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The Trump administration is going after the free encyclopedia. Journalist Stephen Harrison explains how the site went from “the last bastion of shared reality” to “Wokepedia.” This episode was produced by Gabrielle Berbey with help from Hady Mawajdeh, edited by Amina Al-Sadi, fact-checked by Laura Bullard, engineered by Andrea Kristinsdottir and Patrick Boyd, and hosted by Sean Rameswaram. Listen to Today, Explained ad-free by becoming a Vox Member: vox.com/members. Transcript at vox.com/today-explained-podcast. Photo Illustration by Thomas Fuller/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
The Trump administration's effort to purge government websites is accelerating digital decay. It's a trend that imperils our record of ourselves. This episode was produced by Amanda Lewellyn, edited by Jolie Myers, fact-checked by Laura Bullard, engineered by Patrick Boyd and Andrea Kristinsdottir, and hosted by Sean Rameswaram. Transcript at vox.com/today-explained-podcast Support Today, Explained by becoming a Vox Member today: http://www.vox.com/members A photo illustration of the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) website. Photo Illustration by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Google Maps has officially changed the Gulf's name to "Gulf of America". Is that what we're going with? (Photo Illustration by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
Jason and Laura talk about his fashion show appearance over the weekend. Then on the DeRush-Hour: a new test will look for COVID and the flu (Photo Illustration by Scott Olson/Getty Images)
When news dropped that a member of Ireland's parliament was a suspected Russian agent, chaos ensued in the Irish parliament as politicians stood up to declare it wasn't them. Today we hear from John Mooney, The Sunday Times investigative reporter who broke the story, on why Russia sees Ireland as Europe's ‘Trojan horse'.This podcast was brought to you thanks to the support of readers of The Times and The Sunday Times. Subscribe today: http://thetimes.co.uk/thestoryGuest: John Mooney, investigative reporter, The Sunday Times.Host: Manveen Rana.Clips: RTÉ News, RTÉ Radio.Photo: Illustration by James Cowen.Get in touch: thestory@thetimes.co.uk Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Short answer: yes. Dan Niepow from Twin Cities Business magazine wrote about it and joins Jason with what he learned. (Photo Illustration by Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)
Full Hour | In today's second hour, Dom continues the Dom Giordano Program by returning to a burgeoning topic from the week, the bill concerning a TikTok divestment from the communist China government. Dom asks his producer Dan whether he's changed his headstrong stance supporting a ban of the social media platform, with Dan telling that he's read the text and is comfortable with the specificity concerning TikTok itself, noting that the Presidential power offered in the new bill comes with, what he believes to be, acceptable conditions. Then, Dom returns to the topic of 2024 election strategies, stressing again the importance of utilizing mail-in balloting and legal ballot harvesting to our advantage. Then, in Dan Time with Dom, Dan and Dom discuss a couple shows worth watching over the weekend, including the surge in popularity of SyFy's Resident Alien. (Photo Illustration by Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)
Dom welcomes Representative Scott Perry back onto the Dom Giordano Program to discuss why he voted against the bi-partisan bill passed yesterday that would require the social media app TikTok to divest from communist China. Perry explains his distaste for the communist Chinese regime, telling of the deep abuses of the Chinese government using subversive tactics through the app. That being said, Perry takes issue with the bill itself, explaining that the difference between an ‘and' and ‘or' has led to concern that the bill will be used to expand past TikTok, wondering whether once passed, if the federal government will use it against the American citizens. (Photo Illustration by Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)
Jim Chilsen, CUB Director of Communications - Citizens Utility Board joins Megan Lynch about fighting against Illinois American Water proposed rate hike. (Photo Illustration by Sean Gallup/Getty Images)
Wegovy may reduce risk of heart attack or stroke. Dr. Shauna Levy, a specialist in obesity medicine and the Medical Director at the Tulane Bariatric Center in New Orleans, spoke with On the Record with Steve Scott. Dr. Levy suspects Wegovy will lead to a host of health improvements beyond weight loss as research continues.Photo: In this photo illustration, a wegovy logo is displayed on the screen of a smartphone. (Photo Illustration by Sheldon Cooper/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)
Heyo star friends! Renowned astrologer, author and educator Alex Trenoweth, MA, FAS joins us for Episode 263 of StarSound Speaks . She brings us a fabulous slide show on astrology, the movies, and this summer's biggest meme, Barbieheimer -- a viral mashup of the Barbie and Oppenheimer film premieres opening July 21st. Discover how this month's Grand Cardinal Cross with the Sun, Pluto and the Nodes, and Venus Retrograde, impacts the films, the actors and history -- and why the Barbie Doll is a Pisces!!! Alex is the author of "Growing Pains: Astrology in Adolescence" and "Mirror Mirror: The Astrology of Famous People and the Actors Who Have Portrayed Them”. To contact Alex: https://alextrenoweth.co.uk Books at https://alextrenoweth.co.uk/buy-my-book/ YAY MOVIES! I'm planning to see both Barbie and Oppenheimer. The theaters need us! How about you? Leave your comments and shares below... always appreciated! much love, irlianna samsara StarSound Astrology
Since the creation of deepfakes in 2017, the AI-powered technology that swaps faces into videos has become commonplace, particularly in pornography. Using someone's image without their consent to create porn can have damaging effects, emotionally and physically. But no federal law criminalizes the creation or sharing of non-consensual deepfake porn in the United States. Endless Thread co-hosts Amory Sivertson and Ben Brock Johnson speak with producer Dean Russell about deepfake law and the movement for change. Credits: This episode was written and produced by Dean Russell. Mixing and sound design by Emily Jankowski. Amory Sivertson and Ben Brock Johnson are the co-hosts. (Photo Illustration by Adrien Fillon/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
The US economy grew 1.1% in the year to March, down from 2.6% in the previous quarter. American consumers kept spending despite inflation, contributing to GDP expansion. But growth slowed down as businesses pulled back on investment and hiring. We hear from experts and businesses about the consequences this. Also in the show, we take a look at India's plans to start producing genetically modified mustard seeds, and we listen to women who have experienced impostor syndrome. Devina Gupta is joined throughout the programme by two guests on opposite sides of the world: Colin Peacock, host of MediaWatch in New Zealand, and James Early, chief investment officer at BBAE in the United States. (Photo: Illustration of US flag and dollars. Credit: Getty Images)
Full Hour | Today, Dom led off the Dom Giordano Program by offering his review of the Masters, again expressing his disappointment in the allowance of LIV golfers to compete in the event. Dom tells why he's against allowing these golfers to compete, stressing the negatives that come with propagandizing a country who sees us as an enemy. Then, Dom offers his thoughts on the controversy surrounding Bud Lights new relationship with trans-activist Dylan Mulvaney, playing back a clip from Howard Stern, responding to his sidekick Robin why many conservatives are indeed upset about this. Then, Dom welcomes in Congressman Jim Jordan back onto the Dom Giordano Program to hear what's been going on inside Congress following the arrest and arraignment of former President Donald Trump. Jordan tells what Congress has been doing after the arrest, telling of many questions about the Biden administration and the President's family's dealings with foreign entities. Also, Jordan takes us inside the back and forth over January 6th, telling whether that's still a controversy Democrats are trying to push after the arrest of Trump. In addition, Dom gets an update on the border crisis, with Jordan telling what Congress hopes to do to push back against cartels. (Photo Illustration by Scott Olson/Getty Images)
Full Hour | In today's third hour, Dom welcomes back State Representative Martina White onto the Dom Giordano Program to discuss both the allegations against Democratic Representative Mike Zabel and the upcoming budget proposal by new Governor Josh Shapiro. First, White addresses the accusations against Zabel, telling of her disappointment in the Democratic Party within the State, asking what the Party is waiting for in holding Zabel accountable. Then, Dom and Rep. White delve into what they both expect from Shapiro's proposal, with both offering their opinion how they believe Shapiro will address public safety, education, and a multitude of other topics. (Photo Illustration by Scott Olson/Getty Images)
Dom Giordano tells Dan that the show was mentioned in the Philadelphia Inquirer, but he's labeled a 'conservative talk show' host. While truthful, he asks, could we start officially calling the Inquirer a 'liberal rag?' (Photo Illustration by William Thomas Cain/Getty Images)
Bloomberg's Spencer Soper explains how the RX Pass service works.PHOTO: In this photo illustration an Amazon logo seen displayed on a smartphone. (Photo Illustration by Mateusz Slodkowski/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)
Will anything actually happen with the Twitter files? Joe Concha joins the show to share his thoughts on this. Annie and Concha then dig into Jill Biden's obligations as a wife and whether or not Joe Biden will seek reelection in 2024. © 2022 KFTK (Audacy). All rights reserved. | (Photo Illustration by Scott Olson/Getty Images)
Elon Musk completed on a 44-billion-dollar takeover of Twitter last week. He's expressed the want to restructure the platform and create a digital ‘town square', a potential space for free speech, growth and learning. But defining freedom of speech is a minefield, and some parties are afraid that Elon's vision could provide opportunity for greater disinformation and misinformation. Gareth and Becky Hogge speculate as to whether Twitter can ever fulfil the digital idealism that many first dreamt of at the conception of the internet. As social media platforms have become ever more adept at seeking out and closing bots, a thriving underground ecosystem has grown up where people make a living from setting up multiple fake accounts. Clients buy their services through so called ‘click farms' that sell packages of likes and shares. For a few dollars a celeb, a business or a politician can simply buy a big following, and influence. A new report highlights the stories of the largely exploited gig economy workers behind the clicks. One of the authors is Rafael Grohmann of University of Toronto, Canada. At the Digital Doorstep is a recent report that shines the spotlight on the manner in which novel doorbell cameras alter the behaviour and management of delivery drivers. Harrison Lewis speaks to the authors, Eve Zelickson and Aiha Nguyen from Data and Society, to find out how some of our doorsteps have become a social enigma; where does surveillance belong on private property when that same space also acts as a work place for others? The programme is presented by Gareth Mitchell with expert commentary from Ghislaine Boddington. Studio Manager: Bob Nettles Producer: Harrison Lewis (Image: Elon Musk 'Chief Twit' Photo Illustration. Credit: Getty Images)
Full Hour | In today's third hour, Dom leads off the hour by reading back an email from his son DJ, telling him of a topic that he should discuss… that he's already discussed. This leads Dom back into a conversation about the Bucks County School District choosing randomly to relieve student lunch debt. Then, Dom reveals that rapper Megan thee Stallion will be joining Disney series SheHulk, asking how the public would react if somebody like Howard Stern were pegged for a Disney film in the mid-90s. Also, Dom and Dan discuss the extreme popularity of Greg Gutfeld's late night TV show, with both admitting that they aren't huge fans of the humor on the show, which producer Dan calls ‘occasionally cringe-worthy.' Then, Dom reveals a Bloomberg report that notes that the DOJ won't reveal an indictment against former President Trump until after the midterm election. (Photo Illustration by Mario Tama/Getty Images)
Full Hour | In today's second hour, Sean Parnell, former candidate for Senate now supporting Dave McCormick, returns to the Dom Giordano Program to discuss some questions he has about Kathy Barnette's candidacy. Today, Breitbart released a McCormick-sponsored article written by Parnell asking questions about past comments made by Barnette and her history of service in the military. Giordano first pushes Parnell on the repeated attacks, asking whether attacking other candidates in a primary is beneficial to the overall scheme of electing a conservative. Then, Parnell delves into questions about documentation for Barnette's military service, telling what she has produced and why he finds transparency incredibly important prior to a general election. Then, Giordano takes some callers discussing Tuesday's primary, with callers explaining why they still support Barnette even in light of recent comments that surfaced. After that, Giordano tells about a protest held by gas station owners in New Jersey hoping to bring self-service to stations in the State. Then Neal Zoren returns to the Dom Giordano Program to lament about the finale of Ozark and tell us what's worth watching coming up. (Photo Illustration by Miguel Villagran/Getty Images)
Photo: Illustration shows German Emperor William II about to place another bundle of rifles, swords, and ammunition labelled "The Last Straw" onto a huge stack of weapons labelled "German Armament" on the back of a camel labelled "German Capacity War Taxation". #LondonCalling: Olaf Scholz changes direction again. @JosephSternberg @WSJOpinion https://www.cnn.com/2022/04/26/europe/germany-weapons-ukraine-intl/index.html
Host of The Michael Knowles Show on the Daily Wire, Michael Knowles joins Annie to discuss a myriad of topics ranging from Elon Musk's purchase of Twitter to how the Right needs to move from a non-profit mentality to a for-profit mentality. © 2022 KFTK (Audacy). All rights reserved. | (Photo Illustration by Scott Olson/Getty Images)
Full Hour | Today, Dom led off the Dom Giordano Program by discussing the visceral reaction by Leftists to the Elon Musk buyout of Twitter, asking listeners for their biggest takeaways from the news and telling of a couple conservatives who many believe deserve to be back on the platform. Then, Giordano plays back a couple clips from last night's debate between the candidates running for United States Senate in Pennsylvania, breaking down heated words between Kathy Barnette and Carla Sands, and offering kudos to Dave McCormick for a comment he made regarding Dr. Mehmet Oz's flip-flopping after his time spent as a television host. Then, Kathy Barnette, candidate for U.S. Senate in Pennsylvania, rejoins the Dom Giordano Program to take us inside last night's debate in which she faced off against a number of other competitors. First, Kathy tells of the response she's had since last night, telling that it was a very good night for the campaign, and explains how she's developed throughout her campaign, telling of the association she makes between counties and faces after canvassing the state and meeting voters. Then, Giordano asks Barnette about a heated exchange she shared with opponent Carla Sands over Sands' comments regarding Barnette's 2020 loss running as a congressional candidate against Madeleine Dean, with Barnette explaining why the comments made were disingenuous. Then, Giordano asks Kathy about a comment made about ‘MAGA' and former President Donald Trump's endorsement of Dr. Oz, telling why and how she believes ‘MAGA' is not owned by Trump, but instead the conservative people. (Photo Illustration by Scott Olson/Getty Images)
As a series of UN climate reports have warned recently, drastic reductions in greenhouse gas emissions – a halving over the next decade – are needed if we are to keep global warming down to manageable levels. No sign of that happening. An emergency measure to buy time that's sometimes discussed is solar geoengineering – creating an atmospheric sunscreen that reduces incoming solar heat. Sulphate compounds in volcanic gases or in industrial fumes attract water vapour to make a fine haze and have that effect. The difference would be starting a deliberate programme of injecting sulphate particles into the stratosphere. There are a host of arguments against it, including a revulsion against adding another pollutant to the atmosphere to offset the one, carbon dioxide, that's giving us problems in the first place. Another objection, outlined this week, is that it could set back the global fight against malaria - a major killer in its own right. University of Cape Town ecologist Chris Trisos tells Roland Pease what his team's modelling study revealed. Yale University neurologist Kevin Sheth talks to us about a revolution in medical scanning – small-scale MRI machines that can be wheeled to the patient's bedside. According to palaeontologist Maria McNamara, an amazingly preserved pterosaur fossil from Brazil proves that some of these flying reptiles did have feathers similar to those of birds (and some dinosaurs), and that the feathers were of different colours, possibly for mating display. Primatologist Adrian Barnett has discovered that spider monkeys in one part of the Brazilian Amazon seek out fruit, full of live maggots to eat. Why? The ancient Maya flourished in modern day Mexico and Central America for millennia. They built incredible cities and they had sophisticated knowledge of astronomy, architecture and the natural world. But although Maya culture continues to exist today, around 900 AD, many of their great settlements collapsed, and today they lie in ruins. CrowdScience listener Michael wants to know - how did the Maya sustain their populations successfully for so long? And what happened 1000 years ago that led them to abandon their cities? To find out, Melanie Brown travels to the forests of Western Belize. She visits the archaeological site of Xunantunich to learn about what life would have been like for the Maya living in what was once a prosperous city. She hears about the importance of water to the Maya way of life in this region, and their ingenious methods for capturing and storing rainfall. She meets archaeologists using lasers and drones to map Maya settlements that have lain hidden by jungle for centuries. And she discovers what material from the bottom of lakes can tell us about how the Maya faced a changing climate, which may have had huge consequences for their society. (Photo: Illustration of a mosquito biting Credit: SCIEPRO/Science Photo Library/Getty Images) Presenters: Roland Pease and Melanie Brown Producers: Andrew Luck-Baker and Anand Jagatia
Full Hour | To lead off today's second hour, Dom Giordano welcomes back Philadelphia chiropractor and concerned citizen Ann Marie Muldoon, who has organized a rally out at Frankford and Cottman tomorrow at 5:30PM ET supporting the Toomey family, after 15-year-old Sean Toomey was left braindead, killing him, after a rogue bullet struck him following a carjacking-gone-awry. Muldoon explains the purpose for the rally and the title of ‘Not One More,' telling of the climate that has become of Philadelphia under District Attorney Larry Krasner, calling for not one more child death in Philadelphia. Muldoon tells why she's taken this upon herself, explaining how her neighborhood has changed, telling that lack of policing and new policies have turned her neighborhood upside down. Then, Giordano circles back to a discussion about the gubernatorial and senate races playing out across Pennsylvania, telling whether he believes if Trump will offer an endorsement in the gubernatorial race, similarly to the endorsement of Dr. Mehmet Oz in the senate race. Then, Giordano tells of a legal loophole that the Russians are using to continue exporting and producing oil, telling of the ‘Latvian blend,' which is essentially Russian diesel being branded under another name to bypass sanctions. (Photo Illustration by Miguel Villagran/Getty Images)
Photo: Illustration of power loom weaving, 1835 #SmallBusinessAmerica: Back to work. @GeneMarks @Guardian @PhillyInquirer https://www.dol.gov/ui/data.pdf
Photo Illustration by Slate/Photos by HBO Millions have watched the HBO drama "Succession" where siblings are fighting over who gets control of the family-owned multi-billion-dollar international media conglomerate. There's no succession plan in place. But what happens when a small family-owned business needs a succession plan? Does the second or third generation want to take over the business when the parents retire? Or do they try something completely different? The Language of Business looks at succession plans in small family businesses. Host Greg Stoller talks with Beatriz Iglesias Garcia, possible heir to Folder, the family office supply business in Spain. Then we look at Karma Concord, a family-run Malaysian Restaurant in Concord MA. Does son Daryl Quek, a student at Boston University Questrom School of Business, plan to succeed his parent? Or does he have other plans? Host Greg Stoller Beatriz Iglesias Garcia Daryl Quek Support for the Language of Business is from
Photo: Illustration of Paleo-Indians hunting a glyptodon @Batchelorshow 4/4: #ClassicNature: The greatest migration. David J. Meltzer, SMU. @NatureMagazine (Originally aired July 28, 2021) "Peopling of the Americas as inferred from ancient genomics." David J. Meltzer, SMU. @NatureMagazine @NatureScience https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-021-03499-y "In less than a decade, analyses of ancient genomes have transformed our understanding of the Indigenous peopling and population history of the Americas. These studies have shown that this history, which began in the late Pleistocene epoch and continued episodically into the Holocene epoch, was far more complex than previously thought. It is now evident that the initial dispersal involved the movement from northeast Asia of distinct and previously unknown populations, including some for whom there are no currently known descendants. The first peoples, once south of the continental ice sheets, spread widely, expanded rapidly and branched into multiple populations. Their descendants—over the next fifteen millennia—experienced varying degrees of isolation, admixture, continuity and replacement, and their genomes help to illuminate the relationships among major subgroups of Native American populations. Notably, all ancient individuals in the Americas, save for later-arriving Arctic peoples, are more closely related to contemporary Indigenous American individuals than to any other population elsewhere, which challenges the claim—which is based on anatomical evidence—that there was an early, non-Native American population in the Americas. Here we review the patterns revealed by ancient genomics that help to shed light on the past peoples who created the archaeological landscape, and together lead to deeper insights into the population and cultural history of the Americas."
Antonio Zapata comes over to the side of the Federalist insurgents... and turns their war of words into a real threat to Centralist rule over Northeastern Mexico.Photo: Illustration of Antonio Zapata by Matt Tumlinson
Photo: Illustration of a wingèd, fire-breathing dragon by Friedrich Justin Bertuch from 1806 CBS Eye on the World with John Batchelor CBS Audio Network @Batchelorshow Dragon Supreme. Bob Zimmerman BehindtheBlack.com HFN https://behindtheblack.com/behind-the-black/points-of-information/astronauts-name-next-new-dragon-capsule-to-fly-endurance/
As Vaccine Mandates Increase - Religious Exemptions Come Under Fire Mary Margaret Olohan / @MaryMargOlohan / September 22, 2021 Pressure from activists and mandate-minded lawmakers suggests that the religious objections of Americans to COVID-19 vaccine mandates may face more serious inquisition in the coming weeks. (Photo Illustration: photos/Getty Images) Columbia University's Robert Klitzman shared a tragic story with CNN Saturday of a woman riddled with cancer who reportedly refused to undergo medical procedures, relied on the power of prayer, and ultimately died. “Her religious belief contributed to her death, unfortunately,” he said. Klitzman, who directs Columbia's bioethics master's program, stressed that employees should not be able to easily obtain religious exemptions from President Joe Biden's vaccine mandates, pointing to the extreme beliefs of jihadists and noting, “there are limits in our society to how far religious beliefs can go.” He also suggested that the Biden administration should create “guidelines” to decide whether Americans' religious objections measure up. “The problem is a lot of religious exemptions that people are claiming … are based on myths,” he said. “People saying, for instance, ‘All vaccines are made using fetal cells, and I'm pro-life.' That's simply not true.” A Biden administration official told The Daily Caller News Foundation Tuesday afternoon that protecting religious Americans “will be part of the policy process,” but did not further explain the remark. From the briefing room, White House press secretary Jen Psaki confirmed that some individuals may receive religious exemptions from the Biden mandate. But pressure from activists and mandate-minded lawmakers suggests that the religious objections of Americans may face more serious inquisition in the coming weeks. “How much can we ask? How far can we push? Do we have to accommodate this? Those are the questions employers are trying to figure out,” Society for Human Resource Management adviser Barbara Holland told The New York Times. “How do I tease out who's not telling the truth?” New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, a Democrat, told reporters in early September that she was unaware “of a sanctioned religious exemption from any organized religion,” dismissing the idea that health care workers could be religiously exempt from the state's vaccine mandate. “To the extent that there's leadership of different religious organizations that have spoken, and they have, I'm not aware of a sanctioned religious exemption from any organized religion,” Hochul said. “In fact, they're encouraging the opposite. They're encouraging their members, everybody from the pope on down, is encouraging people to get vaccinated. So people will say what they choose.” But neither the governor of New York nor any employer has the authority to tell an individual what he or she believes, Ethics and Public Policy Center senior fellow Roger Severino told The Daily Caller News Foundation. Should an employer rebut the religious objection of a Catholic employee by noting that the pope had encouraged Catholics to get vaccinated, Severino told The Daily Caller News Foundation, that would amount to religious discrimination. “For employers to say, ‘you are wrong' about your own beliefs is a) arrogant and b) discriminatory because people are entitled to their own religious beliefs,” Severino said. “Even if they disagree with their own religious leaders.” Many thousands of Americans are seeking religious exemptions to vaccine mandates, citing reports that some of the vaccines were developed using aborted fetal cell lines. Objectors also cite concerns over the haste with which the vaccines were made, anxieties over the vaccines' effects on fertility, and distaste for the authoritarian government mandates. Under the Americans with Disabilities Act and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, U.S. employers are required to accommodate their employees' “sincerely held” religious beliefs—including potential religious objections to a vaccine. “Public institutions should not act like inquisitorial boards, quizzing people's religious beliefs and trying to find holes because somebody has a different view of things,” said Severino, who is the former director of the Office of Civil Rights at the United States Department of Health and Human Services. “If separation of church and state means anything, it means that state institutions don't second guess to try to resolve religious truths.” Workplace Religious Accommodations: What Are They? There is longstanding legal precedent for workplace religious accommodations to be taken as sincere, Religious Freedom & Business Foundation President Brian Grim told The Daily Caller News Foundation. “They are viewed as personal religious convictions rather than ecclesiastical, in other words, matters of conscience rather than doctrine per se, given that there is wide variety in how people put to practice their faiths,” Grim said. “The question then becomes whether the accommodation request puts an undue burden on the employer, who is also protected by law and responsible for the health and well-being of all employees.” U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission guidance warns that “whether or not a religious belief is sincerely held by an applicant or employee is rarely at issue in many types of Title VII religious claims. “For example,” the guidance said, “with respect to an allegation of discriminatory discharge or harassment, it is the motivation of the discriminating official, not the actual beliefs of the individual alleging discrimination, that is relevant in determining if the discrimination that occurred was because of religion.” Neither the commission nor the courts should “be in the business of deciding whether a person holds religious beliefs for the ‘proper' reasons,” the guidance said, but they may examine the individual's motives or reasons for holding the belief. An individual would not be deemed insincere in his belief just because he is not scrupulous in his observance, the guidance notes, but an employee's credibility could be undermined by behaving “in a manner markedly inconsistent with the professed belief,” if the accommodation the individual is seeking would have a “particularly desirable benefit that is likely to be sought for secular reasons,” if the timing of the religious objection is suspect, or if the employer has other reasons to believe the “accommodation is not sought for religious reasons.” None of these factors are final, however: An individual may inconsistently practice his faith but still hold sincerely held beliefs, or an individual may have “forgone his or her sincerely held religious practice” out of fear of discrimination, according to the EEOC guidance. How Far Can the Biden Administration Go? Legal experts at the Alliance Defending Freedom are evaluating what the Biden administration mandates mean for religious employers and churches. “Should these mandates encroach on the First Amendment freedoms and autonomy of religious institutions, ADF stands ready to challenge the administration in federal court,” ADF President and CEO Michael Farris and General Counsel Kristen Waggoner said in a statement. Some have already taken the mandates to court. In early September, a group of 17 health professionals represented by the Thomas More Society sued New York and Hochul, accusing the state of violating Title VII and constitutional rights through its vaccination mandate and by disavowing religious exemptions. The United States District Court for the Northern District of New York granted a temporary restraining order to the medical workers Sept. 14, barring the New York Department of Health “from interfering in any way with the granting of religious exemptions from COVID-19 vaccination going forward.” New York Medical Workers Su… by Mary Margaret Olohan Hochul, who did not immediately respond to a request for comment from The Daily Caller News Foundation, has until Sept. 22 to respond in court. “What New York is attempting to do is slam shut an escape hatch from an unconstitutional vaccine mandate,” Christopher Ferrara, Thomas More Society special counsel attorney, said in a Sept. 14 statement. “And they are doing this while knowing that many people have sincere religious objections to vaccines that were tested, developed, or produced with cell lines derived from aborted children.” Vaccines and Abortion-Derived Cell Lines Analysis by the Charlotte Lozier Institute released in December 2020 found that AstraZeneca and Johnson & Johnson use abortion-derived cell lines in development, production, and lab testing. Pfizer/BioNTech, Moderna, Novavax, and Inovio use abortion-derived cells in some tests but do not use abortion-derived cells in other tests, the analysis found, but these four do not use abortion-derived cell lines in development or production of the vaccine. Charlotte Lozier Institute Vice President Dr. David Prentice previously told The Daily Caller News Foundation that when abortion-derived cell lines are used in the production of a vaccine, that means the cells are “directly involved in making the final product, the vaccine that is injected in our arms.” “It is an essential element for the final vaccine,” Prentice said. “Although the connection is distant both in time and space, since the abortion occurred decades ago and the cells have been grown in the lab ever since, that connection to abortion remains and is of concern to many Americans. ” Laboratory testing using abortion-derived cell lines is potentially less morally problematic, since it is “another step removed” Prentice said. “When an abortion-derived cell line is used in laboratory testing, that is not done within the production line,” he explained. “It's a confirmatory test done on the final vaccine, to validate what the scientists believe they've produced.” Content created by The Daily Caller News Foundation is available without charge to any eligible news publisher that can provide a large audience. For licensing opportunities for this original content, email licensing@dailycallernewsfoundation.org. Have an opinion about this article? To sound off, please email letters@DailySignal.com and we'll consider publishing your edited remarks in our regular “We Hear You” feature. Remember to include the URL or headline of the article plus your name and town and/or state. The Daily Signal depends on the support of readers like you. Donate now Mary Margaret Olohan @MaryMargOlohan Mary Margaret Olohan is a reporter covering social issues for The Daily Caller News Foundation.
The last king of France and his queen, Marie Antoinette, were killed during the French Revolution. Their son and heir was said to have died in prison in 1795 but did he in fact escape? The 10-year-old spent his last two years of life in solitary confinement with no human contact. During his final few months he neither talked nor walked, rumours spread that this was an imposter and that the real dauphin had been smuggled out in a laundry basket and replaced with a mute boy. Years later dozens of men from all over the world claimed they were Louis-Charles, the rightful heir to the French throne. It could never be proven one way or the other, but in 2000 a team of scientists took DNA samples from the heart of the boy, which had been recovered and kept in a royal crypt. Claire Bowes has been speaking to professor Jean Jacques Cassiman and historian Deborah Cadbury about the mystery. (Photo: Illustration of Louis XVII - formally Louis-Charles, Dauphin of France in prison.Credit: Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
Photo: Illustration shows a vignette cartoon of various incidents where a person refuses to perform a task because he or she is a specialist in some other field; the series concludes with two men speaking to each other over the caption "The only specialists from whom nothing else is expected." Illus. in: Puck, v. 53, no. 1355 (1903 February 18). CBS Eyes on the World with John Batchelor CBS Audio Network @Batchelorshow John Tamny #Unbound. The complete, forty-minute interview. March 28, 2021. When Politicians Panicked: The New Coronavirus, Expert Opinion, and a Tragic Lapse of Reason. Hardcover – March 30, 2021 by John Tamny (Author), George Gilder (Foreword) https://www.amazon.com/When-Politicians-Panicked-Coronavirus-Opinion/dp/1642938378/ref=tmm_hrd_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=&sr= When Politicians Panicked tells the tragic story of how, in response to a spreading virus, global politicians mindlessly pursued economic desperation, starvation, and death as the cure. The global economy was booming as 2020 dawned, but within a few short months wreckage, death, and desperation borne of economic contraction were the new normal. What happened? In When Politicians Panicked, economic commentator John Tamny tells the heart-wrenching story of a time when politicians were tragically relieved of basic common sense in their response to the new coronavirus. In March of 2020, the virus quickly became a major news item as political panic about it traveled around the world. Even though anecdotal and market-based evidence from the virus's epicenter indicated very low lethality, politicians quickly imposed economy-crushing lockdowns on the rather specious assumption that unemployment, bankruptcy, and starvation would somehow halt the virus's spread. Tamny methodically dismantles the political consensus by showing how economic growth has long been the first and last answer to death and disease. He then shows how politicians, having mindlessly crushed a growing economy, proceeded to double down on their mistakes by throwing taxpayer money at their shocking errors. Throughout When Politicians Panicked, Tamny makes a relentless case that free people don't just produce the wealth that renders today's killers yesterday's news. They also produce crucial information about health threats that shine a light on that which threatens us. Lockdowns suffocate economic progress, but they also blind us to how we can progress—as Tamny makes plain in what will go down as an essential history for anyone seeking to understand the coronavirus panic of 2020.
Gary Arndt is an award-winning blogger and travel photographer who has been traveling around the world since 2007. His travels have taken him to over 130 countries, over 400 UNESCO World Heritage sites, and all 50 US states...twice! Gary's blog Everything Everywhere is considered one of the best travel blogs in the world. It was named one of the Top 25 Blogs in the world by Time Magazine and it earned a Gold Medal in the Travel Blog category in the North American Travel Journalist Association (NATJA) Awards and a Gold Medal for Best Travel Photography Blog in the 2018 TBCAsia Awards. He is also one of the most awarded travel photographers of this decade. Gary was named the 2014 SATW Travel Photographer of the Year as well as the 2013 & 2015 NATJA Travel Photographer of the Year. He is the only travel photographer to have been named photographer of the year by both organizations. He is also a 3-time Lowell Thomas Award winner in Photo Illustration of Travel and a 2x Northern Lights Award winner in photography. Gary writes and produces a daily podcast, Everything Everywhere Daily, which features stories about people, places, and things from around the world. Since 2009 he has been the co-host of This Week in Travel, an award-winning weekly podcast that covers travel industry news. He is also an associate producer and senior travel correspondent for On Travel, on the American Forces Radio Network. An accomplished public speaker, Gary has spoken on topics related to travel and new media on six continents. On this episode of The One Way Ticket Show, Gary shares his one way ticket to Ancient Rome. He also talks about the fun of learning Latin, offers photography tips, and highlights some less traveled to destinations that should be on everyone's list of places to visit (Padua, anyone?). Gary is just one of the fascinating personalities featured on The One Way Ticket Show, where Host Steven Shalowitz explores with his guests where they would go if given a one way ticket, no coming back. Their destinations may be in the past, present, future, real, imaginary or a state of mind. Steven's guests have included: Nobel Peace Prize Winner, President Jose Ramos-Horta; Legendary Talk Show Host, Dick Cavett; Law Professor, Alan Dershowitz; Fashion Expert, Tim Gunn; Broadcast Legend, Charles Osgood; International Rescue Committee President & CEO, David Miliband; Former Senator, Joe Lieberman; Playwright, David Henry Hwang; Journalist-Humorist-Actor, Mo Rocca; SkyBridge Capital Founder & Co-Managing Partner, Anthony Scaramucci; Abercrombie & Kent Founder, Geoffrey Kent; Travel Expert, Pauline Frommer, as well as leading photographers, artists, chefs, writers, intellectuals and more.
Hackers are making millions from ransomware attacks. What can be done to stop them? Ed Butler speaks to professional ransomware negotiator Kurtis Minder, about the increasing professionalisation of the ransomware business. Kimberly Grauer, head of research at Chainalysis explains why following the bitcoin trail may be the best way of bringing ransomware gangs to justice and Vishaal Hariprasad, boss of cyber insurance company Resilience, tells us why the ransomware threat means there needs to be a stepchange in how companies view cyber security. (Photo: Illustration of ransomware attack, Credit: Getty Images)
Photo: Illustration of NASA’s Ingenuity Helicopter flying on Mars. Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech The New John Batchelor ShowCBS Audio Network@Batchelorshow Ingenuity weathers Mars first night alone. Bob Zimmerman BehindtheBlack.comhttps://behindtheblack.com/?s=Ingenuity
Photo: Illustration entitled, "The Prosperity Painter", by cartoonist Clifford Berryman, which appeared in the Washington Evening Star on January 30, 1915, depicts President Woodrow Wilson as a painter of prosperity while the economy continued to boom in America.The New John Batchelor ShowCBS Audio Network@Batchelorshow The jobs roar back without bothering with the Biden hand-outs. @LizPeekhttps://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/us-jobs-report-916000-jobs-added-in-march-as-pandemic-recovery-picks-up-speed/ar-BB1feyYg
Photo: Illustration of natural gas fires in Azerbaijan, Central Asia, c 1900.The New John Batchelor ShowCBS Audio Network@Batchelorshow California looks to end new natural gas housing & What is to be done? @DevinNunes CA-22https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/california-is-closing-the-door-to-gas-in-new-homes/
To view the full episode show notes, visit: https://www.perspective-collective.com/perspectivepodcast/183-----Monetizing something from the jump can easily suffocate the joy from the process of play.Today’s guest, Donna Adi, gave herself permission to play. This sparked incredible success for her and set the tone for a highly desired new art style.She’s an insanely talented artist and storyteller who combines vibrant illustrations with lifestyle and fashion photography.What started off as a hobby has led to her flexing her unique style with major brands like Puma, Google, Michael Kors, and Nike.In this episode, Donna and I go deep on:Creating for you vs. following trends.Focusing on the passion over making money in the beginning.Going with your gut and chasing what scares you.Time management, productivity, and avoiding distractions.Mindset, confidence, finding your style, and more.If you’re ready to focus on doing YOU vs. worrying about what everyone else is doing, then this episode was made for you.RESOURCES & REFERENCESPP 161: 3 Key Ingredients to Finding Your Secret Sauce CONNECT WITH DONNAInstagramYoutubeTikTokPinterestWebsite-----GET A GLOBAL PODCAST SHOUTOUTBecome a future Listener of the Week by Subscribing and leaving a Rating & Review on Apple Podcasts/iTunes here.FREE TOOLKIT TO SIDE HUSTLE FREEDOM6 FREE resources to help you grow an audience and build a profitable creative side hustle outside your day job. Download here.FINANCIALLY SUPPORT THE SHOW ON PATREONWith as little as your weekly cup of coffee, you can support the growth of this show by backing us on Patreon. JOIN THE PRIVATE FACEBOOK COMMUNITY FOR CREATORSJoin a like-minded FREE global community of kickass creators and take your side hustle to the next level. Your family is waiting.PURCHASE THE SIDE HUSTLER’S HANDBOOK PDF COURSEThe proven framework that’ll help you gain clarity, confidence, and a mental edge to unlock your biggest side hustling breakthrough. Purchase here.BEST DEALS ON THE BEST DESIGN RESOURCES (Affiliates)RETRO SUPPLY - Use SCOTTY20 to get 20% OFF high-quality AI, PS, Procreate & Affinity resources. Shop here.DESIGN CUTS - Get your FREE Ever-Expanding design resources bundle pack here.LISTEN ON YOUR FAVORITE PODCASTING APPApple PodcastsSpotifyGoogle Play MusicOvercastYouTubeCONNECT WITH MEInstagramPodcast InstagramTikTokPinterestTwitterCREDITSMusic - BlookahPodcast Editor - Aine BrennanExecutive Assistant - Paige GarlandPhoto & Video Specialist - Colton Bachar Social Media Coordinator - Hannah SchickAnimation Specialist - Greg D'Amico
Durée : 7:47 - Bien sûr, ce jeudi 11 juin, il a plu sur nos territoires, mais globalement, c’est une nouvelle sécheresse qui est redoutée pour cet été en France et dans notre région. La Loire-Atlantique et la Vendée connaissent d'ailleurs déjà des restrictions d’usage de l'eau. Et comme l’été dernier, l’inquiétude est forte pour le secteur de l’agriculture. La Chambre d’agriculture des Pays de la Loire a adopté il y a quelques mois sa stratégie Eau jusqu’en 2025, avec des actions prévues pour la qualité de l’eau bien sûr, mais aussi pour la quantité. Evolution des cultures, utilisation de la technologie pour l’irrigation, stockage de l’eau… Nous avons fait le point sur cette stratégie avec Michel Dauton, il est président de la chambre d’agriculture de la Sarthe, élu sur la liste de la FSDEA, et vice-président de la chambre régionale, président du Pôle Innovation Recherche et Développement, qui travaille notamment sur l’eau, l’environnement et le changement climatique. Photo : Illustration cc Bru-nO/Pixabay
Durée : 7:47 - Bien sûr, ce jeudi 11 juin, il a plu sur nos territoires, mais globalement, c’est une nouvelle sécheresse qui est redoutée pour cet été en France et dans notre région. La Loire-Atlantique et la Vendée connaissent d'ailleurs déjà des restrictions d’usage de l'eau. Et comme l’été dernier, l’inquiétude est forte pour le secteur de l’agriculture. La Chambre d’agriculture des Pays de la Loire a adopté il y a quelques mois sa stratégie Eau jusqu’en 2025, avec des actions prévues pour la qualité de l’eau bien sûr, mais aussi pour la quantité. Evolution des cultures, utilisation de la technologie pour l’irrigation, stockage de l’eau… Nous avons fait le point sur cette stratégie avec Michel Dauton, il est président de la chambre d’agriculture de la Sarthe, élu sur la liste de la FSDEA, et vice-président de la chambre régionale, président du Pôle Innovation Recherche et Développement, qui travaille notamment sur l’eau, l’environnement et le changement climatique. Photo : Illustration cc Bru-nO/Pixabay
In this episode, I talk with designers Melissa Deckert and Nicole Licht of Party of One studio about how they started collaborating, how they used personal projects to their advantage and how they create sets and props for photo-illustrations.About this EpisodeParty of One (Web; IG) is a collaborative studio founded and headed by Melissa Deckert and Nicole Licht. Together, they specialize in bold visual campaigns for brands and products using props, sets, and unique materials. Melissa and Nicole met while working as in-house designers at Etsy and after freelancing separately for a while, decided to join forces as Party of One. Since then they’ve worked with many brands and publications including Mercedes Benz, Otherland, Eater, the New York Times, and the Washington Post.In this conversation we talk about:how “cathartic piñatas” helped Nicole and Melissa to imagine their future studiowhy you should focus on process rather than outcomes as much as possiblehow to embrace play as a form of workhow Nicole and Melissa approach editorial assignmentsdesign portfolios and building one that gets you workthe Party of One processhow Melissa and Nicole get inspiredthe power of personal projectsComprehensive Show Notes:Episode Show NotesFollow the podcast:And remember to leave a review and/or rating on Apple Podcast (formerly iTunes) if you feel so inclined. It helps the podcast tremendously.Our WebsiteTwitterInstagramNewsletter AKA Art ClubResource LibraryFollow Julia:WebsiteInstagramBehanceSkillshare
Gary Arndt is an awarding winning blogger and travel photographer who has been traveling around the world since 2007. His travels have taken him to 200 countries and territories in the Traveler’s Century Club and 128 United Nations countries. He has also visited over 380 UNESCO World Heritage sites and all 50 US states. His blog Everything Everywhere is considered one of the best travel blogs in the world. It was named one of the Top 25 Blogs in the world by Time Magazine and it earned a Gold Medal in the Travel Blog category in the North American Travel Journalist Association (NATJA) awards and a Gold Medal for Best Travel Photography Blog in the 2018 TBCAsia Awards. He is one of the most awarded travel photographers of this decade. He was named the 2014 SATW Travel Photographer of the Year as well as the 2013 & 2015 NATJA Travel Photographer of the Year. He is the only travel photographer to have been named photographer of the year by both organizations. He is also a 3-time Lowell Thomas Award winner in Photo Illustration of Travel and a 2x Northern Lights Award winner in photography. Since 2009 he has been the co-host of This Week in Travel, an award-winning weekly podcast which covers travel industry news. He is also the host of The Well Traveled Life podcast. He is also an associate producer and senior travel correspondent for On Travel, on the American Forces Radio Network. Gary is also an accomplished public speaker and has spoken on topics related to travel and new media on six continents. JUST GO GRIND SHOW NOTES: http://www.justgogrind.com/podcast/ MY FREE COURSE ON HOW TO START A PODCAST: https://just-go-grind.teachable.com/p/podcast-launch JUST GO GRIND INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/justgogrind/ JUST GO GRIND FB COMMUNITY: https://www.facebook.com/groups/justgogrind/
Why Facebook's Libra project will attract the attention of regulators. Rob Young hears from the BBC's technology correspondent Rory Cellan-Jones about why Facebook is launching its own currency. Charles Cascarilla, founder of the digital currency company Paxos explains why the Libra project is so ambitious. Rebecca Harding, chief executive of the data and analytics group Coriolis Trade Technologies and former chief economist at the British Bankers’ Association, explains why regulators will be paying attention. (Photo: Illustration of Facebook and digital currency, Credit: Getty Images)
On our third installment of HOP TAKES we discuss the very crowded field of candidates vying for the Democratic Party nomination & the importance of on-the-ground social movements that support them. During the full episode we also discuss pride, some local Victoria political controversy, the upcoming Canadian election & why the idea of breaking up Facebook is bad. Sign up to our Patreon to hear the whole episode as well as more HOP TAKES and other goodies. Photo Illustration by Sarah Rogers/The Daily Beast/Photos Getty
The idea of creating underwater habitats has captured the imagination of writers, thinkers and scientists for decades. However, despite numerous grand visions these dreams of aquatic metropolises have not yet come to fruition. Crowdscience listener and scuba enthusiast Jack, wonders whether - given improved technology and the growing environmental pressures facing humans on land - it is time to reconsider the ocean as an alternative permanent living space for humans? Marnie Chesterton, dons her flippers for Crowdscience in search of the oceanographers and architects who have dedicated their lives to designing vessels, labs and underwater habitats. She explores whether oceanic cities remain a sci-fi dream or a realistic solution to some of our modern challenges. Can the oceans’ largely unexplored resources be harnessed to support living underwater? (Photo: Illustration of a modern city under the sea. Credit: Getty Images)
One short message led to a Twitter ban for a controversial activist – and highlighted the complicated world of transgender politics and how philosophical battles within transgender communities are playing out on social media. How many words do you need to speak a language and how many words do native speakers actually use? Reporter Beth Sagar-Fenton finds out with help from Professor Stuart Webb, and puts Tim Harford through his paces to find out how big his own English vocabulary is. People have been fishing for thousands of years – it is one of the last hunter gatherer activities. But increasingly it is becoming more difficult, as fish stocks dwindle or regulation limits the number of fish that can be caught. Caz Graham asks why do people continue to fish despite these challenges. (Photo: Illustration of people going from woman to man Credit: Getty Images)
Gary Arndt is an awarding winning blogger and travel photographer who has been traveling around the world since 2007. His travels have taken him to 190 countries and territories in the Traveler’s Century Club and 120 United Nations countries. He has also visited over 325 UNESCO World Heritage sites and all 50 US states. His blog Everything Everywhere is widely considered one of the most popular travel blogs in the world. In 2010 Time Magazine named it one of the Top 25 Blogs on the Internet and it earned a Gold Medal in the Travel Blog category in the North American Travel Journalist Association (NATJA) awards. He is one of the most awarded travel photographers of this decade. He was named the 2014 SATW Travel Photographer of the Year as well as the 2013 and 2015 NATJA Travel Photographer of the Year. He is the only travel photographer to have been named photographer of the year by both organizations. He is also a 3-time Lowell Thomas Award winner in Photo Illustration of Travel and a 2x Northern Lights Award winner in photography. Gary is also a 2013 inaugural recipient of a Travel + Leisure SMITTY Award for excellence in social media by a travel journalist. His social media following is among the largest among influencers in the travel industry on five different platforms: Twitter, Facebook, Google+, Pinterest and Instagram. His combined social media audience is over 2,300,000 people. Since 2009 he has been the co-host of This Week in Travel, an award winning weekly podcast which covers travel industry news. He is also an associate producer and senior travel correspondent for On Travel, on the American Forces Radio Network. Gary is also an accomplished public speaker and has spoken on topics related to travel and new media all over the world. For more information about ManTalks or to join a ManTalks Mastermind: Click Here Subscribe on Apple Podcasts | Stitcher Radio | Android For more episodes visit us at ManTalks.com Facebook | Instagram | Twitter Some Questions Connor Asks:Could you share a defining moment for you? - 4:14 What turned you to debating? - 7:35 We seem to be in an era when “opinions” are weighted more than “facts” what are your thoughts? - 18:42 How do you think travel changed you? - 24:40 Where are some “off the grid” places people should visit? - 31:27 Did you enjoy the podcast?If so please leave us a review on Apple Podcasts or Stitcher. It helps our podcast get into the ears of new listeners, which expands the ManTalks Community! Thank You to the Team:Editing & Mixing by: Aaron Johnson
In this episode I talk to Gary Arndt the creator of Everything Everywhere, world traveler, award winning photographer, podcaster, and just all around cool guy. He discusses travel, stories from his various expeditions, how he learned photography, and where his next adventure is leading him. His stories will encourage you to travel more and chase your dreams. Gary's life is filled with events that could fill most people's bucket list and yet he still continues to push forward into new territory. You won't want to miss this episode!Gary Arndt is an awarding winning blogger and travel photographer who has been traveling around the world since 2007. His travels have taken him to over 180 countries and territories and has earned membership in the elite Traveler’s Century Club. He has also visited over 320 UNESCO World Heritage sites and all 50 US states.His blog Everything Everywhere is widely considered one of the most popular travel blogs in the world. In 2010 Time Magazinenamed it one of the Top 25 Blogs on the Internet and it earned a Gold Medal in the Travel Blog category in the North American Travel Journalist Association (NATJA) awards.He is one of the most awarded travel photographers of this decade. He was named the 2014 SATW Travel Photographer of the Year as well as the 2013 and 2015 NATJA Travel Photographer of the Year. He is the only travel photographer to have been named photographer of the year by both organizations. He is also a 3-time Lowell Thomas Award winner in Photo Illustration of Travel and a 2x Northern Lights Award winner in photography.Gary is also a 2013 inaugural recipient of a Travel + Leisure SMITTY Award for excellence in social media by a travel journalist. His social media following is among the largest among influencers in the travel industry on five different platforms: Twitter, Facebook, Google+, Pinterest and Instagram.His combined social media audience is over 2,300,000 people.Since 2009 he has been the co-host of This Week in Travel, an award winning weekly podcast which covers travel industry news. He is also the host of The Global Travel Conspiracy on the CBS Podcast Network.He is also an associate producer and senior travel correspondent for On Travel, on the American Forces Radio Network.Gary is also an accomplished public speaker and has spoken on topics related to travel and new media all over the world.Website: http://everything-everywhere.com/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/EverythingEverywhereInstagram: http://instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/Twitter: http://twitter.com/EverywhereTrip/Pinterest: http://www.pinterest.com/everywheretrip/
Illustration: Judd Winick Judd Winick, artist and writer and author of the best-selling graphic novel series, Hilo: The Boy Who Crashed to Earth and Hilo: Saving the Whole Wide World, is interviewed by Richard Wolinsky, On October 28th, 2015 Richard Wolinsky interviewed Judd Winick in the studios of KPFA on the publication of the first in Judd's graphic novel series, Hilo: The Boy Who Crashed to Earth. A second book in the series, Hilo: Saving the Whole Wide World was published in May 2016. And a third book, Hilo: The Great Big Boom will be published in February 2017. Both Hilo books have spent time and continue to spend time on the NY Times Hardcover Top Ten Graphic Novels best-seller list. Judd Winick is a comic book, comic strip and television writer and artist, and gained fame as one of the housemates on perhaps the best-known season of MTV's The Real World reality television series, set in San Francisco. Since then, he has become a gay rights and AIDS activist, worked on The Green Lantern and Green Arrow comic books, wrote a graphic novel about his friendship with Pedro Zamora, titled Pedro and Me, and created an animated TV series, The Life and Times of Juniper Lee for the Cartoon Network. Judd is also the recipient of several awards from the American Library Association and GLAAD. He is married to Pam Ling, whom he met and dated during the Real World: San Francisco season. A shorter version of this interview aired on Arts-Waves on KPFA and Bookwaves via syndication. Photo & Illustration courtesy Judd Winick. Thanks, Judd. The post Judd Winick appeared first on KPFA.
Ce jeudi sur Amplitudes, c'est grand cru d'electronica. Savant mélange d'expérimentations, de rythmiques ciselées et de mélodies à pleurer, l'electronica est un genre aux mécanismes finement orchestrés. Ces 17 morceaux couvrent deux décades de production sonore, en provenance quasi-exclusive de Grande-Bretagne. François Tracklist : µ-Ziq - Green Crumble (In Pine Effect, 1995) Bola - Vertiphon (Fuyti, 2002) Aphex Twin - Acrid Avid Jam Shred (...I Care Because You Do, 1995) The Flashbulb - Kirlian Isles II (Kirlian Selections, 2005) Slag Boom Van Loon - Sutedja (Slag Boom Van Loon, 1998) Boards of Canada - Whitewater (Boc Maxima, 1996) Ditone - Infoporn (Infoporn, 2009) Jack Marchment - David's Dance (Music Volume Four, 2007) Push Button Objects - Twisted (A Day in a Life, 1999) Boulderdash - Window of Opportunity (We Never Went to Koxut Island, 2000) Leila - Mollie (Blood Looms and Blooms, 2008) Kelpe - There's a Sea in Your Body (Sea Inside Body, 2004) Christ. - Moxley-Moy (Yugo 77, 1998) Ochre - Revolver (A Midsummer Nice Dream, 2004) Plaid - Nafovanny (Reachy Prints, 2014) Autechre - Drane2 (LP5, 1998) Anenon - Damiel (Silver Trees / Damiel , 2010) Photo : Illustration de Underweysung der Messung, mit dem Zirckel und Richtscheyt, in Linien, Ebenen und gantzen corporen, d'Albrecht Dürer (1525)
Ce jeudi sur Amplitudes, c'est grand cru d'electronica. Savant mélange d'expérimentations, de rythmiques ciselées et de mélodies à pleurer, l'electronica est un genre aux mécanismes finement orchestrés. Ces 17 morceaux couvrent deux décades de production sonore, en provenance quasi-exclusive de Grande-Bretagne. François Tracklist : µ-Ziq - Green Crumble (In Pine Effect, 1995) Bola - Vertiphon (Fuyti, 2002) Aphex Twin - Acrid Avid Jam Shred (...I Care Because You Do, 1995) The Flashbulb - Kirlian Isles II (Kirlian Selections, 2005) Slag Boom Van Loon - Sutedja (Slag Boom Van Loon, 1998) Boards of Canada - Whitewater (Boc Maxima, 1996) Ditone - Infoporn (Infoporn, 2009) Jack Marchment - David's Dance (Music Volume Four, 2007) Push Button Objects - Twisted (A Day in a Life, 1999) Boulderdash - Window of Opportunity (We Never Went to Koxut Island, 2000) Leila - Mollie (Blood Looms and Blooms, 2008) Kelpe - There's a Sea in Your Body (Sea Inside Body, 2004) Christ. - Moxley-Moy (Yugo 77, 1998) Ochre - Revolver (A Midsummer Nice Dream, 2004) Plaid - Nafovanny (Reachy Prints, 2014) Autechre - Drane2 (LP5, 1998) Anenon - Damiel (Silver Trees / Damiel , 2010) Photo : Illustration de Underweysung der Messung, mit dem Zirckel und Richtscheyt, in Linien, Ebenen und gantzen corporen, d'Albrecht Dürer (1525)
In 1915, the passenger liner RMS Lusitania was sunk by a German submarine off the coast of Ireland with the loss of 1,200 lives. The liner had been travelling from New York to Liverpool. It was one of the most controversial incidents in WW1 and helped turn American opinion against Germany. (Photo: Illustration from The Graphic - A Crime That Has Staggered Humanity: The Torpedoing Of The Lusitania, 15 March 1915, drawn by Charles Dixon. Credit: Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
Comedian Chris Gethard shows The Gist his guns. We’ll hear how his fans are demanding a new range of creative experimentation and interactivity on his public access program The Chris Gethard Show. His new album is called My Comedy Album. For the Spiel, the country in Africa that’s a runaway success story. Photo Illustration by Slate. Photo by Jewel Frankfeldt Photography: https://www.facebook.com/JewelFrankfeldtPhotography Get The Gist by email as soon as it’s available: http://slate.com/GistEmail Subscribe to the podcast in iTunes: http://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/slate…id873667927?mt=2 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices