographer at work. So if there was a birthday party, they would get me to take photos of everybody and then a wedding my cousin got married so I remember taking my camera to the wedding and doing a couple shots here and and but that was the first time when I thought photography was kind of fun, but I never thought it was gonna be a career. I was just doing this horrible job in the government which I ended up hating the passion. And then eventually I quit that job. I just I just couldn't be there anymore. It was just mind numbing. One of my main duties was to file these forms in alphabetical order and when I started I had four piles that were just like massive piles of paper, everyone had gotten in a strict strict alphabetical order. It wasn't just the AC and the A. And the bees, there was a VC with it. Anyway, it was mind numbing. And I did that for three months, finding bits of paper. And at the end of it, I had three piles left standard for after three months, I only had three. So it'll just took me that long it was that and newborns would come in every day, and it was just horrible food, end up cleaning there. And then, just bumming around with a mate, we made a couple of snowboards, because we thought, oh, we'll just make some stuff because I was into sandboarding as well. So I bought some Epsom salt boards and sell those. And that didn't work that well, because we you know, I didn't have any skills my mate did most of the work. I was just kind of like, helping fund some of the materials. And but we made a couple sideboards that didn't float that well, they were a little bit heavy, and I don't think I think I might have sailed one month, but it was a bit of a dog. So that business was never gonna go anywhere. And, and then I started thinking about all well, and crafty sort of stuff. So I would go out in the bush and find old lumps of old tree roots and stuff. And I'd get out there with a file and some sandpaper and a drill. And I would try and make some shapes out of them, and then varnish them up and put little flowers in them and you know, blah, blah. And that wasn't going anywhere. That was I did one I think I gave it to mom, I think she liked it. But it was another dead end business. And then eventually I end up with a video live because governor at the time who are uncle was selling his video library. So my sister and I got into that was really cheap, little rundown thing. And then I ended up we ran that for about five years or so and was quite successful because we, we managed to get a good following with with clients because we, we knew the numbers and we gave them great service. And then eventually that that died out because the big video stores came in. And so I decided, Okay, well I'm going to I'm going to do something else. So at that time, my parents moved to Dunsborough. And I had been on a trip around Australia working on I was actually doing video at that stage, I had a video camera that is shooting film or cast film cassettes, whatever they are, whatever you call them now. And so I started that. And that was three months of just taking video. And I really enjoyed that process. And notice, I would look at my brother and his wife and I would just run ahead and film them walking path. And they were making these little scenes and I edit all this together. And it was pretty cool. I was quite enjoying that, that process. And then I decided that I was going to leave Perth and move down south and just crash with mum dad for a while. So that's when I thought maybe I'll pick up the camera again. And I'll start taking photos. So you know, it's a bit of a long process from from when I first got the camera to when I actually started to be serious about and I was 25 then at that stage when I picked up the camera again, and thought I got to make this into a career because I think it'd be fun a fun job and it'd be easy. I wouldn't have to answer to anyone I can do my own thing. And people might be pushing me around, which is what happened in the government all time. So I got the I got a little camera out and realised that that wasn't going to cut the mustard. So I thought oh, I'll invest all my money in a really good camera. So all the money I had at that stage was 1500 bucks. So I bought a Nikon 801 s that came with two lenses I think and and that that was my first camera. And within six months I realised that camera was not going to cut the mustard. It was just it was a consumer camera. It was well I think I called it a prosumer camera that was a little bit better than the average. And but then I thought no, I'm not getting the results. I have like my darkroom setup my death house and, and I will just do all the do my stuff there. And I just work in black and white pretty much exclusively at that stage. And then the whole aim was to take landscape photographs and sell them through a gallery and didn't think that I'd have my own gallery eventually. But anyway, I realised that that that Nigam was not going to cut it. So I bought a Bonica medium format film camera so blank sky and started using that. And that's when my work started to be elevated to a different level. And people were starting to take a bit more notice of what I was doing. So I wouldn't say it was good. It took me ages to work out anything I had no I mean, I'm an in green, completely green, bought the gear, and just worked it out myself tried to work it out. But even then I was, you know, you only learned so much with film because you shoot it, then you got to develop it and print it before you know what you've done wrong, pretty much. So that was a really long process. Hence, it took me another 10 years before I started to get anywhere near a reasonable level of quality, but that I was pretty, pretty uptight young guy had a lot of stress, pretty nervy sort of timescale of everything. And I was doing weddings and portraits and that was killing me from the inside. I was just sick every time we do a wedding, I would just be nauseas for the whole week beforehand. And the day before and then the morning of the wedding. I just just woke up with this dread in my heart and I knew that I couldn't continue on doing it. So eventually, I gave up photography for two days. And then I was inspired by a lady who had a small gallery in a small town called Esperance. South of south southeast of But where I was living, and and I thought, well, this lady can do or she's doing what I had intended to do when I first moved down south was to have to shoot NASDAQ photographs and sell them in the gallery. And this lady was doing this. So that's when I thought I've got to get back to, to landscapes. And then from there, it was a long process of doing market stalls, trying to get my photos out wherever I could, it was pitch framing at the time as well. So I managed to con the guy I was framing with to give me space in his in his framing studio to to hang my pitches. And eventually I ended up hiring, releasing the whole front of the building from him. And he had his framings of effects that we shared this season that became our first gallery. And then it sort of kicked off from there. That's sort of abbreviated version of a 20 year period of my photography career. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt 10:50 I'm Christian now your audio just dropped off there a little bit. Not sure if the microphone Yeah, the volume kind of just died down a little bit. Christian Fletcher 10:59 They're speaking close enough in my Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt 11:03 mind. No, it was okay. And then it just died also might be like disconnected or something. Christian Fletcher 11:08 Okay. They seem to be testing one, two, I guess you can't see any. That's just coming through. But microphone on mic. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt 11:16 Not that's that's good. Christian Fletcher 11:18 That's good. Yeah. Yeah. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt 11:19 So it must be. Yeah, cool. Well, that's, that's incredible. Yeah. I mean, I can I can't even imagine. So how do you actually progress and learn photography back then, you know, like, right now, it's really hard to think back of your struggle, because we got everything in our hand, we got Instagram, we got Facebook, we got YouTube, we got it's just so interconnected with with the internet, but you know, like you say, back then it was, especially when you do it all yourself all that trial and error really comes back through a lot of legs, you know, after you finish the role, you take a photo, and then you develop it. And so when do you actually learn, like, you know, the technique and, you know, composition and lights and so forth? Christian Fletcher 12:07 Yeah, I didn't, I didn't learn it. It was just, in fact, I learned nothing until I went digital. And because I had no control. I mean, I remember getting some commercial jobs. And I'd saw some of the top of commercial shooters in Perth, lighting these scenes and I'm going I don't even know how to use I've got lights, but I don't know how to use them. I had no idea of how to balance that out. You know, I was using a light metre lesson stuff. So it was all I didn't I didn't know anything. I think I had a book that Kodak released on photography. And that was one book I remember having. So I had to pretty much learn on the job. And that's why it took so long because I literally went from 25 to 35 not knowing anything. And then 35 I had been to America and I saw some of the some of the best photographers over there, how they were working, what they were doing, and then getting my act together going, Okay, well, I need to have control because I, I'm sending these images off these transparencies off to a lab and the or actually, I was shooting the film a lot of it because it was all leftover film from the wedding days. So I had no control of sending off to the lab expecting to get these great results back and I was going Why can't I get the colours that these guys getting? So then I got a I got into digital. So I basically, I wasn't in digital, I was scanning or scanning of digitally scanning my negative transparencies. So I'd had it I had it I bought a Fuji GX exhibiting panoramic camera that was a that was the first really expensive camera that I bought that was going to allow me to do landscapes that I thought I wanted to do it that that but that time so I built my sort of career on shooting panoramic landscapes, and digitising them. And once I get those files into Photoshop, it was just a matter of teaching myself Photoshop. And that was that was again trial and error. And just I had some books on on Photoshop and how to do it. So yeah, that's when I started to get the control that I needed. And that's and this was still before. I think it'll still be on the internet was around at that stage. But I don't know if YouTube was there. And there was definitely no YouTube videos, on tutorials on whatever. So I was still just trying doing anything myself. I was very insular. When I first brought in for most of my career I spent. I didn't know who was the top photographers were in the country, I wasn't part of the aipp. So I was pretty much just my own guy down in the country. Country hick taking photos and processing my way, the way I sort of thought was right. And it was until I actually joined the AIP that I started to realise what quality, what quality I needed to work towards. And that really helped helped me develop my skills. And then I met some friends that taught me some stuff and went to a couple seminars here and then I did a lot of it. I've been doing a lot of workshops, people I was getting asked to teach people, how I how I did what I did. And so I was very scared of public speaking I hated that the thought of being on the stage and just freezing and not just totally sucking at anything. So I am, I had a really hard time getting out of that. And my wife pushed me to get away from that fear and to start just pushing myself to do that. So I start off doing small workshops in my gallery. And it was actually pretty good because I could set a small amount of people, you know, like, I was doing maximum eight people. And so I thought, Okay, that's good. Then I had a workbook that they could follow along, and I was pretty much going off a formula. And within the first five minutes, I realised that I knew what I was talking about, because that's what I did. So it wasn't so hard. It was, I wasn't off on some topic that I had no idea about. Nobody was like, I know this. But the idea this is this, and whether it was right, it was people didn't mind because it was what I was doing. And they wanted to know what I was doing to get those photos looking like that, you know, that were coming to the gallery. And, and that was, and that was going back about 10 or 12 years ago. So that you know, my my first times doing that I would just get a bottle of wine and pretty much knock off half a bottle before I started so that I wasn't so nervous. And eventually I got to a point where I didn't need any alcohol to, to get on stage. And, and yeah, now now it's all fine. It's all good. But asked me to talk about something I know nothing about, then I'll freeze up. Yeah, that was hard learning. That meant that answer. But learning back then was impossible. And I think in some ways, it made me a better photographer, because I I had to really be sure. And when I was shooting film on my Fuji was $5 Every time I push the button, so I had to make sure that whatever I was pointing the camera at was a reasonable shot. Whereas digital now you just you just shoot away you get moderately interesting, I'll take a photo of that. And then you know, eventually it's just clogging up harddrive. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt 16:46 Well, I think that's definitely the struggles with people who shoot digital camera or started with a digital camera and I'm one of them. You know, so? Yeah, you're exactly right. Like, we're, we're, we take it for granted, we don't think about what was you just gonna like, Oh, that's beautiful. And we don't even think about what is beautiful about it. What is you know, whether or not it's a lie, whether or not it's the shape, whether or not is the texture, we just point and shoot. And I guess that's why they call it point and shoot cameras, right? Because you just switched off you just go up beautiful. Snap. And and that's kind of why like, when I first started photography, my photo doesn't really turn out that great because exactly what I did just point and shoot, I didn't really put a lot of thoughts in there. So yeah, yeah, and look, I I'm like everyone else now today, though, Christian Fletcher 17:31 I still take way more shots than I should. I've gone a bit I think I've taught myself composition a lot better back in those days, I mean, I shooting black and white as well. So I wasn't worrying about colour at all, it's just worrying about tone and contrast and stuff like that. So it maybe it helped me become better at composition. And, you know, it just, I guess you do anything long enough, you kind of know what works and what doesn't work. And I still time and look, I get a ride all the time. I'm just like anyone else. But then you get these moments where you find just that perfect composition. And, and also, it's important to pre visualise when you're out there in the field going okay, well this the lights not perfect, but I know that that little headline is going to look beautiful. And if we put up new sky or if we darken this or light now to add a bit of colour, he'll enhance that area. So you know, I'm always thinking about capturing data as opposed to capturing a photo. So I mean, I still like to capture a photo obviously but an outdoor photos but you know, I might have some stuff some of these things for like I was out data Pesco beach town a little while back and, and I wanted a palm tree I hadn't I hadn't got a shot of a palm tree. So I found this one down there. So I photographed it and then I've used that in other photos so you know I'm not a purist by any any any stretch of imagination I'm I'm always putting in new skies, altering skies, I don't alter landscapes completely, like I don't change the form that's there in nature, but that look if disguise mean sky, something that's changeable. And, and I always say to people, if you're out shooting a commercial job for somebody, you better be good at putting in skies and enhancing images, because that's what they want to see. They want to see the perfect sky over the perfect, you know, building there if that's their beautiful building, yeah, they don't want something average, they want to see the best guy ever. And if you get paid to come out one day, and it's it's not doing what it's supposed to do, then you need to, you need to sort of, so that's that's the way I look at it. i When I'm out photographing, I, especially if I'm away on a trip, if I fly to Iceland, and it cost me X amount of dollars to get there and I want to make sure that I'll catch us guys, I'm not sure if I can catch the skies in Iceland, but I'll use them in other shots. I'll do that. So you know, do that all the time. Just to make things look a little bit more. Perfect. Yeah, Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt 19:52 that's that's a good point. Um, you know, with especially with commercial photography, it's really hard especially if you've got a really short window or um timeframe tissue. So, yeah, very interesting. Take on the shoot for data instead of a photo, that's definitely a different one. One thing that I want to ask you this. So when I started photography, the way I learned composition, I didn't know all these composition techniques. And the way I learned it was, I basically take 100 photos of a similar perspective, just slightly different, right? So one, download one out one closer one with this in it when that in it. And that's how I learned composition. But back on the film days, you don't really have that luxury to, like you say, you know, every snap is $5. And $5, back then, is a lot more valuable than it is now. So how do you actually learn composition all together? Christian Fletcher 20:48 It's very slowly, you learn it very slowly with film. I don't know I, I just got to a point where, and I liked the idea what you just said about taking the same, the same scene 100 times from different perspectives, changing your viewpoint and all that sort of stuff. But I never did that. And because I couldn't, but I think I've made enough mistakes along the way to go, okay, I can work that out. But now I can go out and I can see the balance, and I can see the composition. And it just feels right. And, you know, it's like when you I can like if you're looking at a mountain range, right? I always think about my histogram on my camera, and having that perfect histogram, you know, with that beautiful triangle shape. And you might have a couple of nice, and sometimes you look at the history and go, Wow, that's a beautiful composition. And then other times, you've got this horrible one, it's just like, it comes up and it goes straight across, and it goes down a little bit and then and then cuts off there. And it's like this horrible, ugly histogram that doesn't fill you with any joy. So I just when I'm out shooting, now I kind of feel that the composition is right. And I find that easy. And I work quite quick. And I've done a lot of shooting with mates like them Tony, who who's an amazing photographer. And he does beautiful work. But he goes on to say, How come you you're here? You're there, you're over there you'd like. So I'm either not getting it right. And I'm just moving on think I got it right, or I got it right. And I kind of move on to the next thing. So I think I do have a an ability to see composition, easily. And and I know I can just feel it's balanced or not then. So that that probably helps. I wouldn't say I get it right all the time. Yeah, I find it probably a bit easier than maybe some some people. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt 22:28 Yeah, I think like some people might, like looking at composition might come natural to some people. And I guess you're kind of one of those more lucky one than the others. Christian Fletcher 22:40 So that's why I ended up in photography and why I've been successful, because, I mean, there's a lot of photographers in Australia, but not many of them have galleries or and I'm sure there's some more that could, you know, especially in my case, it's been because it's been a long process. And it's been a process that I've had to help with. I've had staff and partners that have enabled all these things to happen. You know, I've done I've done well, but you know, it's, you think there would be more people doing it, but it just isn't. So aberdovey always a lot of photo galleries of your way kind of Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt 23:14 this, there are a few but you know, like nowadays, I think with the way the online world works, it's kind of easier, you got less costs, you know, you just put it out there. And I think it's a lot less risk, right. And I mean, I saw your I saw your bio, and you were inspired to kind of build a gallery, you saw somebody have a gallery and you thought to yourself, you want to build a gallery. So there might have been reason why you get to where you are right now where most people kind of, especially nowadays, in the modern era, don't really think much of a gallery, more of Instagram followings. But that's their dream is to get 30,000 100,000 followers on Instagram. Yeah, Christian Fletcher 23:57 that's so true. And, and this is probably a reflection on my age. I mean, I've had had my own galleries for 20 years, so 20 years ago, the only way you're gonna sell prints, if you had them in a gallery, though, there was no social media to help you sell them so and it just carried on. But I think one thing about a gallery that just gives you that little bit of credibility, and then also because, you know, we get followed by other people on Instagram that are other photographers that are and not all, but not all, but there's definitely a lot of that so, and a lot of other photographers aren't going to buy your work, they're going to look at what you do and try and emulate it or, and make their own which is perfectly fine. It's great. So a gallery out. And we've done studies on people and how they found out about our gallery and most of them are just walking by and see it see at the front and go let's go in and have a look. And that's where we get our sales from. So even after all these years, we still make more sales out of our gallery than we do online. But then yeah, like you said, you got that massive debt as well. Not a debt but that every week you're gonna sit sell certain amount of pitches to keep the doors open, pay the rent, pay the wages, pay attacks, all that sort of stuff. So. And then when we had when COVID hit us, we closed the gallery for five weeks. And our staff went on to Job keeper, which was fantastic. Because we didn't have to worry about wages we didn't have, we only had some renters our overhead. And electricity had been deferred all those costs. So we were just back to internet sales, and we'll and we got some good sales over that period of time. And I said to my wife, is it far out? Do we really want to reopen the gallery because this, if we can just live like this, we can just, we don't have to do much, we can just bring the printers home, get the oldest make prints, put them in tubes and stuff. And it'd be fantastic. But it's still nice to have your own space. Because people they see see more, you're more visual, basically. Yeah. And being in Dunsborough, in the small little holiday town, we get a lot of people that come in, and we get repeat customers. And it used to be exposed to a different different group of people. And it's kind of nice, because you, you you get immediate feedback from, from real people, not just like on Instagram saying I love to shop man, you know, it's cool that yeah, and they hand over cash. That's, that's always nice, too. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt 26:14 Yeah, I think I mean, like, I have a dream that one day, I will have my own gallery. No more not for the sales part of it, but more of just being able to bring my work and present it in a way that I'm happy about, you know, being able to see that big print of yours and hanging on the wall is a different feeling. I'm sure you can relate to that. And that's, that's the main reason why I want to Gallery. But I want to I want to know, and get a little bit of insights or so you did a few different things from commercial portrait and wedding and kind of ended up with travel and landscape photography. How do you get there kind of what is the process of why you decided that it is your it is what you want to do for, you know, for your main part of your photography career. Christian Fletcher 27:09 It was because I mean, I started out wanting to do that. Because like I said, Back Back in those days, I was very insular, I was quite, you know, I wasn't into being in the limelight. And public speaking, I didn't like being around people so much. Not that I'm not a people person, because I enjoyed it. But I thought the far as work goes, I needed to be controlling my destiny, and I need to do something that I enjoy. And landscapes always seemed like the option for me, that was the most good, the best match for my personality. So I didn't commit I got sucked in. I started out doing landscaping, I got stuck into the commercial work and the portraits and weddings by people, friends, people in town. And I knew, I mean, I had when I put my very first pictures up in an a restaurant, my brother had a restaurant in town where I worked as a dish big washing dishes. I put pictures in there, the first day I sold one. And that was an amazing feeling to have a landscape photograph. They're all black and whites and to sell. So one on the first night was was brilliant. So that again, got me thinking, Yes, this is the path for me. But the reality was that it took another three months before I sold the next one. So I wasn't gonna make any money out of photography. And so I had to wash dishes, pitcher, pitcher, framing, and all that. And then from having the work hanging in the restaurant, I would get business people coming and saying, Can you do this photo for me? Can you do this though? So I started doing commercial work that way. Then I had a friend who I met down south and he said, Can you do my wedding photos. And that was when I started doing weddings and other work out. At least I'm making money from photography, you know, but I had no idea what I was doing. I was shooting these things and these for these people. And I'm heading over the work and I'm not happy with it myself. Because I'm never happy with my work. I know. It has to be pretty special for me to really like it. And if I do like it, I like it for a month, two months, three months, six months, and then I hate it or not. I mean, I've got images I don't hate but there are images that I've just never want to see again. And they just frustrate the hell out of me when they sell on the gallery. Why are you buying that? Horrible? Buy this one? No, no, I like this one. Yeah, but look at that. Look, there's noise and there's some weirdness going on. It's over. There's a small file shot on the canon that he d 60. And IT systems horrible. Anyway, he gets on like a photographer. Yeah, so we are very harsh and very critical. There were. So I didn't that's how I got stuck in the commercial. But then after doing it for so long. It really started to I was getting really nervous and I was starting to feel like I needed to escape from it. I didn't I stopped enjoying it was like when I was back in the government and people were telling me what they wanted me to photograph and I didn't like that. I had no idea what I was doing. I was doing commercial work and they were wanting specific things not going. I didn't even know how to do that. And I was just fudging it. And I remember I had to photograph a fairly important lady a very well known lady I'm in Australia, and I took a few shots and I can't do this anymore. I am too worried about being found out as a fraud. So I need to just get back to doing my landscapes. And that's when I quit for a while and then rediscovered landscape photography. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt 30:15 That's fantastic. Yeah, like, I don't have to look back since I think many, many of us really, especially when you kind of just started really got sucked in into the, you know, because the portrait and the commercial all the one that a lot easier to make money, it's in necessity. So cool. That's a it's a really good to hear that story from your side of things. And you know, to kind of see that you do have that struggle as well. So what do you find? How does the photography become a part of your happy lifestyle, then? You know, especially now, you still do a lot of photography? Does it still, you know, after all this year, does it still bring satisfaction and happiness? Christian Fletcher 30:55 Yeah, I, it's the only passion I've ever had, I've never sort of got sick off. Because I've done a lot of things and have a lot of a lot of fun things. And, but photography has always been dealing with will be and like, if someone said, Hey, Fletch, you know, here's an opportunity to go on a trip across the, you know, to some shitty town 300,000 kilometres away. And we'll end and we'll take a canvas and see what we can get, I'll be in there because I love I love it so much that I just love making images. I love finding it. Because for me, it's like, gold prospecting. You know, when you get it, you get your metal detector, and you go out. I mean, who doesn't want to go dig up a nugget, a golden nugget and, and how exciting is just to be wandering in the bush and all sudden, you see something that's, that's incredible. And, and you get that get that golden moment where you take that photo, and I never get sick of that feeling. It's, you know, whether you liken it to an Easter egg hunt, or opening your presents at Christmas time. If Adobe is like that, for me, every every time and, and I get excited, you know, like, it's, I remember when I used to surf, if I was a good good days in the surf, you know, you pull up to the beach, and you see the ways understand you're starting to get in a heart starts to pound and you're going, you're getting ready and you're getting so many that you want to get out but you're nervous, but you want to do it and then you're worried you're going to miss it. And I'm in photography is I've had so many stressful moments where you're racing in your car to get down to the spot, you know, the sun sets gonna be amazing. We just got to get to that, you know, you're just gonna do another kilometre, and you gotta get out, you got to get the tripod legs out, and you got to race down the beach, and you've got to get to that that spot and shoot it before that sunset disappears. And I love that. Stressful that and that's what keeps me going. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt 32:40 I mean, yeah, like hearing your your stories, it sounded like you are passionate about photography in it, because you do you did try a lot of things before you get there. But once you kind of find photography, just stick with it as a ghost to show how much you you're passionate about it. So yeah, Christian Fletcher 32:55 fantastic. But any day of the week, if I if I could, if I didn't have a business that was a little bit heavy on labour, I would be I'd be out there shooting more and I do need to push myself more to get out. But you know, I've got a family and kids in high school got a business. That's that's almost it was a seven day a week business. So there's always something to do. I got a big yard for the gardening to do just doesn't seem to be enough hours in the day to do anything. But if I could, I'm the happiest when I'm on my own with my camera somewhere in the bush taking photos. That's that's, and it doesn't have to be spectacular. The less spectacular for me the better. Because there's less pressure on you. If you're in the Canadian Rockies, I think you said five out. I mean, you have so much pressure because your landscapes are awesome. If you go out and get photos that suck, then you're in big trouble. Whereas for me, we're in Australia, one of the flattest countries on earth and it's one of the oldest countries and there ain't much out here there's always there's a lot of great stuff that is so spread apart, that we don't have massive mountains with snow capped peaks and glaciers and beautiful blue lakes and all that sort of stuff we we have the Outback, which is had its own sort of nice things about it, which sounded like that we got 15 minutes of good light in the morning and 15 minutes at the end of the day. And the rest of the day. If you're up north it's baking hot. You know you'll die out if you break down it's remote. So yeah, that's there's less pressure it's more pressure on surviving this on getting good photos. It's so much easier. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt 34:34 It's interesting that you mentioned that because it is so true that you know when you're out here it seems like you're trying to please everyone else then to please us sometimes and it's like it becomes an uphill battle. Again, you know, because of the social media and you know, say Oh, this guy is making this like the shot is like it's in perfect condition. And sometimes I get like really pushed to go to this location at that certain time. And when I first got here, that's what I did like literally just chasing every single condition. Um, you know, now kind of, because I've already have that I tried to force myself to sit back a little bit and just find one that actually, I really liked. Yeah, really, really interesting that you mentioned that, because that is very true. Over here, a lot of a lot of British gender. Yeah. So you're very passionate about the environment as well. And, you know, I, myself, when I started travelling, before I even got into photography, I have a lot of ignorance with with the environment, and what's happening around the environment. And travel really opened up my eyes, and I get to see a lot of things that I would normally things like, you know, I was just, you know, wandering chameleons, like, it's not going to make a difference. But when you actually go out there and go to those places and actually see, you know, with your own eyes, it really changes your perspective. So, sure, I know you're really passionate about it. So I'd like you, I'd like to hear some of your stories about, you know, either project or some environment sort of issue that, that you see through your travel and photography, and what do you think we can do about it? Christian Fletcher 36:13 Well, yeah, big issue, big, big question. I really struggle with being an environmentalist and travelling a lot for photography. And, you know, up until in the last 10 years, I've travelled all over the world, you know, long haul flights all over the place. I mean, I always offset my flights. Usually with Qantas, I'm always offsetting those emissions pay a little bit extra than what happens to that money, does anything amazing. So there is that there is that side of it. And when the biggest issue that I found, in my travels was when we went to Antarctica, and we had I was invited as an instructor on a trip. And we I was to drift I was hooked on to back to back. Anyway, we get down to Punta Arenas in Chile. And what's happened is that we get a plane from there down to King George Island. So instead of having to go across the Drake Passage, in a boat, you just fly across it. So you have the same amount of time down on the peninsula, but you're not flooding around in the ocean, getting seasick. So it's quite a good option, you know, that unfortunately, on this particular week that we were there, the conditions were quite warm in Antarctica, and the island was formed, a covered in fog. And that went for a whole week, so that everybody that was on the first trip in Antarctica, didn't get to go. So we were all in Puntarenas, waiting by the hour or waiting for the conditions to change. And so we could fly in. And we had two aborted attempts to get into Antarctica where we got packed the way down and the plane just turned around, and then ended back in Puntarenas. And then the second trip, luckily, the fog cleared, and we were able to get in and, and we we landed because there's it's not a it's an uncontrolled to airspace as there's no tower and all that you basically got people on the ground saying, I don't know, man, I can't even see five in front of me so. So yeah, so that was when I really, really hit home that we've got a problem. And, and how that affected so many people. And I'm sure that happens quite regularly. Now, as we know, Antarctica is having record temperatures, and there's record Ice, ice loss. And another time where I thought, you know, where the pollution was a problem was when I was in Cambodia. And I'd never seen the Natta plastic rubbish that I'd ever seen. And, and basically, the conditions that people were living in and, you know, it was quite confronting, you know, thinking, wow, we've gone this far that we, we, you know, we've just, we can't get rid of our wastes, you know, and we're lucky here in Australia, we're, we're privileged, we've got, you know, we've got a functioning government that's, that works well, we pay our taxes, and we haven't got to 30 There's so many countries that don't have that. And it's not anyone's fault. Well, it probably is the government's fault that, you know, you know, there's a lot of issues that people, you know, they can't change things for the fact that it's so easy to sit back as a privileged Westerner, to and point fingers, hey, you need to be, you know, turning your lights off at night and then spending, you know, putting the rubbish in the bin and, and, you know, all this other stuff that we're the ones that are creating the bulk of the problems by consuming what we consume. And, and I'm not saying I'm perfect, and we do what we can, but it's such a big topic thing, I think, definitely getting off off coal and gas in Australia was were the one of the worst culprits because we have a lot of it. And it just frustrates the hell out of me because the way I look at it, that they seem to want to protect the coal industry so much, I'm probably gonna get a lot of trouble here. But anyway, I think there's something like 20,000 coal jobs in Australia that might go with it. coal industry was just phased out. But then I sat down I thought about the photography industry, not about, yeah, remember the old days when there was film, you would go take your films down to the mini lab. And every town would have a mini lab where there would be somebody with a processing machine, you get you put your films in, you get your photos back, you know, four by sixes or whatever. And you don't see them anymore. They're just gone. You know, they don't exist anymore. And they would have been one in every town, all across the world, you would think, right? And now that just don't exist anywhere. But no one ever complained about the poor old photography workers that end up without a job. So this is, this kind of annoys me, is this, this kind of this the power of the minerals Council, the lobbies, the lobby groups and all that. They just say, Oh, no, no, no, no, you can't do that. We got to keep digging the coal out of the ground, and blah, blah, blah. Because we got to keep that the jobs and the jobs. Well, how about the jobs in the renewable industries? You know, that's, that's why aren't we making hydrogen and I think that's actually happening. Now, I think Australia is getting a bit more involved in some of the big miners are starting to do that. And it's going to take those sort of people, big industries, the big corporations to go, Hey, we got to change the way we do things. So that's more the issue, as opposed to there's more people that love it, yeah, we can always inspire other people to do things like consume less, on what needs to be consuming less. And, you know, one thing I really see is having young kids teenagers, they're so much more aware. And then than we ever were, and my son, for example is, is he doesn't want anything he doesn't want to consume, you know, he's he, he doesn't see the benefit doesn't see the need, he understands what's going on in the world. And, yeah, and, and there's a lot of kids that are now so much more aware of everything from, you know, racism, sexism, you know, that politically aware, they understand corruption, and, you know, and I'm hoping that they're going to be the ones that make the changes, you know, when they turn 18, and can vote, and I think you can see it happening. We've had a bad run of leaders around the world. Now for a while, or the nutjobs had been out submitting their, their hold on power, but they're in the minority now. So we just gotta get out, get all the rational thinking people together and make some changes that make the world a better place for everybody in it. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt 42:16 That's, that's fantastic. I think grant, I totally agree with you, you know, it's not about changing it overnight. And I think it's impossible. It's, it's about finding what sustainable, right? Because there's always that balance between, yes, we can do this, but then what's going to happen with everything. So it's about having that awareness that maybe if you just reduce once a day, it will actually make a lot of impact. So yeah, that's, that's, that's amazing. Um, especially, this is what I find as well. Coming back to your story in Antarctica is that what I find when I'm here in Canada, I see global warming a lot more. One of the glacier that is here, receding at 50 metres per year, at least 50 metres per year, which is, like when you think about it's crazy, because it's, it's massive, like, you go there, it's like, five storeys high, you're looking off, and it's like, what this thing melting, like, disappearing at 50 metres per year, that's just insane, you know? Yeah, it's a really, really happy when I see someone else, you know, spread this, this message, I suppose. It's, it's, it's not gonna be, it's not always gonna be we're not always going to be able to change everyone. But that's, that's where it started, right? Christian Fletcher 43:25 Well, and I think it's really hard to change people's minds if they if they're not ready to change. And, you know, I've given up ranting and raving on Facebook and stuff on Instagram and on Facebook anymore. Because you don't win any fans, you just alienate people, you just make you push them even further away. Because no one no one wants to be told what to do, and how they should be living their life, they need to want to do it themselves. And then they need to make the changes themselves. And I mean, and inspiring people to do this more effective than calling them out for and we're all hypocrites, we all we all do ship things, I mean, the best thing we can do is go jump off the planet somewhere and let it do its thing, you know, but when it's not gonna happen, we're all here. We just need to be smarter. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt 44:10 Yeah, that'll happen. That's very true. Like, and I think one of the reason why I encourage people to travel more is that they will get to experience it for themselves, because a lot of times, you know, they see the media and they think the media is lying, and just finding that headlines like, yeah, they might be finding that headline, but there's also a little bit of truth in it. And, you know, being able to see for yourself like I myself only changed my mindset when I when I see for myself, so it's definitely a difficult one for sure. Well, thanks a lot for being here. Christine. And one last thing, one last question that I always ask my, you know, anyone that comes into this podcast, what is the one message or one advice that you can give photographers, whether or not they're, they're new or they have been in it for a while. Christian Fletcher 45:02 Yeah, it could be anything. So what is the one message that you would deliver to never be happy with what you've done this week, because it's always gonna you get, you can always get better, you can always strive for more, you can do things that have more meaning. And I do that all the time, I think if you, as a photographer, think that you're at the pinnacle of the game, and you're the best you're ever going to be, then you're probably not going to be that good. You need to keep moving forward, and experimenting and trying new stuff. And, and that's the hardest thing to do. Because, and I'll stay with myself, you know, it's so easy for me to get up in the morning and go out, find a pretty landscape, take a photo, edit it, print it, put it in the gallery, and someone guys lovely, it's beautiful. But that's not gonna last forever, and it doesn't feed your soul. So you need to just continue to push yourself, don't be happy with what you've done. Always know that you can do better, because you can. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt 45:58 Perfect. Well, thanks a lot. And that's, that's perfect to close our podcasts. Now, for those of you for the listener who want to find more about you and your work, especially your gallery. Where can they find you? Yet? Well, Christian Fletcher 46:12 you go online, probably the best way it's Christian fletcher.com.au. And it shouldn't be too hard to find. And yeah, that's where I do most of my stuff through the gallery. I will I'm not doing any much training anymore. I do have a training website where I teach. I've got video tutorials on my Photoshop techniques. And that's Christian Fletcher. training.com. Perfect to that you subscribe to that. And that, you know, like you said, everything's on YouTube. But the difference with my stuff is that if you like my work, what I teach is basically what has become my style. So the techniques that I do, you may be able to find those from other places. But if you like what I do, then that is it's valuable in that respect, but not much different than what you find anywhere else. And on YouTube. There's probably guys doing way better than me. But my tutorials are a bit more quick. And to the point. Less rambling. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt 47:08 Yeah, well, I think at the end of the day, it's it's about what, what resonates with people, right? So check out Christian's work. And if you do like his work, you know, see even check out the training and see if you could learn from what you have to teach you because he's been on the game forever. And he's definitely from for for a city that is so isolated. Unknown Speaker 47:33 Definitely have been to everywhere. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt 47:36 So that's fantastic. All right. Well, thank you very much for being here. Thank you very much for sparing some of your time. I know you're busy back home. But yeah, well, we'll come this to an end. We can hunters, thank you very much for tuning in. And hopefully that is you find that inspiring as well as helpful in your photography journey. And if you're, if you liked this and if you're interested to hear more, don't forget to hit the subscribe button just down here and leave a comment or a like, you know, feel free to stay in touch with me and Christian. Well, thank you very much Christina for being here and absolutely love this episode and it was such a pleasure to talk to you. Christian Fletcher 48:13 Likewise, man, thank you
Conversazione sul Pci (seconda puntata, ieri la prima). Cent'anni fa nasceva il Partito Comunista d'Italia e trent'anni fa il Pci decideva di sciogliersi. Una storia lunga che ha riguardato milioni e milioni di persone in Italia. Una storia che è un pezzo fondamentale della biografia civile e politica di questo paese nel corso di settant'anni. I suoi leader, tutti uomini, sono stati Bordiga e Gramsci, Togliatti e Longo, Berlinguer e Natta fino all'ultimo segretario Occhetto. Il Pci, il partito dell'antifascismo, della Costituzione repubblicana e poi della via italiana al socialismo. Il partito che ha vacillato di fronte ai fatti di Ungheria e Praga. Il partito del compromesso storico e delle lotte per i diritti, il partito della questione morale. Il conflitto con i movimenti e gli intellettuali. Fino al crollo del Muro di Berlino, la Bolognina, la Cosa, lo scioglimento nel congresso del febbraio 1991, a pochi mesi dalla dissoluzione dell'Urss. Una lunga storia che Memos ha cercato di ripercorrere in buona parte con lo storico Angelo D'Orsi, allievo di Norberto Bobbio e biografo di Antonio Gramsci.
Conversazione sul Pci. Cent'anni fa nasceva il Partito Comunista d'Italia e trent'anni fa il Pci decideva di sciogliersi. Una storia lunga che ha riguardato milioni e milioni di persone in Italia. Una storia che è un pezzo fondamentale della biografia civile e politica di questo paese nel corso di settant'anni. I suoi leader, tutti uomini, sono stati Bordiga e Gramsci, Togliatti e Longo, Berlinguer e Natta fino all'ultimo segretario Occhetto. Il Pci, il partito dell'antifascismo, della Costituzione repubblicana e poi della via italiana al socialismo. Il partito che ha vacillato di fronte ai fatti di Ungheria e Praga. Il partito del compromesso storico e delle lotte per i diritti, il partito della questione morale. Il conflitto con i movimenti e gli intellettuali. Fino al crollo del Muro di Berlino, la Bolognina, la Cosa, lo scioglimento nel congresso del febbraio 1991, a pochi mesi dalla dissoluzione dell'Urss. Una lunga storia che Memos ha cercato di ripercorrere in buona parte con lo storico Angelo D'Orsi, allievo di Norberto Bobbio e biografo di Antonio Gramsci. Quella di oggi è la prima di due puntate. La seconda, domani.
Batwoman S1 & The Flash S6 Premieres: Legends of the Arrowverse Episode #10 Welcome back to Legends of the Arrowverse! This time Phil and Lilith review the season premieres of Batwoman S1 “Pilot”, Supergirl S5 “Event Horizon”, Black Lightning S3 “The Book of Occupation: Chapter One”, The Flash S6 “Into the Void” and the latest Crisis on Infinite Earths news Show notes: Batwoman S1 & The Flash S6 Premieres: Legends of the Arrowverse Episode #10 Find all of our Social Media & Merchandise here https://linktr.ee/capesandlunatics Follow Phil Perich on Twitter: https://twitter.com/Nightwingpdp Follow Lilith Hellfire on Twitter: https://twitter.com/LilithHellfire Produced by: http://www.southgatemediagroup.com Production Team: Phil Perich Batwoman S1 & The Flash S6 Premieres: Legends of the Arrowverse Episode #10 00:00:10 - 00:10:35 Chipping in a lifetime warranty or you can get there through the link on our website Southgate Media Group dotcom era verse podcast This episode of keeps them excited kicks is brought to you by tweaked audio awesome headphones get tweaked audio dot com and use the coupon code southgate in thirty percent off take these old chronic Quarter air she gets she could suck the new black holes is back first week back hero versus pack I am Phil Joining me as always that curmudgeon herself yeah yeah I mean had really good ratings relate it's never the premier is always episode a father is running a security company instead of being in the military was he most people that run security firms Afghan all right I'm confused maybe they're doing this for on is our story convenience Bam like isn't their whole thing like Oh yeah tavern well screwed the Oregon for whatever who yes so it's like did I I might have missed it but so her the thing that I can say about the errors absolutely love with the seconds every single paddle now a mailing errol order and you will strengthen our impact they went there but we got a phone well I mean and then to the identical crews are out there though right Oh yeah yeah I thought you meant that woman I ever ever rehashing suffer any so I guess that bring us to bat woman I cover I mean she didn't have to steal one Bruce's suits or dad helped Latino here let's get this military gear and Nino riding Our adversary he that's so we'll see learning as I have a real big problem with Wayne's cousin but like she came to that toll thing the season the nuttier side of that it even if she you know like a for dad had some stuff and she stole that like manner ensued or whatever have that that arsenal egg in our trash I just wonder I they probably did that woman a big disservice by having her first season be during the year of crisis congenitally tied the Batman Acquired Canyon Saly a gutter sh you know she's not Batman she's a woman and stuff but we won't then they tie her origin in the Batman yet at that that was a disservice because even in the comics they didn't do that yeah she are ex-military Russell so any time on a state doesn't say I wonder if maybe he's on I don't think that her premier was as big as flashy we've oh no no no as the be the the biggest line will actually yeah we just went sake Gambia on band go early now regularly new vehicle crisis kirk nine thirty we're doing it that's why I'm surprised they haven't been putting that woman on after flash with everything else black light being black lightning yeah well girls night for that kroner for programming I just I just wonder I just wonder if maybe that women can hold onto some ratings just because I tried lesser proper are I mean I saw so I don't know if the numbers right but somebody was posted in pilot numbers on facebook somewhere not supergirl had the highest but that's because her first season with CBS we are basically recruiting Oliver on proper that as Brownie greedy you know hero so she have a lot on her sidekick docker Natta love interest obviously true how Meghan Meghan ones can be you know Oh batmans coming back you know I mean regarding carrier we're re in her cover ask maybe not leaving when Akwa pilot during that one crossover Sal Lor Jin's survey battery needed here euros final refresh the ratings game I think thera out yes he stills on Bruce's suits still didn't I wonder why she steals out week from our our bag of her husband in that you know not if they turn at Kinda cool you have Sunday a superhero may you know yeah yeah of course you had the high wasn't actively bang they had to like make that thing remember the words screwing with eight thirty in a lot of character building of everyone else until after crisis I'm saying you're lucky your ever so I guess I think I read somewhere so she's just going to be a voice on the radio I care about hope refrain user I will say play by talking heads playing rugby head as I tyler thought it was rushed so oh thank you they can on the Drina some lines on a free Gig of Gutter I may yeah journal ev every episode ounce sending an email like car I did you know season won until he showed up thing we're in birth you know that that everybody's leaner I just wonder if they're going to do a season one this season finale season and are putting in say the third episode so her team coalescing around her we might have to have that internal monologue and they don't want it to the edge cheek at ill but now speaking of the love interest that's like you think this is GonNa last year Arby's newsbeat bring out you're getting the question yeah yeah that you know they they smack her in the previous month over those late I don't know rich Sergey met Maine well for those of us who read the comics wonder if he's getting a suit eventually back it's GonNa be a big thing probably like a slow burn in the background is he gonNA be like this in strapper at some people don't like it president-elect supergirl thanking ready but superbos raking her lake supposedly have the most it's the most recognizable franchise on it. 00:10:36 - 00:11:28 Okay and I know you nervous what did you think of Ruby Roses Acting Ritholtz no they're going to get you know they're gonNA get interference because I mean if nothing else it's too bad back franchise loughrey bother exaggerating all right Laura Navy even Linda Part Entrepreneur take me wrong there vicky are served are we going to vesper fairchild on the radio leaguer Ernest until you can actual night win with a mullet Silje it's fine it's fine with the primary it was was the bull enough action we yeah right into the plot with her twin sister. 00:07:00 - 00:17:05 I don't know we really don't need a reactor out what that's going to take over guarding rehashing wasn't at the end of this this episode seem to be right in that a rare once I mean it's easier but then to that way her dad don't recognize her right away sure luther that kind of weird we're supposed to be identical yeah yeah although maybe they did that so I mean again it might be it we're GONNA do twins I wanna Gosh Darn parent trap that's all thank embassy but I am pretty sure I'm looking this up yeah let's somebody said something online do do you know who the ritual that the actress playing Alice's Art Summer Oh man I wanNA talk rawls over here you're a supposedly we're getting what's her face Ashley Scott from birds of Prey so uh I don't know when I know we got on getting probably athletes it's either one so I wonder if you're gonNA break up or she's GonNa die the same time chronic makes me nervous and you probably have the most include Lago cw run and while we gauzy trickster joker reprimanded darker okay I mean trickster is fine but you got conroy meeting Hamill gestures the actor who played alice the Act I'm I'm actually cried new deliver the Deborah Clark I know you win the night anyway or will the nights anyway but if you give people why the action Mark Mark Hamill Verse Kevin Conroy Rat race is doing I don't know they could change your mind there's a lot of Being happening on the file Cohen People I mean you know yeah I do personally three episodes where we don't have anybody else for booking and I I just want report can whenever the pain yeah I guess yeah considering that that we're beer minimum starting at five million dollars Africa so all right triggered a superhero her yes I I heard so many investors are you know there's a lot going for the show in a lot of room for everything I react soda growth so I'm GonNa what did you think of never been like aerobic manner Ruby rose those she's got a lot of words when Melissa One you're I love her super I mean again it's only been it's only one episode to find uh-huh crossovers that are offered hey hey shooting in the air over wonder if they think Russia over do I remember that when the bouncer but I can't remember right now for proper Rachel Karston who believe played Dinah on birds of prey breath but of all the air over shows for season they are that person a lot of ski show which I can recreation Rhythm Give Ruby Leila I felt like all the acting William there I said art that's all that I'm saying it's funny you said You thought this episode was busy 'cause I I like I like the episode sounds like a coup the guy that they weren't really read on the net they had other fish to fry now really from the green lantern thing and you know the lack of Christopher Nolan one you've actually you good a good bowl but again it's like you're you're gonNA trust the Luther it's like the love of Superhero for a Lukin changed you said you went super run where her aunt act made the moms twin what I wish Clark with done in Smallville all of the change things you told like what room goes sell cocktail law and now it's just like Okay Soleil McQuillan keep that one girl so here it's like vows superman aim to build that universe of your arm leeway where I really do feel right back by the origin with so yeah pray connection here arrear canonizing Burger pray razor prayed sure I am a bicker about the errors that yourself on the head remember to CW show the brainy alerting they're like most everybody else love inches leave after the dollar I'm saying but Brady against the road yeah but she's a super bowl she's a superhero too I mean look superhero plan I know but you know and Jimmy James Olsen sister our buddy that families getting an Olsen the you know the I I was a close second call and I'm nervous it was busy there is a lot going on but you get from thumper somebody goes to Alex alcl inside missionary getting come down for that are- Europe hours playing his either that matter litter with okay but now yeah that's the one thing that I'm who are working full yeah brains love interest can you imagine if cargo back James they could both be you know in the brother and sister yeah later I tried to do everything earned saying what the character now but you know how they love their romances I don't know like in especially if super girls can have a love will at least right now looking for love interest no not blood they're not even the same species technically variant that happens they say oh she has got a banquet superhero meanwhile that infested ship Lina Baxter Baxter the rivers that's currently airing on the eerie though that tumor without literally Roman literally found that out tonight yeah that's fun on their white telling Lena Yeah I was like Yes for the drama I I'm just like schizophrenic chronic for scenic on yeah is that they didn't want to know totally because they got the and was confirmed thing very far cutter I actually don't like the live action already the other way around the head us you got two months your Hashtag we'll get there Steed now at chance rula grow becker were their little wooded right now so he won and it was finally Kinda worked thicke like the material armor armor but again crypto millions on earth they need armor I said this during new fifty two what's going on a rate that Kinda affected her honorable route and I don't get the whole Is We screw you guys lake I dunno against me the when the worst of the smaller guy I don't need a skin tight costume it doesn't it look a little too that'd be great disguise you know between the classes and if you have bangs in one identity and no bangs in another rally I don't follow her the guy was like Oh that must either finale I call this is they said that they may that must be finale I can fight things that I mean I mean okay I can see like if the whole thing like goes rogue in our rich uh-huh I mean maybe if the covers you from head to toe and blocks radiation so you know Kryptonite I can see that we're selling confirmed disappointing about the things that kind of humor Barbara Campbell I was like oh no I'm happy that there is the late that reiter anyway I just I don't know the banks are secretly the shield random choice had bangs canes that one day had cut her banks craft you always WanNa team around these people and to CW romantic. 00:17:08 - 00:23:48 I know making her wear wigs or something I'm saying that's the most actors Iraqi reader line you not even supposed to change without for mission of yeah but I mean that would it's alive Kerns Brad Turns Red Kryptonite WHO NEEDS CISCO TOO Jason Okay people are not embracing remorse comic Berkman reassemble everyone can fail a everyone acetate says oh be careful next time you take off your glasses the pseudo appear but it's like she took her glasses off the talk to Lina and I didn't see no suit better controller but I'm just a great guy he's a headbands you're not but I mean yeah I mean under fantastic secular more fodder like her car going in bet together my friends grows who earn Alex Yeah people shipped out the back the mini aero are backing Superhero CASSANDRA crisis they might all be on earth fingers crossed for simple Acrobat Room and they're like oh well I guess we shouldn't gear to rape her under his bangs are still better than a head Bam it's all tweet me it's legion future tack rate for me I'm just saying I would have been so funny what happened Brady put in Our I thought I saw something like Melissa wanted like a new hairstyle and night our big mood yes why don't know yeah because I don't know if they were like almost considering the nanotech or Symbian Tony Tony we like to have a word with you after crisis they don't like the look of the soup but do you like that it's like what like nanotech or whatever now courtesy Array Palmer would've been awful that's like this stuff you're not the pages of Matt Guy Eating supergirl I mean would you rather have we're best friends I'm like it's I think well they're Lena is rich in sheltered evil early had yeah I'm like I mean they're they're like Oh we're best friends and like I like I don't know conflict losers I mean there's worse things Oh that will be or may her no yes so then so we added a witness were finished with a big mood and now it's like a big move but even I don't know somebody aver Right well it seems already better Gal let's make Alex into the mix crisis all if Alex there you go because I was thinking like with us to to or do you like kissing search for Hassett refers the obviously and evil tack although I get it it's like they don't WanNa do that with Alex making her the Horny last year is getting which they told that now we not only the first episode but it doesn't seem as busy as the episodes last season Rossi then there's a lot right that's a pretty big secret it's like look at your family's history Robert I mean you should be she should she should have been satisfied that Kara toward eventually Akkad year without cried did felicity rate that in Asir with sonic cannon or something spoiler getting our that for Boise they did jacker over rare Marie favorite thing of others are there I said it it's like it wouldn't be bad but it's like especially with this show does Lena swing in the world of Lily Ho fire shipping did she does Zachary Yeah I can get it from Lena's angle but now she's just faking it 'cause she's bad to me I'm like like I get your mad but Brent exactly okay so those both those both remain on on Sunday what did you better bat women's premier or Super Girls Premier Aram that's right back baby that's right air over obviously a really I- lesser AH cousin she's using his tack I'm like how much more do we have hospital basically working on it and again he has to make a case but I liked the idea but it's like having spent more than like five minutes together at a time it's like tall national city I mean I'm just saying y'all and then John's you will brother releases that chick from the Phantom Zone Gorgon right zone rampart things just the white skin it seems like that I think that's like her actual hair around I think so kirker Iran I was like nobody actual nobody does Iran and bird new rule take care bye yeah but no Carson Oh no you're my bet thanks work cars what is your my best friend. 00:23:48 - 00:36:50 I don't disowned her route craft Rabat car bet claim data rain you know everywhere we know see them one ownership fashion brought all these anti Oh frugally wow where were they last fourteen years I'll never know Rapper chains it so much and why you had Thai Batman in the well are they bringing the Batman fans in but it's Oh man this is all I had the titles backwards Oregon our company work screwed up so badly don't go to it every two seconds like unit you know mix stuff up a bunch of stuff in it yeah it's GonNa it's GonNa be it's GonNa Be Eagle Simmer in the back and then what's going on with evil election under the building I get it it's like you can't have a sub basement and has to be another cave burning are is Andrea her he's like the original kings the Mother didn't make that well I guess if you'd have to like Paul Villain out of well Kim put out your but you literally have to Yeah Bernini Jimmy by Agnes Chemistry between here away Maury I don't know if action subtext Texas for honor it is superman or supergirl hey we need the polls on thin air hey animals with argue quip me okay I don't think I know it's gone on for not another teen movie it wouldn't have been easier to break in the cave under the manner but maybe Alford's their late her thing and he knows exactly exactly why were unless like we say every year unless they're going to do more with the daughters and finally tobias whale was locked up her powers immortality or canal and to be fair he got a was it he kern railing oh is he ordered guy needs extra padding winner but then I was watching the episode on Monday and I was like I'll say now black lightning at supermax exactly as as they met Napa supermac polar bird the the main Newton Karaki never a bunch in euro are yes dow offended wait see the pseudo I want to give it a chance but it's like at least from the pictures that doesn't like that chest piece the first two seasons cut really boggy at least really pushing his daughters aren't we are unfortunately thank honestly when I find lightning are wanting we see black writing three million are really rely I think it was I think it was like nine hundred some thousand yeah well we pretty much confirmed he's shown up in the crossover bag as people's interest actually reflect the shore learn because because a picture drop today of him in the flash together looks like on the wave rider we are I girlfriend that were black ranking or something look right I mean I'm willing to give the next couple of episodes because they're filming his scenes for crisis author local guide this season maybe hopefully at least it looks more like skin tight actual like comic book Black Lightning's now ridden with turn on here I was like you see like we're GonNa for mandating rattling all by loans low no leaders no no I was like that got for at least it was something different like great agree faith or Quentin Tarantino pod kids it just seemed like the show is moving slower than all the other Arab Russia's actually kind of enjoyed from the perspective are yeah I thought it was surprisingly are I mean it's definitely because he's busy with crisis or something rock up in a very tight it's very very locker ormoc favorite serves vampire diaries literally they relate stuck in a sideline story by literally this Erga climbing the show her I mean it maybe I wasn't paying attention last season but it just seemed more blatant this this episode of You Compete Murder Career and I don't Wanna sound weird or creepy but that it seemed like they like focused on Mrs Bud a couple times last night honey it was in that movie that's right we're not ever coming back taxes they're not captain America now there's an I I know you need evidence the lock them up but it's like you can't take this guy down there like three ago the route I know I know Tehran pipeline or Oliver locked up last season were that that in other oh I thought it was a definite improvement real see if they'll be able to keep that eighteen of the interesting are outwards were and again if I mean if they are merging Earth's and I mean this is GonNa be in the larger universe I mean it might breath some more like the ruder it better live action reversal frigging with the news curve out but I think I think it would help the show like you know it's on the same earth as everyone else casino again supergirl could drop by flash ladder broncos they're I mean like more interesting I mean by last season it was just like oh we're still doing the same thing it's still too by us we're still doing it again and again black knights on its own Monday night island there's no air over show with it so ask garnered say I'm GonNa say I have a problem with it I'm just saying it seem we're bringing jock you're playing supergirl eagerly on the earth don't Wanna eat though like they shoot different completely different city so far I I said so far this week so yeah we didn't get air rigor me is no surprise greenback with either I think they did that with ballot means just an hour this is the thing that you I'm even though I didn't like it seemed like they mixed it up more this again it's only one episode but it seemed like they mixed you know it's not our blue flash late to catch up they actually fine I'm okay with that slow bird but like yet this one's the best one so far yes they're gonna be there baffling for your abro heroes got it experience at this point but I mean for at first when the black holes AH hundred nine hundred shorter the Fed is actually buy back up I guess because Sean Crossover maybe we should watch I occurs or compressor power dampener on him and he was getting old where I'm SORTA Kinda Guy Yeah there was better back those terrible still mulching laming or opening and