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Analog. Nuclear. Podcast.Our second week of GDT In The GTA brings us Guillermo del Toro in action blockbuster mode: the rock 'em sock 'em kaiju robot punchfest, PACIFIC RIM from 2013! Join us in canceling the apocalypse!We're diving (lol) deep into how drifting works, what separates this from other mecha anime & monster movies, and what constitutes an analog robot. And we're working to answer the question: did GDT cast Charlie Day purely on the Pepe Silvia episode of Always Sunny? And where does Gamera fit into this picture?Nick takes Erin on GDT's journey from DEVIL'S BACKBONE to PACIFIC RIM and, spoiler alert, James Cameron is way more involved than you might think. And can Erin finally best a round of Graboid Onto These Facts?Next week we go full Oscars mode with 2017's THE SHAPE OF WATER!
In this episode, Ella and Berenice take on their own version of the infamous Pepe Silvia conspiracy from It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia! Inspired by the chaos and confusion of Charlie's mailroom breakdown, the girls dive into hilarious stories of piecing together the truth from shady exes, bad vibes, and all-around messy situations. From finding wallets to deciphering cryptic texts, it's like Pepe Silvia but IRL. Tune in for laughs, drama, and life lessons. Don't forget to follow us on socials for more behind-the-scenes fun:Follow us for more laughs! IG: @thanks4urconcern @berenicediazm @ellaltudorTikTok: @thanks4yourconcern @berenicediazm @ellaltudor
Jeremy has spent the majority of today's show piecing together a "Pepe Silvia" style yarn-tethered board of photos linking Dan, Roger Goodell, and a shadowy figured named "The Draft King" to a number of crime families connected to the Dan Leotard Show universe in order to figure out how exactly Dan was in cahoots with the NFL and Miami Dolphins. Then, Jeff Darlington is clearly angry with us, Mark Hamill's voiceover work, Travis Kelce in Happy Gilmore 2, and some limited fake Adam Sandler from Chris and Mike. Plus, a tribute to the end of Jackie Chan and his insane injuries, Robert Di Nero jumps out of a boat, and Greg Cote's 70th birthday surprise. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
If you have been around this space for awhile you'll inevitably run into issues dealing with "muggles" or those unwise in the magical arts of award travel. Angie and Mike talk about the type of muggles we meet and how to best converse with them without sounding like a crazy person.Links to topics discussedUnder the Canvas Joins World of HyattFlash” 70% transfer bonus from Chase to Marriott (through August 15)Amex MR 30% Transfer Bonus to AviosAmex MR 20% Transfer Bonus to Hawaiian"Pepe Silvia" It's Always Sunny In PhiladelphiaWhere to Find Us For questions, you can join us in the free 110,000+ member Award Travel 101 Community. To book time with our team, check out Award Travel 1-on-1. You can also email us at 101@award.travel Our next meetup is located in SEATTLE on AUGUST 16–18, 2024. For more details and to purchase tickets, visit "Out to SEA" on the award.travel website. Support the AT101 Podcast/Community
In this lucky episode we're interviewing fellow core developer Brandt Bucher to talk about Justin, Swedish warships, and the n-body benchmark. We're also breaking the duration record with this one. We promise we'll get faster in future releases! ## Outline (00:00:00) INTRO (00:01:43) PART 1: BRANDT BUCHER INTERVIEW (00:03:04) Beginnings of contribution (00:06:29) Sticking around (00:09:38) PEP work: pattern matching, dict unions, weird decorators (00:13:07) Implementing pattern matching, we like parsers (00:19:41) First tasks with the Faster Python team (00:20:59) It's always pytest with these things (00:28:55) Pepe Silvia and generators (00:30:12) The paper that inspired the JIT (00:32:01) The n-body benchmark is a joke (00:35:33) What even is a JIT? (00:38:11) Advantages of copy & patch (00:40:27) The Vasa Question (00:45:30) When are we getting faster? (00:49:09) Using pure Python versions of libraries... for speed? (00:52:18) The weirdest bug so far (00:55:12) How did removal of the GIL complicate your life? (00:57:53) Naming things is hard (00:59:55) Collaborating and mentoring others (01:06:19) The Linker Connoisseur Question (01:08:53) PART 2: PR OF THE WEEK (01:14:04) PART 3: WHAT'S GOING ON IN CPYTHON (01:14:40) Jelle is implementing PEP 649 and PEP 749 (01:15:08) Petr's battle with string interning (01:16:24) Ruben Vorderman makes str.count 2X faster (01:16:54) Ken Jin folds constants in entire attribute loads (01:18:07) neonene and Eric Snow make datetime work better with subinterpreters (01:20:18) pickle protocol 5 will be the default in 3.14 (01:21:58) Tian Gao improves pdb (01:23:42) Free-threading changes galore (01:27:34) Victor exposes PyUnicodeWriter in the C API (01:28:18) PyREPL changes & going off the rails
Jeremy and Mike Ryan have come up with a plan to get Kevin Durant to the Miami Heat, and Jeremy goes to the Pepe Silvia plotting board to tell us how. Stugotz shares his weekend observations on a Wednesday which include his top five athletes that connote things you would find in a barn and what happened to his Twitter account. We have picks in Against The Spread and Lucy tells us why she would make a terrible soldier. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Stan Van Gundy sticks around as Jeremy goes all Pepe Silvia to explain why Donovan Mitchell could follow LeBron's path to South Beach. Stan also discusses the Pacers No. 1 options, the Timberwolves-Nuggets series, and Omer Asik's Adam's Apple. Then, what do men think of when they go to sleep at night? And it's time for everyone's favorite game: AGAINST! THE! SPREAD! Plus, the man who ruined basketball, Kirk Goldsberry, is here to tell us about his new book and break down the scoring evolutions of Al Horford and LeBron James, why Jalen Brunson was overlooked, how Victor Wembanyama will fare in the future, and suggest a change to NBA rules. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Host Dan Levi & friends break down UFC 300: Alex Pereira vs Jamahal Hill from a betting, fantasy, insider, and analyst perspective. Levi & friends cover the entire UFC 300 fight card from the main event to the opening prelim and provide a pick for each fight. This is episode 514 of Half The Battle! SPONSOR: Get $150 in bonus bets instantly on DraftKings, the Official Sports Betting Partner of UFC! 1) Sign-up here: http://bit.ly/bfp-dk 2) Bet $5 on any UFC 300 bet 3) Get $150 bonus bets, instantly! Thank you Betting Hero for sponsoring today's episode of Half The Battle! TIMESTAMPS: 0:00 - Jamahal Hill vs Alex Pereira (w/ Belal Muhammad) 17:26 - Yan Xiaonan vs Zhang Weili (w/ The Jewish Bettor & Art C) 37:00 - Justin Gaethje vs Max Holloway (w/ Lucrative MMA) 54:32 - Arman Tsarukyan vs Charles Oliveira (w/ Gianni The Greek) 1:18:04 - Bo Nickal vs Cody Brundage (w/ Clint Maclean) 1:28:23 - Betting Hero Exclusive DraftKings Sportsbook Offer 1:30:00 - Jiri Prochazka vs Aleksandar Rakic (w/ Adam Newsome) 1:52:17 - Calvin Kattar vs Aljamain Sterling (w/ Brett Appley) 2:03:47 - Kayla Harrison vs Holly Holm (w/ Brett Appley) 2:15:55 - Sodiq Yusuff vs Diego Lopes (w/ James Vick) 2:34:24 - Jalin Turner vs Renato Moicano (w/ Kyle Marley) 2:47:00 - Jessica Andrade vs Marina Rodriguez (w/ Pepe Silvia) 3:01:10 - Bobby Green vs Jim Miller (w/ Andrew Gombas) 3:10:00 - Deiveson Figueiredo vs Cody Garbrandt (w/ Nick Kalikas) - SUBSCRIBE TO HALF THE BATTLE PODCAST: ITUNES: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/half-the-battle/id1040391940 SOUNDCLOUD: https://soundcloud.com/bestfightpicks YOUTUBE: https://youtube.com/BestFightPicksHalfTheBattle/Streams SPOTIFY: https://open.spotify.com/show/1R7NuoyetaVaPbsRMStE5f?si=75d790f0811e47ba STITCHER: https://stitcher.com/show/half-the-battle - FOLLOW/CONTACT ME: TWITTER: https://twitter.com/BestFightPicks, https://twitter.com/HalfTheBattleHQ INSTAGRAM: https://instagram.com/HalfTheBattlePod FACEBOOK: https://facebook.com/HalfTheBattlePod - DAN'S BET RECORD: https://betmma.tips/BestFightPicks If my picks helped you win money or you're simply interested in supporting HALF THE BATTLE: PAYPAL: BestFightPicks@gmail.com VENMO: @Daniel-Levi CASHAPP: $DFLonDrums All donations are incredibly appreciated and go directly to paying for the show & improving the quality of the channel. Thank you so much for your support! Video sample credits: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lq2j1ER1DHs&t=123s https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RRnfksMAgx0 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xe9PgMJbiMk https://youtu.be/pZCpS77Kq5I?si=5iw_9mruQYGzo6KQ https://youtu.be/nCg3ufihKyU?si=4dW6nW76mr3o_iaP Gambling problem? Call one eight hundred gambler or in West Virigina visit W W W dot one eight hundred gambler dot net. In New York, call eight seven seven eight HOPE NY or text HOPE NY (four six seven three six nine). In Connecticut, Help is available for problem gambling call eight eight eight seven eight nine seven seven seven seven, or visit C C P G dot org. Please play responsibly. On behalf of Boot Hill Casino & Resort (in Kansas). Twenty one plus age varies by jurisdiction. Void in Ontario. Bonus bets expire one hundred sixty eight hours after issuance. See D K N G dot co slash mma for eligibility and deposit restrictions, terms, and responsible gaming resources.
Hosts: Amrita, John, Patrick, RJ, Vin. Read along with John, Vin, Patrick, Joy, Amrita and RJ as they read The Narrow Road Between Desires for the very first time in The Narrow Pod Between Pages! For longer thoughts that you would like us to address on the podcast, please write letters to narrowpodbetweenpages@gmail.com! Narrow Pod is created and produced by John, Vinny, Patrick, Amrita, RJ, Bill, and Joy
Recorded Feb 10, 2024Fundamentals & Business Cat discuss the use of nyms and check in on the school which stacks satsIntro Music: The Killers - BootsIn this episode, we talked about:1m10s - Pepe Silvia & hash contributors7m40s - Nym culture28m40s - Waldorf update50m30s - Getting bitcoin jobs1hr4m10s - Life after fiatOutro Music: Sam Smith - Man I AmFollow us on X: @RockPBPodcastIf you like the show and would like to support us, you can stream sats by listening with any podcasting 2.0 app.If you'd like to point hash, use the stratum URL "stratum+tcp://NA.lincoin.com:3333" with "RockPaperBitcoin.YourAliasHere" as the worker name.Big shout-out and THANKS for the hash contributions from:senateishospice & thebigturdJoin our Telegram group and let us know what you think.Thanks for listening.
The legends crew have dinner with Hades Support us @ https://www.patreon.com/ReadySetRoll1 Like us on Facebook http://facebook.com/readysetroll1 Twitter http://twitter.com/readysetroll20 We all like shirts get yours at http://rsrmerch.com Get your set of Dice at http://diceenvy.com/readysetroll and get 10% off Don't forget to rate, review, subscribe & share!
Host Dan Levi (@BestFightPicks) & guest Pepe Silvia (@pepe_silvia716) break down UFC Vegas 85: Nassourdine Imavov vs Roman Dolidze from a betting, fantasy, insider, and analyst perspective. Levi & Pepe cover the entire UFC Vegas 85 fight card from the main event to the opening prelim and provides a pick for each fight. This is episode 507 of Half The Battle! - SUBSCRIBE TO HALF THE BATTLE PODCAST: ITUNES: podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/half…le/id1040391940 SOUNDCLOUD: @bestfightpicks YOUTUBE: youtube.com/BestFightPicksHalfTheBattle/Streams SPOTIFY: open.spotify.com/show/1R7NuoyetaV…75d790f0811e47ba STITCHER: stitcher.com/show/half-the-battle - FOLLOW/CONTACT ME: TWITTER: twitter.com/BestFightPicks, twitter.com/HalfTheBattleHQ INSTAGRAM: instagram.com/HalfTheBattlePod FACEBOOK: facebook.com/HalfTheBattlePod - DAN'S BET RECORD: betmma.tips/BestFightPicks If my picks helped you win money or you're simply interested in supporting HALF THE BATTLE: PAYPAL: BestFightPicks@gmail.com VENMO: @Daniel -Levi CASHAPP: $DFLonDrums All donations are incredibly appreciated and go directly to paying for the show & improving the quality of the channel. Thank you so much for your support!
Sam and Ronan sit down with Shaq Sinclair, the newest addition to our weird little family, for an enlightening discussion on life, health, acting, and...Pepe Silvia? Find all our links and good stuff here: https://linktr.ee/ewasay
Host Dan (@BestFightPicks) and guest Pepe Silvia (@pepe_silvia716) go LIVE on HALF THE BATTLE to breakdown UFC Vegas 75: Marvin Vettori vs Jared Cannonier & Arman Tsarukyan vs Joaquim Silva from a betting, fantasy, insider, and analyst perspective. Levi & Silvia cover the entire UFC Vegas 75 fight card from the main event to the opening prelim and provide a pick for each fight, as well as answering fan questions along the way. TIMESTAMPS: 0:01 - Marvin Vettori vs Jared Cannonier 12:10 - Arman Tsarukyan vs Joaquim Silva 17:00 - Christian Leroy Duncan vs Armen Petrosyan 23:43 - Lucas Almeida vs Pat Sabatini 28:20 - Nikolas Motta vs Manuel Torres 36:23 - Muslim Salikhov vs Nicolas Dalby 42:20 - Raoni Barcelos vs Miles Johns 47:40 - Alessandro Costa vs Jimmy Flick 51:19 - Christian Quinonez vs Kyung Ho Kang 56:00 - Carlos Hernandez vs Denys Bondar 1:03:28 - Felipe Bunes vs Zhalgas Zhumagulov 1:10:42 - Tereza Bleda vs Gabriella Fernandes 1:17:00 - Ronnie Lawrence vs Dan Argueta 1:23:20 - Modestas Bukauskas vs Zac Pauga _ SUBSCRIBE TO HALF THE BATTLE PODCAST: ITUNES: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/half-the-battle/id1040391940 SOUNDCLOUD: https://www.soundcloud.com/bestfightpicks YOUTUBE: https://www.youtube.com/BestFightPicksHalfTheBattle/Streams SPOTIFY: https://open.spotify.com/show/1R7NuoyetaVaPbsRMStE5f?si=75d790f0811e47ba STITCHER: https://www.stitcher.com/show/half-the-battle - FOLLOW/CONTACT ME: TWITTER: https://www.twitter.com/BestFightPicks, https://www.twitter.com/HalfTheBattleHQ INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/HalfTheBattlePod FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/HalfTheBattlePod - DAN'S 2022 FINAL BETTING RESULTS: +53.25 Units +25% ROI DAN'S BET RECORD: https://betmma.tips/BestFightPicks If my picks helped you win money or you're simply interested in supporting HALF THE BATTLE: PAYPAL: BestFightPicks@gmail.com VENMO: @Daniel-Levi CASHAPP: $DFLonDrums All donations are incredibly appreciated and go directly to improving the quality of the show. Thank you so much!
Round 6, Team 1: Pepe Silvia. Transcript here. 3032, Earth. After fifteen years, Dane ‘Smiley' Valencia is back at his hometown in the middle of the desert to collect an inheritance, but the murder of his childhood best friend is all the welcoming he finds. As he tries to find the culprit, he learns everyone in town has changed —the desert and his past won't be kind. Content Warnings: Murder, mentions of violence related to the murder, mentions of death, cults, mentions of alcohol, guns, threats, mentions of bombs. This episode was written by David Orión Pena and edited by Nikko Goldstein. It was directed by John Glasfeld, with dialogue editing and sound design by Kathryn Stanley and music composition by Ras Sethu. The transcript was arranged by Charlie Caruso-Neal. The production of his episode was coordinated by Molly Alexander. Dane “Smiley” Valencia was voiced by JJ Jensen. Anika “Rider” Gaur was voiced by Ras Sethu. Harper “Jester” de la Cruz was voiced by Maddie Girouard. Sawyer “Mercy/The Infamous” Kanagawa was voiced by Charlie Caruso-Neal. Riley “Hollow” Lee was voiced by Marnie Warner. Sam “Dawn” Douglas was voiced by Ari Delyne. Mikhail “The Kid” Gray was voiced by Sivan Raz. This team took 25.5 hours for production.
Does home plate umpire Todd Tichenor deserve credit in the Guardians win over the Tigers for lighting a fire under José Ramírez?Cal Quantrill finally had a quality start. Will he make his next start?We give a quick 'thanks for coming' to Brayan Rocchio for his brief callup. Who would take over shortstop for the Guardians should Amed Rosario be out longer?We do a quick bullpen confidence check-in and ranking and ask if there is something to be concerned about with James Karinchak?Of course, we get into who will take Hunter Gaddis' rotation spot next week? Will it be Tanner Bibee? Logan Allen? Xzavion Curry? Konnor Pilkington? Josh Tomlin? Pepe Silvia?Support Us By Supporting Our Sponsors!eBay MotorsFor parts that fit, head to eBay Motors and look for the green check. Stay in the game with eBay Guaranteed Fit. eBay Motors dot com. Let's ride. Eligible items only. Exclusions apply.GametimeDownload the Gametime app, create an account, and use code LOCKEDONMLB for $20 off your first purchase.Ultimate Pro Baseball GMTo download the game just visit probaseballgm.com or look it up on the app stores. Our listeners get a 100% free boost to their franchise when using the promo LOCKEDON (ALL CAPS) in the game store.Built BarBuilt Bar is a protein bar that tastes like a candy bar. Go to builtbar.com and use promo code “LOCKEDON15,” and you'll get 15% off your next order.FanDuelMake Every Moment More. Don't miss the chance to get your No Sweat First Bet up to ONE THOUSAND DOLLARS in Bonus Bets when you go FanDuel.com/LOCKEDON.FANDUEL DISCLAIMER: 21+ in select states. First online real money wager only. Bonus issued as nonwithdrawable free bets that expires in 14 days. Restrictions apply. See terms at sportsbook.fanduel.com. Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-GAMBLER or visit FanDuel.com/RG (CO, IA, MD, MI, NJ, PA, IL, VA, WV), 1-800-NEXT-STEP or text NEXTSTEP to 53342 (AZ), 1-888-789-7777 or visit ccpg.org/chat (CT), 1-800-9-WITH-IT (IN), 1-800-522-4700 (WY, KS) or visit ksgamblinghelp.com (KFollow & Subscribe on all Podcast platforms…
Does home plate umpire Todd Tichenor deserve credit in the Guardians win over the Tigers for lighting a fire under José Ramírez? Cal Quantrill finally had a quality start. Will he make his next start? We give a quick 'thanks for coming' to Brayan Rocchio for his brief callup. Who would take over shortstop for the Guardians should Amed Rosario be out longer? We do a quick bullpen confidence check-in and ranking and ask if there is something to be concerned about with James Karinchak? Of course, we get into who will take Hunter Gaddis' rotation spot next week? Will it be Tanner Bibee? Logan Allen? Xzavion Curry? Konnor Pilkington? Josh Tomlin? Pepe Silvia? Support Us By Supporting Our Sponsors! eBay Motors For parts that fit, head to eBay Motors and look for the green check. Stay in the game with eBay Guaranteed Fit. eBay Motors dot com. Let's ride. Eligible items only. Exclusions apply. Gametime Download the Gametime app, create an account, and use code LOCKEDONMLB for $20 off your first purchase. Ultimate Pro Baseball GM To download the game just visit probaseballgm.com or look it up on the app stores. Our listeners get a 100% free boost to their franchise when using the promo LOCKEDON (ALL CAPS) in the game store. Built Bar Built Bar is a protein bar that tastes like a candy bar. Go to builtbar.com and use promo code “LOCKEDON15,” and you'll get 15% off your next order. FanDuel Make Every Moment More. Don't miss the chance to get your No Sweat First Bet up to ONE THOUSAND DOLLARS in Bonus Bets when you go FanDuel.com/LOCKEDON. FANDUEL DISCLAIMER: 21+ in select states. First online real money wager only. Bonus issued as nonwithdrawable free bets that expires in 14 days. Restrictions apply. See terms at sportsbook.fanduel.com. Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-GAMBLER or visit FanDuel.com/RG (CO, IA, MD, MI, NJ, PA, IL, VA, WV), 1-800-NEXT-STEP or text NEXTSTEP to 53342 (AZ), 1-888-789-7777 or visit ccpg.org/chat (CT), 1-800-9-WITH-IT (IN), 1-800-522-4700 (WY, KS) or visit ksgamblinghelp.com (K Follow & Subscribe on all Podcast platforms…
From deep inside a subterranean bunker where he's perfecting his Pepe Silvia bulletin board, Kyle dishes on the latest in entertainment headlines. On the cutting board this week: delay announcements for Hogwarts Legacy, a movie reboot of a fun 1980s TV show, the steady decline of a once-proud comic book publisher, and hot off the panini presses today, the sale of a major television network to one of those local news conglomerates that help shape your parents' political opinions like so much Silly Putty.Listen in your browser or subscribe to the show on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, or any old podcatcher using our RSS feed. Write opinions or news tips to the show at twitter @media_sandwich or b email at mediasandwichshow@gmail.com!
Everybody remembers that one scene from It's Always Sunny, right? 'course y'all do.It's the end of chapter 5, and the gang decide to try to plan their next move in light of their recent adventures... however, no one is prepared for when a dire piece of critical information comes from an unexpected source. Albion has been dying to talk about the mail, Desdemona plays host yet again, it's Ro's turn to piss off a Warden, and Sylvester auditions his new answering service; with special guest Britty Lea as Kris (Who Works At Zabby & Elf's Stone Soup and The Parlor).Starring Christine Tardif as Desdemona Brown, Darius Southland as Dr. Sylvester Coopersmith, Gwen Vetter as Ro Kamen, Thom Freitag as Albion Graves, and Michael Freitag as everyone else. Adventure written by Seth Burton.Today's show is brought to you by Wine Insiders!Wine Insiders is an online wine retailer committed to better wine, delivered.New customers enjoy $30 off purchases $100+ with code FIRST30 at WineInsiders.com!Go to https://wineinsiders.eqwh.net/PPNPocket Notes are back! https://www.pocketpodcastnetwork.com/shop/pocket-notesFollow Green Mountain Mysteries here!Twitter: https://twitter.com/GMMCastFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/GMMCast/Discord: https://discord.gg/9FJzbzb
Get your Pepe Silvia boards ready cuz it's time to connect some dots! Black Lives Matter. For more info, please check out https://blacklivesmatter.carrd.co/ The Reckless Rollers is part of the Pokecaster's Network Help MarsroverII, our resident robot, out by checking out their Patreon and maybe throwin a couple bucks their way! Check out Steph doin streams and whatnot on Twitch! https://www.twitch.tv/sleepanie Music in this episode was made by Scott, the GM, using either Garageband, Bandlab, or Groovepad. They're all phone apps, and worth checking out if you wanna make some simple tracks too. Follow us on Twitter! @RecklessRPod Join our Discord Server! Link is here
Today we talk about the time Charlie from Its Always Sunny In Philadelphia went on a rant about Pepe Silvia.
CONTENT WARNING: We briefly discuss the topic of sexual assault depicted in Part 5 and The Woman Called Fujiko Mine at the 35 minute mark. Discussion of that topics ends at the 37:20 mark. The main plot has finally kicked back into gear, so it's Tea Time once again, Lupintic folks! Special guest Shannon Strucci joins Drew, Natalie, and Chris to discuss Part 6's return to the Lupin vs. Holmes arc, "An Untold Truth." They talk OC Sherlock Holmes, defending our boy Zenigata, The Part 6 Pepe Silvia board, the current state of Newpin, the beauty of writing fanfic, everything we loved and hated about Part 5, Dynamite Joe, and a number of other topics to avoid our disappointment with this week's episode. Then, our delightful co-host Guillaume gives us his take on this week's reveals, discusses the literary roots the deadly airsoft enthusiast, and provides an interesting theory you don't want to miss! We'll be covering every episode of Part 6 as it airs. Join us on our journey as we react to all the twists and turns of the Lupin gang's latest caper! Shannon's Twitter: https://twitter.com/plentyofalcoves Shannon's YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/struccimovies Twitter: https://twitter.com/lupinpod SoundCloud: https://soundcloud.com/lupinpod iTunes: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/sideburns-cigarettes-a-lupin-iii-podcast/id1478541296 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/1BP4ku5resMwg6CkjHcmMB Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lupinpod/
Matteo doesn't known the lyric to America's of nation anthem. Matteo plays his favorite American Patriotic song. Greg gives a good taken on Eyes Wide Shut and Rob then proceed to trash Tom Cruise. Matteo gives his take on why doesn't like the film Whiplash. We give our take on heterosexual anal play. Plus much more as well. Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thegregandrobpodcast?fan_landing=true --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thegregandrobpocast/support
Video: https://youtu.be/Cxaf8E00GMMSlides: https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1sJSqNy-t-kVxzrWlqMTp_03nI7Zo8Znr7k0f0C6L9ig/edit?usp=sharingTimestamps:[00:00:00] Intro[00:02:17] Part 1 - Components: Code Organization for Real Apps [00:04:26] What we learned from React [00:07:46] Part 2 - Architecture: Choreography vs Orchestration [00:13:05] Retries and Timeouts [00:14:37] Part 3 - Time: React vs Temporal[00:16:34] Elevator Pitch [00:17:13] Programming Model [00:18:44] Comparing React and Temporal Principles [00:19:11] Live Demo: Amazon One Click Button [00:23:49] Talk Recap [00:24:16] React and Temporal Full Comparison [00:24:42] Conclusion: EnablementTranscript [00:00:00] Once again, I want to thank you all for tuning in and joining, React New York 2021 without further ado, I'll pass it on to Shawn. All right, so hi everyone. Hello, React new York. It is my home town in the U S and I miss everyone back in New York. I am currently based in Seattle, but I'm here to talk about React for the Backend. In 2020 I actually thought that I had given my last React talk because I was all tapped out. I had said everything I wanted to say, and then React New York came by and said, do you want to speak? And I was like, oh, I really wanted to speak for React New York. So here's my presentation about what I've been working on and what I think the parallels have been for React. And I think there's some generalizable lessons, even if you don't end up using Temporal. So, the inspiration for this talk came from Guillermo Rauch, the creator of Next.js. And he was the first person to point out that Temporal.io, does to backend and infra what React did to frontend. Temporal engine is quite complex, much like React, but the surface exposed to developers a beautiful render function and I'm a bit upset because he realized there's before me and I have been working on Temporal for a few months now. So important caveats before I start this talk. What I'm presenting to you is alpha for TypeScript. Temporal is typically a goal or Java based application, but we're developing TypeScript and hopefully launching it soon. And then finally "React for the backend" is an analogy, not a design goal. The way I treat this is like, it's a, it's basically like crabs. And one of the most entertaining facts that I've ever found is that nature has apparently tried to evolve crabs five independent times. And in fact, there's a word in evolutionary biology for it called Carcinization. And of course, this is really good for a lot of memes. So tired convergent evolution is not uncommon, especially when species have similar selecting pressures in their environments, wired. Everything is Crab. And perhaps everything is React, because we have similar design space problems. So I'll tell a little bit of the story through three parts there's Components, and we'll tell it through the story of Uber, talk about architecture, we'll talk through the story of YouTube, and Time will tell you through the story of Amazon. So a lot to cover, I'm going to try to go really fast. Don't worry. I'll share the slides on my Twitter later on. Okay. [00:02:17] Part 1 - Components: Code Organization for Real Apps So part one is about components. You see this a lot on YouTube. Probably you're watching now on YouTube or live streaming. And yeah, you know, like three hour live stream and that's it. Very cool. I think we, we know how to break things down and React has really helped us be more productive by being able to break things down into the components and knowing how to compose them together in a predictable way. But there's a lot of things unanswered in things like this in, in full stack, clones of major well-known apps, which is the hard parts. What like a typical Uber trip, we'll have all these steps like search pricing match. Pick-up drop-off rating tipping, payment, email, uh, and so on and so forth. And typically the naive way of organizing all this is basically one after the other, right? Like this is search goes to pricing, goes to matching, goes to pick upgoes to dropoff goes to rating goes to tipping goes to payment, goes to email, imagine that these are all managed by separate teams and scaled independently. Then you realize, like, this is only the happy path. Then you have to throw in a whole bunch of things that can happen along the way. An Uber trip is basically a long running process with humans in the loop and humans are very, very messy by nature. So how would you write an Uber clone? good luck with a lot of data technologies that you would typically reach for just naively, because you will have to discover all these systems and all these use cases and edge cases along the way. So when people say full stack, they often really mean like this half drawn horse meme. I think this is particularly funny so I take every opportunity I can get to show it, but to be honest, a lot of us front end developers are probably the other way the half-drawn Dragon where we're frontend a very good and in the backend, we'll just like, you know, stick some stuff on Firebase and something. And in reality, if you look at the backend systems, most companies, especially at scale, go towards some form of very complex micro service, system. I don't have the chart for Uber, but Hail-0 is probably a good comparison. Netflix, Twitter, and It's not really avoidable. If you want to scale a company to any significant size, you probably have to break them up into independent services because you're going to ship your org chart anyway. [00:04:26] What we learned from React The thing I realized as a React developer, as a front end developer, is that actually we had a pretty good run in the past seven, eight years of React in terms of the fact that front end developers know how to organize code at least in terms of the component level. So we moved from the jQuery era where everything was just kind of spaghetti all over the place to at least something more organized where event handlers are strongly tied, locally tied with renders, but essentially managed by React's runtime. So a few key lessons from React that I personally draw [00:05:00] is that you want to have a component and a renderer model. Like, so essentially the user or the developer writes components. And then the react core team writes the render and that handles a lot of the boilerplate that you might typically forget. And this is everything to do with on mounting or having local states. And it gives you a very nice, non-leaky abstraction that you can write. Second, you can also guarantee work and correctness, which is originally what drew Jordan walk to make something like React because he was working on Facebook messenger and there was a lot of inconsistent state within Facebook manager because of the spaghetti code. So correctness, meaning that we embrace functional programming to produce a virtual DOM view is a pure function of state. If you look at the old enough React talks, you will see a lot of v = f(d), so view as a pure function of data. And finally the programming model. We like to say that it's just JavaScript. There's no custom syntax with templating syntax to learn. I think all these three lessons , there are actually a lot more, but all of these three lessons are where I'm going to focus on for this talk. And I think whenever you tackle any programming paradigm, any framework, any design question, you might want to run it through some of these ideas. So whenever I talk about React principles, I always like to bring up the fact that there's this often overlooked repo called react-basic. And it's actually in the official React organization on GitHub. And this is Sebastian Markbage, who is the tech lead of React. And he wrote down six years ago, his principles on what he thinks makes up React on a fundamental basis? No, JSX just like, what are the principles that we're designing for? We are designing for a simple, pure transformation, abstraction, composition, state, memoization. The words that he uses are very theoretical sometimes, but you feel it every single day when you write React. So there's a lot of things else apart from that, that reacts has done for front end programming. Apart from deterministic renders, we have useState with a reduction of boiler plate with unmounting, child components in con in the very careful design composition, um, side effects where, you know, we have used effect or use memo. And actually a lot of people don't know. I don't, I forget my source. I think it's Sophie Alpert, but, one-third of the React code base is actually just normalization of events across browsers. So you don't even have to worry about it. And creating synthetic events for that. They also produce a dev tool and manage a central scheduler and obviously the success of React over the past five, six years has really shown Testament to how great all these decisions have been. If you want to learn more about the talks that I've done and my perspectives on some of these React principles, I've done three talks. One is at React Rally. The second at JSConf and the third, ,at React Summit. So you can check out my YouTube for more conversations on that. I don't have time here. Okay. [00:07:46] Part 2 - Architecture: Choreography vs Orchestration So that was part one where we talked about Components and the React revolution. So part two, we're going to talk about architecture. So a bit, one level higher than just components. And I'm going to motivate this question with a question of how would you write YouTube. And again, if you look on YouTube for how to write YouTube tutorials, you can get full-stack clones of YouTube, which is pretty impressive, you know, write YouTube in three hours using Firebase. That's very impressive. Unfortunately the hard parts of YouTube also come in. And there are a bunch of Googlers actually who actually went and interviewed YouTube engineers on how YouTube works on the backend. There's a bunch of work that goes on in the background. So you need to upload your file. You need to analyze for metadata. You need to split it up into chunks. You need to process these chunks in parallel, and then you need to stitch it back. And by the way, processing, you have to produce an array of formats, right? From like, 240 P to like 1400 P or something like that. And then you have to stitch all these chunks back into the continuous videos that you actually see in stream. You need to notify subscribers, you need to produce automatic captions and you need to produce thumbnails. And that is again, just the happy path. Right. So, what about all these other features? It's. For example, YouTube premiere is a scheduled release of a YouTube video or feeding into the recommendation algorithm. That must be the most craziest batch job in the world. And you need to scale this process, whatever, whatever you design for 30,000 hours of video uploaded every hour. That's the sheer amount of volume that's going on YouTube today, which is just insane. Like, like any design that you make at scale is going to break in some respect. So I think, I think that's, that's really interesting to consider. And I learned about this actually, and I thought more about this because I interviewed one of our users who is Descript (hi! I'm editing this transcript in Descript rn lol). Descript is a audio transcription platform and their entire business is transcribing audio and then making it easy for you to edit audio. I do it for my podcast every single day and millions of people use it. I think it's really cool. So their problem was that when a user hits transcribe, it kicks off asynchronous multi-stage and parallelized process that involves reading, encoding audio, chunk splitting. external API calls, merging results that may potentially arrive out of order and then verifying their alignment. So there's a lot of [00:10:00] nuance here that can get really tricky. And if any part of the process fails, you need to try it again. So, this is typically the kind of architectures that people build up incrementally over time, as they discover all these use cases and then find holes and patch them because it's too late to rewrite something. There's a lot of decisions that goes into here. And this is normal. This is natural. I think you run into basically the eight fallacies of distributed computing, which has actually discussed or discovered back in 1994 by people at Sun Microsystems. I love these cartoons but it can be a little bit hard to read. So here's a more organized version of them. At the bare minimum, don't forget distributed computing fallacy number one, which is that the network may or may not be reliable or compute may or may not be reliable. So, what that means in practice is that when you're calling system a, B, C, D E F G you may actually need to introduce hardening layers because at every point and you cross system boundaries, you have a chance of failure and that multiplies exponentially, as you have more and more services tied up in your systems like we saw for the Uber example, like we saw for the YouTube example. You need to add in timeouts and retries. And what that means is that you need to persist the number of times you timed out, when you timed out, what jobs you timed up. So you need a database every single time, and then you need a scheduler or a timer to say when the next time is going out, I'm going to try this again. And you need to write this for every service. If the ma the maintainer for every service needs to maintain both the code and the infrastructure for this. This is a lot of how I was talking about things when I was exploring the serverless world. So here's a real life example from the AWS blog where they said that you were using dead letter queues to replay messages when such things as failures occur. This is a fine looking example until you try to scale it. And again it looks like a complete mess, complete track, and it's very hard to keep in your head, and pretty soon when you're explaining this to your CTO you look like the Pepe Silvia meme. So the solution that I found is really to have a central orchestrator, right? Instead of every single system maintainer writing their own API hardening layer, which is a production requirements, as you find more and more of these bugs, you should centralize it with a centralized team that takes care of the orchestration of all these different services. And that's in the business, what we call choreography, which is A to B to C versus orchestration, which is a central orchestrator coordinating the dance between AB and C, and then storing both the infrastructure and the code for the scheduler and the database. So there's a really good article on this by Yan Cui in the burningmonk.com so I highly recommend checking it out where he talks about choreography versus orchestration, with real life examples that people use in AWS, but also it's not specific to any cloud. It's a architecture design pattern, which I think fundamentally, if you start off with this, it's really hard to rearchitect to this. I mean, it's, it's possible because people are doing it, but also it's a conscious, architectural choice that you might not know that you're making if you don't know about it. So, I guess a lot of my message here is to tell you that orchestration is a thing. [00:13:05] Retries and Timeouts Also, so you want to declaratively put into your framework retries and timeouts, so for example, this is actually our API. You want to be able to say, all right, here's the default retry policy. Whenever I fire off an activity, an activity is just like an external API call, for example. So when I fire up an activity, I want it to be retried every second. If it fails, I need a backoff coefficient, like exponential backoff. This is very similar to the TCP protocol so that if the endpoint is failing or getting rate limited, I don't keep retrying, and then building up a DDoS attack on myself, I actually back off and put more and more intervals in between until some maximum interval, let's say a hundred seconds. And then I give myself a maximum attempt, so I can say like, all right. I don't want any retries. I can just say have a maximum attempt of one. Or let's say, I want a linear back off and not an exponential for whatever reason. And I want to try to a maximum of five times - you want to have this all declarative so that you can tweak this as you understand your system and you scale your system. Right? So I think this is a really interesting programming model that just puts retries into the code that you write. And that's only possible when you have your centralized orchestrator, no matter what system, not just Temporal. Okay. So the case that I'm making is really for choreography versus orchestration. And I, the analogy that I make for front end versus the back end is that it's kind of like vanilla or jQuery versus react. React has a react as the central orchestrator, orchestrating all the components. And I think that's a really interesting architectural analogy that you can make and learn from React. All right. [00:14:37] Part 3 - Time Part three - Time. I'm doing very good on time. I think better than I thought, which means that we'll have time for a live demo, which is really awesome. So let's talk a little bit about Temporal. [00:14:45] What is Temporal? What is Temporal? Temporal is the open source platform for orchestrating highly reliable mission-critical applications at scale. I love talking a little bit about the history, the reason because our CEO started at Amazon as the tech lead for what became Amazon SQS. Our [00:15:00] CTO was at Microsoft and it was the principal architect of the Durable Task Framework, which became a Microsoft's version of Durable Functions, and then finally they joined Uber and worked on Cadence, which is the open-source version of their workflow orchestration platform and Cadence became so popular that they spun out and became Temporal. And since then it's been adopted by a lot of well-known household name companies, especially in the developer world. There are a lot of people hiring for Temporal developers, which I really like to see because it's not just being used, but also it's creating jobs for people and it's becoming a desirable skillset. And most recently last week we had Netflix presenting about how they used Temporal for their CI/CD. Temporal has three components or produces three products that are used in sync. The main star is Temporal server, which is comparable to the React runtime that you might see, then there's Devtools, which is the UI that you might want to inspect the state of things. And then the SDK is, which is what you use to code. So I think all those are really comparable to what we have in React and having been in the React world for while, like, it's really amazing to see the analogies that we have. We have exactly the same thing. For me, the really sort of the seal of approval comes from Mitchell Hashimoto who, created Hashi Corp, saying that without Temporal, we would have spent a significant amount of time rebuilding Temporal, which actually to me is the best form of validation because Mitchell is one of the best developers in distributed systems and he says it's hard and he says it does it well. All right. Enough social proof you want actual facts? I would just give it straight to you. [00:16:34] Elevator Pitch So because your workloads like the YouTube encoding, or like the Uber journey and this technology was developed at Uber i s long running and it ties together multiple services. You want to standardize timeouts and retries and you want to make it easy for every team to have production grade retries and timeouts. Because this work is so important. You must never drop any work. You must log all progress. In other words, you must use event sourcing. And then finally, because this work is so complex, you want to use generic programming languages, instead of Domain specific languages. So you want to model a dynamic, asynchronous logic, and then you want to reuse, test, version and migrated it. So that's the pitch in one screen. But I'll just break it down for what it means, and then we'll go into a demo. [00:17:13] Programming Model So to me, The, the closest analogy to React is the programming model, because React spends a lot of time on API design and in the workflow orchestration world there are a lot of JSON or DAG based domain specific languages. So you, you write a bunch of JSON or you do boxes and arrows boxes and arrows boxes and arrows, sometimes you've even write XML, which is very interesting as well. What I find with all these is that they're actually really good for manipulating visually. But they get very tricky when you need to do programming language constructs, like variables, functions, loops, branching statements and all the things that we've invented in programming languages over the past few years. So if you use "just JavaScript" or "just programming languages", you have all the tooling available. You can use all the libraries that are available. You can use all the testing and code version, quality controls available. If you write your own, you have to rebuild all this dev tooling from scratch for yourself. So that's essentially what this is. Here's an example from one of the big clouds where this is their workflow orchestrator model, where you write Jason and it's really hard. It actually goes off the screen and I couldn't really fit everything on one screen. And with Temporal literal just JavaScript you call an endpoint you use that the result of that end point to call other end points, for example. It's a very simple example, but in built here is default retry policies that have been worked out. So both of these handle reliability on rails, it's just, we differ in the programming model and the engineering that it takes to maintain one of these SDKs is I'm learning. It's very, very immense. So it's really interesting. [00:18:44] Comparing React and Temporal Principles So, again, back to the core principles that we talked about early on from React. React d ecided on using a framework, decided on correctness and decided on a programming model, and Temporal, in a very similar way. The developer writes workflows and the Temporal core team writes the orchestrator, which is Temporal server. In terms of correctness, React insists on functional programming, Temporal insists on event sourcing in deterministic workflows and then programming model, you want "just JavaScript" or just programming languages, not any custom DSL syntax. [00:19:11] Live Demo: Amazon One Click Button So the final example that I'm gonna motivate is which is like, I'm, I've been trying to re progressively reduce the complexity of my examples. So we met from Uber, which is like a super long running, a lot of humans in the loop to YouTube, which is not so much humans in the loop. You upload it once and then everything else takes over from there. Now I just want to build one feature, which is a one-click buy button in React or in front end. It's actually super easy. It's a button. That's the literal simplest thing you can possibly do. You put an onclick handler. You're done. If you want to do a one-click buy, you do a setTimeout, and then say like, okay, if you want to cancel this within some window, with Amazon is 30 minutes, we can cancel it. But if you want to persist it, imagine if some person clicks, closes the browser and then changes their mind, opens the browser again, and it's gone. You're screwed. You don't have any other way to implement one-click [00:20:00] purchases. You need to implement timers on the backend to do this. I was watching this old talk from Joel Spolsky where he talks about the engineering for the one-click buy button. And I put it up on my YouTube because this is such an old talk. And I was afraid to link to the timestamp, but you can check it out as it's just a three minute video where he tells the story about how Amazon moved from shopping cart to one-click buy I mean they still have a shopping cart but it's that important because in online e-commerce actually even up to today the abandonment rate for shopping carts is 70%. So imagine if you implement this one feature, you improve your sales by I don't what's the inverse of 70%, three times. That's really amazing. So I think it's just fascinating and it's not just about Amazon. It's not about one click buy. It's about user experience. It's about making things easy and intuitive and that often involves turning synchronous things into asynchronous things and in persisting them so that they persist in the background. So I have a little demo here. I'm going to go really, really fast, but you can check out the code in temporalio/samples-node. There's the specific path this year but it's basically a Next.js demo where I have a Next.js folder here. This is going to be pretty standard for a lot of React developers. Hopefully you're familiar with Next.js, so you can learn it. It's got some pages and an API routes where I have serverless functions that call and send signals to my workflow functions. I have also a Temporal folder where I have written my workflows and activities. The activities are just a little logs obviously, cause they don't interact with any backends, but they could. And then the workflow coordinates the states in the background of all of these. So I can show you the code, but essentially I kick off a one-click buy with a purchase and then I set a timer and promise.race with a five second wait. So if I receive a cancel signal during that timer then that cancels if not, it goes through and the purchase is confirmed. Obviously I can. And what's fascinating about Temporal is that every single step is persisted in automatically saved. So in other words, I can sleep for 30 days. I can sleep for a year. I can sleep for five years and it doesn't matter because it's all persisted and wakes up automatically. So the compute the, this serverless function can be. The worker or a Temporal server itself can go down. You can just bring you back up again and it carries on as though nothing happened because of event sourcing. So, I'm gonna, I'm going to go ahead and run this. I think it's uh, demos I'm always stressed out about live demos. Okay. I mean, I did test it before the talk. It's just that whenever I'm streaming, like it adds an extra latency thing and that goes haywire. So, Let's see if I have this demo available. All right. So I also want to pull this out, which is the UI layer. These are the my test runs. But I have here at one-click purchase UI, and literally, I, you know, I, I want to implement this without a shopping cart, but I want to be able to cancel within some certain amount of time. So if I click buy, uh, it clicks, it handles it's. It sends a workflow. And that workflow starts in starts in the background and it's running, right. It's waiting for the timer to proceed. So I'm going to hit the timer, uh, and you can see that a timer started and time of ended, uh, within that five second window that I specified, obviously I should make it longer if I, if I really wanted to show this along the way. Um, so, uh, this, this is, this is as is purchased, um, and we can, uh, and now we've confirmed it. Um, but if I ever want to click buy, and then I can click the. That also fires off a different workflow, uh, where it sees that it receives the cancel signal from me. Uh, so, so I signaled it to cancel. And that's a very useful model as well. So this actually shows off a lot of the core principles of Temporal, which is you kick off a workflow, you can set durable timers, you can send it human signals and you can get out data as well with queries. There's a lot of interesting elements behind that, but that's the core demo that I wanted to show off. So maybe I'll write a YouTube example and then I'll go on to an Uber example and be a billionaire. [00:23:49] Talk Recap So ultimately I just want it to recap again, what we covered. We covered components, we covered architecture we covered time, and these are all the three elements I wanted to compare reacts and Temporal, and explain a little bit of how we think about doing the hard parts of making clones of very popular projects. Why is it so interesting? It's a little bit like the crabs story, you know. Obviously the founders of Temporal are not front end developers. They didn't even know react at all. [00:24:16] React and Temporal Full Comparison But they independently evolved a lot of the same principles and this that's, I haven't even gone into like the full comparison. So we talked a little bit about deterministic functions and local state and composition, but we haven't talked about normalization and how that compares dev tools. Testing is also super interesting thing as well as the central runtime. So there's a lot here, which I think. And fascinated by, and I'm obsessed by applying the lessons from React to things that are not React. [00:24:42] Conclusion: Enablement And I think overall, when I asked my CEO, like, what is the core message that we want to deliver is actually about enablements. Like we enable people to do things that they're not formally trained to do because we wrapped it up rapid all in a central runtime or central framework. So, uh, I always loved the Alfred north Whitehead quote that [00:25:00] civilization advances by extending the numberof things that we can do without thinking about it. So for me, my version of it is that B2B software advances by extending the number of jobs we can perform without formal training. And the message overall here is that Temporal lets backend developers or, just general full stack developers do distributed systems right? So that's it. I blasted through that. I only took 26 minutes. Really great for me, cause I was worried that it would take 50 and I'm happy to answer any questions you can hit me up on Twitter at Swyx. You can read my long form blog posts about why Temporal and then you can join our mailing list, YouTube or Slack. Thank you. Alright, thank you very much things. So I think that was a really, really nice. And you did, uh, went through that quite quickly. Uh, when I see the comments, people love the, like the most right there, because I could fail because I could fail. It's always like that. So, uh, yeah. Um, the nice thank you for the presentation. With this talk, I think it's actually the last talk of the event and I want to thanks everyone for joining us and thanks to everyone, thanks to all the speakers, of course, for being part of this event, uh, React New York 2021 and the sponsors. Um, I think this would be a good afternoon, I guess, or good night, depending on where we are in the world. Right. Have a good one. Everyone.
The patterns! THE PATTERNS!!! Can't you see them!? It's all connected, I'm telling you, IT'S ALL CONNECTED!
This week: Dean and Sam aren't WASPs, a one-scene heist movie, Jules goes full Pepe Silvia over G-d as an author, Elijah is NOT a vampire, and it's wildly easy to trick John Winchester.(Supernatural Season 1, Episodes 19 and 20)References:Working Class as a Signifier of Masculinity (Web Archive)(Tag Screenshot)Working Class as a Signifier of Masculinity (Original)A Swarm of Evil BeesExodus 20:4 with ConnectionsNosferatu (word)Lilith and lilin as blood drinkers You can also find us on Twitter @menschofletters and on Tumblr at menschofletters.tumblr.com. If you like what we're doing, you can support us on Patreon! For as little as one dollar a month, you can get a special role in our Discord, exclusive access to bonus content, and more. Get your creative hats on, because Jupernatural Week is back! Running from October 2nd through October 9th, it's an entire week of celebrating the canon and fanon Jews of Supernatural. Draw some art, write a fic, put together a playlist, and share your favorites far and wide. We can't wait to see what you make! Our intro music is Fun Tashlikh and our outro music is Szarvaszo Stomp, both by Yid Vicious, who you can find at their website yidvicious.com, where their music is available for purchase.
00:00 - Introduction 02:30 - New games this week 12:15 - Boshgamer News w/ Pepe Silvia 16:02 - Fortnite vs Among Us "Originality in gaming" 25:30 - Videogames and violence - bullshit? 35:50 - What are the first RTS games to get on the Steam Deck? 45:50 - Twitch Hate Raids - wtf is going on?
Join us as we discuss new games to watch this week, Twitch streaming popularity, Bosh gaming news, Steam deck, and whether you should get a Xbox or PS5 as a PC gamer. 00:00 - Introduction 01:30 - New games this week 07:28 - Boshgamer News with Pepe Silvia 14:00 - Discussing Twitch Streaming Popularity 25:09 - The new Steam Deck (gets my pp diamond hard) 34:00 - Bosh Community Question: Xbox or PS5 for PC users?
Welcome Back! Join Jared, Jon, Rose, and Me your Host Rob for Our 48th A.N.A.L. Segment! Might even be a random drop in! We break down everything in the title and so much more! Don't miss out! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/analpod/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/analpod/support
Just throw a boxing event and then don't pay anyone. Easiest cash of all time. Austin McBroom is getting sued by the likes of James Harden and others for his Pepe Silvia boxing event and I find it hilarious and also dumbfounding. He just thought nobody was gonna care about not getting paid???? I get into it and try to make any explanation of it. Enjoy
We have a new voice taking over your ear holes!! Check out this weeks news that interest us the most...
Subscribe, Rate, Share, and Leave a Review! -We may die of heat exhaustion in our studio -KFC went Pepe Silvia and tried to figure out who Lana Rhoades was referring to when she said a basketball player brought a back up sure thing onto a date with her in case she didnt want to hook up. All signs are pointing to Kevin Durant. -Feits recaps the Bruins/Islanders live streams from this past weekend and the madman that is Frankie Borrelli -The Logan Paul vs Floyd Mayweather fight was an absolute success minus the allegations that Floyd knocked out Logan for a split second and held him up to keep the match going -Jackie took a power nap at a bar this weekend -Top 5 nap locations -Voicemails include smelly dates, getting your friend's mom high, and people you know in porn Let us know what you think on twitter: @KFCRadio @KFCBarstool @Feitsbarstool @nickhammy5 @JNics415 @Joshua__DM Subscribe to watch on youtube: barstool.link/KFCRADIO
In the Mood for Chaos: A Riverdale Roasting and Recap Podcast
20 whole epi...chapters. 20 chapters of this godforsaken show. To celebrate, they've decided to completely change the genre on us without any warning and make this episode an anthology. Jughead is called on to deliver "pancake mix" even though according to a few episodes ago the Serpents don't deal in "pancake mix". Along the way, he hitches a ride with a guy who tells us about, wait for it...The Riverdale Reaper. Also Archie's sort of there too and pays for dinner or whatever. On the plus side, we hear more from Josie, but on the ever-weightier minus side, she's being stalked and manipulated, and also Chuck is back? We get a Cheryl reveal that sends smoke shooting out of Miranda's ears too. Then Betty and Veronica do some snooping - read: seriously overstep boundaries and Sheriff Dad cuts them way too much slack because they're his son's only friends. He also gets off a sick burn on Archie, making him the MVP of this episode. Go, Sheriff Dad! Evelyn has a hot take on why Riverdale exists, and makes an excellent metaphor about a dishcloth. Miranda finds new ways to be angry at Jughead, and tries to transplant Riverdale onto the Pepe Silvia meme. Both exhausted by the style changes, and character inconsistency, Evelyn imparts words of nihilistic wisdom: "We have no arcs in Riverdale. We only have vague fluctuations." Screencaps & other fun stuff can be found on our Twitter: https://twitter.com/moodforchaospod Content Warnings: - Animal death (deer, mentions of a pig's heart) - Emotional abuse/manipulation - Drugs/drug usage - Hunting - Murder - Sexual Assault (brief mention) - Stalking Music: 'Imps' by Mark Revell
STAR WARS used to be my favorite movie series of all time. I'm not sure if it was just growing up and not becoming a Funko Pop collector that ended that, or if it was Disney producing the absolute worst garbage movies that soured me to the franchise. Either way, I now have an Encyclopedia Autistica level of useless knowledge about background Star Wars characters, and it is time to finally put it to work. George Lucas, in his greatest troll of all time, made one more edit to the Original Trilogy right before selling it off to the Mouse. For some insane reason, he made the character Greedo shout the nonsense word "Maclunkey" before having his brains fried. This absolutely ridiculous change has lead me down a conspiracy theory RABBITHOLE to uncover the truth behind Mark Hamill's mysterious 1977 car crash, what happened to his face, why they covered it up, who is Pepe Silvia, and proof that George Lucas is the greatest troll of all time. PLUS: A brand new fake-radio guy GOON! Big John Mason gets prank called on his Conservative Talk show in a galaxy far, far away. Want to see the after show all about embarrassing the King Of Fake Radio, Tom Gulley? Get the POD AWFTER SHOW for this episode in THE PIZZA FUND! $6 level. http://podawful.pizza VIDEO: https://youtu.be/yFqrKo5R4lo RSS FEED: http://feeds.feedburner.com/podawful TWITTER: https://twitter.com/fatgaynigger YOUTUBE: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCbHjnTwg0vr_xfo10mhYXOA TWITCH: https://www.twitch.tv/podawful DLIVE: https://dlive.tv/PodAwful ODYSEE: https://odysee.com/@podawful:8 FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/podawfultv/ CULT: http://podawful.com/cult DISCORD: http://podawful.com/discord MERCH: http://podawful.shop http://podawful.com
STAR WARS used to be my favorite movie series of all time. I'm not sure if it was just growing up and not becoming a Funko Pop collector that ended that, or if it was Disney producing the absolute worst garbage movies that soured me to the franchise. Either way, I now have an Encyclopedia Autistica level of useless knowledge about background Star Wars characters, and it is time to finally put it to work. George Lucas, in his greatest troll of all time, made one more edit to the Original Trilogy right before selling it off to the Mouse. For some insane reason, he made the character Greedo shout the nonsense word "Maclunkey" before having his brains fried. This absolutely ridiculous change has lead me down a conspiracy theory RABBITHOLE to uncover the truth behind Mark Hamill's mysterious 1977 car crash, what happened to his face, why they covered it up, who is Pepe Silvia, and proof that George Lucas is the greatest troll of all time. PLUS: A brand new fake-radio guy GOON! Big John Mason gets prank called on his Conservative Talk show in a galaxy far, far away. Want to see the after show all about embarrassing the King Of Fake Radio, Tom Gulley? Get the POD AWFTER SHOW for this episode in THE PIZZA FUND! $6 level. http://podawful.pizza VIDEO: https://youtu.be/yFqrKo5R4lo RSS FEED: http://feeds.feedburner.com/podawful TWITTER: https://twitter.com/fatgaynigger YOUTUBE: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCbHjnTwg0vr_xfo10mhYXOA TWITCH: https://www.twitch.tv/podawful DLIVE: https://dlive.tv/PodAwful ODYSEE: https://odysee.com/@podawful:8 FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/podawfultv/ CULT: http://podawful.com/cult DISCORD: http://podawful.com/discord MERCH: http://podawful.shop http://podawful.com
The Bleacher Boys take a trip to Deshaun Watson’s house to give him a massage while Trey Songs sets the mood. Also, the Miami Dolphins Front Office are making deals like they’re looking for Pepe Silvia and its time to talk NCAA Men’s Sweet 16 happening this weekend! Hit us up on Instagram bleacher_boys_podcast, follow and subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and Google Podcasts. --- 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/bleacherboys/message
Derek's Daily Rec: Worthikids--Subscribe now for great recommendations, Monday through Friday!
On this week's episode of Podcast Beyond!, IGN's PlayStation show, host Jonathon Dornbush is joined by Brian Altano for an episode even Pepe Silvia would marvel at. The duo discusses what Sony's next movies should and could be for the PS5 following Xbox's Series X and Series S announcements, including when and what Sony might do when it comes to PS5 price, preorders, launch lineup, and games in 2020. Plus, the duo looks ahead at the big games still to come for the PS4, and the PS5's launch window, in 2020 and beyond (BEYOND!), and Jonathon talks himself into three different arguments for and against PS5 launch dates. Have questions, comments, Memory Card stories, or something else to share? Write in to beyond@ign.com!
WILDCARD, Bitches! Drunk & Uncultured is finally covering one of their favorite TV shows. Yes, we're questioning how we're just now covering this show, but the timing works out pretty well because 8/4/2020 marked the 15 year anniversary of It's Always Sunny In Philadelphia. We're talking kitten mittens, rum ham, Pepe Silvia, best episodes and Charlie moments. This was a fun episode, and you don't want to miss out. Beer Creator Feature: This Chick Talks Beer Podcast Website: https://afrobeerchick.com/thischicktalksbeer Instagram: thischicktalksbeer and afro.beer.chick Episode Title: Genius of Love by Tom Tom Club
We occupy Pepe Silvia's galaxy brain in Kentucky Route Zero, Act 3. Developer: Cardboard Computer | Publisher: Annapurna Interactive | Initial Release: May 6, 2014 Jacob, Mike and special guest Adam Iannetta experience a haunting musical performance, degauss old CRTs and scream about debt. Players: Jacob McCourt (@JacobMcCourt) & Mike Ruffolo (@ruffolom) Special Guest: Adam Iannetta (@adiannetta) | Website: adamiannetta.ca Web: LeftBehindGame.Club | Twitter: @LeftBehindClub | Instagram: @LeftBehindGameClub Additional Music: Ice Cider (Cider Time Variation) by Lifeformed | Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0 SHOW NOTES: 0:00 Previously on Act 2 of Kentucky Route Zero 2:00 "Where my leg?" 5:10 Was the first scene a hallucination? 8:00 Hey, this game is about debt, right? 12:50 The writing and the direction is so great (and continues to get better) 14:00 Meeting Junebug and Johnny 19:00 Taking in a show 25:35 We set up Junebug and Johnny's beautiful performance 32:45 The Hall of the Mountain King & Xanadu 39:30 Jacob's galaxy brain moment (and really beautiful death) with Xanadu 44:00 Going to a creepy graveyard 47:25 The Hard Times Whiskey Distillery 58:00 Jacob is ready to "wring this game's neck" and we explain why 1:03:45 Wrap-up NEXT SHOWS: July 8, 2020 - Kentucky Route Zero (Here And There Along The Echo) feat. Jacob, Mike and special guest Adam Iannetta July 22, 2020 - Florence feat. Jacob with special guests Travis Colenutt, Katie Lesperance and Jessica Fantauzzo August 5, 2020 - Kentucky Route Zero (Act IV) feat. Jacob, Mike and special guest Adam Iannetta August 12, 2020 - Kentucky Route Zero (Un Pueblo de Nada) feat. Jacob, Mike and special guest Adam Iannetta August 19, 2020 - A Way Out feat. Jacob, Mike, Moe and special guest Kevin Reaburn LEAVE US A VOICEMAIL: If you want a chance to get your voice on the show, give us a call at (734) 489-9753 and tell us what you think about one of this month's games! This is a U.S. number, long-distance charges apply for international callers. DISCORD: The Left Behind Game Club is a monthly game club podcast with a focus on positivity & community. To talk to members of the community, join our Discord server! TIP JAR: If you’re feeling generous and love the show, we have a PayPal tip jar! Any funds raised will go towards hosting our site and paying for games and equipment as we look to bring you higher quality content every month.
The boys are here to gives their thoughts on the matches from the returning week of OWL as well as a preview of next week's games! Shoutouts to our Executive Producer Bungee Bamboo You can... The longest running Overwatch league and competitive Overwatch Podcast.
Mariska Hargitay, bitches. Lock yourself and your immediate family indoors for this evening’s entertainment as our quarantined comrades dive deep on the Yorgos Lanthimos-directed Greek Weird Wave fav Dogtooth and the Mike Myers career-killer The Love Guru. Plus: Rob goes full Pepe Silvia trying to explain The Phanton Menace.
Mariska Hargitay, bitches. Lock yourself and your immediate family indoors for this evening’s entertainment as our quarantined comrades dive deep on the Yorgos Lanthimos-directed Greek Weird Wave fav Dogtooth and the Mike Myers career-killer The Love Guru. Plus: Rob goes full Pepe Silvia trying to explain The Phanton Menace.
Welcome to Gabagool & Roses, the ONLY leftist Sopranos podcast. John has seen HBO's "The Sopranos" a bunch of times, Ben and Rachel have never seen it. We're gonna watch it and talk about it from a leftist perspective. Follow us on Twitter: @PodSopranos, Rachel is @whatshakesloose, Ben is @esentialcnsltnt, and John is @johnnyawful. This week on the podcast we talk about Season 1 Episode 6 "Pax Soprana", also, child drug use again?!?, Rachel puts John & Ben on the spot, Tony and the male g-spot, consent to touch and the 70/30, how to do cocaine, Pepe Silvia, Carmella's Polycule, Rachel's kink corner, and of course, Who's Horny?, our Stans of the Week, and THE DIALECTIC. The closing song this week is "Rub 'Till It Bleeds" by PJ Harvey. Until next week: take your meds, go to therapy, and organize for the Revolution. We love you. Find out more at https://gabagool-roses.pinecast.co
BackTrekking returns again to look back at the real-world inspirations of classic Trek episodes!There's a reason that the Pepe Silvia scene from "It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia" has become a popular meme. In our post-Watergate/Gamergate/Deflategate/et al. world, governmental conspiracy has gone from something the Washington Post investigates to fodder for the obsessive, "crazy" tinfoil hat characters of prime-time TV. Conspiracy was popular as a subject long before ex-President Nixon took his last helicopter ride out of Washington, but Watergate seemed to solidify paranoia as a *genre*, leading to the classic paranoid thrillers of the '70s like "Three Days of the Condor", "The Conversation", and of course, "All the President's Men". Generally, conspiracy films end with justice done and our hero's integrity being rewarded. Unfortunately, however, the actual process of uncovering a conspiracy tends to be a long and frustrating one, replete with half-truths and redactions and missing the satisfying third act reveal, the bad guys in question going unpunished and often keeping the positions they abused in the first place. Such was the Iran-Contra affair, a twisted, multi-national criminal conspiracy to fund right-wing rebels in a Central American nation that the Reagan Administration used illegal weapons sales and drug money to support. Iran-Contra was all anyone on either side of the aisle could talk about in the late '80s; in 2019, it's a barely remembered footnote of the Reagan presidency, as is the stack of pardons handed out to nearly everyone involved by Reagan's successor, George H. W. Bush. Bush (and his son) went on to be president, the Sandinista party (with a new coat of paint) remains in power in Nicaragua to this day, and Ollie North got a TV show on Fox News. Players with bit parts---like CIA-recruited pilot Barry Seal, focus of the 2017 movie "American Made"---got a bullet for their troubles, disposable by design and by policy.The TNG episode "Too Short a Season" and the conspiracy it contains doesn't have a Barry Seal character exactly. Imagine instead that Ronald Reagan himself---the "Great Communicator"---began his diplomatic career by secretly negotiating with terrorists and giving them exactly what they wanted. Now, after 45 years of lies and cover-ups, he's returning to the planet in question to atone for his crimes . . . as a sweaty 25-year-old? Star Trek!This week, we're looking at one of early TNG's botched attempts at political commentary and the Tom Cruise film that swooped in to set the record straight. On the show, we talk about the twisted conspiracy underpinning Iran-Contra, the film's attempt to "McKay" a potentially stultifying subject, the "Three Billboards" vibe, Domnhall Gleason=weak dick, getting your "Burn After Reading" in your "Goodfellas", too much medicine and not enough sugar, Tom Cruise question acting, the Federation's first Muppet admiral, Professor X chairs, "Oops, you war-crimed", exactly when to Benjamin Button yourself, Troi clownface, the dreaded "anti-Bechdel", running phasers to the Contras, pharmacological crime-fighting ethics, and LEONARD MAIZLISH! *gasp*This episode is dedicated to DC Fontana, Rene Auberjonois, and the many Trek actors and staff we've lost this year.Join us in the Just Enough Trope Discord!https://discord.gg/EAx5VGXTweet at the show or your hosts with your suggestions for future episodes!http://www.twitter.com/backtrekkinghttp://www.twitter.com/ka1ibanhttp://www.twitter.com/gooeyfameCheck out the other shows on the Just Enough Trope network!http://www.justenoughtrope.comTheme: Disco Medusae Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 Licensehttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Eyeball anatomy All the important parts, wherever they are! Who really cares anyway we’re only here for two in particular: the iris and the retina. The retinal blind spot. Creationism And intelligent design. Are wrong. Reaching conclusions and working backwards for fun and profit. Young Earth creationism. Dan’s religious upbringing. Irreducible complexity. Faulty reasoning. The evolution of the modern vertebrate eyeball Fish and their goofy eyeball arrangements. The crazy Charlie eyeball progress chart. Light sensitive flat patches, pits, enclosures, open pinhole eyeballs, lenses, and flexing your sphincters. Dan’s episode on Three-D Vision. Pepe Silvia eyeball evolution. Comparative eyeball studies Human eyes are pretty sweet! But there other ones that do other things (at their own local summits on Mount Improbable) and are also really good at stuff! Goats, sharks, snakes (sorta), bees. Removing your lenses for fun and profit. Monet’s lens removal and ultraviolet perception. Eyeball shortcomings Common “colorblindness” is a misnomer, but “color discernment syndrome” doesn’t flow as well. Retinal wiring and the “blind spot.” Saccades. “Chronostasis” or “the stopped clock illusion” and the tight coupling of our eyes and our brains. Bio-identification Selecting scanning sites for statistical uniqueness and natural resistance to hacking. The insufficiency of fingerprints. Iris scans. Retinal scans. Bio-identification security. Ease of use. Rationality Rationalism/spiritualism/etc. The rational scientific worldview and self-correction. The absolution of new knowledge. Richard Dawkins demonstrates the evolution of the eye: YouTube Daniel James Barker's Podcast: Uncertainty Principle the Podcast Welcome, Marty - a special short episode: Uncertainty Principle The Podcast Support the show!
This week we have Jack and Scott/Shane hosting as they are joined by Ray from Jackalmen Games. They recap how they did at CAPA Cup this past weekend, both in the standard tournament and the Battle Royale event. They wrap up this talk by figuring out who each Golden Dice member would be if they were an Always Sunny in Philadelphia character.Podcast: http://shoutengine.com/GoldenDicePodcast/WordPress: https://thegoldendicepodcast.wordpress.com/GooglePlay: https://play.google.com/music/m/I746l...iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/g...YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/GoldenDicePodcastFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/goldendicepo...Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/GoldenDiceTwitch: https://www.twitch.tv/goldendicepodcastTwitter: https://twitter.com/GoldenDicePodTopDeck: https://www.topdecktcg.com/ Promo:GoldenDice10Jackalmen Games: https://www.jackalmengames.com/
This is a weekly headline show where Dee and Jessie Broke do their best to highlight bits of nonce-sense from Crypto News. We only choose three articles, from the litany of blockchain news that is syndicated throughout a week. If you are interested in all the news articles that we horde in a week, please visit the link below to look at our collection. This week: -Pepe Silvia strikes again. -Venezuela makes the Petro a national currency. -Private keys in DNA...not a terrible idea...not at all. -Jessie wants a lightning round. Enjoy! Crypto Headline Database: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1XDslU2J4ipR9BawjfEAihqTusr4NZqjq4S5ALY8sMJw/edit?usp=sharing
Toei promptly tells Castranger to go fuck themselves by way of the Hokan Keikaku episodes thus far. In response, in a move unheard of since logic'ing out Cronus's Reset paradox, Ichi manages to logic out MOST, not all, of the time/space paradox nonsense presented by episodes 1 and 2 of Zi-O. Come witness, jaw agape, as we go all Pepe Silvia on this show's ass. Next, Sakuya guns for our jobs and Noel smuglords his way through the weirdest collection piece thus far. Finally, we begin GASHATEMBER, our Ex-Aid-themed 3/4 of a month, by discussing the first of the trilogy movies. The Chou Den-O Episode Red, if you will. Casters Present: Red Blue Pink Yellow Cyan Show Notes: https://www.patreon.com/posts/21449585 (includes Ichi's Zi-O Whiteboard image!) Required Viewing: Kamen Rider Zi-O 1.5, 2, 2.5, Kaitou Sentai Lupinranger VS Keisatsu Sentai Patranger 31, Kamen Rider Brave & Snipe YouTube Version: [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gWaRQjW2Ieo] Feed the Castrangers and get $7 off your first order with SkipTheDishes! https://www.skipthedishes.com/r/6YaJc65HKg
All of our lives have been upended because of some pretty awesome news (read item one here, and item two here), and it has had the unfortunate effect of knocking our recording schedule totally out of whack. So for this month's Idle Thumbs we have something a little different! At PAX East 2018, Chris moderated a panel called "Building Bridges & Breaking Barriers" and we're privileged to share it with you! Here's the official description: This panel brings a diverse group of individuals together who are actively working – often times behind-the-scenes - in the game space to help bridge cultural gaps and create positive communities. Panelists will share personal stories on how they overcame cross-cultural challenges, not just in their own “backyard” but also across the world! We're not sure when a 100% regular schedule will resume but we'll keep you posted! In the mean time enjoy this episode and thanks for listening! Discussed: Pepe Silvia w/drums
Extray! Extray! Read all about it! 9 months after the first Act Hiveswap is once again in trouble! Viz Media acquires Homestuck! All these headlines and more brought to you by LMTYA Publishers, only 25 cents! Talking Points: Hiveswap, , top notch game design, pepe silvia, human thinky power, what what pumpkin?, Viz Media, inefficient cracker mechanics,dr pepper cultists, jude is the dude Check out the website for links to our shows on iTunes and GooglePlay ► http://www.lmtya.com Peep us on Twitter ► @LetMeTellYouPD Official Discord ► https://discord.gg/SqyXJ9R /////// SHILL CORNER /////// ► https://www.patreon.com/LMTYA LMTYA shirts! ► https://represent.com/lmtya /////// SHILL CORNER /////// LMTYA Theme by ► https://www.huskyswonderfulmusicland.net/
Enjoy this bonus episode drawn from the Idle Thumbs Patreon Ruination Online! Each month, we do a livestream where all topics have been posed by high-tier backers of our Patreon campaign: patreon.com/IdleThumbs. Due to popular demand, we're releasing the audio of that stream to the main podcast feed for easier listening. We'll be back with a regular episode of Idle Thumbs soon! Discussed: B. D. Wong, HPB Wong, The Idle Thumbs Patreon, impressing someone with your cooking ability, impressive cooking disasters, roasting tomatoes, roasting your dad's tomato sauce recipe, climate change, Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis, only playing Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis one more time before you die, Positive and Uplifting Internet Content*, ABBA, My Brother, My Brother, and Me, Content ID, how do podcasts use tons of licensed music and not get destroyed?, This American Life uploading their library to YouTube and being Content ID'd into a crater, which podcasts would we guest on and ruin, being one step closer to the grave, lightly roasted coffee, powerfully roasted coffee, :-), brushing your teeth for a week so you don't have to brush your teeth for a long time, teleporting around, good genies vs bad genies, our favorite tiki drinks, the Winter Olympics, StarCraft 2, QWOP *Positive and Uplifting Internet content: Pepe Silvia w/drums, Nick tries to Ambush Far Cry 2 while Chris Remo plays music, Thru-YOU, Gangnam Style (yeah), Justice DVNO music video, any Vine compilation
The Walter Proof Experiment on W.A.P.X ! Bienvenue dans l'igloo de l'Inaudible pour cette nouvelle année ! Une année placée sous le signe de la réflexion. L'Inaudible va-t-il recruter des actionnaires, ou va-t-il continuer tant bien que mal ? Tu pourras en juger avec le prologue de cet épisode plein de sons et de musiques ébourriffantes : c'est le 37e numéro du Wapx ! Dans cet épisode Conseil d'administration de l'Inaudible Ben Lacy : Sir Duke + I wish Ben brings the funk Cashmere avec Jay Roberts NSynth soundmaker Knuckles of the Caribbean Brassens est vivant : Alexis HK : Le temps ne fait rien à l'affaire Alexis HK : Georges et moi Danyel Wario : La mauvaise réputation Pour me rendre à mon bureau : par Georges Tabet - Georges Brassens - Les petites Bourrettes - Les Ogres de Barback Come again : de John Dowland mash-up de Ninon Genesis : Antoine Baril : One man Genesis Flora : Firth of fifth Firth of fifth par l'Orchestre Contemporanea Covers : Motörhead : Heroes Banjo Guy Ollie : Castlevania Gabriella Quevedo : Another brick in the wall Fender vs Gibson : Layla Mathieu Terrade on Harpejji : Bohemian Rhapsody Alexandr Misko : Careless Whisper Dany Ochoa Cantina Theme au crayon Marche impériale au crayon Assassin de la police ? Daft Punk : interview radio 2007 La +BCdM : La chanson de Maxence par Jeanne Added et Stéphane Kerecki Quartet - Anne-Sophie von Otter - L'orchestre de Michel Legrand You must believe in spring par Sarah McKenzie - Marlena Shaw - Lauren Bush - Bill Evans - Michel Legrand au piano La Playlist de la +BCdM : sur le Tube à Walter sur Spotify (merci John Cytron) sur Deezer (merci MaO de Paris) et sur Amazon Music (merci Hellxions) Le son mystère : Pepe Silvia with drums par David Dockery Christophe Chassol Coluche : Si maman, si