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What does Toronto's response to the refugee crisis actually look like on the ground? Just across the street from the Canadaland office, a crisis unfolded: dozens of asylum seekers camping out as they were unable to get space in city shelters. Some had been there for weeks. After the federal government and the city both pledged that more support would be given to the asylum seekers, many were still there - being helped by a tenuous system of volunteers, donated goods, religious outreach and good samaritans.Join reporter Cherise Seucharan and Editor in Chief Karyn Pugliese as they follow asylum seekers at 129 Peter Street as they search for a place to spend the night. Credits: Jesse Brown, Host & Publisher, Cherise Seucharan, Reporter, Tristan Capacchione (Audio Editor and Technical Producer), Bruce Thorson (Senior Producer), Annette Ejiofor (Managing Editor), Karyn Pugliese (Editor-in-Chief)Further reading:On Peter Street, a community steps up for asylum seekers abandoned to sleep on the sidewalk, Toronto StarCrossing the Darien Gap, CFRMayor Olivia Chow outlines next steps for housing asylum seekers in Toronto, CBCSponsors: Squarespace, Athletic Greens, PelotonIf you value this podcast, support us! You'll get premium access to all our shows ad free, including early releases and bonus content. You'll also get our exclusive newsletter, discounts on merch at our store, tickets to our live and virtual events, and more than anything, you'll be a part of the solution to Canada's journalism crisis, you'll be keeping our work free and accessible to everybody.You can listen ad-free on Amazon Music—included with Prime. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this weekly roundup, hosts Jessa McLean and Santiago Helou Quintero cover:Search the Landfill:Camp Morgan is a place of resistance - a blockage of the road leading to the private landfill where Police and community members expect to find the remains of Morgan Harris and Marcedes Myran. The authorities have failed the families and have refused to search the landfill or even stop continued dumping in that location.Hosts cover the anti-Indigenous racism prevalent in this stories as well as the stories of resistance at the blockade and the use of injunctions to stop peaceful protests. 129 Peter StreetIn an attempt to limit access to the shelter system, the City of Toronto defied their own sanctuary City policy and started turning away asylum seekers. This lead to a large number of people sleeping on the sidewalk outside of 129 Peter Street in an attempt to access services.We talk about the inadequate shelter system, attitudes towards migrants and the unhoused community and the various efforts of mutual aid in response.References and Resources: Housing & Homelessness Research & Reports from City of TorontoLorraine Lam Linktree - This includes a link to the ongoing needs for the folks at 129 Peter Street. Diana Chan McNally (Community Worker) on Twitter - Diana provides some updates and first hand accounts of what is happening in the shelter systems, outside Peter Street and a lot of the other work being done with the unhoused community in Toronto. Resistance to injunction News on InjuctionBe sure to catch all our other Inside the NDP episodes to get the full picture. All our content is made possible through our Patrons. To support the show: patreon.com/bpofdisruption
Asylum seekers come to Canada for safety and a better life, but instead a group of them ended up sleeping on the streets of the country's biggest city.The Peter Street shelter intake office was thrust into the national spotlight after the city–dealing with an overwhelmed shelter system–started to refer asylum seekers to federally run programs. But when people in need showed up to Peter Street site they were met with long waits, forcing them to stay on the street out front for weeks with no other place to go.Community leaders have taken matters into their own hands, helping move the unhoused people to GTA churches. Hours after they stepped up, the federal government announced more than $200 million nationally to fund interim housing for asylum seekers, with about half going to Toronto.But will this last-minute funding make a difference? And what will it take to create sustainable housing for asylum seekers in Toronto – and beyond?GUEST HOST: Melissa Duggan, reporter for CityNewsGUEST: Sharry Aiken, Associate Professor specializing in immigration and refugee law at Queen's University
Everyone's favorite Milford-based Fantasy Football league is back!! Join the Super Dads as we discuss the NFL Draft, which players make Steve giddy, what Mike thinks of his team, and we determine who is the OFFSEASON GEM. Your computer is not broke, Casey's phone records in black and white. This is Entering Milford!
Listen to Peter Street, James Hughes and Laurence Lord, Software Craftspeople at Codurance discuss their experience of 'Expert, T-shaped and Generalist' in the context of software engineering. Hosted by Kirsten Osborn, Regional Director. The podcast covers: What made you choose the path you went down? What are the advantages and disadvantages of specialising or remaining more of a generalist? What advice would you give someone who is considering whether to be a specialist or generalist? Visit codurance.com to discover more of our insights.
On this weeks episode we have a chat to Daniel Cross, a former Bulldog and Demon through his career in the AFL. We have chat about an unfortunate position he found himself in early on in his career, when big ruckman Peter Street fell across his leg during training. You never want to go through rehab alone, but it just so happened that Ryan Griffen had sustained an injury during the same day and subsequently found himself in the rehab group as well. This gave the two of them major support through their rehabilitation, when usually it's just you, yourself and your thoughts. Daniel talks through his passion of conditioning and reconditioning and how training hard at young age lead him down the path of wanting to assist others in their own training. Which lead him to his position now at North Melbourne as their Reconditioning Coach. The Under Pressure draft brings for some interesting choices, as we draft 'Players to have a shot after the siren to win the game.' Feature both players young and old, so tune in to see our selections! Instagram: @underpressure1_ Twitter: @UnderPressure1_ Facebook: Under Pressure Podcast Youtube: Under Pressure Podcast Music from Uppbeat (free for Creators!): https://uppbeat.io/t/atm/follow-your-heart Be sure to check out ‘The Inner Sanctum' socials and the website at theinnersanctum.com.au
Today in botanical history, we celebrate a Dutch botanical illustrator, a writer from New Orleans, and a hymn writer - who wrote over 400 hymns. We'll hear an excerpt from Terri Irwin - just fabulous - wife of the late great Steve Irwin. We Grow That Garden Library™ with a book about Living on the Land. A hot topic since 2020. And then we'll wrap things up with a touching story about Beatrix Potter. Subscribe Apple | Google | Spotify | Stitcher | iHeart To listen to the show while you're at home, just ask Alexa or Google to “Play the latest episode of The Daily Gardener Podcast.” And she will. It's just that easy. The Daily Gardener Friday Newsletter Sign up for the FREE Friday Newsletter featuring: A personal update from me Garden-related items for your calendar The Grow That Garden Library™ featured books for the week Gardener gift ideas Garden-inspired recipes Exclusive updates regarding the show Plus, each week, one lucky subscriber wins a book from the Grow That Garden Library™ bookshelf. Gardener Greetings Send your garden pics, stories, birthday wishes, and so forth to Jennifer@theDailyGardener.org Facebook Group If you'd like to check out my curated news articles and original blog posts for yourself, you're in luck. I share all of it with the Listener Community in the Free Facebook Group - The Daily Gardener Community. So, there's no need to take notes or search for links. The next time you're on Facebook, search for Daily Gardener Community, where you'd search for a friend... and request to join. I'd love to meet you in the group. Curated News TOP TREES FOR FALL COLOR | Garden Design | Mike MacCaskey Fall Foliage Prediction Map Important Events October 12, 1817 Birth of Berthe Hoola van Nooten ("Bair-tah Hole-lah van NO-ten") Dutch botanical artist. Berthe's life story is incredibly moving. She was born in Utrecht in the Netherlands. She married a judge named Dirk Hoola van Nooten who secured a position in the Dutch colony of Suriname SurahNAM in South America. The couple frequently traveled between Jakarta and Suriname. Along the way, Berthe collected and drew plant specimens which she would send back home to the botanical gardens in the Netherlands. By the mid-1840's the couple moved to New Orleans to establish a Protestant school for girls on behalf of the Episcopal Church. But in the summer of 1847, New Orleans was ravaged by an epidemic of yellow fever that wiped out ten percent of the population. After the yellow fever claimed Dirk's life, Berthe was left to fend for herself and her five children at the age of thirty. She attempted to open another school in Galveston but was unable to pay her creditors. Eventually, Berthe joined her brother on a trip to Java. There she opened another school, but she also had a patron in Sophie Mathilde, the wife of William II (Netherlands). The result was her masterpiece - a collection of forty plates of her botanical art - called Fleurs, Fruits et Feuillages Choisis de l'Ile de Java or Selected Flowers, Fruits and Foliage from the Island of Java (1863-64). Berthe's work was dramatic, featuring rich colors and bold illustrations. Most Europeans had never seen such magnificent plants. In the introduction, aware of her station as a woman and penniless widow during the Victorian age, Berthe apologized for her daring attempt at creating such work, writing, You may not, like myself, have tasted the bitterness of exile… you may not, like myself, have experienced, even in the springtime of life, the sorrowful separation from home and country – the absence of the friendly greeting, on a foreign shore… Death may not have snatched away from you, the arm which was your sole support… bereavement may not have entered your dwelling, like mine, as with one sudden stroke to tear away the veil of sweet illusions, which, as yet, had hidden from your eyes the stern realities of life – to place you, with a lacerated heart, a shrinking spirit, and a feeble and suffering body, before an unpitying necessity, which presents no other alternative than labour. In 1892, Berthe died impoverished on the island of Jakarta. She was 77. October 12, 1844 Birth of George Washington Cable, American writer, and critic. A son of New Orleans, he has been called the first modern southern writer. Despite being a German Protestant, instead of French Catholic, George understood Creole culture and is most remembered for his early fiction about his hometown, including Old Creole Days (1879), The Grandissimes "Gran-DE-seem" (1880), and Madame Delphine "Delphine" (1881). Today the George Washington Cable House is open to visitors. The house was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1962. Located at 1313 8th Street, in the Garden District of New Orleans, the home features gardens that George designed. In fact, The neighborhood is known for outstanding restaurants and beautiful gardens. The beauty of New Orleans inspired George, and he was especially fond of nature and gardens. In The Taxidermist, his story begins with these words, One day a hummingbird got caught in a cobweb in our greenhouse. It had no real need to seek that damp, artificial heat. We were in the very heart of that Creole summertime when bird-notes are many as the sunbeams. The flowers were in such multitude they seemed to follow one about, offering their honeys and perfumes and begging to be gathered. Our little boy saw the embodied joy fall, a joy no longer, seized it and, clasping it too tightly, brought it to me dead. He cried so over the loss that I promised to have the body stuffed. This is how I came to know Manouvrier “Man-vree-yay,” the Taxidermist in St. Peter Street. In My Own Acre, he wrote, A garden, we say, should never compel us to go back the way we came; but in truth, a garden should never compel us to do anything. Its don'ts should be laid solely on itself. “Private grounds, no crossing”–take that away, please, wherever you can, and plant your margins so that there can be no crossing. Wire nettings hidden by shrubberies from all but the shameless trespasser you will find far more effective, more promotive to beauty, and more courteous. “Don't” make your garden a garden of don'ts. For no garden is quite a garden until it is “Joyous Gard.” Let not yours or mine be a garden for display. Then our rhododendrons and like splendors will not be at the front gate, and our grounds be less and less worth seeing the farther into them we go. Nor let yours or mine be a garden of pride. And let us not have a garden of tiring care or a user up of precious time. Neither let us have an old-trousers, sun-bonnet, black fingernails garden–especially if you are a woman. Finally, in The American Garden, he wrote, One of the happiest things about gardening is that when it is bad, you can always–you and time–you and year after next–make it good. It is very easy to think of the plants, beds, and paths of a garden as things which, being once placed, must stay where they are; but it is shortsighted, and it is fatal to effective gardening. We should look upon the arrangement of things in our garden very much as a housekeeper looks on the arrangement of the furniture in her house. Except buildings, pavements, and great trees–and not always excepting the trees–we should regard nothing in it as permanent architecture but only as furnishment and decoration. At favorable moments you will make whatever rearrangement may seem to you good. October 12, 1895 Death of Cecil Frances Alexander, Anglo-Irish hymn writer, and poet. She wrote over 400 hymns. In addition to There Is a Green Hill Far Away and the Christmas carol Once in Royal David's City, she wrote All Things Bright and Beautiful. Here are the garden and nature-related verses, along with the refrain at the end. Each little flower that opens, Each little bird that sings, He made their glowing colours, He made their tiny wings. The cold wind in the winter, The pleasant summer sun, The ripe fruits in the garden, He made them every one; The tall trees in the greenwood, The meadows for our play, The rushes by the water, To gather every day; All things bright and beautiful, All creatures great and small, All things wise and wonderful, The Lord God made them all. Unearthed Words The name of the zoo was the Queensland Reptile and Fauna Park. As I crossed the parking area, I prepared myself for disappointment. I am going to see a collection of snakes, lizards, and miserable creatures in jars, feel terribly sorry for them and leave. It was October 1991. I was Terri Raines, a twenty-seven-year-old Oregon girl in Australia on an unlikely quest to find homes for rescued American cougars. A reptile park wasn't going to be interested in a big cat. I headed through the pleasant spring heat toward the park, thinking pessimistic thoughts. This is going to be a big waste of time. But the prospect of seeing new species of wildlife drew me in. I walked through the modest entrance with some friends, only to be shocked at what I found on the other side: the most beautiful, immaculately kept gardens I had ever encountered. Peacocks strutted around, kangaroos and wallabies roamed freely, and palm trees lined all the walkways. It was like a little piece of Eden. ― Terri Irwin, Steve & Me Grow That Garden Library Carving Out a Living on the Land by Emmet Van Driesche ("DRY-sh") This book came out in 2019, and the subtitle is lessons in resourcefulness and craft from an unusual Christmas tree farm. Well, I have to confess that I'm a huge fan of Emmett's YouTube channel. He does everything that he's talking about in this book - Even carving his own spoons. But what I especially love about this book is learning about what it's like to be a Christmas tree farmer. I find this fascinating. (And to me, this book is an excellent option for a Christmas gift. So keep that in mind as well.) Now what Emmett is writing about is simplicity - living a life that's in tune with nature, A life that is away from the hustle and bustle of the city and the daily grind. Emmett is busy, but he has plenty of time to do the things that matter - Even pursuing his favorite pastime of spoon carving. Now I have to confess that I discovered a very pleasant surprise when I started reading Emmett's book; he's an excellent writer. And I wanted to give you a little taste for his writing, a little sample. Just by reading what he wrote in the introduction to his book. He wrote, The air is cold enough for my breath to show. But I'm about to break a sweat. I'm harvesting balsam branches, grabbing each with one hand and cutting them with the red clippers in the other. ...I work fast and don't stop until my arm is completely stacked with branches and sticking straight out, and I look like a kid with too many sweaters on under his jacket. Pivoting on my heel. I stride back to my central pile of balsam boughs and dump the armload on top, eyeballing it to gauge how much the pile weighs. I decide I need more and head off in another direction into the grove. The balsam fir grows from big wild stumps and thickets that can stretch 20 feet around, the trees crowded so closely together, in no apparent order or pattern, that their branches interlock. Instead of single trees, each stump has up to three small trees of different ages growing off of it. They are pruned as Christmas trees, and I am a Christmas tree farmer. Isn't that fascinating? Well, this book is 288 pages of self-reliance and the Christmas spirit. You can get a copy of Carving Out a Living on the Land by Emmet Van Driesche and support the show using the Amazon Link in today's Show Notes for around $13. Today's Botanic Spark Reviving the little botanic spark in your heart October 12, 1907 On this day, a 41-year-old Beatrix Potter wrote to Millie Warne, the sister of her publisher, friend, and former fiance Norman Warne (who died two years earlier - a month after their engagement - at the age of 37). Beatrix wore Norman's ring on the ring finger of her right hand until she died three days before Christmas in 1943 at the age of 77. My news is all gardening at present and supplies. I went to see an old lady at Windermere and impudently took a large basket and trowel with me. She had the most untidy garden I ever saw. I got nice things in handfuls without any shame, amongst others a bundle of lavender slips ...and another bunch of violet suckers. Incidentally, twenty years earlier on this day, in 1887, that a 21-year-old Beatrix drew her first fungus, the Verdigris Toadstool "Vir-dah-greez" (Stropharia aeruginosa). Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener. And remember: "For a happy, healthy life, garden every day."
#LHHMiami #LHH #TheUrbanBinge #RiBelTV Love & Hip Hop Miami Season 4 | +MUCH MORE All Things Love & Hip Hop Miami S4 EP 11 Hurricane Ida was a deadly and destructive Category 4 Atlantic hurricane that became the second-most damaging and intense hurricane to strike the U.S. state of Louisiana on record, behind Hurricane Katrina, and is tied for the strongest landfall in the state by maximum winds with Hurricane Laura a year before and the 1856 Last Island hurricane. The storm also caused catastrophic flooding across the Northeastern United States. Ida is the sixth-costliest tropical cyclone on record, having caused at least $50.1 billion (2021 USD) in damages,[1][2] of which $18 billion was in insured losses in Louisiana, and of which $100 million was in Cuba, surpassing Hurricane Ike of 2008. CoreLogic estimated that Ida caused an estimated $16 to 24 billion in flooding damage in the Northeastern United States, making it the costliest storm to hit the region since Hurricane Sandy in 2012.[3] The ninth named storm, fourth hurricane, and second major hurricane of the 2021 Atlantic hurricane season, Ida originated from a tropical wave in the Caribbean Sea on August 23. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hurricane_Ida After over a year long hiatus due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the show was retooled for season four, with only Trina, Amara, Trick and Sukihana returning to the main cast. New cast members include Ace Hood and his wife Shelah Marie, Noreaga and his wife Neri, and Florence El Luche. Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood's Ray J makes a crossover appearance. Funky Dineva is a gossip blogger and social media personality. He first appears in the audience at the first season reunion of Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta and as a commentator in the specials Dirty Little Secrets and 40 Greatest Love & Hip Hop Moments. He also interviews Traci Steele and DJ Babey Drew in a promo video for season two. Funky appears in three episodes of Love & Hip Hop Atlanta: After Party Live!, skyping into the show to give his thoughts on the night's episode. After a heated on-air confrontation with Joseline, in which she calls him a "cucaracha" and "the help" and threatens to take his wig off on Peter Street, he is not seen again. Funky would continue to review episodes of Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta for his YouTube channel, being very critical of the show's later seasons. LiNK iN BiO PLEASE SUBSCRIBE GUYS on YouTube RiBelTV #SUBSCRIBE ON #YOUTUBE @RiBelTV —FOLLOW US Instagram & Twitter & BiGo: @TheUrbanBinge Facebook: @TheeUrbanBinge #TrickandTrina #Trina #Sukihana #TrickDaddy #FunkyDineva #Noreaga #AmaraLanegra #foxsoul #teagif #Cocktailswiththequeens #AceHood and #FlorenceElLuche #tonex #bslade #tmz #breakingnews #hottopics #youtuber #youtubers #soundcloud #applemusic #youtubechannel #explore #viralpost **To any claimant seeking distortion, removal or review of owned content is surely mistaken, and should primarily review the original content in comparison to ours. Which, is covered under the fair use Act for use in our creative content.** Intro song credit: B.Slade - Established & B.Slade - The Map
From the transcription in Francis O'Neill's Music of Ireland collection of 1903. He wrote that it was well towards the top of the list at the time, found in most American piano publications which included reels and hornpipes. Peter Street is a good dance tune, so they say.
From the transcription in Francis O'Neill's Music of Ireland collection of 1903. He wrote that it was well towards the top of the list at the time, found in most American piano publications which included reels and hornpipes. Peter Street is a good dance tune, so they say.
Trad reel in G played CH style.
Trad reel in G played CH style.
Trad reel in G played CH style.
Trad reel in G played CH style.
Trad reel in G played CH style.
Peter Street started his working life as a gravedigger before becoming a gardener, running a restaurant and teaching in prisons. The author grew up with epilepsy and a learning disability. But it was therapy for PTSD stemming from his time as a war poet in Croatia, which lead to an autism diagnosis aged 64. Humorous stories about losing five inches in height in a forestry accident, reading fairy tales to young offenders and his two week stay at a brothel keep Robyn and Jamie entertained during this wide-ranging chat. With Robyn Steward, her support bat Henry, Jamie Knight and Lion. Produced by Emma Tracey. Subscribe to the podcast on BBC Sounds or say "Ask the BBC for 1800 Seconds on Autism" to your smart speaker. Email stim@bbc.co.uk
Episode 3 we chat to Peter Street from Beast Treats! We discuss breeding rodents, herping, Photography and Antaresia.
AN EYE FOR AN EYE -- A special edition of Yesterday’s News exploring the criminal justice system at its most extreme: Inflicting the Death Penalty... La Chataine Juliette And The Perverted Professor Of Magnetic Physiology Episode 372 delves into the history of one of the most hideous villains to ever stalk American streets, a predator so vile that he ranks up there with Albert Fish in his depravity. Even if you don’t believe in capital punishment, I think you’ll agree that Etienne Deschamps deserved his punishment, and then some. Culled from the historic pages of the New Orleans Times-Democrat, the New Orleans Times-Picayune and other newspapers of the era *** Show recommendation of the week - OBSCURA. Download the Himalaya app or go to https://www.himalaya.com/obscura and enter promo code OBSCURA at checkout to get 30 days of premium content, FREE! *** A creation Of Pulpular Media Also from Pulpular Media: Portals to Possibility, an improvised comedy about an alternate reality, where monsters are real--and hilarious!!! Visit pulpular.com/portals for a brand-new episode. Catastrophic Calmaties, Exploring the famous and forgotten disasters of the 19th and 20th centuries. What could go wrong? Everything! Want to get a jump on the next episode of True Crime Historian? Why then, download the new podcast app Himalaya and get all new episodes a day early, then drop a buck in the tip jar for True Crime Historian. Or sign up for Himalaya Plus and for premium content and other special features. Or you can support your favorite podcaster at www.patreon.com/truecrimehistorian. Just a dollar an episode reserves your bunk at the safe house and access to exclusive content and whatever personal services you require. *** Opening theme by Nico Vitesse. Incidental music by Nico Vitesse, Chuck Wiggins, and Dave Sams. Some music and sound effects licensed from podcastmusic.com. Closing theme by Dave Sams and Rachel Schott, engineered by David Hisch at Third Street Music. Media management by Sean Miller-Jones Richard O Jones, Executive Producer
Tana's Thesis: Paying Respects: Death, Commodity Culture, and the Middle Class in Victorian London. Death Photos of the Victorian Age - memento mori The Catholic incorruptible saints British "natural death" burial laws Garden Cemeteries The Cremation Society (behind the 1902 UK Cremation Act) The Highgate Vampire case of the early 1970s Nicholas Cage's pyramid tomb in New Orleans St. Louis Cemetery (Source: Atlas Obscura) New Orleans Above Ground Burial: "When St. Peter Street graveyard was close to capacity, city officials established St. Louis Cemetery #1. At the time, Esteban Miro was the governor of New Orleans, and his allegiance was to Spain. Therefore, when the St. Louis Cemetery was developed, the wall vault system that was popular in Spain at the time was adopted for those who wished to be buried stylishly above ground. Ground burial also continued at St. Louis Cemetery." Mort Safes - protected corpses from resurrectionists, not the public from wandering dead. Burke & Hare - notorious resurrectionists turned murderers, inspired: The Body Snatcher (1945) Burke and Hare (2011) Horror Maniacs aka The Greed of William Hart (1948) The Flesh and the Fiends aka The Fiendish Ghouls (1960) Burke and Hare (1972) The Doctor and the Devils (1985) (amazing cast + produced by Mel Brooks!?) "Saved by the Bell" etymology derives from boxing, not grave bells Launching ashes into space "Jet" the source of the phrase "jet black" and the Whitby Jet mourning jewelry referenced Key West cemetery
0:01- Intro and episode summary 1:05 The Feral Cats pane review the cats win over the swans 17:03 Preview of the Fremantle game 26.54 Our Banner's Flying high, (what we believe the banner should read for the Dockers game) 28:29 Catting by numbers. This week it's numbers 36-40. Do the names Peter Street, Sean Denham or Sean Simpson ring a bell.
On Thursday 2nd November 1961, on the first floor of 3 Peter Street, a Soho sex-worker called Jacqueline Birri was bludgeoned to death… by a complete stranger. But why?Murder Mile is researched, written and performed by Michael J Buchanan-Dunne of Murder Mile Walks with music written and performed by Erik Stein and Jon Boux of Cult With No Name with additional music by Kai Engel, Parvus Decree and Chris Zabriskie, as used under the Creative Commons License 4.0 (Attribution) via Free Music Archive. A full listing of tracks used and sources for each episode is listed here.FOLLOW US HERE:FacebookTwitterInstagramMurder Mile Discussion GroupIf you’d like to sign-up for exclusive Murder Mile content, check out our Patreon Page by CLICKING HERE.And for OFFICIAL MERCHANDISE, please visit the Murder Mile Shop. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
After serving locals and visitors for more than seven decades, The Old Coffee Pot Restaurant on St. Peter Street in the French Quarter closed on February 10, 2019. In tribute to this beloved Creole eatery, here is a podcast interview with Pearl Jefferson from 2008. In addition to being a gracious server, Ms. Pearl was the Coffee Pot’s bread pudding lady. For over forty years, patrons enjoyed Ms. Pearl’s rich bread pudding swimming in buttery whisky sauce. Those who had the opportunity to visit the restaurant prior to its 2018 redecoration will miss its original, cozy ambiance and memorable servers. Ms. Pearl and The Old Coffee Pot Restaurant represented New Orleans’ true essence: warm, hospitable, welcoming, and generous. Even as we mourn the loss of the Old Coffee Pot Restaurant, we will always remember Ms. Pearl with gratitude for her contributions to New Orleans’ rich culture. She is, truly, a precious Pearl!
Back to King Island for their Grand Final, a VFLW goal kicking record, cult hero Peter Street and a footy beanie knitting project.
Back to King Island for their Grand Final, a VFLW goal kicking record, cult hero Peter Street and a footy beanie knitting project.
Back to King Island for their Grand Final, a VFLW goal kicking record, cult hero Peter Street and a footy beanie knitting project.
In our Manchester Pride Special, we commentate on the 2018 Parade as it travels past us at Impossible bar on Peter Street. Get ready for a bumper 2-hour episode in Cudcast 16!Recorded on Saturday, 25th of August 2018. Join us live every Sunday afternoon at cudcast.comPlease consider supporting us on Patreon at patreon.com/cudcast
In our Manchester Pride Special, we commentate on the 2018 Parade as it travels past us at Impossible bar on Peter Street. Get ready for a bumper 2-hour episode in Cudcast 16!Recorded on Saturday, 25th of August 2018. Join us live every Sunday afternoon at cudcast.comPlease consider supporting us on Patreon at patreon.com/cudcast
Slutsky and Mamourian sit with President of Centrcourt Developments; Shamez Virani. Centrecourt does highrise and only highrise and want to do more highrise! They've developed exciting Toronto high rises like Peter Street condos, Axis, Core Condos, Karma and INDX and are now creating a new downtown from scratch in Vaughan.
I'm still working on next week's 3-hour special. I needed the work of the weavers to make it happen. That's why show #203 features Irish Celtic music from Bow Triplets, Embarr, Duncan Cameron, Hugh Morrison, Damh the Bard, Dublin O'Shea, Tullamore, Poitin, Don Gabbert, abuck63, Mishaped Pearls, Finbar Furey with Mary Black, Sprag Session, Celtica Pipes Rock, Clandestine. celticmusicpodcast.com/203 If you enjoy this show, then subscribe to our Celtic Music Magazine. This is our free newsletter and your guide to the latest Celtic music and podcast news. Subscribe today to download 34 Celtic MP3s for free. Remember to support the artists who support this podcast: buy their CDs, download their MP3s, see their shows, and drop them an email to let them know you heard them on the Irish and Celtic Music Podcast. Photo by Joris Louwes Today's show is brought to you by Celtic Invasion Vacations Every year, I take a small group of Celtic music fans to exotic locations around the world. We don’t travel in big tour buses and see everything. Instead, we stay in one area. We get to Know the region through its culture, history, and legends. Plus, I bring you some great Celtic music by me and other Celtic artists. Help me decide where we are going for the 2016 trip. Subscribe to the mailing list to join the invasion at celticinvasion.com Notes: Your guide to the Best indie Celtic music online Thanks to the Patrons of the Podcast. Your kind and generous support keeps this show running every week. Become a Patrons at http://celticmusicpodcast.com/patron/. Special thanks to Rian Kegerreis our latest patron! You can now Vote in the Celtic Top 20 If you're subscribed to the Celtic Music Magazine, you'll know there were five new Kickstarters posted. You will find a link to them on the website at celticmusicmagazine.com My Kickstarter, Dragons vs. Pirates, is just two weeks away from completion. The goal is already met. But every little bit helps. The album features Celtic sea shanties with a Steampunk twist about dragons and pirates. I'm performing this Saturday, April 11, 2015 at Johnnie MacCracken's Celtic Pub in Marietta, GA. I WANT YOUR FEEDBACK: Email a comment to celticpodast@gmail.com or call 678-CELT-POD to leave a voicemail message. That's 678-235-8763. This Week in Celtic Music 0:27"Ragtime Annie" by Bow Tripletsfrom Fair Play to You 4:06"A Set of Polkas" by Embarrfrom Bushes, Briars & Figs 7:05"The Mickey Dam" by Duncan Cameronfrom The Whistling Thief 10:31"Country Dance Jigs - 4x32 Bars" by Hugh Morrisonfrom Ali MacGregor's Music Collection 12:52"Domeanna" by Damh the Bardfrom Spirit of Albion 17:52Celtic Music News 19:10"Peter Street" by Dublin O'Sheafrom Have Another Drink Boys 21:08"Work of the Weavers" by Tullamorefrom Wild and Wicked Youth 26:58"Le Loup" by Poitinfrom De La Basse Bretagne 29:31"Carrickfergus" by Don Gabbertfrom Alone on the Porch 33:51"Swallow Pennies" by abuck63from Singles 35:32Celtic Feedback 37:02"Festival" by Mishaped Pearlsfrom Le Puy en Velay 40:25"Walk With My Love" by Finbar Furey with Mary Blackfrom Colours 43:55"Paddy's" by Sprag Sessionfrom Sprag Session 49:39"The Druids Prophecy" by Celtica Pipes Rockfrom Legends and Visions "QuarterGirl" by Clandestinefrom Red Remember too, when you buy through our affiliates at CD Baby, Amazon, or iTunes, you support the artists AND the podcast. The Irish & Celtic Music Podcast was produced by Marc Gunn, The Celtfather. To subscribe, go to iTunes or to CelticMusicPodcast.com where you can also join our mailing list. You can post feedback in the shownotes, on social media use the hashtag #CelticPodcast, or email me music@celticmusicpodcast.com.
Bits of data smatter your face as you fly through what seems, superficially, to be a series of tubes. Engulfed by the bit-current, you are forced to bounce across the country multiple times before finally arriving at your ultimate destination, the BaldMove headquarters. The chaos of your inexplicably long journey is puncuated by the soothing voices of Peter Street and A. Ron Hubbard. Suddenly you realize, you've just stepped into the RPG episode of Blue Yonder. Roll for initiative. Intro Music: Serenity's Wake by Greg Michalec Outro Music: Secret Identity by Kirby Krackle
One of the challenges that some Black Canadian men face is being in prison and getting back into society after being released from prison.During this episode, we speak and share with Greg Rogers, Executive Director of the John Society of Ontario.The mission statement of the John Howard Society is effective, just, and humane responses to crime and its causes. The Society also:1. Provides for the effective integration into the community of those in conflict with the law and provides, or encourages others to provide, services to those in contact with, or affected by the criminal justice system; 2. Promotes changes in the law and the administration of justice which will lead to the more humane and effective treatment of individuals; 3. Promotes citizen awareness of the problems of crime and its causes, acceptance of responsibility to respond to these problems and involvement in the delivery and management of justice related programs; 4. Promotes the fair and humane treatment of all incarcerated person and seeks to ensure that all forms of detention and imprisonment comply with relevant legal and human rights standards. Here is the John Howard Society of Ontario contact information: Address: 111 Peter Street, Suite 603 Toronto, Ontario M5V 2H1 Tel: (416) 408-4282 Fax: (416) 408-2991 Email: jhso@johnhoward.on.ca Please feel free to email us at info@blackcanadianman.com and visit our podcast site at http://thevibeandvegasshow.wordpress.com/ God bless, peace, be well and keep the faith, Vibe and Vegas info@blackcanadianman.com http://thevibeandvegasshow.wordpress.com/
http://www.djrickparker.com/mixes/djrickparkerbar38.mp3Funky HouseThis mix has been done to celebrate my new residency @ Bar 38, Peter Street, Manchesterhttp://www.djrickparker.com
Here's a reel which is sometimes played in A. I always thought it sounded a bit scary in that key. Here's a slightly less disturbing version in G.