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This podcast hit paid subscribers' inboxes on Oct. 14. It dropped for free subscribers on Oct. 21. To receive future episodes as soon as they're live, and to support independent ski journalism, please consider an upgrade to a paid subscription. You can also subscribe to the free tier below:WhoRalph Lewis, General Manager of Pleasant Mountain (formerly Shawnee Peak), MaineRecorded onSeptember 9, 2024About Pleasant MountainClick here for a mountain stats overviewOwned by: Boyne Resorts, which also owns:Located in: Bridgton, MaineYear founded: 1938Pass affiliations: New England Gold Pass: 3 days, no blackoutsClosest neighboring ski areas: Cranmore (:33), King Pine (:39), Attitash (:46), Black Mountain NH (:48), Sunday River (:53), Wildcat (:58), Mt. Abram (:56), Lost Valley (:59)Base elevation: 600 feetSummit elevation: 1,900 feetVertical drop: 1,300 feetSkiable Acres: 239Average annual snowfall: 110 inchesTrail count: 47 (25% advanced, 50% intermediate, 25% beginner)Lift count: 6 (1 high-speed quad, 1 fixed-grip quad, 2 triple chairs, 2 surface lifts – total includes Summit Express quad, anticipated to open for the 2024-25 ski season; view Lift Blog's inventory of Pleasant Mountain's lift fleet)Why I interviewed himPleasant Mountain is loaded with many of the attributes of great - or at least useful - ski areas: bottom-to-top chairlifts, a second base area to hack the crowds, night skiing, a nuanced trail network that includes wigglers through the woods and interstate-width racing chutes, good stuff for kids, an easy access road that breaks right off a U.S. highway, killer views, a tight community undiluted by destination skiers, and a simpleness that makes you think “yeah this is pretty much what I thought a Maine ski area would be.”But the place has been around since 1938, which was 15 U.S. presidents ago. Parts of Pleasant feel musty and dated. Core skier services remain smushed between the access road and the bottom of the lifts, squeezed by that kitchen-in-a-camper feeling that everything could use just a bit more space. The baselodge feels improvised, labyrinthian, built for some purpose other than skiing. I would believe that it used to be a dairy barn housing 200 cows or a hideout for bootleggers and bandits or the home of an eccentric grandmother who kept aardvarks for pets before I would believe that anyone built this structure to accommodate hundreds of skiers on a winter weekend.American skiing, with few exceptions, follows a military/finance-style up-or-out framework. You either advance or face discharge, which in skiing means falling over dead in the snow. Twenty-five years ago, the notion of a high-speed lift at Alta would have been sacrilege. The ski area has four now, including a six-pack, and nobody ever even mentions it. Saddleback rose from the grave partly because they replaced a Napolean-era double chair with a high-speed quad. Taos – Ikon and Mountain Collective partner Taos – held out for eons before installing its first detachable in 2018 (the mountain now has two). One of the new owner's first acts at tiny Bousquet, Massachusetts was to level the rusty baselodge and build a new one.Pleasant needed to start moving up. Thirteen hundred vertical feet is too many vertical feet to ascend on a fixed-grip lift in southern New England. There are too many larger options too nearby where skiers don't have to do that. Sure, Magic, Smuggs, and MRG have fended off ostentatious modernization by tapping nostalgia as a brand, but they are backstopped by the kind of fistfighting terrain and natural snow that Pleasant lacks. To be a successful city-convenient New England ski area in the 2020s, you're going to have to be a modern ski area.That's happening now, at an encouraging clip, under Boyne Resorts' ownership. Pleasant was fine before, kept in good repair and still relevant even in a crowded market. It could have hung around for decades no matter what. But the big passes aren't going anywhere and the fast lifts aren't going anywhere and ski areas need to change along with skier expectations of what a ski area ought to be. That's happening now at Pleasant Mountain, and it's damn fun to watch.What we talked aboutAt long last, a high-speed lift up Pleasant Mountain; why the new lift won't have a midstation; why the summit triple had to go; taking out the same lift at two different mountains decades apart; when the mountain will sell old triple chairs, and where the proceeds for those will go; will the new lift overcrowd the mountain?; why Pleasant doesn't consider this a used lift even though its bones came from Sunday River; being part of Boyne versus being an indie on an island; Pleasant Mountain in the ‘70s; building Bear Peak at Attitash; returning to a childhood place when you're no longer a child; the Homer family legacy; Boyne buys Shawnee and changes the name back to “Pleasant”; “the big question is, what do we do with the land to the west of us?” as far as potential ski area expansion goes; how Pleasant interacts with Boyne's other New England ski areas; why Pleasant hasn't joined the Ikon Pass like all of Boyne's other ski areas; the evolution and future of Pleasant Mountain on the New England Pass; whether the Sunnyside triple is next in line for a high-speed upgrade; night-skiing; snowmaking; and potential baselodge expansion. This pod also features some of the coolest background noise ever, as we hear the helicopter flying these towers for the new summit lift:Lewis sent me some photos after the call:Why I thought that now was a good time for this interviewBoyne came in and went to work doing Boyne things. That means snowmaking that can bury a brontosaurus. More parking. Food trucks. Tweaks to the trail network. Better grooming. Access to the Maine bigsters with a Pleasant season pass. And a bunch of corporate streamlining that none of us notice but that fortify the bump for long-term stability.But what we've all been waiting for are the new lifts. Or lift. It would always be the Summit Triple that would go first. The other chairs gathered around Big Jim (as he was known around the yard), and delivered their eulogies on that day three years ago when Boyne bought its fourth New England ski area. They all had stories to share. Breakdowns and wind holds. Liftlines and rainy days. Long summers just sitting there, waiting for something to do. Better to hear the tributes before the chairs stopped spinning, before they were auctioned off and sent to sentry backyard firepits from Portsmouth to Farmington, before the towers were scrapped and recycled into steel support beams for a Bangor outlet mall. Then they gathered round to listen.“What's it like to have a midstation?” asked Pine Quad.“Did you have electricity in the ‘90s, or were you powered by a woodstove?” asked Rabbit Run Triple, born in 2014.“Is it true that from the top of North Peak at Loon, you can see four Canadian states?” asked Sunnyside Triple.“In Canada, they're called ‘metric states,'” Summit Express Triple answered sagely. And they all nodded in awe.And then Boyne sawed the whole thing into pieces and trucked a better lift down from Sunday River to replace it. The whole project probably took a bit longer than Pleasant Mountain locals would have liked, but hey Boyne restored the ski area's original name in the meantime which was a nifty distraction. And now the new lift is here and it isn't new but it looks new and was rebuilt like a ‘60s muscle car so that the garaged version you see today is better than anything you would have seen on the street when CCR was new and cool.I don't know what Boyne's going to do when they run out of lifts to upgrade. Right now it's like 10 every year and each of them sleek as a fighter jet and nearly as expensive. But impactful, meaningfully changing how skiers experience a mountain. The new tram at Big Sky feels like a rocket launch to a moon landing. Camelot 6 at The Highlands – 487 vertical feet with bubbles and heated seats – is so over the top that riders travel from Michigan to Austria on the 42-second ride. Even the International triple chair at Alpental will blow the sidewalls off one of the best pure ski mountains in the Pacific Northwest, humble as a three-person chair sounds in this itemization of megalifts.Pleasant Mountain's new Summit Express – which replaces a Summit Express that was actually a Summit Regular-Speed Fixed-Grip Lift – will transform the ski area. It will change how skiers think about the place and how they experience it. It instantly promotes the mountain to the 21st century, where New England skiers expect detachable chairs anytime a lift rises more than a thousand vertical feet. And it assures the locals that yeah Boyne is in this. They've got plans. And we're just getting started here.What I got wrong* There were a bunch of times that I called the ski area “Shawnee” or “Shawnee Peak.” Yes I got the memo but I don't know names are hard.* I said the six-state New England region was “like half the size of Colorado,” but the difference is not quite that dramatic. New England covers 71,988 square miles (nearly half of which – 30,843 square miles – is Maine), compared to 103,610 square miles for Colorado. I feel like I've made this mistake, and this correction, before.* I made the keen observation that Pleasant Mountains was “Loon's” fourth ski area in the region and third in the state of Maine. I meant “Boyne's.”Why you should ski Pleasant MountainPleasant Mountain fits into this odd category of ski areas that you only visit if you live within an hour of the parking lot, and only if that hour is east-southeast of the ski area. There's too much Conway competition west. Too much Sunday River north. Too easy to get to Loon if you're south. Which is another way of saying that Pleasant Mountain is an overlooked member of New England's ski area roster, a lost-unless-you're-from-Portland afterthought for skiers distracted by New Hamsphire and Vermont and Sugarloaf.That's not the same thing as saying that this is not a very nice ski area. Nothing stays in business for 86 years by accident. Skiers just don't think about it unless they have to. Pleasant isn't on any national multimountain pass, isn't particularly convenient to get to, isn't a bargain, doesn't harbor a pocket of secret hardcore terrain.But you should go anyway. Even if all you do is ride the lift to the summit and stare out at the water below. The views are primo. But the ride down is fun too. Twisty narrow New England fall lines at their playful, unpredictable best. The pitches aren't overly steep, but they are consistent. This is one of the more approachable thousand-plus-footers in the country. And Maine is one of the more pleasant states in the country (no pun intended). Good people up there. A nice place to break your leg, I'm told. I'll take any excuse to visit Maine. You can go ahead and see that for yourself.Podcast NotesOn Pleasant having one of New England's highest vertical drops with no high-speed liftPleasant Mountain is one of the last New England ski areas with more than 1,000 vertical feet to install a detachable lift, but there are still a 11 left. Twelve if you count Dartmouth Skiway, which I will because I suspect their reported vertical drop may be more honest than some of the ski areas claiming 1,000-plus:On Boyne rebuilding old detach quadsBoyne has rebuilt quite a few high-speed quads over the past half-decade:Loon GM Brian Norton delivered an excellent breakdown of his mountain's rebuild of Kanc/Seven Brothers in his 2022 podcast appearance.On early-70s Pleasant MountainLewis recalls his 1970s childhood days skiing Pleasant Mountain. The place was a fairly simple operation in 1970:Within a couple of years, however, the trail footprint had evolved into something remarkably similar to modern-day Pleasant Mountain:On Pleasant's claim to having the first chairlift in the state of MainePleasant appears to be home to Maine's first double chair, a Constam make named “Old Blue,” that ran from 1955 to ‘84. According to New England Ski History, a now-defunct operation named Michaud Hill installed a single-person chairlift for the 1945-46 ski season. The lift only lasted for a couple of years, however, before being “possibly removed following 1947-48 season, with parts possibly used at [also now defunct] Thorn Mountain, New Hampshire.”On Sunday River as a backwaterI've covered this extensively, but it's still a trip to look at 1980s trailmaps of a teeny-tiny Sunday River:On ASC's rosterLewis spent time as part of American Skiing Company, which at its height had collected a now widely distributed bundle of mountains:On Bear Peak at AttitashLewis helped build two of the largest modern ski expansions in New Hampshire. Bear Peak, installed between 1994 and '95 on the proposed-but-never-developed Big Bear development next door to Attitash, more or less doubled the size of the ski area. Here's a before-and-after look at the American Skiing Company mega-project:On Sugarbush's Lift-tacular summerThose American Skiing Company days were wild in New England, marking the last major investment surge until the one we're witnessing over the past five years. One of the most incredible single-summer efforts unfolded at Sugarbush in 1995, when the company installed six chairlifts: Super Bravo Express, Gatehouse Express, and the North Lynx Triple on the Lincoln side; North Ridge Express and the Green Mountain Quad on the Mt. Ellen side; and the two-mile-long Slide Brook Express (still the longest chairlift in the world), linking the two.Current Sugarbush GM John Hammond, who occupied a much more junior role at the mountain in the mid-90s, recalled that summer when he joined the podcast in 2020.On vintage LoonLewis eventually moved from Attitash to Loon, where he found himself part of his second generational expansion: South Peak. Here's Loon around 2003:Expansion unfolded in phases, beginning in 2007. By 2011, the new peak was mostly built out:Loon actually expanded it again in 2022:On Loon busynessWhile it's difficult to verify skier visit numbers exactly, since ski areas, for reasons I don't understand, lock them up as though they were the nuclear launch codes, they occasionally slip out. And all available evidence suggests that Loon is, by far, New Hampshire's busiest ski area. Here's a dated snapshot gathered by New England Ski History:On Loon being the best of New HampshireI claim, without really qualifying it, that Loon is New Hampshire's “premier ski area.” What I meant by that was that the ski area owns the state's most sophisticated snowmaking and lift system. That assessment is a bit subjective, and Bretton Woods Nation could fight me about it and I wouldn't really have much of a counterargument.However, there is another way to look at the “best,” and that is in terms of pure ski terrain. Among the state's ski areas, Cannon and Wildcat generally split this category. Again, it's subjective, but on a powder day, those two are going to give you the most interesting terrain when you consider glades, steeps, bumps, etc.And then you have a bunch of ski areas in Vermont, and a handful in Maine, that are right in this fight. And since New England states are roughly the size of suburban Atlanta Costcos, it makes sense to consider them as a whole. Which means this is a good place to re-insert my standard Ski Areas of New England Inventory:On Booth Creek's rosterLoon was, for a time, one of eight ski areas owned by Booth Creek:Today, the company's only ski area is Sierra-at-Tahoe.On the Homer family and “Shawnee Peak”Pleasant Mountain's somewhat bizarre history includes its purchase by the owners of Shawnee Mountain, Pennsylvania in 1988. Per New England Ski History:Following the 1987-88 season, the owners of Pleasant Mountain found themselves in financial trouble. That off season, they sold the ski area to Shawnee Mountain Corp. for $1.4 million. Pleasant Mountain was subsequently renamed to "Shawnee Peak," the name of the owners' Pennsylvania ski area.Current Shawnee Mountain CEO Nick Fredericks, who has worked at that Pennsylvania ski area for its entire existence, recalled the whole episode in detail when he joined me on the podcast three years ago.Out-of-state ownership didn't last long. New England Ski History:Circa 1992, the parent company decided to divest its skiing holdings, resulting in banks taking control of Shawnee Peak. After a couple of season on the bubble, Shawnee Peak was purchased by Tom's of Maine executive Chet Homer in September of 1994. Though Homer considered restoring the ski area's original name, he opted to keep the Shawnee Peak identity due to the brand that had been established.In 2021, Homer sold the ski area to Boyne Resorts, who changed the name back to “Pleasant Mountain” in 2022. Chet's son, Geoff, recently acquired the operating lease for the small Blue Hills, Massachusetts ski area:On expansion potential to Pleasant Mountain's westPleasant Mountain owns a large parcel skier's left off the summit that could substantially expand the mountain's skiable terrain:Boyne has been aggressive with New England expansions over the past several years, opening a massive new terrain pod at Sugarloaf, expanding South Peak at Loon, and adding the family-friendly Merrill Hill at Sunday River. Boyne has the resources, organizational knowhow, and will to pull off a similar project at Pleasant. I'd expect the new terrain to be included whenever the company puts together the sort of long-term visions it's articulated for Sugarloaf, Sunday River, Loon, Boyne Mountain, The Highlands, Summit at Snoqualmie, and Big Sky.That expansion will not include these trails teased skier's right of the current Sunnyside pod in this 52-year-old trailmap – Pleasant either donated or sold this land to a nature conservancy some years ago.On Pleasant's slow expansion onto the New England PassHere's how access has evolved between Pleasant Mountain and the remainder of Boyne's portfolio since the company's 2021 acquisition:* 2021-22: Boyne purchased Pleasant in September, 2021 – too late to include the ski area on any of the company's pass products for the coming winter.* 2022-23: New England Pass excludes Pleasant as a full partner, but top-tier passes include three days each at Pleasant and Boyne's other ski areas across North America; top-tier Pleasant passes included three days to split between Sugarloaf, Sunday River, and Loon, but no access to Boyne's other resorts.* 2023-24: New England Pass access remains same as 2022-23; top-tier Pleasant Mountain passes now include three days each at Boyne's non-New England resorts, including Big Sky.* 2024-25: New England Pass holders can now add a Pleasant Mountain night-skiing pass at a substantial discount; Pleasant Mountain access to remainder of Boyne's portfolio remains unchanged.Since Pleasant Mountain's season pass remains so heavily discounted against top-tier New England Passes ($849 early-bird versus $1,389), it seems unlikely that adding Pleasant as a full pass partner would do much to overcrowd the smaller mountain. Most skiers who lay out that much for their big-time pass will probably want to spend their weekends at the bigger mountains up north. Pleasant's expansion, whenever it happens, will also increase the chances that Pleasant could join the New England or Ikon Passes.The Storm explores the world of lift-served skiing year-round. Join us.The Storm publishes year-round, and guarantees 100 articles per year. This is article 65/100 in 2024, and number 565 since launching on Oct. 13, 2019. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.stormskiing.com/subscribe
Style expert Kristina Zias joins Drew to give one lucky audience member a makeover she'll never forget! See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
The boys have closed the damper, swept out the firebox and moved operations to the front porch for remainer of the spring and summer. Spring peepers and hoot owls will provide ambient sound as the rockers get a workout on the rough-sawn boards at close of day. But in this episode, the fire is still crackling and the conversation drifts to the subject of multi-purpose dogs, mostly coonhounds operating outside the normal bounds of track and tree. It's a good listen and a thought-provoker for anyone bold enough to consider using Old Blue to perform what many would consider unnatural acts. Lean in and see if you don't find this to be some interesting stuff. It will be your last chance to spit on the stove for a while.
The boys have closed the damper, swept out the firebox and moved operations to the front porch for remainer of the spring and summer. Spring peepers and hoot owls will provide ambient sound as the rockers get a workout on the rough-sawn boards at close of day. But in this episode, the fire is still crackling and the conversation drifts to the subject of multi-purpose dogs, mostly coonhounds operating outside the normal bounds of track and tree. It's a good listen and a thought-provoker for anyone bold enough to consider using Old Blue to perform what many would consider unnatural acts. Lean in and see if you don't find this to be some interesting stuff. It will be your last chance to spit on the stove for a while.
The animated hosts of the Cult Film Showdown explore the strangest time in human history - the late 20th century. A transitional time when rap music was attacked by Congress during the week, then dressed up for kids' viewing on Saturday mornings. Watch along at https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLRkso3AeKZUk2kT_iXfXP8PCb6iaufS48&si=7nKxhyHpiA2z0QQm Episode 9 "Kid 'n' Play" Centers on hip-hop duo Kid 'n Play. Stresses positive role models, teaching children cooperation and staying out of trouble. Kid 'n Play is a 1990 animated cartoon series based on the real-life hip hop duo Kid 'n Play. It ran for one season on NBC from September 8 to December 8, 1990. On the show, Kid 'n Play were portrayed as teenagers, along with their friend Jazzy, their producer Hurbie and their DJ Wiz, but their recording careers remained the same as in real life, as did their character traits. Production was by Marvel Productions and Saban Entertainment. The real Kid 'n Play appeared in live-action wraparounds of the cartoons, but voice actors took over for the animated versions of the duo. The show stressed positive role models, teaching children how to get along with each other and stay out of trouble. Akin to the House Party films, Play was the less responsible member of the duo, cooking up get rich quick schemes, while Kid, the more responsible member, would usually be made to clean up messes. Oftentimes the issue would be resolved by the characters' girlfriends, or sometimes by an elderly jazz musician who wore a blue beret and was aptly named "Old Blue". Also along the crew is Kid's Mohawk pet dog Hairy. The lessons ranged from serious to lighter fare. One of the "less serious" episodes dealt with Kid's father under the impression hip hop is bad and Kid not having the means to put it in a positive light. Old Blue offers to help by sending Kid on a trip back in time to the era of jazz and 1920s speakeasies to help better understand its roots. Find out more about this great series at https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0098840/reference/ You can support our show and get access to exclusive content at https://www.patreon.com/cultfilmshowdown New levels added! Subscribe on Apple Podcasts Follow us on Instagram
Matt Swanson is a honest man Got his start in midget racing at the age of 8 years old just getting his feet wet in dirt racing.Matt is a third generation driver his grand father did drag racing and his father got into running Busch North along with PASS At the age of 9 he went from getting his feet wet to running 130 feature races in 1 year and having quarter midgets getting air freighted from Colorado after selling a car he was racing of a chassis deal he hadHe then jumped up to Tour Mods where he got his first start at Star Speedway while Bobby Sr over looked the facility cause no other track would allow him out there at his age to run the Tour Type Mods became a Tour Type Mod Champion at Star in 2014 under car owner Marco Turcotte He then jumped down to go SK Light racing at Stafford and absolutely hated it going from 600 HP to a crate car wasnt his cup of tea then jumped into VRMS along with the Nascar Whelen Modified Touring Series 2016 became Rookie of the year with his house car earning a couple top 10s along with top 5 finishes for the year along with running Nema Lites at Seekonk that year and making his first Pro Stock start at Seekonk aswell and came home 6th As years went on he caught the attention of the owners of Old Blue #3 Boheler Racing Enterprises that got in contact with Matts family and started a 3 year journey for him in that prestigious car and team.There he learned he can keep up with the best of them but also learned to start setting pace and to stay out of trouble with a car that can win a feature on the NWMTS, they parted ways and Matt just went back to running his house car starting out at 10 races with goal to win all 10 races and to keep his racing fun going.He then linked up with Howie #97 NESS owner and started running big blocks first race being at Thunder Road the most technical track in all of New England running 9 second lap times. He shares the differences going into a modified or a 350 super into a big block and how you have to caress the steering wheel and not to run a big visor helmet cause the air will definitely try to rip it off and how big aerodynamics deal with one of those cars Great episode with a great story and many laughs with Swanson ! Enjoy and make sure to share the episode with friends !Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/roughing-fenders-podcast--5244198/support.
Diving into Kenny Chesney's album Be as You Are. Recipes mentioned in the show Email: songlinesandtanlines@gmail.com Twitter: @zombiebeach Instagram: aparrotheaddad Kofi: ko-fi.com/anthonyrenfro Books and Short Stories: Amazon US Amazon UK Barnes and Noble Apple --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thedeepcuts/message
This episode can be enjoyed as a regular podcast or as a companion to the Free Zombie Road tour. If you can't make it, we've got you covered with the YouTube video at... https://youtu.be/zBqAGqXC7JQ Merch is also available at https://cryptiquepodcaststore.com Zombie Road has produced an array of hauntings including Shadow People, a railroad worker's spirit, a lady in white, Old Blue, the Mummy, a monkey man, flannel man, and more. Deaths were commonplace in the area beginning with Native American battlegrounds, suicides, accidental deaths, and murders. The tour will be 100% free and we will have some stickers, racerbacks, and ringspun cotton tees for sale so bring some cash. Join us for a Halloween party like no other, on the infamous Zombie Road! We'll see ya there! Saturday October 28th @ 12PM Central Time Sherman Beach Park 1582 Saint Paul Road Ballwin, MO 63021
We are planning a free Zombie Road tour on Saturday October 28th at noon. All are welcome but the tour will include descriptions of violence, death, and hauntings. Zombie road boasts an array of hauntings including Shadow People, a railroad worker's spirit, a lady in white, Old Blue, the Mummy, a monkey man, flannel man, and more. Deaths were commonplace in the area beginning with Native American battlegrounds, suicides, accidental deaths, and murders. The tour will be 100% free and we will have some merch for sale so bring some cash. Join us for a Halloween party like no other, on the infamous Zombie Road! We'll see ya there! Saturday October 28th @ 12PM Central Time Sherman Beach Park 1582 Saint Paul Road Ballwin, MO 63021
This week on the Happy MonsterCast, the rascals must bust up a wedding – or save it. The rascals are chasing a rumor of the son of a Big Boy in Firpo, and must decide whether he is an ally or an enemy. Featuring Ron, Brendan, Jung Soo, Bob and Frank of the Foundry Monsters. Characters: preacher Piety Jackson (Brendan), gouger Karl son of Karl (Frank), mountain magician Buck Grayson (Bob), bootleg distiller Booker Noe (Jung Soo), and itinerant crooner Old Blue (Ron). Well, folks, we here at the Happy MonsterCast must apologize – we had an epic technical fail with the second part of the Fiddler's Convention, and ended up with no audio from either our primary or backup recording. That said, here's a quick update on what happened. The rascals managed to defeat the demons, and Old Blue almost one the prize fiddle – but a small, otherworldly boy managed to snatch the victory away. The crew followed the boy into the forest, where he offered the fiddle back to a demon purporting to be its deceased owner. The heroes fought off the demon and took the fiddle, but it left them with a mighty large set of questions. Next day, the company guards descended on the festival, and with help from the locals, our heroes fought them off, acquiring a healthy share of company weapons along the way. And now, on with the story.
Old Blue's been invited to the Fiddler's Convention, and the crew heads there hoping to find allies in their new-found resistance. Featuring Foundry Monsters Brendan, Ron, Bob, Jung Soo, and Frank.
In this episode, Ed Frawley shares a question from the Ask Cindy database. Today's question is about a 3-month-old blue heeler puppy that likes to bite and nip when it gets excited. Ed gives his opinion and feedback on the situation.| Links mentioned: Your Puppy 8 Weeks to 12 Months by Ed Frawley: https://leerburg.com/120.htm | Raising Your Puppy by Michael Ellis: https://leerburg.com/ellispuppydvd.htm | Living with Your Puppy: Establishing Pack Structure by Ed Frawley: https://leerburg.com/puppy-pack-structure.htm | FREE - How We Manage Dogs In Our Home - Online Course: https://university.leerburg.com/Catalog/viewCourse/cid/14
Ed Frawley 09:02 no
Roger recounts some bidding wars against the likes of Michael Jackson and an associate of Frank Sinatra. He also tells how Old Blue eyes did him a huge favor as well as a secret the Sinatra family would probably not want you to hear. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
It's a week late, sure, but we've got more blue sorceries than ever. Check out these sweet forgotten beauties. Rules: 1. Under 2000 decks on EDHRec.com 2. First Printed BEFORE 8ED HEY! We got a YouTube channel where we'll be uploading our episodes, as well! Check it out and SUBSCRIBE! We might upload the occasional non-episode there as well. Temple of the False Pod on YouTube! Come bask with us in the casual formats, and may your fifth land always be the Temple. We are available wherever podcasts are found, so subscribe and leave us a review! It helps us out and drop us a line at falsepodmtg@gmail.com to tell us about your big plays! You can also find us on Twitter: @FalsePodMTG We are: Andy Stocker (@andyweekend) Bruce Richard (@manaburned)
Elias Makos is joined by Trudie Mason, Veteran Newscaster here at CJAD 800and Jonathan Kalles, Senior Consultant at McMillan Vantage Policy Group and former advisor to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. In a letter sent to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Quebec Premier François Legault is pleading with the federal government to transfer all asylum seekers entering at Roxham Road to other provinces Montreal is shocked - shocked I tell you! - that developers are uninterested in the city's wishes for an affordable housing “eco-quartier” at the old Blue Bonnets site The desertion of Montreal's city centre becomes an increasing problem that we are faced with
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/1997/11/10/fathers-old-blue-cardigan
We've got a bit of a special edition of Overdrive Radio for you this week. There's a guest host of sorts, who's going to walk us through a conversation with Chace Barber, cofounder of Edison Motors. If Barber's name sounds familiar, you may have read Overdrive Executive Editor Alex Lockie's reporting of some of what Barber's been doing with a diesel-electric concept that's similar to the way locomotive work. The system features effectively an on-board diesel generator serving only to charge in this case a lithium ion battery powering an electric motor capable of monster loads of both horsepower and torque. In the case of Barber and company's prototype, that's all inside a beautiful and beautifully tough old 1969 Kenworth they call, simply, Old Blue. Log hauler, writer, and podcaster Gord Magill recently drew out more of Chace Barber's company's origin story and plenty about just where his electric-drive trucks stand to be best applied in his Voice of GO(R)D podcast. Gord's roots, like Chache Barber's, are in Canada, though Magill now calls the United States home, as our own "Long Haul Paul" Marhoefer wrote in his Faces of the Road series talk with Magill: https://www.overdriveonline.com/overdrive-extra/article/15289327/faces-of-the-road-gord-magill As noted, Barber's Edison Motors has been making a name for itself by taking advantage of big strides in battery technology to repurpose something of an old general concept for new application, with big potential. It's not exactly a hybrid diesel-electric in the manner of much of the hybrid technology in cars today, as he told Magill, and over-the-road trucking benefits are decidedly less than more intense applications like log hauling. Yet OTR could benefit in form of fuel savings to the tune of a potential 5-10 percent or more. There's some perhaps non-obvious benefits, too -- think things that might fall into the "weird government" classification Magill mentions in the podcast (electric-drive trucks ELD/road tax-exempt?) -- spelled out the podcast. Find the full two-hour conversation in the Voice of GO(R)D podcast via this link to Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/01IBVRZ1pokC94ZXvguJfR Here on Stitcher: https://www.stitcher.com/show/voice-of-go-r-d/episode/old-trucks-new-tech-how-a-b-c-logger-is-making-electric-trucks-less-cringe-211086897 Here on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/voice-of-go-r-d/id1663362014 Magill's writing, featured elsewhere in outlets like Newsweek among many others, is also accessible via his Substack page at this link: https://autonomoustruckers.substack.com/ Alex Lockie's reporting on Barber and his Edison Motors cofounder Eric Little: https://www.overdriveonline.com/business/article/15301066/loghauling-truckings-toughest-niche
Drive-by Truckers "Dragon Pants"Fleetwood Mac "Like It This Way"Fats Domino "The Big Beat"Aerial M "Wedding Song No.2"Valerie June "You And I"Hound Dog Taylor & The HouseRockers "Give Me Back My Wig (Live)"AC/DC "Let There Be Rock"John Fahey "Uncloudy Day"Adia Victoria "Stuck In The South"Andrew Bird "Underlands"Elizabeth Cotten "Going Down the Road Feeling Bad"Craig Finn "God in Chicago"Ian Noe "Strip Job Blues 1984"Esther Phillips "Tonight I'll Be Staying Here with You"R.L. Burnside "Miss Maybelle"Hank Williams "I'm Sorry for You My Friend"Joan Shelley "Amberlit Morning (feat. Bill Callahan)"John R. Miller "Lookin' Over My Shoulder"Max Roach "Garvey's Ghost (feat. Carlos "Patato" Valdes & Carlos "Totico" Eugenio)"Ranie Burnette "Hungry Spell"Nina Nastasia "This Is Love"Thurston Harris "I Got Loaded (In Smokey Joe's Joint)"Folk Implosion "Sputnik's Down"Slim Harpo "I'm a King Bee"Wipers "Youth of America"The Scotty McKay Quintet "The Train Kept a-Rollin'"Mississippi John Hurt "Sliding Delta"Magnolia Electric Co. "Montgomery"Dr. John "Memories of Professor Longhair"Billie McKenzie "I'd Rather Drink Muddy Water"Little Walter "Juke"Elvis Presley "Trying to Get to You"Billie Jo Spears "Get Behind Me Satan And Push"Ray Charles "Georgia On My Mind"Freddy King "Hide Away"Furry Lewis "Old Blue"Billie Holiday "What a Little Moonlight Can Do"Bob Dylan "One More Cup of Coffee"The Primitives "How Do Yu Feel"Ramones "Blitzkrieg Bop"Ruth Brown "Lucky Lips"Bonnie 'Prince' Billy "A Minor Place"Pearl Bailey "Frankie and Johnnie"fIREHOSE "In Memory Of Elizabeth Cotton"James Booker "On The Sunny Side Of The Street"Ray Price "The Same Old Me"Mississippi Fred McDowell "My Babe"The Replacements "Here Comes a Regular"
on the resonator banjo of the third kind
on the resonator banjo of the third kind
The development of Staffordshire transfer-printed wares.
It's a classic catch-up with mom that starts with a dramatic reading of her viral short story Old Blue, becomes an announcement that her third New York Times bestseller Vacuuming in the Nude will be available as an audiobook on this podcast, and then somehow devolves into a scatological story-swap evoking the Thomas Crapper episode.
The Blue Ledge Mine up above the Applegate Valley has not produced copper or zinc for close to a century now. But the extraction of those metals left a mess behind, one the federal government declared a Superfund cleanup site in 2011.CDPH just put out a health assessment, open for public comment until September 21st.
The guys start this week by talking about a road trip game you can play and well the answer we got wasn't expected. Also, we spend a little time with a flash back on the falling car market but not least, Old Blue makes it back home. This and more on todays show.--Let's Talk Cars Radio 07-16-2022
Another week digging through the records I got from texas last month. If you enjoy the show consider donating monthly via Patreon at patreon.com/dollarcountry. Patreon supporters get more episodes, bonus tracks on each episode, and early access to new merchandise among other things.
Sintonía: "Perfect Woman" - J.J. Cale "Sho-Biz Blues", "Slower Baby", "Devil´s Nurse", "Like You Used To", "Rose In The Garden", "Ain´t Love Funky" y "Steve´s Song", extraídas del álbum "Closer to You" (1994) "Days Go By", "Low Down", "Old Blue", "Doctor Told Me", "Miss Ol St. Louie", "Nobody Knows" y "If I Had A Rocket", extraídas del álbum "Guitar Man" (1996) Todas las músicas compuestas e interpretadas por J.J. Cale Escuchar audio
Si estás en la Ciudad de los Vientos puede que hayas dado con uno de nuestros protagonistas una noche cualquiera en un bar o en un club, detrás de su batería o a los platos tocado con un sombrero Stetson de piel de castor y su mercedes vintage azul aparcado en la puerta. Es el baterista nacido en Panamá y establecido en Chicago, Daniel Villarreal. Acaba de publicar uno de los mejores trabajos del año. Un disco psicodélico, magnético y divertido que redefine las reglas del nuevo jazz latinoamericano. Un álbum obligatorio, necesario y exigente. Como todo cuanto nos ocupa habitualmente en Future Beats. Tu viaje al futuro inmediato de la actualidad sonora global, bajo la prescripción y narración de Alex García Amat.He aquí, una vez más, la música que nos conmueve.
It's mothers day…and I miss my mom very much. She's been gone for almost seven years now. But I know that this is one of those albums that she would have chosen to be on the stereo. She was a poodle skirt-wearing bobby soxer when Old Blue eyes was really hot in the 1940s and 50s. And it's an entertainer both my parents were able to see in concert a couple of times. So get ready for the Sultan of Swoon in Volume 71: This Is Sinatra! for Mothers Day. https://www.britannica.com/biography/Frank-Sinatra/The-Rat-Pack-and-the-mob Credits and copyrights: Frank Sinatra – This Is Sinatra! Label: Capitol Records – T-768 Format: Vinyl, LP, Compilation, Mono, Scranton Pressing Released: 1956 Genre: Jazz, Pop Style: Big Band, Swing, Easy Listening, Vocal Recorded : April 30, 1953 – September 13, 1955 at Capitol Studio on Melrose Ave.in Hollywood. I've Got The World On A String Written-By – Harold Arlen, Ted Koehler Love And Marriage Written-By – James Van Heusen-Sammy Cahn* South Of The Border Conductor, Arranged By – Billy May Written-By – Jimmy Kennedy, Michael Carr Young-At-Heart Written-By – Carolyn Leigh, Johnny Richards My One And Only Love Written-By – Guy Wood, Robert Mellin Learnin' The Blues Written-By – Dolores Vicki Silvers I do not own the rights to this music. ASCAP, BMI licenses provided by third-party platforms for music that is not under Public Domain.
I'm always amazed when I do a podcast and somebody I've known for 25 years or longer like Veryl Goodnight manages to surprise me, and not just surprise me, but enchant me. Her enthusiasm for what she does and her love of animals is and has always been the driving force for her creativity, from childhood to now. So, artists out there who are wondering, you know, "How do I make a living or what can I do? Or How do I find my passion?" Just listen to this podcast and you're going to see passion on a different level.It's real. It's palpable. It shows through in her sculptures and in her paintings, and she's always willing to try something new, something different, whether it be horses busting through the Berlin Wall, or working on renditions of sled dogs and the whole history of the relationship between those human and canine counterparts. She looks for things that are interesting, that captivate her imagination, often tied to, I'd almost say, always tied to history in some form or fashion.She's 75, and I guarantee you the last day of her life, she's going to have either a paintbrush in her hand or clay underneath her fingers. So enjoy this one. Veryl Goodnight on Art Dealer Diaries Podcast episode 183.
We drink and discuss why Independent Bottler's are still some of the best value in Scotch. Also the LCBO botches yet another limited release, this time the Blue Spot Irish Whiskey. And Macallan 81 becomes the new oldest scotch ever bottled! The Whisky Rant Podcast Ep 25.
These days, the trains in Taiwan are very nice. They have air conditioning, and they are very fast… But when your mommy and daddy were young people, the trains in Taiwan were very different. 你爸爸媽媽小時候坐的火車,跟現在的火車很不一樣喔。 The old trains were painted blue. The old trains were slow… and guess what? They didn't have air conditioning! But, you could open the windows on the train! 老火車是藍色的,速度很慢,而且還沒有冷氣! 但是旅客可以打開窗戶。 If your mommy and daddy tell you they miss the old trains, I have good news for them… The old blue trains are coming back! They will only be used for special trips. So, if mommy and daddy want to feel young again, they can get a ticket and go ride on the old blue trains. 好消息,藍皮老火車要回來了! 雖然是特別的班次,但只要買了票就可以搭乘。 How about you? Would you like to ride on a train with no air conditioning? Although, remember… you can open the windows. 你想去坐一下沒有冷氣的火車嗎? 記住可以打開窗戶喔! Hmm… I say, sure, why not? Maybe it would be fun. But not every day! I like air conditioning, and open windows let smoke and bad air come in! Taiwan's new trains are much more comfortable. ________________________________ Vocabulary 老火車重出江湖,滿足人們對過去的懷念。 1. Train 火車。 Would you like to ride on the old blue trains? 你會想搭藍皮老火車嗎? No, not really. I prefer fast new trains. 不會,我比較喜歡快捷的新火車。 2. Air conditioning 冷氣。 I don't like trains with no air conditioning. 我不喜歡沒有冷氣的火車。 You can open the window! 你可以打開窗戶啊! Well, there's air pollution outside. 外面有空氣汙染。 3. Miss 想念。 So you don't miss the old times. 所以你不想念舊日的時光。 I miss some of it, like riding a bike everywhere. 我會想念一部份,比如說到哪裡都騎腳踏車。 4. Young 年輕的。 People often miss the time when they were young. 人們經常想念自己年輕的時候。 Not me. I was poor when I was young. 我可不。我年輕時很窮的。 我們來讀讀單字吧。 train 火車 air conditioning 冷氣 miss 想念 young 年輕的 ________________________________ Quiz 1. What color were the old trains in Taiwan? A: Pink B: Purple C: Blue 2. What DIDN'T the old trains have? A: They didn't have wheels B: They didn't have air conditioning C: They didn't have windows 3. What are the new trains in Taiwan like? A: They are fast and have air conditioning. B: They are pink and yellow. C: Taiwan doesn't have trains anymore! Answers 1 C 2 B 3 A
Indie-pop romantics Pinkish Blu are becoming an unavoidable heart-shaped dot on the radar that is the Australian music scene and in this weeks episode we had the pleasure of chatting a bit more in depth about their new EP ‘people just do good things sometimes' which is part 2 of their last EP ‘there's no such thing as good people'. Along with some lovely stories about how the band came to be and the story of their most recent single ‘Old Blue'
Welcome to our "Just the X, Ma'am!" look at the Marvel's Voices: Indigenous Voices Anthology Special! Today we will be discussing two stories... one featuring Dani Moonstar, the other featuring Silver Fox -- the latter of which gives us the origin story of Old Blue from that crazy "Tracykins" issue of Wolverine (vol.2) we covered during the first episode of From Claremont to Claremont! Also: Great Listener Mail! -- @acecomics / @cosmictmill / weirdcomicshistory@gmail.com chrisandreggie.podbean.com chrisisoninfiniteearths.com xlapsed.chrisisoninfiniteearths.com/ facebook.com/groups/90sxmen
Humans have hunted since the dawn of time and we’ve greatly relied on our intelligence as well as instincts. A successful hunt also relies on observation ,skill but most of all wisdom. David would find that without these traits his very life could have been in jeopardy. Up first is, “An Encounter in Kentucky.”And then, young Ed learns some unusual but valuable lessons while staying on his grandfather’s farm. What are they and what do they want? Generations of people have experienced and witnessed these beings known as Bigfoot. Can they co-exist?This second encounter story is from the Blue Ridge Bigfoot series and aptly named, “The Bigfoot Of The Old Blue Ridge.”----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Bigfoot Frightening Encounters, Volume 1 through 3 are now available on Audible! Click the link to get yours ! https://www.audible.com/search?searchNarrator=Michael+Singleton&ref=a_search_c3_mlNarrator_1_1_1&pf_rd_p=83218cca-c308-412f-bfcf-90198b687a2f&pf_rd_r=JTSXBFKM239ZHJBJ8BC7
Funniest one ever!
Good morning creeps! Today we bring to you three tales of equal intrigue. First up, Cassie delivers a story about an unidentifiable hitchhiker with nothing but a note and some ticket stubs in his pocket. Sophie takes a much needed break from anything related to bodily fluids and tells the Dictionary origin story with an unexpected link to Broadmoor. Finally Jen takes us home with a story of a good person who was just pushed too far. Settle in creeps, we're all in this together.
SPOKEN WORD WITH ELECTRONICS #29: "Lary King's 1984 Guide to Adult Video Cassette Movies" Hi, everyone, welcome back to the show. This week focuses on an independently produced book from 1984. Title is "Lary King's Encyclopedic Guide to Adult Video Cassette Movies" and it is a wonderful surviving snapshot of adult movies from that era. Incidentally, 1984 is the stated end of The Golden Age of Porn and the titles included, which contain films from 1960-1984, don't disappoint. Porn at its best is very clever. This is from the time adult movies were scripted, filmed (not videotaped), and these movies contained some of the funniest titles imaginable. So, in 1983, an archivist by the name of Lary King (not Larry King! we hope) endeavored to list every single one of these film titles available on VHS and LaserDisc. There are no pictures in the book, highlighting the value and insane delights of the titles themselves, naked and alone. The surviving rare book shows the variety of content from that era, and also speaks to the manageable amount of films themselves. Back in 1984, you could reasonable see EVERY American adult film in existence. Heck, it all fit in a snug 300 page book. We're happy to share the first half of film titles with an audiobook component for Side A, where a computer will read you every title, A through L. The second half of titles will post next week, as the computer got pretty exhausted. Side B continues the Charlie Pickle story with part eleven: Morrie Treemont.
I dream of travel so much I write about it. I dream of it, want a better perspective of it and eventually, we made it there. Writing for Just Checked In lets me live my travel dreams with big goals in mind: I want to take a massive road trip playing as many golf courses along the way. In this episode California Dreaming of Ocean Surf Inn and Suites, Sunset Beach Mind Trick Travel I'd Like to sit in Kenny's Old Blue Chair Information about The Journey Journal can be found here. Read more of my work on Medium.com/@NanciArvizu or at www.NanciWrites.com And - I did get to go! Read the review here at Just Checked In, Ocean Surf Inn & Suites. Please like, share, and comment so others can find this podcast :) Thank you! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/writespeakplay/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/writespeakplay/support
Colleen and Tyler recap a fun two-parter that surprisingly focuses on Haibara's deduction skills as Conan gets kidnapped. Lots of thrills in this Detective Boys case!
NEW YORK, NY - There is no time like the present for candid, if awkward, conversations about racism, perceptions and the narrowing of the divide(s) that are cause for protests, boycotts and violence here in America, and abroad. Rugby United NY, Old Blue & Roots star, Derek Lipscomb, joins New York Rugby's David Flemister and Junior Blaber in a sometimes uncomfortable conversation with Matt McCarthy re their experiences, hopes and calls for action. Watch... Listen/Download the Podcast version... Please share and join our weekly newsletter: http://rugbywrapup.com/weekly-updates/ All Segments: rugbywrapup.com/category/videos/ Find All Here: -Web: http://www.RugbyWrapUp.com -Twitter: https://twitter.com/RugbyWrapUp @RugbyWrapUp, @Matt_McCarthy00, @JonnyLewisFilms, @Junoir Blaber, @JWB_RWU, @Luke Bienstock, @Ronan Nelson, @MeetTheMatts, @Declan Yeats. -Face Book: https://www.facebook.com/RugbyWrapUp -Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/RugbyWrapUp -YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/RugbyWrapUp -Apple PodCasts: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/rugby-wrap-up/id1253199236?mt=2 #USARugby #MajorLeagueRugby #RugbyWrapUp #OldGlory #RugbyATL #MLR2020 #SixNations #WorldRugby #SuperRugby #Top14 #PremiershipRugby #Pro14
This minute we say goodbye to Alice Lauren. Gunny, Choozoo and Old Blue make an appearance at the Colonel's Mess Night. Check out Alice's Podcast Now You've Seen It!Find us on Social Media: Instagram: MarinecorpsmovieminutepodTwitter: MCMM_PodcastFacebook: Marine Corps Movie Minute Facebook PageMarine Corps Movie Minute Quarterdeck: https://www.facebook.com/groups/545010009420157/
Derek Lipscomb has been a premiere player for Old Blue Rugby for a decade, but that's not just who he is. A Colombia graduate, who has motivated passion to help improve the misunderstandings and clear the misinformation that occurs with inclusive and diverse racial issues. Derek talks to us about his journey to play rugby, as well as his work with kids on social issues. We speak on ROOTS Rugby and it's impact, and how he see's the future of rugby going. Sponsored by Rugby Outlet Mall: Enter code "Greaux Rugby" for 20% off all Rugby Outlet Mall exclusive material Singapore To Tokyo: Anyway We Can --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/gifttimerugby/support
Rural Voices Radio: Michigan - I Am From an Old Blue Truck by Connected Learning Alliance
Otro invitado de lujo que pasa por los microfonos de Al otro Lado Del Try, Julio Cesar "El Emperado" Giraldo; Un colombiano que cumple su sueño de poder debutar profesionalmente en el Rugby de los Estados Unidos, en una liga que esta en constante crecimiento y que cada día con la llegada de mas jugadores experimentados, aumenta su nivel significativamente. Julio nos cuenta en este episodio de como fueron sus inicios desde Caporos en Monteria, pasando por procesos de Selección Colombia Juvenil para despues llegar a los Old Blue en Nueva York, equipo que fue clave para que pudiera llegar a jugar al más alto nivel que se pueda alcanzar en los Estados Unidos. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/rugby-alotroladodeltry/message
The Fart Boys talk with Bart Alfred and tell the story of Old Blue. They also banter back and forth with some old stories from back in the day. Another fun episode.
Roopa Pemmaraju is the Founder of a modern, sustainable and ethical luxury fashion brand. Roopa’s work has been featured in The New York Times, Vogue, Cosmopolitan and various other mainstream publications - Her beautiful work has also been featured in prestigious fashion shows in Australia, Paris, Dubai and India. “I love day dreaming, but at the same time to make it real, a lot of hard work is involved” - Roopa Pemmaraju In this episode you will get a glimpse into what really go behind all the glamour and how luxury sustainable fashion products are made from start to finish. You will also learn more about what sustainability truly means and why sustainable garments are expensive and more... We'd love to hear from you - so do drop us a line at info@productsbywomen.com! ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Products by Women Podcast is a series dedicated to featuring the women behind innovative, sustainable, ethical and cutting-edge brands and products. We’ll be talking to product innovators, change makers and leaders about how they built and scaled their companies and what motivates them and keeps them going! Sources: · https://cdn.businessoffashion.com/reports/The_State_of_Fashion_2018_v2.pdf · Earth Prelude by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) Source: http://incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/index.html?isrc=USUAN1100247 Artist: http://incompetech.com/ · Chris Haugen, Old Blue, YouTube Audio Library · Dhaka by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) Source: http://incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/index.html?isrc=USUAN1400003 Artist: http://incompetech.com/ · Big Mojo - Vadodara by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) Source: http://incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/index.html?isrc=USUAN1100306 Artist: http://incompetech.com/ · Kul Riddim, Konrad OldMoney, YouTube Audio Library
Sermon on Fear of the Other. Scripture: Matthew 5:43-48
A rare Blue Jays Opening Thought from Matt Cauz today! On Friday the 13th, Matt explains why a disappointing Winter Meetings from the Blue Jays has seemingly killed our happiness surrounding the team.
Talk about news from around the major sports categories with a deep dive into the Blue Jays free agency
Meet the 100 year old Blue Ribbon Baker! Plus, what happens when we wait in line...
Chai, Fluff, Goolie and Old Blue are assaulting Valenti's criminal headquarters. Stack up the corpses — all debts are about to be paid in full. The battle of Break-My-Back comes to a final and bloody end. Written by Scott Sigler and Matt Wallace Narrated by Scott Sigler Produced by AB Kovacs Engineered by Steve Riekeberg Copyright 2019 by Empty Set Entertainment Theme music by the band Amps & Volts Get this episode from Scott’s site: http://scottsigler.com/podcast/the-reef-episode-12 Episode 12 of THE REEF is brought to you by our “GoDaddy Coupon” page http://scottsigler.com/godaddy. Get a new dot-com domain for $4.99 with the code CJCSIG99CC. Copyright: 2019 Empty Set Entertainment
In this episode of our MaknaTalks Live, we spoke with Old Blue, LOC, and VonDutch. This podcast was recorded live at PopUp Market 2019 hosted by Iyas Lawrence. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/makna-talks/message
Hey there Game Moosers, did you know the trailer for Sonic The Hedgehog is out and it’s… something. We’re joined by special guest Bryn Pottie as we dive deep into the trailer and the implications of it. We also talk briefly about The Division 2, Ryan’s experience with ACOdy: The Fate of Atlantis, and Yoshi’s... The post Game Moose Episode 157 – 11 Year-old Blue Werewolf appeared first on Game Moose.
Our old nemesis PG&E has finally admitted to their faults, but something potentially more dangerous has come out of the woodwork's. Sonic the Hedgehog has a live action movie coming out and we have just seen the first glimpse of the monstrous figure that is Sonic in the real world!
Traveling is never as complicated as we make it out to be in our heads! There are only a few must have things to make your trip low stress so you can focus on the fun. We'll talk you through each of them and let you know how we've screwed it up at some point in the past. You'll also get to hear about Old Blue, a bad haircut, the Valentine's Day massacre, and other misadventures. Come along, it's worth the trip!
Sad Party is over the hill! Join us for the 40th episode, where for something new, we do the Herald Sun quiz from February 8th 2019. Mitch can't tell the difference between gulf and golf. http://bit.ly/sp040itunes for all of you iPad and iPhone aficionados. Sad Party for more info, and email us stuff! sadpartypodcast@gmail.com
James Bird is a rugby player and management consultant. He is a fly-half for New York based Old Blue RFC, who he has played for since moving to the US in 2013. In 2016 he became eligible for and represented the US national team in the Americas Rugby Championship, the American equivalent of the Six Nations. On this episode, Richard and Gideon talk about the growing game in the US, the challenges of balancing a demanding rugby schedule with a corporate career, and where to get married if you’re planning a quintessential New York wedding.
After receiving support from the likes of Dave Clarke, Carl Cox and Matador in the early years of his career, Hybrasil became one of the break through artists of 2018 when his 'Lady Nada' came out on Gregor Tresher's Break New Soil. He delivers an excellent live set in episode 097 of Gem FM. TRACKLIST Hybrasil, The Man from Sirius B, Hybrasil Hybrasil, Tau Ceti, Off Recordings Hybrasil, Oppenheimer, Hybrasil Hybrasil, Breasal, Intacto Hybrasil, Unknown Live Edit Hybrasil, Old Blue, Hydrozoa (May 2019) Hybrasil, Analogue Hype, Intacto Hybrasil, 80bb, Hybrasil Hybrasil, Manhattan, Hybrasil Hybrasil, Hybrid (live edit), Loose Records Hybrasil, RASSOR, Intacto Hybrasil, Dagon, Hydrozoa (May 2019)
Welcome back! We've got a fresh new season for you, to begin this Thursday, December 6th, and we want to tell you a little about it. Plus: Today is the Old Town School's 61st anniversary! In celebration, we bring you a special rebroadcast of "60 Years of Folk, Part 1: Come for to Sing" from last season's audio documentary, all about the people, principles and forces that led to the creation of the school back in 1957. Featuring archival recordings from Pete Seeger, Studs Terkel, and the school's co-founders, as well as oral history interviews collected in collaboration with StoryCorps. Original recordings featured in this episode (in order of occurrence): - “Blues on Big Bill Broonzy guitar” performed by Chris Walz live at 4544 N Lincoln Ave, 6/17/2011 - StoryCorps interview of Jane Stracke by Mareva Lindo, 6/5/2017 - “Wandering,” performed by Win Stracke, Old Town School Compendium, circa 1965 - “The Trees Are All Ivied” performed by Win Stracke, Win Stracke Live with Studs Terkel, 3/19/1982 - “Ballad of the Boll Weevil” performed by Win Stracke, Old Town School Compendium, circa 1965 - StoryCorps conversation between Ron Cohen & Bob Riesman, 5/20/2017 - Studs Terkel interview by Paul Tyler, Old Town School 35th anniversary interviews, 1992 - Win Stracke interview by Studs Terkel, Win Stracke Live with Studs Terkel, 3/19/1982 - “In the Evening” performed by Frank Hamilton live at 333 W North Ave, 4/15/1962 - Frank Hamilton interviews by Mareva Lindo, 7/27/2015 and 2/12/2016 - “Old Blue” performed by Guy Carawan live at the Armstrong home, 8/13/1978 - “Nine Hundred Miles” from Old Town School Compendium, circa 1965 - “Roll the Union On,” performed by Pete Seeger live at People's Church, 5/17/1986 - Pete Seeger interview by Paul Tyler, Old Town School 35th anniversary interviews, 1992 - StoryCorps conversation between Lance Greening & Rick Veras, 5/8/2017 - Dawn Greening interview by Paul Tyler, Old Town School 35th anniversary interviews, 1992 - “Ain't Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me ‘Round,” performed by Odetta live at 4544 N Lincoln Ave, 10/30/2004 - “Methodist Pie” performed by Win Stracke live at 333 W North Ave, 4/15/1962 - “Vranjanka (Serbia)” performed by Valucha deCastro and Frank Hamilton live at 333 W North Ave, 4/15/1962 - “Witch Upon A Hill” performed by Ted Johnson live at 333 W North Ave, 10/10/1964 - StoryCorps conversation between Ted Johnson and Marcia Johnson, 3/22/2017 - “Glory of Love” performed by Big Bill Broonzy live at Circle Pines Center, circa 1950s References and recommended reading: - Chicago Folk: Images of the Sixties Music Scene by Ronald D. Cohen & Bob Riesman - Rainbow Quest: The Folk Music Revival and American Society, 1940-1970 by Ronald D. Cohen
Glenda Bonin tells her folktale story of "Old Blue" in this live recording from StoryRise Goodyear on November 1, 2018. Sponsored by The Small-Tooth-Dog Publishing Group, LLC and the Goodyear Arts and Culture Commission in the city of Goodyear, Arizona. storyrise.com --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/storyrise/support
The boys discuss weekend club action as Old Blue traveled to Mystic and lay the hammer down. They also look at how the presence of international talent from Uruguay and France will impact Major League Rugby's 2019 season. And they share how listeners can get their hands on a pair of tickets to The Rugby Weekend Tripleheader presented by UL, coming to Chicago in November.
WOW! Dan Buettner himself joined me on the show to talk everything Blue Zones! We cover: • Where are these so-called Blue Zones? • What do the people do that they live to be 100+ years old? • Is a plant-based diet good for that too? • If he’s vegan • If genetic factors play a role in getting old & staying healthy • How he impacts the world by creating Blue Zones in the US • A Blue Zones optimized day • and so so much more! You’ll LOVE this episode. You can find him on IG: @bluezones Also definitely check out his Blue Zones Meal Planner: https://meals.bluezones.com
The first episode! Contentment and how the Old Blue Truck came to be part of the family.
NEW YORK, NY - Rugby certainly makes for interesting bedfellows. Old Blue, NYAC, the New York Rugby Club and the Village Lions all share Manhattan and consider each other rivals. But the beauty of this glorious game is that its inherent characteristics of community has members of each club socializing together and at times, playing alongside one and other. In this Friends of the British Council Community Corner segment, host Matt McCarthy (NYRC) goes up to Baker Field at Columbia University for a match between fierce rivals, Old Blue and NYAC. Despite any bad blood that may take place on the pitch, much is wiped away after. Included here after this heavyweight bout, along with prevarications and banter from Ol' Blue Hands himself, Steve Lewis, are interviews with: -NYAC Coach Chris Edwards -NYAC lock Nate Brakeley -Old Blue back Connor Wallace-Sims And don't miss the scene-stealing cameo from recent Connacht & Rugby United NY star, Dave Gannon and Matt Walier's Old Blue Beer commercial. *Watch or download as a Podcast. Please feel free to comment below and please share with your mates! All Segments: rugbywrapup.com/category/videos/ Find All Here: -Web: http://www.RugbyWrapUp.com -Twitter: https://twitter.com/RugbyWrapUp @RugbyWrapUp, @Matt_McCarthy00, @JonnyLewisFilms, @Junoir Blaber, @JWB_RWU, @Luke Bienstock, @Ronan Nelson, @MeetTheMatts, @Declan Yeats. -Face Book: https://www.facebook.com/RugbyWrapUp -Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/RugbyWrapUp -YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/RugbyWrapUp -Google + (Yes, apparently that's still a thing): https://plus.google.com/+RugbyWrapUp -Apple PodCasts: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/rugby-wrap-up/id1253199236?mt=2
goodathleteproject.com For today's episode we sat down with Nate Augspurger, Captain of the USA 15s Rugby team and member of Old Blue in New York. He played collegiate rugby at the University of Minnesota and was a traveling reserve for the 2016 US Olympic team. In his free time, Nate works as a Youth Development Mentor for Play Rugby USA. You can find Nate on Twitter and Instagram: @Nthanielchannel. Today's Episode brought to you by Remind Recover. You can find them at Remindrecover.com and on Twitter and Instagram: @ReMindRecover. Use the code: GoodAthlete at checkout for a discount on your next order. Follow us on Twitter and Instagram: @Coach4Kindness Follow and like us on Facebook: www.facebook.com/coach4kindness/
Elliot is joined by the hosts of “Pods In The Key Of Springfield” James O'Connor & Captain Nick to review; S.6 E.2 “Lisa's Rival” S.11 E.9 “Grift Of The Magi” S.29 E.6 “The Old Blue Mayor She Ain't What She Used To Be” https://podsinthekeyofspringfield.podbean.com www.thesimpsonsindex.com
Sixty years ago, in the holiday season of 1957, Chicago's Old Town School of Folk Music first opened its doors. This Thanksgiving Day, The Archives celebrates the 60th anniversary with a six-part documentary on the school's history, through the voices and songs of the people who were there. This first episode tells the remarkable story of how Win Stracke, Frank Hamilton, Dawn Greening and Gertrude Soltker came together to found the Old Town School--featuring archival music and recordings from Studs Terkel, Pete Seeger, and the founders themselves, as well as many of the people who participated in our oral history project with StoryCorps this past year. Go to oldtownschool.org/StoryCorps to hear more of the stories we gathered, and to learn more about this ongoing partnership. Original recordings featured in this episode (in order of occurrence): - “Glory of Love” performed by Big Bill Broonzy live at Circle Pines Center, circa 1950s - StoryCorps conversation between Ron Cohen & Bob Riesman, 5/20/2017 - “Blues on Big Bill Broonzy guitar” performed by Chris Walz live at 4544 N Lincoln Ave, 6/17/2011 - StoryCorps interview of Jane Stracke by Mareva Lindo, 6/5/2017 - “Wandering,” performed by Win Stracke, Old Town School Compendium, circa 1965 - “The Trees Are All Ivied” performed by Win Stracke, Win Stracke Live with Studs Terkel, 3/19/1982 - “Ballad of the Boll Weevil” performed by Win Stracke, Old Town School Compendium, circa 1965 - Studs Terkel interview by Paul Tyler, Old Town School 35th anniversary interviews, 1992 - Win Stracke interview by Studs Terkel, Win Stracke Live with Studs Terkel, 3/19/1982 - “In the Evening” performed by Frank Hamilton live at 333 W North Ave, 4/15/1962 - Frank Hamilton interviews by Mareva Lindo, 7/27/2015 and 2/12/2016 - “Old Blue” performed by Guy Carawan live at the Armstrong home, 8/13/1978 - “Nine Hundred Miles” from Old Town School Compendium, circa 1965 - “Roll the Union On,” performed by Pete Seeger live at People's Church, 5/17/1986 - Pete Seeger interview by Paul Tyler, Old Town School 35th anniversary interviews, 1992 - StoryCorps conversation between Lance Greening & Rick Veras, 5/8/2017 - Dawn Greening interview by Paul Tyler, Old Town School 35th anniversary interviews, 1992 - “Ain't Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me ‘Round,” performed by Odetta live at 4544 N Lincoln Ave, 10/30/2004 - “Methodist Pie” performed by Win Stracke live at 333 W North Ave, 4/15/1962 - “Vranjanka (Serbia)” performed by Valucha deCastro and Frank Hamilton live at 333 W North Ave, 4/15/1962 - “Witch Upon A Hill” performed by Ted Johnson live at 333 W North Ave, 10/10/1964 - StoryCorps conversation between Ted Johnson and Marcia Johnson, 3/22/2017 References and recommended reading: - Chicago Folk: Images of the Sixties Music Scene by Ronald D. Cohen & Bob Riesman - Rainbow Quest: The Folk Music Revival and American Society, 1940-1970 by Ronald D. Cohen
NEW YORK, NY - University at Buffalo Rugby & New York Rugby Club player Kris Anderson needs our help. After countless encounters on the pitch, the hard-nosed and talented Anderson severely injured himself swimming at home with his twin boys. Now wheelchair-bound, Kris' insurance simply doesn't cover certain essentials, and his family needs our assistance. Here, fellow UB Rugby Alumni & New York Rugby Club players Jim Temple & Matt McCarthy talk about an upcoming fundraiser for the Andersons and ways we can all help.... Thanks to USA Rugby and Old Blue star Luke Hume for the light intro. You can watch the interview at www.RugbyWrapUp.com or listen here or on iTunes. Please share this. THANK YOU
England Rugby 7s stars Mathew Drew Turner and Sam Edgerley join Matt McCarthy in an informative chat about Major League Rugby - which Turner will be with as a member of the Seattle Seawolves - and the new Super 7s, set to launch in 2018. Edgerely also talks about being a student/player at Oxford University and their undefeated tour of the USA vs Mystic River, the USA Rugby Collegiate All-Americans and Old Blue in NYC. The South African born Turner and Englishman Edgerley also weigh in on their roles with UR7s before the trio finishes with their opinions of the Guinness Pro 14. You can watch the whole show or just segments, or just listen on iTunes or SoundCloud. Of course, all can easily be accessed on RugbyWrapUp.com. Please share with your mates and thanks for checking in!
The party gets to know their newest ally, a young looking blue skin woman that everyone refers to as “the old hermit.” Also, the guys find out that the northern terrorbird is a mount that takes a lot of getting used to.
In 2005, historian James Whiteside bought a Harley Davidson Heritage Softail, christened it “Old Blue,” and set off on a series of motorcycle adventures. Over six years he traveled more than 15,000 miles. In his new book “Old Blue's Road” Whiteside recounts his travels to the Pacific Northwest, Yellowstone, Dodge City, Santa Fe, Wounded Knee, and many other places and considers the ongoing struggle between Indian and mainstream American culture, the meaning of community, the sustainability of the West's hydraulic society, the creation of the national parks system, the Mormon experience in Utah, the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II, and more. Whiteside reflects on the processes of change that made the American West what it is today and the complex ways in which the West's past and present come together.
In 2005, historian James Whiteside bought a Harley Davidson Heritage Softail, christened it "Old Blue," and set off on a series of motorcycle adventures. Over six years he traveled more than 15,000 miles. In his new book "Old Blue's Road" Whiteside recounts his travels to the Pacific Northwest, Yellowstone, Dodge City, Santa Fe, Wounded Knee, and many other places and considers the ongoing struggle between Indian and mainstream American culture, the meaning of community, the sustainability of the West's hydraulic society, the creation of the national parks system, the Mormon experience in Utah, the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II, and more. Whiteside reflects on the processes of change that made the American West what it is today and the complex ways in which the West's past and present come together.