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Stacy and Curtis are joined by Percy Allen of The Seattle Times to discuss why UW fired head basketball coach Mike Hopkins following the final game of the season, they answer your questions about Tyler Lockett’s future and Russell Wilson’s move in Pittsburgh in Four Down Territory, they hear a college football coach announce her own firing in the Timeline, and they bring you the biggest Seahawks free agency moves, including a move that could impact Leonard William’s future in Seattle and Colby Parkinson’s deal with the Rams.
Bob and Dave get ready for the Seahawks mock game with John Boyle, they are joined by Percy Allen of the Seattle Times to look at the collapse of the PAC-12, and we hear some bad singing in Whyman! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The big news over the weekend was the Bears sending the #1 pick to Carolina. How did that move impact the Seahawks at #5? Bump and Stacy tell you why it's not very likely the Seahawks take a QB with their first first round pick. Percy Allen of The Seattle Times stops by to discuss why UW is running it back with Mike Hopkins next year despite mounting criticism.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Percy Allen, Seattle Times beat writer covering Washington Huskies basketball, discusses the recent troubles for the team on a three-game losing streak heading into a tough matchup with the Arizona Wildcats in Tucson.
Percy Allen, Washington Huskies beat writer for the Seattle Times, previews Arizona vs. Washington men's basketball coming up on Saturday.
Percy Allen, Washington Huskies beat writer for the Seattle Times, gives a preview of the Huskies ahead of their Pac-12 matchup tonight against Arizona.
A football season ends abruptly, a basketball season continues unhappily, and a recruiting class is signed. Come listen as we break down what’s wrong with the UW basketball team, how we’re now going to quantify Mike Hopkins’ progress, review the 2021 UW football recruiting class, and discuss an unceremonious end to the 2020 football season. @2:25 - Percy Allen on the potential miscasting of UW: https://www.seattletimes.com/sports/uw-husky-basketball/analysis-are-changes-coming-after-the-uw-mens-basketball-teams-disappointing-loss-to-montana/ @6:03 – Wikipedia article on the Doomsday clock: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doomsday_Clock @8:50 – Derrick and Victor’s “Hop Confidence Clock” is at 11:55, 5 minutes to midnight. @10:55 – UW’s 2021 football recruiting class: https://247sports.com/college/washington/Season/2021-Football/Commits/ @27:35 – The difference between the Huskies and Seahawks on COVID: https://www.thenewstribune.com/sports/nfl/seattle-seahawks/article247918770.html
It was the best of times, it was the…no, wait. It was only the worst of times last week as both basketball and football suffered defeats and losses on all fronts. Come hear our takes on what exactly happened with the UW defense against Stanford, whether this is a referendum on Jimmy Lake’s progress on the team, what exactly is going on with UW basketball, and the sad circumstances around Naz Carter. Hoping for better days ahead, because this last week was not it. 21:02 – Last year’s NBA 3PT shooting percentage across the league was 35.8%. The year before was 35.5%. 24:55 – Seattle Times article on Naz Carter’s sexual assault investigation by Asia Fields and Percy Allen: https://www.seattletimes.com/sports/uw-husky-basketball/uw-suspended-basketball-player-nahziah-carter-over-two-sexual-assault-allegations/ UWDaily article on the same subject by Ash Shah, Andy Yamashita, and Jake Goldstein-Street: http://www.dailyuw.com/news/article_5e752186-374c-11eb-874a-87a1e760ea27.html
This week, the guys cover the NBA's players pushing to restart their season as well as the MLB players and owners negotiating their delayed start of their season. Plus, our thoughts on the latest episode of The Last Dance, including an exclusive segment with Percy Allen of The Seattle Times where we discuss the 1996 Finals between the Bulls and Sonics, Michael Jordan's battle with Gary Payton, how the Sonics left Seattle and much more!. Make sure to rate, retweet, and share the podcast and follow the show on all social media @DandDavisShow for updates and more great content. Catch new D & Davis episodes each week on WARR on Anchor, plus explore our archives on Soundcloud and watch new content on the show's YouTube page. Subscribe to WARR on Anchor and follow WARR for all the latest on our movement and stay tuned for upcoming episodes and specials from your guys. Weareregalradio.com provides the best independent coverage of sports and culture -- feel free to share our content and rate us well here or wherever else you find our podcasts. Thanks for listening. twitter.com/regalradio1 facebook.com/regalradio1 instagram.com/weareregalradio --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/regal-radio/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/regal-radio/support
The guys recap episode 7 & 8 of ESPN's The Last Dance with Percy Allen of The Seattle Times. We discuss the 1996 Finals between Bulls and Sonics, Michael Jordan vs Gary Payton, how the Sonics left Seattle and much more! Make sure to subscribe, rate, retweet, and share the podcast and follow the show on all social media @DandDavisShow for updates and more great content.
Who is the top dog in UW? We ask 2-3 zone expert Percy Allen.
Millenial burnout. You feeling it? Breaking down Utah-UW with Percy Allen of the Seattle Times.
Previewing Utah-UW hoops with the don of the Pac-12.
“The fraud of men was ever so / Since summer first was leafy” — Balthasar’s song, Much Ado About Nothing In episode six, we look at that vexing question of whether or not Will Shakespeare was a complete and utter conman. We’ll follow those who dug up rivers, cracked codes, turned to grave-robbing, or occasionally just wrote really, really long books to find the answer. We’ll hear from Mark Twain, Sigmund Freud, William Wordsworth, and learn some surprising theories as to why Queen Elizabeth I was the Virgin Queen (or was she…?). It’s a journey from the 1560s to our era and back again, and somehow I manage to bring up Golden Girls, England’s greatest treasure hunt, George W. Bush and Dame Agatha Christie! Confused? You still will be after listening, but I hope you’ll enjoy this incredibly long investigation of the madness that is the authorship question. You can find me on Facebook, Twitter, or by email at podcastshakespeare@gmail.com. You can listen to the podcast at iTunes or download direct from Libsyn. We also have a Spotify playlist, which will be updated each week as we work through the plays. The website for the podcast is https://podcastshakespeare.com/. On the website, you will find an evolving bibliography. Contents 00:00 - Introduction / searching for Shakespeare 09:33 - Delia Bacon / candidate Sir Francis Bacon 24:50 - Mark Twain / Ignatius Donnelly, codebreaker 35:05 - Dr. Owen's machine / Mrs. Gallup and Mr. Arensberg 41:45 - J. Thomas Looney / candidate Edward De Vere, Earl of Oxford 1:04:40 - Other candidates / Christopher Marlowe 1:09:35 - Oxford gets another chance / "Anonymous" 1:13:41 - The "Masquerade" connection 1:18:49 - William Shakespeare 1:37:38 - The enduring appeal of theories / My theories 1:47:15 - The "Declaration of Reasonable Doubt" / hail and farewell Links mentioned: Due to the nature of the episode, I have done a separate permanent Authorship page at https://podcastshakespeare.com/further-reading/the-authorship-question/. Some links below. SIR FRANCIS BACON (1561 – 1626) on Wikipedia John Aubrey’s biography and details of his death in Brief Lives (1693) The Francis Bacon Society (“Baconiana”) Supporters of Bacon Delia Salter Bacon (1811 – 1859): at Wikipedia “William Shakespeare and His Plays: An Enquiry Concerning Them” in Putnam’s Monthly Magazine of American literature, science and art, Issue 37, January 1856 The Philosophy of the Plays of Shakespeare Unfolded, 1857 Nina Baym, “Delia Bacon: Hawthorne’s Last Heroine“ Nathaniel Hawthorne, “Recollections of a Gifted Woman” in The Atlantic Monthly, January 1863 Ralph Waldo Emerson, unpublished letter to George P. Putnam regarding Delia Bacon, published by Vivian C. Hopkins in the New England Quarterly, vol 33 no 4, Dec 1960 (JSTOR access required) Catherine E. Beecher, Truth Stranger than Fiction (1850) comments on the Bacon/MacWhorter affair without using names Walt Whitman,“Shakespeare Bacon’s Cipher” Ignatius Donnelly, The Great Cryptogram (1888) Elizabeth Ward Gallup: The Bi-Lateral Cypher (1910) The Tragedy of Anne Boleyn, being a discovery of the ciphered play of Sir Francis Bacon inside the Shakespeare First Folio (1911) [see also, this article on the play at Anne Boleyn Novels] Dr. Orville Ward Owen, Sir Francis Bacon’s Cipher Story (1893-95) Mark Twain, Is Shakespeare Dead? (1909) Henry W. Fisher, Abroad with Mark Twain and Eugene Field, Tales they told to a fellow correspondent, (1922) – see page 49 for Twain and Fisher’s anecdote Queen Elizabeth being a man. Walter Conrad Arensberg: The Cryptography of Shakespeare -(1922) see also The Cryptography of Dante – (1921) EDWARD DE VERE, 17TH EARL OF OXFORD (1550 – 1604) at Wikipedia Poems at Wikisource Family tree and the famous fart anecdote of James Aubrey “Renunciation” poem from Palgrave’s Golden Treasury, ed. Francis T. Palgrave, 1875 Supporters of Oxford John Thomas Looney (1870 – 1944) at Wikipedia The Church of Humanity Shakespeare Identified in Edward De Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford (1920) The De Vere Society of Great Britain The Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship Why I Became an Oxfordian at the “Shakespeare Authorship Sourcebook” Charlton Ogburn: The Mysterious William Shakespeare: The Myth and the Reality (1984) “The Man Who Shakespeare Was Not (and who he was)“, Harvard Magazine, November 1974 Michael Brame and Galina Propova, Shakespeare’s Fingerprints (2002), discussed in Washington University News, January 23, 2003 Percy Allen, Life Story of Edward De Vere (1932) Trailer for Anonymous, directed by Roland Emmerich (2011) GENERAL DOUBT The Declaration of Reasonable Doubt Hester Dowden, the medium who apparently confirmed both Bacon and Oxford had written the plays, at different times – at Wikipedia. WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE (1564 – 1616) The First Folio at the Bodleian online Shakespeare suing for minor debts – at ShakespeareDocumented.org The Shakespeare Authorship Page – a vital resource David Kathman: “Why I Am Not An Oxfordian“, originally published in The Elizabethan Review, at the Shakespeare Authorship Page “Shakespeare’s Eulogies“ at the Shakespeare Authorship Page “Dating the Tempest“ “How We Know That Shakespeare Wrote Shakespeare: The Historical Facts“ with Tom Reedy James Shapiro, Contested Will: Who Wrote Shakespeare? (2010) Irvin Leigh Matus, “The Case for Shakespeare“, The Atlantic, October 1991 Samuel Schoenbaum, Shakespeare’s Lives, 1970 William F. Friedman & Elizebeth Smith Friedman: Wikipedia: He | She The Shakespeare Ciphers Examined, Cambridge, 1957 Ralph Waldo Emerson, Representative Men – chapter 6 “Shakespeare or the Poet” (1850) Terry Ross, “The Code that Failed: Testing a Bacon-Shakespeare Cipher“ at The Shakespeare Authorship Page Don Foster: Elegy for WS, reviewed in The Observer, June 2002 The moot trials of Shakespeare: 1987 trial – at PBS 1987 trial – the New York Times A 1993 trial at the Boston American Bar Association – at PBS Giles Dawson and Laetitia Kennedy-Skipton, The Survival of Manuscripts, from Elizabethan Handwriting, 1500-1650: A Manual, W.W. Norton & Co, 1966 at The Shakespeare Authorship Site Muriel St Clare Byrne, “The Social Background“, in A Companion to Shakespeare Studies, page 190, edited by Harley Granville Barker and G.B Harrison (1934) William Wordsworth, Scorn not the Sonnet (c. 1807) Robert Browning, House (1876) Robert Bell Wheler: Historical Account of the Birth Place of Shakespeare (1806) CHRISTOPHER MARLOWE (1564 – 1593) Marlovian theory of authorship MISCELLANEOUS CANDIDATES Wikipedia’s list of 87 (at July 2018) Robert Frazer, Silent Shakespeare (1915) PDF Gilbert Slater, The Seven Shakespeares (1913) Michaelangelo Florio, aka Crollalanza Roger Manners, Earl of Rutland, in Claud Walter Skyes’ Alias William Shakespeare, Aldor, 1947 Henry Neville, a very peculiar theory – with Tom Veal’s response OTHER LINKS QUOTED Catullus, Poem 5 Kit Williams’ Masquerade John Keats’ Lamia Aeschylus’ Eumenides Clips: Sergei Prokofiev, “Montagues and Capulets”, from Romeo and Juliet (ballet), 1935 Franz Schubert, Im Fruhling, D.882 performed by Barbara Hendricks Gerald Finzi, Love’s Labour’s Lost, op. 28: Dance, Aurora Orchestra conducted by Nicholas Collon Gaetano Donizetti, Overture to Roberto Devereux (feat. God Save the Queen), Royal Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Sir Charles Mackerras John Dowland, Galliard for the Queen and Robert Dudley Hakan Parkman, “Take, O Take These Lips Away” (Madrigal) from 3 Shakespeare Songs, sung by Singer Pur choir “Bonny Peggy Ramsey” (traditional) performed by Tom Kines on Songs from Shakespeare’s Plays and Popular Songs of Shakespeare’s Time Ambroise Thomas, Hamlet (1868), 1994 recording, London Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Antonio de Almeida: Thomas Hampson (Hamlet) – singing part of his “Doubt not that I love” letter June Anderson (Ophélie) – Ophélie’s mad scene and death, Act IV
Percy Allen of The Seattle Times previews the surging Washington Huskies trying to break their losing streak to Oregon on Thursday night.
The Quack Attack with Judah Newby airs Wednesdays from 7-8pm. This week Judah previewed Oregon's home games with Washington and Washington State, and talked to Steve Mims of the Eugene Register-Guard and Percy Allen of The Seattle Times.
The Seattle Times' Adam Jude and Percy Allen discuss Lorenzo Romar's firing and what's next for the UW basketball program. Hear from Romar and UW athletic director Jennifer Cohen, and from Kevin King about his NFL Combine experience.
Adam Jude and Percy Allen give an early preview of Washington's national semifinal matchup against No. 1 Alabama in the Peach Bowl.
Adam Jude and Percy Allen review the Huskies' loss to USC, and Associated Press national college football writer Ralph Russ helps break down Washington's playoff chances.
The headlines in this week’s Husky Headlines podcast: - It’s No. 4 Washington at No. 17 Utah … a prime opportunity for the Huskies to impress the College Football Playoff committee. - Troy Williams has been waiting for this matchup for almost two years. - Reviewing the Huskies’ 41-17 victory over Oregon State. Also, Sports Illustrated’s Lindsay Schnell discusses Jake Browning’s Heisman hopes and wonders if Oregon would try to lure Chris Petersen away from the Huskies. Percy Allen and I make our UW-Utah picks — and we’re not in agreement. And Utah beat writer Kyle Goon offers his insights on the “Troy Williams Revenge Tour” and Utah’s depleted defense.
Adam Jude is joined by ESPN's Kirk Herbstreit to talk about the Huskies' playoff chances after last week's blowout against Stanford. Plus, Percy Allen and the Oregonian's Andrew Greif join the show to preview UW's rivalry matchup vs. the Ducks.
Adam Jude and Percy Allen give their picks for the UW-Stanford game and chat with Seattle Times assistant sports editor Ed Guzman, a Stanford graduate, who offers his insights on the Cardinal. They also discuss Lavon Coleman’s breakthrough performance against Arizona. The headlines in this week’s Husky Headlines podcast: - Big game, you say? The No. 10 Huskies host No. 7 Stanford on Friday in a game that could go a long way in determining the Pac-12 champion. - Huskies survive: Despite a shaky start, UW passes its first test of the season with an overtime win at Arizona. - Another in-state star: Juanita’s Salvon Ahmed becomes the latest in-state recruit to commit to the Huskies.
UW reporter Adam Jude previews the Huskies' Pac-12 opener at Arizona, reviews Washington's 3-0 start with reporter Percy Allen, catches up with UW senior linebacker Joe Mathis, and chats with Wildcats reporter Michael Lev of the Arizona Daily Star. The headlines in this week's Husky Headlines podcast: - UW wraps up play with another dominating performance against Portland State. - Jake Browning continues his stellar start to the season, leading the nation in passing efficiency.< -Hooray: Pac-12 play is here.
Adam Jude chats with Percy Allen about the Pac-12 and discusses John Ross, Steve Sarkisian and O-line recruiting targets Foster Sarell and Henry Bainivalu.
Adam Jude previews the Huskies' opener vs. Rutgers with Seattle Times colleagues Larry Stone and Percy Allen, previews the UW defense with Keishawn Bierria and answers questions in our Twitter mailbag.
Seattle Times Huskies reporter Adam Jude previews Washington's 2016 football season, talks to UW head coach Chris Peterson, chats with fellow Seattle Times reporter Percy Allen and interviews Rutgers football writer Keith Sargeant of The Star-Ledger.