POPULARITY
EPISODE 74 - “SWEETHEARTS FROM THE GOLDEN AGE OF HOLLYWOOD" 2/10/2025 As Cupid sharpens his arrows, and the candy and greeting card companies prepare to make bank, we celebrate Valentine's Day. In this episode, we take a loving look at some of Hollywood's most enduring real-life love stories. From JOEL McCREA and FRANCES DEE to JEAN HARLOW and WILLIAM POWELL, join us as we discuss their lives, films, and, most importantly, their beautiful love stories. SHOW NOTES: Sources: Ladies of the Westerns (2015) by Michael C. Fitzgerald and Boyd Magers; Joel McCrea: Ride The High Country (1992), by Tony Thomas: “William Powell: Hollywood Star, Detective Film Icon," Jan. 27, 2025, Britannica,com; Letters From Hollywood: Jean Harlow , January 21, 2023 by David Stenn, TCM.com; The Love Story of Jean Harlow and William Power: Hollywood's Iconic Couple, Documentary (2023), Youtube.com; “McIntire and Nolan: A Romance Wright In Radio,” June 27, 2022, Travelanche; “12 Times Real Life Couple John McIntire and Jeanette Nolan Played a Couple Onscreen,” July 18, 2022, MeTV.com; “It Took Three Separate Actors To Bring Psycho's Norma Bates to Life,” November 30, 2022, www.slashfilm.com; “John McIntire and Jeanette Nolan Mix Business With Pleasure,” 2022, by J. Johnson, www.vocal.media/geeks; “John McIntire & Jeanette Nolan: Life Together,” by Jerry Skinner, YouTube.com; “Mary Pickford,” April 5, 2005, American Experience, PBS; “Douglas Fairbanks,” American Experience, PBS; Life and Times of Mary Pickford, Documentary (1998), Youtube.com; Harlow: The Blonde Bombshell, Documentary (1993), directed by Tom McQuade; “William Powell,” The State Historical Society of Missouri, www.missouriencyclopedia.com; Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (Oscars.org): Mary Pickford; “William Powell, Film Star, Dies at 91,”March 6, 1984, by Peter B. Flint, New York Times; “Jeanette Nolan, Spouse Rough it in Montana Wilderness Home,” March 24, 1974, The Indianapolis Star; TCM.com; MaryPickford.org; McCreaRanchFoundation.org; IMDBPro.com; IBDB.com; Wikipedia.com; AcademyMuseum.com Movies Mentioned: JOEL MCCREA & FRANCES DEE: The Jazz Age (1929); The Silver Horde (1930); Playboy of Paris (1930); King of the Jungle (1930); An American Tragedy (1931); Caught (1931); Born to Love (1931); Bird of Paradise (1932); The Silver Cord (1933); One Man's Journey (1933); Little Women (1933); Finishing School (1934); Of Human Bondage (1934); Gambling Lady (1934); Becky Sharp (1935); Barbary Coast (1935); These Three (1936); Come and Get It (1936); The Gay Deception (1936); Wells Fargo (1937); Dead End (1937); If I Were King (1938); Union Station (1939); Foreign Correspondent (1940); I Walked With A Zombie (1943); Four Faces West (1948); Ride The High Country (1962); JEAN HARLOW & WILLIAM POWELL: Man of the World (1931); Ladies Man (1931); Hell's Angels (1930); Reckless (1935); Libeled Lady (1936); After The Thin Man (1936); Saratoga (1937); My Man Godfrey (1936); JOHN McINTIRE & JEANETTE NOLAN: The Ramparts We Watch (1940); Northside 777 (1948); MacBeth (1948); Words and Music (1948); River Lady (1948); Command Decision (1948); Top of The Morning (1949); No Sad Song For Me (1950); The Asphalt Jungle (1950); Winchester '73 (1950); The Secret of Convict Lake (1951); The Happy Time (1952); The Big Heat (1953); Westward The Women (1951); Apache (1954); The Far County (1954); Flaming Star (1960); Summer and Smoke (1961); The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (1962); Rooster Cogburn (1975); The Rescuers (1978); True Confessions (1981); Cloak and Dagger (1984); Turner and Hooch (1989); The Horse Whisperer (1998); MARY PICKFORD & DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS: *** Please email us for list of Pickford & Fairbanks movies*** --------------------------------- http://www.airwavemedia.com Please contact sales@advertisecast.com if you would like to advertise on our podcast. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Financial Freedom for Physicians with Dr. Christopher H. Loo, MD-PhD
What if your greatest failures became the foundation for your biggest successes? In this episode, John Graham, founder of the Good Samaritan Home, award-winning author, and relentless advocate for second chances, shares his transformative story. From overcoming homelessness to creating a nonprofit serving formerly incarcerated individuals, John opens up about resilience, reinvention, and the power of empathy. Discover how storytelling can inspire social change, why life is written in pencil, and actionable advice for starting over after a setback. To check out "Of Human Bondage" visit (affiliate): https://amzn.to/3AYUklx To check out the YouTube (video podcast), visit: https://www.youtube.com/@drchrisloomdphd/streams Disclaimer: Not advice. Educational purposes only. Not an endorsement for or against. Results not vetted. Views of the guests do not represent those of the host or show. Click here to join PodMatch (the "AirBNB" of Podcasting): https://www.joinpodmatch.com/drchrisloomdphd If you enjoyed the audio and video quality of this episode, enhance your own productions by signing up through our Descript affiliate link: https://get.descript.com/gaei637mutik Click here to check out our Amazon product of the day (affiliate): https://amzn.to/419TAVg We couldn't do it without the support of our listeners. To help support the show: CashApp- https://cash.app/$drchrisloomdphd Venmo- https://account.venmo.com/u/Chris-Loo-4 Spotify- https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/christopher-loo/support Buy Me a Coffee- https://www.buymeacoffee.com/chrisJx Click here to schedule a 1-on-1 private coaching call: https://www.drchrisloomdphd.com/book-online Click here to check out our e-courses and bookstore here: https://www.drchrisloomdphd.com/shop Click here to purchase my books on Amazon: https://amzn.to/2PaQn4p For audiobooks, visit: https://www.audible.com/author/Christopher-H-Loo-MD-PhD/B07WFKBG1F Follow our YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/chL1357 Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/drchrisloomdphd Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thereal_drchrisloo Follow us on Threads: https://www.threads.net/@thereal_drchrisloo Follow us on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@drchrisloomddphd Follow our Blog: https://www.drchrisloomdphd.com/blog Follow the podcast on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3NkM6US7cjsiAYTBjWGdx6?si=1da9d0a17be14d18 Subscribe to our Substack newsletter: https://substack.com/@drchrisloomdphd1 Subscribe to our Medium newsletter: https://medium.com/@drchrisloomdphd Subscribe to our LinkedIn newsletter: https://www.linkedin.com/build-relation/newsletter-follow?entityUrn=6992935013231071233 Subscribe to our email list: https://financial-freedom-podcast-with-dr-loo.kit.com/ Thank you to all of our sponsors and advertisers that help support the show! Financial Freedom for Physicians, Copyright 2024 --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/christopher-loo/support
Cuốn tiểu thuyết kinh điển “Of Human Bondage” (bản dịch tiếng Việt là “Kiếp Người”) Đây là một tác phẩm bán tự truyện của nhà văn người Anh nổi tiếng William Somerset Maugham. Trước đó, mình đã giới thiệu cuốn sách "Mặt trăng và đồng sáu xu" của ông. Ý tưởng viết cuốn tiểu thuyết này được Maugham ấp ủ từ năm 23 tuổi và mãi đến năm 37 tuổi ông mới hoàn thành bản thảo. Ngay khi ra mắt, cuốn sách đã được ca ngợi là “tác phẩm thiên tài”, nhanh chóng trở thành một tác phẩm kinh điển và dịch ra nhiều thứ tiếng. Mời các bạn cùng lắng nghe chia sẻ ngày hôm nay! ------------------------- Nếu bạn muốn mua sách giấy để đọc, có thể ủng hộ Better Version bằng cách mua qua đường link này nhé, cám ơn các bạn! CUỐN SÁCH NÀY, BẢN DỊCH ĐÃ NGƯNG XUẤT BẢN THÌ PHẢI ❤️ Link tổng hợp các cuốn sách trong tất cả video: https://beacons.ai/betterversion.vn/books ❤️ ỦNG HỘ KÊNH TẠI: https://beacons.ai/betterversion.donate
fWotD Episode 2456: W. Somerset Maugham Welcome to featured Wiki of the Day where we read the summary of the featured Wikipedia article every day.The featured article for Thursday, 25 January 2024 is W. Somerset Maugham.William Somerset Maugham ( MAWM; 25 January 1874 – 16 December 1965) was an English writer, known for his plays, novels and short stories. Born in Paris, where he spent his first ten years, Maugham was schooled in England and went to a German university. He became a medical student in London and qualified as a physician in 1897. He never practised medicine, and became a full-time writer. His first novel, Liza of Lambeth (1897), a study of life in the slums, attracted attention, but it was as a playwright that he first achieved national celebrity. By 1908 he had four plays running at once in the West End of London. He wrote his 32nd and last play in 1933, after which he abandoned the theatre and concentrated on novels and short stories.Maugham's novels after Liza of Lambeth include Of Human Bondage (1915), The Moon and Sixpence (1919), The Painted Veil (1925), Cakes and Ale (1930) and The Razor's Edge (1944). His short stories were published in collections such as The Casuarina Tree (1926) and The Mixture as Before (1940); many of them have been adapted for radio, cinema and television. His great popularity and prodigious sales provoked adverse reactions from highbrow critics, many of whom sought to belittle him as merely competent. More recent assessments generally rank Of Human Bondage – a book with a large autobiographical element – as a masterpiece, and his short stories are widely held in high critical regard. Maugham's plain prose style became known for its lucidity, but his reliance on clichés attracted adverse critical comment.During the First World War Maugham worked for the British Secret Service, later drawing on his experiences for stories published in the 1920s. Although primarily homosexual, he attempted to conform to some extent with the norms of his day. After a three-year affair with Syrie Wellcome which produced their daughter, Liza, they married in 1917. The marriage lasted for twelve years, but before, during and after it, Maugham's principal partner was a younger man, Gerald Haxton. Together they made extended visits to Asia, the South Seas and other destinations; Maugham gathered material for his fiction wherever they went. They lived together in the French Riviera, where Maugham entertained lavishly. After Haxton's death in 1944, Alan Searle became Maugham's secretary-companion for the rest of the author's life. Maugham gave up writing novels shortly after the Second World War, and his last years were marred by senility. He died at the age of 91.This recording reflects the Wikipedia text as of 00:35 UTC on Thursday, 25 January 2024.For the full current version of the article, see W. Somerset Maugham on Wikipedia.This podcast uses content from Wikipedia under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.Visit our archives at wikioftheday.com and subscribe to stay updated on new episodes.Follow us on Mastodon at @wikioftheday@masto.ai.Also check out Curmudgeon's Corner, a current events podcast.Until next time, I'm Emma Standard.
Chapter 1 What's Of Human Bondage"Of Human Bondage" is a semi-autobiographical novel written by British author W. Somerset Maugham. It was published in 1915 and tells the story of Philip Carey, a young orphan with a clubfoot, who struggles to find his place in the world. The novel explores themes such as love, art, religion, and the human condition. It is considered one of Maugham's most important works and a classic of English literature.Chapter 2 Why is Of Human Bondage Worth ReadOf Human Bondage by W. Somerset Maugham is worth reading for several reasons:1. Profound exploration of human nature: The novel delves deep into the complexities and contradictions of human character and emotions. It provides a detailed examination of the protagonist's journey, and how he navigates through life, love, and personal growth.2. Rich character development: Maugham's vivid characterizations make the novel highly engaging. The protagonist, Philip Carey, undergoes significant growth and transformation throughout the story, compelling readers to empathize with his struggles, successes, and failures.3. Realistic portrayal of life: Of Human Bondage presents a realistic depiction of the challenges individuals face in life. It tackles themes such as unrequited love, sexual desire, existential questions, and social expectations, making it relatable and thought-provoking for readers across generations.4. Beautifully written prose: Maugham's exquisite writing style and evocative prose make the novel a pleasure to read. His descriptive language and storytelling abilities create a vivid and immersive world, bringing the characters and settings to life.5. Timeless themes: The novel explores timeless themes such as self-discovery, personal freedom, and the struggle between passion and reason. These themes continue to resonate with readers, making the book relevant and enduring.Overall, Of Human Bondage is a classic work of literature that offers profound insights into the human condition, with compelling characters and a beautifully crafted narrative. It is a book that can be enjoyed by readers of various backgrounds and interests.Chapter 3 Of Human Bondage SummaryOf Human Bondage by William Somerset Maugham is a semi-autobiographical novel that follows the life of Philip Carey, a young English orphan. The novel explores themes of love, artistic pursuits, and the search for meaning and happiness in life.The story begins with young Philip being sent to live with his strict and unsympathetic uncle and aunt in Blackstable, a small town in England. Philip is born with a club foot, which becomes a source of insecurity and self-consciousness throughout his life.As he grows up, Philip becomes interested in art and desires to become a painter. However, his uncle believes that art is a frivolous pursuit and insists that Philip become a clergyman. Philip reluctantly agrees and enrolls in a theological college, though he quickly realizes that he lacks the passion and faith required for the profession.After leaving college, Philip moves to London to study art. It is here that he meets Mildred Rogers, a waitress with whom he becomes infatuated. Despite Mildred's manipulative and selfish nature, Philip becomes deeply attached to her and is willing to sacrifice his own happiness for her.Over the course of the novel, Philip's relationship with Mildred becomes increasingly toxic and destructive. He endures years of emotional abuse and humiliation as Mildred repeatedly rejects him and takes up with other men. Through this tumultuous relationship, Philip learns about the complexities of love and the limitations of his own desires.Throughout the novel, Philip also experiences a series of...
Welcome to It's A Wonderful Podcast!! The role that turned Bette Davis into a megastar and prompted the public to nominate her for an Oscar when the Academy snubbed her in this darkly sad tale of power, pity and desperation on this week's main show as Morgan and Jeannine talk John Cromwell's RKO adaptation of W. Somerset Maugham's OF HUMAN BONDAGE (1934) starring Ms. Davis alongside Leslie Howard and Frances Dee!! Our Youtube Channel for Monday Madness on video, Watchalongs, Live Discussions & more: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvACMX8jX1qQ5ClrGW53vow The It's A Wonderful Podcast Theme by David B. Music. Donate: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/ItsAWonderful1 Join our Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/ItsAWonderful1 IT'S A WONDERFUL PODCAST STORE: https://its-a-wonderful-podcast.creator-spring.com/ Sub to the feed and download now on Anchor, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, Google Podcasts, Castbox, Amazon Music & more and be sure to rate, review and SHARE AROUND!! Keep up with us on Twitter: Podcast: https://twitter.com/ItsAWonderful1 Morgan: https://twitter.com/Th3PurpleDon Jeannine: https://twitter.com/JeannineDaBean Keep being wonderful!! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/itsawonderfulpodcast/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/itsawonderfulpodcast/support
Week 1 of our public domain movie month. We will watch 1 movie per decade, starting with the 1930's.
Dr. Abraham Verghese is a prolific writer and revered physician who has deeply contemplated the philosophical underpinnings of the practice of medicine. He is renowned as an advocate for the importance of bedside examination and physical diagnosis, and his best-selling books probe the intricacies of human connection in the context of healthcare. In this episode, Dr. Verghese discusses how maintaining a literary life has impacted his approach to doctoring, why the human touch still matters for healing in our increasingly digital age, and his vision of the future of medicine.In this episode, you will hear about: How Dr. Verghese's love of literature influenced his decision to enter medicine - 2:39Reflections on the challenges of contemporary medicine - 7:51How physical exams can be seen as a ritual for “reading the body like a book” - 10:07Dr. Verghese's perspective on the future of doctor-patient relationships given the rise of telemedicine and other technologies - 20:36Balancing the need to connect with each patient for their treatment, while being responsible for so many at once - 26:23How the craft of writing relates to medicine for Dr. Verghese - 31:50The counterintuitive diagnostic efficiency of taking the time and care to meet patients where they are at - 35:45Dr. Verghese is the author of three books:My Own Country (1994) - traces the story of young Dr. Verghese in the mid-1980s in Johnson City, Tennessee, who began to treat patients with a then unknown disease, HIV.The Tennis Partner (1999) - Dr. Verghese writes of his experience moving to El Paso in the midst of an unraveling marriage. There, he meets and becomes a mentor to David Smith, a medical resident at the hospital and a brilliant tennis player recovering from drug addiction.Cutting for Stone (2009) - a novel about twin brothers, orphaned by their mother's death in childbirth and forsaken by their father.The book that Dr. Verghese credits as having inspired him to pursue medicine is Of Human Bondage (1915), by William Somerset Maugham - Available for free Follow Dr. Verghese on Twitter @cuttingforstone and visit his website AbrahamVerghese.org.Visit our website www.TheDoctorsArt.com where you can find transcripts of all episodes.If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe, rate, and review our show, available for free on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. If you know of a doctor, patient, or anyone working in health care who would love to explore meaning in medicine with us on the show, feel free to leave a suggestion in the comments or send an email to info@thedoctorsart.com.
Welcome to the March '22 edition of The Film Detective Focus, starring author/journalist Don Stradley and The Movie Loft host, Dana Hersey!Join us this week, as Don and Dana discuss the highlighted features that are showing this month on The Film Detective, including our annual Oscar season celebration, which features Academy Award winning titles such as: A Farewell to Arms (1932), Of Human Bondage (1934), Algiers (1938), and Cyrano de Bergerac (1950). The duo also reminisce over the glory days of Hollywood, as they deep dive into iconic films & actors, including a discussion of One-Eyed Jacks (1961), and the life and career of Marlon Brando. Serving up a perfect conversation for any connoisseur who has an affinity for classic cinema, be sure to gather around for this month's The Film Detective Focus!Enjoying The Film Detective?You can watch this episode here.Or connect with us here:FacebookInstagramTwitterYouTubeWant even more? Subscribe to our Newsletter here. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Summary We're back with Season 4, Episode 1- The Freshmen! Cory and Laine talk about Maugham's book Of Human Bondage, our favorite Mandalorian Pedro Pascal, and take a nostalgic look back at our own high school experiences in the 90's. Thank you for listening to our discussion of Season 4, Episode 1: The Freshmen Listen … Continue reading Episode 64: The Freshmen →
This week on And the Runner-Up Is, Kevin welcomes Kimberly Pierce of Ticklish Business to discuss the 1934 Oscar race for Best Actress, where Claudette Colbert won for her performance in "It Happened One Night," beating Grace Moore in "One Night of Love" and Norma Shearer in "The Barretts of Wimpole Street," plus write-in candidate Bette Davis in "Of Human Bondage." We discuss all of these performances and discuss why the confirmed runner-up was the runner-up. 0:00 - 8:37 - Introduction 8:38 - 23:05 - Grace Moore 23:06 - 43:09 - Norma Shearer 43:10 - 1:04:00 - Bette Davis 1:04:01 - 1:21:30 - Claudette Colbert 1:21:31 - 1:53:25 - Why Claudette Colbert won / Twitter questions 1:53:26 - 1:59:29 - Why was ____ the runner-up? Support And the Runner-Up Is on Patreon at patreon.com/andtherunnerupis! Follow Kevin Jacobsen on Twitter Follow Kimberly Pierce on Twitter Follow And the Runner-Up Is on Twitter and Instagram Theme/End Music: "Diamonds" by Iouri Sazonov Additional Music: "Storming Cinema Ident" by Edward Blakeley Artwork: Brian O'Meara
Bonus Ep. 7.Nick and Dani take the opportunity to discuss the career of Bette Davis.We talk about her work, her brilliance as an actress, and all those that have collaborated with her.The films we discuss include: 'Of Human Bondage' (1934, John Cromwell), starring Leslie Howard, Frances Dee alongside Bette Davis'Jezebel' (1938, William Wyler), starring Bette Davis and Henry Fonda'The Letter' (1940, William Wyler), starring Bette Davis, Herbert Marshall and James Stephenson'The Little Foxes' (1941, William Wyler), starring Bette Davis, Herbert Marshall and Teresa WrightThis episode coincides with the Bette Davis: Hollywood Rebel season at the BFI Southbank that is taking place this month.Link: AFI Salute To Bette DavisTwitter: @kinotomicContact Us: kinotomic@gmail.com
We watch the Bette Davis classic "Of Human Bondage" and count the number of whips and ball gags we see. Are we disappointed at the final number? Or do we just become deeply bound to these characters and their plight?
为了保证今年/2021的阅读计划顺利进行 我「不得不」先把话放出来 接下来我会把这选出来的20本书摆在书柜显眼的地方 一本一本的读完 每读完一本后用小视频的方式分享收获和感悟 欢迎大家监督提醒 我也想看看你们的年度书单 欢迎留言或私信分享给我~**本期内容建议收看视频,因为有些书我忘记把名字读出来可以在各大视频平台搜索「优势教练雨娟」时间轴&书单提示:【03:45】1.《少有人走的路》【04:37】2.《如何成为一个抗压的人》、3.《所以,一切都是童年的错吗?》【05:11】4.《我在秘密生长》、5.《读书与旅行》、6.《记忆错觉》【06:02】7.《Man's Search For Meaning/活出生命的意义》【06:26】8.《The Gift of Therapy/给心理咨询师的礼物》【06:38】9.《Coaching Plain & Simple》【06:58】10.《Group Coaching》【07:32】11.《Turning The Mind Into An Ally》【08:33】12.《The Surrender Experiment/臣服实验》、13.《The Untethered Soul/不羁的灵魂》【09:23】14.《The Happiness Project/幸福计划》、15.《Furiously Happy》【10:11】16.《The Resilience Factor》【10:26】17.《The Kindness Method》【11:12】18.《12 Rules For Life/人生十二法则》【11:48】19.《Of Human Bondage/人性的枷锁》【13:11】20.《職業としての小説家/我的职业是小说家》
为了保证今年/2021的阅读计划顺利进行 我「不得不」先把话放出来 接下来我会把这选出来的20本书摆在书柜显眼的地方 一本一本的读完 每读完一本后用小视频的方式分享收获和感悟 欢迎大家监督提醒 我也想看看你们的年度书单 欢迎留言或私信分享给我~**本期内容建议收看视频,因为有些书我忘记把名字读出来可以在各大视频平台搜索「优势教练雨娟」时间轴&书单提示:【03:45】1.《少有人走的路》【04:37】2.《如何成为一个抗压的人》、3.《所以,一切都是童年的错吗?》【05:11】4.《我在秘密生长》、5.《读书与旅行》、6.《记忆错觉》【06:02】7.《Man's Search For Meaning/活出生命的意义》【06:26】8.《The Gift of Therapy/给心理咨询师的礼物》【06:38】9.《Coaching Plain & Simple》【06:58】10.《Group Coaching》【07:32】11.《Turning The Mind Into An Ally》【08:33】12.《The Surrender Experiment/臣服实验》、13.《The Untethered Soul/不羁的灵魂》【09:23】14.《The Happiness Project/幸福计划》、15.《Furiously Happy》【10:11】16.《The Resilience Factor》【10:26】17.《The Kindness Method》【11:12】18.《12 Rules For Life/人生十二法则》【11:48】19.《Of Human Bondage/人性的枷锁》【13:11】20.《職業としての小説家/我的职业是小说家》
Yes, there will be a brief pause in the episodes covering the 2020 NZIFF. I am hoping to get the next volume of "Movie Chronicles" published before Xmas and this is taking up most of my time. Meanwhile, this episode returns to adaptations from literature in 1934. Movies include:- Of Human Bondage, The Scarlet Pimpernel, and Treasure Island.
Here is the link to the novel: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Of_Human_Bondage
How do you find meaning in a world filled with cruelty? Michael Knowles and Larry Elder discuss the universal search for unconditional love as seen in the pages of W. Somerset Maugham's fictional novel, Of Human Bondage. In our fast-paced world, it's tough to make reading a priority. At least it used to be. At Thinkr.org, they summarize the key ideas from new and noteworthy nonfiction, giving you access to an entire library of great books in bite-size form. Read or listen to hundreds of titles in a matter of minutes: start your free trial today at https://thinkr.org/
Chaplin, Cagney, Garbo and Grant all make Adam and Josh's 1930s "Starter Pack," 10 films to introduce you – or get you better acquainted with – arguably the greatest movie decade. Plus, the first film in our four-film Bette Davis Marathon, 1934's OF HUMAN BONDAGE, and the Elite 8 of Filmspotting Madness: Best of the 2010s. 0:00 - Billboard 1:04 - Top 5: 1930s Starter Pack Fred Astaire, "Cheek to Cheek" 43:40 - Notes 52:28 - Filmspotting Madness Elite 8 1:06:51 - Bette Davis Marathon #1: "Of Human Bondage" 1:26:33 - Outro / Outtake Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
When Maria Marten disappeared from the English village of Polstead in 1827, her lover said that they had married and were living on the Isle of Wight. But Maria's stepmother began having disturbing dreams that hinted at a much grimmer fate. In this week's episode of the Futility Closet podcast we'll tell the story of the Red Barn, which transfixed Britain in the early 19th century. We'll also encounter an unfortunate copycat and puzzle over some curious births. Intro: In 1859, a penurious Henry Thoreau donated $5 to a college library. Georges Perec rendered "Ozymandias" without the letter E. Sources for our feature on the Red Barn: James Curtis, The Murder of Maria Marten, 1828. Shane McCorristine, William Corder and the Red Barn Murder: Journeys of the Criminal Body, 2014. Lucy Worsley, The Art of the English Murder: From Jack the Ripper and Sherlock Holmes to Agatha Christie and Alfred Hitchcock, 2014. James Moore, Murder at the Inn: A History of Crime in Britain's Pubs and Hotels, 2015. Colin Wilson, A Casebook of Murder, 2015. Maryrose Cuskelly, Original Skin: Exploring the Marvels of the Human Hide, 2011. Henry Vizetelly, The Romance of Crime, 1860. "Trial of William Corder for the Murder of Maria Marten," Annual Register, 1828, 337-349. James Redding Ware, Wonderful Dreams of Remarkable Men and Women, 1884. Jessie Dobson, "The College Criminals: 4. William Corder," Annals of the Royal College of Surgeons of England 11:4 (1952), 249. Richard Grady, "Personal Identity Established by the Teeth; the Dentist a Scientific Expert," American Journal of Dental Science 17:9 (1884), 385. Harry Cocks, "The Pre-History of Print and Online Dating, c. 1690-1990," in I. Alev Degim, James Johnson, and Tao Fu, Online Courtship: Interpersonal Interactions Across Borders, 2015. Sarah Tarlow, "Curious Afterlives: The Enduring Appeal of the Criminal Corpse," Mortality 21:3 (2016), 210–228. Ruth Penfold-Mounce, "Consuming Criminal Corpses: Fascination With the Dead Criminal Body," Mortality 15:3 (August 2010), 250-265. "The Trial of William Corder, for the Wilful Murder of Maria Marten, Etc.," 1828. "The Trial, at Length, of William Corder, Convicted of the Murder of Maria Marten," 1828. "An Accurate Account of the Trial of William Corder for the Murder of Maria Marten," 1828. "The Trial of William Corder at the Assizes, Bury St. Edmunds," 1828. "Dream Testimony," Notes & Queries 52, Dec. 27, 1856. Paul Collins, "The Molecatcher's Daughter," Independent on Sunday, Nov. 26, 2006, 20. Peter Watson, "Alternatives: Natural Barn Killer," Guardian, Feb. 19, 1995, 23. Jonathan Kay, "Lessons From a Molecatcher's Daughter," National Post, Jan. 9, 2007, A17. Michael Horsnell, "Red Barn Murderer Finally Laid to Rest," Times, Aug. 18, 2004, 10. Max Haines, "The Red Barn Murder," Sudbury [Ontario] Star, Aug. 16, 2003, D.11. Maryrose Cuskelly, "Of Human Bondage," Australian, June 3, 2009, 18. "Gruesome Murder Still Has the Power to Fascinate," East Anglian Daily Times, Oct. 28, 2013. "True Crime From the 1820s: Shades of Capote," Weekend Edition Saturday, National Public Radio, Oct. 28, 2006. Colin Wilson, "A Murder Mystery: Why Do Some Killings Dominate the Headlines?", Times, Jan. 28, 2006, 25. Pamela Owen, "The Day Murder Became a National Obsession," The People, Sept. 22, 2013, 34. Stephanie Markinson, "Dark History," Yorkshire Post, Jan. 10, 2020, 7. "Collection Articles: The Trial, at Length, of William Corder, Convicted of the Murder of Maria Marten," British Library (accessed Feb. 2, 2020). Alsager Richard Vian, "Corder, William," Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900, Vol. 12. Alsager Vian, "Corder, William," Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Sept. 23, 2004. Listener mail: Malcolm Gladwell, "Safety in the Skies," Gladwell.com, Oct. 1, 2001. Hugh Morris, "The Strangest Stories From the Golden Age of Plane Hijacking," Telegraph, July 5, 2019. Thom Patterson, "How the Era of 'Skyjackings' Changed the Way We Fly," CNN, Oct. 2, 2017. "Three Cheeseburgers and a Rental Car," Fear of Landing, July 26, 2019. Wikipedia, "D. B. Cooper" (accessed Feb. 4, 2020). Joni Balter, "Attorney: Hijacker Couldn't Hurt Anyone," UPI, Jan. 21, 1983. "Man Killed in Attempted Hijacking on Coast," UPI, Jan. 21, 1983. This week's lateral thinking puzzle was contributed by both Ronald Gainey and Chris Zinsli, based on an item they heard on the podcast 99% Invisible. Here are four additional corroborating links (warning -- these spoil the puzzle). You can listen using the player above, download this episode directly, or subscribe on Google Podcasts, on Apple Podcasts, or via the RSS feed at https://futilitycloset.libsyn.com/rss. Please consider becoming a patron of Futility Closet -- you can choose the amount you want to pledge, and we've set up some rewards to help thank you for your support. You can also make a one-time donation on the Support Us page of the Futility Closet website. Many thanks to Doug Ross for the music in this episode. If you have any questions or comments you can reach us at podcast@futilitycloset.com. Thanks for listening!
Michael & Ethan In A Room With Scotch - Tapestry Radio Network
Well, they finally finish talking about Of Human Bondage. Have Ethan’s tastes changed? Is Michael that influential? Can he find Ethan’s emotional core? Find out in this episode!In this episode:Ethan drinks scotch by himself.“guest” “Michael Lilienthal”Michael problematizes it, as he does.Michael viciously punches the microphone.As undergrads, we always read each novel at least twice if not thrice.Michael takes the podcast into the ditch.Ethan hopes to sneakily get the 50 Shades of Gray audience.No offense to the Mildreds out there.Ethan would be smart if he could remember that name.Next episode they’ll talk about The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead. Join the discussion! Go to the Contact page and put "Scotch Talk" in the Subject line. We'd love to hear from you! And submit your homework at the Michael & Ethan in a Room with Scotch page.Donate to our Patreon!BUY A NIHILIST BLANKET!Your Hosts: Michael G. Lilienthal (@mglilienthal) andEthan Bartlett (@bjartlett)MUSIC & SFX:"Kessy Swings Endless - (ID 349)" by Lobo Loco. Used by permission."The Grim Reaper - II Presto" by Aitua. Used under an Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike License."Thinking It Over" by Lee Rosevere. Used under an Attribution License.
Today on The Literary Life Podcast, our hosts Angelina Stanford and Cindy Rollins, along with Thomas Banks, are discussing chapters 4-10 of Northanger Abbey. They start out talking about Jane Austen’s light touch and her gentle satirical way of pointing out the pros and cons of the novel. Angelina and Thomas bring up some of the historical and social context for this setting in Regency period Bath. They contrast the proper social code with the way the Thorpes behave and with Catherine Morland’s naïvetè and innocence. Cindy laughs about the way in which Jane Austen pokes fun at the novel’s form while writing a novel herself. After the critics’ early disgust for the novel, Jane Austen elevated the form to the point that they finally had to recognize the novel as a worthy work of literature. Cindy also brings up the idea that Austen may have partly written this novel because she wanted to talk with others about all these books that she references. They chat about all the things that occurred in history that led up to the availability of the novel to the masses, and to women in particular. Angelina observes that Austen plays with the tropes within a realistic situation in contrast to the over-the-top situations presented in sensational novels of the period. They wrap up the conversation with highlights about the different characters and what we can be looking for in the next several chapters. Thanks to Our Sponsor: Located in beautiful Franklin Tennessee, New College Franklin is a four year Christian Liberal Arts college dedicated to excellent academics and discipling relationships among students and faculty. We seek to enrich and disciple students intellectually, physically, emotionally, and spiritually, to guide them to wisdom and a life of service to God, neighbors, and creation. Also, be sure to check out Thomas Banks’ webinar, The Poetry of Advent, taking place on December 4, 2019. Love and Live by John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester All my past life is mine no more, The flying hours are gone, Like transitory dreams giv’n o’er, Whose images are kept in store By memory alone. The time that is to come is not; How can it then be mine? The present moment’s all my lot; And that, as fast as it is got, Phyllis, is only thine. Then talk not of inconstancy, False hearts, and broken vows; If I, by miracle, can be This live-long minute true to thee, ’Tis all that Heav’n allows. Book List: Summer Lightning by P. G. Wodehouse Pamela by Samuel Richardson Lyrical Ballads by Wordsworth and Coleridge Biographia Literaria by Samuel Taylor Coleridge Becoming Jane (film) Of Human Bondage by W. Somerset Maugham Lady Susan by Jane Austen Love and Friendship (film) Support The Literary Life: Become a patron of The Literary Life podcast as part of the “Friends and Fellows Community” on Patreon, and get some amazing bonus content! Thanks for your support! Connect with Us: Find Angelina at https://angelinastanford.com, on Instagram @angelinastanford, and on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/ANGStanford/ Find Cindy at https://cindyrollins.net, on Instagram @cindyordoamoris and on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/cindyrollins.net/ Follow The Literary Life on Instagram, and jump into our private Facebook group, The Literary Life Discussion Group, and let’s get the book talk going! http://bit.ly/literarylifeFB
Michael & Ethan In A Room With Scotch - Tapestry Radio Network
Yes, Michael & Ethan are still talking about Of Human Bondage, by W. Somerset Maugham, and Ethan doesn’t know how he feels. Stay tuned for this emotional roller coaster!In this episode:Ethan tries to make this podcast intellectual.It’s like The Gift of the Magi with traps.Freedom - ?The nature of experience is finite!Ethan buys himself time. But gives up.Never hit on someone in a service position, and other relationship advice.Ethan vastly oversimplifies the Christian tradition.Next episode will be the groundbreaking finale of Of Human Bondage! Join the discussion! Go to the Contact page and put "Scotch Talk" in the Subject line. We'd love to hear from you! And submit your homework at the Michael & Ethan in a Room with Scotch page.Donate to our Patreon!BUY A NIHILIST BLANKET!Your Hosts: Michael G. Lilienthal (@mglilienthal) andEthan Bartlett (@bjartlett)MUSIC & SFX:"Kessy Swings Endless - (ID 349)" by Lobo Loco. Used by permission."The Grim Reaper - II Presto" by Aitua. Used under an Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike License."Thinking It Over" by Lee Rosevere. Used under an Attribution License.
Michael & Ethan In A Room With Scotch - Tapestry Radio Network
Michael & Ethan keep talking about William Shakespeare’s The Tempest, but actually about W. H. Auden’s poem, The Sea and the Mirror. They both cried, and they aren’t afraid to tell you so.In this episode:Ethan makes a deep cut: Here’s Michael in Hamlet.This podcast does it right just once.Ethan has flashbacks.Michael gets super theological.Ethan is not gonna make this The Alchemy Podcast….Michael makes it about money.Ethan is better than Michael at humility.Ethan inducts you into his cult.Stick around for bloopers!Next episode, Michael & Ethan will be back to Of Human Bondage, by W. Somerset Maugham! Join the discussion! Go to the Contact page and put "Scotch Talk" in the Subject line. We'd love to hear from you! And submit your homework at the Michael & Ethan in a Room with Scotch page.Donate to our Patreon!BUY A NIHILIST BLANKET!Your Hosts: Michael G. Lilienthal (@mglilienthal) andEthan Bartlett (@bjartlett)MUSIC & SFX:"Kessy Swings Endless - (ID 349)" by Lobo Loco. Used by permission. "Thinking It Over" by Lee Rosevere. Used under an Attribution License.
Michael & Ethan In A Room With Scotch - Tapestry Radio Network
Michael & Ethan take a brief break from their discussion of Of Human Bondage, by W. Somerset Maugham, and pursue an island vacation with William Shakespeare’s The Tempest. Ethan drinks a Pimm’s Cup, and Michael a Brandy Cocktail.In this episode:Live and in person, Michael mixes a drink.He also makes up a pop song on the spot.The play is made up and the plot doesn’t matter.Ethan uses the (real) word “nounal.”John Dee was a wizard.Prospero: Christ-figure or antichrist?Next: The Sunday School Podcast!Ethan almost tells a joke, then does.Ethan recommends Approaching Shakespeare (which is the correct way to say it).Ethan uses the past tense of “teacher.”This isn’t the Christopher Marlowe podcast special.They might write a book. Probably not.Reductive things are stupid.Was Shakespeare a postmodernist?How real was the stuff happening onstage?Lots of theatre history fits into this episode.At the end, they talk Caliban.Michael reveals how he’s going to scare his daughter’s boyfriends.Next episode, Michael & Ethan will keep talking The Tempest, but specifically in the context of W. H. Auden’s poem, The Sea and the Mirror! After that, it’s back to Of Human Bondage! Join the discussion! Go to the Contact page and put "Scotch Talk" in the Subject line. We'd love to hear from you! And submit your homework at the Michael & Ethan in a Room with Scotch page.Donate to our Patreon!BUY A NIHILIST BLANKET!Your Hosts: Michael G. Lilienthal (@mglilienthal) andEthan Bartlett (@bjartlett)MUSIC & SFX:"Kessy Swings Endless - (ID 349)" by Lobo Loco. Used by permission."Thinking It Over" by Lee Rosevere. Used under an Attribution License.
Michael & Ethan In A Room With Scotch - Tapestry Radio Network
Continuing their Mongo book Of Human Bondage, by W. Somerset Maugham, Michael and Ethan get into the nitty gritty.In this episode:Our funny is all edited in.Michael deletes all Ethan’s tail-related jokes.They throw shade at Barnes & Noble.Michael tries to go on a Nabokov parade. Ethan douses him.They start out continuing the chronological order, then skip to the end.Ethan says something that sounds very incestual.Michael went ahead without Ethan, as per frickin’ usual.SPOILERS for Up in the Air.All female names look alike to Ethan.The key to the podcast is in The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy.Ethan references this song by accident.The nude report will follow the episode.Next episode will be a Shakespeare Special discussing The Tempest! Join the discussion! Go to the Contact page and put "Scotch Talk" in the Subject line. We'd love to hear from you! And submit your homework at the Michael & Ethan in a Room with Scotch page.Donate to our Patreon!BUY A NIHILIST BLANKET!Your Hosts: Michael G. Lilienthal (@mglilienthal) andEthan Bartlett (@bjartlett)MUSIC & SFX:"Kessy Swings Endless - (ID 349)" by Lobo Loco. Used by permission."The Grim Reaper - II Presto" by Aitua. Used under an Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike License."Thinking It Over" by Lee Rosevere. Used under an Attribution License.
Michael & Ethan In A Room With Scotch - Tapestry Radio Network
Season 4 begins in style, with the delectable Lagavulin 16yo single malt! The season kickoff Mongo book this time around is Of Human Bondage, by W. Somerset Maugham, and it’s a truly hot topic. Which of our hosts loved the book, and which one hated it? Find out exclusively on this episode!In this episode:Oedipal admissions and fantasies.New rules!Michael forgot his copy.Ethan conducts an interrogation.They keep pronouncing the author’s name in different ways.They start at the very beginning. A very good place to start.Ethan gets hung up on mother-figures. But it’s a thin line, so he didn’t lose over it.Pop-psychology-cast!The Oedipal Foundation isn’t real. But apparently this is.They have their signature longer-than-necessary Harry Potter digression.Ethan cites Hezekiah 11:17.The whole book is about economics.Michael turns out the lights.Join the discussion! Go to the Contact page and put "Scotch Talk" in the Subject line. We'd love to hear from you! And submit your homework at the Michael & Ethan in a Room with Scotch page.Donate to our Patreon!Buy a Nihilism Blanket!Your Hosts: Michael G. Lilienthal (@mglilienthal) andEthan Bartlett (@bjartlett)MUSIC & SFX:"Kessy Swings Endless - (ID 349)" by Lobo Loco. Used by permission."The Grim Reaper - II Presto" by Aitua. Used under an Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike License."Thinking It Over" by Lee Rosevere. Used under an Attribution License.“Intermission” by Unthunk. Used under an Attribution-NonCommercial License.
Michael & Ethan In A Room With Scotch - Tapestry Radio Network
In the final episode of Season 3, Michael & Ethan dive into some creative nonfiction, sipping on this taste of the Midwest in essays by Bill Holm. Specifically: “The Grand Tour,” “Singing Latin in New Ulm,” and “The Music of Failure: Variations on an Idea.”In this episode:Michael is Queen Elizabeth I.Michael planted a beer seed in Minnesota.We are nothing if not willing to compromise everything about this show for profit.We read to feel dumb.Nihilism or something?Ethan knows people like that.We object to morals.Ethan eventually makes his point.We weren’t going to read theology. Oh well.We debate about the Mississippi.Their Mongo book kicking off Season 4 will be Of Human Bondage, by W. Somerset Maugham. Join the discussion! Go to the Contact page and put "Scotch Talk" in the Subject line. We'd love to hear from you! And submit your homework at the Michael & Ethan in a Room with Scotch page.Donate to our Patreon!Your Hosts: Michael G. Lilienthal (@mglilienthal) andEthan Bartlett (@bjartlett)MUSIC & SFX:"Kessy Swings Endless - (ID 349)" by Lobo Loco. Used by permission."The Grim Reaper - II Presto" by Aitua. Used under an Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike License."Thinking It Over" by Lee Rosevere. Used under an Attribution License.“Intermission” by Unthunk. Used under an Attribution-NonCommercial License.
First Draft Episode #202: D.C. Pierson D.C. Pierson, comedian, writer, filmmaker and author of The Boy Who Couldn’t Sleep and Never Had To and Crap Kingdom, and co-writer and star of indie comedy movie Mystery Team, talks about getting more vulnerable with age, using his fiction to explore the gap between what we expect of the world and what turns out to be true, and being sick of not finishing things. Links and Topics Mentioned In This Episode Dan Eckman and Meggie McFadden are two comedians D.C. has worked with for years, in part on an adaptation of D.C.’s first book, The Boy Who Couldn’t Sleep and Never Had To D.C. loved the cover of his dad’s copy of Jurassic Park by Michael Crichton Rubber Soul was the one Beatles album D.C.’s family had on cassette or CD In conjunction with the documentary The Beatles Anthology, detailed compilations of Beatles ephemera were released in three double-CD sets: Anthology 1, Anthology 2, and Anthology 3. D.C. listened to these more than the regular Beatles albums, which means he listened to a lot of alternate versions of songs and random studio chatter. He credits that with jumpstarting much of his curiosity as a storyteller. While D.C. attended the Rita and Burton Goldberg School of Dramatic Writing at NYU’s Tisch Institute of Performing Arts, one of his teachers was Charlie Rubin, who wrote for Seinfeld and In Living Color, and was a showrunner for Law & Order: Criminal Intent Derick was D.C.’s improv group which formed at NYU, made up of D.C. Pierson, Dominic Dierkes, Donald Glover, Dan Eckman, and Maggie McFadden Mystery Team was a fully independently-made movie that the Derick Comedy group made, which had a screening at Sundance, and led the group to move to Los Angeles Upright Citizens Brigade improv theater is where D.C. honed his comedy and performing chops during and after college The concept for Mystery Team is basically: what if characters from Encyclopedia Brown never really grew out of their idealized, 1950s childhood, and kept trying to solve crimes? Donald shared what he learned writing for 30 Rock (with Tina Fey, Robert Carlock, Matt Hubbard, Kay Cannon) with his Derick Comedy friends to help them write a tight script for Mystery Team Nathan Rabin, who wrote for The A.V. Club at the time, wrote a glowing review there for Mystery Team that D.C. credits with helping the movie gain momentum A passing encouraging comment from comedian, actor, writer, and musician Eliza Skinner gave D.C. the boost he needed to start writing a book Dianne McGunigle, manager and a producer of Atlanta, was D.C. agent at the time that he wrote a first draft of The Boy Who Couldn’t Sleep… and she read it quickly, a favor for which D.C. is forever grateful Gerry Howard, who edited David Foster Wallace’s The Broom of the System and Girl with Curious Hair, as well as Hanya Yanagihara’s A Little Life, was the editor D.C. worked with for The Boy Who Couldn’t Sleep… D.C. was starstruck to be going to the offices where Sloane Crosley—essayist and writer known for I Was Told There’d Be Cake, How Did You Get This Number and her newest, Look Alive Out There—also worked. The Los Angeles Times gave The Boy Who Couldn’t Sleep… a lovely review D.C. was inspired by psychologist Carol Dweck’s book, Mindset: The New Psychology of Success One of D.C.’s favorite English teachers sent him Of Human Bondage by W. Somerset Maugham provided a quote that summed up what he likes to explore in all his writing To me, Crap Kingdom is asking, “What if Lord of the Rings was deeply uncool?” Stephen King’s On Writing is one of the writing books that has inspired D.C. in his fiction process One of D.C.’s earliest imrpov teachers, Owen Burke, referred to the following passage from Tom Stoppard’s Arcadia, on the endurance of human thought and creation: “We shed as we pick up, like travellers who must carry everything in their arms, and what we let fall will be picked up by those behind. The procession is very long and life is very short. We die on the march. But there is nothing outside the march so nothing can be lost to it. The missing plays of Sophocles will turn up piece by piece, or be written again in another language. Ancient cures for diseases will reveal themselves once more. Mathematical discoveries glimpsed and lost to view will have their time again. You do not suppose, my lady, that if all of Archimedes had been hiding in the great library of Alexandria, we would be at a loss for a corkscrew?” D.C. sometimes teaches at Writing Pad, a writing program offered online and in L.A./S.F. Subscribe To First Draft with Sarah Enni Every Tuesday, I speak to storytellers like Veronica Roth, author of Divergent; Linda Holmes, author and host of NPR’s Pop Culture Happy Hour podcast; Jonny Sun, internet superstar, illustrator of Lin-Manuel Miranda’s Gmorning, Gnight! and author and illustrator of Everyone’s an Aliebn When Ur a Aliebn Too; Michael Dante DiMartino, co-creator of Avatar: The Last Airbender; John August, screenwriter of Big Fish, Charlie’s Angels, and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory; or Rhett Miller, musician and frontman for The Old 97s. Together, we take deep dives on their careers and creative works. Don’t miss an episode! Subscribe in Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, or wherever you get your podcasts. It’s free! Participate To leave a voicemail for a future episode, call 818-533-1998. Or you can email the show at firstdraftwithsarahenni@gmail.com. Rate, Review, and Recommend How do you like the show? Please take a moment to rate and review First Draft with Sarah Enni in Apple Podcasts, Google Play, or wherever you listen to podcasts. Your honest and positive review helps others discover the show -- so thank you! Is there someone you think would love this podcast as much as you do? Please share this episode on Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, or via carrier pigeon (maybe try a text or e-mail, come to think of it). Just click the Share button at the bottom of this post! Thanks again!
Michael & Ethan In A Room With Scotch - Tapestry Radio Network
As they converse about Jacques the Fatalist, by Denis Diderot, Michael & Ethan learn about themselves, and about each other. But most importantly, they learn about themselves.In this episode:Ethan renounces Michael. Michael kicks him out.The word “dumb” gets used a lot.Ethan giggles at the gutter his mind is in.They spend a lot of words on what they picture in this book.They’re not worried about the plot.All 18th-century Frenchmen are apparently alcoholics.Morals!They talk the finer points of robotics.Ethan goes to Middle School, then tries to bring it back intellectual.Jacques marries the author again.They wrap up, and keep talking.Their next book will be Of Human Bondage, by W. Somerset Maugam. Join the discussion! Go to the Contact page and put "Scotch Talk" in the Subject line. We'd love to hear from you! And submit your homework at the Michael & Ethan in a Room with Scotch page.Donate to our Patreon!Your Hosts: Michael G. Lilienthal (@mglilienthal) andEthan Bartlett (@bjartlett)MUSIC & SFX:"Kessy Swings Endless - (ID 349)" by Lobo Loco. Used by permission."The Grim Reaper - II Presto" by Aitua. Used under an Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike License."Thinking It Over" by Lee Rosevere. Used under an Attribution License.“Intermission” by Unthunk. Used under an Attribution-NonCommercial License.
Michael & Ethan In A Room With Scotch - Tapestry Radio Network
Now they’re reading Don Quixote again, but actually, it’s Tristram Shandy, or maybe, for real, it’s Jacques the Fatalist, by Denis Diderot.In this episode:Michael stuns Ethan into silence.Ethan translates Michael.Ethan baby steps forward in technology.The curtain is pulled back.Ethan doesn’t throw shade, or at least he claims not to.Some translation theory creeps in. But neither one knows enough French.Ethan’s theory get’s super meta.Michael & Ethan might not agree!Michael ignores Ethan making fun of him, and is a total nerd.They make fun of the editor of Michael’s copy.Robots in the 18th century!?Luther is mentioned, but not dwelt on.Their next book will be Of Human Bondage, by W. Somerset Maugam. Join the discussion! Go to the Contact page and put "Scotch Talk" in the Subject line. We'd love to hear from you! And submit your homework at the Michael & Ethan in a Room with Scotch page.Donate to our Patreon!Your Hosts: Michael G. Lilienthal (@mglilienthal) andEthan Bartlett (@bjartlett)MUSIC & SFX:"Kessy Swings Endless - (ID 349)" by Lobo Loco. Used by permission."The Grim Reaper - II Presto" by Aitua. Used under an Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike License."Thinking It Over" by Lee Rosevere. Used under an Attribution License.“Intermission” by Unthunk. Used under an Attribution-NonCommercial License.
约翰•克伦威尔 John CromwellAnn Vickers (1933)天造地设 Made for Each Other (1939)徒有其表 In Name Only (1939)铁窗红泪 Caged (1950)红颜泪 The Goddess (1958)与黄宗霑的合作 罗宫秘史 The Prisoner of Zenda (1937)海角游魂 Algiers (1938)伊利诺斯州的林肯 Abe Lincoln in Illinois (1940)人生的枷锁 Of Human Bondage (1934)自君别后 Since You Went Away (1944)马可波罗东游记 The Adventures of Marco Polo (1938)安娜与暹罗王 Anna and the King of Siam (1946)
In this episode, I discuss the classic Of Human Bondage with Chris Malmberg. Topics addressed include tendencies in post-structuralism and the question of free will.
Cat, dog, pig, bird, hand, leg, eye, foot…简简单单的英文单词也能变化无穷?同样的单词前面后面搭一搭就有不同意思? 1. Cat 猫咪cat food 猫食cat house 猫屋一个字的 “cathouse” 是俚语中的「妓院」。所以要表达猫咪的房子的时候可以讲 “a cat's house”、”a house for a cat” 比较不会造成误会。 bobcat 山猫wildcat 野猫snow cat 雪猫stray cat 流浪猫 My sister always takes pity on some stray cat or dog.我姐姐常常可怜一些无家可归的猫呀狗呀。 2. Dog 狗doghouse 狗屋“In the doghouse” 是表达状况不妙的俚语。通常是描写因为做错了事情而被打入冷宫、失去优势了。 I've been in the doghouse with my mom and dad ever since they saw my grades from last semester.自从我妈妈和爸爸看到我上学期的成绩单以后,他们一直对我很生气。 bulldog 牛头狗watchdog 看家狗underdog 弱犬;处于劣势的一方top dog 主要人物;掌控权力的人 3. Pig 猪 pigsty 猪舍;葬乱的地方Get all these dirty dishes away! The place is like a pigsty!把这些脏盘子统统拿走!这地方看上去像猪圈了! piggyback 扛在肩或背上piggybank 扑满,零钱罐piglet 小猪;尤指乳猪pigtail 猪尾 接着,其实身体不同的部位也是现成的单词大集合,手、脚、腿、眼睛就可以转换成不同单词的基础架构。 4.Hand 手handstand 用手倒立handkerchief 手帕handmade 手工製造handout传单hand towel 手巾hand-to-mouth 过一天算一天的;勉强维持的 In Waterloo, Li lived the hand-to-mouth life of a grad student.在滑铁卢,他过着研究生的紧紧巴巴的日子。 hand-me-down 别人用过的旧东西 现成的廉价衣服shorthand 速记法;速记underhanded 祕密的,不正当的The underhanded manipulation of the mega-corporation uncovered in the latest corruption case has resulted in the immediate fall of its stock values.巨型企业在最新的贪腐案中以卑鄙的手段导致该公司股票价值暴跌。 5. Foot 脚barefoot 赤脚Bigfoot 大脚族,传说中生存于北美洲西北部太平洋沿岸森林中的野人clubfoot 弯脚;畸形足In the famous novel Of Human Bondage by Somerset Maugham, the protagonist's clubfoot is a clever application of a literary symbolism that represents his emotional disability.在毛姆着名的小说《人性枷锁》中,主角的畸形足是巧妙的文学象征,它代表了他情感上的障碍。 footnote 脚注;补充说明football 足球footprint 脚印如果大家喜欢本期文章请点右上角的转发将我们我的文章转发至朋友圈推荐给喜欢英语的朋友扫描下方二维码↓学习更多实用地道口语表达↓
Summary: "Uncomfortably funny." This week Andrea and Lisa talk about the genre-bending genius of Sorry To Bother You and how it is a film that manages to speak to everyone. Also discussed: Don DeLillo, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, and working in telemarketing. Show notes: White Noise by Don DeLillo Of Human Bondage by W. Somerset Maugham Persephone Books Sorry To Bother You trailer "The Message" by the Coup (Boots Riley) Norma Rae trailer Game Night trailer Idiocracy trailer Recommendations: Andrea: The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel (Amazon Prime) Lisa: "Shine on with Reese" (TV) Music credits: "Back to the '90s" by Douglas Mulvey aka D-REX From Free Music Archive CC BY 4.0 Theme song "Pyro Flow" by Kevin Macleod From Incompetch CC BY 3.0 Intro bed:"OLPC" by Marco Raaphorst Courtesy of Free Music Archive CC BY-SA 3.0 NL Pop This! Links: Pop This! on TumblrPop This! on iTunes (please consider reviewing and rating us!) Pop This! on Stitcher (please consider reviewing and rating us!) Pop This! on Google PlayPop This! on TuneIn radioPop This! on TwitterPop This! on Instagram Logo design by Samantha Smith Pop This! is two women talking about pop culture. Lisa Christiansen is a broadcaster, journalist and longtime metal head. Andrea Warner is a music critic, author and former horoscopes columnist. Press play and come hang out with your two new best friends. Pop This! podcast is produced by Andrea Gin and recorded at the Vancouver Public Library's wonderful Inspiration Lab.
Vadym Yavych has spent the past 7 months on the road. I met Vadym at a club meeting for travelers in Chiang Mai Thailand last week and he was nice enough to let me talk to him about his life growing up in the Ukraine. We met up in a busy mall on Sunday afternoon (pardon the noise) before going to the movies to see Deadpool. He drops some gems on traveling, his summer waiting tables at iHop, and how to live life with intention. This man has great stories about finding happiness and is wise beyond his years. It was a pleasure to have him on, and I hope you enjoy the conversation as much as I did. Books and Programs mentioned in the podcast: https://www.ciee.org/in-the-usa/work/work-travel-usa "Of Human Bondage" https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Of_Human_Bondage Connect with Vadym: https://www.facebook.com/vadym.yavych Connect with me: https://www.instagram.com/kiaorion https://soundcloud.com/kiaorion kiaorionmail@gmail.com Become a supporter of this podcast: https://anchor.fm/creativecontact/support --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/creativecontact/support
Courtney Ch'ng Lancaster is presently a resident artist and the Shen Fellow at Soulpepper Theatre Company. She is a Founding Member of The Howland Company and a graduate of UBC, the Citadel/Banff Theatre Program and the Soulpepper Academy. Selected theatre credits include Spoon River, Blood Wedding, Incident at Vichy, The Dining Room, Eurydice, Of Human Bondage, Marat/Sade, Alligator Pie, Idiot’s Delight, The Barber of Seville, The Royal Comedians, The Crucible, Death of a Salesman, Assistant Director on The Anger in Ernest and Ernestine (Soulpepper); The Flood Thereafter (Canadian Stage); As You Like It (Blue Bridge); Pride and Prejudice (Citadel); 52 Pick-Up (Co-Director, Howland Company). Screen credits include The Drawer Boy feature film, Murdoch Mysteries, Fringe, Supernatural and Shattered. http://www.courtneylancaster.com/@courtneyvlhttp://www.theatreinamorata.com/@theainamorataStageworthy:http://www.stageworthypodcast.com Twitter @stageworthyPod Facebook: http://facebook.com/stageworthyPod
Part 2 of our 'Sisters under the Skin' series, of which Joan Crawford was featured in part 1, this episode is all about Bette. We celebrate a queen of Woman's Pictures through three of her finest films: Of Human Bondage (1934), Marked Woman (1937) and Now, Voyager (1942). This is also our last episode of the year but we will return in January fresh smelling with the fabulous Barbara Stanwyck. Sources: Considine, S. (1989) Bette & Joan: The Divine Feud. New York: Dutton. Davis, B. (1962) The Lonely Life. (with Sanford Dody). New York: Lancer Books. -- (1987) This ‘N That (with Michael Herskowitz). New York: Putnam. Dody, S. (1980) Giving Up the Ghost: A Writer’s Life Among the Stars. Lanham: M Evans and Co. Eckert, C. (1973) ‘The Anatomy of a Proletarian Film: Warner's Marked Woman’ Film Quarterly Vol. 27 No. 2 (Winter 1973-1974) pp. 10-24. Fuller, E. (1992) Me and Jezebel New York: Berkley. Marked Woman (1937) Dir. Lloyd Bacon [DVD] Warner Brothers. Now Voyager (1942) Dir. Irving Rapper [DVD] Warner Brothers. Of Human Bondage (1934) Dir. James Cromwell [YouTube] RKO Pictures. Sherman, V. (1996) Studio Affairs: My Life as a Film Director. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. Stine, W. (1974) Mother Goddamn: Bette Davis Hawthorn Books. http://sensesofcinema.com/2001/feature-articles/spinster/
Christopher and Lydia explore “pre-code” hollywood and get tied up in 1934’s “Of Human Bondage” Oethel ratings for this month, Lydia – 3 Œ’s Christopher – 3 Œ’s Promo: Saturday B-Movie Reel – http://www.saturdaybmoviereel.com/ (Also check out Cinema Psyops – http://cinemapsyops.podbean.com/) (The song "Memory Subtract" by seven7hwave used under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported […]
Of Human Bondage is a 1934 American drama film directed by John Cromwell and is widely regarded by critics as the film that made Bette Davis a star. A young man finds himself attracted to a cold and unfeeling waitress who may ultimately destroy them both.Of Human Bondage (1934).mp4
In the week of the much anticipated release of "Fifty Shades of Grey", Matthew Sweet features the Danny Elfman score and considers film music inspired by obsession. The programme includes music from Of Human Bondage; American Beauty; The Talented Mr Ripley; Perfume: The Story of a Murderer; Peeping Tom; Lolita; Eyes Wide Shut; Fatal Attraction; Last Tango In Paris and Sleeping With the Enemy. The Classic Score of the Week is Bernard Herrmann's "Vertigo".
This week my father Frederick Seinfelt returns to Word Patriots. We will briefly discuss the archetypal Bildungsroman “Wilhelm Meister’s Apprenticeship” and several other early German specimens or representatives of the genre and then examine three prominent 20th Century educational or coming of age novels —William Somerset Maugham’s “Of Human Bondage,” Thomas Mann’s “The Magic Mountain” and George Santayana’s “The Last … Read more about this episode...
The FORD THEATER, sponsored by the Ford Motor Company, presented hour long dramas first on NBC for one only season. The series moved to CBS for its second and last season. There were 39 NBC and 39 CBS hour- long shows (not verified). The show initially received an unfavorable review from the New York Times for poor script adaptation but was still highly rated for the actors' performance and overall production. The show was supposed to feature only original scripts but had to forgo that plan due to lack of quality material. The first season on NBC used radio actors under the direction of George Zachary. Martin Gabel announced the first show but was soon replaced by Kenneth Banghart. The second season, on CBS, used Hollywood screen actors in the lead roles, supported by radio actors. Fletcher Markle, who previously produced CBS's STUDIO ONE series, was the producer for the second season. Although a short series, it still has some of radio's best dramas. THIS EPISODE:October 29, 1948. CBS network, KNX, Los Angeles aircheck. "Of Human Bondage". Sponsored by: Ford, Bulova Watch (local). Not auditioned. Ray Milland, Joan Lorring, Somerset Maugham (author), Fletcher Markle (host, director), Hedley Rennie, Susan Douglas, Jack Manning, Elwood Hoffman (adaptor), Cy Feuer (conductor), Rita Vale, Robert Dryden, Miriam Wolfe, Neal Fitzgerald, Gregory Morton. 57:19.