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Hello Interactors,A couple weeks ago, I found myself in Tulsa for the first time. I left pleasantly surprised. There's a lot of private money flowing into this town, but the city is filled with sorted stories about land, who holds it, who loses it, and how that loss and potential return is engineered. On Juneteenth, the city's history feels especially close so I thought I'd unpack the layers of displacement, violence, and reinvention that lurk beneath a city still struggling to face them.CONCRETE, COALS, AND A CITY THAT CONCEALSRaise your hand if you like Brutalist architecture (I'm raising mine.) I just didn't expect to find it in Tulsa, Oklahoma, where I was visiting for my niece's wedding.The Brut Hotel is a converted Brutalist tower a few blocks from the Arkansas River and it's all raw concrete. Even the floors and counters. Most people see Brutalism as cold — which is nice on a hot Tulsa day — but I read it as honest and direct. A bit like a Midwestern prairie settler stereotype. After all, the style did emerge in postwar Europe from an egalitarian impulse. It was meant to be democratic architecture stripped of ornamental excesses of fancy city folks. It arrived in America just in time to become the aesthetic of urban renewal. We mostly got housing projects and highway interchanges built on top of what had been Black and working-class neighborhoods, often by eminent domain and without meaningful consent. Concrete can be made to beautiful, but it's definitely also the material of displacement. Tulsa is no exception.On my first muggy Tulsa morning, I ran from The Brut toward the river. A block or two along, tucked between midtown houses on Cheyenne Avenue, I passed a small park I had read about but didn't know was so close. The bronze sculpture of a flame was the give away. This is Creek Nation Council Oak Park, and it is, in the most literal sense, where Tulsa began.In 1836, the Lochapoka clan of the Creek Nation arrived at this hill above the river after two years on the Trail of Tears. They had carried live coals from their last ceremonial fires in Alabama the entire way — embers kept alive through hundreds of miles of forced march. Under this oak, they set those coals down and kindled a new flame. They named the settlement Talasi, meaning “old town.” White settlers mispronounced it into Tulsa. The term “Trail of Tears” perhaps softens this forced displacement too much. Of the 630 Lochapoka who began the journey, 161 did not survive it. The oak did and it still holds its annual ceremonies. In November 2024, the site was formally returned to the Muscogee (Creek) Nation.As I kept running south along the river, a second gathering place was harder to miss. It has a giant sign that reads, The Gathering Place.The Gathering Place is a privately built public-ish park that stretches along the Arkansas River's eastern bank and inland a bit. It's one hundred acres of fountains, climbing structures, event lawns, and restored prairie plantings. It is, by nearly any measure, a stunningly beautiful park. It is also unmistakably the product of a single man's fortune. George Kaiser, the Tulsa-born oil billionaire and philanthropist, has poured more than $350 million into transforming this stretch of riverfront. It's honestly something you'd expect to see in a Northern European city. The park opened in 2018 to national acclaim. The New York Times called it “the most ambitious new park in a generation.” I can see why.But head north from the riverfront, past the gleaming BOK Center arena (“B. OK.” is a financial services company dating back to 1910 oil money and is half owned by Kaiser) and the reclaimed warehouse districts, (including the Bob Dylan Center — Kaiser bought Bob Dylan's archive collection in 2016) and within minutes you are in a different city. North Tulsa — and specifically the Greenwood District — reveals modest homes and stretches of underdevelopment. This is an area that feels like it's being watched and commemorated but it's not entirely clear it is being heard. The Greenwood Rising history center, also primarily bankrolled by Kaiser, opened in 2021 exactly one hundred years after the neighborhood was destroyed in the Tulsa Massacre. This building is also very nice and tells the area's story well. Whether it changes the story is another matter.Cities can act as maps of their own history, so that's how I try to read them. I take note of the distances between prosperity and poverty, commemoration and investment…even a museum and a neighborhood. These are not determinant accidents of the market, but accumulated residue of specific decisions made by specific people over a very long time. To understand Tulsa's geography today, you have to go back not just to 1921, but further — to the rivers and grasslands of Indian Territory the Lochapoka people encountered. It's here you'll find federal ledgers leveraged as weapons, their lines and lists legalizing the largest land liquidation in American history.PROMISES, PARCELS, AND THE POLITICS OF POSSESSIONThe Lochapoka were not the only ones force-marched into Indian Territory. All five of the so-called Civilized Tribes — the Cherokee, Choctaw, Chickasaw, Creek, and Seminole nations — were relocated from their homelands in the American Southeast across the 1830s. Each tribe were given the same federal promise that the territory would remain theirs permanently. The maps and the Federal treaties said so, but neither turned out to mean much.What the maps did not show, and what the official history long preferred to omit, is that the Five Tribes brought enslaved Black people with them into Indian Territory. As the historians Annette Gordon-Reed and Rose Stremlau have noted in the context of the 1619 Project, the story of this dispossession cannot be told without acknowledging that intersection: the Trail of Tears was also, for some, a forced march into continued bondage (Gordon-Reed et al., 2022). That fact would shape the politics of Oklahoma for generations — and it is the thread that connects the founding fire under the Council Oak to the rise of Greenwood eighty years later.After the Civil War, the federal government's promises to the Five Tribes began to erode almost immediately. The Freedmen — formerly enslaved people who had been held by tribal members — were formally granted citizenship in the tribes by treaty, though the tribes' willingness to honor that citizenship varied considerably. Many Freedmen, seeking mutual protection and economic self-sufficiency, began establishing their own communities. This impulse gave rise to what became known as the Black Towns Movement. Between the 1870s and the 1920s, more than fifty all-Black towns were founded in Oklahoma and Kansas, created by people who had learned, with good reason, not to rely on the goodwill of white-majority governments (Martin, 2025; Gordon-Reed et al., 2022).The legal and cartographic instrument that made the Black Towns possible — and that would ultimately help destroy them — was the allotment system. The Dawes Act of 1887 broke up communally held tribal land into individual parcels, assigning plots to enrolled tribal members and opening the remainder to white settlement. It was framed as a civilizing measure. It was in practice a mechanism for transferring Indigenous land to white hands on an enormous scale. Each parcel was drawn on a map, recorded in a ledger, and assigned a legal description. This act appeared to secure property rights while in fact it made land far easier to steal through legal machinery than it had ever been to simply seize.The discovery of oil made the theft more systematic and more lethal. When crude was found beneath allotments assigned to Native people — particularly in the Osage Nation, the Creek Nation, and elsewhere — a federal guardianship system allowed courts to appoint white guardians for Native landowners deemed “incompetent” to manage their own affairs. The definition of incompetence was flexible and self-serving. Native heirs to oil-bearing land died under suspicious circumstances with startling frequency. Deeds were forged. Guardians enriched themselves and left their wards landless. The historian David Grann has documented this in devastating detail for the Osage Nation specifically, but the pattern was region-wide. Modern GIS analysis of original allotment records against subsequent deed transfers reveals what contemporaries knew but rarely said aloud: the disappearance of Native landowners from oil country was not a coincidence, but a covert policy.For Black Oklahomans, the allotment system created a narrow window of possibility. Freedmen who appeared on the Dawes Rolls received allotments of their own. Some of this land was in proximity to other Black allottees, and the Black Towns Movement capitalized on that geography, incorporating towns, establishing churches and schools, and building the civic infrastructure that Black communities had been denied elsewhere. As scholar JT Martin has argued, the philanthropic traditions within these communities — the mutual aid societies, the church networks, the communal investment in education — were not secondary features of the Black Towns Movement but its essential architecture (Martin, 2025). People who had nothing built institutions that served everyone.Greenwood, established in the early 1900s on the northern edge of Tulsa, was the apex of that project. By 1921, it contained over thirty-five blocks of Black-owned businesses, a hospital, law offices, two newspapers, a library, schools, and churches. Booker T. Washington reportedly called it “the Negro Wall Street,” a phrase that has since become shorthand for what the neighborhood achieved. Although that shorthand flattens what was, more precisely, a masterwork of community-building under conditions designed to make community impossible.As the literary scholar Gary M. Jenkins has observed, Greenwood sat directly along what would become Route 66 (Jenkins, 2022). The all-Black towns of Oklahoma were embedded in the landscape that John Steinbeck traversed in The Grapes of Wrath — and conspicuously omitted from it. The invisibility of Black spatial achievement in the canonical accounts of American westward movement is not incidental. It reflects a pattern in which the places, presence, and prosperity of Black life were purposefully purged from the maps white Americans made of their own country.BURNING, BURYING, AND THE BATTLE TO BELONGOn the night of May 31, 1921, a white mob descended on Greenwood. Over the following eighteen hours, the neighborhood was looted, burned, and bombed — aircraft dropped incendiary devices on residential streets. When it was over, 35 square blocks had been reduced to ash. Somewhere between 100 and 300 people were dead, most of them Black. More than 10,000 Black residents were left homeless. Survivors were interned in camps run by the National Guard — many of whom had also participated in the destruction.What followed the physical destruction was a second, slower erasure. Greenwood residents who attempted to rebuild found themselves blocked by a newly enacted city ordinance that rezoned their land for commercial and industrial use. Insurance claims were denied. Property was effectively seized under the cover of “urban renewal” in subsequent decades. As Morris, Parker, and Negrón have documented, the Tulsa massacre is a case study in what they call “Black community-killing” — the systematic destruction not just of physical structures but of the institutional web that makes a community function: the schools, the churches, the newspapers, the businesses (Morris, Parker & Negrón, 2022). The buildings burned in a day. The community's capacity to reconstitute itself was methodically dismantled over years.For most of the twentieth century, the massacre was not taught in Oklahoma schools. It did not appear in city histories and land was not returned. The story was, in the most literal sense, removed from the map.Kaiser's investments in Tulsa have been substantial and wide-ranging: the Gathering Place, the Greenwood Rising museum, workforce development initiatives, early childhood programs. The philanthropic intent appears sincere, and some of the work — particularly in early education — addresses structural inequities rather than simply aestheticizing them. It would be uncharitable, and inaccurate, to dismiss the whole enterprise as window dressing.But scholar JT Martin poses this question which cuts to the heart of the matter: when we study philanthropy in America, whose philanthropic traditions do we center? (Martin, 2025). The mutual aid societies, the church networks, the community land trusts built by Black and Indigenous communities — these represent forms of collective investment that predate and often outperform the interventions of elite donors, yet they receive a fraction of the scholarly and public attention. George Kaiser's riverfront is visible. The endogenous philanthropic infrastructure of North Tulsa — the churches that held Greenwood together after the massacre, the community organizations that exist today — is largely invisible in the civic narrative that Tulsa tells about itself.The geography makes this concrete. The Gathering Place and the BOK Center sit south on the Arkansas River, in and adjacent to Tulsa's whiter, wealthier districts. Including the area where the Philbrook Museum of Art sits. This Italian Renaissance villa was built in 1926 by oil pioneer Waite Phillips (as in Phillips 66), donated to the city in 1938 as a public art center. It's now one of the finest regional museums in the country. This gesture rhymes with Kaiser's: oil money transmuted into civic cultural institution, the private estate opened to the public as an act of philanthropic legacy-building. The Philbrook is genuinely beautiful and genuinely valuable. It is also located nowhere near North Tulsa.The pattern is not new. Greenwood Rising stands in Greenwood, but the area remains economically depressed, and North Tulsa is still among the most segregated parts of an already divided city. Philanthropic investments that produce a park on the wealthy side of the river and a museum on the historically Black side, while leaving structural inequalities intact, are not reparative.The development around Greenwood tells a more troubling story. ONEOK Field, built in 2010 on historic Greenwood land despite community opposition, has delivered few benefits to Black residents, who are still taxed to support it. Nearby, the Tulsa Arts District has flourished with amenities catering to a whiter, more affluent clientele, while long-standing Black businesses struggle. Even hotels in Greenwood market themselves as part of that district. This is less restoration than a familiar precursor to displacement in the form of cultural investment followed by real estate pressure.Some argue that understanding land and spatial justice in places like Tulsa requires connecting the Greenwood reparations movement to broader Indigenous-led land reclamation efforts (Du, 2021). In 2020, the Supreme Court's decision in McGirt v. Oklahoma ruled that the Creek Nation reservation had never been legally dissolved and that the federal government's century-old maps of Oklahoma had been legally wrong all along. The majority opinion was written by Justice Neil Gorsuch, a conservative textualist, who applied the same originalist logic to treaty rights that right-wing jurists typically apply to the Second Amendment. The ruling was a genuine landmark, restoring tribal jurisdiction over a substantial portion of eastern Oklahoma. Subsequent decisions have extended the logic to other tribes.The political irony is perplexing. Oklahoma has been among the most reliably right-wing states in the country for decades; its congressional delegation is uniformly conservative; its state government has consistently resisted federal oversight and minority rights claims. Yet it was conservative judicial originalism — the doctrine that legal texts mean what they said when written — that restored, at least partially, what the federal government had promised the Five Tribes in the 1830s. The promise was old, the maps were wrong, and it took a conservative judge to point it out.What McGirt did not do was address the claims of Black Oklahomans. The Freedmen's citizenship rights within the Five Tribes remain contested. The Greenwood reparations movement has won moral recognition but not legal remedy. The 1921 massacre commission recommended reparations in 2001 and they have never been paid. These struggles do feel connected — Black and Indigenous claims to land and sovereignty in Oklahoma have been shaped by the same federal machinery of dispossession, and their futures may be intertwined in ways that neither community has yet fully reckoned with (Du, 2021).Juneteenth, the holiday now recognized federally, commemorates June 19, 1865 — the day enslaved people in Galveston, Texas, were told the war was over (the Emancipation Proclamation had been issued two and a half years earlier) and they were free. What the holiday cannot quite contain is what freedom meant in practice for people who were free but landless. They were free but also targeted. They were also freed from the maps that governed how wealth was accumulated and held in America. The Black Towns of Oklahoma were an answer to these problems and Greenwood was that, for a while. Then it was burned down.What grows back from a fire depends on who tends the soil, and who owns it. In Tulsa today, that question is still being answered. Will the answers be as brutally honest as Brutalism — the idea that a building should be honest about what it is made of? Tulsa is made of oil money and dispossession, Black resilience and white violence, broken treaties and belated reckonings. Despite conservative political domination, the maps are being redrawn. Whether they will finally show all of that honestly — without the decorative Italian Renaissance stucco — is more political than cartographic. But McGirt proves that promises, however papered over, still possess the power to pierce the present.ReferencesDu, Y. (2021). Black geographies unveiled: A critical review. Human Geography. Gordon-Reed, A., Stremlau, R., Lowery, M., et al. (2022). The 1619 project forum. The American Historical Review. Jenkins, G. M. (2022). Steinbeck, race, and Route 66 in The Grapes of Wrath. Steinbeck Review.Martin, J. T. (2025). Are Black people philanthropists? Toward a more diverse research agenda on philanthropy. Du Bois Review: Social Science Research on Race. Morris, J. E., Parker, B. D., & Negrón, L. M. (2022). Black school closings aren't new: Historically contextualizing contemporary school closings and Black community resistance. Educational Researcher. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit interplace.io
Curated for the dancers, the dreamers, the real ones left and ready to go into the night. Inspired by true events in Cazadero. Dedicated to the loving memory of Daniel Wherrett aka DJ Dan. I miss you! # | Artist - Track 01 | You Man - Birdcage 02 | Escort - Cocaine Blues (Greg Wilson Remix) 03 | 40 Thieves - Don't Turn It Off (Greg Wilson Remix) 04 | Jamback - Positive (Extended Mix) 05 | Underworld - Two Months Off (DAVI Remix) 06 | Parcels - lightenup (Alex Metric Remix) 07 | DB Boulevard - Point of View (Sgt Slick ReCut) 08 | Mark Knight - Clap Your Hands (Extended Mix) 09 | Jitwan, Gudfella - Morning Coffee (Extended Mix) 10 | DJ Dan - Remember the Time 11 | Foo Funkers - Trouble City (Radio Edit) 12 | DJ Rolando - Knights of the Jaguar (Matt Moore Shut Up & Dance Booty) 13 | Mark Knight, Pietro, Rome Fortune - Shut It Down (Extended Mix) 14 | Curtis Mayfield - Move On Up (Harry Unsworth & Sam Curran Remix) 15 | Everything But the Girl vs The Bug Kann & The Plastic Jam - Made With Love (Joe Friend & Steve Friend Mash Edit) 16 | Nik Kershaw & Les Rhythmes Digitales - Sometimes 17 | Ben Bohmer - Fade to Blue 18 | RRP - Georgia (Myagi Remix)
Carry On Camping (1969) wraps up our very short Carry On Month. Don't worry, we will probably have another soon. The main thing is, we are back and we're watching one of the most highest rated Carry On films. Hopefully it lives up to expectations and we won't be labelled as fake Carry On stans for not liking it as much as everyone else. Join us next week as Calum inflicts his quirky nonsense on us all (2026)
SER Deportivos VigoEl Real Club Celta retoma los entrenamientos tras vencer al Elche, rompiendo una racha negativa y manteniendo el sueño europeo bajo la dirección de Claudio Giráldez. El técnico recupera a Marcos Alonso para el duelo ante el Atlético de Madrid, aunque pierde a Javi Rueda por lesión, mientras se vigila la evolución de Matías Vecino. En el plano institucional, destaca el convenio firmado con el distrito senegalés de Parcels para potenciar la Habs Academy y mejorar las infraestructuras locales. La tertulia deportiva elogió la solidez defensiva del equipo en bloque bajo y el liderazgo de Iago Aspas, subrayando que la reciente victoria es un impulso moral clave. Los comentaristas analizaron el impacto de la eliminación europea del Atlético en el próximo choque y celebraron el éxito del Celta Fortuna, que ya ha asegurado su plaza en los playoffs de ascenso a Segunda División. El calendario final será determinante, especialmente los partidos en Balaídos, para que el equipo logre consolidar su escalada en la clasificación liguera.
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Japan Post Co. said Monday that it will resume accepting certain parcels addressed to the United States starting Tuesday, after suspending the service last August.
Seg 1 – Primary Season BluesSeg 2 – A Midterm Surprise?Seg 3 – USPS on the Brink?Seg 4 – The Taxation Trap
Su sonido fusiona el pop y electropop más fresco con el groove arrollador del funk y el soul, logrando un estilo propio con identidad muy marcada. Entre sus influencias destacan desde clásicos como Stevie Wonder, James Brown, Bill Withers y Michael Jackson, hasta referentes contemporáneos como Jamiroquai, Daft Punk, Parcels, Bruno Mars y Silk Sonic. En su nuevo EP, Free To Love, incorporan una mayor presencia de elementos electrónicos, anticipando la dirección sonora hacia la que se orienta la banda: un sonido más sintético, moderno y bailable, sin perder la esencia cálida y orgánica que los caracteriza. En directo, completan el sexteto batería, bajo, teclado y saxo, dando forma a una propuesta tan enérgica como elegante.Escuchar audio
A doctor's instrument case, and a pair of child’s rompers help solve today's most baffling case. In voiceover the details of a gruesome murder are described. Parcels have been discovered…
Alexis Faure, the Co-founder of King Colis which sells lost packages tells PJ what to expect when they run a pop up shop in Douglas Court Shopping Centre from Tuesday, February 24 to Sunday, March 1 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Benji and Eleanor were just walking home from school… until a flying pirate ship showed up!
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Garrett Bridgeman, MD of An Post Mails & Parcels, discusses the increase in stamp prices as the number of international letters being posted falls significantly.
Full show: https://kNOwBETTERHIPHOP.com Artists Played: Knaladeus, conshus, Sadat X, Dat Guy Ike, Trexz, LEX the Lexicon Artist, Royce Wood Junior, The Expert, Blu, Stik Figa, Samm Henshaw, MRKBH, Rico James, Nowaah The Flood, El Train, Miki Rose, The Olympians, MyGrane McNastee, Stacy Epps, Travisty the Lazy Emcee, DJ Kawon, Keith Garner, Dennis O, Mad Sexual Genius, Parcels, BlackLiq, Dub Sonata, TEED, OutKast, GOODie MOb, IMAKEMADBEATS
A major step away from naivety – that's how EU officials describe moves to crack down on cheap Chinese parcels flooding the European market. The EU is edging closer to abolishing the customs exemption on packages valued at under €150. For now, the EU has agreed to impose a temporary €3 customs fee on small parcels, effective from July 1, 2026.
Discover the essential packaging requirements for UK Amazon FBA sellers, from updated box dimensions and weight limits to approved materials and labelling rules. Learn cost-effective strategies including bulk buying, reusable options, and where to source boxes.Info: https://www.globepackaging.co.uk/boxes/amazon-shipping-fba-boxes/amazon-fba-specific-size-boxes.html Globe Packaging City: Hayes Address: Unit 5, Caxton Trading Estate Website: https://www.globepackaging.co.uk/
Sue and Kendra talked with Tim Brown (Chief Innovation/Strategy Officer for the Northeast Arc) about their incredible store called PARCELS in the Liberty Tree Mall. Tim is offering a 10% discount on online orders when you use the code: MAGIC.
durée : 00:05:53 - Dans la playlist de France Inter - Dans le best of 2025, entre flower power et néo funk, le dernier album des australiens de PARCELS Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les autres épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France.
NZ Post chief operating officer Brendon Main talks to Lisa Owen about the 10 million parcels being delivered in the two weeks leading up to Christmas Eve.
Closing your first deal takes courage… closing two parcels and two mobile homes and walking away with $60,000 takes consistency, confidence, and the right system. That's exactly what land investor Candius Welborn pulled off. From finding the parcels to negotiating mobile homes to navigating profit splits, Candius proves that everyday investors can create big wins when they follow a proven blueprint. Looking for more land deals? Follow the Land Sharks Program and let Brent teach you his ways to real estate and help you level-up your land deals.---------Show notes:(0:50) Beginning of today's episode (1:00) Full time job and handling 5 rentals(2:25) His 5 year investing goal(4:35) Update on his rentals(10:41) The value of social media and putting yourself out there(12:01) Net parcel for each land(13:24) Utilizing the land sharks method(16:11) Advice to landsharks who are just getting started----------Resources:Email Candice at: cwellborn02@gmail.com or Contact him at: (864) 386 9036Snapchat: @mystique864To speak with Brent or one of our other expert coaches call (281) 835-4201 or schedule your free discovery call here to learn about our mentorship programs and become part of the TribeGo to Wholesalingincgroup.com to become part of one of the fastest growing Facebook communities in the Wholesaling space. Get all of your burning Wholesaling questions answered, gain access to JV partnerships, and connect with other "success minded" Rhinos in the community.It's 100% free to join. The opportunities in this community are endless, what are you waiting for?
The State Post Bureau says China's express delivery sector handled more than 180 billion parcels in the first eleven months of the year. It marked the first time the annual volume has exceeded that threshold.
John is joined by Parcels to discuss how they wrote, recorded and produced the album “LOVED”. Parcels are an Australian electropop band consisting of Jules Crommelin, Louie Swain, Noah Hill, Patrick Hetherington and Anatole Serret. After moving from Australia to Berlin, Parcels signed a deal with French label Kitsuné. However, it was their collaboration with seminal dance duo Daft Punk, who produced their 2017 single “Overnight”, that led to their breakthrough. Since then the band have released three studio albums, their self-titled debut in 2018, and the ambitious double LP ‘Day/Night', in 2021. Parcels' third album “LOVED”, released in September 2025, draws on the five-piece's eclectic music taste, taking their signature disco sound in new directions. In this episode, John is joined by Jules and Patrick in LA. The trio discuss the band's early years busking in Australia, being inspired by 2000s pop songs in their youth, Parcels' techniques for creating their signature multi-track vocal harmonies and how their vocals and instrumentation are designed to make songs sound like memories. Tracks discussed: Tobeloved, Ifyoucall, Iwanttobeyourlightagain TAPE IT Thanks to our friends at Tape It for supporting the podcast. Visit tape.it/tapenotes or use the promo code TAPENOTES in the app to get 20% off. QUBE Get 20% off at Qube Studio: https://www.theqube.com/ MAKENOISE PRO AUDIO Get 20% off all Franklin Audio products at https://makenoiseproaudio.com/ MUSIVERSAL Skip the waitlist and get your discount HERE LISTEN to ‘LOVED' HERE: LOVED by Parcels ‘ Because Music SAS' LINKS TO EVERYTHING TAPE NOTES linktr.ee/tapenotes Intro Music - Sunshine Buddy, Laurel Collective GEAR MENTIONS Korg M1 Shure SM7B Logic Pro Wurlitzer Moog Synth Roland Juno Neumann U87 Roland SH-101 Fender Rhodes Critter & Guitari Organelle Shure SM57 Neumann U67 Valhalla Reverbs OUR GEAR https://linktr.ee/tapenotes_ourgear HELP SUPPORT THE SHOW If you'd like to help support the show you can join us on Patreon, where among many things you can access full length videos of most new episodes, ad-free episodes and detailed gear list breakdowns. KEEP UP TO DATE For behind the scenes photos and the latest updates, make sure to follow us on: Patreon: Tape Notes YouTube: Tape Notes Podcast Instagram: @tapenotes Discord: Tape Notes To let us know the artists you'd like to hear, slide into our DMs, send us an email or even a letter. We'd love to hear! Visit our website to join our mailing list: www.tapenotes.co.uk
We're talking Parcels today and how weird of a shape is too weird. Is there too weird of a shape? Todays thumbnail is an actual parcel being purchased and after passing on it multiple times because of how it looks, the seller came back with a price that we couldn't pass up on. So what … Read More Read More
Malcolm Harris brings a stacked lineup diving into e-commerce logistics, fleet operations, and the growing impact of AI across the supply chain. Headlines: Malcolm breaks down the latest in freight, including FMCSA bond enforcement, driver shortages affecting farm labor, Maersk's relocation to Charlotte, 3PL marketing ROI insights, and rising cargo theft trends. Featured Guests Carlos Barbosa — VP of E-commerce Solutions, ePost Global Carlos shares insights from ePost Global's new report analyzing 20 million international shipments, revealing why multi-carrier strategies outperform single-carrier setups by 37%. He explains how speed, reliability, cost stability, and AI-driven decision-making are shaping the future of cross-border e-commerce. Zach Cellar — Operations Manager, Ploger Transportation Zach talks about how adopting AI-powered planning transformed their fleet operations. He discusses: -21%+ increase in load volume -Higher driver satisfaction & better scheduling -Reduced manual planning -Improved retention and recruiting -A must-watch for fleets exploring AI adoption. Ben Marks — Senior Solutions Leader, Optimal Dynamics Ben breaks down how Optimal Dynamics serves as the decision layer for trucking fleets—optimizing planning, increasing efficiency, and allowing dispatchers to focus on higher-value work. He also shares how fleets can evaluate AI partners and prepare for the future of automated operations. Watch on YouTube Visit our sponsor Subscribe to the WTT newsletter Apple Podcasts Spotify More FreightWaves Podcasts #WHATTHETRUCK #FreightNews #supplychain Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Malcolm Harris brings a stacked lineup diving into e-commerce logistics, fleet operations, and the growing impact of AI across the supply chain. Headlines: Malcolm breaks down the latest in freight, including FMCSA bond enforcement, driver shortages affecting farm labor, Maersk's relocation to Charlotte, 3PL marketing ROI insights, and rising cargo theft trends. Featured Guests Carlos Barbosa — VP of E-commerce Solutions, ePost Global Carlos shares insights from ePost Global's new report analyzing 20 million international shipments, revealing why multi-carrier strategies outperform single-carrier setups by 37%. He explains how speed, reliability, cost stability, and AI-driven decision-making are shaping the future of cross-border e-commerce. Zach Cellar — Operations Manager, Ploger Transportation Zach talks about how adopting AI-powered planning transformed their fleet operations. He discusses: -21%+ increase in load volume -Higher driver satisfaction & better scheduling -Reduced manual planning -Improved retention and recruiting -A must-watch for fleets exploring AI adoption. Ben Marks — Senior Solutions Leader, Optimal Dynamics Ben breaks down how Optimal Dynamics serves as the decision layer for trucking fleets—optimizing planning, increasing efficiency, and allowing dispatchers to focus on higher-value work. He also shares how fleets can evaluate AI partners and prepare for the future of automated operations. Watch on YouTube Visit our sponsor Subscribe to the WTT newsletter Apple Podcasts Spotify More FreightWaves Podcasts #WHATTHETRUCK #FreightNews #supplychain Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Patrick Hetherington and Louie Swain are two-fifths of Australian disco pop-rock band Parcels, which stopped in Nashville on the final non-festival date of their October tour of the U.S. Hear the singers and multi-instrumentalists On The Record with WNXP discussing the third Parcels LP called 'LOVED' and shed light on the creative history of the quintet, who've made music together since their teenage years.
PJ chats to Neil McDonnell of the ISME who says businesses that used Fastway now struggle for information on their parcels in transit and find it hard to get an alternative. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
It's been welcomed by small businesses but comes with new tariff costs. More than a billion small parcels were sent between India and America last year.What will a $20 billion currency swap deal mean for Argentina?And Greece proposes a workday which could run for up to 13 hours.
China's express delivery volume has surpassed 150 billion parcels this year, reaching the milestone 37 days earlier than last year.
Jules et Antatole sont venus nous dire coucou juste avant leur concert !Hébergé par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Neue Alben von Jens Lekman, Baxter Dury, King Princess und Parcels? Müssen heute alle hinten anstehen. Denn: am Schweizer Musiktag läuft auf SRF 3 ausschliesslich Musik von Schweizer Acts - auch im Sounds! Wir präsentieren Brandneues (Anna Rey, Blind Butcher, deleterolf) und Altbewährtes.
Patrick Hetherington of Parcels says that the urge to write usually strikes when he's had some kind of new input, but then he needs distance from that input to be able to process it and write about it. And a good sunset is mandatory. "I need to touch base with the sunset every day. I take a walk at sunset to feel that change, that shift in the day."The latest album by Parcels is Loved.
AP correspondent Julie Walker reports postal traffic to the U.S. is down substantially after the Trump administration ended an exemption on low-value parcels.
Joshua Shrum joins me via Zoom for an interview. We discuss the ever-more-crowded field of postal podcasting. More importantly, we discuss Joshua's upcoming run for vice president in Branch 4374.
Oscar, Victor, Hector, and (Rod)rigo give some final comments on Lollapalooza 2025 including T-Pain and Korn's sets. The group also discusses the ethics of being tall in GA and offer a preview of the artists they're looking forward to at Riot Fest 2025.The 4x4 segment includes songs by Whitney, Chance The Rapper, Parcels, and WAJ. with Maxo, Frsh Waters, Saba. Follow along with the monthly 4x4 picks by Liking the YCT Playlist on Spotify & subscribing to the podcast. Listen to all of the music discussed on the latest episode of the show here: https://spoti.fi/3rTsZ9TYou can also listen to the YCT Playlist on Apple Music: https://apple.co/39CwlaCCheck out our weekly Spotify playlist, I Made This For You, updated on Fridays and featuring our favorite songs released during the current week.IMTFY playlist:- Apple Music: https://music.apple.com/us/playlist/i-made-this-for-you/pl.u-2aoqL3qCDvDB1- Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/47zdwKFNfoYpJfQxRtXWIS?si=8654e038a0314143
Aengus Cox, Consumer Affairs Correspondent, discusses rule changes for parcels being shipped to the United States.
Friday sees the US Customs and Border Protection agency scrap tariff exemptions, known as de minimis, for millions of small international postal items arriving from abroad that are valued below US$800.Roger Hearing is joined by Sinead Mangan in Perth and Tony Nash in Houston to discuss the White House's claims that ending the loophole will curb the movement of drugs and provide US$10bn of revenue. But what does it mean for small traders around the world?We catch up with the saga engulfing the Federal Reserve after governor Lisa Cook filed a legal case against US president Donald Trump over his efforts to fire her.Elsewhere, police raids have taken place across Brazil as authorities try to close down a US$10bn money laundering operation. Just days after South Korean president Lee Jae Myung visited Washington DC, we hear from David Kim, the man at the centre of a multi-billion dollar investment from the east Asian country into US shipbuilding. And how old is too old when it comes to being a commercial pilot? Former flyer Kit Darby shares his thoughts. Global business news, with live guests and contributions from Asia and the USA.
As the US Customs and Border Protection agency gets ready to end a tariff exemption on all global parcel imports valued under US$800, known as de minimis, the White House claims it will help curb the movement of drugs. We hear from Kate Muth of the International Mailers Advisory Group on whether Donald Trump's administration has compromised on the plans, and if ending the loophole will provide US$10bn of revenue as claimed. Elsewhere, Federal Reserve governor Lisa Cook has filed a legal case against the US president over his efforts to fire her, while police raids have taken place across Brazil as authorities try to close down a US$10bn money laundering operation. Roger Hearing speaks to the man at the centre of a multi-billion dollar investment from South Korea into US shipbuilding. And how old is too old when it comes to being a commercial pilot? Former flyer Kit Darby shares his thoughts. The latest business and finance news from around the world, on the BBC.
You may have heard that big things come in small packages. Now, tariffs do too. The "de minimis" tariff exemption for purchases less than $800 ends Friday. Parcels will then be subject to the tariff for whatever country from which they're shipped. Plus, why Nvidia's quarterly results are a big deal and how a less independent Federal Reserve could affect the value of the U.S. dollar.
You may have heard that big things come in small packages. Now, tariffs do too. The "de minimis" tariff exemption for purchases less than $800 ends Friday. Parcels will then be subject to the tariff for whatever country from which they're shipped. Plus, why Nvidia's quarterly results are a big deal and how a less independent Federal Reserve could affect the value of the U.S. dollar.
Australia Post is the latest courier to suddenly halt shipments to the US due to new Trump administration customs rules, throwing Aussie small businesses into chaos. Plus, it's the 70th anniversary of the Guinness World Records, so we're diving into the epic origins. Like all good stories, this one started at the pub. And in headlines today, In a beautiful garden surrounded by greenery and flowers, Taylor Swift had her own love story where she got to say yes, as she announced overnight that Travis Kelce had got down on one knee and proposed to the singer; A heavily armed man remains on the run in dense Victorian bushland after killing two police officers in a shooting ambush; Tehran has denied any involvement in anti-semitic attacks on Australian soil, linking the attacks to Australia’s support for a Palestinian state; Brittany Higgins will find out today whether she will be found to have defamed her former boss Linda ReynoldsTHE END BITSSupport independent women's media Check out The Quicky Instagram here Listen to Morning Tea celebrity headlines here GET IN TOUCHShare your story, feedback, or dilemma! Send us a voice note or email us at thequicky@mamamia.com.au CREDITS Hosts: Taylah Strano & Claire Murphy Audio Producer: Lu Hill Become a Mamamia subscriber: https://www.mamamia.com.au/subscribeSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Across the globe postal services are pausing deliveries to the US as Washington prepares to end its long‑held tariff exemption on low‑value parcels.Evergrande, once China's biggest property giant has now been kicked off the Hong Kong stock market, we bring you the latest twist in its collapse.Plus in Ghana, part of our Africa series, we see the true cost of fast fashion as piles of unwanted clothes end up on the beaches.You can contact us on WhatsApp or send us a voicenote: +44 330 678 3033.
The Trump administration's move to slap tariffs on goods imported into the United States is wreaking havoc with international postage. New Zealand Post announced last week it is temporarily suspending parcel shipping to the States and will only carry letters and documents. They said th emove is a temporary measure until details of how the tariffs will be enforced become clear. Bill Hickman reports.
What started as a quick trip to mail Sophia a package turned into a hilarious story that we couldn't keep to ourselves. We hope you enjoy this epic fail of a story, as well as the special return of a favorite segment from the past.
It's all been a bit much lately, to be honest. Turns out, a 'sorry we missed you' notification on a day when I had WAITED IN ALL MORNING was the straw that broke the camel's back.The real lesson here is that I need to refresh my coping mechanisms because something as trivial as missing a delivery, albeit for a replacement internet router because my one inexplicably gave up a few days ago, shouldn't be the thing that makes me cry.
TISS is a weekly podcast where Varun, Kautuk, Neville & Aadar discuss crazy "facts" they find on the internet. Come learn with them... or something like that.This week, the boys are diving into a very exciting episode of Music Recommendations — brought to you by Amazon Music India. Listen to the episode first on Amazon Music, before any other audio streaming platform - included with your Prime Video Membership — https://shorturl.at/hfQZX To support TISS, check out our Instamojo: www.instamojo.com/@TISSOPFollow #TISS Shorts where we put out videos: https://bit.ly/3tUdLTCYou can also check out the podcast on Apple podcast, Spotify and Google podcast!https://shorturl.at/hfQZXhttp://apple.co/3neTO62http://spoti.fi/3blYG79http://bit.ly/3oh0BxkCheck out the TISS Sub-Reddit: https://bit.ly/2IEi0QsCheck out the TISS Discord: / discord Buy Varun Thakur's 420 Merch - http://bit.ly/2oDkhRVSubscribe To Our YT Channels:Varun - https://bit.ly/2HgGwqcAadar - https://bit.ly/37m49J2Kautuk - https://bit.ly/3jcpKGaNeville - https://bit.ly/2HfYlWyFollow Us on Instagram:Varun - / varunthakur Aadar - / theaadarguy Kautak - / cowtuk Neville - / nevilleshah. Chapters:0:00 - Cold Open 2:54 - Welcome to The Internet Said So3:01 - Music based episode!3:39 - How are the boys consuming their music nowadays?4:40 - Shifting musical tastes5:49 - Millennial trend of listening to music?7:40 - How access has changed the way people listen to music 9:10 - Analysing Thakur's musical tastes13:30 - Kautuk sings old Bollywood song14:15 - Why were old songs easier to remember and sing?17:04 - The rise of Hip Hop and Rap in India18:07 - What is Kautuk listening to nowadays?19:20 - 'Sitar for Mental Health' by Rishabh Rishiram Sharma21:33 - Aadar's favourite instrumental musical artists25:47 - EDM Discussion25:15 - Rock A Bye Baby25:43 - Nightclub era of Bollywood28:13 - How to make a successful Item Number song in Bollywood?29:50 - How Varun discovers new music32:25 - Ed Sheeran and India33:00 - Nostalgia bait musician tours35:46 - Eminem coming to India?36:32 - The Dave Chappelle sketch with John Mayer37:14 - Everything nostalgic is making a comeback39:38 - The Visual Presentation of bands like Glass Beams40:53 - Reels help introduce you to new songs nowadays41:53 - The ways to Promote your music has changed43:09 - King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard and Australian bands44:20 - 'Local Train' are awesome!!44:59 - Varun is obsessed with The Parcels 45:46 - Australian Rock Band - Gang of Youths46:16 - The Return of Indie Music46:45 - The Rembrandts (Who made the F.R.I.E.N.D.S. soundtrack)47:08 - Music sampling has gone fully global and cross-genre48:22 - Diljit Dosanjh at Coachella 48:52 - Remo Fernandes' Goan Songs49:15 - Bollywood Music TISS Facts49:26 - Record for writing the lyrics to the most songs 51:40 - Pop Quiz51:48 - Listing Bollywood Composer Duos54:26 - Record for Singer who has sung the most songs55:00 - The magic of Lata Mangeshkar55:40 - Fun fact about Lata ji56:24 - Fun Fact about Madan-Mohan, the music duo57:15 - The song that managed to unite 42 political parties?58:08 - Khalnayak and the crazy things around it58:40 - 'Dil Ne Yeh Kaha Hai Dil Se' and 'Need Churai Meri Kisne O Sanam?'1:00:30 - Bollywood Rap Music Beef - Badshah vs Honey Singh1:01:50 - Which is the longest song in Bollywood history?1:04:35 - Fun fact about 'Masti Ki Paathshala' song from Rang De Basanti1:06:51 - Varun watched Masti 21:06:34 - Some more mindblowing AR Rahman TISS Facts1:07:35 - AR Rahman's Oscar Winning Song 'Jai Ho' was actually composed of another movie?1:08:35 - Salman Khan...the singer?1:09:50 - The most downloaded song on mobiles1:10:20 - AR Rahman has some crazy awards, accolades and records1:10:58 - The 1st artists to ever sell out a stadium - The Beatles1:11:45 - Metallica after the Berlin Wall Fell1:12:18 - The first time Cold Play came to India1:12:50 - The first time music was played in space1:13:50 - What is the oldest musical instrument?1:14:18 - The Divje Babe Flute1:16:29 - The Oldest Piece of Written Music1:17:47 - Which is the Album to sell 1 Million copies in One Week!1:19:18 - Reprised versions of songs1:20:26 - Crazy TISS Fact about Shreya Ghoshal1:20:59 - A purely gibberish song became a massive hit?1:22:49 - The boys give some more of their best music recommendations1:24:22 - The importance of good song videos1:27:50 - FIFA Soundtracks from the games1:29:55 - Aadar is vibing to South Indian rap1:32:04 - 'The Bartender' album1:32:50 - Bombay Vikings and other 90s-early 2000s songs and bands1:35:10 - Muhfaad and TISS Maa Kasam connection?1:35:55 - Thanks for tuning in, folks!1:36:16 - Post credit sceneCreative Producer- Antariksh TakkarChannel Artwork by OMLThumbnail - OML
Why are you doing what you're doing? Is it really about land… or something deeper? In this episode of The Land Academy Show, Steven Jack Butala and Jill DeWit get real about revisiting the “why” behind your land business—from personal reflections (including Jack's unexpected obsession with plaid) to the hilarious and heartfelt moments that make their dynamic so compelling. And just when you think it's all philosophy and flannel, they dive into an unforgettable story: a mysterious 12-acre parcel in Virginia with a deed written before 1871, referencing black walnut trees and Civil War-era chaos. No boundaries, no map—just one giant real estate puzzle. Whether you're here to laugh, learn, or locate lost land, this episode has it all. Get ready for plaid, purpose, and parcels that disappear into the woods and dare you to follow.
The Land Podcast - The Pursuit of Land Ownership and Investing
Dive into the world of land buying and selling with expert Pat Porter. From overcoming landlocked dilemmas to smart investing in rural real estate, this episode is chock-full of seasoned guidance and insider tips, including a chance to snag Pat's latest book for free! So grab your boots, and let's trek through the lucrative trails of land ownership. • Expert advice on land access issues • Tips on value-adding property improvements • The reality of property investment returns • Pat's principles of buying and selling land GET YOUR FREE BOOK: office@recland.net https://www.whitetailmasteracademy.com Use code 'HOFER' to save 10% off at www.theprairiefarm.com Massive potential tax savings: ASMLABS.Net -Moultrie: https://bit.ly/moultrie_ -Hawke Optics: https://bit.ly/hawkeoptics_ -OnX: https://bit.ly/onX_Hunt -Painted Arrow: https://bit.ly/PaintedArrow
En esta ocasión hablamos sobre el show de Rawayana en Coachella y la popularidad histórica del festival. Además, conversamos sobre la percepción gen Z de estos eventos, la música de Parcels, el show de Charli XCX y la nueva encarnación del rockstar. Gracias a: NordVPN Deal ➼ https://nordvpn.com/edn Deal exclusivo de 4 meses gratis. Si quieres ver más contenido de Escuela de Nada, suscríbete a Patreon donde por $6 al mes tendrás acceso a un episodio exclusivo cada viernes y contenido extra los martes). También podrás elegir el tópico principal de un episodio al mes en nuestro Tema de Oro y además tendrás acceso a los primeros 100 episodios del podcast. https://www.patreon.com/escueladenada Escúchanos en Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/4xOM98A8Es30eGevw6tYwe?si=QwORHX8BTMyzKxJOa9_oZQ&dl_branch=1 Y por último, síguenos en nuestras redes sociales: ESCUELA DE NADA Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/escueladenada/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/escueladenada Tik Tok: https://www.tiktok.com/@escueladenada Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/escueladenada Discord: https://discord.com/invite/S8bYM6A 0:00 Intro 1:57 Update de Daniel padrino 3:08 Experiencia de Chris dormido 4:34 Reunirse para ver a Rawayana 6:06 Cosas que hay que ver 7:19 Camisas iguales 7:54 ¿El Coachella perdió popularidad? 12:33 No es lo que era antes 13:55 Green Day envejeció 15:02 Charlie XCX vs. Green Day 16:42 La opinión de Azealia Banks 18:44 Armar tu escenario 20:29 Los tweets de Kanye 20:57 El ensayo de J-Balvin 22:07 La gen Z no aprecia los festivales 24:04 Todo el mundo está en personaje 25:50 ¿Qué pasa con Dudamel? 27:47 Mozart en la selva 29:03 La comunidad de arca 29:42 Mejor música en vivo 31:00 El concepto de Rawayana 33:24 La ganancia del artista 34:44 Talentos escondidos 35:42 Parcels es música 37:47 La historia de Phoenix y Daft Punk 38:49 El fenómeno de Keinemusik 41:54 El chivo en Venezuela 42:18 Perder dinero 43:59 La dirección del stream 45:11 El fotógrafo que interrumpe 47:13 La adicción a las pantallas 49:06 ¿El rockstar está reviviendo? 51:02 El crecimiento de Rawayana 52:56 Hablar desde el desconocimiento 55:24 Conclusiones Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices