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My ‘Modern Family' brother-in-law, Ty Burrell joins the show. Over sandwiches and tater tots, Ty tells me about his grueling audition process for the role of Phil Dunphy, why ‘Modern Family' fans recently assumed he was dead, and he teases an exciting new project with Bryan Cranston. This episode was recorded at an Airbnb in Sandy, UT. Food was provided by Ty's restaurant, Beer Bar, in Salt Lake City. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
*Spongebob Narrator Voice* 4 YEARS LATER... Welcome to the 4-year anniversary episode of my podcast, Happy 2 Be Here! In this episode, I reflect on my journey with the podcast and the growth I've made over the past four years. This episode also features a special segment: Which well-known TV characters would have a good podcast, and would I tune in? I'll go through characters like Sue Sylvester and Phil Dunphy and share my thoughts.Thank you to all the guests who have been on my show, it's always a pleasure. You have helped make the show what it is! A special thank you to my listeners. You are all so special to me. I am happy to be here with all of you.
In today's episode, Nicole and Rich take a trip down memory lane, reflecting on the birth of this podcast, their own battles with COVID, and the day Rich said goodbye to New York. The TV Dad Face-Off heats up as Bandit from Bluey goes head-to-head with Phil Dunphy from Modern Family.Plus, Nicole needs your advice—her daughter Parker is struggling with insomnia. They also tackle the ultimate Disneyland survival guide, a listener's bold plan to meet Rich in Mexico, and one mom's face-to-face showdown with her daughter's bully. Have Kids, They Said... is a SiriusXM Network Podcast made by Nicole Ryan and Rich Davis.If you'd like to send us a message or ask a question email us at HKTSpod@gmail.comFollow on social media:Instagram @havekidstheysaidpodNicole @mashupnicoleRich @richdavisand @siriusxm
Herzlich willkommen zu einem neuen BB RADIO Mitternachtstalk Podcast! Ich bin Jens Herrmann, und heute erwartet euch eine Stimme, die ihr garantiert schon unzählige Male gehört habt – ohne es vielleicht bewusst zu wissen. Mein Gast ist einer der gefragtesten und fleißigsten Synchronschauspieler Deutschlands: Peter Flechtner! Er ist die deutsche Stimme von Ben Affleck – und nicht nur das. Auch William Fichtner, David James Elliott, Billy Crudup, Ty Burrell oder die Anime-Legende „Lupin III“ verdanken ihm ihre markante deutsche Stimme. In der Synchronkartei ist er immer ganz vorne mit dabei – kein Wunder, bei über 40 Jahren Erfahrung in der Branche! Seine Stimme begleitet uns in Filmen, Serien, Hörspielen, Werbespots und Videogames. Kurz gesagt: Er ist aus unserer Medienwelt nicht wegzudenken. Seine Karriere begann früh – schon als Kind war er im Radio zu hören. Entdeckt wurde er durch Oliver Rohrbeck, den ihr als Stimme von Ben Stiller, Chris Rock und natürlich Justus Jonas aus den „Drei ???“ kennt. Über Rohrbecks Mutter, die eine Kinderagentur leitete, kam er zum Sprechen – und der Rest ist Geschichte. Später ging es für ihn ans Theater, wo ihn Klaus Sonnenschein, der Chef der „Tribüne“, entdeckte. Doch während das Theater seine Leidenschaft war, brachte die Synchronarbeit das nötige Kleingeld – und so nahm seine Karriere in den Studios Fahrt auf. Peter Flechtner kennt die Branche wie kaum ein anderer. Und nicht nur das: Er hat selbst Hollywood-Luft geschnuppert! Er spielte in Steven Spielbergs Meisterwerk „Schindlers Liste“ mit und war auch in „Wie ein Licht in dunkler Nacht“ an der Seite von Melanie Griffith zu sehen. Heute plaudert er mit uns über seine unglaubliche Karriere, die Höhen und Tiefen des Schauspiel- und Synchronbusiness und verrät uns, warum ihm seine erste Synchronrolle überhaupt keinen Spaß gemacht hat. Außerdem bekommt ihr spannende „Behind-the-Scenes“-Stories und erfahrt, wie er als Punk in Berlin unterwegs war. Das wird spannend, unterhaltsam und definitiv ein Talk mit viel Stimme – also viel Spaß jetzt mit Peter Flechtner, der Stimme Hollywoods!
In our first episode of 2025, we explore a strange aspect of advertising.Specifically, when TV and movie characters endorse products. Not the actors themselves - but the characters they portray.It's a trend that started in the early '60s with the Andy Griffith Show and Bonanza.Today, it includes characters like Breaking Bad's Walter White and even Phil Dunphy from Modern Family.Sometimes it's funny - and sometimes it bends the time/space continuum. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
IT'S TIME TO WATCH THE MUPPETS! This week we watched Dinosaurs - Career Opportunities. Distracted rants include but are not limited to Eight Billion Genies, The City™, Jason Alexander, Waiting for Guffman, A Complete Unknown, Kid Pix, Turtlepuss, Loofahs, Phil Dunphy, and much more!"Robbie goes to see the Job Wizard who dictates what careers everybody has for the rest of their lives. He hopes to be picked to be a rock legend but his dream falls flat when it's announced he's going to be a tree pusher like his father."Follow us:tiktok.com/@ittwtmInstagram.com/ittwtm
Going off an earlier episode where Samantha tested Remoy's musical knowledge, this week Samantha checks in on what Remoy knows about TV. Through round after round, our two co hosts explore how TV dads and masculinity have evolved over the decades.Samantha kicks things off with a clip of Al Bundy and his daughter Kelly. Does Remoy remember anything about this dysfunctional yet iconic duo? And what does our laughter about their relationship on Married With Children tell us about fatherhood three decades ago?Bonus Episode: Remoy has to know. Was Samantha's own relationship with her father's anything like Al and Kelly's?You can't not talk 90's TV Dads and not think TGIF: Samantha highlights a heartfelt moment between Carl and Eddie Winslow, one of the few Black father-son relationships on 90s TV.They break down how Family Matters portrayed manhood and why this mattered for representation at the time.Samantha skips forward a decade or two to show Remoy the ultimate suburban survivalist: Modern Family's Phil Dunphy has a near-death epiphany on a camping trip. Remoy reflects on how Phil represents a new era of goofy yet emotionally vulnerable TV dads.You can't not talk TV and not talk animation. But it isn't Bart and Homer for Samantha. It's Bob Belcher from Bob's Burgers who in a tender and hilariously awkward clip bonds with his daughter Tina during a “hairy” situation.Samantha wants to know. Are there any African daughters out there who their father shared in the pain of getting their legs waxed in solidarity? If so, email us at maskulinitypodcast@gmail.comAnother Black father and duo + Schmitt. No it's not New Girl. It's The Neighborhood on CBS.TV laugh tracks aside, Samantha and Remoy take a moment to appreciate a really tender and evolved, but not perfect, moment in modern TV.Samantha shows Remoy a lesser seen moment on TV: An immigrant father-son moment from the crowd favorite Fresh off the Boat.A sweet moment portrayed on the screen for an Asian dad. But would huckster chef Eddie Huang, whose life story the show was modeled off of, approve? Would Remoy?What do you think after hearing the clip? Hit us at our inboxes and let us know maskulinitypodcast@gmail.com.Remoy is sold and wants to play. He shares with Samantha a moment from a new comedy he's been loving. Any guesses to what that series is?Let's just say Harrison Ford playing a therapist and being vulnerable on screen with Jason Segel and many more is a win for both Samantha and Remoy as they appreciate where TV has come over 30 years. Referenced on this episode:The paper that informed Samantha's gamifying of TV dads? That's–Laughing at Men: Masculinities in Contemporary SitcomsOur guide to navigate being Home ALONE for the HolidaysOur new classic episode: The Fresh Prince and
There's a big difference between being the hunter and the hunted, and if you are fortunate enough to be the hunted, you are going to face the prospect of people aiming to come after you and upset you. This week, Tony and I break down the steps that you can take to prevent being upset, even though it is almost inevitable that you are going to be upset by someone in your season. We go through things you can do with preparation and practices, along with the mindset that you need to drill into your team to avoid being upset.Along with that, we have trivia, the flailing 76ers, "Feast Week" dream destinations, Azzi Fudd back for UConn, Ups and Downs, multiple Marv Alberts and multiple Phil Dunphy references . . . yep, it's "The Coaching Staff"! Happy Thanksgiving everyone!
This week, Rich and Nicole are back and share a wild mix of stories, including a father who ended up walking no one down the aisle, forgetting his daughter at the altar, and Jeff Lewis insisting that Rich and Covino are secretly in love. Nicole also drops the surprising news that she's only had Taco Bell once! In this week's TV Dad Face-Off, Danny Tanner from Full House takes on Phil Dunphy from Modern Family, leaving Nicole and Rich stumped and desperately seeking more votes from the Village B*tches. Finally, the duo tackles your burning questions, like what they'd do if they found inappropriate content on their teenager's phone, plus much more! Have Kids, They Said... is a SiriusXM Network Podcast made by Nicole Ryan and Rich Davis.If you'd like to send us a message or ask a question email us at HKTSpod@gmail.comFollow on social media:Instagram @havekidstheysaidpodNicole @mashupnicoleRich @richdavisand @siriusxm
Ty Burell had a birthday yesterday. He played Phil Dunphy on what sitcom that lasted 11 seasons?
Royal Riot covers the Utah Royals loss to the Washington Spirit at home, celebrates Pride with Phil Dunphy, and previews the expansion team battle coming up on Sunday at Bay FC. The crew highlights some NWSL history, celebrates the little wins, and praises the ground Mandy Haught walks on. Royal Riot is presented by ABC4Utah - click to support the podcast and coverage of Utah Royals and Real Salt Lake!
We're taking a deeper dive into polyvagal theory & co-regulation because understanding our nervous system can aid in managing moments of panic or stress. Inside the episode:Polyvagal theory, proposed by neuroscientist Stephen Porges, simplifies the nervous system's response to threats into three states: fight, flight, and freeze. Unlike the common four-state model, which includes faun, freeze, and variations of fight or flight, Polyvagal theory focuses on these three primary states. Co-regulation, where calm signals from trusted individuals alleviate threat responses, is another method we can use to help get our brains and bodies back online. In professional settings, trusted colleagues or managers serve as co-regulators. Lack of co-regulation contributes to feelings of isolation and heightened stress in workplaces.When co-regulation isn't immediately available, individuals can employ retrospective techniques, recalling moments of safety and creativity to soothe their nervous systems. These practices, documented in an "SOS note," aid in re-regulation and problem-solving. Notably, the urge to rush through soothing processes impedes progress. Adhering to Phil Dunphy's adage from Modern Family— "Slow is smooth and smooth is fast"—advocates for a deliberate, unhurried approach to achieving a calm, creative state conducive to problem-solving Homework: Make a SOS note.Think about that relaxed state where creativity has come to you. What were you doing? What were the conditions for this? Write that down so you can reference it when things are bad so you don't have to try and figure out how to feel better in that moment.
Modern Family's Phil Dunphy may not be cool, but he is a cool dad. Here are Phil's seven lessons on how to ace parenting.
We're heading into Father's Day, so there's no better time to take a look back at some of the great fathers in television and film history, as well as some more forgettable father figures. Our list touches on a wide range of fathers, including Atticus Finch from "To Kill A Mockingbird," Phil Dunphy from "Modern Family," Walter White from "Breaking Bad" and Frank Costanza from "Seinfeld." We won't give away the entire list, but rest assured there is some discussion of Homer Simpson, Jack Pearson, Darth Vader, Mike Brady, Tony Soprano and Cliff Huxtable. Yes, we're all over the place. In other topics, the show covers "Jury Duty" and season 2 of "The Bear," plus new movies coming out including "Elemental" and "The Flash." Where to watch "Jury Duty" on Freevee and Amazon Prime Video "The Bear" on FX and Hulu "Elemental" in theaters "The Flash" in theaters About the show Streamed & Screened is a podcast about movies and TV hosted by Bruce Miller, a longtime entertainment reporter who is now the editor of the Sioux City Journal in Iowa and Terry Lipshetz, a senior producer for Lee Enterprises based in Madison, Wisconsin. Episode transcript Note: The following transcript was created by Adobe Premiere and may contain misspellings and other inaccuracies as it was generated automatically: Welcome everyone to another episode of Streamed and Screened and Entertainment podcast about movies and TV from Lee Enterprises. I'm Terry Lipshetz, a senior producer at Lee and co-host of the program with my entertainment journalism father figure. Bruce, you're editor of the Sioux City Journal and a longtime entertainment reporter. Hey, Papa. How are you? We'll try to talk to you. Yeah, it's you know what? I've seen so much and been around so long that you can drop a name, and I think I can grab it. I think it's that easy. Yeah, I got to tell you, you know, even though we're entering that kind of dull season where all I watch is American Ninja Warriors, last night, I truly like that. I that is my obsession. And I couldn't make it past the first one. But I loved watching that thing. And I never, ever, ever see the last episode of that. Never. I never know if anybody won or if it's it's just that whole thrill of the hunt. But last night, I decided I was going to binge something because I've heard too much about it. And that's jury duty. Jury duty. I've been called for jury duty, but I've never I've never served on jury duty. But it's a reality show where everybody in the show, except one guy, is an actor. So there's this one gets kind of a Punk'd thing where they are trying to, you know, show how he would react during this situation, how he doesn't catch on. I don't know. But James Marsden is in it as one of the people called to jury duty. And he's kind of an elevated sense of aspect of himself. You see this kind of pull of himself actor who you like, you know, third tier credits that they mention. Very funny. And I was just I was smitten with it. It's not necessarily well done, but there are so many moments that are such laugh out loud, funny moments that you got to see it. It's on Amazon Prime and Freebie had it first, and I think you can find it through Amazon, but it is eight episodes and you just it it's like eating candy and I had such a great time looking at that that then you go to the next dig where you try to look up these people online to see if you've seen them in something else. Because some of the actors looked vaguely familiar. And I think if I were that one guy, the first question I would have is why are we sequestering the jury for this little kind of two bit case? Why are we here for 15 days or whatever the amount of time was? But they don't seem to question it. It's like, well, I got a vacation and I'll be doing this, and here we are. And then when they start spelling out the case and the guy who is, you know, defending the guy drops everything that the audio visual stuff doesn't work. You would be I would be very curious, like, something's up with this. And then I would look in my hotel room and think, I think this place is bugged. It's got to be bugged somehow. But I do watch it because I think it is one of those kind of fun little summer things that takes no effort out of you. You don't feel like you're worn out after you've watched it. You do feel like it's something that you go, okay, like I had a good time. I love those little ones. They'll pop up on Netflix here and there. Hulu or Prime, as you said, there's no effort, there's no thought process. I like like there's a few of them that'll show up on Netflix. They'll do those little documentaries like they the kid that wanted to buy the Harrier jet with the Pepsi points and they did four episodes on it and I couldn't stop watching it because it's just it's just a fun little romp. So, I mean, I'm into selling Sunset on Netflix. That said, you know, Los Angeles area high end real estate show, and it looks like there's two bad little real estate offers on the sunset Strip. It looks like, you know, you could have a 7-Eleven next door. That's how dinky it looks. And yet they act like they are all, you know, catering to everybody who starts at $1,000,000,000. And they basically seem to show the same house. It's like the same kind of URLs. All the houses in Los Angeles look alike. But selling sunset is another one of my binge binge. Crazes like that where you don't think and I think I need that after work is where you don't think at all and you let these people kind of just wash over you. So for a make a reality show, remember, no thinking, wash over you. Here you go. Anything else you're watching or any movies on the horizon? Well, there are some things coming up I've been looking at, but I've not yet to tell. Not yet. And they had the big premiere last night of Indiana Jones. And so we're going to start hearing a lot about that. If you haven't buried yourself already, please get on to one of those apps and you can put your picture inside a thing where it calls you a Barbie of some sort. Nice. That's out there in case you're looking for fun. Elemental. Have you seen Elemental or is that that's about to come? Elemental? No, I did go last week to Transformers and I will admit it's not as bad as I thought it was going to be. Okay. I'm still not going to see it. No. What it does, though, you know, these they make no symptoms. They absolutely make no sense. And it started out with a toy that made no sense. And then they decided there was a film franchise. But in this one, they kind of back up and give you a little history about the things and why they are what they are and how they came into being and why they want to dominate the world. So there's a little kind of a tutorial, if you will, that helps you understand this. And then they go on their little journey and transform into gorillas this time. Okay. Okay. And that is Optimus Primal. Not Optimus Primate, but Optimus Primal. Interesting. Interesting. I am looking forward to Indiana Jones. We've talked about this a few times that I've been hearing reviews, very mixed. Like some people are loving it, some people not so much. So I'm really curious to see where that one falls. I could see that one getting very mixed reviews from critics, but doing very well with fans also gets critic proof. This is not one of those things that no matter how much people rant and rave, they're still going through it. Absolutely. And I will dying to see it as soon as I can get to it. I am absolutely going to go see it. I'm just like a hardcore Lucasfilm. Indiana Jones Star Wars junkie. So I think they're absolutely, absolutely. Somewhere I have a whip and a hat, and that is one of the early warheads that's in my basement full of crap. You'll find it out. If you ever want to excavate, that can be your Indiana Jones story. You go down there, dig out that stuff you got. Here's that whip. He was talking about. Yep, there's a whip down there. But you're going to see Elemental this way. Yeah. Father's Day. I love the idea that you get to pick the movie. I know. Well, the options were. Hey, Dad, what would you like to do this weekend? And I'm thinking, I'm not sure. And then when my daughter says, Well, let's go see Elemental, so I'm okay, that sounds fine. The other option would was was Little Mermaid, and that was Oh, no or no on that one. And and the Barbie movie isn't out yet, which I, I kind of want to see that I'm kind of. You want to see that. I want to see that one. So and I told them, I said I will absolutely go with you to go see the Barbie movie. But Elemental, I feel like you can't really can't usually go wrong with a Pixar movie. I love most of them. They've been a little bit more missed and hit the last couple of years. But, you know, and they did just fire a whole bunch of Pixar people, like long time Pixar people, Disney. So that would be a great opening, wouldn't it? Yeah. Back. You'll have to pay for your own popcorn. Exactly. Yeah. I don't know if you saw that, Bruce, but. But Disney, because they've been cutting down because the revenues haven't been quite there and they wiped out a huge chunk of the Pixar Department and it included a lot of folks that had been there from the beginning. Even they had a whole studio in Orlando that if you went to the Hollywood studios aspect of Disney World, you could watch them making, you know, God knows what. But it was animated films and they were actually doing the work there. And then they that one down and they shut some other ones down and then they went over to another country, did things there. So who knows with that? And they almost shut it down before the original Little Mermaid came out. So it's hard to tell. I'm sure somebody in the in the money department looks and says, I think we need to make some cuts here. And the lowest profit area was. And that's where they go. Exactly. There is another program coming out soon. Now, you have not gotten any advance screening of this, but you and I are both a bit of a fan of the show. The Bear season to come, it affects you. I have talked to people about the bear. I have done interviews for the bear. I've written a story about the upcoming bear, but they are very guarded about season two. They are not letting out any kind of screeners. Now, that always is a bad sign when you do that with a movie. If you don't let anybody see it in advance, it's like, oh, we're worried about the about the kind of reviews we might get. But I think this one, because they've got really great people working on it. I think what it hinges on is what this new restaurant is, because if you may remember, this is spoiler alert. So turn me off. They found a lot of money at the end of the episode. The final episode of last season. So they have the money to be able to make upgrades to this little the beef or whatever it's called restaurant. So that it's not was kind of a hit and run sandwich shop. It's much more than that. And I think they don't want you to know what it's going to look like. I don't think they want you to know how the plot is going to unfold. And I can still see chaos in there in the kitchen. It'll still be there. But it's that kind of surprise element that they want to say. And that premieres next week. Yeah, it's it looks like the 20, maybe the 22nd on Fox and then a day later on Hulu, I got into the show pretty hardcore last year. I didn't see it when it dropped immediately, but my brother reached out, one of my brothers who's a chef, and he said, You know, that's how this always works. Like I go see the journalism things. And then, you know, he goes, sees the food ones, but he's like, Hey, you go watch them. Yeah, exactly. But he, he, he thought it was really good and just mentioned, hey, you know, if you're looking for something, then check out watch it. And I got hooked pretty hard. Now, I found with the show that I couldn't watch really more than one episode because by the time I picked it up, it was already season one was already done. So but I couldn't binge it because I would get through one episode and there's so much yelling because it's in a kitchen, there's a lot moving on and they're yelling at each other and they're bickering because they're family or longtime friends and that kind of thing. And I just felt exhausted, like emotionally drained by the end of it. But it's a fun it's a comedy and it's a good feeling. But it's a good feeling. Yeah. Like it wasn't a horrible dream. Like I'm never going to come back to this. It just felt like, you know, I gave the show my all for 30 minutes of sitting here doing nothing, and I just can't go anymore. I need I need like a one day buffer before I come back on episode two. Well, and this was one of those kobin shows that they were in a bubble and they weren't able to do a lot of, you know, exterior things, a lot of stuff outside of their little bubble. So they stayed in it and they had a culinary producer, somebody who showed them how to do like chopping or where you would grab for a bowl or where pots and pans needed to be located. So if your brother has a lot of like technical knowledge about all those things, it was absolutely technically correct. And they all felt that they had some degree of facility with all of that. But what the goal of the producer was was to throw you into that atmosphere so you didn't know anything. So that's why you felt the tension is because you felt like you were right in the middle of that kitchen and all that trouble happening. And one thing that he discovered, well, he was like, you know, planning all of this show is that there were a lot of times he would order Uber eats and then it would be like, you can't we what is this? And that figured into one of the episodes where, you know, suddenly they get a jillion orders at once and they can't keep up with it and so they'll just turn off that app again. They won't come. So that was a surprise to me when I first I thought, wait a minute, is this why I'm not able to order at 7:00 at night? They've shut me off. That's what the trick is. So there are a lot of things that we can learn in the process of this, but it also makes you very appreciative of what goes into a kitchen. I think I saw Bob ODENKIRK is listed as a guest star for season two. I don't know in what capacity because obviously they won't screen it. But coming off a better call. Saul, I guess he's looking for work. Yeah, well, he is. And he had the lucky egg. Yeah, he's getting all over the place. And that will be, by the way, if you want to jump ahead to that concept, the they're really doing a lot of pitches for what will be nominated for Emmys because the Emmy Awards will be coming out pretty shortly, the nominations. And will a Better Call Saul get something in its last season because it's been really cheated a lot. But will the bear get something? That's another one, because technically it's classified as a comedy, but it plays really dark. And and then you have ones like Ted Lasso who supposedly are wrapping it up. You give them one more shot, you know, So there are a lot of questions that are rolling around the Emmys right now. Well, we'll have to come back at that as soon as the nominations come out to new movies we have or Mantle and we have The Flash coming out this week. And you could pick the Flash. I could have and you did. Kids didn't want to go see that one. Well, I think there are some parts that maybe you'd go, kids, maybe we shouldn't be watching that. Probably. Yeah. Yeah, they would. They wouldn't understand. They wouldn't understand the Michael Keaton aspect of it either. They're not going to get excited. Yeah. Who's that old guy? That's Batman. And it's not Batman. That's somebody else. I think Superboy super be in it. Yeah, I'm not going to say, but yeah. So there are so elementals all fresh and new and it's a not unlike the inside out which took on emotions. Right. And this is another one where it's element s so air, wind, water all that is kind of swirled together into one thing about learning something from yourself. I don't know I Good luck. Thanks. This better be a popcorn movie. It's. Well, I'm bringing back the bucket. Remember, I bought my my annual bucket. That will give you popcorn galore. Exactly. I'm coming back with my refill and everything. So that's my Father's Day. Your Jurassic Park bucket. Exactly. So that's my Father's Day. So we also figured for this week we're going to talk a little bit about Father's Day. So we're going to just kind of segway from that theme over to the big day and and talk a little bit about some of our favorite fatherly figures from TV and movie history. What do you got for us? Well, you know, whenever you say who is the best father in film, it goes to one and one only. Atticus Finch from To Kill a mockingbird is Bar None the best dad of all times in films. That's what whenever they survey people. And then maybe because that's the one they remember most. There are others. There are many, many others. Field of dreams, you know. I mean, you could just go down the line, but I think Atticus Finch is the one that people are most tied to in terms of Father, do you agree with me or I? It has been so long since I've seen that movie. I don't know if I can agree. I've seen it. I've absolutely seen it. It's just been so, so long now and it's been on a a a theater tour because it was on Broadway several years ago. And Richard Thomas from The Waltons is playing Atticus Finch. And, you know, it's it's one of those cases where dad tries it's, you know, set years and years and years ago, tries to convince his children that, you know, maybe sometimes the people that you suspect are right aren't necessarily right. And then they rewrote the or brought out an earlier version of the book. And that had a different take on things. But it's Gregory Peck. Come on. Gregory Peck. Yeah. You wrong? Gregory Peck has always And maybe he felt that that was limiting, too. In the later films he made. He did MacArthur after that. So there are all these kind of larger than life real heroes. I think he played Lincoln at one point. And so I think that kind of dogged him, if you will. But he was like the perfect dad. Now, who did you think was a great movie, Dad? A great movie, dad for me. You had mentioned Field of Dreams, and I always kind of come back to that movie. It's a movie about fathers and sons relationships. It's a movie that I watched just a few days after my my dad passed away earlier this year. And it's something that we watch because he he died in, you know, march right around the start of the baseball season. It's a movie I go back to year after year. And I also think, you know, for myself as somebody who's in his upper forties and getting a little bit older and but I have kids and, you know, it's a little bit of a midlife crisis kind of movie, too. You know, it's it's like you're maybe in that job, which isn't as fulfilling as you thought it was going to be or you're not progressing through life. You know, you had all these dreams as a kid. You wanted to be a baseball player or a movie star or a rock star, or maybe just be sitting on a pile of cash doing whatever. And here he's just an average guy farming, and he's having a midlife crisis and trying to find a way to reconnect his dad. So, you know, Kevin Costner, I thought, really did a great job of that role. It's one as I said, I go back to that year after year after year to watch it and I get choked up every time I watch it at the end when he's just going out to play catch with his dad. Yeah, yeah. It's a touch. It can really it can really get you when you need that. But there are other ones, you know. Clark Griswold. Yeah. He's a nearly good dad. Come on. He's trying to give his family the kind of vacation that they've always wanted. Yeah, if things go wrong. But his intentions as a father are good, I think. Yes. Then you go to Steve Martin from Father of the bride. He wants to make sure all of that pulls off are right. You have the dad from Mrs. Doubtfire, Mr. Mom, Finding Nemo. Yeah, and that's a good one. There are good dads in there. The one that I hadn't really thought of recently. Minari. Do you remember that? Did you see Minari about a family that moves to They're in an Asian family to move to the Midwest and and they're farming and everything kind of goes wrong. But the dad wants to make sure everything is right. It won an Oscar for Best Supporting Actress, a woman who plays the grandmother. And that dad was a good dad. You know, Ethan Hawke in boyhood, if you remember. Oh, that movie. Yeah, right. And then we get to The Godfather. Carmen, can you be better than The Godfather? Very overly protective. Dad's there. Yeah, He's the one that you touch. My kid. I kill you. Yeah, well, and even the The Godfather Part two, when Michael Corleone slams the door, not even a slam. It's just more of a a hard shot. And Diane Keaton, like I'm the dad, the cutting. You want your mom, you've made your choice. Yeah, And parenthood, if you're that and then one that's going to cross over. Now, when I talk about this is Friday Night Lights, the movie Taylor the coach. Now in the movie it was Billy Bob Thornton, but in the TV series, you cannot get better as a dad than Eric Taylor. He was a dad to all those kids on the team. And I kid you not. That is one of those shows that I. I have the entire box set that I will if I need to can go back to that because it's so inspirational and it's one that I can't watch the end because I don't want it over. But they talk all the time about rebooting it, but there might be a class reunion with that. But Eric are three Taylors in TV that you want to think about Tim Taylor, Andy Taylor and Eric Taylor. Okay. Andy Griffith, Come on. Andy Taylor was the best dad from my childhood. He was always so protective, so fun, so willing to do whatever. Great. Tim The tool man. Taylor Come on. He was like the fun dad that you could climb, right? And then we get to my Eric Taylor from Friday Night Lights. Those are three big TV TV dads that that resonate the John Hughes dads, too, because we've talked about John Hughes movies previously, the Dan Aykroyd and John Candy and the Great outdoors, just constantly trying to one up each other or at least John Candy, just trying to keep up with Dan Aykroyd. Right. That was always fun and trying to eat the £96 steak. Right? Right. There's nothing on that plate but fat and grizzle. And then you look at the bad dads ones we'd find on TV. Homer Simpson, come on. Does it get worse than Homer? I don't know about Red Forman from that seventies show. Oh, he was kind of always grumpy and and barking orders at people. And, you know, one day that I really hated Mike Brady from the Brady Bunch that Brady anything he just sat there and he was like doing architecture stuff for the kids were whatever but I really thought he was a bad dad if you were picking them out and more recently on TV, Jack Pearson is a good dad. Oh, yes, right. Yes, This is us. This is us. Yes, he is that all-American dad. He everything is always positive, can do anything wrong. And he would be willing to go to the ends for anyone. I don't know. When we first saw him bad in the course of that series. No, I mean, he might have done things that were like. But I don't think you could ever classify him as a bad dad. Still makes me nervous every time my wife pulls out the crock pot, though you don't wear it out of the house. You know, I'm not looking at about it was so angry. It's same and same. It's a slow cooker. It's fine. Oh, man, you know, You know who I always loved for? There's a couple of dads. I wouldn't necessarily call them good dads, but they were just to me, very entertaining TV dads. Frank Costanza by Jerry Taylor from Seinfeld. And then the relationship between Ray Romano, Peter Boyle and Everybody Loves Raymond. I thought that connection was just really especially coming from a new York background, the the complaining about everything and just a very relatable relationship for me. You know, it's funny because in the new series Barb Kiss with Pete Davidson, he kind of has this thing, you know, in real life. He lost his dad in 911, right? He had this kind of projection, if you will, with Ray Romano and Everybody Loves Raymond. And you see kind of a sense of that in this show. And Ray Romano does a kind of a cameo bit in the in the thing. But it is interesting. What about Phil Dunphy from Modern Family, isn't he like every dad who tries too hard? Yes. I never could quite figure out if I liked him or not through the whole series. Like there would be some weeks where you just love Phil Dunphy, but then other weeks where he's just so ridiculous that I couldn't put up with him. And that was a show, too. I love Modern Family. I don't think I watched the final season. I think I kind of tapped out. Oh, no. Yeah, you get that? It hit that point where I just. I saw enough and it was kind of the same thing for me, episode after episode, where it just kind of lost me that last year. And I just said, you know, I'm good. We peaked. Yeah. Is there a dad that you relate to? What kind of a dad are you? I'm not Darth Vader that I know people yet. Not yet. Who am I? I do think I am a little bit of a rake in, Sela. I'm not ready to take up my backyard yet, but I feel like. Like a you know, I'm kind of in in that point in my life where I'm things aren't always what they were meant to be. And I've had to go through some changes here and there. And, you know, can I this has always been my theory because I'm so old that I can have that Yoda like turnabout experience in your twenties. Anything's possible, right? In the thirties, you realize I got to get something done or else I'm going to be kind of wasting this life. Forties. You feel like, Oh, did I make a mistake and go the wrong way? Am I? Should I regroup and start over fifties? You think you know what? I don't care. I have made my point. And in the sixties you're just glad you're around. So I'm still I'm still okay. But it's it's that kind of you know, and it's like class reunions where you go, well, I've got to prove to them that I've done something or, you know, whatever, and you find usually if you go to a class reunion, you'll find that the person that you really didn't see as the most successful is the most successful. It could have been. The kid who was quiet in the back, got C's and didn't really cause a wave. And the one that you thought was the most likely to succeed maybe didn't. But look at those. Look at those ears and see what you if you don't agree with me on that, because I find that in the twenties you were just like, Oh, I can have fun, but I better hurry up because I've got to do something with my life so that it makes sense. And that's the thirties where you're like all freaked about what it is. And then the forties, you're sadly for a little something. And then like I say, the fifties and sixties weren't we don't care and you can easily badmouthed people in the older years too. That's always good. I've got a couple of years still until I hit my fifties but I'll I'll give that some thought for just know that that's where your head is so great where you don't give a damn that I have that and I like I can hardly wait until it's the unfiltered years. The seventies in the eighties when when I can just say whatever I think about somebody or doubt, worry about it, let it go. That's my my grandfather, who's 93, my last living grandparent, and he just doesn't care. He just totally unfiltered. Yeah, I think you look a little fat. Don't you? And you go, Wait a minute, You're not supposed to say that. You're supposed to be nice, right? Yeah. I remember even with my in-laws, one of my wife's grandmothers who passed away a number of years ago, the one of the last time I saw her before she passed away. She's like, You've put on some weight since the last time I saw you. And I'm like, okay, we're we're good here. If a whale came in the room, you wouldn't say those kind of things, right? So, yeah, but you'd say, My God, in your head, this one really looks like it got out of hand. But in your mind, Oh, you. You look like you're so healthy and you're having such a good time. How are things going? You know, that's what I'm waiting for is the unfiltered. I'm just saying it like it is. So. You look marvelous, Terry. Thank you. I appreciate it. One last bother on my list that we didn't touch on Tony Soprano. Yeah. And is he a good dad? I don't know that he is. I think he's very protective of his family. I also thought, you know, he was a great dad when he took Meadow up to New England to go looking at colleges. And he was very, very much wants to make it a dad daughter weekend, help her find a school. He found a rat. He took care of that, cleaned himself up after the murder, and then went ahead and finished a very nice weekend with his daughter. So I think he could have a moment there. You know, he took care each care business, but also took care of family at the same time. Don't you think that his wife had a stronger influence on the kids than he did? Yes or no? I think that Carmela and there are all these similar types of movies and shows that get into that mafia stuff. It's it's always the same where they try to paint the spouse as kind of like, you know, some unwitting bystander. But they're fully they know everyone. They know everything. She know she knows where the guns are hidden in the wall. So, yeah, it's like The Real Housewives of New Jersey, as much as they act like they don't know what's going on in their businesses, they're right there. And when they go to court, they're just as guilty as the husband. So I've probably seen every episode of The Sopranos at least three times because I watched it when it came out initially. And then I also a long time ago was writing a weekly column for newspapers in New Jersey with my thoughts about The Sopranos each week. So I'd watch it then. And then a few years ago, I actually rewatched the whole series again, and I thought it held up. Other than the flip phones, you know, the cell phone technology changed. But I thought by and large, the show itself held up very well. It was always the same thing with Carmela, where she would get angry. Tony got a change and then he would show up with a Porsche Cayenne or a diamond necklace. And then she's like, I love you, Tony. And then I would it would totally change her demeanor for about three episodes, and then it would kind of go back in the other direction. That's the secret. That's the secret that a father learns about a mother. Yep. Right. Absolutely. Okay. Red Forman was a loud, mouthy one. But then you get to Ward Cleaver. What in the hell did Ward Cleaver ever do? When he put on the suit? He went to work and he came home, and then he was served a drink or whatever, and he read the newspaper and had to be kind of the judge of the kids went, Oh, you better go see your father. And then he would kind of like take an eyebrow to them and, and well, now, Beaver, what happened? All that kind of Well, weren't Cleaver was a big a a big fake he did nothing so yet he gets on the list of the best of the best dads and then I'd be remiss not to mention Cliff Huxtable. Oh, yeah. I didn't know what to do with him. What? I loved it. Well, now we're we're doing the character, not the not the person. All right. But what I loved about Cliff Huxtable is that the kids tried to schmooze him and, you know, they would try to use that. Oh, dad, you're just so wonderful. And you kids are just stupid. He would just call them out on things. And it was like it was a dad who was on to them. And I don't think we had seen dads who were on to their kids and how they just kind of work their wiles because I'll bet any money that your daughters work you. Oh yeah, yeah. You know, And yet here was a dad who said, No, I'm not buying into that. And I don't know what you know his job. Well, what exactly was it that he did? Because he stayed at home all the time. But I did enjoy watching that dynamic. I liked the dynamic. And then the wife who had the upper hand on him was a an interesting kind of dynamic. I thought Walter White, could he be considered a good dad or a bad? That I don't know. I was wasn't sure if I wanted to put him on my list or not. I one hand I thought he was you know, he's thinking about himself. He's he's presumably terminally ill and he's looking out for the long term good of his family. But he also had a lot of flaws in his planning and execution. Can bad equal good? I don't know. That's one of those things. All right, then what about the monster dads like Gomez Addams or Herman Munster? They were fun dads. Do they fit in there? Do they? You know, and I don't saw I didn't see any kind of parenting that went on with them. No, there was none. I always I think I preferred Gomez Addams. So as a father, yeah, Herman was stupid. Yeah. And he was just kind of bumbling around, which isn't unlike a lot of men currently. We've still got Dan Conner on the Conners and he has changed over the years. I've probably seen two episodes total. I think I watched maybe one episode when they rebooted it as the new Roseanne show, and then not long ago, just almost by accident, I kind of watched a bit of an episode of The Conners and it was fine. I liked him as a dad in the original series, but I also thought he was a classic blue collar, right? Do we know what he even did? I don't even remember. But he was a working man's dad. You work at some kind of factory plant, whatever. But he was. He was a solid Midwest. Yeah, working dad. It was. He would make sure they stayed afloat no matter what. It meant that he had to do another job or had to do something else. They were going to stay afloat. And I like that he did in Indulged Roseanne in her kind of pipe dreams. Mm hmm. Which was interesting. But I think things are a little a little back to normal with the new series. I don't know. But how about Full House Danny Tanner? Yeah, he was a little too upbeat for me. I don't know that the show was fun to watch as a kid. My daughters watch that show on stream. You know, we we turned on Fuller House for about 30 seconds and then flipped it off. And I, I at the time when it came out, we thought it was a little too grown up for my kids. Yeah. So they could probably watch it now. They watch they watched the original series Front to back and loved it when it aired originally. I enjoyed it. I watch it now and the shows are to me are very tough to watch because I think it's just it's not realistic. Like you can afford this house. It's probably $8 million and San Francisco, your buddies are living with you. What's that all about? It's just it was a strange, you know, in retrospect, a very strange show to me. A lot of memories with those characters. But yeah, well, that's. Oh, and then more recently, Blackish Dre. Interesting. But I found that he yelled a lot and I did not watch that show. So yeah, I thought he yelled too much for his own good and was always kind of flustered and I didn't really care for that. I like Anthony, though. I think he's a great actor, but I don't know that he necessarily he was more in the line of George Jefferson. I want to be honest about all that. And yeah, and so right now, I don't know that there is a dad like Jack Pearson where you would go, okay, that's our big TV dad right now. What about All in the Family? There's a classic TV dad for you. Yeah. And I don't know that he was really that fatherly knew. He didn't think Meat Head was good enough for his daughter. Right? I mean, he's protecting his daughter, but I don't know that he ever did anything. You know, particularly I don't know Dad, like, know about when he was in Archie's place. But I Yeah, I just I don't think he's considered a dad at all. No, I think that's more of the show is, you know, the Archie Bunker character very ground breaking for the time, you know, to tackle issues with race and in all of that during the seventies. But beyond that, it does a great job of capturing I mean, I don't think those episodes could ever run today because there were too much political discourse about the points that they take. But it is fascinating when you look at them in retrospect and you think, my God, these were things that were being thrown out on the television airwaves when we were just, I guess, naive. Yeah, a lot has changed since then that is. I don't know which you could do it. Is that the last? Yeah, I think that's about it on my list. You covered a lot of ground there. I had a few in mind Again, Darth Vader. Not the best, Dad. He did try to reconcile with his son at the end. Okay, but now think about this. Were we just duped into thinking he's bad because of the perspective we got? Or was he just. Yeah, you sound very Obi-Wan Kenobi there. It's just from a different point of view, right? I mean, from his perspective, he was probably a great dad. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Know, he slaughtered all the younglings. That's all we know. He went into the Jedi temple. And what you won't do for your kids, right? I know, Right, Exactly. We're going to go refill that bucket, though. That's right in the middle of the mantle. When you think, oh, I can't watch this anymore, you go back and get an extra fill. I am looking forward to my popcorn. Any anything on the horizon, Bruce, before we sign off, you know, I really do want to dig into the flash, so if you get a chance, zip over to flash and see that because that has been such a troubled film all during its duration. And now let's see if the hype actually if that was part of the hype or if indeed this was that film that had to be released because it is so great. So if you get a chance, please see that. And we'll talk the Flash next week, because I really want to know where you said I'm going to try to get there because my family is heading out of town, but I'm sticking around. So maybe I will. I will have a date date evening with me, myself and I. And there you go and bring that bucket And I absolutely bring in the bucket. All right, Bruce, thanks again for another episode. Well, Terry, Happy Father's Day, too. And have lots of fun. And to all the fathers and listeners out there or the fathers that want to be fathers or whatever it might be, happy Father's Day.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This week Chanté looks at whether pop culture can get the portrayal of neurodiversity right – from Bart in The Simpsons to Phil Dunphy in Modern Family. And why people self-diagnosing on TikTok can be problematic
Let's talk more about famous actors turning down famous roles. What would the world be like with a different George Costanza, Phil Dunphy, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, or James Bond? Let's get into it. Remember to subscribe on your podcast platform of choice. Also be sure to rate, review, comment, like, or whatever the new thing is. Tell your friends to listen. Just take their phone and subscribe to this podcast for them. They will thank you. Or they will stop talking to you. But, let's be real if they get mad about you giving them access to the greatest podcast you don't really want to be friends with them anyway.
【句子】To this day, at every crossroad, I ask myself one question--What would Phil Dunphy do? 【ModernFamilyS3E09】 【发音】/tʊ/ /ðɪs/ /deɪ/ /æt/ /ˈev.ri/ /ˈkrɒsˌrəʊd/ /ˈkrɑːsˌrəʊd/ /aɪ/ /ɑːsk/ /æsk/ /maɪˈself/ /wʌn/ /ˈkwes.tʃən/ /wɒt/ /wɑːt/ /wʊd/ /fɪl/ /ˈdʌn.fi/ /duː/ 【发音技巧】at every连读+闪音;ask myself不完全爆破;What would类似不完全爆破的处理;would Phil不完全爆破;【翻译】直到今天,在每做一个决定之前,我都会问自己:“Phil Dunphy会怎么做?”【适用场合】 今天我们来学习一下什么叫做at every crossroad这个短语什么意思。其实crossroad就是“十字路口”的意思,你也可以说crossing或者intersection呀,这些单词也都可以表达类似的意思。而且需要注意了,英语中很常见at a crossroads 这样的说法,crossroad很经常用复数形式crossroads,而且前面跟a搭配也ok,这个很容易出错。在英文中at a crossroad(s) 除了字面的意思的理解以外,还可以表达“在一个需要做出选择、改变、抉择的时候”,这算引申出来的意思。口语中我们也可以说at the crossroads,也是一个意思。来看看对应的英文解释:at a point when a choice must be made或者at a point of changeeg: After earning my degree, I'm at a crossroads. I need to figure out which direction my life should take.在拿到了我的学位以后,我面临选择。我得想明白我的人生应该朝什么方向发展和前进。eg: As a company, we're at a crossroads. We can continue business as usual, or we can take a risk and try to grow.作为一家公司,我们现在面临选择。我们可以像以往一样继续以前的业务,或者我们可以冒险、努力再发展壮大一次。eg: Because of the proposed merger, the company is standing at the crossroads. 因为有人提议合并收购,这个公司目前面临抉择。eg: He's at a crossroads in his career. Either he stays in his current job and waits for promotion, or he accepts this new post in Brazil.他现在的职业生涯面临抉择。要么在原来的职位上等待提拔,或者就是接受在巴西的这个新的职位。所以今天我们视频中出现的这个短语at every crossroad,什么意思呢?“在每一次面临人生选择、抉择的时候”;【尝试翻译以下句子,并留言在文章留言区】在每一次面临人生选择的时候,我都会问问他的意见。
【句子】To this day, at every crossroad, I ask myself one question--What would Phil Dunphy do? 【ModernFamilyS3E09】 【发音】/tʊ/ /ðɪs/ /deɪ/ /æt/ /ˈev.ri/ /ˈkrɒsˌrəʊd/ /ˈkrɑːsˌrəʊd/ /aɪ/ /ɑːsk/ /æsk/ /maɪˈself/ /wʌn/ /ˈkwes.tʃən/ /wɒt/ /wɑːt/ /wʊd/ /fɪl/ /ˈdʌn.fi/ /duː/ 【发音技巧】at every连读+闪音;ask myself不完全爆破;What would类似不完全爆破的处理;would Phil不完全爆破;【翻译】直到今天,在每做一个决定之前,我都会问自己:“Phil Dunphy会怎么做?”【适用场合】 今天我们来学习一下什么叫做at every crossroad这个短语什么意思。其实crossroad就是“十字路口”的意思,你也可以说crossing或者intersection呀,这些单词也都可以表达类似的意思。而且需要注意了,英语中很常见at a crossroads 这样的说法,crossroad很经常用复数形式crossroads,而且前面跟a搭配也ok,这个很容易出错。在英文中at a crossroad(s) 除了字面的意思的理解以外,还可以表达“在一个需要做出选择、改变、抉择的时候”,这算引申出来的意思。口语中我们也可以说at the crossroads,也是一个意思。来看看对应的英文解释:at a point when a choice must be made或者at a point of changeeg: After earning my degree, I'm at a crossroads. I need to figure out which direction my life should take.在拿到了我的学位以后,我面临选择。我得想明白我的人生应该朝什么方向发展和前进。eg: As a company, we're at a crossroads. We can continue business as usual, or we can take a risk and try to grow.作为一家公司,我们现在面临选择。我们可以像以往一样继续以前的业务,或者我们可以冒险、努力再发展壮大一次。eg: Because of the proposed merger, the company is standing at the crossroads. 因为有人提议合并收购,这个公司目前面临抉择。eg: He's at a crossroads in his career. Either he stays in his current job and waits for promotion, or he accepts this new post in Brazil.他现在的职业生涯面临抉择。要么在原来的职位上等待提拔,或者就是接受在巴西的这个新的职位。所以今天我们视频中出现的这个短语at every crossroad,什么意思呢?“在每一次面临人生选择、抉择的时候”;【尝试翻译以下句子,并留言在文章留言区】在每一次面临人生选择的时候,我都会问问他的意见。
And, IT'S A WRAP!! Congratulations on making it to the FINALE episode. To celebrate that, here's a piece of golden advice from the greatest dad in the history of sitcoms, "When Life Gives You Lemonade, Make Lemons. Life Will Be All Like 'What?!'" AHAHAHA, and that Ladies and Gentlemen, is Phil Dunphy for you. Tune in to this extremely special episode as our dynamic best friend duo Ankita and Sai cry over the finale episode of Modern Family, break down the best life lessons from Phil Dunphy's iconic Philosophy book “Phil's-Osophy, and bid their goodbyes with a super fun ‘Would You Rather' challenge.
主播:Selah | 翩翩 歌曲 : Never on SundaysMBTI rivals(竞争) star signs(星座) and astrology(占星术) itself.今天我们就来聊聊:稳坐顶流之位这么多年的星座,终于遇到的一个挑战者——MBTI!*rival /ˈraɪvl/ v. 与……匹敌;比得上……*star sign n. 星座*astrology /əˈstrɒlədʒi/ n. 占星术1. 当下顶流MBTIMBTI is becoming something of a name card or personality trait for people.MBTI正在成为社交网站的个人名片。 It comes to mind very quickly. 现在这套理论越来越红,90后谈恋爱的时候,第一句早就不问星座了,改问MBTI。在工作方面,它也成为了a networking tool and job search tool(一个网络工具和求职工具)。因为它可以在穿衣方面,以及帮助你find your areas of strength(找到擅长的领域)方面provides guidance(提供参考)。And it is very accurate, better than star signs.它非常准确,比星座还准。*guidance /ˈɡaɪdns/ n. 指导*accurate /ˈækjərət/ adj. 精准的来看2个国外网友的评价:就像是在读自己的一生,关于我的personality(性格),它说准的太多了。太真实了!爱了!!!超级准!先来给大家科普一下,这套国际上最流行的职业人格评估工具,MBTI是Myers–Briggs Type Indicator(迈尔斯-布里格斯类型指标)的缩写。它是一种personality test(性格测试),分析the test-taker(测试者)的personality traits(个人特征)。*indicator /ˈɪndɪkeɪtər/ n. 指标*personality /ˌpɜːrsəˈnæləti/ n. 性格*trait /treɪt/ n. 特征It is testing for these 5 different traits.MBTI测试有5个纬度的特征:(1) Mind - Introverted vs. Extroverted获得活力的方式:内向(I)、外向(E)(2) Energy - Observant (S)vs. Intuitive(N)自然留意的信息类型:实感(S)、直觉(N)(3) Nature - Thinking vs. Feeling做决定的方式:思维(T)、情感(F)(4) Tactics - Judging vs. Prospecting做事的方式:判断(J)、知觉(P)(5) Identity - Assertive vs. Turbulent与人沟通时:掌控旁人者(A)社会交往者(T)*introverted /ˈɪntrəvɜ:rtɪd/ adj. 内向的,含蓄的*extroverted /ˈekstrəvɜ:rtɪd/ adj. 性格外向的*observant/əbˈzɜːrvənt/ adj. 善于观察的*intuitive/ɪnˈtuːɪtɪv/ adj. 直觉的*judging/dʒʌdʒɪŋ/ adj. 判断型的*prospecting /ˈprɑspektɪŋ/ adj. 知觉型的* assertive /əˈsɜ:rtɪv/ adj. 武断的*turbulent/ˈtɜːrbjələnt/ adj. 难以控制的2. 前8种人格详细分析There are 16 different personalities total.测试结果一共有16种人格,我们来做前8种人格的详细介绍。(1) Architect- INTJ : imaginative and strategic thinkers, with a plan for everything建筑学家人格,是富有想象力和战略性的思想家,对一切都有计划代表人物:· Friedrich Nietzsche(尼采)· Isaac Newton(牛顿)· Elon Musk(马斯克)· Mark Zuckerberg(扎克伯格) · Eileen Gu(谷爱凌)*imaginative /ɪˈmædʒɪnətɪv/ adj. 富于想象力的*strategic /strəˈtiːdʒɪk/ adj. 战略(性)的(2) Logician-INTP: innovative inventors with an unquenchable thirst for knowledge逻辑学家人格,是对知识有着无法抑制的渴望的创新型发明家代表人物:· 爱因斯坦曾把一张1500美元的支票(check)当book mark(书签)用,有人见了大为惊讶,他却平静地说:“重要的不是这个,而是科学。”· 苏格拉底在繁华的古希腊大街上,街上人声鼎沸,两旁贩卖着各种各样的商品,然而使他惊讶的是,里面充斥着那么多奢侈品。他不禁惊叹道:这个世界上,竟然有那么多东西是我不需要的。*innovative /ˈɪnəveɪtɪv/ adj. 富有革新精神的*inventor/ɪnˈventər/ n. 发明家*unquenchable/ʌnˈkwentʃəbl/ adj. 不能遏制的*a thirst for... 对……的渴望(3) Commander-ENTJ: bold, imaginative and strong-willed leaders, always finding a way or making one统帅型人格,是大胆、富有想象力和意志坚强的领导者,总能找到或创造方法代表人物:· Steve Jobs(乔布斯)· Napoleon(拿破仑)· 中国的秦皇汉武*bold /boʊld/ adj. 大胆自信的*strong-willed adj. 意志坚强的(4) Debater- ENTP: smart and curious thinkers who cannot resist an intellectual challenge辩论家人格,聪明好奇,爱思考,不会败给任何的智力挑战。代表人物:· Mark Twin(马克·吐温)· 孙悟空· 苏轼· 罗翔老师*resist /rɪˈzɪst/ v. 抵制*intellectual /ˌɪntəˈlektʃuəl/ adj. 智力的(5) Advocate- INFJ: quiet and mystical, yet very inspiring and idealists提倡者人格,安静神秘,大义凛然,完美主义者代表人物:· Martin Luther King(马丁·路德·金)· Mother Teresa(特蕾莎修女)· Mandela(曼德拉)他们总是会在 ideas, relationships, and material possessions(物质财产)中seek meaning and connection(找寻意义和联系)。*mystical /ˈmɪstɪkl/ adj. 神秘的*inspiring /ɪnˈspaɪərɪŋ/ adj. 鼓舞人心的*idealist /aɪˈdiːəlɪst/ n. 理想主义者*possession /pəˈzeʃn/ n. 个人财产(6) Mediator- INFP: poetic, kind always eager to help a good cause调停者型人格,有诗意,总是渴望帮助别人代表人物:· Tom Hiddleston(汤姆·希德勒斯顿/抖森)· William Shakespeare(威廉·莎士比亚)· Julia Roberts(朱莉娅·罗伯茨)· Amelie Poulain(艾米丽·普莱恩,电影《天使爱美丽》中的角色)他们是idealistic(理想主义的), 并且are loyal to their values(忠于自己的价值观) and to people who are important to them(忠于对自己重要的人)。*poetic /poʊˈetɪk/ adj. 有诗意的*eager to do ... 渴望做……*loyal /ˈlɔɪəl/ adj. 忠诚的(7) Protagonist- ENFJ: charismatic and inspiring leaders able to mesmerize their listeners主人公型人格,是有魅力、有感召力、有感染力的领袖,让他的listeners为之倾倒代表人物:· Barack Obama(奥巴马)· Oprah Winfrey(奥普拉·温弗瑞)· Malala Yousafzai(马拉拉·优素福·扎伊)· Elizabeth Bennet(伊丽莎白·贝内特,英国女小说家简·奥斯汀创作的长篇小说《傲慢与偏见》中的人物)这些人都有共同的特点:Warm, empathetic, responsive, and responsible.暖心,有同理心,有求必应,尽职尽责。主播Selah就是ENFJ,这些形容词简直就是描述Selah的关键词。*charismatic /ˌkærɪzˈmætɪk/ adj. 有魅力的*mesmerize/ˈmezməraɪz/ v. 以魅力吸引*empathetic/ˌempəˈθetɪk/ adj. 有同理心的* responsive /rɪˈspɑːnsɪv/ adj. 积极反应的*responsible/rɪˈspɑːnsəbl/ adj. 负责任的(8) Campaigner- ENFP: enthusiastic, creative and have sociable free spirits, who can always find a reason to smile 竞选者人格,有激情,有创意,有社交能力,总有微笑的理由代表人物:· Spider-man(蜘蛛侠)· Michael Scott(麦克·斯科特,系列美剧《办公室》中的角色)· Phil Dunphy(菲尔·邓菲,系列美剧《摩登家庭》中的角色)他们总是warmly enthusiastic and imaginative(充满热情,富有想象力), and see life as full of possibilities.认为生活充满了可能性。*enthusiastic /ɪnˌθuːziˈæstɪk/ adj. 充满热情的*possibility/ˌpɑ:səˈbɪləti/ n. 可能性MBTI上半部分我们就先做到这里,非常推荐大家做一下这个测试。这个测试can be helpful to learn about yourself(会帮助你了解自己),你会更加清楚地知道,what motivates you(是什么激励了你),why you do things(你为什么做这些事),how you work with other people(你是如何与他人一起相处、工作的),会帮助你了解那些facts about yourself you may not have known before(关于自己,你以前可能不知道的事)。总之,you'll definitely learn much much more about yourself.你会更加了解自己。请留言告诉我们:你是哪种人格类型?非常期待大家的分享!
Realtor-slash-amateur magician, Phil Dunphy, is one of the funniest dads on one of the highest-rated sitcoms. Modern Family aired for 11 seasons, bringing in millions of viewers and 22 Emmys. But before landing the role of Phil, actor Ty Burrell was rejected by Hollywood for 20 straight years. Told his features were too big, he was too off-beat and too old. By his 40th birthday, he was ready to give up acting altogether. Then the phone rang. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In part two of their top 10 TV dads countdown, hosts Eric Petersen and Danny Jordan welcome back Emmy-nominated actor, Cameron Britton (Mindhunter, Umbrella Academy). The fellas continue counting down each of their top 10 favorite TV dads of all time. From Uncle Phil and Phil Dunphy to Bob Belcher and Bandit (the dad from Bluey), this countdown is packed with some of the most memorable TV dads of all time. Love what you're hearing? Want a chance to be featured on the show? CLICK HERE TO SUPPORT US! Follow us on the socials: INSTAGRAM FACEBOOK TWITTER TIKTOK --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/parenting-countdown/support
We have a very special bonus episode for you! Andrew sat down with Ty Burrell (Modern Family) to discuss the dead pilot he produced, Yours, Mine and Paul's written by Julia Meltzer. In their interview they discuss breaking new voices, what exactly that entails, what Ty looks for in specs from green writers, and the effort his company puts into finding them. He told us the story about how Julia's pilot came to him and how his whole production company flipped for it. The benefits of developing a well oiled spec versus a pitch. An enlightening conversation about multi-camera sitcoms and whether or not they'll be making a comeback. Enjoy it and thanks for listening!You can get the video for the table read of Yours, Mine and Paul's for as little as $5 by going to https://maximumfun.org/joinFor more Dead Pilots Society episodes and information about our live shows, please subscribe to the podcast!Make sure to like us on Facebook, follow us on Instagram, and Twitter, and visit our website at deadpilotssociety.com
Caitlin is joined by artist, kickball champion, and fellow Richmonder Stephanie to talk about the 2004 remake of Dawn of the Dead. We ask lots of questions. Where would you spend time if you lived in the mall? Can cats eat bananas? Is CJ the proto-Daryl? Does CJ have the best redemption arc in horror history? How would zombie babies eat? Is Steve just the bizarro world version of Phil Dunphy? ARE you down with the sickness?
Eine der letzten großen Comedyserien hat nun auch mit ihrer finalen Staffel das deutsche Massenpublikum erreicht - wir schauen zurück auf elf Jahre mit unserer Lieblings-Patchworkfamilie: den Pritchetts, den Dunphys und den Tucker-Pritchetts. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 00:00:00 Familienstreit 00:03:44 Warum haben wir Modern Family gern gesehen? 00:11:50 Was macht die Serie aus? 00:25:58 Was sind unsere Lieblingsmitglieder der Modern Family? 00:47:41 Entwicklungen der Figuren 01:10:33 Die Nebencharaktere 01:28:33 Wiederkehrende Familienfeste - besondere Folgen 01:55:03 Ein bisschen Drama muss auch sein - ein Fazit 02:07:20 Coda: Halloween 02:16:31 Vorschau auf den Gruselmonat Oktober - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Mainstation: Nerdzig.de Alles, was wir tun:Nerdzig Linktree Danke für ein Trinkgeld: Ko-fi Musik: Fighter von Tristan Barton - lizenziert durch Artlist.io Bild: © 2020 20th Television
IT'S TIME TO WATCH THE MUPPETS! This week with special guest Milton Berle. Distracted rants include but are not limited to, Home Improvement (again!), Kenan & Kel, our first Pigs In Space, Rami Malek, 90's TV, Kroll Show, Futurama, Phil Dunphy's blinking, and more. "When Berle comes to guest-star on the show, Fozzie is too shy to meet his idol." ITTWTM shirts!https://www.teepublic.com/t-shirt/21898238-ittwtm?store_id=333945 See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
After 23 episodes of perfect attendance, Priddy is the first to miss a week. Kevin, Flynn, and Hovekamp soldier on as a trio this week. First they uselessly discuss Mjolnir outside of Marvel, and it gets weird when Betty White gets a mention. Then the guys make the road a better place to be with a new segment called "8 simple rules" before Flynn's game flies off the rails and they realize how much they actually need Priddy. Follow our Pinterest pages on Twitter and Instagram @AiredBnB. Original Artwork by: Sam “Slam” Kremer Original Music by: @the_real_priddy Voiceover work by: @thekatmoser
The battle of Urban Outfitters vs ASOS wages on in this week's episode of the Newplex Podcast. Also, dangerous cat food, The Flash movie shoots in London (and reveals Supergirl), and is Phil Dunphy in the MCU? Plus, if you're confused by the DC movie timeline, you're not the only one - Jads is here to fail to answer your questions.
Who is your favorite TV Dad of all time? WGN's Dave Plier and Wally Podrazik, television historian author of ‘Watching TV', break down top TV Dads by decade including Howard Cunningham (‘Happy Days'), Andy Taylor (‘The Andy Griffith Show'), Jim Anderson (‘Father Knows Best'), Mike Brady (‘The Brady Bunch'), Cliff Huxtable (‘The Cosby Show') Phil Dunphy […]
(00:00-9:04): Brian and Aubrey talked about the death penalty and discussed the NBC News article, “South Carolina executions blocked until firing squad formed.” (9:04-18:38): Pastor Jim Mucerino, Senior Pastor of Bemidji Baptist Church, joined Brian and Aubrey to chat about the Grace Conference on June 24th and 25th at Quentin Road Baptist Church in Lake Zurich, IL. Register for the Grace Conference at graceconference.com (18:38-27:56): Brian and Aubrey shared their thoughts on Scot McKnight's Jesus Creed blog post, “The Unmasking of Evangelicalism.” (27:56-36:31): Brian and Aubrey discussed a “TGC Talks” Video from The Gospel Coalition where “Sam Allberry addresses the reasons Christian pastors have become less trustworthy in society, and how they might become trusted again.” (36:31-45:35): Brian and Aubrey talked about Ed Stetzer's Rules for Facebook. They also discussed “Facebook Etiquette on Over-Commenting.” (45:35-55:26): Andy Jack, Licensed Clinical Professional Counselor at Alliance Clinical Associates, joined Brian and Aubrey to chat about tools for coping with anxiety and depression as we move out of the pandemic. (55:26-1:04:53): In honor of Father's Day, Brian and Aubrey shared their TOP FIVE TV Dads. Aubrey's #1 pick was The Mandalorian and Brian's #1 pick was Phil Dunphy from Modern Family. (1:04:53-1:15:25): Aubrey hosted the first episode of the popular Father's Day quiz show, “The Big Daddy Father's Day Quiz” with Brian and special guest, Kevin Sampson, Aubrey's husband and the Lead Pastor of Renewal Church in West Chicago. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Jenelle Riley, Deputy Awards and Features Editor at Variety, will be giving us a taste of her Emmy-winning interview skills when she joins the podcast to speak with actor and comedian Ty Burrell. Ty is best known for his role as Phil Dunphy on Modern Family and is currently playing the role of Jack on the animated sitcom Duncanville, which returns to Fox for its second season today. About the Podcast: The Duck Stops Here is brought to you by the Regional Engagement Team within University Development. Michelle Joyce-Fyffe, the Director of Regional Engagement, is the show's host and executive producer. Keep in touch! Follow the team @uo_the_duck_stops_here on IG to stay up on the latest podcast and alumni news and events. Shoot us an email at engagement@uoregon.edu Music credits: "Luminous Rain" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Cmmons: By Attribution 4.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/, "Funkorama" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/theduckstopshere/message
On this episode of One More Thing Podcast, Miya and Miranda are talking about the ultimate zillennial thing: themselves. There's just something about assigning yourself a label, whether that's through astrology or through personality tests, that evokes a thrill in our hosts. Can you guess which one of our hosts is on the cusp of Taurus and Gemini? Do you know which one of our hosts has a personality like Quentin Tarantino? The answers may surprise you. For their debate, our hosts defend their favorite breakfast food: waffles or pancakes. Follow One More Thing Podcast on Instagram: http://instagram.com/onemorethingpodFollow One More Thing Podcast on Twitter: http://twitter.com/omtpod
"Die lange Leitung" in Reinform erwartet euch in Folge 55 unseres geselligen Podcast-Formats. Neben den Ereignissen und Entwicklungen der Woche beschäftigen wir uns im Filmbingo diesmal mit zwei Filmen, die - einmal mehr und einmal weniger - auf historischen Ereignissen beruhen. Dabei ist die Frage, ob Tobi mit "Der Baader-Meinhof-Komplex" oder Andi mit "Das Leben des Brian" mehr Spaß hatte, rein rhetorischer Natur. Wir reden kurz darüber, warum uns "WrestleMania" in diesem Jahr nicht wirklich interessiert, schwärmen kurz über Phil Dunphy in "Modern Family" und quatschen dann über die aktuelle Reto-Welle im Entertainment-Bereich. Godzilla kehrt zurück, Videospiele sind wieder pixelig und Serien erleben ein Revival. Warum gefallen uns Spyro und Tony Hawk im Jahr 2021 mehr als Cyberpunk 2077 oder Assasin's Creed? Außerdem geben wir euch unsere ausführliche Meinung zum neuen Comedy-Format "L.O.L. - Last One Laughing" auf Amazon Prime und erzählen euch, warum es so irre komisch sein kann, Menschen dabei zuzusehen, wie sie NICHT lachen. Viel zu lachen gibt es dann - vielleicht! - beim definitiv längsten Abschluss-Gag, den wir je hatten. Und immer auf die Kommata achten!
Our triad version of Phil Dunphy returns for another real estate update! Blake Ginther educates us on the state of the local housing market and breaks down the math that may have you realizing you can afford more house than you thought! www.theginthergroup.com 336-283-8689 See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Eine neue Folge eures Lieblingspodcasts ist da! In dieser Folge nehmen wir den Themenvorschlag eines Zuhörers auf und reden über die Ereignisse, die uns zu der Person gemacht haben die wir jetzt sind. Warum alles miteinander zusammenhängt und was Phil Dunphy damit zutun hat, erfahrt Ihr in dieser Folge. Email: justbecause.podcast@web.de
Randy Bynoe - Pro Wrestler, Rapper, Boxer, Youtuber "Enjoy the process" Modern Family, Album, "Do we want kayfabe?", Anime, Megan Thee Stallion, jojo's bizarre adventures Randy on Facebook, Souncloud, Instagram, Twitter & YouTube LINK TREE INTRO SONG: Earthquake - Labrinth ft. Tinie Tempah END SONG: D-sciple - Northside Sincerely Thank you, stay sane, healthy, safe & I truly appreciate you all. . : !LISTEN - SHARE- ENJOY! : . PATREON!!!!! patreon.com/BrendoneC GO HARD PRO HOLIDAY Special - youtube.com/watch?v=-XVYExOaz90 twitter & Instagram 1-866-585-0445 - http://ca.portal.gs/ - 24/7 Canadian Mental Health Toll Free Number!!!!! www.facebook.com/BrendoneCaulfield https://www.facebook.com/HoldenAlbright twitter.com/HoldenPro https://www.instagram.com/HoldenPro/ www.youtube.com/user/Spadez2316 Patrons: Tommy Richardson, James RingsideWithChops, Brendan Adair, Jason Mitchell, Rob Arbic, Uncle Bobby B, Jordan McIlwain, Curtis Rich, Joe Monroe, Caleb Johnstone, Guilmy Talks, Morgan Thomas, Andre Comeau, Rex Atkins, Ryan Knight, Lewis Carlan,Clayton Wilson, Justin Zane, Eric Cairnie, DanielSan
Did you ever wonder what the relationship between the stars and the writers of a hit sitcom is like? Go behind the scenes with Modern Family’s Ty Burrell and writer/exec producer Bill Wrubel With a range of performances across television, film, and theater, award winner Ty Burrell continues to proves himself as one of the finest and most versatile actors today. Burrell starred on ABC’s critically acclaimed hit, Modern Family. The actor garnered countless awards for his fan-favorite role of ‘Phil Dunphy’ including the 2014 and 2011 Emmy® Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series; the 2014 Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Comedy Series; the 2012 Critics Choice Television Award for the Best Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series; as well as the 2012 Comedy Award in the category of Performance by An Actor – TV. In 2012, Burrell shared the TCA Award with Nick Offerman for Individual Achievement in Comedy. Additionally, he has received notable nominations from the Teen Choice Awards, the Television Critics Association Awards, the People's Choice Awards, the American Comedy Awards and the Kids' Choice Awards, all for his role on the series. In July 2020, Burrell launched his production company, Desert Whale Productions, and signed an overall deal with 20th Century Fox TV, the studio behind the acclaimed comedy series, Modern Family. Desert Whale’s first sale under the deal is for the comedy show, Yours, Mine & Paul. The show centers on a woman named Lauren who agrees to be a surrogate for her best friend, Paul, and his husband Xander despite her and Xander hating each other. The show has been put into development at ABC and it was recently announced Sarah Hyland is set to star in the series. On stage, Burrell starred to incredible reviews in the world premiere of Caryl Churchill's two-hander play, Drunk Enough to Say I Love You, at the Royal Court Theatre in London. Burrell's extensive Broadway and Off-Broadway theater credits include the highly acclaimed Signature Theater Off-Broadway production of Burn This opposite Edward Norton, Catherine Keener and Dallas Roberts; starring as Lord Buckingham in the Public Theater's production of Richard III opposite Peter Dinklage and directed by Peter DuBois; and starring opposite Debra Monk and Judy Greer in Paul Weitz's Show People, directed by Peter Askin at Second Stage Theater. Burrell has been a longtime supporter of KIDS IN THE SPOTLIGHT (KITS) which trains youth in foster programs and other under-served youth to create, write, cast and star in their own 10-minute short films. This training culminates in an annual film festival where they present “Movies by Kids, for Kids.” During the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic, Burrell created the program, “Tip Your Server,” to raise money for restaurant employees in Salt Lake City, Utah who lost their jobs due to restaurant closures. Burrell and his wife, Holly, donated $100,000 of their own funds to help ease the burden for the vulnerable members of the Salt Lake community. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
On this episode we sit down with USD and Pioneer league record holding QB Anthony Lawrence, who is now playing professionally in Japan. We learn some of the differences in culture and living and how football is pretty much the same. We hear how many NFL QBs he is better than right now and his plan and potential path to get there. He ranks his friends, declares Phil Dunphy his ride or die, tells about is first TV crush (“Sally” From Cars) and why he is still the king of Fortnite! Tune in for a fun ride – once he starts talking about his friends and girlfriend… the same old football questions he has answered 1,000 times didn’t get him too excited...
【句子】Here's something they didn't count on. You mess with Phil Dunphy, the claws come out. 【Modern Family S2E17】【发音】[hɪəs] ['sʌmθɪŋ] [ðeɪ] [ˈdɪdənt] [kaʊnt] [ɒn] [juː] [mes] [wɪð] [fɪl] [ˈdʌnfi] [ðə] [klɔːz] [kʌm] [aʊt]【发音技巧】didn't count on完全失去爆破+连读;come out连读;【翻译】他们可真是打错算盘了。想和我过不去?那小心着点儿吧。【适用场合】count on1. be confident that you can depend on someone依靠;指望;依赖这个我们很久以前就在节目中学过了,比如:eg: You can count on me.你可以依赖我。我可以靠得住。eg: You can always count on Michael in a crisis.在危急关头你总能依靠迈克尔。eg: I can count on my parents to help me.我可以指望父母来帮我。2. expect something to happen and make plans based on it期望;指望;料想到,并依此做安排;eg: I'm counting on the meeting ending on time, or I'll miss my bus.我指望会议准时结束,否则我就要错过公车了。eg: Sorry I'm late, I didn't count on being held up in the traffic.对不起,我迟到了,我没想到路上会堵车。eg: There's never a taxi when you want one - that's the one thing you can count on!你需要出租车时它一辆都不来——事情总是这样!claw本身指的是动物的爪子the claws come out字面的意思是:露出利爪其实口语中有get (one's) claws out这样的用法,意思是:become particularly aggressive, especially in preparation for a confrontation变得很具有攻击性,感觉随时要出手;动词换成have一样的意思;但这个表达通常用于描述女性。还蛮符合编剧给Phil在剧中的定位的。而且细心的同学会发现剧中下一幕镜头很快给到了Phil的指甲上,很有意思。eg: I hate my neighbor's cat, it always gets its claws out when I go near it.我讨厌邻居的猫,当我走近它时,它总是把爪子伸出来,一副要攻击我的样子。eg: Jenny had her claws out after she found out Mary had been spreading rumors about her in school.Jenny发现Mary在学校散布关于她的谣言后,就大发雷霆。【尝试翻译以下句子,并留言在文章留言区】 I hope you weren't counting on a Christmas bonus because I don't think we're getting them this year.
【句子】Here's something they didn't count on. You mess with Phil Dunphy, the claws come out. 【Modern Family S2E17】【发音】[hɪəs] ['sʌmθɪŋ] [ðeɪ] [ˈdɪdənt] [kaʊnt] [ɒn] [juː] [mes] [wɪð] [fɪl] [ˈdʌnfi] [ðə] [klɔːz] [kʌm] [aʊt]【发音技巧】didn't count on完全失去爆破+连读;come out连读;【翻译】他们可真是打错算盘了。想和我过不去?那小心着点儿吧。【适用场合】count on1. be confident that you can depend on someone依靠;指望;依赖这个我们很久以前就在节目中学过了,比如:eg: You can count on me.你可以依赖我。我可以靠得住。eg: You can always count on Michael in a crisis.在危急关头你总能依靠迈克尔。eg: I can count on my parents to help me.我可以指望父母来帮我。2. expect something to happen and make plans based on it期望;指望;料想到,并依此做安排;eg: I'm counting on the meeting ending on time, or I'll miss my bus.我指望会议准时结束,否则我就要错过公车了。eg: Sorry I'm late, I didn't count on being held up in the traffic.对不起,我迟到了,我没想到路上会堵车。eg: There's never a taxi when you want one - that's the one thing you can count on!你需要出租车时它一辆都不来——事情总是这样!claw本身指的是动物的爪子the claws come out字面的意思是:露出利爪其实口语中有get (one's) claws out这样的用法,意思是:become particularly aggressive, especially in preparation for a confrontation变得很具有攻击性,感觉随时要出手;动词换成have一样的意思;但这个表达通常用于描述女性。还蛮符合编剧给Phil在剧中的定位的。而且细心的同学会发现剧中下一幕镜头很快给到了Phil的指甲上,很有意思。eg: I hate my neighbor's cat, it always gets its claws out when I go near it.我讨厌邻居的猫,当我走近它时,它总是把爪子伸出来,一副要攻击我的样子。eg: Jenny had her claws out after she found out Mary had been spreading rumors about her in school.Jenny发现Mary在学校散布关于她的谣言后,就大发雷霆。【尝试翻译以下句子,并留言在文章留言区】 I hope you weren't counting on a Christmas bonus because I don't think we're getting them this year.
You're either Phil Dunphy, or the Rock. It's up to you.
Nugget, Episode 1.134, 11.09.2020: In der extensiven Vorschau auf den DFB-Pokal kommen der Anchorman Markus Gaupp (Sky) und der Producer um Al Bundy, Tim Taylor, Gordon Shumway und Phil Dunphy naturgemäß nicht herum.
We're back! We're kicking off our Halloween season with Reanimated, a series of films focusing on zombies and/or close relations to zombies, and the first in that series is Zack Snyder's Dawn of the Dead! We're talking the storyline, the fast-moving zombies, Ty Burrell in a non-Phil Dunphy roll, the relation to Land of the Dead, and more! Also, we have Founders' Oktoberfest on the show. Approximate timeline 0:00-12:00 Intro12:00-25:00 Beer talk25:00-end Dawn of the Dead If you like our show, please think about donating to our Patreon account, subscribing on a podcast app of your choice, and leaving a review. You can find us on Facebook (http://facebook.com/bloodandblackrum), Twitter (http://www.twitter.com/bloodnblackrum), or email us at bloodandblackrumpodcast@gmail.com!
In our first episode, we tackle the pilot episode of Breaking Bad. How did Phil Dunphy get into meth? Why did Veronica decide to die? Wait... are those HOPS?! Crack a beer and join us.Music: Funk Game Loop by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3787-funk-game-loopLicense: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
AKA, Phil Dunphy from Modern Family!
I've been critical of the "Phil Dunphy" stereotype of father's. Maybe I should re-consider?
Author and journalism Marc Freeman joins Daniel Ford on Friday Morning Coffee to discuss his latest book, Modern Family: The Untold Oral History of One of Television's Groundbreaking Sitcoms. The pair chat about the show's innovative (and necessary) writing room structure, Ty Burrell's odyssey to landing the role of Phil Dunphy, Fizbo's origin story, and why this sitcom might be the last of its kind. Caitlin Malcuit also talks about a racial justice committee meeting she attended in North Reading, Mass. To learn more about Marc Freeman, read his work for The Hollywood Reporter and Vanity Fair. Today's Friday Morning Coffee is sponsored by Libro.fm and OneRoom.
Vamos ter mais “Liga da Justiça” em 2021 e por isso, ligámos o holofote, apontámos para o céu e voltámos a chamar os Sidekicks, os nossos consultores honorários para tudo que é comics, BD e cultura pop. Filipe Homem Fonseca e Gonçalo Freitas falam deste “Snyder Cut” por entre as principais notícias da semana. Faça download para saber como vai ser o primeiro filme rodado em tempos de pandemia, “Legalmente Loira” vai ter terceiro filme, vamos aprender a cozinhar como em “Friends” e despedimo-nos do pai de Phil Dunphy de “Uma Família Muito Moderna”. Com Patrícia Pereira, Marta Campos e Mário Rui.
Is a hot dog a sandwich? Why does that even matter? It matters a great deal to Chris Grosse, Assistant Athletic Director of Marketing for Penn State Athletics. If you follow him on Twitter, you'll know these are the types of questions that get Chris fired up, out of the box questions that no one else is thinking of. Think of the hot dog question as an exercise for him to flex his muscles when it actually comes time to creating one-of-kind experiences for students and fans. In this episode, Chris goes into detail as to how his creative ideas and experiences have brought him major success and praise nationwide for his innovative execution of unique gameday experiences. We unpack his creative process with his team, and explore how some of his greatest hits (such as Millennial Day at Georgetown) came to life. We talk about why he would go to work for Phil Dunphy from Modern Family and we discuss the differences between innovating in a small athletic department versus one of the nation's largest departments. Join us for this wild ride. For more hot takes from Chris, follow him on Twitter, @Chris_Grosse
It's safe to say that Dads in the media get a bad rap, from Homer Simpson strangling Bart to the man-child that is Phil Dunphy in Modern Family. In this episode, Matt J Hanham is joined by the lads of the Simple Minds Podcast to dive into these portrayals and discuss whether they have affected their relationships with their kids and how they perceive themselves as Dads.
It's safe to say that Dads in the media get a bad rap, from Homer Simpson strangling Bart to the man-child that is Phil Dunphy in Modern Family. The lads dive into these portrayals and discuss whether these have affected their relationships with their kids and how they perceive themselves as Dads.
I think men get mixed messages on fatherhood. "Dad jokes" and the "Phil Dunphy" type dad are considered normal. Yes, these archetypes are "fun" but don't command respect. I also think many "dads" need to be fathers. Kids need and want the love and attention from their dad. But do we too often blow that off?
Trailerschnack Folge 65: Nachdem das Thema „Game of Thrones“ in unserem sympathischen kleinen Podcastformat bislang nicht allzu viel Beachtung gefunden hat – vielleicht sogar weniger, als ihm zugestanden hätte – legen sich die Trailerschnacker kurz vor dem Start der achten und letzten Staffel des Fantasy-Epos noch einmal richtig ins Zeug. Mehr als 20 Minuten dieser […]
When life hands you lemons, make orange juice, then life will be all like "whaaaaaat?" - Phil Dunphy xxxxxx
Being a new parent isn't easy...but it is easier for some of us. We discuss our daily battles with baby Grady and Tim attempts to be Phil Dunphy.
The buzz: “While efficiency…is important…[the HR] function has to think of itself as talent consultants not service deliverers.”” (Josh Bersin, Forbes.com) HR evolved in Europe during the Industrial Revolution from an idea by Robert Owen and Charles Babbage to structure, organize, pay and develop the people who lead and execute on business strategy. Fast-forward. The advent of technology and the need to scale have management evaluating HR with a focus on efficiencies, more than people. Now the workforce is demanding HR put the ‘human' back into Human Resources. The experts speak. Tim Aldrich, EY: “If I went to work in a factory, the first thing I would do is to join a union” (F.D. Roosevelt). James Sinclair, EnterpriseJungle: Success is 1% inspiration, 98% perspiration and 2% attention to detail (Phil Dunphy). Dr. Patti Fletcher, SAP SuccessFactors: “if it doesn't make the world a better place, don't do it” (Kid President). Join us for Humanizing HR: Is Technology the Answer?
The buzz: “While efficiency…is important…[the HR] function has to think of itself as talent consultants not service deliverers.”” (Josh Bersin, Forbes.com) HR evolved in Europe during the Industrial Revolution from an idea by Robert Owen and Charles Babbage to structure, organize, pay and develop the people who lead and execute on business strategy. Fast-forward. The advent of technology and the need to scale have management evaluating HR with a focus on efficiencies, more than people. Now the workforce is demanding HR put the ‘human' back into Human Resources. The experts speak. Tim Aldrich, EY: “If I went to work in a factory, the first thing I would do is to join a union” (F.D. Roosevelt). James Sinclair, EnterpriseJungle: Success is 1% inspiration, 98% perspiration and 2% attention to detail (Phil Dunphy). Dr. Patti Fletcher, SAP SuccessFactors: “if it doesn't make the world a better place, don't do it” (Kid President). Join us for Humanizing HR: Is Technology the Answer?
This week, we put David Duchovny under the scope in the 2001 film, "Evolution". We talk Phil Dunphy, dinosaurs and fake science in this blockbuster episode about one of Cal's favourite movies.
If you want to know what Phil Dunphy, roller derby, and dental work have in common, listen to the show this week. Customer service seems to be a dying art in our increasingly digitally connected, yet personally disconnected world. Kevin and Karen talk about some recent customer service experiences they've had to illustrate why excellent customer service is one of the single most important ingredients to a successful real estate transaction.
The Marketing Genius Podcast: Real Estate Marketing | Digital Strategy | Technology | Leadership
The stereotypical real estate agent is many things: at best, personable and full of local expertise; at worst, aggressive and obsessed with closing the deal. Rarely, however, do people think of real estate agents as being funny (with the possible exception of Phil Dunphy from Modern Family). In fact, the real estate business as a whole tends to take itself pretty seriously. Perhaps that's to be expected—after all, real estate is one of the most tightly regulated industries out there. Still, with sitcoms poking fun at everything from the startup world, to civil service, to paper companies, there does seem to be a humor gap in real estate. That's certainly what Eric Simon thought when he started his career as an agent in Los Angeles three years ago. As a new agent, Eric saw himself and his colleagues playing the role of successful real estate professional—smart suits, nice cars, fast-paced workdays—all while secretly struggling to make a living. “massive population of agents are doing 30, 40 grand a year, three or four sales,” Eric pointed out. Many of us might have come away discouraged by this experience. But Eric saw opportunity. Together with friend and fellow agent Wes Pinkston, Eric developed a creative outlet that reveals the human side of working in real estate. “A lot of agents put on this kind of mythological approach that all they're doing is selling homes and working for their client and then, there's no actual human being behind that person,” Eric told us. “So I wanted to make something that's authentic and show it to everybody. The result was The Broke Agent, is an entertainment website and media company providing an honest take on the sometimes ridiculous, occasionally pathetic, but always comedic side of life in the real estate business. From rap videos to articles on swearing etiquette, The Broke Agent both vents real estate agents' frustrations and pokes fun at their foibles. Eric isn't just a funny agent: he's a skilled marketer who has built an incredible content machine in less than two years. “Funny is a drug. Funny is the gateway drug to content,” Eric explained. That drug seems to have caught on: The Broke Agent has been liked and shared by countless fans, earning over 55 thousand followers on Instagram alone. In this interview, Eric explains the pitfalls of adopting the typical real estate persona, and how modern agents should be using their personality and technology to craft a memorable brand that attracts the right people.
What does Modern Family’s Phil Dunphy have in common with PLL’s Hanna Marin? Spoiler: They are both hard core Hufflepuffs. Find out what houses all of your favorite TV characters were in at Hogwarts (that is, if they weren’t squibs like Julie Taylor). No offense to buzzfeed, but as actual hogwarts alums, we are super qualified for this assessment. Spoiler Alerts: Eh we don’t think there’s anything serious here :)
HA and Stuart peruse the weekly offerings in the world of zombie current events, including an overview of upcoming zombie video games, and reviewed the 2004 reboot of Dawn of the Dead!
Hey ATA Listeners, the theme for this week's podcast is Jingle Bell Rock as the TV schedule winding down for Christmas has Once upon a Time, choosing the right time to put the Neverland story away but a Almost Human crime still makes it a swell time…to go riding on Sleepy Hollow's Headless Horseman drawn sleigh. So giddyup you Phil Dunphy like listeners, pick up those Canadian trekking feet, we've got a holiday Big Bang Theory review on the clock because with a Rundown Section reviewing Homeland, The Tomorrow People, Mob City and more mixed and mingled in the discussion beat, that's the Jingle Bell, (everybody sing) this is the Jingle Bell, this podcast is the Jingle Bell Rock!