Podcasts about Red Jacket

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Best podcasts about Red Jacket

Latest podcast episodes about Red Jacket

Riding Shotgun With Charlie
RSWC# 206 Joe Meaux

Riding Shotgun With Charlie

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2024 55:49


Riding Shotgun With Charlie #206 Joe Meaux Aklys Defense  There has only been one other time when someone has driven the stagecoach and I was in the shotgun seat. That was episode #039 with Kevin Sona from Florida Carry. This time Joe Meaux because he had “sensitive materials” in the car and I wouldn't know what to tell the police if we were pulled over. I met Joe in 2023 at NRA AM in Indianapolis. There was a group of us that went for dinner. This year, Brent, my roomie for the weekend ran into Joe and said he had a van full of machine guns and silencers.  How can I not film this show?   Joe lives in Louisiana and he took an interest in building firearms at a young age. He also spent time repairing lawn mowers when he was young, which came in handy when it was time to build AR. Building an AR was much more affordable than buying one. He would buy kits and put them together. Being a subject matter expert on building and working with computers gave him the chance to teach information technology and business at a local high school where he was only a few years older than the students.    Currently, he owns Aklys Defense. His company makes silencers, suppressors, gun muffler quiet technology, a can, or a yeeter discreeter. Aklys makes their own products, but they also make some OEM products for other manufacturers. Let's get this debate over: the first patent was for a silencer. Yes, we all know it doesn't “silence” the sound, but the first gun muffler was called a silencer. Joe also says the ATF refers to it as a silencer, too. We've also just learned the ATF may be wrong about what they call items (Hello, Mr Michael Cargill!)   Joe's teaching gig and experience with computers and web design was able to help him connect with Red Jacket Firearms. After some bartering, he was able to get a nicer AK kit in exchange for helping with their computers. He was offered a position to help build guns and he took it.    Unbeknownst to Joe, Will Hayden, Red Jacket's owner, submitted a sizzle reel to Discovery. It took some time to pick up Sons of Guns and make it happen. Joe says it was a little weird trying to do work, but Will wanted to build in some drama. They also had a business to run and keep going. Sons of Guns went on for five seasons and during the filming of season six, things got bad. (You can google what went down.) Joe and his partners ended up managing the business and working to change the image and branding. He made the decision to rebrand and start over as Aklys Defense.    We do drive through Dealey Plaza twice. It's become a tradition when we're filming in Dallas. The second time through, I saw someone in tan pants and a black polo shirt. It ended up being Matt Mallory with Klint Macro. I've done two shows with the Meet The Pressers gents. I did get a copy of the clip of us driving through their video, which adds some fun!    Joe gives us some insight into the business side of things, like having SKUs and UPCs. He's fired many different machine guns in his time. And he also tells us his top machine guns and why he feels a connection to the grease gun from World War II. Ok.. maybe a little bit about the Vegas shooting comes up, too.  Aklys Defense is doing well and will keep doing well. If you need a silencer, check their website and get one from Aklys. I say it often, I really love my gig! I enjoy making all kinds of friends in the gun community.  Favorite quotes: “While the computer was defragging, I went and assembled an AK.” “There wasn't a lot of business drive, I thought I could help with that.” “I lost a lot of investment money, time, credibility,” “I worked hard to make sure the Red Jacket brand was inserted before the Sons of Guns brand.” “We've made suppressors, need to learn how to make these good,” Meaux Guns https://www.meauxguns.com/   Aklys Defense https://www.aklysdefense.com/   Aklys Defense https://www.facebook.com/Aklysdefense   Aklys Defense Instagram https://www.instagram.com/aklysdefense   Aklys Defense X https://x.com/Aklysdefense   Second Amendment Foundation https://secure.anedot.com/saf/donate?sc=RidingShotgun    Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms https://www.ccrkba.org/     Please support the Riding Shotgun With Charlie sponsors and supporters.    Buy RSWC & GunGram shirts & hoodies, stickers & patches, and mugs at the store! http://ridingshotgunwithcharlie.com/rswc-shop/   Dennis McCurdy Author, Speaker, Firewalker http://www.find-away.com/   Self Defense Radio Network http://sdrn.us/   Buy a Powertac Flashlight, use RSWC as the discount code and save 15% www.powertac.com/RSWC   SABRE Red Pepper Spray  https://lddy.no/1iq1n   Or listen on: iTunes/Apple podcasts https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/riding-shotgun-with-charlie/id1275691565

That's A Winner Podcast
S3 - Episode 4 - Offensive Woes Continue

That's A Winner Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2024 88:48


The Cardinals offensive woes continue. Is it aging players or streaky hitters? Also, Jordan Walker trending down, Masyn Winn trending up. Is Matt Carpenter a Red Jacket guy? And much more. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thats-a-winner-podcast/support

Union City Radio
Labor Radio-Podcast Daily Van Deusen on "Insurgent Labor”

Union City Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2024 2:00


The former VT AFL-CIO president discusses his new book on the We Rise Fighting podcast Today's labor history: 45 killed in Red Jacket mine blast Today's labor quote: Ruth McKenney @wpfwdc @AFLCIO #1u #UnionStrong #LaborRadioPod Proud founding member of the Labor Radio Podcast Network

Union City Radio
Van Deusen on "Insurgent Labor”

Union City Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2024 2:00 Transcription Available


The former VT AFL-CIO president discusses his new book on the We Rise Fighting podcast Today's labor history: 45 killed in Red Jacket mine blast Today's labor quote: Ruth McKenney @wpfwdc @AFLCIO #1u #UnionStrong #LaborRadioPod Proud founding member of the Labor Radio Podcast Network

Masterblaster
Tajh Malik x Lo Katana - Red Jacket

Masterblaster

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2024 13:16


What are your favorite songs? --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/marquis-walker22/support

Unsung History
The Haudenosaunee Confederacy

Unsung History

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2023 54:31


Before Europeans landed in North America, five Indigenous nations around what would become New York State came together to form the Haudenosaunee Confederacy. When the Europeans arrived, the French called them the Iroquois Confederacy, and the English called them the League of Five Nations. Those Five Nations were the Mohawks, Oneidas, Onondagas, Cayugas, and Senecas; the Tuscaroras joined the Confederacy in 1722. Some founding father of the United States, including George Washington and Benjamin Franklin admired the Haudenosaunee and incorporated their ideas into the U.S. Constitution. Despite that admiration, though, the United States government and the state government of New York did not always treat the Haudenosaunee with respect, and Haudenosaunee leaders had to navigate a difficult terrain in maintaining their sovereignty.  Today we're going to look at the relationship between the Haudenosaunee and the United States through the stories of four individuals: Red Jacket, Ely S. Parker, Harriet Maxwell Converse, and Arthur C. Parker. Joining me in this episode is Dr. John C. Winters, Assistant Professor of History at the University of Southern Mississippi and author of The Amazing Iroquois and the Invention of the Empire State. Our theme song is Frogs Legs Rag, composed by James Scott and performed by Kevin MacLeod, licensed under Creative Commons. The mid-episode music is “Falling Leaves (Piano),” by Oleksii Holubiev, from Pixabay, used under the Pixabay Content License. The episode image is “Red Jacket (Sagoyewatha),” painted by Thomas Hicks in 1868; the painting is in the public domain and can be found in the National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution. Additional Sources: Haudenosaunee Confederacy “Haudenosaunee Guide For Educators,” National Museum of the American Indian. “The Haudenosaunee Confederacy and the Constitution,” by Jennifer Davis, Library of Congress, September 21, 2023. “Indian speech, delivered before a gentleman missionary, from Massachusetts, by a chief, commonly called by the white people Red Jacket. His Indian name is Sagu-ua-what-hath, which being interpreted, is Keeper-awake,” Library of Congress, 1805. “The Graves of Red Jacket,” Western New York Heritage. “Red Jacket Medal Returned to Seneca Nation [video],” WGRZ-TV, May 17, 2021. “Ely S. Parker,” Historical Society of the New York Courts.  April 2, 2015 in From the Stacks “‘We Are All Americans:' Ely S. Parker at Appomattox Court House,” by Mariam Touba, New York Historical Society, April 2, 2015. “Engineer Became Highest Ranking Native American in Union Army,” by David Vergun, DOD News, November 2, 2021. “Building to be Named for Ely S. Parker First Indian Commissioner of the BIA Recognized,” U.S. Department of the Interior, December 15, 2000. “‘The Great White Mother': Harriet Maxwell Converse, the Indian Colony of New York City, and the Media, 1885–1903,” by John. C. Winters, The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era, 21(4), 279-300.  “Harriet Maxwell Converse,” PBS.org. “Harriet Maxwell Converse,” Poets.org. “Research and Collections of Arthur C. Parker,” New York State Museum. “Arthur C. Parker and the Society of the American Indian, 1911-1916,” by S. Carol Berg, New York History, vol. 81, no. 2, 2000, pp. 237–46.  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Pemmy & James Kinda-Sorta-Hopefully Funny Cartoon Podcast
Lupin the Third, Part 2 (aka the Red Jacket Series, TMS Entertainment, 1977-1980)

The Pemmy & James Kinda-Sorta-Hopefully Funny Cartoon Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2023 57:10


Few criminals in animation history are as notorious or beloved as Lupin the Third, the simultaneously suave and goofy gentleman thief. In his second anime run, which Pemmy and James look at in this episode, the character became TMS' flagship property, running over 150 episodes. Many of his US fans first encountered him via Adult Swim's broadcasts of an English language dub, but there was a prior project that saw a small amount of this series dubbed for the home video market, and we check out a little of both!

Podcast of X
On the Run in a Bright Red Jacket: Children of the Vault #1

Podcast of X

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2023 44:13


In this episode, we talk about Children of the Vault #1 and Immortal X-Men #14. Follow us: https://freespeechgeek.com Instagram X House of X #200 --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/podcast-of-x/message

Performance Anxiety
Lincoln Barr (Red Jacket Mine)

Performance Anxiety

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2023 96:56


Today's guest makes me appreciate my childhood. Lincoln Barr joins me to talk about a lot of stuff! He knew early on that music was his calling. He identified with the musicians he saw on TV before he could even play music. But he went to college for English, not music. He also met his wife at that time. Those two things were foundational for his musical style. He moved to Seattle and started the band Red Jacket Mine. Turns out, the families of the Red Jacket Miners weren't exactly thrilled about the band. But fans of the music were! And the members of Red Jacket Mine have been an important part of Lincoln's life ever since. After a few albums, the band ended. Life happened and people moved, including Lincoln and his wife, and it just became too difficult to continue. When he decided to start writing solo material, Lincoln changed everything. He confronted traumas from an abusive childhood. It changed how he wrote. It even changed how the music sounded, whether it's his solo albums or the soundtrack he wrote for a fascinating documentary called The Past Is Never Dead. It's the classic combo of dark minor key jazz & child abuse. But seriously, the music is a left turn from a lot of the stuff I listen to. I highly recommend Lincoln's latest album, Forfeit The Prize. Links to buy it and to follow him on social media are at lincolnbarrmusic.com.  You can follow the podcast @PerformanceAnx on Twitter & Instagram. If you'd like to support the show, try ko-fi.com/performanceanxiety or buy merch at performanceanx.threadless.com. I hope you enjoy this episode as much as I did. It's Lincoln Barr on Performance Anxiety on the Pantheon Podcast Network. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Dr. Raj Podcast
Online Health Support with Brian Loew

The Dr. Raj Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2023 34:56


Today's Episode Dr. Raj speaks with Brian Loew about his patient engagement platform, Inspire. They discuss the origins and inspiration behind Inspire, exploring how it fosters a sense of community among its members, as well as the impact it aims to make in the years to come. Today's Guest  Brian Loew created Inspire in 2005 with the goal of accelerating medical progress by engaging patients and caregivers in safe, trusted online communities. For the past 17 years, he has grown the company to be the leading digital space for health, with more than 10 million visitors annually who join Inspire to discuss more than 3,000 health conditions. Brian has built a network of dozens of Non-profit partners including the American Lung Association, Mental Health America, and the Ovarian Cancer Research Alliance - who rely on Inspire for safe, moderated spaces where their members can receive trusted information and support.  Brian is a frequent speaker and writer on the topics of patient-centricity, the role of data in healthcare, health-focused social networks and digital medicine. He sits on the boards of the Robert Packard Center for ALS Research at Johns Hopkins, and New Jersey Goals of Care, and was a “Red Jacket” recipient from PharmaVOICE magazine for his contributions to the industry. Brian is a graduate of George Washington University. Check out Inspire here  About Dr. Raj Dr Raj is a quadruple board certified physician and associate professor at the University of Southern California. He was a co-host on the TNT series Chasing the Cure with Ann Curry, a regular on the TV Show The Doctors for the past 7 seasons and has a weekly medical segment on ABC news Los Angeles. Want more Dr. Raj? Check out the Beyond the Pearls lecture series! The Ultimate High Yield Bundle: The complete review of high-yield clinical medicine topics necessary for graduate medical education board exams including NBME, USMLE Steps 1/2/3, ITE and ABIM Boards. You can also listen to the Beyond the Pearls podcast. Check out our other shows: Physiology by Physeo Step 1 Success Stories The InsideTheBoards Study Smarter Podcast The InsideTheBoards Podcast Produced by Ars Longa Media To learn more about us and this podcast, visit arslonga.media. You can leave feedback or suggestions at arslonga.media/contact or by emailing info@arslonga.media. Produced by: Christopher Breitigan and Erin McCue. Executive Producer: Patrick C. Beeman, MD The information presented in this podcast is intended for educational purposes only and should not be construed as professional or medical advice. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Weekly Suit Gundam
S3E3 - The Red Jacket Adventures: Lupin the 3rd Part II Review & Analysis

Weekly Suit Gundam

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2023 226:40


“Lupin, our manly drama ends today!”    Airing from 1977 to 1980, the second Lupin the 3rd TV anime – retroactively titled “Part II” – produced a whopping 155 episodes, and with the iconic red jacket and the entire five-person crew (Lupin, Jigen, Fujiko, Goemon, and Zenigata) in tow for every adventure, this is the series that firmly cemented Lupin III as an enduring anime icon, and set the tone for many of his future capers. For today's episode, we watched a selection of 27 episodes – see the full list below – and experienced a wide range of adventures, from Lupin and company stealing a vintage bottle of wine on Christmas, to Jigen helping a ballerina defect to the West, to ‘Pops' Zenigata springing a daring trap for Lupin on the highway, to Goemon surviving a shockingly violent bout of torture, to two whole episodes devoted to an extremely surprising (and very funny) alternate history of Jesus Christ himself! Part II is truly a wild ride, with some absolute masterpiece episodes displaying some of the greatest animation in TV history, and almost always providing a big dose of fun.    Enjoy, and come back next week as we review Lupin's most famous adventure with Hayao Miyazaki's 1979 classic The Castle of Cagliostro, and look at the two episodes Miyazaki directed for Part II, Albatross – Wings of Death and Farewell, O Dearest Lupin!    Time Chart: Theme Song: 0:00:00 – 0:01:20 Intro, History, and Part II Overview: 0:01:20 – 0:57:57  Eyecatch Break 1: 0:57:57 – 0:58:30  Episode-by-episode review, part 1: 0:58:30 – 2:22:00  Eyecatch Break 2: 2:22:00 – 2:22:29  Episode-by-episode review, part 2: 2:22:29 – 3:45:25 End Theme: 3:45:25 – 3:46:40    Support the show at Ko-fi ☕️ https://ko-fi.com/weeklystuff   Subscribe to The Weekly Stuff Podcast on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/TheWeeklyStuffPodcast   Follow The Weekly Stuff Wordcast newsletter for regular updates and extra content!  https://weeklystuff.substack.com “Welcome to Japanimation Station!” Lyrics by Sean Chapman, Music by Thomas Lack, featuring Hatsune Miku. https://www.thomaslack.com   Full list of episodes watched (Japanese title/English title)    1 - "Lupin the Third's Gallant Appearance" / "The Return of Lupin the 3rd" 12 - "A Gift for the President" / "The Sleight Before Christmas" 13 - "The Great Chase in San Francisco" / "I Left My Mind in San Francisco" 20 - "Cornered Lupin" / "Hell Toupee" 21 - "Goemon's Revenge" / "The Last Mastery" 25 - "Encounter With the Deadly Iron Lizard" / "The Lair of the Land-Shark" 26 - "A Rose and a Pistol" / "Shot Through the Heart" 27 - "Where Did the Cinderella Stamp Go?" / "The Little Princess of Darkness" 30 - "The Wind in Morocco is Hot" / "Morocco Horror Picture Show" 32 - "Lupin Dies Twice" / "Lupin the Interred" 34 - "Lupin Who Turned Into a Vampire" / "But your Brother was Such a Nice Guy" 36 - "Uncover the Secret of Tsukikage Castle" / "The Riddle of Tsukikage Castle" 38 - "The Sweet Trap of ICPO" / "Happy Betrayals to You" 48 - "Lupin Laughs at the Alarm Bell" / "Vault Assault" 57 - "Computer or Lupin?" / "Alter-Ego Maniac" 58 - "The Face of Goodbye at the National Border" / "Gettin' Jigen with It" 66 - "Order: Shoot to Kill!!" / "Beauty and the Deceased" 69 - "The Woman Pops Fell in Love With" / "Zenigata Getcha into My Life" 85 - "The ICPO's Secret Plan" / "The Secret Order of ICPO" 94 - "Lupin vs. Superman" / "Lupin Vs. Superman" 97 - "Find Lupin the First's Treasure" / "Searching for Lupin I's Treasure" 99 - "The Scattered Magnum" / "Fighting Jigen" 112 - "Goemon's Close Call" / "Danger! Goemon" 114 - "The Secret of the First Supper" / "The Secret of the First Supper" 129 - "In Jigen, I Saw the Gentleness of a Man's Soul" / "The Kindness Of Jigen is Seen" 148 - "The Target Is 555 Meters" / "The Target is Five Hundred and Fifty Five Meters Away" 151 - "The Arrest Lupin Highway Operation" / "To Arrest Lupin, the Mission at Highway"

Historically Thinking: Conversations about historical knowledge and how we achieve it

When on April 9, 1865, Ulysses S Grant received the surrender of Robert E Lee, one of the staff officers who accompanied him was Ely S. Parker.  He was a Lieutenant Colonel in the Union Army, an engineer, and a friend of Grants from Galena, Illinois. But he was also a member of the Wolf Clan of the Seneca, one of the Six Nations of the Iroquois or Haudenosaunee. And not only was he a member, but indeed the Sachem of the Six Nations. So it was that a man who was not actually a citizen of the United States drafte d the official copy of the terms of surrender which Grant and Lee signed. Parker was one in a lineage of people who shaped the modern conception of the Six Nations. He was preceded by his uncle Red Jacket, and succeeded by his friend and adopted Seneca tribe member Harriet Converse, and his nephew Arthur Parker.  All of them shaped a history of what Arthur Parker– in a ten-volume unpublished work–called “the amazing Iroquois “. John C. Winters describes their story in his new book The Amazing Iroquois and the Invention of the Empire State. He is Assistant Professor of History at the University of Southern Mississippi.  For Further Investigation The most recent mention of the Haudenosaunee on the podcast was in my conversation with Dean Snow, an eminent archaeologist who has excavated numerous Haudenosaunee sites in New York State and beyond. An important conversation on reintegrating Native American history into a broader narrative was with Jim Horn, when we had a conversation about the great chieftain Opechancanough. And self-representation by native leaders was the focus of an old conversation with my colleague Jane Simonsen, way back in Episode 58: What Black Hawk Wore "Red Jacket's Peace Medal returned to Seneca Nation after 116 years at Buffalo museum" Seneca-Iroquois National Museum Arthur Parker, Seneca Myths and Folktales Letter from Ely S. Parker to Harriet Converse   Al: So throughout the book, you play around with this idea of Iroquois exceptionalism. If my old [00:02:00] professor, David Hollinger, was on the podcast, he would immediately protest that American exceptionalism is wrongly used. It was invented by Stalin or the head of the Communist Party or something like that. But we won't get into that. You're enjoying playing around with Iroquois versus American exceptionalism, but defining our terms, what is Iroquois exceptionalism? I trust that it's not that Iroquois lacked a feudal class so that therefore their approach to post capitalism or socialism is different. John: No. No, not quite. What at this notion of Iroquois exceptionalism is of course at the heart of the book, but it's an invented category though, similarly, so it is really Capturing the idea that the Iroquois have this unique place in American history. If you're walking down the street in New York City or you're moving through New York State and you ask people what do you know of the Iroquois? Or have you heard of the Iroquois? The responses that [00:03:00] often spring to mind are these exceptional things like the Skywalkers, right? The Iroquoian steel workers most of them Mohawks, who are building the Empire State Building, and basically New York City's skyline, not only using Iroquoian mussel, but also Iroquoian steel. Some of them who have more like anthropological interests and maybe political theoretical interests are really interested in this idea that the Iroquois in effect invented modern American women's. Rights because as a matrilineal society, the Iroquois had this or granted women this extraordinary and exceptional power. So during the mid 19th through the early 20th century, we see lots of these suffrage reformers turn to the, I Iroquois to say, if we America, the United States, this progressive white nation can't [00:04:00] even do the same thing that these unquote Savage Indian are. Na, sa quote unquote, Savage Indian neighbors are doing and granting women equal repres...

All Hearty Def Party
2 DJs and Mic - Featureing DJ Ivan G Episode #34

All Hearty Def Party

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2023 73:02


Tonight we have the opportunity to talk with another one of the Top DJs in our industry. Amongst all the other DJs, there are only a few who really stand out and leave a mark. One of those is Dallas Texas' own DJ Ivan G (Scratchmaster). From the very early age of 12 years old, DJ Ivan G performed and was in high demand at the area's hottest events. From nightclubs and venues such as Glass Cactus, Carson's Live, Plush, Mixx, Cielo, Red Jacket, and Wish Lounge to many other cities and locations, DJ Ivan G was on his way to the top. Along the way came the selection to mix on the cruise liner Liberty of the Seas and many other cruise ships for Royal Caribbean, NCL, and Carnival, performing for the hottest parties and events while at sea. While at sea, DJ Ivan G performed in many countries such as Mexico, Puerto Rico, Jamaica, St. Martin, Hawaii, and others. His reputation as a competitive battle DJ began to take notice as a selection to compete in the DMC nationwide competition took place, DJ Ivan G did very well. As a very popular and well-crafted DJ, Ivan G was chosen to DJ on stage, opening up for some very famous acts such as Teena Marie, Nina Skyy, Tony Touch, Too Short, Snoop Dog, Pit Bull, Lil John, Daddy Yankee, Don Omar, Nas, Enrique Iglesias, Aventura and many more. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/2djs/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/2djs/support

Your Favorite Blockhead's show
Episode #286: A Round-Headed Kid In A Red Jacket

Your Favorite Blockhead's show

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2023 29:32


All links, sponsors, networks, and notes for this episode can be accessed via the blog page below:https://yourfavoriteblockhead.com/2023/05/13/episode-286-a-round-headed-kid-in-a-red-jacket/

Zolak & Bertrand
Mike Vrabel Gets The Red Jacket // Enough Help For Mac Jones? // “This Or That” - 5/4 (Hour 2)

Zolak & Bertrand

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2023 44:57


(0:00) Zolak & Bertrand begin the second hour talking about Mike Vrabel being elected to the Patriots Hall Of Fame. (10:52) The guys talk about what the Patriots have done so far this offseason to help out Mac Jones and the New England offense. (24:09) The crew talked about songs from the band “The Cardigans”. (33:25) Zo & Beetle close out the second hour with “This or That”.

Between Two Great Lakes
Beautifying Buffalo's Red Jacket Park

Between Two Great Lakes

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2023 15:06


By the end of summer, the entranceway into Red Jacket park along the Buffalo River should see an upgrade as work begins to find an artist to paint a mural on old train abutments. Learn more about this Buffalo Blueway site, what it offers people and how we're seeking input on the process. Artists and community members have until April 30 to provide feedback or apply for the work.

The Project Gutenberg Open Audiobook Collection
An Account of Sa-Go-Ye-Wat-Ha, or Red Jacket, and

The Project Gutenberg Open Audiobook Collection

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2023 445:09


An Account of Sa-Go-Ye-Wat-Ha, or Red Jacket, and His People, 1750-1830

The Boozebuddy Update
BOOZE NEWS: Hard Juice, Golf Gets Red, & Seltzers' Big Boom

The Boozebuddy Update

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2023 3:12


Welcome to the Boozebuddy Update. For you Boozebuddies today I have - Hard Juice, Golf Gets Red, & Seltzers Big Boom Hard Juice is coming from Two Robbers! The hard seltzer maker's latest entry into the canned alcohol “Double Punch Hard Juice” will be Mango Double Punch and Black Cherry Double Punch. Look for 12-ounce cans in packs and a single 19.2-ounce can. They'll launch in April across the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic. Get more at the link! https://breweriesinpa.com/two-robbers-sets-sights-on-fmbs-with-the-launch-of-its-hard-juice-offering-double-punch-this-spring/ Golf Gets Red. Fireball is offering a red jacket for $1,000 in Augusta this April! The cinnamon brand will give 10 fans $1,000 to wear its custom, tournament-inspired Fireball Red Jackets in Augusta, GA. The lucky 10 can rock them on the first nine, the second nine, and everywhere in between - Fireball just wants to see their red across the Augusta green. To try to win your own jacket - head to FireballRedJacket.com before March 29th! To get more head to this link https://tinyurl.com/2mbs9h47 The Boozebuddy Update is brought to you by Green Mountain Payments - helping local business owners save thousands of dollars by providing complimentary credit card processing equipment and zero cost credit card processing. Visit greenmountainpayments.com or posandzero.com today! Seltzer's big boom now has another B - for Billions! High Noon has crossed a major threshold with over a billion dollars in sales! High Noon Sun Sips was released by Spirit of Gallo in May of 2019 and is now cleaning up. They plan to ride that wave with the recent launch of the tequila-infused canned cocktails that landed on March 1st. For more on the big boom, head to the link https://www.marketwatchmag.com/high-noon-eclipses-1-billion-in-sales-in-2022/ Buy me a Beer and get merch - https://ko-fi.com/boozebuddy Find all the show notes, links, and suggest a story at https://BoozebuddyUpdate.com *Affiliate links below* El Gato Retractable Green Screen - https://amzn.to/3gKm4jr LED Streaming Key Light Desktop - https://amzn.to/3TYfV10 Canon 80D - https://amzn.to/3JwYpiB MOMAN MA6 Lavalier Mic - https://amzn.to/3ZktFHf #theboozebuddyupdate #boozebuddy #boozebuddyupdate #beerindustry #boozenews #booze #hardjuice #hardseltzer #hardcider #hardsoda #tworobbers #alcohol #pa #pennsylvania #drinks #fireball #augusta #golfgreen #greens #golfer #golflife life #golf #cinnamon #whiskey #whiskeytube #hardseltzer #seltzer #highnoon #billions #vodka #tequila #rtd #cannedcocktails #rtds the boozebuddy update, beer industry, global news, booze news, booze, Two Robbers, Hard Juice, RTDs, Ready to Drink, Black Cherry, Mango, Double Punch, Golf, Augusta, Golf Greens, Green Jacket, Red Jacket, Fireball Whiskey, Fireball, Cinnamon, Cinnamon Whiskey, Flavored Whiskey, High Noon Sun Sips, High Noon Seltzer, Hard Seltzer, canned cocktails, Vodka, Tequila, --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/boozebuddy/support

Couch Riffs
Ep. 242 Lincoln Barr (Red Jacket Mine/Solo Artist)

Couch Riffs

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2023 103:21


Our guest this episode is Lincoln Barr. The former frontman of Red Jacket Mine released his third solo album in late 2022, Forfeit The Prize, a beautiful collection of heavily orchestrated jazz-leaning pop songs with a definite classic vibe. I had a fantastic time catching up with Lincoln in this conversation and learning about him quite a bit more deeply despite us knowing each other for nearly 20 years. Be sure to check out Lincoln on tour next month (2/23) through the midwest. Check the link to his website below! I hope you enjoy. If you are enjoying the Couch Riffs podcast or our accompanying performance videos please support us on Patreon. Your Patreon support is what allows Couch Riffs to exist, grow, and thrive. Thank you so much for your patronage! https://patreon.com/couchriffs https://couchriffs.com http://lincolnbarrmusic.com  

The Strange Chronicles
Red Jacket

The Strange Chronicles

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2022 13:49 Transcription Available


“I knew something bigger was happening.”Detective Gray Cooper investigates the case of her missing therapist, and in the process, uncovers dark truths from her past.----------------Are you enjoying Season 1 of THE STRANGE CHRONICLES? If so, please consider sharing it with your friends, family, social media followers...everyone you know! The best way you can support the podcasts you love is to help them grow by sharing them. We'd love to bring you another season of THE STRANGE CHRONICLES, and adding more listeners will go a long way toward making that a reality. Thank you for listening.Follow us on Instagram & TwitterSign up for our Newsletter

Listening Pond: Stories for Kids and their Adults

Poppy the Squirrel loves watching the children play in her backyard - but one day, a series of events force her to choose between her own happiness and doing the right thing. Written and narrated by Eryn. 

1st & Foxborough
Will Jakobi Meyers play Sunday? Plus, Vince Wilfork gets his red jacket, and Mac Jones wants more RPOs

1st & Foxborough

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2022 13:31


Khari brings you the latest from Patriots practice on Thursday, plus a behind-the-scenes look at Vince Wilfork's getting his Patriots Hall-of-Fame jacket and taking in the moment down in Foxborough. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Nobody's Listening, Right?
27 - The Red Jacket!

Nobody's Listening, Right?

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2022 62:55


Elizabeth and Andy discuss the newly acquired article of clothing that has shaped her life experience, as well as how sexy their cat is, and what sort of future tech is going to change the world!

Speculators Podcast
How Gary Norden Earned The Coveted Red Jacket At London Futures Exchange

Speculators Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 20, 2022 108:22


Gary Norden is a Hedge Fund manager who not only earned the coveted Red Jacket of the London International Financial Futures and Options Exchange, but also led the derivatives desks for some of the world's largest investment banks in a career that has spanned over three decades.HERE'S WHAT WE COVER:01:46 Introduction to Gary Norden06:37 Fund trade structures12:44 Gary's Backstory 22:08 Getting into a new position29:19 Going against another trader36:12 Learning from the mistakes48:42 Next step of the learning curve54:05 Leaving the trading floor01:07:59 Starting a Hedge Fund01:17:10 Learning Technical Analysis01:33:48 The rise of technical indicatorsGET FUNDED TO TRADE FUTURES

Janet and Nick Podcast
SMA Fill The Boot Details

Janet and Nick Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2022 9:21


Buffalo Professional Firefighters Local 282 will hold their annual Fill the Boot program August 4th from 7am – 9am on 7 corners throughout the City of Buffalo.  The corners are: Oak & Genesee Elm & Swan Niagara St. 190 Exit Delaware & Hertel Skyway & Church Seneca & Bailey Abbott & Red Jacket

Scoops with Danny Mac
Matt Holliday – July 14, 2022 – The Kilcoyne Conversation

Scoops with Danny Mac

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2022 21:37


“The Kilcoyne Conversation” with Matt Holliday about his son Jackson. A top player in the MLB Draft this weekend. And getting a Red Jacket as Cardinals Hall of Famer.

conversations mlb draft matt holliday red jacket cardinals hall of famer kilcoyne conversation
The Kilcoyne Conversation
Matt Holliday

The Kilcoyne Conversation

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2022 21:36


“The Kilcoyne Conversation” with Matt Holliday about his son Jackson. A top player in the MLB Draft this weekend. And getting a Red Jacket as Cardinals Hall of Famer.

mlb draft matt holliday red jacket cardinals hall of famer kilcoyne conversation
Clay and the Magic Morning Show - 104.5 FM WVMJ Conway
Fire at the Red Jacket Mountain View Resort

Clay and the Magic Morning Show - 104.5 FM WVMJ Conway

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2022 3:26


On Saturday a massive fire broke out at the Red Jacket Resort in North Conway. Here is the story as heard on Magic 104 WVMJ

Midnight Train Podcast
Christmas Disasters

Midnight Train Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2021 115:39


For bonuses and to support the show, sign up at www.patreon.com/themidnighttrainpodcast   This week is our Christmas special here on the train. First, we've covered Krampus, Christmas killings, and ghost story Christmas traditions. Then, in keeping with our tradition of crazy Christmas episodes, today, we bring you some crazy Christmas disasters! Christmas isn't immune to crazy shit going on, from natural disasters to fires. Not only that, we're giving you guys a pretty good dose of history today. So with that being said, let's get into some crazy Christmas stuff!   While this first topic isn't necessarily a disaster in the usual sense, it definitely caused nothing but problems. And yes, it's a disaster. In 1865 on Christmas Eve, something happened that would change things for many people in this country and still causes grief to this day. While most people in the u.s. were settling down for the night with their families, leaving milk out for Santa, and tucking the kids in for the night, a group of men in Pulaski, Tennessee, were getting together for a very different purpose. Frank McCord, Richard Reed, John Lester, John Kennedy, J. Calvin Jones, and James Crowe were all officers with the Confederacy in the civil war. That night, they got together to form a group inspired at least in part by the then largely defunct Sons of Malta. While it started as a social club, within months, it would turn into one of the most nefarious groups around, the Ku Klux Klan. According to The Cyclopædia of Fraternities (1907), "Beginning in April, 1867, there was a gradual transformation. ...The members had conjured up a veritable Frankenstein. They had played with an engine of power and mystery, though organized on entirely innocent lines, and found themselves overcome by a belief that something must lie behind it all – that there was, after all, a serious purpose, a work for the Klan to do." It borrowed parts of the initiation ceremony from the sons of Malta with the same purpose: "ludicrous initiations, the baffling of public curiosity, and the amusement for members were the only objects of the Klan," according to Albert Stevens in 1907. In the summer of 1867, local branches of the Klan met in a general organizing convention. They established what they called an "Invisible Empire of the South." Leading Confederate general Nathan Bedford Forrest was chosen as the first leader, or "grand wizard," of the Klan; he presided over a hierarchy of grand dragons, grand titans, and grand cyclops. The organization of the Ku Klux Klan coincided with the beginning of the second phase of post-Civil War Reconstruction, put into place by the more radical members of the Republican Party in Congress. After rejecting President Andrew Johnson's relatively lenient Reconstruction policies from 1865 to 1866, Congress passed the Reconstruction Act over the presidential veto. Under its provisions, the South was divided into five military districts. Each state was required to approve the 14th Amendment, which granted "equal protection" of the Constitution to formerly enslaved people and enacted universal male suffrage. From 1867 onward, Black participation in public life in the South became one of the most radical aspects of Reconstruction. Black people won elections to southern state governments and even the U.S. Congress. For its part, the Ku Klux Klan dedicated itself to an underground campaign of violence against Republican leaders and voters (both Black and white) to reverse the policies of Radical Reconstruction and restore white supremacy in the South. They were joined in this struggle by similar organizations such as the Knights of the White Camelia (launched in Louisiana in 1867) and the White Brotherhood. At least 10 percent of the Black legislators elected during the 1867-1868 constitutional conventions became victims of violence during Reconstruction, including seven who were killed. White Republicans (derided as "carpetbaggers" and "scalawags") and Black institutions such as schools and churches—symbols of Black autonomy—were also targets for Klan attacks. By 1870, the Ku Klux Klan had branches in nearly every southern state. The Klan did not boast a well-organized structure or clear leadership even at its height. Local Klan members, often wearing masks and dressed in the organization's signature long white robes and hoods, usually carried out their attacks at night. They acted on their own but supported the common goals of defeating Radical Reconstruction and restoring white supremacy in the South. Klan activity flourished particularly in the regions of the South where Black people were a minority or a slight majority of the population and were relatively limited in others. Among the most notorious zones of Klan activity was South Carolina, where in January 1871, 500 masked men attacked the Union county jail and lynched eight Black prisoners. Though Democratic leaders would later attribute Ku Klux Klan violence to poorer southern white people, the organization's membership crossed class lines, from small farmers and laborers to planters, lawyers, merchants, physicians, and ministers. In the regions where most Klan activity took place, local law enforcement officials either belonged to the Klan or declined to act against it. Even those who arrested Klansmen found it difficult to find witnesses willing to testify against them.    Other leading white citizens in the South declined to speak out against the group's actions, giving them implicit approval. After 1870, Republican state governments in the South turned to Congress for help, resulting in three Enforcement Acts, the strongest of which was the Ku Klux Klan Act of 1871.   For the first time, the Ku Klux Klan Act designated certain crimes committed by individuals as federal offenses, including conspiracies to deprive citizens of the right to hold office, serve on juries and enjoy the equal protection of the law. In addition, the act authorized the president to suspend the habeas corpus, arrest accused individuals without charge, and send federal forces to suppress Klan violence. For those of us dummies that may not know, a "writ of habeas corpus" (which literally means to "produce the body") is a court order demanding that a public official (such as a warden) deliver an imprisoned individual to the court and show a valid reason for that person's detention. The procedure provides a means for prison inmates or others acting on their behalf to dispute the legal basis for confinement.   This expansion of federal authority–which Ulysses S. Grant promptly used in 1871 to crush Klan activity in South Carolina and other areas of the South–outraged Democrats and even alarmed many Republicans. From the early 1870s onward, white supremacy gradually reasserted its hold on the South as support for Reconstruction waned; by the end of 1876, the entire South was under Democratic control once again.   Now, this was just the first version of the Klan. A second version started up in the early 1900s and later on another revival which is the current iteration of the Klan. We're not going to go into the later versions of the Klan because well…. Fuck 'em! We've already given them too much air time! But… This most definitely qualifies as a Christmas disaster.   Next up, we have a couple natural disasters.    First up, Cyclone Tracy. Cyclone Tracy has been described as the most significant tropical cyclone in Australia's history, and it changed how we viewed the threat of tropical cyclones to northern Australia.   Five days before Christmas 1974, satellite images showed a tropical depression in the Arafura Sea, 700 kilometers (or almost 435 miles for us Americans) northeast of Darwin.   The following day the Tropical Cyclone Warning Center in Darwin warned that a cyclone had formed and gave it the name Tracy. Cyclone Tracy was moving southwest at this stage, but as it passed the northwest of Bathurst Island on December 23, it slowed down and changed course.   That night, it rounded Cape Fourcroy and began moving southeast, with Darwin directly in its path.   The first warning that Darwin was under threat came at 12:30 p.m. on Christmas Eve when a top-priority flash cyclone warning was issued advising people that Cyclone Tracy was expected to make landfall early Christmas morning.   Despite 12 hours' warning of the cyclone's impending arrival, it fell mainly on deaf ears.   Residents were complacent after a near-miss from Cyclone Selma a few weeks before and distracted by the festive season.   Indeed in the preceding decade, the Bureau of Meteorology had identified 25 cyclones in Northern Territory waters, but few had caused much damage. Severe Tropical Cyclone Tracy was a small but intense system at landfall.   The radius of the galeforce winds extended only 50 kilometers from the eye of the cyclone, making it one of the most miniature tropical cyclones on record, according to the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).   Records show that at least six tropical cyclones had severely impacted Darwin before Tracy.   The worst of these was in January 1897 when a "disastrous hurricane" nearly destroyed the settlement, and 28 people died.   However, unlike Tracy, it is thought this cyclone did not directly pass over Darwin.   And while Tracy was reported as a category four cyclone, some meteorologists today believe it may have been a category five shortly before it made landfall.   At midnight on Christmas Day, wind gusts greater than 100 kilometers or over 62 miles per hour began to be recorded.   The cyclone's center reached East Point at 3:15 a.m. and landed just north of Fannie Bay at 3:30 a.m.   Tracy was so strong it bent a railway signal tower in half.    The city was devastated by the cyclone. At least 90 percent of homes in Darwin were demolished or badly damaged. Forty-five vessels in the harbor were wrecked or damaged.   In addition to the 65 people who died, 145 were admitted to the hospital with serious injuries.   Vegetation was damaged up to 80 kilometers away from the coast, and Darwin felt eerily quiet due to the lack of insect and birdlife.   Within a week after the cyclone hit, more than 30,000 Darwin residents had been evacuated by air or road. That's more than two-thirds of the population at that time.   Cyclone Tracy remains one of Australia's most significant disasters.   As Murphy wrote 10 years after the cyclone: "The impact of Cyclone Tracy has reached far beyond the limits of Darwin itself. All along the tropical coasts of northern Australia and beyond a new cyclone awareness has emerged."   Merry fucking Christmas! Damn, that sucks. The information in this section came from an article on abc.net.au   Next up, we are going way back. The Christmas Flood of 1717 resulted from a northwesterly storm, which hit the coastal area of the Netherlands, Germany, and Scandinavia on Christmas night of 1717. During the night of Christmas, 1717, the coastal regions of the Netherlands, Germany, and Scandinavia were hit by a severe north-western storm. It is estimated that 14,000 people died. It was the worst flood for four centuries and the last significant flood to hit the north of the Netherlands.   In the countryside to the north of the Netherlands, the water level rose up to a few meters. The city of Groningen rose up to a few feet. In the province of Groningen, villages that were situated directly behind the dikes were nearly swept away. Action had to be taken against looters who robbed houses and farms under the fraudulent act of rescuing the flood victims. In total, the flood caused 2,276 casualties in Groningen. 1,455 homes were either destroyed or suffered extensive damage. Most livestock was lost.   The water also poured into Amsterdam and Haarlem and the areas around Dokkum and Stavoren. Over 150 people died in Friesland alone. In addition, large sections of Northern Holland were left underwater and the area around Zwolle and Kampen. In these areas, the flood only caused material damage. In Vlieland, however, the sea poured over the dunes, almost entirely sweeping away the already-damaged village of West-Vlieland.   We also found this report from a German website. It's been translated, so our apologies if it's wonky.    "According to tradition, several days before Christmas, it had blown strong and sustained from the southwest. Shortly after sunset on Christmas Eve, the wind suddenly turned from west to northwest and eased a little. The majority of the residents went to bed unconcerned, because currently was half moon and the next regular flood would not occur until 7 a.m. At the time when the tide was supposed to have been low for a long time, however, a drop in the water level could not be determined. Allegedly between 1 and 2 a.m. the storm began to revive violently accompanied by lightning and thunder. Between 3 and 4 o'clock in the morning the water reached the top of the dike. The current and waves caused the dike caps to break, so that the tide rolled over the dike into the flat land with a loud roar of thunder. Many only had time to save themselves in the dark on the floor under the roof. Most of the time there was not even time to take clothes, drinking water and some food with you. Numerous houses could not withstand the rising water and the current. In the higher and higher water and the increasing current, windows were Doors and entire walls dented. Allegedly the hurricane and the storm surge raged against the coast for three full days, so that it was not until December 28 that the water fell so far that one could come to the aid of one's neighbors with simply built "boats." In many places, the dykes had been razed to the ground, which meant that in lower-lying areas, every regular flood caused renewed flooding. At the places where the dykes were broken, deep valleys, some of which were large, formed. In many places where the dike is led around in a semi-arch, these walls, also known as pools or bracken, are still visible and testify to the force of the water. At that time, many people are said to have believed that the march was forever lost. In the low-lying areas, the water was later covered with ice floes, sometimes held up for months. Up until the summer months, bodies were said to have been found repeatedly during the clean-up work on the alluvial piles of straw and in the trenches. Many people who survived the flood later fell victim to so-called marching fever. New storm surges in the following years ruined the efforts for the first time to get the dike back into a defensible condition, and many houses, which were initially only damaged, have now been completely destroyed. Numerous small owners left the country so that the Hanover government even issued a ban on emigration."   Looks like the Netherlands got a proper Christmas fucking as well! Some towns were so severely destroyed that nothing was left, and they simply ceased to exist. Damn.    Cyclones and floods… What else does mother nature have for us? Well, how's about an earthquake! On Friday, December 26, 2003, at 5:26 a.m., Bam city in Southeastern Iran was jolted by an earthquake registering a 6.5 magnitude on the Richter scale. This was the result of the strike-slip motion of the Bam fault, which runs through this area. The earthquake's epicenter was determined to be approximately six miles southwest of the city. Three more significant aftershocks and many smaller aftershocks were also recorded, the last of which occurred over a month after the main earthquake. To date, official death tolls have 26,271 fatalities, 9000 injured, and 525 still missing. The city of Bam is one of Iran's most ancient cities, dating back to 224A.D. Latest reports and damage estimates are approaching the area of $1.9 billion. A United Nations report estimated that about 90% of the city's buildings were 60%-100% damaged, while the remaining buildings were between 30%-60% damaged. The crazy part about the whole thing… The quake only lasted for about 8 seconds.   Now I know what you're thinking… That's not Christmas… Well, there spanky, the night of the 25th, Christmas, people started to feel minor tremors that would preface the quake, so fuck you, it counts.   We have one more natural disaster for you guys, and this one most of you guys probably remember. And this one was another that started last Christmas night and rolled into the 26th, also known as boxing day. So we're talking about the Boxing Day Tsunami and the Indian ocean earthquake in 2004.    A 9.1-magnitude earthquake—one of the largest ever recorded—ripped through an undersea fault in the Indian Ocean, propelling a massive column of water toward unsuspecting shores. The Boxing Day tsunami would be the deadliest in recorded history, taking a staggering 230,000 lives in a matter of hours.   The city of Banda Aceh on the northern tip of Sumatra was closest to the powerful earthquake's epicenter, and the first waves arrived in just 20 minutes. It's nearly impossible to imagine the 100-foot roiling mountain of water that engulfed the coastal city of 320,000, instantly killing more than 100,000 men, women, and children. Buildings folded like houses of cards, trees, and cars were swept up in the oil-black rapids, and virtually no one caught in the deluge survived.   Thailand was next. With waves traveling 500 mph across the Indian Ocean, the tsunami hit the coastal provinces of Phang Nga and Phuket an hour and a half later. Despite the time-lapse, locals and tourists were utterly unaware of the imminent destruction. Curious beachgoers even wandered out among the oddly receding waves, only to be chased down by a churning wall of water. The death toll in Thailand was nearly 5,400, including 2,000 foreign tourists.   An hour later, on the opposite side of the Indian Ocean, the waves struck the southeastern coast of India near the city of Chennai, pushing debris-choked water kilometers inland and killing more than 10,000 people, primarily women and children, since many of the men were out fishing. But some of the worst devastations were reserved for the island nation of Sri Lanka, where more than 30,000 people were swept away by the waves and hundreds of thousands left homeless.   As proof of the record-breaking strength of the tsunami, the last victims of the Boxing Day disaster perished nearly eight hours later when swelling seas and rogue waves caught swimmers by surprise in South Africa, 5,000 miles from the quake's epicenter.   Vasily Titov is a tsunami researcher and forecaster with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Center for Tsunami Research. He credits the unsparing destructiveness of the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami on the raw power of the earthquake that spawned it. The quake originated in a so-called megathrust fault, where heavy oceanic plates subduct beneath lighter continental plates.    "They are the largest faults in the world and they're all underwater," says Titov.   The 2004 quake ruptured a 900-mile stretch along the Indian and Australian plates 31 miles below the ocean floor. Rather than delivering one violent jolt, the earthquake lasted an unrelenting 10 minutes, releasing as much pent-up power as several thousand atomic bombs.   In the process, massive segments of the ocean floor were forced an estimated 30 or 40 meters (up to 130 feet) upward. The effect was like dropping the world's most giant pebble in the Indian Ocean with ripples the size of mountains extending out in all directions.   Titov emphasizes that tsunamis look nothing like the giant surfing break-style waves that many imagine.   "It's a wave, but from the observer's standpoint, you wouldn't recognize it as a wave," Titov says. "It's more like the ocean turns into a white water river and floods everything in its path."   Once caught in the raging waters, the debris will finish the job if the currents don't pull you under.   "In earthquakes, a certain number of people die but many more are injured. It's completely reversed with tsunamis," says Titov. "Almost no injuries, because it's such a difficult disaster to survive."   Holy fuck… That's insane!   Well, there are some crazy natural disasters gifted to us by mother nature. So now let's take a look at some man-made disasters… And there are some bad ones.    First up is the 1953 train wreck on Christmas Eve in New Zealand. So this is actually a mix of mother nature fucking people and a man-made structure failing. This event is also referred to as the Tangiwai disaster. The weather on Christmas Eve was fine, and with little recent rain, no one suspected flooding in the Whangaehu River. The river appeared normal when a goods train crossed the bridge around 7 p.m. What transformed the situation was the sudden release of approximately 2 million cubic meters of water from the crater lake of nearby Mt Ruapehu. A 6-meter-high wave containing water, ice, mud, and rocks surged, tsunami-like, down the Whangaehu River. Sometime between 10.10 and 10.15 p.m., this lahar struck the concrete pylons of the Tangiwai railway bridge.   Traveling at approximately 65 km per hour, locomotive Ka 949 and its train of nine carriages and two vans reached the severely weakened bridge at 10.21 p.m. As the bridge buckled beneath its weight, the engine plunged into the river, taking all five second-class carriages with it. The torrent force destroyed four of these carriages – those inside had little chance of survival.   The leading first-class carriage, Car Z, teetered on the edge of the ruined bridge for a few minutes before breaking free from the remaining three carriages and toppling into the river. It rolled downstream before coming to rest on a bank as the water level fell. Remarkably, 21 of the 22 passengers in this carriage survived. Evidence suggested that the locomotive driver, Charles Parker, had applied the emergency brakes some 200 m from the bridge, which prevented the last three carriages from ending up in the river and saved many lives. Even still, 151 of the 285 passengers and crew died that night in the crash.   This information was taken from nzhistory.gov.    Next up is the Italian Hall disaster.    Before it was called Calumet, the area was known as Red Jacket. And for many, it seemed to be ground zero for the sprawling copper mining operations that absorbed wave after wave of immigrants into the Upper Peninsula.   Red Jacket itself was a company town for the Calumet and Hecla Mining Company, a large firm that in the 1870s was known as the world's largest copper producer. For a time, C&H had the world's deepest copper mines.   But the company wasn't immune from the organized labor push that swept across the Keweenaw Peninsula and other parts of the U.P. in 1913. Miners in Montana and Colorado had unionized, and in July of that year, the Western Federation of Miners called a strike against all Copper Country mines. According to a mining journal published that year, they were pushing for a $3 daily wage, 8-hour days, safer working conditions, and representation.   "The strike took place in a very complicated time in American history," said Jo Holt, a historian with the National Park Service's Keweenaw National Historical Park. "We had all these different things coming together. An increasingly industrialized country was grappling with worker's rights, gender issues, and immigration. We were moving from a gilded age into a progressive era, and recognizing the voice of labor.   "We see this event happen in the midst of that struggle."   "The reason it resonates today is we are still having these conversations. How do we create a just economy that functions for everybody? ... We are still, almost hundred and 10 years later, in the midst of these conversations."   As the strike wore into fall and the holiday season, a women's auxiliary group to the WFM organized a Christmas Eve party for the miners' families at the Italian Benevolent Society building, better known as the Italian Hall.   It was a big, boisterous affair, researchers have said. The multi-story hall was packed, with more than 600 people inside at one point. Children were watching a play and receiving gifts. Organizers later said the crowd was so large that it was hard to track who was coming in the door.   When the false cry of "Fire!" went up, pandemonium reached the sole stairway leading down to the street.   "What happened is when people panicked, they tried to get out through the stairwell," Holt said. "Someone tripped or people started to fall, and that's what created the bottleneck. It was just people falling on top of each other."   The aftermath was horrifying. As the dead were pulled from the pile in the stairwell, the bodies were carried to the town hall, which turned into a makeshift morgue. Some families lost more than one child. Other children were orphaned when their parents died.   One black and white photo in the Michigan Technological University Archives shows rows of what looks like sleeping children lying side-by-side. Their eyes are closed. Their faces were unmarred. The caption reads: "Christmas Eve in the Morgue."   After the dead were buried, some families moved away. Others stayed and kept supporting the strike, which ended the following spring.   Rumors emerged later that the Italian Hall's doors were designed to open inward, preventing the panicked crowd from pushing them outward to the street. Those were debunked, along with the suggestion in Woody Guthrie's "1913 Massacre" song that mining company thugs were holding the doors shut from the outside that night.   Damn… Mostly kids. On Christmas. That's a tough one.   Here's another touchy one. A race riot erupted in Mayfield, Kentucky, just before Christmas 1896. Although slavery in the U.S. ended after the Civil War, the Reconstruction period and beyond was a dangerous time to be black. Things were awful for non-whites in the former Confederacy, amongst which Kentucky was especially bad for racial violence. In December 1896, white vigilantes lynched two black men within 24 hours of each other between the 21st and 22nd, one for a minor disagreement with a white man and the other, Jim Stone, for alleged rape. A note attached to Stone's swinging corpse warned black residents to get out of town.   In response to this unambiguous threat, the local African-American population armed themselves. Rumors spread amongst the town's white people that 250 men were marching on the city, and a state of emergency was called. The whites mobilized, black stores were vandalized, and fighting broke out between the two sides on December 23. In the event, three people were killed, including Will Suet, a black teenager who had just got off the train to spend Christmas with his family. It was all over on Christmas Eve, and a few days later, an uneasy truce between the races was called.   Ugh! Y'all know what time it is? That's right, it's time for some quick hitters.   Many of us enjoy the Christmas period by going to the theatre or watching a movie. In December 1903, Chicago residents were eager to do just that at the brand-new Iroquois Theatre, which had been officially opened only in October that year. 1700 people in all crammed themselves in to see the zany, family-friendly musical comedy, Mr. Bluebeard. But just as the wait was over and the show started, a single spark from a stage light lit the surrounding drapery. The show's star, Eddie Foy, tried to keep things together as Iroquois employees struggled to put the curtains out in vain.   However, even the spectacle of a Windy City-native in drag couldn't stop the terrified crowd stampeding for the few exits. These, preposterously, were concealed by curtains and utterly inadequate in number. When the actors opened their own exit door to escape, a gust of wind sent a fireball through the crowded theatre, meaning that hundreds died before the fire service was even called. 585 people died, either suffocated, burned alive, or crushed. The scene was described in a 1904 account as "worse than that pictured in the mind of Dante in his vision of the inferno". Next up, the politics behind this ghastly event are pretty complicated – one Mexican lecturer described the massacre as "the most complicated case in Mexico" – but here's an inadequate summary. The small and impoverished village of Acteal, Mexico, was home to Las Abejas (the bees'), a religious collective that sympathized with a rebel group opposing the Mexican government. Thus, on December 22, 1997, members of the then-ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party crept down the steep hill slopes above the village. They chose their moment to attack carefully as people gathered at a prayer meeting when they finally slunk into Acteal.   Over the next few hours, assassins armed with guns executed 45 innocent people in cold blood. Amongst the dead were 21 women, some of whom were pregnant, and 15 children. Worst of all, investigations into this cowardly act seem to implicate the government itself. Soldiers garrisoned nearby did not intervene, despite being within earshot of the gunfire and horrified screams. In addition, there was evidence of the crime scene being tampered with by local police and government officials. Though some people have been convicted, there are suspicions that they were framed and that the real culprits remain at large.   -Twas the night before Christmas, when all through the house, not a creature was stirring… except the Soviet Union. The Marxist-Leninist Khalq and Parcham parties had ousted the Afghan president in April 1978. Still, communism was so unpopular in Afghanistan that the mujahideen succeeded in toppling them just over a year later. So Khalq and Parcham turned to the Soviet Union for help, and on Christmas Eve that year, they obliged by sending 30,000 troops across the border into Afghanistan by the cover of darkness. Bloody fighting ensued, and soon the Soviet Union had control of the major cities.   The Soviets stayed for nine years, at which time the mujahideen, backed by foreign support and weapons, waged a brutal guerrilla campaign against the invaders. In turn, captured mujahideen were executed, and entire villages and agricultural areas were razed to the ground. When the Soviets finally withdrew in February 1989, over 1 million civilians and almost 125,000 soldiers from both sides were killed. From the turmoil after the Afghan-Soviet War emerged, the Taliban, installed by neighboring Pakistan, and with them Osama bin Laden. This indeed was a black Christmas for the world.   -How about another race riot… No? Well, here you go anyway. Although, this one may be more fucked up. The Agana Race Riot saw black and white US Marines fight it out from Christmas Eve to Boxing Day, 1944. Guam was host to both black and white US Marines in 1944. But instead of fighting the enemy, the white troops elected to turn on the all-black Marine 25th Depot Company. First, the white Marines would stop their fellow soldiers from entering Agana, pelt them with rocks, and shout racist obscenities at them. Then, on Christmas Eve 1944, 9 members of the 25th on official leave were seen talking to local women, and white Marines opened fire on them. Then, on Christmas Day, 2 black soldiers were shot dead by drunken white Marines in separate incidents.   Guam's white Marines were decidedly short on festive cheer and goodwill to all men. Not content with these murders, a white mob attacked an African-American depot on Boxing Day, and a white soldier sustained an injury when the 25th returned fire. Sick of their treatment by their fellow soldiers, 40 black Marines gave chase to the retreating mob in a jeep, but further violence was prevented by a roadblock. Can you guess what happened next? Yep, the black soldiers were charged with unlawful assembly, rioting, and attempted murder, while the white soldiers were left to nurse their aching heads.   One more major one for you guys, and then we'll leave on a kind of happier note. This one's kind of rough. Be warned.    In late December 2008 and into January 2009, the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) brutally killed more than 865 civilians and abducted at least 160 children in the northern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). LRA combatants hacked their victims to death with machetes or axes or crushed their skulls with clubs and heavy sticks. In some of the places where they attacked, few were left alive.   The worst attacks happened 48 hours over Christmas in locations some 160 miles apart in the Daruma, Duru, and Faradje areas of the Haut-Uele district of northern Congo. The LRA waited until the time of Christmas festivities on December 24 and 25 to carry out their devastating attacks, apparently choosing a moment when they would find the maximum number of people altogether. The killings occurred in the Congo and parts of southern Sudan, where similar weapons and tactics were used.   The Christmas massacres in Congo are part of a longstanding practice of horrific atrocities and abuse by the LRA. Before shifting its operations to the Congo in 2006, the LRA was based in Uganda and southern Sudan, where LRA combatants also killed, raped, and abducted thousands of civilians. When the LRA moved to Congo, its combatants initially refrained from targeting Congolese people. Still, in September 2008, the LRA began its first wave of attacks, apparently to punish local communities who had helped LRA defectors to escape. The first wave of attacks in September, together with the Christmas massacres, has led to the deaths of over 1,033 civilians and the abduction of at least 476 children.   LRA killings have not stopped since the Christmas massacres. Human Rights Watch receives regular reports of murders and abductions by the LRA, keeping civilians living in terror. According to the United Nations, over 140,000 people have fled their homes since late December 2008 to seek safety elsewhere. New attacks and the flight of civilians are reported weekly. People are frightened to gather together in some areas, believing that the LRA may choose these moments to strike, as they did with such devastating efficiency over Christmas.   Even by LRA standards, the Christmas massacres in the Congo were ruthless. LRA combatants struck quickly and quietly, surrounding their victims as they ate their Christmas meal in Batande village or gathered for a Christmas day concert in Faradje. In Mabando village, the LRA sought to maximize the death toll by luring their victims to a central place, playing the radio, and forcing their victims to sing songs and call for others to come to join the party. In most attacks, they tied up their victims, stripped them of their clothes, raped the women and girls, and then killed their victims by crushing their skulls. In two cases, the attackers tried to kill three-year-old toddlers by twisting off their heads. The few villagers who survived often did so because their assailants thought they were dead.   Yeah...so there's that. We could go much deeper into this incident, but we think you get the point.    We'll leave you with a story that is pretty bizarre when you stop and think about it. But we'll leave you with this story of an unlikely Christmas get-together. This is the story of the Christmas truce.    British machine gunner Bruce Bairnsfather, later a prominent cartoonist, wrote about it in his memoirs. Like most of his fellow infantrymen of the 1st Battalion of the Royal Warwickshire Regiment, he was spending the holiday eve shivering in the muck, trying to keep warm. He had spent a good part of the past few months fighting the Germans. And now, in a part of Belgium called Bois de Ploegsteert, he was crouched in a trench that stretched just three feet deep by three feet wide, his days and nights marked by an endless cycle of sleeplessness and fear, stale biscuits and cigarettes too wet to light.   "Here I was, in this horrible clay cavity," Bairnsfather wrote, "…miles and miles from home. Cold, wet through and covered with mud." There didn't "seem the slightest chance of leaving—except in an ambulance."   At about 10 p.m., Bairnsfather noticed a noise. "I listened," he recalled. "Away across the field, among the dark shadows beyond, I could hear the murmur of voices." He turned to a fellow soldier in his trench and said, "Do you hear the Boches [Germans] kicking up that racket over there?"   Yes," came the reply. "They've been at it some time!"   The Germans were singing carols, as it was Christmas Eve. In the darkness, some of the British soldiers began to sing back. "Suddenly," Bairnsfather recalled, "we heard a confused shouting from the other side. We all stopped to listen. The shout came again." The voice was from an enemy soldier, speaking in English with a strong German accent. He was saying, "Come over here."   One of the British sergeants answered: "You come half-way. I come half-way."   In the years to come, what happened next would stun the world and make history. Enemy soldiers began to climb nervously out of their trenches and meet in the barbed-wire-filled "No Man's Land" that separated the armies. Typically, the British and Germans communicated across No Man's Land with streaking bullets, with only occasional gentlemanly allowances to collect the dead unmolested. But now, there were handshakes and words of kindness. The soldiers traded songs, tobacco, and wine, joining in a spontaneous holiday party in the cold night. Bairnsfather could not believe his eyes. "Here they were—the actual, practical soldiers of the German army. There was not an atom of hate on either side."   And it wasn't confined to that one battlefield. Starting on Christmas Eve, small pockets of French, German, Belgian, and British troops held impromptu cease-fires across the Western Front, with reports of some on the Eastern Front as well. Some accounts suggest a few of these unofficial truces remained in effect for days.   Descriptions of the Christmas Truce appear in numerous diaries and letters of the time. One British soldier, a rifleman, named J. Reading, wrote a letter home to his wife describing his holiday experience in 1914: "My company happened to be in the firing line on Christmas eve, and it was my turn…to go into a ruined house and remain there until 6:30 on Christmas morning. During the early part of the morning the Germans started singing and shouting, all in good English. They shouted out: 'Are you the Rifle Brigade; have you a spare bottle; if so we will come halfway and you come the other half.'"   "Later on in the day they came towards us," Reading described. "And our chaps went out to meet them…I shook hands with some of them, and they gave us cigarettes and cigars. We did not fire that day, and everything was so quiet it seemed like a dream."   Another British soldier, named John Ferguson, recalled it this way: "Here we were laughing and chatting to men whom only a few hours before we were trying to kill!"   Other diaries and letters describe German soldiers using candles to light Christmas trees around their trenches. One German infantryman described how a British soldier set up a makeshift barbershop, charging Germans a few cigarettes each for a haircut. Other accounts describe vivid scenes of men helping enemy soldiers collect their dead, of which there was plenty.   One British fighter named Ernie Williams later described in an interview his recollection of some makeshift soccer play on what turned out to be an icy pitch: "The ball appeared from somewhere, I don't know where... They made up some goals and one fellow went in goal and then it was just a general kick-about. I should think there were about a couple of hundred taking part."   German Lieutenant Kurt Zehmisch of the 134 Saxons Infantry, a schoolteacher who spoke both English and German, described a pick-up soccer game in his diary, which was discovered in an attic near Leipzig in 1999, written in an archaic German form of shorthand. "Eventually the English brought a soccer ball from their trenches, and pretty soon, a lively game ensued," he wrote. "How marvelously wonderful, yet how strange it was. The English officers felt the same way about it. Thus Christmas, the celebration of Love, managed to bring mortal enemies together as friends for a time."   So much more can be said about this event, but that seems like an excellent place to leave off this Christmas episode! And yes, when you really do stop and think about it… That's a pretty crazy yet fantastic thing.   Greatest disaster movies of all time   https://www.ranker.com/crowdranked-list/the-greatest-disaster-movies-of-all-time

christmas love american black children lord chicago australia english starting action mexico british americans land french germany colorado fire reading australian german new zealand tennessee south south africa santa african americans congress afghanistan indian kentucky iran cold mexican stone disasters union republicans south carolina enemy christmas eve sick louisiana thailand sons netherlands democrats civil war amsterdam curious montana rumors soldiers doors marine united nations democratic belgium fuck pakistan constitution christmas day frankenstein uganda taliban knights bureau massacre soviet union sri lanka congo bloody marines amendment forty afghan belgians sudan republican party malta ka leipzig no man krampus holt buildings bam richter reconstruction miners laden organizers boxing day allegedly numerous bois scandinavia windy city mayfield guam democratic republic us marines confederacy osama indian ocean soviets ku klux klan kampen national park service western front human rights watch groningen klan chennai battalion northern territory hanover john kennedy meteorology congolese morgue woody guthrie sumatra andrew johnson phuket upper peninsula national oceanic bluebeard haarlem iroquois friesland pulaski zwolle fraternities christmas truce eastern front calumet congo drc duru atmospheric administration noaa lra john ferguson klansmen daruma wfm east point nathan bedford forrest c h red jacket boxing day tsunami christmas well banda aceh charles parker john lester richard reed dokkum invisible empire keweenaw peninsula cyclone tracy mt ruapehu one british civil war reconstruction jim stone cyclop agana acteal institutional revolutionary party white brotherhood
The Speech Guys
Red Jacket Defends Seneca Religion | Speeches About God

The Speech Guys

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2021 82:34


The Speech Guys read and discuss the Seneca leader, Red Jacket's (1750 - 1830), speech he gave at a meeting between members of the Seneca tribe and missionaries from Boston who'd requested permission to evangelize his people. Questions and topics explored in this episode include the relationship between theology and virtue, the socio-economic dynamics that influenced the actualization of Manifest Destiny, the logical antagonism of moral relativism and objectivism when different societies interact for the first time, and more!

Yakker Jacks
Reis' Pieces

Yakker Jacks

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2021 36:34


Kyle Reis from Birds on the Black joins us again to talk about the AFL, Rule 5 Draft, and whether or not Matt Carpenter deserves a Red Jacket.

Weekend Shows
NFL Sunday: Gresh, Keefe, Wiggy, & Fauria - Patriots Inactives: Dont'a Hightower and Rhamondre Stevenson both out

Weekend Shows

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2021 46:02


Hour 3 - NFL Sunday: Gresh, Keefe, Wiggy, & Fauria - WHAT DO WE KNOW ABOUT THE PATS 1/3RD OF THE WAY THRU? (The Patriots playoff chances? The next 3 opponents. LAC, CAR, CLE.) 1PM Inactives: Who's in and who's out for today's game? What Patriots will be out? Red Jacket day yesterday for Richard Seymour. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

TMAT Talks
TMAT Talks: Episode 16 - Previewing The Hunters' Red October

TMAT Talks

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2021 121:49


Fall breezes be breezin', which can only mean one thing: it's time for another Hunter's Red October! Join Tiberius, Centaur, Rythbryt, and a whole lot of guests (yes--GUESTS!!!) as we discuss the scenarios and (20!) lists in this 550 point Good vs. Evil tournament. (Spoiler alert: the evil armies are loaded). Now streaming on Spotify, Google Play, Apple Podcasts, and (probably) wherever you get your audio content! Plus, you can head on over to the TMAT blog for more details about the tournament (and eventually full published lists), or to read Tiberius's thoughts on his Moria armies (and the armies he left behind). tellmeatalegreatorsmall.blogspot.com Music: Happy Haunts by Aaron Kenny =========== Show Notes: 0:00 - Sauron, Wraiths, Bombs, and a Balrog (with Red Jacket and The Black Prince) 41:00 - Azog, Treebeard, Gil-Galad, and a(nother!) Balrog (with Dronak, Ikaika, and Gorgoroth) 1:01:00 - Avengers, Saruman, Theoden, and a (third!?!?) Balrog 1:46:00 - Centaur's vaunted predictions (and some parting thoughts) --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

Tuesdays with Stories!
#420 Red Jacket Flag

Tuesdays with Stories!

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2021 64:43


Hey hey folks, it's another gay episode as Jor makes his way through a hotel party in Philly while Mark deals with loud train passengers on the way to Rhode Island. Check it out! Check out our NEW MERCH STORE here! New designs and items! https://tuesdayswithstories.bigcartel.com/ Sponsored by: MyBookie (mybookie.ag code: tuesdays), Sheath (sheathunderwear.com code: tuesgays), Manscaped (manscaped.com code: tuesdays), Blue Chew (bluechew.com code: tuesdays), & Honey (joinhoney.com/tuesdays) Subscribe to our Patreon for full video of the show A WEEK EARLY, bonus eps, and more! www.patreon.com/tuesdays

Health Professional Radio - Podcast 454422
Protodigm Uses AI to Suggest All Possible Avenues a Drug Could Go

Health Professional Radio - Podcast 454422

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 2, 2021 10:30


Mike Rea, is founder of Protodigm, a contract skunkworks lab specializing in minimizing the risk of drug development by avoiding bias, premature specialization, and providing clients a universe of possibilities in which a drug could be brought to market. He talks about how the use of the skunkworks concept common in tech and engineering can innovate drug development. #Protodigm #DrugDevelopment Mike is the founder of Protodigm, a next generation CRO that innovates, invents, develops, and prototypes possibilities for drugs to be brought to market, as well as the CEO and founder of IDEA Pharma, a specialist in pharmaceutical product positioning and path-to-market strategies. He has delivered positioning and strategy for eight of the fifteen biggest drug launches in the last five years. After having been named to The Medicine Maker's Global Power List 100 from 2017 to 2019, in 2020 and 2021 he was added to the Global Power List 20: the top 20 inspirational medicine makers in biopharmaceuticals. PharmaPhorum has named him as one of the Top 10 Innovators in Pharma and PharmaVOICE awarded him with a lifetime Red Jacket as one of the 100 Most Inspiring People in Healthcare. He is the author of the Medical Marketing Manual: Branding Pharmaceuticals and the Pharmaceutical Innovation Index. Mike earned his bachelor's degree in genetics from the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne.

Lupin Lottery
Episode 173: Inspector Redditor

Lupin Lottery

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2021 81:56


Episode watched: #19, "Which of the Third Generation Will Win!" In this episode, Lupin is pitted against the grandson of the police inspector who dogged his own grandfather, and who I guess is technically also the brother of Inspector Melon from Red Jacket. This week we talk about Jess' love for this show, the big Ranma movie, pokemon go-ed to sleep, sick new tat, inspector shithead, that trap can't stop me, low-rent cultural fair, proto-wojack, science logic and occultism, cursed mid-disguise, different hat, the girls are fighting, the dream team, (persona 5 voice) b-beans?, FAILED AGAIN HAVE YOU, I'm gonna say stupid, IRL eyes emoji, literal paid protesters, the sakuga dimension, all is Lupin, and so much for your PRECIOUS logic.

Lupin Lottery
Episode 169: Jigen Is Sus

Lupin Lottery

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2021 78:35


Episode watched: #06: "Rainy Afternoons Are Bad" In this episode, we get some of the straight-up hard-boiled noir stuff that was more or less entirely absent from Red Jacket! This week we talk about superbeans, Lupin III Union Jacket, eyebrow metal, big pokemon week, Cool Gunman, a man called Kid's Meal, makin' three mouth, nipple armor, waking coma, bad vibe from her, crime surgeon, megaman-ass name, kickass name, dipshit doctor, fuck around to find out, these power rangers suck, waste of mcnuggets, my hand belt, it came from somewhere, hey look behind you, our new friend Ramrod, kiss that corpse diamond, team Protagonists Actually.

TMAT Talks
TMAT Talks: Episode 10 - The Grand Tournament 2021 (Part I)

TMAT Talks

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2021 104:57


A global pandemic may have claimed TMAT's 2020 Grand Tournament, but those dark days are finally past, and a red sun is rising once more. The 2021 Grand Tournament is upon us--so of course, TMAT's resident armchair quarterbacks had to break it down! In Part I, Tiberius, Centaur, and Rythbryt preview the tournament's escalation rules, muse on the three scenarios, and discuss the six armies that will take the field before making some (very reluctant) predictions about the weekend. For the full lists--and to add your two cents--head over to TMAT: tellmeatalegreatorsmall.blogspot.com Music: Happy Haunts by Aaron Kenny ____________________________________________ Show Notes: Intro (0:00) Centaur's Escalation List: Isengard (14:04) Tiberius's Escalation List: Lothlorien (23:10) Rythbryt's Escalation List: An Unholy Northern Alliance (32:12) Red Jacket's Escalation List: Rohan (49:28) Black Prince's Escalation List: Riders and Elves (1:01:50) Dronak & Strider's Escalation List: Monsters Galore (1:16:01) Reluctant Tourney Predictions (1:24:02) --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

Double Barrel Theatre
A grey horse with a red jacket

Double Barrel Theatre

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2021 12:54


Kayal talks the internet vs wall street with GameStop and wall Street bets on Reddit. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/doublebarreltheatre/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/doublebarreltheatre/support

Lupin Lottery
Episode 153: You Know How It Is With These A Cards

Lupin Lottery

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 8, 2021 68:46


Episode watched: #134 "The Surrounded Summit Strategy" In this episode we get a delightful surprise in the twilight days of Red Jacket as Zenigata traps Lupin on a mountain surrounded by 10 million cops. This week we talk about clearing a low bar, my girls, stardew time, f-bomb title, deep Massachusetts cuts, gay little truck, oil exterminators, little prancing leap, sofa dracula, hit my pants quota, floating Lupin, he's gay Lupin, exposition TVs, my 10 year plan, damn Zeni, remote control plane magnet, UN for cops, Britain is just Scotland, Zenigata loses all regard for human life, got that classical music, doing real important jack shit, copalanche, Lupin slaps your shit, sure whatever, Zenigata feral moments, acabification tf, good things we've done, stealing the new year, and sexiest plane.

Fatal Voyage: The Mysterious Death Of Natalie Wood

Natalie Wood has grown profoundly unhappy in her marriage to Robert Wagner in the years leading up to her suspicious demise — a death for which cops have labeled R.J. a “person of interest.” Now, the Oscar winner’s close friends and sister – as well as experts and investigators who have probed her case – open up about what they see as both a prelude to her divorcing Wagner — and a motive for him to do premeditated murder. In this bonus episode, we examine evidence and whether it supports that conclusion, as Wagner makes a series of strange and otherwise inexplicable decisions that end tragically with Natalie’s death.

Copper Country Today
Barbara Kettle Gundlach Shelter, Main Street Calumet

Copper Country Today

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2020 52:50


On this week's Copper Country Today, the Barbara Kettle Gundlach Shelter celebrates 40 years serving victims of domestic violence, and prepares for a move. Todd VanDyke welcomes Mary Niemela, with the latest. And, a Red Jacket update - Todd talks with Main Street Calumet director Leah Polzien. Copper Country Today airs throughout Michigan's Keweenaw Peninsula Sunday mornings at 7:00 on WOLV 97.7 FM; 8:00 WCCY 99.3 FM and 1400 AM, and 9:00 on WHKB 102.3 FM. The program is sponsored by the Portage Health Foundation.

TMAT Talks
TMAT Talks: Episode 7 - The Hunters Red October (THRO) 2020

TMAT Talks

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2020 272:49


It'd been a while since TMAT's last tournament, so Red Jacket was like, "gotta shake off some cobweb legs, dudes." * If your tournament scene is quiet (or you're looking for batreps involving Barad-Dur, Hunter Orcs, Angmar, all-mounted Rohan, or Easterlings (with Shagrat)), Tiberius, Centaur, and Rythbryt are back to give you some before-action predictions and post-action breakdowns from our recent 700 point tournament. It's a time-travel miracle! ** Music: Happy Haunts by Aaron Kenny ----- Intro, Tourney Rules, and Army Lists (0:00) Pre-Tourney Predictions (58:52) Round 1 Re-Cap (Rohan v. Angmar, Azog v. Sauron) (1:11:36) Round 2 Re-Cap (Rohan v. Sauron, Easterlings v. Angmar, Rohan v. Azog) (1:59:56) Round 3 Re-Cap (Easterlings v. Azog, Angmar v. Sauron) (2:43:16) List Modifications and Lessons Learned (3:30:23) Final Placements and Parting Thoughts (4:19:57) * Okay, fine... generously, that's a very rough paraphrase. ** Patent pending. ----- TMAT Talks is a podcast by Tell Me a Tale, Great or Small, a community of American table-top wargamers who enjoy the Middle-Earth Strategy Battle Game by Games Workshop. Adventures Await! Like what you hear? Join the discussion: tellmeatalegreatorsmall.blogspot.com facebook.com/TmatSBG --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

FL1 Daily from FingerLakes1.com
#142: Red Jacket Goes Back To School

FL1 Daily from FingerLakes1.com

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2020 11:58


While there have been a lot of concerns raised about the prospect of students and faculty going back to school this fall -- we are just a couple weeks away from a return to learning. Students around the region will learn in a variety of ways this fall -- and we're catching up with leaders from around the region -- discussing those plans. Today, a conversation with Karen Hall, who is a principal in the Manchester Shortsville Central School District, or Red Jacket. They will be taking a hybrid approach to reopening, bringing students back on opposing days, twice a week. She says there was anxiety and concern, but even when faculty arrived for the first day -- a sense of normalcy could be felt. Now, the next major checkpoint will be welcoming students back later this month.

Iroquois History and Legends
57 Ely Parker | Part 1 | Teenage Diplomat

Iroquois History and Legends

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2020 40:35


It could be said that Ely Parker was the most famous Seneca man of the 19th Century. The grandnephew of Red Jacket became a teenage diplomat, interpreter, aspiring lawyer, domestic engineer and Sachem all before the age of 30. The crazy thing is, that is not at all what he is remembered for. Later in life he would become a General in the Civil War, a Wall Street broker and the first Indigenous person ever to be the Commissioner of Indian Affairs. In this episode we look at the early years of Ely S. Parker. References: The Life of General Ely S. Parker by Arthur C. Parker https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00W0LEWL0/ref=dp-kindle-redirect?_encoding=UTF8&btkr=1 Warrior in Two Camps by William Armstrong  https://www.amazon.com/Warrior-Camps-Iroquois-Their-Neighbors/dp/0815624956 American Lion: Andrew Jackson in the White House by John Meacham https://www.amazon.com/dp/B001FA0JSM/ref=dp-kindle-redirect?_encoding=UTF8&btkr=1  

WCG Clinical Services Fireside Chats
Raise Your Voices: Social Network Provides Safe Place for Patients to Share Stories and Influence Research

WCG Clinical Services Fireside Chats

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2020 15:45


In this episode, Brian Loew, founder and CEO of online patient portal Inspire, talks about the value to patients and caregivers of providing a safe and trustworthy online social network--a “peaceable kingdom,” as he calls it.Millions of patients representing 3,500 diseases--including many rare ones --come to Inspire.com for online community discussions focused on their own particular disease. The platform provides a place for meaningful conversations among patients and caregivers. It also allows them to share their insights in ways that advance clinical research. Patients want to support research, sometimes even initiating it themselves. And, more than ever, Loew says, researchers are interested in patient-reported information. If patients agree, they can also be connected to relevant clinical trials. Loew emphasizes that across all the conditions and forums, patients always have control over what data they share and where they share it--and in his experience, the more control they have, the more willing they are to share it. The recently added coronavirus section (www.inspire.com/coronavirus) also features video testimonials from patients with a variety of conditions describing why COVID-19 is disrupting their medical routines and threatening their health.Loew is a frequent speaker and writer on the topics of health-focused social networks and digital health. He sits on the boards of the Robert Packard Center for ALS Research at Johns Hopkins, and New Jersey Goals of Care. He was a “Red Jacket” recipient from PharmaVOICE magazine for his contributions to the industry.

WCG Clinical Services Fireside Chats
Raise Your Voices: Social Network Provides Safe Place for Patients to Share Stories and Influence Research

WCG Clinical Services Fireside Chats

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2020 15:45


In this episode, Brian Loew, founder and CEO of online patient portal Inspire, talks about the value to patients and caregivers of providing a safe and trustworthy online social network: a “peaceable kingdom,” as he calls it.Millions of patients representing 3,500 diseases—including many rare ones—come to Inspire.com for online community discussions focused on their own particular disease. The platform provides a place for meaningful conversations among patients and caregivers. It also allows them to share their insights in ways that advance clinical research. Patients want to support research, sometimes even initiating it themselves. And, more than ever, Loew says, researchers are interested in patient-reported information. If patients agree, they can also be connected to relevant clinical trials. Loew emphasizes that across all the conditions and forums, patients always have control over what data they share and where they share it—and in his experience, the more control they have, the more willing they are to share it. The recently added coronavirus section (Inspire.com/coronavirus) also features video testimonials from patients with a variety of conditions describing why COVID-19 is disrupting their medical routines and threatening their health.Loew is a frequent speaker and writer on the topics of health-focused social networks and digital health. He sits on the boards of the Robert Packard Center for ALS Research at Johns Hopkins, and New Jersey Goals of Care. He was a “Red Jacket” recipient from PharmaVOICE magazine for his contributions to the industry.

FL1 Daily from FingerLakes1.com
#75: Former Tennessee Governor Phil Bredesen on COVID-19 Response

FL1 Daily from FingerLakes1.com

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2020 11:52


Phil Bredesen Jr. was born in 1943 and lived most of his childhood years in the small town of Shortsville in Ontario County. He graduated from Red Jacket in 1961, and served as mayor of Nashville, and governor of Tennessee in the 1990s and 2000s. He recently joined Brendan Harrington on his Across the Hall podcast. The full-interview is available here, but during part of that conversation — Bredesen talked frankly about the challenges that government has accounting for low-probability events — like a global pandemic. He also talked about the things people expect out of leadership, as well as the flaws of rural healthcare.

Stories from Bittersweet Farm
Red Jacket and Red Flannel

Stories from Bittersweet Farm

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2020 4:08


Jim Howard. He’s the kinda’ guy I wanna’ be. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/ken-pierpont/message

Chicago Acoustic Underground Podcast
Episode 741 - Conrad Merced

Chicago Acoustic Underground Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2020 41:46


Conrad Merced is a singer/songwriter, multi-instrumentalist and producer based out of Chicago, IL. Being raised in a musical family, he started playing in music groups at the age of 13. He was the former front man for the indie rock band The Red Jacket, and the shoegaze, electronic duo Shoplifter. His music has been featured in films, podcasts and in various music compilations. At the age of 25, Conrad abruptly stopped writing and playing music.Tender Beats

Chicago Acoustic Underground Podcast
Episode 741 - Conrad Merced

Chicago Acoustic Underground Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2020 41:46


Conrad Merced is a singer/songwriter, multi-instrumentalist and producer based out of Chicago, IL. Being raised in a musical family, he started playing in music groups at the age of 13. He was the former front man for the indie rock band The Red Jacket, and the shoegaze, electronic duo Shoplifter. His music has been featured in films, podcasts and in various music compilations. At the age of 25, Conrad abruptly stopped writing and playing music.Tender BeatsFollowing the unexpected death of his mother, Conrad picked up his guitar after a ten year hiatus and began writing songs for the album "Tender Beats." This lush collection of songs feature catchy finger-style acoustic guitar backed behind atmospheric, digital textures and drum machines to create a unique blend of ambient electronic-folk.Conrad teamed up with engineer Rick Riggs at Handwritten Recording Studio to help shape and bring to life his wall of sound. The album could have easily stood alone as a folk album but with the composition of orchestral instruments, vintage synthesizers and electronic drum machines, the album bends genres without compromising its melody and thoughtful lyrics. Conrad's songs have been described as "Nick Drake meets Roxy Music" and "Elliott Smith meets Radiohead."The themes of the album touch on dealing with the loss and death of a loved one, reflections on aging, overcoming writer's block, breaking up, falling in love, and a nostalgia piece about growing up in the 90's to immigrant parents. Click here to view the videos from this Podcast

Red Jacket Dads
Red Jacket Dads - Episode 004 - Best Laid Plans

Red Jacket Dads

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2020 24:37


It's been a while. #Baby #5YearOld Special shoutouts to special people, but no one near everyone deserving of one!

Red Jacket Dads
Red Jacket Dads - Episode 3

Red Jacket Dads

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2019 13:06


After a long wait, we finally announce all the big news! Video available at https://redjacketdads.com

Red Jacket Dads
Red Jacket Dads - Episode 2

Red Jacket Dads

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2019 13:07


Can’t talk the walk?

Red Jacket Dads
Red Jacket Dads - Episode 1

Red Jacket Dads

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2019 13:01


Video available at https://redjacketdads.com

Red Jacket Dads
Red Jacket Dads Episode 000

Red Jacket Dads

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2019 7:37


Just an introductory, “test” episode. Still trying to figure out the best way to do this thing.

Trash & Treasures
Lupin III: Strange Psychokinetic Strategy - Disco Suit Lupin

Trash & Treasures

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2018 46:13


Look, we all make mistakes. Sometimes those mistakes involve recommending a movie you haven't watched in half a decade to people, because you remember it being funny and charming. Sometimes you are very wrong. Anyway, this is the Lupin property semi-responsible for getting Red Jacket--easily the most famous installment in the Lupin III franchse--greenlit. And boy is it....awfully 70s. CONTENT WARNING for discussion of sexual assault 2:00 Lupin History 8:00 Dear 70s -- why? 10:30 A Plot, of Sorts 13:00 Character Remixes 18:00 Soundtrack 20:00 The Worst Zenigata 22:30 A Lupin Dynasty 26:00 A Very Un-Elaborate Heist Movie 29:00 Psychokinesis 33:00 Everybody Wants to Reinvent the Wheel 36:30 Should You Watch This? Say hi to Dorothy and Vrai on Twitter @writervrai and @dorothynotgale Join us every two weeks on Soundcloud, iTunes or Stitcher – and if you’d leave a rating and review, so that more people can find their way to us, we’d appreciate it!

Fatal Voyage: The Mysterious Death of Natalie Wood
NATALIE: THE RED JACKET - EP13

Fatal Voyage: The Mysterious Death of Natalie Wood

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2018 19:40


Natalie Wood has grown profoundly unhappy in her marriage to Robert Wagner in the years leading up to her suspicious demise — a death for which cops have labeled R.J. a “person of interest.” Now, the Oscar winner’s close friends and sister – as well as experts and investigators who have probed her case – open up about what they see as both a prelude to her divorcing Wagner — and a motive for him to do premeditated murder. In this bonus episode, we examine evidence and whether it supports that conclusion, as Wagner makes a series of strange and otherwise inexplicable decisions that end tragically with Natalie’s death. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Busbee Style
Top Ten Fall Fashion Trends 2018

Busbee Style

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2018 11:39


Sharing fall fashion trends! Thank you so much for watching. Your support means the world to me! ~Erin xo =====ORIGINAL YOUTUBE VIDEO ===== https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bpJpX-pWVb8 ===== SUBSCRIBE TO NEWSLETTER ===== Get TWO FREE Wardrobe Basics Checklists, Weekly newsletter and FREE lookbook full of style and beauty tips! http://eepurl.com/bedNIr ===== PRODUCT LINKS HERE ===== PLAID VERONICA BEARD BLAZER, $795 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73iihcb5bp FOR LESS, $178 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73inxcb5bp PLAID TROUSERS, $345 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73ixdcb5bp FOR LESS, $66 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73inqcb5bp OVERSIZED BLAZER, $54 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73i8fcb5bp OVERSIZED DENIM JACKET, $90 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73i8tcb5bp OVERSIZED MOTO JACKET, $88 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73i8tcb5bp OVERSIZED CARDIGAN, $148 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73i9pcb5bp OVERSIEZED PARKA, $70 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73jekcb5bp OVERSIZED BOMBER JACKET, $79 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73jdzcb5bp PATCHWORK SWEATER, $36 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73nj9cb5bp CROCHET TOP, $25 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73ni5cb5bp DENIM PATCHWORK SKIRT, $42 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73nk8cb5bp FLORAL BLOUSE, $229 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73n68cb5bp FOR LESS, $70 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73n48cb5bp FLORAL JUMPSUIT, $187 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73n7icb5bp FORAL DRESS, $195 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73n7ecb5bp ZHIVAGO DRESS, $528 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73iincb5bp LOVERS + FRIENDS DRESS, $95 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73pkycb5bp LEATHER PANTS, $498 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73pmicb5bp LEATHER SKIRT, $60 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73pmycb5bp LOVERS + FRIENDS BLAZER, $138 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73pktcb5bp CLEAR BAG, $175 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73pzfcb5bp FOR LESS, $23 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73pzfcb5bp SANDALS, $180 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73pzmcb5bp TRANSPARENT PEEP TOE MULES, $38 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73pzxcb5bp WHITE PANTS, $66 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73qmkcb5bp WHITE SWEATER, $68 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73qk7cb5bp WHITE PUMPS, $120 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73qjncb5bp SUEDE COAT, $499 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73rcpcb5bp FAUX SHEARLING COAT, $199 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73rb8cb5bp FAUX SHEARLING & SUEDE MOTO JACKET, $41 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73q9ucb5bp VINCE CAMUTO PUMPS, $130 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73rygcb5bp STRAPPY PUMPS, $618 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73r2kcb5bp RED PANTS, $395 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73stdcb5bp FOR LESS, $140 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73ss8cb5bp PRED SWEATER, $197 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73stjcb5bp FOR LESS, $49 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73swxcb5bp RED BOOTIES, $100 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73sr9cb5bp RED MULES, $80 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73srxcb5bp RED JACKET, $98 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73sxscb5bp RED BLAZER, $75 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73swrcb5bp BROWN COAT, $495 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73scycb5bp BROWN JACKET, $188 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73saqcb5bp BROWN SWEATER, $195 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73sb8cb5bp BROWN PANTS, $225 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73sc6cb5bp FOR LESS, $33 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73saucb5bp BROWN CARDIGAN, $79 | https://rstyle.me/n/c73sbncb5bp ===== OTHER VIDEOS/BLOGS TO WATCH /READ===== HOW TO WEAR RED FROM HEAD TO TOE | https://busbeestyle.com/2017/11/19/ho... ===== MORE STYLE IDEAS on my WEBSITE ===== http://busbeestyle.com/ ===== SOCIAL MEDIA ===== INSTAGRAM | http://instagram.com/busbeestyle TWITTER | https://twitter.com/BusbeeStyle FACEBOOK | https://www.facebook.com/erinbusbee PINTEREST | http://www.pinterest.com/busbeestyle/

Corner House Chronicles

Another week goes by, and another fun show we present to you. we discussed some MMA and some more crazy stuff from the depths of the ocean. We enjoyed "Red Jacket" from the Keweenaw Brewing Company. Thumbs up for some tasty beer! Congrats to Super Mario Kart for winning our CHC best video game around bracket challenge.  #CHC Help support us on our Patreon Page Twitter – @CornerHCPodcast Facebook – CornerHouseChronicles Instagram – @CHC_Podcast Website – www.CHCPodcast.com Logo created by Steven Biondo @Steveomatictattos Show Music provided by Chris Lloyd.

Iroquois History and Legends
49 The Life of Red Jacket Part I

Iroquois History and Legends

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2018 52:31


Otetiani, also called Sagoyewatha was born into the Wolf Clan in the Seneca Nation around 1750.  His remarkable 80 years was filled with on goal.  To always advocate on behalf of his people.  This is part one in a two part series. Sources: An Account of Sa-go-ye-wat-ha, Or Red Jacket, and His People, 1750-1830 By John Niles Hubbard THE CANADIAN ENCYCLOPEDIA THE PAPERS OF SIR WILLIAM JOHNSON BY WILLIAM JOHNSON WITH MUSKET & TOMAHAWK VOLUME II BY MICHAEL O. LOGUSZ

his people seneca nation red jacket wolf clan michael o logusz
Iroquois History and Legends
50 The Life of Red Jacket Part II

Iroquois History and Legends

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2018 31:59


After the Treaty of Big Tree Red Jacket takes a very anti-Christian and anti-American world view.  His later life is marked by triumphs in defending his nation and personal tragedy.  In his final years his views on Christianity begin to change.  Listen for the conclusion of this two part series and see how he saved the Seneca homeland from complete liquidation. Sources: An Account of Sa-go-ye-wat-ha, Or Red Jacket, and His People, 1750-1830 By John Niles Hubbard THE CANADIAN ENCYCLOPEDIA THE PAPERS OF SIR WILLIAM JOHNSON BY WILLIAM JOHNSON WITH MUSKET & TOMAHAWK VOLUME II BY MICHAEL O. LOGUSZ

PA BOOKS on PCN
"The Indian World of George Washington" with Colin Calloway

PA BOOKS on PCN

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2018 58:52


In this new biography, Colin Calloway uses the prism of George Washington's life to bring focus to the great Native leaders of his time--Shingas, Tanaghrisson, Bloody Fellow, Joseph Brant, Red Jacket, Little Turtle--and the tribes they represented: the Iroquois Confederacy, Lenape, Miami, Creek, Delaware; in the process, he returns them to their rightful place in the story of America's founding. The Indian World of George Washington spans decades of Native American leaders' interactions with Washington, from his early days as surveyor of Indian lands, to his military career against both the French and the British, to his presidency, when he dealt with Native Americans as a head of state would with a foreign power, using every means of diplomacy and persuasion to fulfill the new republic's destiny by appropriating their land. By the end of his life, Washington knew more than anyone else in America about the frontier and its significance to the future of his country. Colin G. Calloway is the John Kimball Jr. 1943 Professor of History and Native American Studies at Dartmouth College. Description courtesy of Oxford University Press.

New Books in Diplomatic History
Colin G. Calloway, “The Indian World of George Washington” (Oxford UP, 2018)

New Books in Diplomatic History

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2018 78:00


In this sweeping new biography, Colin G. Calloway, John Kimball Jr. 1943 Professor of History and Native American Studies at Dartmouth College, uses the prism of George Washington's life to bring focus to the great Native leaders of his time—Shingas, Tanaghrisson, Bloody Fellow, Joseph Brant, Red Jacket, Little Turtle—and the tribes they represented: the Iroquois Confederacy, Lenape, Miami, Creek, Delaware; in the process, he returns them to their rightful place in the story of America's founding. The Indian World of George Washington (Oxford University Press, 2018) spans decades of Native American leaders' interactions with Washington, from his early days as surveyor of Indian lands, to his military career against both the French and the British, to his presidency, when he dealt with Native Americans as a head of state would with a foreign power, using every means of diplomacy and persuasion to fulfill the new republic's destiny by appropriating their land. By the end of his life, Washington knew more than anyone else in America about the frontier and its significance to the future of his country. The Indian World of George Washington offers a fresh portrait of the most revered American and the Native Americans whose story has been only partially told. Calloway's biography invites us to look again at the history of America's beginnings and see the country in a whole new light. Ryan Tripp teaches history at several community colleges, universities, and online extensions. In 2014, he graduated from the University of California, Davis, with a Ph.D. in History. His Ph.D. double minor included World History and Native American Studies, with an emphasis in Linguistic Anthropology and Indigenous Archeology. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in American Studies
Colin G. Calloway, “The Indian World of George Washington” (Oxford UP, 2018)

New Books in American Studies

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2018 78:00


In this sweeping new biography, Colin G. Calloway, John Kimball Jr. 1943 Professor of History and Native American Studies at Dartmouth College, uses the prism of George Washington’s life to bring focus to the great Native leaders of his time—Shingas, Tanaghrisson, Bloody Fellow, Joseph Brant, Red Jacket, Little Turtle—and the tribes they represented: the Iroquois Confederacy, Lenape, Miami, Creek, Delaware; in the process, he returns them to their rightful place in the story of America’s founding. The Indian World of George Washington (Oxford University Press, 2018) spans decades of Native American leaders’ interactions with Washington, from his early days as surveyor of Indian lands, to his military career against both the French and the British, to his presidency, when he dealt with Native Americans as a head of state would with a foreign power, using every means of diplomacy and persuasion to fulfill the new republic’s destiny by appropriating their land. By the end of his life, Washington knew more than anyone else in America about the frontier and its significance to the future of his country. The Indian World of George Washington offers a fresh portrait of the most revered American and the Native Americans whose story has been only partially told. Calloway’s biography invites us to look again at the history of America’s beginnings and see the country in a whole new light. Ryan Tripp teaches history at several community colleges, universities, and online extensions. In 2014, he graduated from the University of California, Davis, with a Ph.D. in History. His Ph.D. double minor included World History and Native American Studies, with an emphasis in Linguistic Anthropology and Indigenous Archeology. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in Native American Studies
Colin G. Calloway, “The Indian World of George Washington” (Oxford UP, 2018)

New Books in Native American Studies

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2018 78:00


In this sweeping new biography, Colin G. Calloway, John Kimball Jr. 1943 Professor of History and Native American Studies at Dartmouth College, uses the prism of George Washington’s life to bring focus to the great Native leaders of his time—Shingas, Tanaghrisson, Bloody Fellow, Joseph Brant, Red Jacket, Little Turtle—and the tribes they represented: the Iroquois Confederacy, Lenape, Miami, Creek, Delaware; in the process, he returns them to their rightful place in the story of America’s founding. The Indian World of George Washington (Oxford University Press, 2018) spans decades of Native American leaders’ interactions with Washington, from his early days as surveyor of Indian lands, to his military career against both the French and the British, to his presidency, when he dealt with Native Americans as a head of state would with a foreign power, using every means of diplomacy and persuasion to fulfill the new republic’s destiny by appropriating their land. By the end of his life, Washington knew more than anyone else in America about the frontier and its significance to the future of his country. The Indian World of George Washington offers a fresh portrait of the most revered American and the Native Americans whose story has been only partially told. Calloway’s biography invites us to look again at the history of America’s beginnings and see the country in a whole new light. Ryan Tripp teaches history at several community colleges, universities, and online extensions. In 2014, he graduated from the University of California, Davis, with a Ph.D. in History. His Ph.D. double minor included World History and Native American Studies, with an emphasis in Linguistic Anthropology and Indigenous Archeology. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books Network
Colin G. Calloway, “The Indian World of George Washington” (Oxford UP, 2018)

New Books Network

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2018 78:00


In this sweeping new biography, Colin G. Calloway, John Kimball Jr. 1943 Professor of History and Native American Studies at Dartmouth College, uses the prism of George Washington’s life to bring focus to the great Native leaders of his time—Shingas, Tanaghrisson, Bloody Fellow, Joseph Brant, Red Jacket, Little Turtle—and the tribes they represented: the Iroquois Confederacy, Lenape, Miami, Creek, Delaware; in the process, he returns them to their rightful place in the story of America’s founding. The Indian World of George Washington (Oxford University Press, 2018) spans decades of Native American leaders’ interactions with Washington, from his early days as surveyor of Indian lands, to his military career against both the French and the British, to his presidency, when he dealt with Native Americans as a head of state would with a foreign power, using every means of diplomacy and persuasion to fulfill the new republic’s destiny by appropriating their land. By the end of his life, Washington knew more than anyone else in America about the frontier and its significance to the future of his country. The Indian World of George Washington offers a fresh portrait of the most revered American and the Native Americans whose story has been only partially told. Calloway’s biography invites us to look again at the history of America’s beginnings and see the country in a whole new light. Ryan Tripp teaches history at several community colleges, universities, and online extensions. In 2014, he graduated from the University of California, Davis, with a Ph.D. in History. His Ph.D. double minor included World History and Native American Studies, with an emphasis in Linguistic Anthropology and Indigenous Archeology. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

In Conversation: An OUP Podcast
Colin G. Calloway, “The Indian World of George Washington” (Oxford UP, 2018)

In Conversation: An OUP Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2018 78:00


In this sweeping new biography, Colin G. Calloway, John Kimball Jr. 1943 Professor of History and Native American Studies at Dartmouth College, uses the prism of George Washington's life to bring focus to the great Native leaders of his time—Shingas, Tanaghrisson, Bloody Fellow, Joseph Brant, Red Jacket, Little Turtle—and the tribes they represented: the Iroquois Confederacy, Lenape, Miami, Creek, Delaware; in the process, he returns them to their rightful place in the story of America's founding. The Indian World of George Washington (Oxford University Press, 2018) spans decades of Native American leaders' interactions with Washington, from his early days as surveyor of Indian lands, to his military career against both the French and the British, to his presidency, when he dealt with Native Americans as a head of state would with a foreign power, using every means of diplomacy and persuasion to fulfill the new republic's destiny by appropriating their land. By the end of his life, Washington knew more than anyone else in America about the frontier and its significance to the future of his country. The Indian World of George Washington offers a fresh portrait of the most revered American and the Native Americans whose story has been only partially told. Calloway's biography invites us to look again at the history of America's beginnings and see the country in a whole new light. Ryan Tripp teaches history at several community colleges, universities, and online extensions. In 2014, he graduated from the University of California, Davis, with a Ph.D. in History. His Ph.D. double minor included World History and Native American Studies, with an emphasis in Linguistic Anthropology and Indigenous Archeology.

New Books in History
Colin G. Calloway, “The Indian World of George Washington” (Oxford UP, 2018)

New Books in History

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2018 78:00


In this sweeping new biography, Colin G. Calloway, John Kimball Jr. 1943 Professor of History and Native American Studies at Dartmouth College, uses the prism of George Washington’s life to bring focus to the great Native leaders of his time—Shingas, Tanaghrisson, Bloody Fellow, Joseph Brant, Red Jacket, Little Turtle—and the tribes they represented: the Iroquois Confederacy, Lenape, Miami, Creek, Delaware; in the process, he returns them to their rightful place in the story of America’s founding. The Indian World of George Washington (Oxford University Press, 2018) spans decades of Native American leaders’ interactions with Washington, from his early days as surveyor of Indian lands, to his military career against both the French and the British, to his presidency, when he dealt with Native Americans as a head of state would with a foreign power, using every means of diplomacy and persuasion to fulfill the new republic’s destiny by appropriating their land. By the end of his life, Washington knew more than anyone else in America about the frontier and its significance to the future of his country. The Indian World of George Washington offers a fresh portrait of the most revered American and the Native Americans whose story has been only partially told. Calloway’s biography invites us to look again at the history of America’s beginnings and see the country in a whole new light. Ryan Tripp teaches history at several community colleges, universities, and online extensions. In 2014, he graduated from the University of California, Davis, with a Ph.D. in History. His Ph.D. double minor included World History and Native American Studies, with an emphasis in Linguistic Anthropology and Indigenous Archeology. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in Biography
Colin G. Calloway, “The Indian World of George Washington” (Oxford UP, 2018)

New Books in Biography

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2018 78:13


In this sweeping new biography, Colin G. Calloway, John Kimball Jr. 1943 Professor of History and Native American Studies at Dartmouth College, uses the prism of George Washington’s life to bring focus to the great Native leaders of his time—Shingas, Tanaghrisson, Bloody Fellow, Joseph Brant, Red Jacket, Little Turtle—and the tribes they represented: the Iroquois Confederacy, Lenape, Miami, Creek, Delaware; in the process, he returns them to their rightful place in the story of America’s founding. The Indian World of George Washington (Oxford University Press, 2018) spans decades of Native American leaders’ interactions with Washington, from his early days as surveyor of Indian lands, to his military career against both the French and the British, to his presidency, when he dealt with Native Americans as a head of state would with a foreign power, using every means of diplomacy and persuasion to fulfill the new republic’s destiny by appropriating their land. By the end of his life, Washington knew more than anyone else in America about the frontier and its significance to the future of his country. The Indian World of George Washington offers a fresh portrait of the most revered American and the Native Americans whose story has been only partially told. Calloway’s biography invites us to look again at the history of America’s beginnings and see the country in a whole new light. Ryan Tripp teaches history at several community colleges, universities, and online extensions. In 2014, he graduated from the University of California, Davis, with a Ph.D. in History. His Ph.D. double minor included World History and Native American Studies, with an emphasis in Linguistic Anthropology and Indigenous Archeology. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

NEW MUSIC INFERNO
N.M.I. w/ Great Weights, Devils Envy, Sunday At Noon & Teammate Markus!!!

NEW MUSIC INFERNO

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2018 125:00


Great Weights - Post Hardcore band from Philadelphia,PA...New Self-Titled EP ft. "After The Drive-In" & "Morning Sickness" out now...Check out their music, tour dates & more @ www.facebook.com/greatweightsphilly Devils Envy - Rock band from Orlando,FL....Debut single "Psycho" out now..Check out their music & more @ www.facebook.com/devilsenvymusic Sunday At Noon - Rock/Alternative band from Phoenix,AZ...New single "Thunder" out now...New single "Dirty Mouth" out May 8th...Playing on the "The Formidable Alliance" Tour w/ Teammate Markus...See them on May 10th @ Beauty Bar in Las Vegas,NV...Check out their music & more @ www.facebook.com/sundayatnoonband Teammate Markus - Rap/Hip Hop/Vibe artist from Mesa,AZ...New EP "Red Jacket" ft "Red Jacket" out this Friday...Playing on the "The Formidable Alliance" Tour w/ Sunday at Noon...See them on May 10th @ Beauty Bar in Las Vegas,NV...Check out their music & more @ www.facebook.com/teammatemarkus

Cardinals Insider
4/10/18: Cardinals Insider | Red Jacket Interviews

Cardinals Insider

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2018 30:03


Lou Brock, Bob Gibson and Whitey Herzog all discuss their perspective of the home opener. Plus, Cardinals Magazine senior writer Stan McNeal joins the show to talk about Yadier Molina's on-going efforts to help the people of Puerto Rico in the wake of last year's hurricane.

St. Louis Cardinals Podcast
4/10/18: Cardinals Insider | Red Jacket Interviews

St. Louis Cardinals Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2018 30:03


Lou Brock, Bob Gibson and Whitey Herzog all discuss their perspective of the home opener. Plus, Cardinals Magazine senior writer Stan McNeal joins the show to talk about Yadier Molina's on-going efforts to help the people of Puerto Rico in the wake of last year's hurricane.

Cardinals Insider
4/10/18: Cardinals Insider | Red Jacket Interviews

Cardinals Insider

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2018 30:03


Lou Brock, Bob Gibson, and Whitey Herzog all discuss their perspective of the home opener. Plus, Cardinals Magazine Senior Writer Stan McNeal joins the show to talk about Yadier Molina’s on-going efforts to help the people of Puerto Rico in the wake of last year’s hurricane.

St. Louis Cardinals Podcast
4/10/18: Cardinals Insider | Red Jacket Interviews

St. Louis Cardinals Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2018 30:03


Lou Brock, Bob Gibson, and Whitey Herzog all discuss their perspective of the home opener. Plus, Cardinals Magazine Senior Writer Stan McNeal joins the show to talk about Yadier Molina’s on-going efforts to help the people of Puerto Rico in the wake of last year’s hurricane.

D&C Podcast Network
Red Jacket teacher announces school closing with song

D&C Podcast Network

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2018 0:37


Red Jacket Middle School music teacher Emily Klempka informed students that school will be closed Friday with her own rendition of "Baby, It's Cold Outside".

Planet Tyro: Pop Culture / Media Discussion & Reviews
Lupin The 3rd Part Two - Red Jacket Series 1977 #YEAROFLUPIN

Planet Tyro: Pop Culture / Media Discussion & Reviews

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2017 22:12


We continue our Lupin retrospective by going over the longest and most well known series in the franchise!1977'S  - Lupin The 3rd Part Two - The Red Jacket SeriesIf you've seen this series please share your thoughts with us down below!Lupin Playlist - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLcpwFFvNw5sVjVUvt6oIsB4h2A0m2krCG______________________________________MENTIONED RECOMMENDED EPS01, 19, 46, 57, 5875, 97, 98, 104, 107112, 131, 139, 143145, 148, 151, 153, 155

Stories-A History of Appalachia, One Story at a Time

On this episode of Stories, Steve and Rod tell the story of what is possibly the worst mining disaster in the history of Virginia. Forty-five men lost their lives in 1938 when an explosion tore through the Red Jacket Coal Company’s mine at Keen Mountain, near Grundy, at shift change time. You can subscribe to […]

Mere Rhetoric
American Indian Rhetorics of Survivance (NEW AND IMPROVED!)

Mere Rhetoric

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2015 6:40


Welcome to Mere Rhetoric a podcast for beginners and insiders about the ideas, people and movements who have shaped rhetorical history. I’m Mary Hedengren. This week we celebrate Thanksgiving, which is a time for food, family and remembering that this land was forcibly occupied from a variety of disenfranchised indigenous people. So in honor of that tradition, today we’ll be talking about a book called American Indian Rhetorics of Survivance, edited by Ernest Stromberg.   First off, we might have to define a couple of the words in the title, which is actually the same step that Stromberg makes in his introduction. He acknowledges that “American Indian” is a pretty broad title to encompass a spectrum of people whose boundaries were and are constantly shifting as questions of heritage, culture, genetics and geography are redefined over and over again. Similarly, the title makes use of ‘rhetorics’ instead of ‘rhetoric’ because there is no singular, Western European-influence rhetoric, but a variety of methods to create symbolic understanding. And now for the kicker--what does “survivance” mean? Survivance, a term coined by Gerald Vizenor, “goes beyond mere survival to acknowledge the dynamic and creative nature of Indigenous rhetoric” (1). Vizenor himself defines it as “Survivance is an active sense of presence, the continuance of native stories, not a mere reaction, or a survivable name. Native survivance stories are renunciations of dominance, tragedy and victimry.” This means that instead of hanging on white knuckled, you thrive, turning your position of oppression into one of resistance.   Over all, the chapters in the book all highlight the way that native american rhetors were able to reappropriate the tropes and stereotypes of their different eras into strategies of persuasion. This includes what Stromberg calls an “acute awareness of [an] audience” (6)that frequently includes white people who may hold their own preconceptions about a Native American speaker. Karen A Redfield provides a term for this when she says “The attempt to find ways to commynicate with non-Native people taht I am calling external rhetoric” (151). External rhetoric is important for rhetors who are “astute enough to tell stories so that white people can hear them” (154).   Let me give you a couple of examples from the book.In Matthew Dennis’ chapter on the 18th century diplomat Red Jacket, he points out that “Red Jacket was capable of deploying to good effect teh conventions of the Vanishing Indian, a white discourse taht imagined various individual Indians as the ‘last of their race.’ In 1797 in Hartford, Connecticut, the Seneca orator says: ‘we stand on a small island in the bosom of the great waters. We are encircles--we are encompassed. The evil spirit rides upon the blast and the waters are disturbed. They rise, they press upon us, and the waves once settled over us, we disappear forever. Who then lives to mourn us? None. What marks our extinction? Nothing. We are mingled with the common elements’” (23). Whoo. Chills. One of the great things about this book is the recovery of such rhetoric, which presents powerful arguments which are also acutely aware of the conventions in which they are made. Another rhetor who played off of white expectations is Sarah Winnemucca Hopkins, who Malea D. Powell describes as creating a “deliberate performance of the kind of Indianness that would have appealed to her late nineteenth-century reformist audiences” (69) as she fashioned herself as the ‘nobel Indian princess’ who could speak in behalf of her people.   These native american orators blend the rhetorics of their borderlands together in what Patrica Bizzell in this volume calls “mixed blood rhetoric” (41). These borderlands can be boarding schools where Native Americans were stripped of their cultural heritage, as the authors Ernest Stromberg studies describe, or the fringes of American and indigenous legal cultures as Janna Knittel and Peter d’Errico describe. These borderlands have existed since Western Europe met the Western Hemisphere, for sure, but they are not a thing of the cowboys-and-indians past. Anthony G. Murphy describes how the documentaries made for PBS in the 1990s about cowboys-and-indians--or rather, about Custer and the battle of little bighorn--highlights how questions about the past, and whose sources of the past we use, are under continual debate. Murphy’s historiography of the battle and the ways that “assumptions of  historical authenticity [have been] long held by the imperial center of American society that has until now attempted to maintain hegemonic control over the Custer Myth” (204). The past keeps meaning new things.   This text also encompasses a variety of genres. Contemporary Native American author Leslie Marmon Silko  is the focus of Ellen L. Arnold’s literary analysis, while Holly L Baumgartner examines an anthology of Native American autobiographies. Karen A Redfield looks at newspapers and Others like Angela Pully Hudson look at political speeches. The last peice in the antholgoy, is piece of ficto-criticism by Richard Clark Eckert, which begins with the question “Who symbolizes a ‘real Indian?”’”   This is a great book to open up a lot of new rhetorical study about native american rhetoric in many time periods and genres, but, as any anthology, it’s more generative than exhaustive. As Ernest Stromberg points out, “the purpose of this text is not aimed at achieving the closure of a conclusion; rather, it suggests future directions for the study of American Indian rhetoric.”   If you’d like to suggest future directions for the podcast or have feedback, drop us a line at mererhetoricpodcast@gmail.com. Until then, have a great Thanksgiving, and remind your friends and loved ones of the words of Red Jacket “At the treates held for the purchase of our lands, the white man with sweet voices and smiling faces told us they loved us and theat they would not cheat us [...] these things puzzle our heads and we beleive that the Indians must take care of themselves and not trust either in your people or in the king’s children” (qtd pg 28).

New Books in Diplomatic History
Michael L. Oberg, “Peacemakers: The Iroquois, the United States, and the Treaty of Canandaigua, 1794” (Oxford UP, 2015)

New Books in Diplomatic History

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2015 73:13


On November 11, 2015, leaders and citizens of the Six Nations of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy–Seneca, Cayuga, Onondaga, Oneida, Mohawk and Tuscarora–will gather in the small lakeside city of Canandaigua, New York to commemorate the 221st anniversary of a monumental treaty. Negotiated between the Confederacy and representatives of new federal government in the autumn of 1794, the Treaty of Canandaigua recognized the sovereign status of the Six Nations as separate polities with the right to the “free use and enjoyment” of their lands. While state and private actors would soon violate the accord, seizing ever more Haudenosaunee territory, the Canandaigua Treaty remains a binding expression of “peace and friendship” between the the Confederacy (commonly known as the Iroquois) and the United States. Michael L. Oberg tells this remarkable story of intercultural diplomacy in Peacemakers: The Iroquois, the United States, and the Treaty of Canandaigua, 1794 (Oxford University Press, 2015). Distinguished Professor of History at SUNY-Geneseo, Oberg narrates the twists and turns of war, dispossession, and resilience that brought sixteen hundred Haudenosaunee delegates, including Red Jacket, Cornplanter, and Handsome Lake, to a council with Colonel Timothy Pickering, an official representative of President George Washington. “Brother, we the Sachems of the Six Nations will now tell our minds,” Red Jacket declared in 1794. “The business of this treaty is to brighten the Chain of Friendship between us and the fifteen fires.” The Haudenosaunee continue that effort today. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in American Studies
Michael L. Oberg, “Peacemakers: The Iroquois, the United States, and the Treaty of Canandaigua, 1794” (Oxford UP, 2015)

New Books in American Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2015 73:13


On November 11, 2015, leaders and citizens of the Six Nations of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy–Seneca, Cayuga, Onondaga, Oneida, Mohawk and Tuscarora–will gather in the small lakeside city of Canandaigua, New York to commemorate the 221st anniversary of a monumental treaty. Negotiated between the Confederacy and representatives of new federal government in the autumn of 1794, the Treaty of Canandaigua recognized the sovereign status of the Six Nations as separate polities with the right to the “free use and enjoyment” of their lands. While state and private actors would soon violate the accord, seizing ever more Haudenosaunee territory, the Canandaigua Treaty remains a binding expression of “peace and friendship” between the the Confederacy (commonly known as the Iroquois) and the United States. Michael L. Oberg tells this remarkable story of intercultural diplomacy in Peacemakers: The Iroquois, the United States, and the Treaty of Canandaigua, 1794 (Oxford University Press, 2015). Distinguished Professor of History at SUNY-Geneseo, Oberg narrates the twists and turns of war, dispossession, and resilience that brought sixteen hundred Haudenosaunee delegates, including Red Jacket, Cornplanter, and Handsome Lake, to a council with Colonel Timothy Pickering, an official representative of President George Washington. “Brother, we the Sachems of the Six Nations will now tell our minds,” Red Jacket declared in 1794. “The business of this treaty is to brighten the Chain of Friendship between us and the fifteen fires.” The Haudenosaunee continue that effort today. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in History
Michael L. Oberg, “Peacemakers: The Iroquois, the United States, and the Treaty of Canandaigua, 1794” (Oxford UP, 2015)

New Books in History

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2015 73:13


On November 11, 2015, leaders and citizens of the Six Nations of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy–Seneca, Cayuga, Onondaga, Oneida, Mohawk and Tuscarora–will gather in the small lakeside city of Canandaigua, New York to commemorate the 221st anniversary of a monumental treaty. Negotiated between the Confederacy and representatives of new federal government in the autumn of 1794, the Treaty of Canandaigua recognized the sovereign status of the Six Nations as separate polities with the right to the “free use and enjoyment” of their lands. While state and private actors would soon violate the accord, seizing ever more Haudenosaunee territory, the Canandaigua Treaty remains a binding expression of “peace and friendship” between the the Confederacy (commonly known as the Iroquois) and the United States. Michael L. Oberg tells this remarkable story of intercultural diplomacy in Peacemakers: The Iroquois, the United States, and the Treaty of Canandaigua, 1794 (Oxford University Press, 2015). Distinguished Professor of History at SUNY-Geneseo, Oberg narrates the twists and turns of war, dispossession, and resilience that brought sixteen hundred Haudenosaunee delegates, including Red Jacket, Cornplanter, and Handsome Lake, to a council with Colonel Timothy Pickering, an official representative of President George Washington. “Brother, we the Sachems of the Six Nations will now tell our minds,” Red Jacket declared in 1794. “The business of this treaty is to brighten the Chain of Friendship between us and the fifteen fires.” The Haudenosaunee continue that effort today. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in Native American Studies
Michael L. Oberg, “Peacemakers: The Iroquois, the United States, and the Treaty of Canandaigua, 1794” (Oxford UP, 2015)

New Books in Native American Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2015 73:13


On November 11, 2015, leaders and citizens of the Six Nations of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy–Seneca, Cayuga, Onondaga, Oneida, Mohawk and Tuscarora–will gather in the small lakeside city of Canandaigua, New York to commemorate the 221st anniversary of a monumental treaty. Negotiated between the Confederacy and representatives of new federal government in the autumn of 1794, the Treaty of Canandaigua recognized the sovereign status of the Six Nations as separate polities with the right to the “free use and enjoyment” of their lands. While state and private actors would soon violate the accord, seizing ever more Haudenosaunee territory, the Canandaigua Treaty remains a binding expression of “peace and friendship” between the the Confederacy (commonly known as the Iroquois) and the United States. Michael L. Oberg tells this remarkable story of intercultural diplomacy in Peacemakers: The Iroquois, the United States, and the Treaty of Canandaigua, 1794 (Oxford University Press, 2015). Distinguished Professor of History at SUNY-Geneseo, Oberg narrates the twists and turns of war, dispossession, and resilience that brought sixteen hundred Haudenosaunee delegates, including Red Jacket, Cornplanter, and Handsome Lake, to a council with Colonel Timothy Pickering, an official representative of President George Washington. “Brother, we the Sachems of the Six Nations will now tell our minds,” Red Jacket declared in 1794. “The business of this treaty is to brighten the Chain of Friendship between us and the fifteen fires.” The Haudenosaunee continue that effort today. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

In Conversation: An OUP Podcast
Michael L. Oberg, “Peacemakers: The Iroquois, the United States, and the Treaty of Canandaigua, 1794” (Oxford UP, 2015)

In Conversation: An OUP Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2015 73:13


On November 11, 2015, leaders and citizens of the Six Nations of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy–Seneca, Cayuga, Onondaga, Oneida, Mohawk and Tuscarora–will gather in the small lakeside city of Canandaigua, New York to commemorate the 221st anniversary of a monumental treaty. Negotiated between the Confederacy and representatives of new federal government in the autumn of 1794, the Treaty of Canandaigua recognized the sovereign status of the Six Nations as separate polities with the right to the “free use and enjoyment” of their lands. While state and private actors would soon violate the accord, seizing ever more Haudenosaunee territory, the Canandaigua Treaty remains a binding expression of “peace and friendship” between the the Confederacy (commonly known as the Iroquois) and the United States. Michael L. Oberg tells this remarkable story of intercultural diplomacy in Peacemakers: The Iroquois, the United States, and the Treaty of Canandaigua, 1794 (Oxford University Press, 2015). Distinguished Professor of History at SUNY-Geneseo, Oberg narrates the twists and turns of war, dispossession, and resilience that brought sixteen hundred Haudenosaunee delegates, including Red Jacket, Cornplanter, and Handsome Lake, to a council with Colonel Timothy Pickering, an official representative of President George Washington. “Brother, we the Sachems of the Six Nations will now tell our minds,” Red Jacket declared in 1794. “The business of this treaty is to brighten the Chain of Friendship between us and the fifteen fires.” The Haudenosaunee continue that effort today.

New Books Network
Michael L. Oberg, “Peacemakers: The Iroquois, the United States, and the Treaty of Canandaigua, 1794” (Oxford UP, 2015)

New Books Network

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2015 73:13


On November 11, 2015, leaders and citizens of the Six Nations of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy–Seneca, Cayuga, Onondaga, Oneida, Mohawk and Tuscarora–will gather in the small lakeside city of Canandaigua, New York to commemorate the 221st anniversary of a monumental treaty. Negotiated between the Confederacy and representatives of new federal government in the autumn of 1794, the Treaty of Canandaigua recognized the sovereign status of the Six Nations as separate polities with the right to the “free use and enjoyment” of their lands. While state and private actors would soon violate the accord, seizing ever more Haudenosaunee territory, the Canandaigua Treaty remains a binding expression of “peace and friendship” between the the Confederacy (commonly known as the Iroquois) and the United States. Michael L. Oberg tells this remarkable story of intercultural diplomacy in Peacemakers: The Iroquois, the United States, and the Treaty of Canandaigua, 1794 (Oxford University Press, 2015). Distinguished Professor of History at SUNY-Geneseo, Oberg narrates the twists and turns of war, dispossession, and resilience that brought sixteen hundred Haudenosaunee delegates, including Red Jacket, Cornplanter, and Handsome Lake, to a council with Colonel Timothy Pickering, an official representative of President George Washington. “Brother, we the Sachems of the Six Nations will now tell our minds,” Red Jacket declared in 1794. “The business of this treaty is to brighten the Chain of Friendship between us and the fifteen fires.” The Haudenosaunee continue that effort today. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Accelerate! with Andy Paul
Episode 7: Sales Differentiation, with Leanne Hoagland-Smith

Accelerate! with Andy Paul

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2015 33:46


In this episode, Leanne Hoagland-Smith (noted sales blogger, business coach and author of “How to be the Red Jacket in a Sea of Gray Suits” ) dishes out the straight talk advice on how to deliberately plan for sales success. She also shares her strategies that sales reps and small business can use to create meaningful sales differentiation. If you’re selling in a crowded and competitive market, what steps can you take to stand out in the crowd and attract the attention of your dream customers? Listen today to learn how!

Contact Marketing Radio
Leanne Hoagland-Smith on Contact Marketing's place in the SMB market

Contact Marketing Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2015 23:46


Premier sales trainer, corporate coach and author of Be the Red Jacket in a Sea of Gray Suits talks about how her focus on people and process combines with Contact Marketing to produce explosive growth for small and medium sized businesses.

On America’s Frontlines of Crime and War – JJ Sutton, C.P.S., C.M.A.S.
On America’s Frontlines of Crime and War – A talk with Red Jacket Firearms’ Leading Lady – Stephanie Hayden

On America’s Frontlines of Crime and War – JJ Sutton, C.P.S., C.M.A.S.

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2014


A special guest is waiting for you in this episode… special in every way. The one and only Daughter of the God of Guns; Red Jacket Firearms’ very own and the Leading Lady of Discovery Channel’s Son’s of Guns. Stephanie Hayden has been around guns her whole life, she is in the middle of a career while being surrounded by … Read more about this episode...

On America’s Frontlines of Crime and War – JJ Sutton, C.P.S., C.M.A.S.
On America’s Frontlines of Crime and War – Gun Talk with Charles Watson from Red Jacket Firearms

On America’s Frontlines of Crime and War – JJ Sutton, C.P.S., C.M.A.S.

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2013 58:08


In this episode my special guest is a member of the very well to do Reality TV series on Discovery. Sons of Guns… you know it. Who doesn’t need a regular Sons of Guns episode fix? The good people at Red Jacket Firearms do the industry proud and they not only turn out some great products they are good red … Read more about this episode...

Jeremiah wonders...
The Building Years- Episode 20: Kevin Hart, Dodgeball, Bombing, and Retiring the Red Jacket

Jeremiah wonders...

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2013 32:05


Justin and Jeremiah talk about Kevin Hart hosting SNL, Justin's dodgeball experiences, and Jeremiah decides to retire his signature red jacket.

Howell Creek Radio
Red Jacket, Silver Curtain

Howell Creek Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2012 10:15


Download MP3 audio – 10:15, 14.16 MB – or Read Transcript Radio address for June 23rd, 2012, inspired by our recent visit to family in Niagara Falls.

Eat Your Words
Episode 46: Red Jacket Orchards

Eat Your Words

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2010 30:20


This week, Cathy sits down with Wen-jay Ying, the CSA coordinator for the iconic Red Jacket Orchards. Fun and laughter ensue as they talk about macoun apples, cooking with quinces, and the Healthy Fresh Bodegas Initiative. This episode was brought to you by Edwards of Surry, Virginia.

The Round, Seattle
Round (61) - Lincoln Barr (Red Jacket Mine) - "Lying Out Loud"

The Round, Seattle

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2010 4:03


Tuesday, June 8th, 2010 8:00 PM live @ Fremont Abbey Arts Center, Seattle | Curated by Nathan Marion, Podcast produced by Joshua Sherman and Jonas G. www.theround.org or http://www.fremontabbey.org | Not to be sold or distributed in any way.

The Round, Seattle
Round (61) - Lincoln Barr (Red Jacket Mine) - "Lover's Lookout"

The Round, Seattle

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2010 5:07


Tuesday, June 8th, 2010 8:00 PM live @ Fremont Abbey Arts Center, Seattle | Curated by Nathan Marion, Podcast produced by Joshua Sherman and Jonas G. www.theround.org or http://www.fremontabbey.org | Not to be sold or distributed in any way.

Dj Addict - Essential Flavor Podcast
Essential Flavor Show # 39 (21.06.2010) Dj Addict only !

Dj Addict - Essential Flavor Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2010 76:50


ESSENTIAL FLAVOR SHOW #3921.06.2010DJ ADDICT01 - Trina - Gucci shoe shopping02 - Trina ft. Rick Ross, Lil Wayne - Currency03 - Flo-Rida ft. Lil Wayne - Fresh I stay04 - Kanye West ft. Dwele - Power05 - Olivia ft. 50 Cent - In my bedroom06 - Craiz - Esprit entrepreneur (Prod. by Red Jacket) (exclu !!)07 - Drake ft. T.I., Swizz Beatz - Fancy08 - Dwele - I wish09 - Travie McCoy ft. Bruno Mars, T-Pain, Gucci Mane - Billionaire (rmx)10 - B.O.B ft. Lupe Fiasco - Past my shades11 - Aloe Blacc - I need a dollar12 - Kid Cudi ft. Snoop Dogg - I do my thing13 - Chalie Boy - Red Over14 - Drake ft. Rick Ross - Find your love (rmx)15 - Christina Aguilera ft. Nicky Minaj - WooHoo16 - Busta Rhymes - Take it off (rmx)17 - Busta Rhymes ft. Swizz Beatz - Stop the party18 - Busta Rhymes ft. Zhane - It's a party19 - Big Pun - Still not a player20 - T.I. ft. Fergie, Will.I.Am - Down like that21 - Mariah Carey ft. ODB - Fantasy22 - Kelis - 4th of July23 - R. Kelly - Be my 224 - N.E.R.D ft. Nelly Furtado - Hot-N-Fun25 - Estelle ft. Nas - Fall in love26 - Breakbot ft. Irfane - Baby I'm yours27 - Stromae - Te quiero28 - Haddaway - What is love29 - Eminem ft. Lil Wayne - No love30 - Jeremih ft. Ludacris - I likewww.essentialflavor.comhttp://facebook.com/addictdjhttp://twitter.com/dj_addictFacebook group : Essential Flavor Show

Totten-Cast
Totten-Cast #3

Totten-Cast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2009


The Kid in the Red JacketSummary for ch.7-10Narrated by Hunter P.

Totten-Cast
Totten-Cast #2

Totten-Cast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2009


The Kid in the Red JacketSummary for ch. 4-6Narrated by Zavier

Totten-Cast
Totten-Cast #1

Totten-Cast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2009


The Kid in the Red JacketSummary ch. 1-3Narrated by Justin

Dj Addict - Essential Flavor Podcast
Essential Flavor Show # 4 (18.05.2008) Special guest : Dj FTBounce

Dj Addict - Essential Flavor Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2008 61:02


DJ FTBOUNCE 01 - Intro 02 - Ray-J Feat The Game : Where You At 03 - Nelly Feat Fergie : Party People 04 - Lil' Scrappy : Keep It On The Low 05 - The Game Feat Lil' Wayne : Who Run It 06 - Bohagon Feat Stat-Quo : Been About money 07 - Nelly Feat Jermaine Dupri and Ciara : Step On My Jays 08 Da Trap Boyz : Get Ya Swag On 09 - Dem Franchize Boyz : Lean With It Work With It 10 - Monica Feat Dem Franchize Boyz : Everytime The Beat Drop 11 - Dem Franchise Boyz Feat UGK - My Muzik 12 - T.I. : Bounce Like This 13 - Nelly : Grillz 14 - 91 Flow and DJ Battle : Le White Et Le Black (DJ Ftbounce Exclusiv, Prod. Canardo) DJ ADDICT 15 - Charli Wilson ft. Snoop Dogg - Let it out 16 - Donnie ft. P. Diddy - Take you there 17 - O'Neal Mc Knight ft. Greg Nice - Check your coat 18 - Mr Criminal ft. Fat Joe - drop it rock it 19 - Three 6 Mafia ft. T Pain - Lollipop 20 - Flo-Rida ft. Timbaland - Elevator 21 - Jason de Rulo ft. Mims - cyber love 22 - Charli Wilson ft. T Pain and Chanty - Supa sexy (Red Jacket rmx - exclu Essential Flavor!) 23 - Mariah Carey ft. AC - that chick (rmx) 24 - Usher - This ain't sex 25 - Ne-Yo ft T.I - Can we chill (rmx) www.essentialflavor.com

The Mike O'Meara Show
#3364: Mr. Clark's Hat

The Mike O'Meara Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 1970 84:49


Today, we have a genuine ghost story.... scared, kids? Mike is a sensational manager AND a good citizen. Robb share some candy history... and we stack up DQ vs. Culver's. Remember: If it's bitters, make it Red Jacket. Today's episode Is Sponsored By: SOUL and their amazing “Out of Office” gummies. Head to WWW.GETSOUL.COM and use code TMOS for 30% off your order. Your continuous support for our sponsors keeps us on the airwaves, and we can't thank you enough!Our Sponsors:* Check out MyBookie and use my code MIKEOMEARA for a great deal: www.mybookie.ag* Check out Rosetta Stone and use my code TODAY for a great deal: www.rosettastone.com* Check out Uncommon Goods and use my code TMOS for a great deal: www.uncommongoods.comAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy