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Did you have a nonstop weekend like we did? What did you get as a graduation gift? What are you getting your kids? When did you buy something that was counterfeit? Have you had to deal with wildlife in your neighborhood?
Did you have a nonstop weekend like we did? What did you get as a graduation gift? What are you getting your kids? When did you buy something that was counterfeit? Have you had to deal with wildlife in your neighborhood?
Boris Herrmann ist ein Gast, den ihr euch schon ganz oft gewünscht habt: Er hat bereits zweimal an einer der härtesten Regatten der Welt teilgenommen: der Vendeé Globe. Ganz alleine und Non-Stop hat Boris in etwa 80 Tagen die Welt umsegelt – einmal war er bis ganz zum Schluss in Schlagdistanz auf einen Platz ganz oben auf dem Treppchen. Wir sprechen über dieses Rennen, die Entbehrungen und Freuden, die damit einher gehen und wie es ist, wieder anzukommen.Neben seinem faszinierenden Boot, der Sea Explorer, die auf ihren Foils eher fliegt als schwimmt, sprechen wir auch über wissenschaftliche Technik an Board. Denn Boris ist es ganz wichtig, sich auch der Klima-Katastrophe zu stellen. Mit seinem sportlichen Ehrgeiz stürzt er sich auch auf diese Frage: Wie können wir das Klima Schützen und startet damit sein eigenes Rennen mit dem Titel: „A race we must win“. Dass das ganze mehr als nur eine PR-Aktion ist wurde mir erst in unserem Gespräch so richtig deutlich, denn Boris hat mittlerweile für die größte Datenreihe ihrer Art im antarktischen Ozean gesammelt.Die Website von Boris Team findet ihr hier: https://www.team-malizia.comMit „Ein Leben für den Ozean“ ist ein Buch zum Podcast erschienen. Es erzählt 10 Geschichten über die Held*innen der Meere und begeistert bildgewaltig für den Ozean. Ihr könnt es unter www.ein-leben-fuer-den-ozean.de bestellen.Den Link zu meinen Werbepartnern findest du hier: https://linktr.ee/helden_der_meere_partner
Full TorahAnytime Lecture Video or Audio More classes from R' Joey Haber ⭐ 2,348
Larry McCray - Hangman - single – 2025Voodoo Ramble – I am a bluesman - In The Heart of The City - 2025Brad Wilson – Groaning the Blues - The cailfornian – 2025Blue Monday – Forgotten land -Hate to see you like this – 2025John Brennan – You shook me - Bring It On Back To Me - 2025 Daddy Mack Blues Band – Mississippi Woman - Doctor's Orders – 2025The Woods – Stay Home - Live at Vera – 2025Simon McBride – show me how to love live at Bluesmoose Radio 27 september 2017Robert Jon and the Wreck – Hit me like you mean it - Live at bluesmoose radio 11 juni 2019T.G. Copperfield – The Needle hit the Groove - All In Your Head - 2025 StackHouse feat. Mark Hummel - Jumpin with Symphony Sid - Live at Bluesmoose radio 24-10-2018
Blue Monday – Hate to see you like this - Hate to see you like this - 2025 Catfish -A time to fly - A time to fly - 2025 Joe Louis Walker – Tell me Why - Blues Conspiracy Live On The Legendary Rhythm & Blues Cruise - 2010 Roy Head feat Deniz tek - Undercoveragent of the Blues - Last Time Around - 2025 – wavWayne Baker Brooks - Ain't No Use - single – 2025Bob Stroger & The Headcutters – Bob is back in Town - Bob Is Back! - 2025 - DelmarkBoogie Beasts – Howl - Live at Depot (EP) - 2025 Innes Sibun – Fishermans's warf - Anthology - 2020 Rebecca Downes - These Days - Single - 2025 Anthony Gomes – Alove song gone wrong - Praise the Loud - 2025
Hi all, Jess here. This episode was Sarina's idea, and when you listen you will understand why. It can be hard to focus on the work, whether it's editing, world building, conjuring meet cutes, or translating research-based hope for the next generation. That said, it's important that we keep creating and putting our words out into the world. We hope you are able to keep working while navigating the a balance between consuming, processing, and reacting to the news cycle and shutting the world out in self preservation. Stuff we talked aboutWrite Through It: An Insider's Guide to Writing and the Creative Life by Kate McKeanKate Mckean's websiteWe Are All Guilty Here by Karin Slaughter (release date August 12, 2025)The OpEd ProjectAuthors Against Book BansPossession by A.S. Byatt and the film I adore based on the bookA Complete Unknown filmHamilton, Non-Stop (“why does he write like he's running out of time?”)On Writing by Stephen KingAll In by Billie Jean KingPermission by Elissa AltmanMeditation for Mortals by Oliver BurkemanHEY. Did you know Sarina's latest thriller is out NOW? Rowan Gallagher is a devoted single mother and a talented architect with a high-profile commission restoring an historic mansion for the most powerful family in Maine. But inside, she's a mess. She knows that stalking her ex's avatar all over Portland on her phone isn't the healthiest way to heal from their breakup. But she's out of ice cream and she's sick of romcoms. Watching his every move is both fascinating and infuriating. He's dining out while she's wallowing on the couch. The last straw comes when he parks in their favorite spot on the waterfront. In a weak moment, she leashes the dog and sets off to see who else is in his car. Instead of catching her ex in a kiss, Rowan becomes the first witness to his murder—and the primary suspect.Digital books at: Amazon | Nook | Apple Books | Kobo | Google Play | Audible Physical books at: Bookshop.org | Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Indigo | More paperback links here!New! Transcript below!EPISODE 448 - TRANSCRIPTKJ Dell'AntoniaListeners who I know are also readers. Have I got a summer book for you, if you haven't yet ordered Dying to Meet You. Sarina Bowen's latest thriller with just enough romance you have to so let me lay this out for you. Rowan Gallagher is a devoted single mother and a talented architect with a high profile commission restoring a historic mansion for the most powerful family in Maine, but inside, she's a mess. She knows stalking her exes avatar all over Portland on her phone isn't the healthiest way to heal from their breakup, but she's out of ice cream and she's sick of rom coms. Watching his every move is both fascinating and infuriating. He's dining out while she's wallowing on the couch. The last straw comes when he parks in their favorite spot on the waterfront. In a weak moment, she leashes the dog and sets off to see who else is in his car. But instead of catching her ex and a kiss, Rowan becomes the first witness to his murder and the primary suspect. But Rowan isn't the only one keeping secrets as she digs for the truth, she discovers that the dead man was stalking her too, gathering intimate details about her job and her past, struggling to clear her name, Rowan finds herself spiraling into the shadowy plot that killed him. Will she be the next to die? You're going to love this. I've had a sneak preview, and I think we all know that The Five Year Lie was among the very best reads and listens of last summer, Dying to Meet You, is available in every format and anywhere that you buy books and you could grab your copy, and you absolutely should…right now.All TalkingIs it recording? Now it's recording, yay, go ahead. This is the part where I stare blankly at the microphone. Try to remember what I'm supposed to be doing. All right, let's start over. Awkward pause. I'm gonna wrestle some papers. Okay, now, 123,KJ Dell'AntoniaHey, I'm KJ Dell'Antonia, and this is hashtag AmWriting podcast the weekly podcast about writing all the things, short things, long things, pitches, proposals, fiction, non fiction, memoir. This is the podcast about finding a way to get your work done, and that is sure what we're gonna talk about this week.Jess LaheyI'm Jess Lahey. I am the author of The Gift of Failure and The Addiction Inoculation and you can find my journalism over at The New York Times, Washington Post and The Atlantic.Sarina BowenI'm Sarina Bowen. I am the author of many contemporary novels, including Dying to Meet You, which is brand new right now. KJ Dell'AntoniaYay!Sarina BowenYay. Thank you.Jennie NashI'm Jennie Nash, I am the founder and CEO of Author Accelerator, a company on a mission to lead the emerging book coaching industry, and also the author of the Blueprint books, which help people get their books out of their head and onto the page.KJ Dell'AntoniaAnd also in your past life, the author of a lot of other books.Jennie NashI know indeed. KJ Dell'AntoniaI think it's worthy. I do. I'm KJ Dell'Antonia, I am KJ Dell'Antonia. I am the author of three novels and two non fiction books, and the former editor and lead writer of the mother lode blog at the New York Times. We have all had a number of careers. And the reason I brought that up, Jenny is that I was just interviewing Kate McKean, who has a new book about the mechanics. Like, it's a great book. It's called Write Through It, and it's sort of like everything we've ever talked about the podcast on the podcast, all the how to stuff all rolled up into one book, which is really cool. But I was telling her that I kind of have a unspoken motto of only taking writing advice from people who have not published a book, very judiciously. Now my freelance editor is not someone who has, or, I think I don't know if she even wants to publish a book, and she's amazing. So with with some thought, but my point being that you have also published many, many, many books. So if anyone out there hesitates around that don't, don't. Yeah, all right, that was a really lot of introductions. We got something to talk about today, and I'm going to demand that Sarina announce our topic, because she came up with it. Okay.Sarina BowenWell, my topic is how to be present and devote yourself to your writing in a world that is so loud and confusing and it feels like whatever you're working on can't possibly matter as much as what's going on in the world, and all my writer friends are struggling with this right now. Jess LaheyIt's, it's hard, especially when the work that I do, the work around like writing about kids and parenting and stuff, requires a fair amount of optimism and requires a fair amount of like, it's gonna be great, and here's what you have to do in order to make it be great. And it's really, it's been very hard for me lately to to be in that head space.Sarina BowenWell, Jess, I would argue that, like, at least you're literally helping people. And some of us are fighting meet cutes and first kisses. Jess LaheyOkay, you are no but you are so helping people, because over and over and over again, what I hear from your readers and from readers of happy kiss, he a and kissing books that they are the the self care and the reprieve that they really need.Sarina BowenOkay, you you just are. You just gave, like, the point, the point at the top of the notes that I made for this discussion, because people keep saying that to me, and they're not wrong. But for some reason, it hasn't been enough lately, and I, um, I was struggling to figure out why. And then over the last 48 hours, in a feverish rush, I read this Karin Slaughter book that's called We Are All Guilty Here that doesn't come out until August, but please pre order it now and do yourself a favor, because it's so good. Jess LaheyI love her books. Sarina BowenYeah, so I had the opportunity to have that same experience from the reader side of the coin, which is that I totally lost myself in this fictional world. It It mattered to me as a person to work through those problems, um, in the way that a novel has a beginning and a middle and an end and and I think that part of my big problem right now is that I can't see an end to any of the stuff that's you know happening. So it was helpful to me to have the same experience that my readers described to me, to be like totally sucked into something, and to feel like it mattered to me in the moment.Jess LaheyWell…And to add on to that, I had a fantastic sorry KJ and Jenny, we're just we're off on our little happy tangent here. But I had a wonderful conversation with a fan recently in on one at one of my speaking engagements, and she was apologizing to me for feeling like she had a really close relationship with me, even though we hadn't met. And she said, and the reason for that is that you're in my head because I'm listening to your audiobook. And I said, You do not need to apologize to that for that to me, because I have the same experience. And she said, the thing that was nice, you know, because I'm such a big audiobook fan, I feel this weird, parasocial, fictional connection to this person, because it's not just their words, it's also their voice. But the thing that she said was really sweet was she listened in her car, and her car became a place of refuge and a place where she knew she was going to hear a voice that would make her feel like it was going to be okay. And so even though I hear that and I know that, and I've experienced it from the other side with the audiobooks that I listen to, it's still, it is still very hard to look down at the empty page and say, How do I help people feel like everything's going to be okay? And it's, it's a difficult moment for that.KJ Dell'AntoniaI have been thinking about this too, because I think we all are, and let me just say that this is not just a, you know, we're not, we're not making a grand political statement here, although we, we certainly could. This is, uh, it is a moment of some global turmoil. Whether you think this global turmoil is exactly what the universe needed or not it is still... um, there's a lot.Jess LaheyIt's just a lot, and it's all the time, and it's like, oh, did you hear this? Did you hear this? And I feel like I'm supposed to be paying attention, and then if I pay attention too much, I feel like my head is it so, yeah, it's just a lot. KJ Dell'AntoniaSo what I want to say is, I think we have to get used to it, and I think it can be done. And I take some encouragement from all the writers who wrote their way through World Wars, who wrote their way through, you know, enormous personal trauma, who have written their way through, you know, enormous political turmoil, in their own countries, both as you know people who are actually writing about what was going on, but also as people who were not, I happen to be a real stan of the World War II books about, not like the drama of the war, but then the home that keep the home fires as they as they would say, stuff like The Diary of a Provincial Lady in Wartime and Angela Thirkell. And it's just, this is what was going on. There's some stuff... I can't think of all of it, but anyway. I love that reminder that life went on, and I think we have had a pretty calm few decades, and that that's been very lucky, but it's actually not the norm. So we gotta get used to this kids.Jess LaheyYeah, I actually, I just flew home from a trip, and Tim was watching on the plane. Tim was watching a film with Siegfried Sassoon and Wilfred Owen. You may know Wilfred Owen as the person who wrote, you know, Dulce et Decorum Est, the whole thing, these are the world war two poets and a world war one poet, sorry, and yeah, they had a lot going on and they were writing poetry. Yeah.Jennie Nash Well, I knew from the moment that Sarina posed this question that I was going to be the voice of opposition here today, because I am seeing this and feeling this great surge of creative energy and people wanting to write, wanting to create, wanting to raise their voice, whether it is in opposition or as an act of rebellion or as an active escape, or just as a thing that they've always wanted to do so they're finally going to do it. It feels similar-ish to me as the pandemic did, in that way. And you know what I was thinking about Sarina, is that you are in the both enviable and also not enviable position of having done this a really long time and and you you know how it goes, and you not that it's wrote by any means, writing a book is never wrote. But the the creative process is not new to you, I guess, and I have encounters with a lot of writers through the book coaches I train who are just stepping up into this and just raising their voice and just embracing that. This is a thing that they could do. And this is a, you know, like I just, I've seen people, you know, a lot of dystopian fiction, obviously wanting to be written, climate justice, social justice, you know, books from people who previously marginalized, even like satire about the crazy stuff going on in education, you know, in all genres, all realms, I just feel the people doubling down. And so I wonder if it's, if it's, you know, the writer friends that you talk to are largely in that same boat as you very accomplished and in it. And I don't know it's my conjecture, because I just, I'm really feeling the opposite.Jess LaheyActually, can I? Can I? Can I verify that through something else? So KJ and I have both mentored with The OpEd Project. It's about raising all voices to publish op eds in newspapers, not just, you know, the people that we're used to hearing from. And they put out an email for their mentors, because they said, This moment is generating so much interest in writing op eds, so that's a good thing too.Jennie NashOh, that's interesting. Yeah, yeah, I don't know i i also have to say that I personally have made a choice that is inspired by Oliver Burkeman, which is I'm not paying attention, and I know it's a luxury to not pay attention to the news, and I know that that it's a privilege and maybe not always a good thing, but I just made a personal decision that can't right now, or you don't want to, for what it's worth, so I feel a little ashamed about that, to be honest... I feel a lot of times that I'm not doing enough when I catch a glimpse of what's happening or what's going on, or my husband is a voracious consumer of the news, so I it's not like I'm not getting news. I just get it filtered through him and through my children, for sure, and and I would also like to just give a shout out to this podcast, because sometimes through this podcast, I listen to Jess and Sarina, On a podcast you recorded a couple weeks ago about pirate the pirate site episode, and learned so much, and it was so great, you know, so I don't know. I have to say that too, that maybe my stance is coming from a place of not being fully... pulling a little over my own eyes, I guess.KJ Dell'AntoniaNo, I think it's great that you are finding something that you're seeing like a surge of of positive energy. I mean, part of me, as I'm listening to you guys, wants to go well, but you know, nothing I'm I'm doing is a voice of protester opposition, but that's okay. We don't have to be voices of protester opposition. And we have to remember that most of the people in our country do not oppose this. So it's a little bit of a weird I mean, it's it's a weird moment that one's that one's tough, but it's also true. It's not, it's just change. It's just, it's just turmoil. But I love your point that there's, um, there's excitement and energy in turmoil. Maybe this is also a question of sort of where you are in your life, like, where, whether, the turmoil is exciting or stressful, or, I don't even know where I was going with that... okay.Jennie NashWell, but I, I think there's, I've been thinking just a lot about AI and where it's going and what's going to happen. And some days I worry, and some days I fret, and some days, you know, I don't, I don't think about it or whatever, but, but I, the thing I keep coming back to is you can't keep a creator down. You know, the creators want to create. And it's the the process of that, the the creative process, whether somebody doesn't matter what they're writing and and Sarina, that speaks to where, where you are. You know, they could be writing a meet cute, or a first kiss, or what have you, but the fact that they want to be a creator in a world that's on fire is, to me, the hope... the sign, the sign of hope. You know, I actually I'm about to take a trip to Amsterdam, where I've never been, and of course, we're going to go to the Anne Frank House, and I may reengage myself with that story, and thought about it and looked at it, and it's like just the the urge to create, the urge to put it down, the urge to do the thing. And maybe that was an act of protest as well. But, you know, not, not a meet cute, but I just, I just, I believe in the power of the creator and and of that. And Sarina, you're so good at it, at that, at that process, and putting yourself in that process, and being in that process, and it makes me sad that you're questioning it in a way. Sarina BowenWell, you know, I don't know. I actually kind of disagree that, that we can look away right now, because there's a lot at stake for for the for the world that writers operate inside and AI is really important, because there's a lot of super important litigation going down right now about what what is legal in terms of using our work to create AI and to not pay us for it. But also, there are other writers who are being silenced and having their student visas, you know, rejected and and it's only work of other people that is pushing back on this. So it's in some ways, I I can't really say, Oh, it's okay for me to look away right now and go back to this scene, because there are moments that matter more than others, but but in order to not give up my entire job at this moment, because it's so distractingly difficult, what I find I've had to do is figure out which sources really matter and which parts of my day are productively informational, and which parts are just anxiety producing. So by by luck, I went on this long vacation, long for me is like nine days, but we'd been planning it forever because one of my kids is overseas, and we were going there at his exact moment of having a break. So I had a vacation in a way that I haven't in a really long time. And I found that being off cycle from the news really affected my the way that I took it in. And it improved my mental health, even though I was ultimately about as well informed as if I hadn't left but I didn't have any time in the day to, like, scroll through the hysteria on threads. I could only take in the news from a few, like, you know, real sources and and that was really informational to me, like I didn't.. I had not processed the fact that how I take in the necessary information affected whether or not it merely informed me or also made me feel like everything was lost. So that that was pretty important, but also just the fact that that I've also been trying to be out in the world more and be where people are, instead of, instead of looking at my computer screen. And it's not like a work smarter, not harder thing, but like, choose your moments. You know, I believe that we still need to be engaged at this moment and to ask ourselves, what is possible for us to do. But that doesn't mean we have to scroll through all the stress online all day long in order to get there. And to me, that's that's what's made the difference.Jess LaheyWe've had a rule in our house for a little while now that I'm not allowed to bring up any newsy things or talk about any newsy things after a certain point in the evening, because it messes with Tim's sleep. He would wake up, you know, churning about and thinking about whatever it was that I talked about from the news most recently. So any of those outrage moments are just not allowed in our house in the evening. And I think that's a really healthy barrier to put up and realize that there are points in my day when I can handle it and points in my day when I can't.KJ Dell'AntoniaIt's also possible that the thing that I could most usefully do to change things that I think should be changed is to give money to other people who are working to change them. Because, you know, we can't all... shouting on social media?, not, not useful, right? I'm not gonna run for office, personally. I do have a family member who does that sort of thing, and I love that, but I'm probably not going to, I guess, check in with me in 10 years. I'm, you know, there's only so much I when I think about, okay, what could I possibly do? Most of it is I can give money to people who are doing things that I want done, and the only way I have money to give to people who want things, who are doing things that I want to get done, is to do my job, which is, is to to write books. So there's that. Jess LaheyI would like to highlight, however, that Tim and I have both been periodically calling our representatives and having some really, you know, it's obviously not the representative themselves or our senator that we're talking to. We're talking to, you know, someone in their office, some college kid in their office, but the conversations have been fascinating. I've learned a lot just through those conversations. And they don't just sort of take your message and then hang up. They're willing to have a conversation. And it's been, it's been really fascinating. So calling your representatives is a really worthy thing to do.KJ Dell'AntoniaYeah, many decades ago, I was that person, and therefore I'm a little cynical about it.Jess LaheyWell, I do want to give a shout out right now, I've been watching one of my former students who ran for Mitt Romney's Senate seat in Utah as a Democrat, which is an impossible task, but she did really, really well, and she just got to open for Bernie and AOC at the at a thing in in in Utah. And so watching her, or watching people who are, you know, really getting engaged, and by a lot of them are younger people. That's and, you know, my thing is younger people. And so it circles back around to the more supporting I'm doing of people who are younger and people who are energized and excited about getting in there and writing the op eds and speaking and running for office, that has been another place of reprieve for me.Jennie NashSo I would love to to ask Sarina about... No no, because something she said, you know, when she said, I I disagree, it just it got me thinking, because I wanted to defend myself, and I don't know, and say, Well, no, I'm not I'm not that terrible. I'm not whatever. But I been listening to you talk, I was realizing that I I really have prioritized my own mental well being over anything else, and in terms of checking out of the things, and I've heard you talk about this before, on on a podcast, but my default response, like on the piece you talked about, about writers and being under attack and what's going on, that's just one tiny thing that's going on in the world of chaos. But that tiny thing I do tell myself I can't do anything. I'm just one person, you know, what? What can I really do? And therefore, then I don't do anything. So I do the bare minimum. I do the bare minimum, you know, like I give money to Authors Guild, right? You know, but it, I'm just going to put myself out there as the, the avatar of the person who says that and doesn't do anything and and then, to be perfectly honest, feels is a little smug when you're like, I'm dying and I'm wrecked and I'm whatever, because you're informed and you're actually doing things, and I'm like... oh, you should be like me and and not do, and then I feel bad about myself. So I just want to put that back as a conversation piece, because I know you have thoughts about that, that one person can't do anything. Sarina BowenYeah, so I often feel like there's a lot of problems I would like to solve and and if I tried to take on all of them, then I would be paralyzed, like there would be nothing I can do. And also, there are moments when we have to really pull back and and put our oxygen mask on before assisting others like that is a totally legitimate thing to do. And when I had this experience of going on vacation, and then it was such a big reset for me, I thought, Oh, you dummy, like, you know, that's like a thing I need to keep relearning is that, oh wait no, sometimes we really do have to drop out for for a little bit of time, because we will be more energized afterwards, but, but I bet that that one thing that you're supposed to do will announce itself to you fairly soon. You know what I mean? Like it just because you're having this moment of pulling back and needing to do that doesn't mean that that's a permanent position for you. Like, I don't, I don't believe that, like, because, because I know you care. So...Jennie NashYeah, yeah. But it's, it's just interesting the different, the different reactions and responses. And I often find myself saying something to my husband, which I'm not proud to share. But the thing that I say is, where is our leader?, who's stepping up?, whatever the topic is, or the area or the realm is like, who's who's going to save us? I I'm looking for somebody else to be the solution. Sarina BowenWell, but, but that that's important though, because part of that is just recognizing that, that without a power structure, who knows what to do? Like, I've been lucky in that, like, I've spent a lot of time on conference calls with The Authors Guild, and I've found that I respect those people so much that you know, when the CEO of The Authors Guild, Mary Rasenberger, has an idea, you know that it's always worth hearing out and not everything you know gets done or becomes a priority of of the but, but I know who to listen to, and that wasn't always true, you know. So I've also subscribed to the emails from Authors Against Book Bans. That's another organization that has a lot of energy right now, and they're doing a fantastic job of paying attention. So, you know, it's, it's okay to pick one little realm and, and that's lately been my solution. Because, yeah, we're not we, we need leaders and, and the reason we're all we're so frustrated is because the lack of true leadership, the lack of leaders who can say, I made a mistake. I don't know everything. I don't have all the answers. Like, that's, you know, that's the kind of people we need in the world, and they're pretty thin on the ground right now. So, yeah, I totally hear what you're saying.KJ Dell'AntoniaSo, I mean, why do we have to say that's useful? I mean, how are we... We're all still working. I mean, yeah, you know, you can listen to Jenny and I trying to write our book every week. And I happen to know that, you know, Sarina is chowing is, you know, nibbling away at new drafts, as is Jess. So we're doing it. We're just distracted.Sarina BowenWell, I always say that everything about writing, you have to learn more than once, like you learned it on a project, and you figure something out and you're like, Oh, right. And I think this is another one of those moments when how to reset yourself, how to. To you know how to find that moment of peace is, this is maybe the the lesson of the week, like, even if you don't, even if you don't write the best chapter of your life between now and the middle of of May, you know you can turn your attention to paying attention to your inner voice and how, how am I feeling right now? And how could I feel better? Like, do I need to go meet a friend in a coffee shop to work? Because that has been a real boon to me lately. Just being changed my scenery change the hours when I look at my inbox, that's another thing that I've done. Right now, I asked my assistant to please watch this one inbox, because I can't watch it myself right now. It's too much of people pulling on my arm. So just, you know, to turn some of the small levers that we have in our lives with regard to how writing fits into your life and see what's working. Like, it's okay to, like, break your strategy a little bit to see, you know, if you can shake up the problem.KJ Dell'AntoniaI've been trying really hard to answer the voice in my head that says... I just can't do this right now with, well, okay, maybe, maybe you could, like, what if we just sat here for another 10 minutes? Like, what if you just, okay... I hear you like, to sort of like, be the other side for myself, like... hey I hear you, that sounds really rough, but what if we just did this anyway? Just, just tried. And you know, it's, it moves, it moves.Jess LaheyAlong those same lines. What's been saving me is, as you all know, anyone who's listening to this for a while knows I love, love, love the research process, and I have a very big stack of books to get through, that is research, formative, sort of base level research, foundational research for this thing I want to write and and hearing other people's ideas, and hearing how other people put ideas together, and that just fuels me. And then on the fiction side, I've been and I hadn't even realized I've been doing this until we started talking about this topic. I have been watching a lot of movies I love about the act of creation. I re watched one of my favorites, “Possession” with Jennifer Ehle, and it's just one of my favorite films about… it's based on the the A.S. Byatt novel, Possession, and it's about poets. And then I was watching a movie about a novelist, and I was just re-listening to the new Bob Dylan movie a complete unknown, and hearing about other people's creative process fuels things in me. And I even just listening to the Bob Dylan movie while I was watering the garden, I was like, Oh, I could go, I can't write music, but, but I can still write these other things. Wait, hold on, I'm a writer. And then you start realizing, oh, that creative process is accessible to me too. And you know, whether it's the creative process that changes the world, or the creative process that gives you an outlet. Selfishly, either way, I think it's, it's important, and so I love digging back into and I've talked about, you know, re listening to Amwriting sometimes when, when I need that boost.KJ Dell'AntoniaIsn't it funny that if Stephen King says, well, I spent, you know, 2016 not doing something, but, but like writing this new book. We're all like, yay, you do that, we love you for that, and that for all of us, we're just like, oh no, you should be... I mean, we gotta, we should do what we do.Jess LaheyYeah, I guess I always think about, there was a moment when I first I saw him, I was so lucky to get to see Hamilton on Broadway, and I remember just that line about writing like you're why does he write like he's running out of time, that idea that like the stuff just is coming pouring out of you, and you've got to put it somewhere before it's over. You know, I love that feeling of desperation, and I get that from listening to other people's creations and other people's research and other people's creative acts. It's, it's good.Jennie NashThat's very cool. That is very cool. I I don't know, I guess I'm really good at, or lately have been really good at, at turning off, turning off the inputs, just because I have to too many input puts that will just do me in. And so for me, it's catching myself, catching myself floating over to social media, or catching myself clicking into something that I don't really want to read like you're saying, Sarina, at this this time of day, you know, I sit down to lunch and I don't, I don't want to read that thing. So setting setting aside time to engage with that is like the, the only way that I'm able to do it. And I'll try to choose to read something longer, a longer form thing, or or listen to a podcast. Rather than sound bites or snippets of things. So I'm trying to be self aware about not getting pulled down into the sound bite things. That's, That's what I mean by disengaging is, you know, not going on threads at all. I'm not going on... I sort of can't even look at Facebook or even Instagram. It's just all too, too much, and especially, especially Instagram, where, you know, you'll have all these calls to action, and then... bathing suits. I mean, maybe that's just me, right?KJ Dell'AntoniaNo, you're right. You're right. It's very...Jennie NashJarring. you know...KJ Dell'AntoniaYou can't control which bits of it like, at least, if you're looking at The Times, you're you know... or The Wall Street Journal, you're getting a section. Instagram is like, this terrible thing just happened here by this Jenny K quitter...Jennie NashIt's very jarring. So I don't wish to be there, and I do have to give a shout out to Substack. How great is it to be able to read things without all the noise and distraction from the people that you choose, who are smart and saying smart things. That's that's the thing that I choose, that I really like and kind of toward what you said Jess, happened to be reading the memoir from Billie Jean King called All In. Jess LaheyIt's so good!Jennie NashAnd and it's, I mean, talk about just a person who lived her values and made massive change, and understood how change is made, and is paying it forward in her life, and it is so inspiring. And it's, it's not quite, it's not quite the creative act, but it, I guess it's creation of change, but I find it hopeful and inspiring, and I think that's where I come up with the the question of, who's gonna who's gonna save us? Like, Where's, where's our person to lead? Like, like she was at the time when women's... not just athletics, but equality. She did so much for women's equality, and still is, you know, so it makes me hopeful that such people will be rising up and and I will be able to identify and support them. Jess LaheyI just finished listening to and reading on the page. I did it both ways. Permission by Elissa Altman about having the courage, it's a memoir, and the courage to create. And she it, she also articulated for me, just how wonderful it is to... I don't know, even if it's not out for mass publication, sometimes writing things down that are the stuff you've gone through and the way you're feeling that's just worth it in and of itself. But anyway, that was a lovely book I highly recommend, Permission by Elissa Altman.KJ Dell'Antonia But also I just want to say, and this is sort of suddenly hopped into my head. So I'm working on a book, surprise! Um, I'm trying to do something bigger and different that says a lot of things, and I have thoughts about it and and, um, I actually think I need to shut down input... for... I'm not gonna, I can't do this if, if there's a lot of stuff pouring into me, all the time, and I, I think that's, I think that's fair. I think sometimes, I mean, I was thinking about the person who wrote Permission, and I was thinking, You know what I'll bet she didn't read a lot of while she was writing that? People shouting at her that, that, you know, the better thing for her to do would be to churn butter in a nap dress. I think it probably It took some time to do that. And these poets that we're talking about, they're not writing a poem. Oh, you know, line by line. In between reading thread's posts, they're they're putting their time and energy into their work, and this is kind of what we've been saying all along, like, like, moderate it, choose your things, pick pick your moments. And maybe, you know, some time of quiet to hear what you think about what's going on, as opposed to what everyone else thinks about what's going on, and to let that, to give yourself permission for that to be whatever it is. Maybe it's not what we think, you know? Maybe, maybe its something different. That's okay. So I, I want to shout for, for that, for, okay, do, turn it off, work on a thing.Sarina BowenYeah, I feel like if, um, Jenny's point about taking your news from social media is totally different than taking your news from the front page of your favorite newspaper. And I guess to KJ's point that if we turn off the voices that are serving us the least well at this moment, what we might find is that there are more hours in the day to both get our work done and then have a minute to say, what else could I... what else could I do? Is that donating my time somewhere or just getting my own house in order? You know, I find I have more time to do things that matter when I am spending less time in the loud places that aren't serving me personally.Jess LaheyAgreed. Jennie NashSo well said.Jess LaheyI think we should end it there, mainly because we're we've run long, but, I'm really grateful for the four of you, I was going to my last point was going to be that my saving grace has been realizing recently that that it's the people in my life that I want to invest in. I had a realization someone told me some news of via someone else, and I didn't realize how disconnected I had become from the people that are real in my life, and how much more attention I was paying to people I don't know anything, people who I don't know that I have a parasocial relationship with. And so I'm my I have sort of a mid year goal, which is to make sure that the people who are actually in life real important to me, are most important to me. And so I've pulled back from those parasocial relationships and gone toward the real relationships, and I'm grateful so much for the three of you. I feel like you all rescue me in moments of doubt. So thank you.KJ Dell'AntoniaYay! People are a good use of time, as our friend, Laura Vanderkam says. So Jess shouted out the book Permission. I think if anybody else has a useful book for this moment, I want to offer up, as we have before, Meditations for Mortals by Oliver Burkeman. It is a series of four weeks, worth of basically three page long thoughts on how to deal with our own inevitably limited lives and personal resources. And I love it. Does anybody else have anything that would maybe serve people in this moment?Jess LaheySarina. Sarina, nothing to serve Jenny. Jenny has the Billie Jean King. I mean, the Billie Jean King...that stuff is fantastic. Yeah, she's amazing.Jennie NashShe's amazing.Jess LaheyAll right. Well, thank you so so much everyone for listening to the podcast. We're great. So grateful for you, because you're why we get to keep doing this. And this is fun, and we love lowering our… sorry flattening the curve for a learning curve for other writers. So until next week, everyone, keep your butt in the chair and your head in the game. The hashtag AmWriting podcast is produced by Andrew Perilla. Our intro music, aptly titled “Unemployed Monday,” was written and played by Max Cohen. Andrew and Max were paid for their time and their creative output, because everyone deserves to be paid for their work. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit amwriting.substack.com/subscribe
Le prime pagine dei principali quotidiani nazionali commentate in rassegna stampa da Davide Giacalone. i negoziati tra Russia e Ucraina, Italia fuori dai partner strategici, l'aumento spesa per la difesa. Il commento sugli Internazionali BNL di Roma con il nostro Massimo Caputi. I fatti di attualità con Roberto Arditti. L'Ucraina è il vertice di Istanbul partito ieri: occasione mancata? Don Antonio Mazzi, fondatore della comunità Exodus, regala ogni giorno un pensiero, un suggerimento, una frase agli ascoltatori di RTL 102.5. All'interno di Non Stop News, con Barbara Sala, Luigi Santarelli e Ludo Marafini.
Le prime pagine dei principali quotidiani nazionali commentate in rassegna stampa da Davide Giacalone. Mattarella e il futuro dell'Europa, Ucraina e il vertice senza Putin. Oggi è la giornata internazionale della famiglia. Ne abbiamo parlato con Marta Bonini, vicecaporedattore di Donna Moderna. Ieri sera la finale della Coppa Italia, in campo abbiamo visto Milan e Bologna. Il punto sul match di ieri con Xavier Jacobelli, giornalista e opinionista, già direttore di Tuttosport e Corriere dello Sport. Don Antonio Mazzi, fondatore della comunità Exodus, regala ogni giorno un pensiero, un suggerimento, una frase agli ascoltatori di RTL 102.5. Si sta svolgendo in questi giorni il Festival del Cinema di Cannes. Il punto con Federico Fumagalli, inviato a Cannes del Corriere della Sera. Il diario del Giro d'Italia con i nostri inviati Paolo Pacchioni e Valentina Iannicelli. Il commento sugli Internazionali BNL di Roma con il nostro Massimo Caputi. Da dove viene ricavata la terra rossa dei campi degli Internazionali di Roma (ma anche dei più importanti campi di tutto il mondo)? Pensate: tutto parte dalle vecchie cascine. Ci sono solo dieci produttori in tutto il mondo. In Italia, in provincia di Cremona, dove di cascine ce ne sono in abbondanza, tutto parte dalle intuizioni del fondatore di una queste realtà, che si chiama Terre Davis (come la Coppa Davis!), oggi rappresentata dalle sorelle Garavelli. All'interno di Non Stop News, con Enrico Galletti, Massimo Lo Nigro e Giusi Legrenzi.
In this episode, Ken and Lisa of Watters Garden Center in Prescott discuss the best flowers for non-stop blooms. These flowers can bring some gorgeous blooms to the garden. With their bright colors and ability to attract pollinators like hummingbirds, these flowers are perfect. Learn about incredible plants like the Suncredible sunflower, So Cool Pale Blue salvia, foxglove, and more!Listen to Mountain Gardener on Cast11: https://cast11.com/mountain-gardener-with-ken-lain-gardening-podcast/Follow Cast11 on Facebook: https://Facebook.com/CAST11AZFollow Cast11 on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/cast11_podcast_network/
Le prime pagine dei principali quotidiani nazionali commentate in rassegna stampa da Davide Giacalone. Putin si nega a Kiev, Trump in Arabia, PNRR e Spread, la protesta degli attori. Il commento sugli Internazionali BNL di Roma con il nostro Massimo Caputi. #Ilpostinazienda. Oggi con Chimera Gold, azienda che produce accessori in metallo per la pelletteria e gioielli, richiesti dai brand di moda, italiani e internazionali. Con noi, la responsabile sviluppo e prodotto della Chimera Gold, Eleonora anselmi. Don Antonio Mazzi, fondatore della comunità Exodus, regala ogni giorno un pensiero, un suggerimento, una frase agli ascoltatori di RTL 102.5. Federico e Jacopo Rampini, insieme firmano il libro "Il gioco del potere" edito da Mondadori. Il diario del Giro d'Italia con i nostri inviati Paolo Pacchioni e Valentina Iannicelli. L'Eurovision Song Contest, commentato da Gabry Ponte. L'attualità, commentata dal direttore ADN Kronos, Davide Desario. All'interno di Non Stop News, con Enrico Galletti, Massimo Lo Nigro e Giusi Legrenzi.
Discover powerful psychological strategies that make women think about you constantly, even when you're not around. In this episode, you'll learn how to create genuine attraction that keeps you on her mind for days, weeks, or even months after you've met. If you're a man who wants to create a lasting impression with women, you'll learn how to leverage psychological principles, create emotional anchoring, and build a genuine connection that makes you unforgettable. Whether you're newly dating someone special or want to reignite passion in your relationship, these four proven techniques will transform how she thinks about you. Build a connection so compelling she can't help but wonder what you're doing when you're apart. Stop being forgettable and start being the man she can't stop thinking about - without manipulation or mind games. MANSCAPED: Get 15% OFF with code NAKED15 at https://www.manscaped.com/
Le prime pagine dei principali quotidiani nazionali commentate in rassegna stampa da Davide Giacalone. USA-Cina tagli ai dazi, Trump convoca Putin, il MES e il pressing su Giorgetti. Con la direttrice di Confidenze, Angelina Spinoni, abbiamo parlato di rapporti familiari, in particolare di sorelle. Il commento sugli Internazionali BNL di Roma con il nostro Massimo Caputi. Don Antonio Mazzi, fondatore della comunità Exodus, regala ogni giorno un pensiero, un suggerimento, una frase agli ascoltatori di RTL 102.5. L'attualità, commentata dal direttore del giornale Il Foglio, Claudio Cerasa. Il diario del Giro d'Italia con i nostri inviati Paolo Pacchioni e Valentina Iannicelli. Torna l'appuntamento: "Beppe Sala a tutto campo", la rubrica di RTL 102.5 per commentare i principali temi di attualità insieme al sindaco di Milano. In diretta con noi il sindaco di Milano Beppe Sala. All'interno di Non Stop News, con Enrico Galletti, Massimo Lo Nigro e Giusi Legrenzi.
Mit etwas Verspätung wurde nun auch der 2 TNA PPV des Jahres besprochen. Dida und Marcel sprechen über Rebellion. Viel Spaß! Der Catch-Club im Netz: https://linktr.ee/catchclub
In her second episode, Vanessa Magula talks about what it was like to join the Philip tour as a Hamilton superfan, including learning harmonies she didn't know existed and doing her best *not* to sing Burr's part in Non-Stop. But now she's in Hamilton and as a friend told Vanessa: time to dream a new dream. She booked her dream job, and now she's gotta figure out how to live it in a healthy and fulfilling way. From imposter syndrome, to having to learn the show, to giving herself grace, and the added stress of coming out of lockdown? Yeah, there was a lot to navigate. Vanessa's episodes are total lovefests, but that doesn't mean we can't pay tribute to the biggest hater of them all: Kendrick Lamar. And we do! Oh, and quick reminder that you can be a hater without being a bully. FYI. Mermaid (Brittany Campbell and Candace Quarrels have a band! Get into it!) Vanessa on Instagram /// Gillian's Website The Hamilcast on Twitter The Hamilcast on Instagram Join the Patreon Peeps
Rob Tognoni - Crossword Blues (Live)Little Milton - The Blues Is My CompanionBilly F Gibbons – Living it up down in Texas - Cruising With Billy F Gibbons - 2025 Creedence Clearwater Revival – Get down Woman - 1968Levi Parham & Them Tulsa Boys And Girls – Boxmeer Blues - It's All Good (2018)Albert King with Stevie Ray Vaughan - Call It Stormy MondPaul Rodgers – Nuddy Waters Blues - Muddy Water Blues – 1993Chris Cain - Trouble Makin' Woman – The Bluesbones - Voodoo Guitar – Lance Lopez - Lowdown Ways - Handmade music
Mon vieux boy Dearlola était de passage dans le nouveau studio pour jaser de grind incroyable sur Old School Runescape. Vous vous rappelez peut-être de lui : c'est le beatmaker de la chanson des 100k et mon pote qui était DJ dans la tournée des Petites Grenouilles en 2017. Membre en règle des Loups de Mer galement. Depuis 5 ans, il vit du streaming et de ses Infernos — il en a plus de 500 à son actif (iykyk).Lola a réalisé plusieurs subathons qui ont marqué le streaming au Québec à cause de leur très longue durée. Immense beatmaker qui a collaboré avec beaucoup d'artistes tels que Wasiu et Apashe.Il a récemment fait un gros burnout suite à une dose de stream massive. Ce burnout l'a poussé à enfin arrêter de consommer le pot, se reprendre en main et retrouver un mode de vie plus équilibré.Immense talk qui nous a fait du bien. On jase de XQC, du streaming en général, de santé mentale, de ses investissements immobiliers et de plusieurs autres sujets. Vous pouvez le suivre en direct sur Kick ici : https://kick.com/dearlola1
Che cosa è il biohacking? Il benessere in versione hi-tech che permette di riprogrammare il metabolismo e il nostro corpo. Se ne occupa la rivista Starbene nel numero in edicola. Ce ne parla la direttrice Francesca Pietra. Motomondiale, si corre oggi pomeriggio sul circuito di Le Mans, in Francia. In diretta l'inviato speciale di RTL 102.5, Max Biaggi. RTL 102.5 è la radio ufficiale degli Internazionali BNL d'Italia di tennis di Roma. Siamo presenti al Foro Italico con il nostro truck per farvi vivere tutte le emozioni del torneo dal cuore della manifestazione. Ieri l'esordio di Sinner dopo i tre mesi di stop. Massimo Caputi - Saluti iniziali Partiamo dal ritorno vincente di Jannik Sinner. L'atmosfera sul campo centrale era pazzesca. Non è stato impeccabile come al suo solito, ma l'importante era vincere. Come giudichi questa prima partita di Jannik? Grande vittoria anche per Jasmine Paolini, che si è presa con forza gli ottavi di finale. Può arrivare in finale l'azzurra? Oggi inizia il terzo turno maschile. In campo tanti big, ma soprattutto il nostro Lorenzo Musetti. Che giornata ci aspetta? Oggi il primo Regina Caeli di Papa Leone XIV. Che profilo possiamo tracciare di questo nuovo pontefice? Ne parliamo con Fabio Marchese Ragona, vaticanista Mediaset, coautore con Papa Francesco della sua prima autobiografia: Life. La mia storia nella storia (edito da HarperCollins). Parliamo anche di ciclismo! Seguiamo il Giro d'Italia n. 108, di cui anche quest'anno RTL 102.5 è radio partner. Lo seguirà per noi una grande squadra, tra cui anche il nostro Paolo Pacchioni! Commentiamo i fatti di attualità con il direttore de La Verità, Maurizio Belpietro.
Flavium - Double TroubleLonnie Mack - StopLonnie Brooks - Mr. SomebodyBig Twist and The Mellow Fellows - I Brought The Blues On My SelfBig Ed Sullivan - Even MoneyMark Kerr - Wishin WellSmokin Joe Kubek - Runnin BlindWilly Deville - Trouble in Mind
Paul Heymon got that Bron Breaker, Taz, Perry Saturn tan. Joe Hendry doesn't have friends. Josh Alexander asks, "why TNA don't love me Uncle Phil?" Alberto Del Rio is back in WWE, Benjamin Shelton is not having any of Hogan's nonsense. Naito has left NJPW. The best dice shooters in pro wrestling. All this and more on the newest episode of Powerbomb Jutsu You can watch this episode too: youtube.com/@PowerbombJutsu Twitter & IG: @PowerbombJutsu [Play/Download]
Le prime pagine dei principali quotidiani nazionali commentate in rassegna stampa da Davide Giacalone. Le parole del nuovo Papa, abrogare l'abuso d'ufficio, Bill Gates attacca Musk. L'elezione del nuovo Papa. Il commento di Marco Girardo, direttore di Avvenire. Con l'elezione del nuovo Pontefice. Quali sono i fatti del mondo che dovranno essere una priorità per lui? Il commento di Roberto Arditti, direttore editoriale di Formiche.net. Don Antonio Mazzi, fondatore della comunità Exodus, regala ogni giorno un pensiero, un suggerimento, una frase agli ascoltatori di RTL 102.5. L'elezione del nuovo Papa. Con noi il vaticanista Stefano Maria Paci. Don Antonio Mazzi, fondatore della comunità Exodus, regala ogni giorno un pensiero, un suggerimento, una frase agli ascoltatori di RTL 102.5. Riflettori sul Giro D'Italia. RTL 102.5 sarà al seguito della Carovana del Giro d'Italia e seguirà giornalisticamente la manifestazione, ma non solo. Si parte oggi da Tirana, ma ci racconta tutto il nostro inviato, Paolo Pacchioni. RTL 102.5 è la radio ufficiale degli Internazionali BNL d'Italia di tennis di Roma. Ospitiamo Diego Nepi Molineris, amministratore delegato di Sport e Salute. All'interno di Non Stop News, con Barbara Sala, Luigi Santarelli e Massimo Lo Nigro.
===本集節目由生鮮時書贊助播出=== 這集我們再次邀請到跑步教練徐國峰(居然三刷了!)。他最近正在籌備線上課程《跑力提升:科學化跑步訓練》,適合初學者到中階跑者,從初學者怎樣才算是「輕鬆跑」?怎麼練間歇、亞索 800、節奏跑、LSD?學習科學化的觀念以及實作方式,而且還有國峰教練示範影片和「跟練」指導配音,你可以戴上耳機,從熱身開始,在你的跑步課表中加入力量、技術與收操環節,一步一步學習。 國峰老師將課程分成四大主軸:心志、體能、力量、技術,以科學化原則,在量化、個人化、週期化,這三個面向提供跑者符合自身能力與需求的訓練方式。這次和國峰教練以往的著作和課程不同,線上平台團隊針對初學者以及進階跑者的需求,改善了以前教學的盲點,讓各種程度的跑者都能從中學到系統性的知識。 — 徐國峰教練《跑力提升:科學化跑步訓練》線上課 體能 x 力量 x 技術 x 心志,全面提升! 理論結合實戰,用一套完整的系統學習跑步 購課連結:https://go.newsveg.tw/7hvvj6
It's the 250th episode of The Pulp Writer Show! To celebrate this occasion, this episode takes a look at the expectations people have of a full-time writer's life and contrasts them with the reality. This coupon code will get you 50% off the audiobook of Dragonskull: Talons of the Sorcerer, Book #6 in the Dragonskull series (as excellently narrated by Brad Wills), at my Payhip store: TALONS50 The coupon code is valid through May 27, 2025. So if you need a new audiobook for spring, we've got you covered! TRANSCRIPT 00:00:00 Introduction and Writing Updates Hello, everyone. Welcome to Episode 250 of The Pulp Writer Show. My name is Jonathan Moeller. Today is May 2, 2025, and today we're looking at what it is really like to be a full-time writer. This is also the 250th episode of the podcast, so thank you all for listening to the podcast over these last six years. Before I started recording, I totaled up the total length of previous podcast episodes and came to about 78 hours, give or take. That's like three days of continuous talking, which sounds less impressive when you realize it was recorded over the last six years. Thank you all for listening and here's hoping you can stick around with the next 250 episodes. Before we get to our main topic, which is the expectations versus reality of being a full-time writer, we are going to do Coupon of the Week, a progress update my current writing projects, and then Question of the Week. So let's kick off with Coupon of the Week. This week's coupon code will get you 50% off the audiobook of Dragonskull: Talons of the Sorcerer, Book Six in the Dragonskull series (as excellently narrated by Brad Wills) at my Payhip store. That code is TALONS50. As always, you can get that coupon code and the links to my Payhip store in the show notes. This coupon code is valid through May 27th, 2025. So if you need a new audiobook for spring, we have got you covered. Now an update on my current writing projects. I am 60,000 words into Ghost in the Corruption, which puts me on chapter 13 of 21, so I'm about two thirds of the way through. I think the rough draft will be between 90-100,000 words long, so hopefully I can have that out before the end of May, if all goes well. I also just finished Chapter One of Shield of Power, which will be the final book of the Shield War series and that'll be my main project once Ghost in the Corruption is finished. I'm also 87,000 words into Stealth and Spells Online: The Final Quest, and that will be my main project once Shield of Power comes out. I expect Final Quest should come out pretty soon after Shield of Power just because I've been chipping away at it for so long and I'm getting close to the end. In audiobook news, recording is almost done for Ghost in the Assembly and that'll be narrated by Hollis McCarthy. Recording is totally done for Shield of Deception (as narrated by Brad Wills) and that is working its way through processing at the various audiobook platforms, so hopefully we'll not be too much longer before we can get that to you. 00:02:26 Question of the Week So that is where I'm at with my current writing projects. And now let's move on to Question of the Week. Question of the Week is intended to inspire enjoyable discussions of interesting topics. This week's question, what is your favorite Jonathan Moeller book? The reason for this question is that this is the 250th podcast episode, so it seems like a good topic for that particular milestone. And as you might expect, we had an array of different opinions. Joachim says: You are kidding us! By the end of the week? How long did you think about your own answer? Let me mirror you: for my own answer, the question is a bit difficult because I spent money on all your books, which meant I thought all of them a good buy. So let me split my answer into male and female protagonists. The best female book was Ghost Exile: Omnibus One because it prompted me to continue with Ghost Exile and fill in the Ghost series later. The Ghosts Omnibus One and Ghost Exile: Omnibus One were my first two books from you. The best male book was the one with Jack March where Thunderbolt said, “males are ogling breasts which never existed”, especially as such AI generated videos are now all over the place on YouTube. I have to admit that I first came up with the character of Thunderbolt back in early 2021 when I was working on Silent Order: Rust Hand (that was before the AI boom really took off), so she turned out to be a very prescient character for the AI era in a number of ways. Joe B. says: That is a tough question as there are many contenders. I'm going to go with one that is a little different, Sevenfold Sword Online: Creation, but now known as Stealth and Spells Online: Creation. Justin says: I nominate Soul of Swords, an excellent end to an excellent series. Perry says: There can only be one! Demonsouled. Paul says: For me, I think my favorite female protagonist book is Cloak Games: Truth Chain. Such a dramatic change to Nadia, sets up the series in her struggles with self and enemies so well. Brad Wills (who as you know narrated the Frostborn, Dragonskull, Malison, and Shield War series for me) says: Does a three book arc count? Excalibur, The Dragon Knight, and The Shadow Prison made for a fantastic lead-up and finale of the Frostborn series. Hollis McCarthy (who as you know, narrated the Ghosts and Cloak Mage audiobooks) says: Ghost in the Storm, when Caina and Kylon meet in the Battle for Marsis. Nonstop action, incredible chase scenes, and a great intro to their combative relationship. Fred says: It's hard for me to say which book is my favorite. All your book series were all great. Juana says: Frostborn: Excalibur with Ridmark. I happen to love stories about Excalibur, odd but true. Caina in Cloak and Ghost: Rebel Cell because Caina and Nadia are an incendiary team. So there! Randy says: Frostborn: The Dragon Knight. This whole series is great, but that is one of the high points. Dennis says: I couldn't name my favorite as I enjoy everything you write. I probably enjoyed the Frostborn series best at the time, but having bought and read every one of your books it's now impossible. Kevin says: There's no way on earth that I could put one book above another, so I would've to take the coward's way out and say Frostborn: The Gray Knight simply because it has a book that drew me to the worlds of Jonathan Moeller back in the spring of 2017, since which time I have bought 117 of his books, including a few omnibus editions, so a few more actual books, I suppose. I avidly read them all as they're published these days, except the Silent Order series (just doesn't grab me and pull me in like the others). Jesse says: Cloak Games: Sky Hammer. Damaged Nadia at her best, epic action the whole way. And yeah, the chapter The Last Death of Nadia Moran was viscerally cinematic and probably the biggest emotional payoff you've written in my opinion, tied her entire journey together. In my head, I cast Castle-era Stana Katic as Nadia, and it worked better than I expected it might. Morgan says: I can't narrow it down to just one. So top three in no particular order, Sevenfold Swords: Swordbearer, Dragontiarna: Gates, and Stealth and Spells Online: Leveling. That being said, I think Niara might be my favorite character of all your books I have read. Jonathan T says: I too am torn though only between two books, Frostborn: The Eightfold Knife and Frostborn: The Shadow Prison. [Side note/addition from The Transcriptionist: My vote is for Half-Elven Thief!] So thank you everyone for the kind words about all those books. For my own answer, the question is a bit difficult because I've written them all, which meant I thought all of them were good idea at the time. I suppose the glib answer would be the one that made me the most money, which was Frostborn: The Iron Tower, but it really depends on the category, like my favorite heist book, my favorite mystery book, my favorite dungeon crawl, my favorite first in series. So I think I'll go for the most basic level of categorization and split it up by male and female protagonists. My favorite book of mine with a female protagonist would probably be Cloak Games: Rebel Fist, since it's such a turning point for Nadia and starts the trajectory of the rest of her character arc. It's the first time she really has to save the day instead of just trying to save herself and shows that her brother Russell can also handle himself, which as you know, comes up again later. My favorite book of mine with a male protagonist would probably be Dragontiarna: Defenders, since it has the Battle of Shadow Crown Hill, which was one of my favorite sequences to write. Four different characters have plans and they all crash into each other at the same time, which was a lot of fun to write and set up, which was a real highlight for me in 2020 because as we all know, 2020 was a fun year. 00:07:35 Main Topic of the Week: Writing Full Time: Expectations Versus Reality So that is it for Question of the Week. Now let's move on to our main topic this week, writing full-time: expectations versus reality (admittedly from the perspective of a self-published author). If you spent any time around the writing community on the Internet at all, you know that many people dream of becoming a full-time writer, and sometimes people think that the only way to be successful as a writer is to write full-time. There are many expectations that people have about what it means to be a full-time writer. Now that I've been a full-time indie writer for nearly nine years at this point, I can provide some lived perspective. In this episode, I will talk about five of those expectations that people have about full-time writing and the way those expectations might be skewed. So before we get to those, I should mention how I actually became a full-time writer. In 2016 (which seems like a really long time ago now), the Frostborn series was doing really well, and at the time I was also working full time and I realized that summer I was going to have to move for family reasons. I wasn't very enthusiastic about the idea of moving at first, but I decided to embrace the idea and try to make the best of it. This would involve moving a considerable distance to a different state and all the different problems that entails. So I thought about it and I thought I could look for a new job, but any job I would be qualified for in the area I was moving to would make less money than I was actually making from writing part-time. So I thought, why not try and make a go of full-time writing and see what happens? Since that was nine years ago, I think I can safely say it's worked out pretty well. And I will say that it's been a pretty good experience and I am very fortunate and very grateful and very blessed to have been able to do this because not everyone has the opportunity to pursue a full-time creative job like I have been able to for these last nine years. That said, while it has been pretty great, it comes with a lot of flexibility and I've gotten to write a lot of great books that many people have enjoyed, it's not always all wine and roses, so to speak, which is part of the reason why I wanted to do this episode to let people more in what the reality of being a full-time writer for this long has been like. So with that introduction out of the way, let's move on to our five expectations versus reality. Expectation #1: Full-time authors make a lot of money. The reality is that even full-time authors generally don't make that much money. A survey from The Author's Guild showed that the median amount that full-time authors make was just about $20,000, though full-time romance writers had a higher median income of about $37,000. Remember that this amount is before any health insurance costs, benefits, retirement contributions, and of course taxes that a traditional job might be able to provide or help with. In the United States, buying even fairly basic health insurance can easily be a thousand dollars per month for a family, and that doesn't include any costs related to deductibles, prescriptions, or additional dental or vision insurance. Authors are either on their own for healthcare in the US or have to rely on a spouse or partner's healthcare coverage. In other words, you either have to pony up a lot of money to buy your own health insurance or you have to rely on your spouse or partner's healthcare coverage. And at least in the US, taxes are also much higher on the self-employed. Uncle Sam really does not like the self-employed. If you are self-employed, it is in your best interest to essentially form a small corporation and work for yourself (though for details on how to do that, you should consult with an accountant licensed to practice in your region). Now all these costs can add up pretty quickly, and they make the amount of money that you'll earn from writing much less than you think based on raw earnings before taxes and all the other expenses we were talking about. You also have business expenses like cover design, site hosting, editors, narrators, advertising, et cetera, that take even more pieces out of those earnings. You can duck some of those, but not all of them. So it boils down to that you have to make a significant amount of money as an author to make an actual living after taxes, healthcare costs, and business expenses are taken out of your earnings, which is one of the reasons that writing part-time as you have a full-time job is not the worst idea in the world and can in fact be a very good idea. Expectation #2: My next book will make as much or more than the last one did. The reality is that your next book or series might not make you as much money as the previous ones did. In fact, you can reliably predict that most book series will have a certain amount of reader drop off as a series goes on, which is why these days I tend to want to keep my series under nine to ten books or so. Budgeting based on your current income levels is not wise, especially with the current economic climate (which for a variety of reasons is very unpredictable) and with increased competition in the ebook market. Most authors have a peak at some point in their career. For example, Stephen King is still obviously making a great living as a writer putting out new books, but his new books don't sell nearly as well as the ones he put out in the ‘80s. J.K. Rowling's novels for adults (she writes as Robert Galbraith the Cormoran Strike series) don't sell anywhere near the number of copies as her Harry Potter series did at its peak. For myself, my peak years in terms of writing income were 2016 and 2017, and I've never quite been able to recapture that level. In fact, in 2024, I only did about two thirds of what I did in 2017 (my peak year), which can be a little nerve wracking as you watch those numbers move up and down. That is why it is important for a writer (like many other creatives like actors) to anticipate that they might only have a limited window of peak success and to save aggressively rather than living large on the amount you're earning in that peak era. And I am pleased to report that I was fortunate enough and sensible enough to do that, so that even if my income has varied from year to year (2017 onward), it hasn't been a crippling loss and I haven't been out in the street or lost the house or anything like that. Expectation #3: You will be happier if you write full-time. The reality is that is not true for everyone. Some people actually do better creatively and emotionally with the time restrictions placed on them by having a full-time job. Many famous writers, including Trollope and Kafka, kept their full-time jobs. Even Tolkien was never a full-time writer. He was a professor of philology until he retired. That was interesting to me because personally, I haven't had much in terms of emotional trouble being a full-time writer. I've always kind of had the ability to hyperfocus on a task, and I've been doing that for almost nine years now, and it's worked out well for me. I've since realized that is not true for many people. One of the things that demonstrated it to me, believe it or not, was insurance actuarial tables. One thing that I tried to do after I became a full-time writer was try and get disability insurance in case I had an accident or severe illness and could not write anymore. I learned that it's extremely difficult for full-time writers to get disability insurance due to their high rates of substance abuse and mental illness. I was astonished by this because I've never had problems with substance abuse or mental illness myself, but given the number of writers and other creatives I've known who have had those issues, perhaps that's not that surprising, but I was still baffled to learn that. For example, in my area there are a number of tree management companies (because it's a heavily wooded area) and it's a lot easier for an arborist who works with a chainsaw all day to get disability insurance than it is for a writer, which is somewhat crazy to think about because as a writer, I'm mostly sitting in a chair all day pressing buttons on a keyboard while an arborist is climbing a tree or in a crane with a chainsaw, which is a much more physically dangerous thing. But because of the rates of substance abuse and mental illness among full-time writers, apparently it is very difficult for full-time writers to get disability insurance. Some people struggle with the lack of structure and outward accountability that comes from being a full-time writer and find that actually decreases their productivity and leads them to fall into substance abuse or sink deeper into mental health problems. Very few people have the self-discipline and mental resilience required to be a full-time writer for years on end. And that's not me tooting my own horn so to speak, but apparently it is just the facts. Some writers even go back to full-time work just because they find it less stressful or better for their wellbeing. So I think this is an excellent example of having to know yourself and know what is best for you. For example, if you're a very extroverted person who enjoys talking to people at the office, becoming a full-time writer where you spend most of your time by yourself typing might not be the best for your long-term mental and physical health. Expectation #4: Writing full-time will make me more productive. The reality is having more time does not necessarily mean that you'll be more productive. Writers are notorious for falling prey to time wasters, such as social media scrolling, research spirals, and writing adjacent activities (of which there is a whole series about on this podcast already). It does take a lot of a self-discipline, focus, and determination to be a full-time writer. If you are a full-time writer, especially a full-time indie writer, you also have to balance writing time with various administrative tasks, marketing and ads, social media, fan correspondence, and the various tasks involved in the self-publishing process. Writing is not the only thing that writers actually do, and the other tasks often make finding time for writing more difficult than you might expect. Even traditionally published writers still have to carve out time for administrative work and assisting with marketing and social media work. As your writing career scales up, so does the behind the scenes workload. This is true in my case. Up until 2023, I basically did everything myself, but I did have COVID pretty badly for a while in 2023 and it just knocked out my energy for a while and I realized that I can't keep trying to do everything by myself. I basically had a choice, either cut some tasks or get some help. So I have some people now, some contractors who help me with things like listening to audiobook proofs (I used to do that all myself), doing the podcast transcript, and Excel record keeping (which I used to do myself). While that is an expense, I don't regret it because it really has taken a lot off my plate and freed up more time for writing, which of course is the entire point. Expectation #5: I admit this one made me laugh. I will have more free time as a full-time writer. I can attest firsthand that that is not true. What you have as a full-time writer is flexibility. The reality is, although there is flexibility on the job, the hours can be more than for a full-time job. There's a joke that full-time writers can work any 12 hours they want every day. Most indie authors are putting out far more than one book a year in order to make a full-time income, and that requires a fairly demanding pace that most people don't have the self-discipline to maintain as a lifestyle for years and years on end. The majority of full-time writers right now are either romance or erotica writers who are putting out at least a book a month, sometimes even more. As I mentioned in an earlier point in the show, the administrative task can take far more time than most people would imagine. They could, depending on the circumstances, be easily 40 hours a week on their own before you have time to do a single word of writing on the page. I found you really have to guard your writing time well and find ways to keep administrative tasks, distractions, and necessary tasks such as home maintenance or childcare separate from writing. Anyone who has ever worked from home is familiar with how difficult that can be because home comes with a wide set of distractions. Granted, that's often fewer distractions than the office, but home can have its own set of distractions. I've mentioned before that you need a bit of tunnel vision to produce the quantity of writing I do month after month. I do keep to a pretty rigid schedule. I have daily word count goals I always try to meet and I use the Pomodoro Method to make sure that I'm prioritizing my writing time. If you are self-employed and working for yourself, that means there are no allocated vacation or sick days and no paid sick leave in the writing world. Taking a couple of weeks off usually means anticipating a loss in income, such as a month without a book being released. Sometimes, especially in the case of illness, family emergencies, and so forth, that just can't be helped. However, the long vacations people imagine writers being able to take mean either a loss of income or a couple of weeks beforehand of working extra hours to make up for it. For example, Brandon Sanderson, who is probably the most famous fantasy author right now, still works and writes on his vacations and does extra work before leaving for a vacation (such as pre-recording videos). So as you can see, most of the expectations people have about what it's like to write full-time come from the hope that it will change their productivity or make it easier to write. In reality, if you manage your time well, you can often meet all your writing goals even while working another full-time job. Some people are even more productive under the time pressure of only having an hour or so available to write each day. You don't have to wait until you are a full-time writer for your writing career to start. I wrote for decades and published for years before I was a full-time writer. Frankly, the idea that you need to be a full-time writer in order to be taken seriously or make money exists only in your own mind. Whether you are a full-time writer or not, what matters is having the discipline to shut out distractions and write with absolute consistency regardless of the circumstances. Even writing 250 to 300 words every single day can add up very quickly, even if you don't do it in 15 minute bursts like Anthony Trollope did. Finally, I suppose this makes it sound like I'm painting a very bleak picture here, but I'm not. As I said before, I'm very fortunate to be able to do what I do, and I'm very grateful to all my readers that I'm able to write full-time and even hire on contractors for narration and behind the scenes work. I appreciate and am very grateful to all the readers who have supported me by continuing to buy my work and access it through subscription services like Kindle Unlimited or Kobo Plus or library options like Libby and Hoopla. So that is it for this week. I hope it provided some insight into what it's like to be a full-time writer. Thanks for listening to The Pulp Writer Show and all 250 episodes. I hope you found the show and all 250 episodes useful. A reminder that you can listen to all the back episodes on https://thepulpwritershow.com. If you enjoyed the podcast, please leave your review on your podcasting platform of choice. Stay safe and stay healthy and see you all next week.
Nonstop flight vibes! Fishing vibes! Food vibes! Rebecca vibes! Adam vibes! Felicia vibes!
Connor Selby – SomeoneEmanuel Casablanca - Low Down Dirty ShameAnthony Gomes - True ThatRobin Trower - One Go RoundLarry McCray - Bye Bye BluesAfton Wolfe - Last King Of The BluesSteve Marriner - I Can't DanceMitch Laddie - 50 Shades Of BlueWellbad – MurderersJacob Friant - Little WingAlly Venable - Money & PowerMojo Buford – Deep sea diver - Champagne & Reefer – 1999Popa Chubby and Friends – I am going down - I Love Freddie King – 2025
Charlie Musselwhite – Stormwarning - Look Out Highway - 2025 Sean Chambers – Louisianan blues -Live from Daryls House - 2025 Brandon Santini – bay's got soul - Which Way do We Go – 2025Hughes Taylor – Midnight Angel - Roasted – 2025Mondo Cortez and The Chicago Blues Angels – Buddy Hug - Call on me – 2025Samantha Fish – Sweet southern sounds - Paper Doll (2025) Joanna Knitter Blues & Folk Connection – Blue Devils - Distant Blues - 2025 Lightnin' G-Bird – I was fool about you - I Was Fool About You - 2025 Dov Hammer – The same thing - Exile - The Chicago Blues Sessions - 2025 Aki Kumar – Tis what it is - God Bless The USA - 2025
brasileiro grooves from banda black rio caboclo folk from renata rosa a sexy new uk release from j caeser 70s czech jazz fusion from the jan hammer group polite 80s rap from whodini unreal brass harmonies from kokoroko super chill bossa from chet baker a HUGE thai banger มันแปลกดีนะ from Ter Rewat and that's just the first half hour there's a lovely disco section, some downtempo ambience, a ravey section and then the last 20 mins is any other business PEACE ✊
Moose and Matt Cardona didn't try to catch Leon Slater, TLC should have been on Wrestlemania's card, The Bird Lady is speaking, Trick Williams in TNA, MJF doesn't have the complexion for the progression of Hurt Syndicate, pale people hate MVP. St Jude's is emotionally blackmailing you. All this and more on the next episode of Powerbomb Jutsu You can watch this episode too: youtube.com/@PowerbombJutsu Twitter & IG: @PowerbombJutsu [Play/Download]
**Top Soca Hits 2025 Mix – Non-Stop Bangers** drops the **30 biggest tracks blazing Trinidad Carnival 2025 and Caribbean fetes worldwide.** Mixed live by **DJ Simple Simon**, it's 60 minutes of seamless power & groovy soca—perfect for workouts, parties, road trips, or anytime you need pure Carnival energy.
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Angela and I dive into the adrenaline-pumping world of Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol! Join us as talk about the jaw-dropping stunts, iconic Burj Khalifa scene, and why this mission is non-stop fun!
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Two local paddlers, living in County Clare, have achieved an extraordinary feat on the international stage. Paul Austin, from O'Briensbridge, and Killaloe man Barry Walsh, representing Shannon Paddlers Kayaking Club, successfully completed the Devizes to Westminster International Canoe Race over the Easter weekend. The 125-mile endurance race is widely regarded as the toughest non-stop kayak/canoe event in the world. To discuss this further, Alan Morrissey was joined by Barry Walsh, from Killaloe and Paul Austin, from O'Briensbridge, who completed the world's longest non-stop canoe race. Photo(C): Clare FM
Omar & The Howlers - Angel BluesDave Hole - North West BluesLonnie Brooks - Cold Lonely NightsJohnny Winter, Muddy Waters, James Cotton & Pinetop Perki – Deep down in Florida John Lord & The Hoochie Coochie Man - Blues With A FeelinHarrison Kennedy - It's HardL.V. Banks - I Llove My GuitarGregor Hilden & Matt Walsh - Poor Boy Blues Henrik Freischlader Band - When I First Saw YouVivian Vance Kelly - Down Home Blues (unplugged)
Carolyn Wonderland – Blues for Gene -Truth Is - 2025James Harman – Double Hogback crowler - The Bluesmoose Session – 2018Beaux Gris Gris & The Apocalypse – Fistful of Dirt - Live In The United Kingdom 2023 – 2023Kai Strauss – Slow Roasted - Wailin' in Vienna (a retro blues album) – 2024The Hoochies – Let's get High - live moulin blues – 2019Steven Troch band – God Pull the Strings - The Dawning - 2025Commoners, The – Devil teasin me - Live in the UK - 2025The Too Bad Jims -Out on the road - Over The Hill A Tribute To RL Burnside - 2025Micke Bjorklof & Blue Strip – Running shoes - Outtakes - 2025
1. PAWSA & Malachiii - BANG BANG (Extended Mix) 2. PAWSA - Too good to be careless (Extended Mix) 3. Jocelyn Brown, Luke Alessi, Chloé Caillet - The One (Extended Mix) 4. David Guetta & Sia - Beautiful People (D.O.D Extended Remix) 5. John Summit ft Inez - Light Years (Extended) 6. DJ S.K.T - Deeper (Extended Mix) 7. Black Box - Ride On Time (Tommy Mc Extended Remix) 8. Felguk - Show Me Love (Extended Mix) 9. James Hype - Don't Wake Me Up (OBW4N Extended Remix) 10. The Temper Trap - Sweet Disposition (ARTBAT Extended Remix) 11. Rufus Du Sol - In The Moment (Ylai Extended Remix) 12. Dom Dolla, Daya - Dreamin (OBW4N Extended Remix) 13. R3WIRE - Stand and Deliver (Extended Mix) 14. Volac - Enemies (Original Mix) 15. Deeper Purpose, Dansyn & MERYLL - What The Fuzz (Extended Mix) 16. Monotown - Push That Pedal (Extended Mix) 17. Chris Lake & Amber Mark - In My Head (Extended Mix) 18. Prospa - Don't Stop (Extended Mix) 19. FISHER (OZ) - Stay (Extended Mix)
Wrestlemania has come and gone, leaving us underwhelemed. Jey Uso is The Tribal Chief now, John Cena has 27 dates left. Randy Orton believes in Joe Hendry. WWE buying AAA brings a lot of problems. There was no good press for WWE during Wrestlemania weekend but Trump probably loves it. A whole bunch of other good stuff happened. Sabu has retired, Chris Bey has returned to TNA, Negative 1 has made his debut, ASÉ is still dope, the brunch was big and gay. All this and more on the next episode of Powerbomb Jutsu. You can watch this episode too: youtube.com/@PowerbombJutsu Twitter & IG: @PowerbombJutsu [Play/Download]
On the single biggest release week of the year we head down to Ghost kicking off the Skeletour here in the UK, Charli XCX officially declares it a Turnstile Summer, the original Alice Cooper band reunites after 52 years, and there's important updates about last week's Weezer movie announcement.Releases:Superheaven - SuperheavenMelvins - ThunderballLik - NecroAncient Death - Ego DissolutionTribunal - In Penitence and RuinHeaven's Gate - Tales from a Blistering ParadiseZeicrydeus - La Grande HeresieUngraven - Hollows Made Homes In Their Sunken CheeksXweaponX - Weapon X Demo 2Employed to Serve - Fallen StarInhuman Nature - Greater Than DeathGhost - SkeletáMachine Head - UnatonedLandmvrks - The Darkest Place I've Ever BeenCaliban - Back From HellWednesday 13 - Mid Death CrisisH.E.A.T. - Welcome to the FutureHeart Attack Man - Joyride the Pale HorseEluveitie - AnvPagan Altar - Never Quite DeadConan - Violence DimensionSumac / Moor Mother - The FilmBRUIT < - The Age of EphemeralityCancer - Inverted WorldCaustic Wound - Grinding Mechanism of TormentKardashev - AluneaPhantom - Tyrants of WrathVenator - PsychodromeHyena - About Rock and RollBig Boy - Love SongsProfanatica - Wreathed In Dead AngelsDavid Eugene Edwards & Al Cisneros - Pillar of Fire/CapernaumCirith Ungol - Live at the Roxy
UNC Asheville head basketball coach, Mike Morrell, shares insights on the Bulldogs full-court pressure defense, including details for pressing, trapping, and ball screen coverages.More from Coach Morrell:Relentless Full-Court & Half-Court Pressure DefenseThis episode is sponsored by the Dr. Dish Basketball Shooting Machine. Mention "Quick Timeout" and receive $300 off on the Dr. Dish Rebel, All-Star, and CT models.
Vance Kelly - Foot Loose And Fancy FreeMike Morgan & The Crawl - Five Thousand Miles From HomeJoe Hughes - How Blue Can You GetJohnnie Johnson - The Blues Don't KnockMagic Slim & The Teardrops - Blues With A FellingJohn Primer - Sad, Sad DayMike Bloomfield - Your FriendsJulian Sas - Is This What They Call The Blues
Listen to Cris and Charley's 5 Takeaways from Freelance's NonStop Momentum - Race for the next Red Star Medallion - Eye Candy Elliot makes things interesting??? - Give Sabin What He Wants! - Blair Onyx Gets Creepier - New Freelance World Champion
The Butler Twins - Inner City BluesAndre De Luca – Comeback Baby - Live and Studio Session – 2025Koko Taylor – I cried like a baby - Volume 1-2-3-4 (1986) (Arcade)Today's Blues - Volume 1 (1986)Today's Blues - Son Seals - I Can Count On My BluesJohn Watkins - Chainted To Your LoveFlavium - Double TroubleZakiya Hooker – in the mood - Bluesman's Journey - 2023 Blue Monday – True Lies - live at Bluesmoose radio - 1 apr 2009
Wrestlemania is in the air. A special time of year where we talk about all the other shows going on this weekend. TNA's Unbreakable, Joey Janella's Spring Break, Josh Barnet's Bloodsport. MJF really thinks he's with the crew. Tony Khan didn't get Josh Alexander any new gear. NJPW is losing everyone. Wrestlemania 41 is going to happen too. All this and more on the next episode of Powerbomb Jutsu.You can watch this episode too: youtube.com/@PowerbombJutsu Twitter & IG: @PowerbombJutsu [Play/Download]
Aujourd'hui, Barbara Lefebvre, Bruno Poncet et Emmanuel de Villiers débattent de l'actualité autour d'Alain Marschall et Olivier Truchot.
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In this episode, we're diving into Chapter 8 of Make Change That Last, by Dr. Rangan Chatterjee "How are you?"When was the last time someone asked you that?And when was the last time you answered:"Oh, I've just been so busy."or"Nonstop, man. Just grinding, trying to get everything done."Sound familiar?We live in a world where busyness is the default.We're taught that if we're not constantly working, rushing, producing… we're somehow falling behind.But let me challenge you on this:
Inspired by Cory Booker, we are yapping NONSTOP about the delulu dumbasses on these tv shows but unlike Cory Booker...still we sit.