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John & Marla break down the unmitigated disaster that was the Peggy Lee musical.Music by Paul HornerLyrics by Peggy LeeBook by Peggy Lee (originally by William Luce)Also featuring songs by Johnny Mercer, Joe McCoy, Richard Rodgers and Lieber & Stoller.Directed by Robert Drivas, replaced by Cy ColemanStarring Peggy LeeOpened on Broadway December 14, 1983.
Worms Are People Too In This Podcast: When his previous industry ground to a sudden halt, Paul Horner decided to farm worms, and this unusual decision turned his life in a completely unexpected direction. His enthusiastic appreciation for the humble worm has fueled a passion for educating others about the value of these tiny creatures, creatures that can magically turn food waste into one of the best plant foods on the planet. Paul openly shares his story, encouraging us to have positive feelings not just about worms, but also about ourselves. Don't miss an episode! visit UrbanFarm.Org/blog/podcast Paul Horner is a worm farmer, published children's book author, and Co-Founder of Our Silent Partners - a grass roots effort focusing on transforming waste diversion into chemical-free soil amendments. An organic gardener and avid composter for over 20 years, Paul has only recently been awakened to what he calls “the true magic that is vermicomposting”. His first book, an illustrated children's book titled “Worms Are People, Too”, was published in April 2022. He is a member of the U.S. Composting Council, the North Carolina Composting Council, and the Carolina Farm Stewards Association. Paul currently resides in Harrisburg, NC with his wife and three children. Visit www.UrbanFarm.org/Podcast-by-episode-titles for the show notes on this episode, and access to our full podcast library! Paul Horner on Vermicomposting.
Paul Horner is a musician who operates the Pastorius Community Garden in the Germantown section of Philadelphia. His summer concert series showcases local talent while exploring the concept that “urban agriculture can be used as a baseline for new social movements.” The Garden Series takes place every third Thursday of the month through September on the corner of Pastorius Street and Germantown Avenue.
It took a bit of work, but episode #175 with our special guest, Taylor Grin, is finally here for your listening pleasure! Taylor is an atheist and former Utah resident who is working on his Master's degree in Intelligence Studies. He joined us in the Godless Rebelution studio for the longest recording session we've had since the presidential debates to talk about the launch of his new website, Grin and Bear Int. The website is a collaborative effort with Taylor's friend, Bear, and is a news aggregation, analysis, and commentary site. We had a fantastic time recording with Taylor, and we talked about a wide variety of things, including: Tom Price, Trump's pick for the head of Health and Human Services, has resigned after coming under fire for spending more than $1M for travel Paul Manafort is suuuuper fucked The American justice system needs an overhaul Donald Trump Jr stands down his Secret Service protection Former director of national intelligence, James Clapper, says Trump was briefed on Russia's interference and legitimacy of the presidential election What Matters: Taking a Knee Fake news writer, Paul Horner, recently died Alex Jones and the Chobani Islamic pedophile ring conspiracy Alt-tech for the alt-right PATRONS ONLY - We had an 80-minute discussion on the topic of punching Nazis, which is one of the best (if not the best) discussions we've heard about the subject Patreon subscribers get more than 80 minutes of extras this week! Show Links: Grin and Bear Int: https://grinandbearint.com/about/ Taylor on Twitter: https://twitter.com/TaylorMGrin Bear on Twitter: https://twitter.com/newtype_hack You can find the Godless Rebelution around the Internet at these links: Our Website: http://www.godlessrebelution.com Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/godlessrebelution Podbean: http://www.godlessrebelution.podbean.com Stitcher: http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/the-godless-rebelution/godless-rebelution iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/godless-rebelution/id872416298 YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/c/GodlessRebelution Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/GodlessRebelution Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/TGRPodcast You can also send us hate-mail, show ideas, questions, corrections, whines, and rants at: GodlessRebelution@gmail.com~ OR ~Send us a text or leave us a voicemail message at: 330-81-REBEL YOU'RE WELCOME!
Sydney examines the life and times of Paul Horner, a “fake news” purveyor and hoax artist who died this past week. Heidi asks why fake news lingers, but real news dissipates from our minds. Friday, September 29, 2017 Links! Paul Horner obituary: http://nyti.ms/2xRiIT9 Indian rape festival: http://bzfd.it/2yN1unR “Peripheral awareness”: http://bit.ly/2xPHdjy Paul Horner post: http://bit.ly/2woxc9q Talk to us! On Twitter: twitter.com/trustissuespod By email: trustissuespod@gmail.com Got a show idea? Submit it at www.wehavetrustissues.com
There shall be no knees taken on this episode cave dwellers. We start off the show with a feisty round table discussion, with our take on the NFL players taking a knee. Hopefully we put this to bed. Then we talk about celebrity deaths. First Hugh Heffner the creator of Playboy magazine and then we talk about the tragic death of former guest and fake news maker, Paul Horner aka Fappy the anti-masturbation dolphin. We play a clip from Pauls appearance in the cave. We have a couple of vagina stories that are sure to tickle. Then we are off to the allotment for updates on the recent election. Finally we have a story of a couple that made a porno movie at a Burger King. Cave Crew Radio can be heard live every Thursday night at 9pm eastern on www.cavecrewradio.com.
Calum Macdonald chats to Paul Horner, king of fake news articles, to find out whether his made up stories might have influenced the outcome of the US Presidential Election 2016, and sent Donald Trump to the White House. What do you think? Leave a comment or email: hello@trustmeimajourno.com Find the podcast on iTunes via the website: trustmeimajourno.com
Hey, it's Episode 24, perhaps! You should download and listen and tell everyone you know to subscribe to the show, because reasons. So what did this pair of passably handsome pseudo-intellectuals talk about this time? Well, Paul Horner, as the title implies. He's a dickbag, for reasons you'll learn if you listen! And WHAT ELSE did we talk about? Paul's hopped up on the goofballs again! Trump's cabinet is shaping up to be a racist pile of crap. Seriously. Would Mike Pence be a better President than Trump? Proooooooobably? Is Mike Pence a murderer? BREAKING: Ben Carson, go **** yourself. WE DON'T KNOW WHAT EPISODE WE'RE ON Fake news is a big problem, and not a simple fix. Paul Horner peddles fake news, is a douche. MANY OTHER THINGS WERE DISCUSSED, I'M SURE, but I have to go pick up my son now. Also, you should totally follow us on Twitter at @dotboom, @paulfidalgo and @thinkerypodcast. And leave a review for us on iTunes or whatever app you use to listen to podcasts.
Andrew Jay Schwartzman (@aschwa02) is the Benton Senior Counselor at the Institute for Public Representation of Georgetown University Law Center. He directed Media Access Project, a public interest media and telecommunications law firm, for 34 years. Mr. Schwartzman serves on the International Advisory Board of Southwestern Law School's National Entertainment & Media Law Institute and on the Board of Directors of the Multicultural Media, Telecom and Internet Council and was the Board President of the Safe Energy Communications Council for many years. Mr. Schwartzman's work has been published in major legal and general journals, including Variety, The Nation, The Washington Post, COMM/ENT Law Journal, the Federal Communications Law Journal, and The ABA Journal. He has also been a frequent guest on television and radio programs. In recognition of his service as chief counsel in the public interest community's challenge to the FCC's June, 2003 media ownership deregulation decision, Scientific American honored Schwartzman as one of the nation's 50 leaders in technology for 2004. Schwartzman was the 2002 Verizon Distinguished Lecturer at Carnegie Mellon University, the 2004 McGannon Lecturer on Communications Policy and Ethics at Fordham University in 2004, and the Distinguished Lecturer in Residence at the Southwestern University School of Law Summer Entertainment and Media Law Program at Fitzwilliam College in Cambridge (2004). In this episode we discussed: possible scenarios regarding the AT&T/Time Warner merger. what an FCC under an Ajit Pai Chairmanship might look like. the possible future of net neutrality under a Donald Trump administration and Republican-controlled Congress. Resources Andy's Schwartzman's 'The Daily Item' Newsletter (subscribe here) Institute for Public Representation at Georgetown University Law Center The Industries of the Future by Alec Ross Yuge!: 30 Years of Doonesbury on Trump by G.B. Trudeau NEWS ROUNDUP A BuzzFeed analysis of news stories appearing on Facebook found fake news stories received more engagements during the final three months before the presidential election than news stories from the leading real news outlets. The difference was some 1.4 million combined likes, shares and comments. At a news conference in Germany, President Obama expressed concern about the spread of fake news saying Q“If we are not serious about facts and what's true and what's not ... if we can't discriminate between serious arguments and propaganda, then we have problems". On the Washington Post's The Intersect Blog, a fake news writer by the name of Paul Horner, who has written numerous fake news stories which have gone viral, expressed regret for the stories he wrote and said he thinks President-elect Trump won the election because of him. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg was initially dismissive, saying the week before last that the notion of fake news having impacted the election in any significant way is a "pretty crazy idea". Since then, Zuckerberg has announced initiatives to identify fake news, such as through user generated reports. Meanwhile, a group of students participating in a hackathon at Princeton last week developed a Chrome plug-in that allows users to assess the veracity of news stories. -- Policymakers are increasingly concerned about the role that mobile apps play in distracted driving incidents. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration says that between January and June of this year, highway fatalities were up 10.4% to 17,775, compared to the same period in 2015. Neal Boudette reports in The New York Times on goals set during the Obama administration to eliminate highway fatalities by 2047. -- SnapChat filed for an initial public offering last week. The IPO is expected to be valued at around $20 billion. It is the largest IPO since Facebook's in 2012. Reuters has more. -- Director of National Intelligence James Clapper has submitted his resignation after a 50- year U.S. intelligence career. In October, Clapper's office formally concluded that Russia was behind cyberattacks intended to sway the U.S. presidential election, and that Rusian President Vladimir Putin has almost certainly approved them. Clapper told the House Intelligence Committee that submitting his resignation "felt pretty good." Greg Miller has the story at the Washington Post. -- A new Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure--Rule 41--which would give federal authorities sweeping powers to search devices, is set to go into effect on December 1st. Currently, federal judges can only authorize searches within their own jurisdictions. Once Rule 41 goes into effect, judges will have the authority to issue search warrants for computers located outside their jurisdictional boundaries, potentially allowing a single judge to issue searches of millions of computers. Civil rights groups are concerned about the rule would intrude on innocents, particularly communities of color. Senator Ron Wyden has proposed legislation to scale back Rule 41, but it hasn't even gotten a committee hearing. On Thursday, Delaware Senator Chris Coons introduced legislation that would delay Rule 41's implementation. David Kravets covers this for Ars Technica. -- Twitter has suspended several accounts linked to the alt-right--super-conservative ideologues, many of whom promote white nationalism. The Southern Poverty Law Center had asked Twitter to remove about 100 accounts expressing white nationalist views for violation of Twitter's terms of service. Among the suspended accounts -- Richard Spencer, President of the National Policy Institute--an organization whose website says is "dedicated to the heritage, identity, and future of people of European descent in the United States." Spencer said Twitter's deletion of his account was akin to a "digital execution". USA Today notes that Spencer has called for removing blacks, Asians, Hispanics and Jews from the United States. Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey also apologized last week for allowing an ad promoting a white supremacist group. Jessica Guynn has the story at USA Today. -- Amar Toor at the Verge reported that China has threatened to cut iPhone sales if President-elect Trump follows through on his threat to declare China a currency manipulator and impose a 45% tariff on Chinese exports. China also threatened to limit automobile and other sales. -- It appears that the Trans-Pacific Partnership--the trade deal that would have enhanced American ties with 11 countries, counterbalancing China's influence in the region--appears to have been defeated even before President-elect Trump has taken office. The deal simply doesn't have enough votes in Congress, and President-elect Trump has stated he would oppose the deal. Elise Labott and Nicole Gaouette reported this for CNN. -- The GOP has successfully forced the FCC to cancel nearly its entire November open meeting agenda, which was supposed to take place last Thursday. Up for consideration were bulk data caps, the Mobility Fund, and a proposed rule on roaming obligations of mobile providers. One Freedom of Information Act request remained on the agenda. Senate Commerce Committee Chair John Thune had sent a letter to the FCC Tuesday warning against “complex, partisan, or otherwise controversial items.” Massachusetts Senator Markey blasted Thune's heavy-handed approach, with Thune responding that he was only referring to the most controversial items. Brendan Bordelon has the story in Morning Consult. -- Finally, the hold on Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel's nomination has been lifted. Democrats Ron Wyden and Ed Markey had put a hold on the Commissioner's nomination following her rejection of the set-top box competition proposal. Rosenworcel will need to be confirmed before the end of the Commission in order to stay on. Some analysts are speculating that Rosenworcel might vote in favor of the set-top box rules currently on circulation. Brendan Bordelon covers the story in Morning Consult.