Constitutional ban on alcoholic beverages from 1920 to 1933
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Guest speaker, Jordan Griffith, closes our series on integrity. And the importance of integrity in our romantic/sexual relationships. If integrity is important to God, then it's important in all aspects of our lives.
Integrity isn't about rules, it's about protecting something valuable. In the final week of The Noble Experiment we're challenging students to think differently about sex, boundaries, and identity. Discover how following Jesus in this area leads to freedom, not shame.**SM meets every Wednesday night and is for students grades 6-12**
Mason kicks off our integrity series with the bottom line, "integrity does what is right". Tune in as we continue this journey.
Bryce continues our integrity series, showing us that Jesus is the perfect example of integrity. What He shows us and teaches us, is the best for us.
Mason brings us the truth about integrity in our relationships towards others. Being someone of integrity reflects Jesus to others and honors those around us.
It's one thing to know what's right... but actually doing it? That's a different story. In Week 2 of The Noble Experiment we're looking at Jesus' words about building a strong foundation in life. What you do with His words determines what kind of life you build. Are you building something that will last?**SM meets every Wednesday night and is for students grades 6-12**
Integrity isn't just about making the right choice—it's about who you are when no one's watching. In Week 1 of The Noble Experiment we're breaking down what integrity really means and why it's more than just following rules. Discover how living with authenticity and good character shapes who you become!
LOUNGE LIZARDS PRESENTED BY FABRICA 5 - Visit Fabrica005.com and use code LIZARDPOD at checkout for 10% off THE ENTIRE STORE! Free worldwide shipping from Miami on all orders over $125. See website for more information and terms.Recorded at Ten86 Cigars in Hawthorne, New Jersey, the lizards pair the Roma Craft Intemperance Volstead VO 1920 Noble Experiment with fourteen years old Oban Single Malt Scotch Whisky. The guys revisit a familiar friend from Oban, they discuss Davidoff returning to the PCA show and they share the latest lizard bingo card from a listener.PLUS: Roma Craft Story & Rating Debate: When does the Formal Lizard Rating require a box purchase?Join the Lounge Lizards for a weekly discussion on all things cigars (both Cuban and non-Cuban), whiskey, food, travel, life and work. This is your formal invitation to join us in a relaxing discussion amongst friends and become a card-carrying Lounge Lizard yourself. This is not your typical cigar podcast. We're a group of friends who love sharing cigars, whiskey and a good laugh.website/merch/rating archive: loungelizardspod.comemail: hello@loungelizardspod.com to join the conversation and be featured on an upcoming episode!instagram: @loungelizardspod
In January of 1948, Alfred Kinsey releases his first book, Sexual Behavior in the Human Male, igniting a firestorm of controversy across the United States. As the Professor scrambles to capitalize on his newfound fame and pen a sequel, his methodology comes under attack from skeptical academics and religious conservatives. Meanwhile, Kinsey's research team at the Institute of Sex Research embarks on a series of increasingly bizarre – and politically dangerous – sexual adventures. SOURCES: Allen, Judith A. The Kinsey Institute: The First Seventy Years. 2017. Brenot, Phillipe. The Story of Sex. 2016. D'Emilio, John. Freedman, Estelle. Intimate Matters: The History of Sexuality in America. 1988. Donna J. Drucker, “‘A Noble Experiment': The Marriage Course at Indiana University, 1938-1940,” IMH September 2007 https://www.jstor.org/stable/27792817?read-now=1&seq=7#page_scan_tab_contents Gary, Brett. Dirty Works. Obscenity on Trial in America's First Sexual Revolution. 2021. Hardy, Gathorne. Sex: The Measure of All Things: A Life of Alfred C. Kinsey. 1998. Hegarty, Peter. Gentlemen's Disagreement. 2013. Jones, James H. Alfred C. Kinsey: A Life. 1997. Wimpee, Rachel. Iacobell, Teresa. “Funding a Sexual Revolution: The Kinsey Reports.” Jan 9 2020. Rockefeller Archive Center. https://resource.rockarch.org/story/funding-a-sexual-revolution-the-kinsey-reports/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
As Dr. Alfred Kinsey begins his foray into sex research in 1938, he faces a rising tide of controversy at Indiana University, and is soon confronted with an ultimatum. While his research develops and his methodology takes shape, Kinsey is forced to reckon with hard truths about sex – and himself. SOURCES: Allen, Judith A. The Kinsey Institute: The First Seventy Years. 2017. Brenot, Phillipe. The Story of Sex. 2016. D'Emilio, John. Freedman, Estelle. Intimate Matters: The History of Sexuality in America. 1988. Donna J. Drucker, “‘A Noble Experiment': The Marriage Course at Indiana University, 1938-1940,” IMH September 2007 https://www.jstor.org/stable/27792817?read-now=1&seq=7#page_scan_tab_contents Gary, Brett. Dirty Works. Obscenity on Trial in America's First Sexual Revolution. 2021. Hardy, Gathorne. Sex: The Measure of All Things: A Life of Alfred C. Kinsey. 1998. Hegarty, Peter. Gentlemen's Disagreement. 2013. Jones, James H. Alfred C. Kinsey: A Life. 1997. Wimpee, Rachel. Iacobell, Teresa. “Funding a Sexual Revolution: The Kinsey Reports.” Jan 9 2020. Rockefeller Archive Center. https://resource.rockarch.org/story/funding-a-sexual-revolution-the-kinsey-reports/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In 1948, Dr. Alfred Kinsey wrote the book on sex. “The Kinsey Report”, as it came to be known, was a pioneering scientific study on the sexual habits of ordinary Americans. Divided into Male and Female Volumes, it challenged longstanding myths about sex and the religious ideology that upheld them. In this first installment of a three-part series, we explore the life, times and motivations of the enigmatic man behind the Kinsey Report – Dr. Alfred Kinsey. SOURCES: Allen, Judith A. The Kinsey Institute: The First Seventy Years. 2017. Brenot, Phillipe. The Story of Sex. 2016. D'Emilio, John. Freedman, Estelle. Intimate Matters: The History of Sexuality in America. 1988. Donna J. Drucker, “‘A Noble Experiment': The Marriage Course at Indiana University, 1938-1940,” IMH September 2007 Gary, Brett. Dirty Works. Obscenity on Trial in America's First Sexual Revolution. 2021. Hardy, Gathorne. Sex: The Measure of All Things: A Life of Alfred C. Kinsey. 1998. Hegarty, Peter. Gentlemen's Disagreement. 2013. Jones, James H. Alfred C. Kinsey: A Life. 1997. Wimpee, Rachel. Iacobell, Teresa. “Funding a Sexual Revolution: The Kinsey Reports.” Jan 9 2020. Rockefeller Archive Center. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Jacob Mentel is a bartender from San Diego, California, and has worked in some amazing bars over the years including Youngblood cocktails, Noble Experiment, and Polite Provisions where he was trained by Sam Ross and Erick Castro. Jacob is an advocate for mental health in the hospitality industry and shares his life experiences and journey over the years. ----------Don't miss out on any of the action! Head to www.bardtender.com to stay up to date with all of the Bardtender content, find resources for mental and physical wellbeing, get access to education materials, and check out what all of our bards are up to!
Seth, John and Aaron discuss their review experience with the RoMa Craft Intemperance Volstead VO 1920 Noble Experiment https://developingpalates.com/reviews/cigar-reviews/team-cigar-review-roma-craft-intemperance-volstead-vo-1920-noble-experiment/
This weeks guest is Jacob Mentel who currently lives in San Diego, California. Jacob is a bartender at The Realm of 52 Remedies in San Diego. Jacob's bar history consists of opening Youngblood Cocktails, working at Noble Experiment, and assisting with menus at Polite Provisions. Jacob has had the privilege of being trained by Sam Ross and Erick Castro. Jacob is an avid mental health advocate as he has been diagnosed with Anxiety/ Depression / ADHD/ Autism. Jacob is extremely open about this and his struggles in an effort to allow for conversations to happen and people to seek help. Jacob is also working with Chilled Magazine to do a series of columns interviewing well known industry professional about their own struggles and how they were able to push through and become resources for others. Links @thecocktailretriever @sugarrunbar @babylonsistersbar @argyle_arms_2023 @the_industry_podcast email us: info@theindustrypodcast.club Podcast Artwork by Zak Hannah zakhannah.co
The Hugo Pérez era comes to an end. Once again La Azul finds itself in familiar territory: coachless and disrupted. We break it down and decompress all the frustration of reliving the vicious cycle of the quick overturn of coaches. 2026 never felt so far away.
What are the main takeaways from the BEST EPISODE OF DOWN UNDER YET!? "We're gonna have to start calling her Yuri Stye" - Rubi Taboo, "I love the term 'foot'" - Bettie Rosè & "THE PODCAST IS DOING IT'S FIRST LIVE EVENT FOR THE DOWN UNDER FINALE" - Reese
An Offer You Can't Refuse: the History of Organized Crime in the United States
In this episode, Pettengill finalizes the discussion concerning the temperance movement. Activists like Wayne Wheeler were ultimately triumphant and, in 1920, the Volstead Act went into effect. But compliance with Prohibition was sporadic at best. As Pettengill notes, there were plenty of Americans who were more than happy to flout the new law. And given that legitimate producers were unable to provide the commodity, Prohibition served as a launching pad for criminals who would become some of the most central figures within the history of organized crime.
We've got serial entrepreneur @whitneyeckis on the podcast today and she is really making us want to pack our bags and book a one way trip to San Diego without looking back. Are you a fan of perfect weather, great views and speak-easy's? Tune into this week and start planning your trip today! Follow us on IG: @likealocalpodcast Podcast available on all major podcast platforms ---> Please subscribe! Leave us a review! Share with your friends! SHOW NOTES Where to stay:The Pendry, The Lafayette Hotel, The Guild Where to eat: Breakfast: Morning Glory, Breakfast and Bubbles Lunch: Coasterra Dinner: Barbusa, Born and Raised (put your name down and then go to the rooftop bar and they have must-see bathrooms), Cowboy Star Best places to get sushi: Harney Sushi, Bamboo Sushi, PB Sushi, Where to drink: Coasterra, The Neighborhood (Two speak easy's inside: Noble Experiment, second one is a mystery), The Grass Skirt (speak easy restaurant), Polite Provisions, Craft and Commerce (speak easy, False Idol-hidden speak easy inside), OB Noodle House What to do: Sail San Diego (sunset sailboat tours), go to La Jolla and see the cliffs and seals, dine and drink! RAPID FIRE: Most instagram-able spot: Morning Glory, Oxford Social Club Favorite pizza spot: Giovanni's (on Linda Vista Rd.) Favorite San Diego event: Padre's game, Del Mar Fair, Del Mar Horse Races, BRO-AM Music Festival on Moonlight Beach (also a local secret) Favorite coffee shop: The Invigatorium Favorite wine & cheese spot: Carruth Cellars Favorite season to visit: Summer Favorite rooftop bar: The Nolen Favorite dessert place: Nomad Donuts Favorite local business: Swirl Boutique, Biggest tourist trap: San Diego Zoo and Balboa Park but both are WORTH IT Credits: Produced by yours truly, Katie Hylton & Stephanie Girard Until next week... Sayonara!!! Xo
Prohibition came as something of a surprise, and there was widespread flouting of the law. A new drinking culture emerged, and criminal gangs made more money, and became more violent, than ever.
With the St. Louis Cardinals speeding toward opening day and The St. Louis Post-Dispatch's 2020 Baseball Preview section about to drop its 26-page extravaganza, including a poster-ready cover of Yadier Molina and Adam Wainwright, the podcast takes a brief detour to the other side of the state and a visit with Kansas City Star columnist Sam Mellinger. The Kansas City Royals will visit Busch Stadium for an exhibition game on July 22 -- the Cardinals' first game against an opposing team in 133 games. It's the Cardinals first chance to catch 22, Royals manager Mike Matheny, and his first appearance in uniform at Busch since the Cardinals fired him midway through the 2018 season. The Royals are a team in the middle of a reinvention, and what they're trying do will some familiar to Cardinals fans. They want to draft and debut pitching, pitching, pitching. Development is where the Cardinals have found their edge. Can KC? Mellinger and Post-Dispatch baseball writer Derrick Goold discuss that -- and navigate a few tangents about covering baseball during a pandemic. The Best Podcast in Baseball, sponsored by Closets by Design of St. Louis, is a weekly production of The Post-Dispatch, StlToday.com, and Derrick Goold.
Jimmy Barrett and Shara Fryer take you through the stories that matter on the morning of 07/13/2020.The Texas Republican Party Convention was supposed to start on Thursday. But Mayor Sylvester Turner cancelled it. It’s going to court. Where do we stand? How much money does cancelling this cost the city? Joining us is Texas GOP Chairman James Dickey and he gives his opinion on the situation. NBA will allow social justice messaging on jerseys. NFL could play the Black National Anthem before games. MLB is doing a lot of BLM messaging on social media. We’ve also had Colin Kaepernick, Meghan Rapinoe and their protests. LeBron James has been putting himself out there for a few years now. Is all of this going to ruin sports as we know it? Do you want to see this as sports fans? Could this kill pro sports as we know it? We talk to Breitbart’s Warner Todd Huston. Thanks to socialism, the most noble experiment in human history is on a ventilator. “How did the completely senseless and tragic death of George Floyd devolve into the anarchy pulsing through America’s cities today? Is this really about George Floyd? I posit for your consideration that the professional agitators and extremists have leaped upon Mr. Floyd’s death to do what they do best. Namely, this is their time to destroy the United States and all that has made it the country of hope and opportunity for hundreds of millions of people.” “…our wonderful, magnificent experiment in freedom and opportunity lies in bed on a respirator. If more Americans don’t wake up, the Democrats will gladly pull the plug.” Political analyst Robert Gonzalez calls in to give us some more information on the issue.
If you've gone out for cocktails in San Diego, you've come across Anthony Schmidt. He's played big brother to speakeasies Noble Experiment, False Idol, & Raised By Wolves, kept it classy with Polite Provisions & Born and Raised, & put LCD Soundsystem lyrics on the walls at Craft & Commerce. Playlist here: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/2oLG7HOoaTTCjxjg459VbM
Hey guys check out this latest interview with Chef Jason McLeod of Consortium Holdings (Born and Raised, Raised by Wolves, Ironside, Craft and Commerce, Morning Glory, Noble Experiment, etc..) in San Diego.
St. Paul's Boutique met gast Gijsbert KamerEerste UurDiana Dors - So Little TimeSteve Lacey - PlaygroundT-Rex - Cosmic DancerNick Cave - Watching AliceLizzy Mercier Descloux - Jim On The MoveCate Le Bon - Mother's Mother's MagazineDeerhunter - What Happens To People?Boek van de maand: Daisy Jones & The SixYes - I've Seen All The Good PeopleSilicon Teens - Memphis Tennessee The National - Not In KansasTweede UurHoly Hive - The Things ThemselvesMorrissey - Wedding Bell BluesEzra Furman - Calm Down aka I Should Not Be AloneVloervuller van de maand: Stormzy - Vossi BopLL Cool J - Mama Said Knock You OutThe Davis Sisters - Plant My Feet On Higher GroundVon Spar ft. Laetitia Sadier - Extend The SongElton John - I Want LoveThinking Fellers Union Local 282 - Noble Experiment
Welcome to Episode 21! Conrad Life Report is a podcast about life, including digital media, music, books, food, drink, New York City, and more. Episode 21 topics: Intro theme: none, An American Tail, Faun Restaurant in Prospect Heights, Evan Dando at Brooklyn Bowl, Tommy Stinson, Guns n' Roses party at Bar Niagara in December 2003, Richard Fortus, Dizzy Reed, 37d03d (People) + Big Red Machine at Pioneer Works, Oliver tough week, Bar Great Harry, Father of the Bride by Vampire Weekend, U.F.O.F. by Big Thief, Purse EP by Elvis Costello, Not In Kansas by The National, Noble Experiment by Thinking Fellers Union Local 282, reserving books at the library, Sticky Fingers by Joe Hagan, The Fifth Season by N.K. Jemisin, outro music: none.
The story of the kidnapping of the lieutenant governor of Idaho in 1929, by a crew of incompetent gangsters. Also: Police Blotter & Court News, November 16, 1886. HISTORICAL REFERENCES: The Kidnapping of the Lieutenant Governor McClary, Daryl C., William B. Kinne, Lieutenant Governor of Idaho, Is kidnapped On June 12, 1929, History Link (2006). Unintended Consequences of a Noble Experiment, Notes from the Latah County Historical Society (April 7, 2015). Kinne Kidnapping: Idaho Experience, PBS (video) (2018). William Baker Kinne Memorial Page, Find-A-Grave. Police Blotter & Court News Cleveland Plain Dealer, November 16, 1886. GUEST VOICES: The Kidnapping of the Lieutenant Governor Guest Narrator - Jessica Malone, radio and voice artist - Facebook - Twitter. Edward Fliss – Jeff Richardson of Everything Is Awesome Podcast and the Shattered Worlds RPG Podcast. Judge Johnson – Sam Kulper, host and producer of the Breakers podcast. Police Blotter & Court News Guest Narrator – Augie Peterson, host of the Short Stories of Augie Peterson podcast. Minnie Hinkel – Skitty Kat, freelance audiodrama and voice artist. Police Blotter Intro Title Voice - Kim Wellman, freelance voice artist Judge / Call to Order - John Doe, free lance actor & voice performer. Judge / Adjournment - Jimmy Murray of the Kid-Friendly Podcast Network. MISCELLANEOUS: Exit Aphorism (voice) – Kit Caren of the Forgotten News Podcast and Whispered True Stories. Host Intro – Nina Innsted, the host of the Already Gone podcast. Exit Aphorism - Source: Chesterton, G.K., Illustrated London News, March 14, 1908 (reprinted in The Collected Works of G.K. Chesterton: The Illustrated London News (1987), p. 63. MUSIC: Kevin MacLeod of Incompetech.com – Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses / by 3.0 At Rest Comfortable Life The Curtain Rises I Knew A Guy SOUND EFFECTS: Freesound.org: Applause Crowd Clapping Crowd Cheering untitled-trimorphine Flaw-and-Disorder Gavel_-_3_Strikes_with_room_reverb Eighties_synth beep T-SHIRTS, MUGS, AND OTHER SWAG - NOW AVAILABLE! Just click here! HEY! CONTACT US: E-Mail: ForgottenNewsPodcast@gmail.com Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/Forgotten-News-Podcast Twitter: @NewsForgotten @KitCaren @WhisperedTrue (kit caren) HEY! CAN YOU HELP US?! PLEASE HELP THE FORGOTTEN NEWS PODCAST TO COVER THE COSTS OF RESEARCH, INVESTIGATION, AUDIO EQUIPMENT. AND PODCAST HOSTING FEES. ANY DONATION - EVEN A DOLLAR - WOULD REALLY HELP US OUT! Just click on this PayPal link, to contribute. PAYPAL Thank You! Thank You! Thank You!
This interview with Anthony Schmidt, bar director for Consortium Holdings in San Diego (Polite Provisions, Craft and Commerce, Neighborhood, Noble Experiment, Ironside, Born and Raised) was straight fire!! Anthony has so much to share and give to the bar community, there are so many aspects of hospitality that he touches on. I really hope you guys enjoy this one!
When a German U-boat torpedoed the RMS Lusitania on Friday, May 7th, 1915, Americans found two new enemies: Germany and the beer it was so associated with. Anti-German sentiment grew, and with it hostility to the breweries founded in the 19th century by German immigrants. Soon, the war effort and the temperance movement were linked: it was patriotic to abstain, and Prohibition became law.How did America cope? They swapped their stool at the bar for a seat at the soda shop, listening to new radios and the first ever baseball broadcasts. But Americans’ thirst wasn’t ever fully quenched: they turned to family doctors who prescribed “medicinal alcohol,” and then finally to the bootleggers, moonshiners and rum-runners who made, smuggled and sold hooch of all types, from top-shelf French cognac to homemade swill that might just kill you.For more about the Lusitania, check out Dead Wake: The Crossing of the Lusitania by Erik Larson.Daniel Okrent’s Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition has more information on medicinal alcohol and how it was prescribed by doctors. To learn more about medicinal beer, this article by Beverly Gage for The Smithsonian is excellent.The 1991 study “Alcohol Consumption During Prohibition” by Jeffrey A. Miron and Jeffrey Zwiebel, is considered the definitive study about how much people actually drank during the noble experiment. For more information on how Prohibition played out in the early days, check out Professor David J. Hanson’s, “Alcohol Problems and Solutions,” a comprehensive, interactive site that outlines all the various stakeholders in the Noble Experiment.To read more about Americans behaving badly in Cuba and other places during Prohibition, check out Wayne Curtis’s And A Bootle of Rum: A History of the World in Ten Cocktails, as well as Matthew Rowley’s Lost Recipes of Prohibition. And, to learn more about rum-runners, Daniel Francis’s book, Closing Time: Prohibition, Rum-Runners and Border Wars is an excellent reference.Further references can be found in America Walks Into a Bar: A Spirited History of Taverns and Saloons, Speakeasies and Grog Shops by Christine Sismondo.Support this show by supporting our sponsors!
On January 17, 1920, the United States passed the 18th Amendment to the US Constitution, ushering in a 13-year dry spell known as Prohibition. But how did a country that loved to drink turn its back on alcohol? How did two-thirds of both the House and Senate and three-fourths of State legislatures all agree that going dry was the way to get the country going forward? It had always been a long, uphill battle for the temperance movement, but towards the end of the nineteenth century, certain forces aligned: fears of industrialization, urbanization and immigration. Traditional American life was changing - fast - and many people looked for a scapegoat: the saloon.For more information on how Prohibition came to be, check out Professor David J. Hanson’s, “Alcohol Problems and Solutions,” a comprehensive, interactive site that outlines all the various stakeholders in the Noble Experiment.Daniel Okrent’s Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition is a key text for learning more about Prohibition and how it came about. And, to narrow in on New York, itself, Michael Lerner’s Dry Manhattan: Prohibition in New York City is a tremendous resource.The bootlegger character was based on a real story, A Bootlegger’s Story: How I Started, which ran in the New Yorker in 1926.For more on the Atlanta race riots and how they connect to Prohibition, check out this story on NPR, in which professor Cliff Kuhn describes his research. To learn more about the intersection between race and the policing of Prohibition, Lisa McGirr’s The War on Alcohol: Prohibition and the Rise of the American State is invaluable.Further references can be found in America Walks Into a Bar: A Spirited History of Taverns and Saloons, Speakeasies and Grog Shops by Christine Sismondo.Support us by supporting our sponsors!
SHOWGIRL SUNDAY DINNER Episode #11 - Habitual Line Steppers 0:24- Showgirl Intros Buttah Love - California’s Chocolate Buttah Babe Sepia Jewel - The Seductress of Slay Twirlisha Devine - The Black Gold Goddess 1:01 Intro Quote - “If we lose love and respect for each other, this is how we finally die.” Maya Angelou 1:46- Sparkle & Shine Twirl’s cat Zoey Rose makes several cameos. Buttah sends love & gratitude to her mother & grandmother. Sepia shouts out La Femme Fatales - Canadian burlesque troupe from Canada. Twirl give props to Sapphire Jones of Tycoons of Tease Sepia’s Slayspiration- Slay being open! 6:32- Burly Biz Cora Harrington - Founder & Editor in Chief of the Lingerie Addict blog Website: http://www.thelingerieaddict.com Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thelingerieaddict/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TLAfans/ 9:12- Sepia Sews Use acetone to help remove excess glue from rhinestoning on mesh fabrics. 11:38- The Glitter Box We’re feeling lonesome over here. Shoutout to Noble Experiment for following us on SoundCloud. PLEASE leave comments and click like on SoundCloud & leave us 5 star reviews on iTunes/ApplePodcasts. We’ll shout you out & read them on the show!! To have your email read on the show hit us up at showgirlsundaydinner@gmail.com 14:03- Ecdysiast Factz Weekly history lesson on a historical burly babe or event in burly history. This week- Brown Skin Showgirls by Leslie Cunningham https://tinyurl.com/y9uk4f3m 17:59- PhD in Slayology Weekly shoutout to showgirls This week: Storm Marrero - Black Boriqua & The Original Hips McGhee Website: http://www.stormmarrero.com Insta: https://www.instagram.com/storm_marrero/ Facebook:https://www.facebook.com/storm.stormmarrero 20:10- Oh You Thought Stop wasting Burly folks time with your disrespectful, unsolicited sexually explicit messages & ashy genetalia in their inboxes without consent or compensation. GIVE SHOWFOLKS $$$!!! 27:46- Dine & Dish Our Main Dish for the week- Habitual Line Steppers…STAY IN YOUR FUCKING LANE IN 2018!!! The show wasn’t free & neither are we… 1:05:06 Booked & Busy Sepia- 2/7- Nudie Newbies Ultimate Reveal Twirl- 1/27 Lola Demure’s Burlesque & Variety Show Sepia, Twirl & Buttah- 2/17 Blass Your Heart Burlesque - Sextra Terrestrials We have a calendar in the Booked & Busy section of our website www.showgirlsundaydinner.com. Click on over today for the most up to date list of our upcoming shows & booking information!! 1:07:51 - Pasties & Cake Sepia is working on her pop, lock & drop it skills with Skyy Masters, Twirl fangirls out over Zyra Lee Vanity, & Buttah says Consent isn’t sexy, it’s neccessary! Next Week- Showgirls In Training DONATE TO THE PASTIES & CAKE FUND!!! PATREON https://www.patreon.com/showgirlsundaydinner PAYPAL paypal.me/ShowgirlSundayDinner Links to follow & show us LOVE!! Instagram- @showgirlsundaydinner Facebook- https://www.facebook.com/ShowgirlSundayDinner/ Twitter- @sgsundaydinner Hashtags- #showgirlsundaydinner #sgsd #glitterndinner #pastiesncake #pastiesnmelanin Website- www.showgirlsundaydinner.com Email- showgirlsundaydinner@gmail.com Buttah Love Insta- @keenabuttah Facebook- https://www.facebook.com/KeenaButtah YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/KeenaButtaH Sepia Jewel Insta- @sepiajewel Facebook- https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100011664364702 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDqC31br0k1nWr7A11ZJO-A Twirlisa Devine Insta- @twirlisha Facebook- https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100016057546895 Intro/Outro Song: Black Velvet Dreams by Lost Harmonies Showgirl Sunday Dinner will drop weekly at 6pm Pacific Standard Time on SoundCloud iTunes/ApplePodcasts, Stitcher and GooglePlay. Please subscribe, like comment & share!!! Stay Sparkly & we look forward to #glitterndinner with you next week xoxoxo!!!
The Noble Experiment, it was called. Prohibition was a test of whether the government gun can be used to effectively treat hazard. On this week's episode, I examine what let up to prohibition, its impacts, and I share my thoughts on the effectiveness (or lack thereof) that comes from government intervention in risk.Created, written and produced by Jacinthe A GalpinSoundtrack Credits (sourced from www.freemusicarchive.org and www.freesound.org)Kathleen Martin - East St Louis BluesLatche Swing - Rhythme GitanLatche Swing - MenilmontantNew York Military Band - Sounds of AmericaUS Army Blues - Walk That DogPodington Bear - Across the RiverSandermotions - Applause
The Noble Experiment, it was called. Prohibition was a test of whether the government gun can be used to effectively treat hazard. On this week's episode, I examine what let up to prohibition, its impacts, and I share my thoughts on the effectiveness (or lack thereof) that comes from government intervention in risk.Created, written and produced by Jacinthe A GalpinSoundtrack Credits (sourced from www.freemusicarchive.org and www.freesound.org)Kathleen Martin - East St Louis BluesLatche Swing - Rhythme GitanLatche Swing - MenilmontantNew York Military Band - Sounds of AmericaUS Army Blues - Walk That DogPodington Bear - Across the RiverSandermotions - Applause
“The reign of tears is over. The slums will soon be a memory. We will turn our prisons into factories and our jails into storehouses and corncribs. Men will walk upright now, women will smile, and children will laugh. Hell will be forever for rent.” - Reverend Billy SundayReverend Billy Sunday was a proponent of the “Noble Experiment”, a anti-alcohol movement that gained steam throughout the nineteenth century and became a staple of the progressive movement at the start of the twentieth century. By 1900, Maine, Vermont, Kansas, Iowa, and North Dakota were already dry states with many scheduled to follow. The Prohibitionists believed that there was no way a person in a dry state could obtain liquor. However, they overlooked the postal service, which was run by the federal government, not the states. So alcohol could be purchased from a wet state and sent to a dry state. (More on the podcast)
There are lots of experiments that have come and gone. And not just experiments you'll find in science laboratories or chemistry classes. For example, if you were around for the early days of Facebook, back when it was known as “THE Facebook,” you might remember the slogan “a social experiment.” But it wasn't the first social experiment, and it certain won't be the last. Prohibition, otherwise known as a constitutional ban on the making and selling of alcoholic beverages, was known as the Noble Experiment from 1920-1933. It's safe to say the experiment failed, considering many lost their jobs, restaurants and clubs were put out of business, and prohibition gave way to corruption and an increase in underground crime, not to mention an exorbitant amount of power wielded to mobsters and bootleggers like Al Capone. Jello Biafra of the Dead Kennedys once said, "For every prohibition you create, you also create an underground." I'm your host, Emily Prokop, and this is The Story Behind Speakeasies. Follow The Story Behind: Twitter | Facebook | Instagram | Website Check out #PodernFamily on Twitter to find other great indie podcasts like this one. The role of Jello Biafra was played by Mark from the Unskippable podcast, and Eleanor Roosevelt was played by Tammy Terwelp, General Manager of 91.5 KRCC, Southern Colorado's NPR Station. Click here to support this podcast on Patreon. Media: Music for Makers Sources: http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/j/jello_biafra.html http://www.history.com/news/hungry-history/prohibition-speakeasies-and-finger-foods http://www.legendsofamerica.com/ah-prohibitionspeakeasy.html http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2268971/Inside-speakeasies-1920s-The-hidden-drinking-spots-transformed-New-York-Citys-night-life-prohibition-era-beyond.html http://www.blackpast.org/aah/cotton-club-harlem-1923 https://www.thrillist.com/drink/nation/secret-bars-hard-to-find-speakeasies http://www.legendsofamerica.com/20th-gangsters.html https://parachute.mapquest.com/2016/03/16/five-hardest-speakeasies-to-get-into/ http://www.u-s-history.com/pages/h1085.html
This show, for a lack of a better word, is a stress test because frankly, I was pretty sure something would go wrong and I wanted to get in front of it before we did something real. Topics discussed in no particular order: -Daredevil -Avengers:Age of Ultron -Mad Max: Fury Road -NHL Playoffs -Conventions: Comic Con, PAX -San Diego, CA : Stone Brewery, The Noble Experiment, Polite Provisions -Rooster Teeth: Monty Oum - Haloid, RVB, RWBY Contact Information: apozopodcast@gmail.com
The Firewater interview with Brooklyn's own The Noble Experiment Distillery. Learn more about this distillery's Owney's Rum and the realities of running an urban distillery. Visit the extended profile on the Firewater Network: http://bit.ly/1taiGIs
What goes into opening a distillery? From troubleshooting boilers to priming pumps, Bridget Firtle has gotten a lot of training she never expected to while opening “The Noble Experiment”, a distillery in NYC. On this week’s episode of The Speakeasy, Damon Boelte chats with Bridget about opening a distillery, making rum and making moves in the craft spirits industry. If things like sourcing molasses and Island rum variations interest you, then you’ve found the right show to listen to. Today’s program was sponsored by Catskill Provisions “Whiskey is known as the American spirit, but one of the first distilleries in the country was a rum distillery in Staten Island.” [20:00] –Bridget Firtle on The Speakeasy