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In this episode of the Psych in Business podcast, your host Dr. Ernest Wayde speaks with Reginald Jackson, an executive coach and veteran, shares insights on leadership and effective communication in various sectors. He emphasizes the importance of leading with logic, removing emotion from decision-making, and focusing on the mission. Jackson highlights the need for trust in relationships and the delegation of tasks to empower employees. He also discusses the significance of executive presence and effective communication in gaining the trust and respect of senior leaders. Overall, Jackson's coaching philosophy revolves around turning chaos into clarity through systems and processes.Takeaways• Leading with logic means removing emotion and looking at situations objectively.• Trust is essential in leadership, both in trusting your employees and being trusted by them.• Effective communication involves conveying your intentions clearly and receiving feedback to ensure understanding.• Delegating tasks and empowering employees is crucial for effective leadership.• Executive presence is important for gaining the trust and respect of senior leaders.• Creating systems and processes helps turn chaos into clarity in leadership.To learn more about Reginald Jackson, visit his linkedin page at: https://www.linkedin.com/in/coachreginaldgjacksonsrpcc/
CCH is an avid art collector. A new exhibit featuring pieces from CCH's collection Diaspora Stories: Selections from the CCH Pounder Collection opened in Chicago on March 18 at The DuSable Black History Museum and Education Center and runs through July 16, 2023. The exhibition which was curated especially for the DuSable Museum contains 24 works of art by worldrenowned artists including Kehinde Wiley, Patricia Renee Thomas, Reginald Jackson, Robert Pruitt, Greg Breda, Ebony G. Patterson, and Mickalene Thomas, among others. Each item was curated and personally selected in collaboration with the DuSable and Ms. Pounder from her extensive collection specifically for “Diaspora Stories: Selections from the CCH Pounder Collection.” Bio: Award winning actress CCH Pounder can currently be seen as “Mo'at” in James Cameron's AVATAR: THE WAY OF WATER. Pounder portrayed “Dr. Loretta Wade” on the CBS series, NCIS: NEW ORLEANS for seven seasons and other notable projects include the television shows THE GOOD FIGHT, WAREHOUSE 13, SONS OF ANARCHY, REVENGE, BROTHERS, LAW & ORDER: SVU and HBO's THE NO. 1 LADIES' DETECTIVE AGENCY, which garnered Pounder her fourth Emmy® nomination. For seven years, Pounder portrayed "Claudette Wyms" on the critically acclaimed FX series, THE SHIELD, which earned her many accolades including an Emmy® nomination, the MIB Prism Award," two Golden Satellite Awards and the “Genii Excellence in TV Award.” Other honors for Pounder include an Emmy® nomination for her role as Dr. Angela Hicks on the NBC series ER and an Emmy® nomination for her role in FOX's The X-FILES. In addition, she received a Grammy® Award nomination for "Best Spoken Word Album" for GROW OLD ALONG WITH ME, THE BEST IS YET TO BE and won an AUDIE, the Audio Publishers Association's top honor, for WOMEN IN THE MATERIAL WORLD. Film credits include HOME AGAIN, RAIN, PRIZZI'S HONOR, POSTCARDS FROM THE EDGE, ROBOCOP 3, SLIVER, TALES FROM THE CRYPT: DEMON KNIGHT, FACE/OFF, END OF DAYS, MORTAL INSTRUMENTS: CITY OF BONES, ORPHAN, AVATAR, GODZILLA: KING OF THE MONSTERS and her breakout role in BAGDAD CAFÉ. A graduate of Ithaca College, she received an Honorary Doctorate of Fine Arts from the school, was their 2010 Commencement Speaker and in 2021, she received Ithaca College Alumni Association's Lifetime Achievement Award. Pounder serves on the Board of the African Millennium Foundation and was a founding member of Artists for a New South Africa. An advocate of the arts, she is active in the Creative Coalition and recent accolades for Pounder include the Visionary Leadership Award in Performing Arts from the Museum of the African Diaspora (MOAD) in San Francisco, the 2015 Carney Awards, the Lifetime Achievement Award from Chase Brexton Health Care in Baltimore, 2015 Honoree at the Grand Performances Gala in Los Angeles, the 2016 SweetArts Performing Arts honoree from the Contemporary Arts Center in New Orleans, the National Urban League's 2017 Women of Power Award and the 2018 Bob Marley Award from AFUWI (American Foundation for the University of the West Indies). In addition to her prolific acting career and advocacy, Pounder has been extensively involved with the arts as a patron, collector, gallery owner and museum founder. Originally from Georgetown, Guyana, Pounder's collection consists of Caribbean and African artists and artists of the African Diaspora. Her collection is heavily concentrated in the area of Contemporary Art but also includes traditional African sculptures. In 1992, Pounder and her husband, the late Boubacar Koné, founded and built the Musée Boribana, the first privately owned contemporary museum in Dakar Senegal, which they gifted to that nation in 2014. Pounder's personal collection contains over 500 works of art, many of which she has loaned to Xavier University of Louisiana for a series of exhibitions and some which were on exhibit at Somerset House in England, Kent State Museum, The Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History in Detroit, MI and The DuSable Black History Museum and Education Center in Chicago.
In Episode 37, the S+H team celebrates the third anniversary of the podcast by diving into the March issue's feature story on the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act. Additionally, Reginald Jackson, a safety and health specialist in OSHA's Office of General Industry and Agricultural Enforcement, discusses loading dock safety in an expanded “5 Questions With …” interview. Read episode notes, sign up to be notified by email when each new episode has been published, and find other ways to subscribe. https://safetyandhealthmagazine.com/articles/23669-safe-side-podcast-pregnant-workers-loading-dock-safety
In Episode 37, the S+H team celebrates the third anniversary of the podcast by diving into the March issue's feature story on the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act. Additionally, Reginald Jackson, a safety and health specialist in OSHA's Office of General Industry and Agricultural Enforcement, discusses loading dock safety in an expanded “5 Questions With …” interview. Read episode notes, sign up to be notified by email when each new episode has been published, and find other ways to subscribe. https://safetyandhealthmagazine.com/articles/23669-safe-side-podcast-pregnant-workers-loading-dock-safety
We don't even know the real name of the 11th century author Murasaki Shikibu. But we do know that her book, The Tale of Genji, is arguably one of the most influential Japanese texts to date. Genji quickly captured its readers' imaginations with political intrigue and court drama, but it can also be read as an astute critique of Japanese elite society. Reginald Jackson is an associate professor of Pre-modern Japanese Literature and Performance at the University of Michigan. He is the author of Textures of Mourning. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
We don't even know the real name of the 11th century author Murasaki Shikibu. But we do know that her book, The Tale of Genji, is arguably one of the most influential Japanese texts to date. Genji quickly captured its readers' imaginations with political intrigue and court drama, but it can also be read as an astute critique of Japanese elite society. Reginald Jackson is an associate professor of Pre-modern Japanese Literature and Performance at the University of Michigan. He is the author of Textures of Mourning. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/east-asian-studies
We don't even know the real name of the 11th century author Murasaki Shikibu. But we do know that her book, The Tale of Genji, is arguably one of the most influential Japanese texts to date. Genji quickly captured its readers' imaginations with political intrigue and court drama, but it can also be read as an astute critique of Japanese elite society. Reginald Jackson is an associate professor of Pre-modern Japanese Literature and Performance at the University of Michigan. He is the author of Textures of Mourning. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/literary-studies
We don't even know the real name of the 11th century author Murasaki Shikibu. But we do know that her book, The Tale of Genji, is arguably one of the most influential Japanese texts to date. Genji quickly captured its readers' imaginations with political intrigue and court drama, but it can also be read as an astute critique of Japanese elite society. Reginald Jackson is an associate professor of Pre-modern Japanese Literature and Performance at the University of Michigan. He is the author of Textures of Mourning. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
We don't even know the real name of the 11th century author Murasaki Shikibu. But we do know that her book, The Tale of Genji, is arguably one of the most influential Japanese texts to date. Genji quickly captured its readers' imaginations with political intrigue and court drama, but it can also be read as an astute critique of Japanese elite society. Reginald Jackson is an associate professor of Pre-modern Japanese Literature and Performance at the University of Michigan. He is the author of Textures of Mourning. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/japanese-studies
In this episode, we are joined by Prof. Andrea Mendoza, Assistant Professor of Japanese and Comparative Literature at the University of California, San Diego. Professor Mendoza's work combines the studies of 20th and 21st century East Asian and Latin American literatures and visual cultures; transpacific studies; feminist and gender studies; critical race studies; and intellectual history. Her current projects focus on developing an intersectional and transpacific approach to comparing philosophical, literary, and cinematic discourses on race and racism in Mexico and Japan and their role in constituting ideas about national identity in the twentieth century. Prof. Mendoza is joined in conversation with JSAP contributors Sophie Hasuo, Rachel Willis, Harrison Watson, and Prof. Reginald Jackson. Topics of discussion include: identifications and positionality; growing up in Mexico and New Jersey as a racialized migrant; attending primarily white schools; Orientalism; Black feminist theory and scholarship; The Bridge Called My Back; Sara Ahmed; micro- and macro-aggressions in the academy; Othering in Japanese Studies; Abe Sada; Prof. Mendoza's article "Nonencounter as Relation;" transpacific studies; antiracist practice and pedagogy; undisciplinary shifts; astrology. To learn more about Professor Mendoza's research, please watch her JSAP webinar, "Confronting the “Ends” of Area: On Transpacific Accountability" or read her article "Nonencounter as Relation: Cannibals and Poison Women in the Consumption of Difference" in Verge: Studies in Global Asias. She is on twitter @andbrea_m.This podcast is created with generous support from the University of Michigan's Center for Japanese Studies. Recording, editing, and transcription support came from Reginald Jackson, Justin Schell, Sophie Hasuo, Rachel Willis, Harrison Watson, Robin Griffin, and Allison Alexy. Please see the Japanese Studies and Antiracist Pedagogy homepage for more information.
In this episode, we are joined by Prof. Leo Ching, Professor of Asian and Middle Eastern Studies at Duke University. Professor Ching's work explores colonial discourse studies, postcolonial theory, Japanese mass culture, and theories of globalization and regionalism. He is the author of Becoming “Japanese”: Colonial Taiwan and the Politics of Identity Formation and Anti-Japan: The Politics of Sentiment in Postcolonial East Asia, which is also available as a digital open access version. Prof. Ching is joined in conversation with JSAP contributors Sophie Hasuo, Rachel Willis, and Prof. Reginald Jackson. Topics of discussion include: identifications; defining home; Prof. Ching's family history; baseball in Taiwan and Japan; the Redress / Reparation movement in the US; geology; graduate school; Masao Miyoshi; California; being stopped by police in Japan; race in the US South; the category of "Asian American"; so-called "standard" Japanese vs. Kansai-ben; antiblackness and antiracism; anti-Asian violence; settler colonialism; Ainu people; "coloniality as the underside of modernity"; Palestine; and Archipelago East Asia.To learn more about Professor Ching's research, please watch his JSAP webinar, "Contrapuntal Imaginations: Reading Empires in an Undergraduate Japanese Studies Class."This podcast is created with generous support from the University of Michigan's Center for Japanese Studies. Recording, editing, and transcription support came from Reginald Jackson, Justin Schell, Sophie Hasuo, Rachel Willis, Harrison Watson, Robin Griffin, and Allison Alexy. Please see the Japanese Studies and Antiracist Pedagogy homepage for more information.
Prof. Takashi Fujitani is the Dr. David Chu Professor and Director in Asia Pacific Studies at the University of Toronto. His research focuses on modern and contemporary Japanese history, East Asian history, Asian American history, and transnational history (primarily U.S./Japan and Asia Pacific). Much of his past and current research has centered on the intersections of nationalism, colonialism, war, memory, racism, ethnicity, and gender, as well as the disciplinary and area studies boundaries that have figured our ways of studying these issues. He is the author of Splendid Monarchy: Power and Pageantry in Modern Japan and Race for Empire: Koreans as Japanese and Japanese as Koreans in WWII; co-editor of Perilous Memories: The Asia Pacific War(s) and editor of the series Asia Pacific Modern. Prof. Fujitani is joined in conversation with JSAP contributors Harrison Watson, Sophie Hasuo, Rachel Willis, and Prof. Reginald Jackson. Topics of discussion include: the possibilities and politics of naming; growing up in Berkeley; segregation; ties between Black people and Asian / Asian American people; jazz; James Brown; W.E.B. DuBois; disidentifications with whiteness; Malcolm X and Yuri Kochiyama; solidarity politics; the model minority myth; race and racism in the Japanese empire; learning from professors of color; Asian American Studies; responses in Japanese Studies to discrimination about Buraku people and Korean-Japanese people; Clint Eastwood; Asia in the American political unconscious; Indigenous theory; palliative monarchy; the demise of Japanese Studies.To learn more about Professor Fujitani's research, please watch his JSAP webinar, "Challenges and Opportunities for a Historian of Japan Teaching about Race and Imperialism." In this conversation, Prof. Fujitani mentions his article, "Minshūshi As Critique of Orientalist Knowledges."This podcast is created with generous support from the University of Michigan's Center for Japanese Studies. Recording, editing, and transcription support came from Reginald Jackson, Justin Schell, Sophie Hasuo, Rachel Willis, Harrison Watson, Robin Griffin, and Allison Alexy. Please see the Japanese Studies and Antiracist Pedagogy homepage for more information.
In this episode, the JSAP team talks with Prof. Vyjayanthi Selinger, whose research focuses on medieval Japanese literature and culture. Vyjayanthi Ratnam Selinger is the Stanley F. Druckenmiller Associate Professor of Asian Studies at Bowdoin College. Born and raised in India, she moved to the United States to pursue doctoral work in Japanese literature and culture. Her research examines literary representations of conflict in medieval Japan, using conflict as the key node to examine war memory, legal and ritual constraints on war, Buddhist mythmaking, and women in war. She is the author of the book Authorizing the Shogunate: Ritual and Material Culture in the Literary Construction of Warrior Order. Prof. Selinger is joined in conversation with JSAP contributors Harrison Watson, Sophie Hasuo, and Prof. Reginald Jackson. Topics of discussion include: South Asian American identities; caste privilege; international faculty at US institutions; applying to graduate school; racist microaggressions; English; colonial and postcolonial understandings of the other; race in Japanese Studies; reparative orientations; forgetting first languages; second language learning; Wuthering Heights; antiracist work; Japanese American students; finding one's voice in writing.To learn more about Professor Selinger's research, please watch her JSAP webinar, "Challenges and Opportunities in Anti-racist Pedagogy in Premodern Japanese Literature." She is on twitter @jayselinge.This podcast is created with generous support from the University of Michigan's Center for Japanese Studies. Recording, editing, and transcription support came from Reginald Jackson, Justin Schell, Sophie Hasuo, Rachel Willis, Harrison Watson, Robin Griffin, and Allison Alexy. Please see the Japanese Studies and Antiracist Pedagogy homepage for more information.
In this episode, we welcome Hwaji Shin, Associate Professor in the Sociology Department at the University of San Francisco. Professor Shin's research focuses on political sociology, with particular emphases on race and ethnicity, social movements, and migration. This episode was recorded in the aftermath of the disturbing act of violence in Atlanta on Tuesday, March 16th, 2021 as we continue to witness ongoing abuse towards Black, Indigenous, Latinx, Asian American, and other communities of color. Prof. Shin is joined in conversation with JSAP contributors Sophie Hasuo, Rachel Willis, and Prof. Reginald Jackson. Our topics include: the March 2021 Atlanta spa shooting; Prof. Shin's family background; anti-Korean discrimination; supportive and unsupportive teachers; traveling to South Korea as a Korean Japanese person; creating belonging; Bon Jovi; fetishization of Asian women; professional training; graduate school; surviving vs. thriving; Charles Tilly's scholarship; anti-racist practice; racialization and racial formation; labeling, especially for Asian and Asian Americans; and Prof. Shin's book project.To hear more from Prof. Shin's work please watch her JSAP webinar on “Decolonizing Race and Ethnicity: Understanding Racial Formation in Japanese Society” and her presentation at the Center for Japanese Studies, "Contentious Citizenship: Zainichi Korean Activism in Japan."This podcast is created with generous support from the University of Michigan's Center for Japanese Studies. Recording, editing, and transcription support came from Reginald Jackson, Justin Schell, Sophie Hasuo, Rachel Willis, Harrison Watson, Robin Griffin, and Allison Alexy. Please see the Japanese Studies and Antiracist Pedagogy homepage for more information.
In this 74th episode of the Brian Hornback Experience I talk with Reginald Jackson, Independent candidate for Knox County School Board District 1 (East Knoxville to Sequoyah Hills) Most all the Brian Hornback links you should need are here. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/brian-hornback/support
Exploring Computer Science E18 In celebration of CS Ed Week, hosts Kelly Greene and Claire Conway engage in a conversation with guests from a variety of computer science industry organizations including Microsoft, American Express, State Farm, TCS and GenTech Support. Reginald Jackson from State Farm is a Infrastructure and Dev Ops Analyst with a passion […] The post Exploring Computer Science E18 appeared first on Business RadioX ®.
Exploring Computer Science E18 In celebration of CS Ed Week, hosts Kelly Greene and Claire Conway engage in a conversation with guests from a variety of computer science industry organizations including Microsoft, American Express, State Farm, TCS and GenTech Support. Reginald Jackson from State Farm is a Infrastructure and Dev Ops Analyst with a passion […] The post Exploring Computer Science E18 appeared first on Business RadioX ®.
This week YOUR SISTER'S GOING OUT... WITH DEAN! We are talking 1998's Trey Parker and Matt Stone's comedy Sports film BASEketball. The boys are learning what happened the the Oakland Raiders, Reel Big Fish's back catalogue and Dean treats the boys to a mini game of 'Are You A Dead'. Dean is the host of That Fking show: Part Gameshow, part chat show, all entertaining...that sounds like a decent elevator pitch. ThatFkingShow is another podcast looking to get some of that Spotify money. Join hosts former man-baby and recovering sh*tlord Boo Lemont, Art goth Nik Nak munching creeper magnet Yorkshire lass Abbie Stabby, and Fierce female pro-wrestling Amazon warrior queen Ayesha Raymond, as they talk about life, love and well... pretty much whatever task master producer ThatFKingGuy has made a trivia quiz about that week. Play along while listening to them compete in games such as "Are you a Dead?", "La La Land" and "Tuckers Luck" The only podcast gameshow dedicated to Chris Tucker. --- BASEketball is a 1998 American sports comedy film co-written and directed by David Zucker and starring South Park creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone, along with Yasmine Bleeth, Jenny McCarthy, Robert Vaughn, Ernest Borgnine, and Dian Bachar. The film follows the history of the sport of the same name (created by Zucker years earlier), from its invention by the lead characters as a game they could win against more athletic types, to its development as a nationwide league sport and a target of corporate sponsorship. This is the only work involving Parker and Stone that was neither written, directed, nor produced by them, although Zucker himself has stated that Parker and Stone contributed innumerable suggestions for the film, most of which were used. --- Join us on the Socials: Twitter Instagram Facebook Support the show (Buy me a Coffee) --- Transcription I guys an Nesho we're looking at an horn, machos fawn bog named McCarthy bleef stone in Park, Lookin N N N T it years, basketball, hello, everyone and welcome to this week's episode of one hundred things. We learned from film I'm one of your hosts and I'm a little bitch and I'm the other horse and I'm a beggar batch the bites back. I markes jump John. How are you I'm all right, ready, I'm, okay and I'm off for a week this week, so I'm just planning on drinking lots of bus. That's pretty much gonna be my way playing dead space and watching the Yujun bond that nats my plans. Okay! Well, you live in the life of Riley Leven Leven, the dream living the reader want to got a lover Pol, but I don't think on me got to be honest. Who knows you know you can always call in for a cup of low low sugar, I and brew on your way back exactly some o MIS and rules and sources for that. We that we, a greasy spin beside this he's, got very Carmilhan it. But yes, let's sit! Let's, let's stop our nonsense, because we're not alone this week we're being watched and joined and carried on with Lala by a certain Mr Dean Dean Hi. How are you doing all right pig focus? No only only my closest friends can call me pick. Fucker swain sway her. So I can call Dean is the host of a very, very funny, if not extremely not safe, for work podcast that F King Show Dean? Do you want to tell us a little bit about your you, your program and all of that nonsense? All right. I have a pitch for this at some point, but I've lost it part. Education, part, conversational, part, entertainment. I guess you could call it or some people call it in the Sayemon all bollocks. We generally, I generally pink up a quiz and presented to the other hosts or the other guests or contributors, and we lost one yeah. You Lot one of the battle, the podcast episodes. Definitely gonna Start doing some of them when we get to season free of the show want to have you to back on there against the film floggers or you be good to come back on when I'm not two bottles of wine in the way. So this is how that show ended. You can find this over at Tall Codino. That's where I, the links off of the social media and stuff, like that. This is the show subscribe like it. Try It. You might like it a smash that, like in US game, as I see, do, do it because ye it's a regular. For me, I kind of got about four and a half minutes into this week's podcast. Before I got a very long, meanderin phone call, one was in the car the other day, so I still haven't gotten around to it to the full story on that one. But it sounds like you with a psychotic. Yes, yes, like we did e end very good, cliff anger for season free, so we are going on hites for a little bit. So if you currently, it has forty episodes, you can get through fill your boots, HMM YEAH! Please do it's great and that's not just the episodes that me and John M Iturea was a fantastic Friday night. I love that John. What are we talking about this week? So that's were gone for one thousand nine hunded and ney eight basketball, okay, which I've not seen in the way, but when I watch that thought Jos, is it just to quite funny timeless, except for some of the gay panic, jokes timeless yeah, so dean? Thank you so much for bringing this one to was ninety eight John we've been to night. Yet before I'm certain of we having the so of anybody wants to see what phones were going in on thousand nine hundred and ninety eight have a lesson near a wedding singer, podcast with it all and Kayasthas of a ease music in that in that one that was a that was a lot of that. Yeah is good as good. You know the rules by now listeners unless you've never listened before. Then you know fucking clue what we're doing. We've all sat and watched the film we've all made a list of things that we wanted to learn a little bit more about. Do some research we're going to walk through the film he I'm going to walk to the film and these two a M to jump in whenever they want. We will have some bits and pieces facts informationbehind the scenes or just random thoughts that have come up. Are You, gentlemen? Both ready to start your remotes as it well read: Yeah Scotland Right, Elodie's? Okay, so we open in Yankee Stadium, Reggie Jackson, this Guy Reggie Jackson, who look I've got a level with you before before we get properly started. I don't know a lot too much about American sports right. My American sport is Hannibal. I mean sorry, football is American football. If I e work any of them yeah and a yes, that's the one and I I'm a Miami Dolphins Fan, which means that I, for about a week at the start of the season and very positive, I'm certainly going to win the Super Bowl. No for the rest of the season. I just shake my head and a disappointed. John. You don't like sports generally you're, not really a sportsman anyway. I not been brought in Policastro Ney. It was nothing. It was death thing an what's your association with the Murican Sports American sports. I tried getting into ice hockey for a bit a couple years back. I like the idea of isole know it's only port where fighting is part, the game as a trying to weed that out, but it is like you look at the history of it's like it's quite violent is quite fun. You know didn't really get very far with that, because you can't really watch it anywhere and the same thing having coupees, but I try I get into the baseball because I was in Japan for a couple of weeks and one night we was come back from the somewhere had a couple of drinks, but on TV and Japan's playing career in baseball really got into it. It s really enjoyable to watch and it's very slow, very pays you at a couple of drinks in you. It's great I've currently wearing my Hiroshima Cap, baseball, Jo wow. I did wonder what that was so yeah hey some of the best things I bought out there yeah I try and support them, but the same thing. You can't really watch over here that easily, if you, if you are interested in getting into ice socket, I do recommend going to a game because it is just as exciting when you're there I used to go and watch not an panthers when lived in the Midlands. So like we have a London team, don't we yeah, I couldn't couldn't tell you what they called anymore or all in all. I know is that not good panthers of there Nottingham G, MB, Panthers Bat back talking about unionizing again, John always with the unionized. We Open Up Reggie Jackson, batting for the Yankees. Now. What I do know about baseball is the Yankee Song Right. We have to hate the Yankees, because it's The New York team. I assume- and I think they've bought their way to a lot of titles, of something I don't know, but we don't like the Yankees. That's that's it. Even though our podcast baseball team is a Yankees of Filia. Isn't it John that really is a riders, the double a affiliate of the Yankees, which I wish I'd known before we picked them, but what ll get out eleven land, you leven yeah, absolutely she's a witch. The main thing about the men oponent a bit less a tag line yet line of the new of ow James Bomb Film. We've got a couple of facts. Last of at our start, I ca. If a sort, Yuyan kees were alleged and originally named the New York Hilanders, but the name was changed back in one thousand nine hundred and thirteen because Ne do is using Hal Anders. I don't know why Reggie Jackson's nickname was Mr October m yeah we'll get a bit about that late. Rest Yeah! I don't know much about Regie Jackson, because as soon as I went and looked him up, I actually looked up a basket Wolmar by mistake at likes. My regato you're, going to tell us about Reginald Jackson. This leave that ten, this shore, that one is they all look the same, don't hi, I lading in yea, they are going to ball involved of some subject is that's how much I do not like spots. Actually, the only sport I won't grow up grew up watching Robinia, no, not nero, because because it was my dad was always hung over and then they like noise, so cause its lacing play. We just watching the G, that's a that's! A look into the s and eight really, as that we expected. Isn't it and Tel become national sports is like darts snow up, Yep anything quiet, yea, Joe Blam, Baron Billard billiards. That kind of thing. I can tell you a little bit about this Reggie Jackson, John Thankful likes, please. He played for Oakland Baltimore, the Yankees, the California angels. It's fourteen all star titles, which I think is another smash mouth song will come to that later on at five world series championships, three most valuable players to term. I really don't like the idea of somebody being of a value he's for home, run leaders, Yankees, retired number, forty four, because of him, and for good reason, unlike Birmingham City, who recently retired a shirt for a lad that had played a handful of games for them because Birmingham city or a joke of a football club, it was inducted into the baseball hall of fame in one thousand nine hundred and ninety three, now I'm going to read you this story, the Batum as I as it was reported because this this is just the wording of this, the writing of this. At the time. It's so early S, so Jackson was a victim of an attempted shooting in the early morning, hours of June, the first one thousand nine hundred and eighteen a few hours after hitting the game, winning elevent inning home runner to a home game against the Toronto. Blue, Jays Jackson drove his vehicle to the singles bar he frequented in a push neighborhood of swinging pubs and night spots amid high rise apartments, man hands of the east side, while searching for a parking spot. He asked the driver of a vehicle that was blocking the way to move and a passenger in the vehicle began. Yelling absentes and racial slurs at Jackson before throwing a broken bottle. Its car after other passer, is recognized Jackson and began joking with him about apprehending them. One of the men in the car twenty five year old Manhattan resident Angel Viera, allegedly returned with a point. Thirty eight caliber revolver fired three shots at Jackson, each which missed the era was criminally charged. Attempted murder in legal possession of deadly weapon. News on the incident was the third ever story broadcast on CNN, which had its inaugeratin later. That day I mean that's too much going on. Then you know if that was to happen to a sports start day. I mean that like you'd, never hear the end of that, would you it's three shots is: will we get the Guy Washes with three shots at the hand, Canon so he's firing. These these home runs he's done to already goes for a third one and these kids, these coupon Rima kids, who I think, look just like the adult coop and Rebathe d. Some really good unreal, yeah they're cute enough kids, says yeah. Give us it give us a give us a third home run is no not no. Third, one he's already hit to coop. He hits it. Coop catches the ball some day, I'm going to become a big spot. Star says K, which is. This is something that I that I was tweeted about earlier one of the week now. We then have this this chap this narrator talking about the the rates. Actually Stephen Machat Y, all right WHO's, an insanely prolific, character, actor. The last fifty years he's started in TV shows from like star Skin Hush Kojak Mimi, Vice Beautin, the beast, both the original Ron, perman series and the newer one, which I didn't even know they did. It was like a couple years back SEINFELD GON to Le La Law, the XL DET space. Nine will be Texas ranger in the strain it's been in a ton of film star, ranging from Theodor Rex, the woe gobots dinosaur, buddy cop. Maybe I remember that sad lives, Cup free, three hundred watchman history of violence and the mother film has another exclamation a yeah. If you want to, for a podcast suggest this guy's career, because he's got two hundred and fifteen credits and in DB wow yeah, you know the worst. The worst thing of this is Davis. Now I have an idea for a podcast and my wife hates you, because I cannot do a third podcast suster one of my favorite horror, films, which I mentioned on. One of our shows recently were doing our top five horror films, and this was like one of the ones that always made it ponty pool and it's based in a radio station, a DJ yeah was yeah. That was a lot of fun yeah. I like one of the things I didn't know he was doing the narration on this until this podcast and I was doing with the facts for- and I realized- Oh Stephen Matty Kayano was a slow bunner, but it really I enjoyed that thing. I went. I didn't think it went because I was an fast pipes, action, zome movies, but that was proper slot bun and joy em, every minute, yeah and if you can't find it online anywhere to watch or can't find a DVD to buy, you can get the audio drama of the film on Youtube, which I was a it wasfilmed and recorded at the same time. I believe- and it was our long audio play and the long lines of awesome Wales broadcast o good God really yeah. That's that's right on my street. Okay I'll, be I'll. Add that to the to the mimory AD of things that I'll be listening to in the car next week. So this whole thing is about how sport is on its ass in America and surely you would think nothing is kind of is more prescient now than that. So it basically says that all they want to do is spend more time celebrating than they do the actual game. These American football players are doing a river doubt celebration which at the time would have been. You know very kind of Oh yeah. You know by the rive at the time was ye, but now of course, less so river dance, premed on the ninth of February thousand nine hundred and ninety five at the point theater Dublin was the Interval Act at one thousand, nine hundred and ninety four. Your revision show it has been seen by over twenty five million people- big Jesus Jesus- He a God, flatly made his money and he ah he, but he was only in it for like a yeah yeah, but his anchors gave it or something the is. Is a looks at you, your fatly. Looking you lie, you should be fat but you're, not not gonna go with Michael Fatally Joke Michael Battely, oh ileal, he'th loads, going on they're talking about. Does this the stadiums with awful names, so the color change names ones like the preparation, h, stadium and nice pad back the maxie tampon stadium at the rim. Think you know how much its gross to world wide. I dread to think more than a billion dollars, jeest seven point six million or were at that point: wow diculous amount. Monetary is its like it's crazy yeah. I think jay logs ass was less, you know, wasn't it it was con a million. I no more passes e t h the whole thing about river dances. Who is that for because i mean john yo, you've got the celtic connection. Of course you know being a scotsman yeah for you, i stuff a non it was. I don't even know who that was for it's a massive thing at a time and it's not like lane danson mars a freeze, but everybody could do it. You had to be really fast, so it was a really yeah. It was, i don't know who's directed that selling end. Do you think? That's why colin farrel so good at line dancing that is famously colin farel is a great line. Dancer is because he's irish right i go bein an is because he grew up in dublin and not on a fucking farm. The line from in bruce, which is something we have got to cover on. There really did as is going at some stadiums. I looked up. Philadelphia is the wells fargo center home with the philadelphia flyers philadelphia. I was going to say sixty nine, as that would be much better at the seventy sixes and the philadelphia wings. Nashville is the nis and micro state. A certain of the nissan stadium in his a microstation would be good, though, wouldn't it home of the tennessee titans of the nfl and the tennessee state tigers of tennessee state to university. Just where shack made all these millions charlotte is the bank of america, stadium they've also got the jerry richardson stadium and the trust field stadium, as well as the american legion memorial stadium was fucking poppies everywhere, but the yeah i mean i was astounded by how every stadium every single stadium is named after something, whereas of course in the uk, you've got a few. Stadiums have taken the opportunity to do that, but example down the road we've got. We've got carliles brunton park, which you wouldn't sponsor, i'm considering sponsor it for the podcast things probably going to cost ten quid. You know you've got celtic and rangers. Who will never do that and yes go, you know, but then you've got you've got things. You know like rother room play it some. You know some stupidly named stadium and you know people are accreton stanley who you can't afford not to, but if you did that with chelsea or spurs or man united, it would just be. You know it's sacristan, isn't it really almostt because of those big clubs? Although that doesn't stop man city with the ts leading i mean they do it arsenal as well. Wasn't it at type of course, nals the emerich yeah yeah, i mean as a forest fan. I know listeners it's a it's a sham. So as a far as fan, i don't think i've ever specifically purchased anything that sponsors forest, since it was le bat laga in the s and i used to drink a lot of the bats longer, but only because the the beer that sponsored them before no longer exists of, i guess neither does love back preparation. H, gentlemen: it's an american brand of medication made by our good friends at fizer. That's the twice on the truck. We've talked about fier in a jump yeh, that's a one! I go a we're in the dornaus old, her tea, all right. Okay, we're all you be e! Bad one, all the all the push farmers in penrith we got ours, it's using the treatment of hemoroid, of course, and emeroids are caused in part, at least by inflam blood vessels and most versions of preparation, each work by reducing inflammation in blood vessels, different formulas, but in greece it includes three percent shark liver oil. Get some of that short liver oil in uranus, gentlemen, is the story there. I think on she's also good for healing tattoos. I've heard all right, okay, sure if it's fully safe to use on them, but when i had a friend who's like you had tattoos, you always used to get it here, like four leaves on or use preparation age for it all right. I just wench hit to a pantin and a a in i plan a e pantin line of it and is happy with that. Tan was what i put on mine when i got mine on manafacter years ago, yeah, because it was the thing that you were told today, yeah, so there's this football player can't remember who we signed, for he thinks he's that miami is at minnesota. He's played here there and everywhere, which, as we would call it in the uk's a journeyman pro, i think, is the term that they use and then they're talking about all the teams that have moved the jazz moved to salt lake city, where they don't allow music as a dig at the mormons it. If you have not seen the the fantastic orgasmo listeners, a recommend, you go and watch that, what's what's the two a book, a mormon, musical correct the buck, mormon of the we saw a few years ago in some london was fantastic. Sa daly cassite we're sitting either way that that's the one yeah yeah, it's something something like no worries. Isn't it it's like the lion, king or something yeah yeah, the raiders, moved from la and then moved to la and then back to oakland. No one in la noticed now. Here's why that's so precent, because the raiders have moved again because he did they did the la thing and it didn't work and they've moved again. They are now the lost vegas raiders jesus, but don't worry because in twenty years time they'll be the space raiders. I was going to see that you're going to move on as this tin british crisp chat, great yeah, so basically they've decided. You know. The whole story is that we need a sport that people can get involved in. You know that that sport truly is in the hearts and minds of people who love sport and that one day will kind of get back to that. We now meet adult coop and adult rema and adult keeps saying bein mind earlier on. He said some day, i'm going to be a big sport star. What's he saying now there on a big sports bar i'm going to own a big spot, but which is a dream of a lot of people? It's not something i'm particularly into because i think the probablys dead fo ones, but should we want to own a big sports bar gentleman? I did a little bit of looking into this. If we want to own one in the eu, which i think we technically still can we can kind of do it, but we have to jump through some hoops now i don't know what's happening in bala medinas in spain right, but i can tell you they are giving sports bows away. I assume it's something to do with a pandemic and brexit right: fifteen thousand europe for a sports bar at six thousand nine hundred and fifty euro for a non sports bar. I mean that's just fucking pennies yeah. If we want to sports bar in tor fan in gwent north wales, which looks like the phoenix club i found it on there, it's too probably is an a workingman's club, two hundred and ninety five thousand pounds for that. A london cocktail bar somewhere in north landon, five hundred and seventy five thousand pounds. Meanwhile, in the us, if you want one, the presumptuously named fantastic sports bar and lounge in westchester new new york state is a hundred ninety five thousand dollars. An irish pub and grill in midtown manhattan will run you one point: one five million dollar reduce london. One! Isn't that bad? Considering north london, i told be pier yeah, you would- and i was looking at- that the the turnover was huge as well yeah. We have a cooperi watering, the plants aptly. You can use your in dort blunts, but not rash body waste like in the movie, so your in his rich in things that been used for a generation health plot to grow. Occasionally they will include dna from bacteria which includes genes for antibiotic resistance. Oh, so, if you piss on crops, you could get crops that give you antipatica resistance, which is a considered a greater frit humanity than the climate crisis. All right. This bacteria will die out pretty quickly. However, so you got to actually store it for a bit before using our plants or there's certain systems you can use to third lie plants. The moment where household is quite ego friendly, we're getting cat litter from a company called natter sam, which essentially gives us a delivery litter every month and every month they pick up the waste from the cat. So, every time the cat poop piece everywhere, we put it into a bag and we send it back to me in the month and they transfer that into first lizer. I have written that down because that sounds like something we need to do with the sea. All the eco friendly people at there with cats that just and codo ok, the fasti there you go not not sponsor in the podcast, but should probably sponsor the so yeah. That is not something i expected to learn, but that's what this podcast about. So i love it so they're at britney s house they walk in it's like a docker's commercial. In here everybody i've just written everybody's, a was per soul. Really i didn't think you'd show up. Well, look. We wouldn't miss this! No! No! I didn't you show, because i didn't invite you this place sucks at what o, what do you everyone's kind of doing all sorts of different things? What are you doing? You still sitting at home playing playing nintendo? Well, no, i'm in the first year of medical school. What are you doing? Still i'm playing intendo cuck does w. It's also advertisement for cosbi. Oh i i, the absolutely was yet and there's a little bit later on, where a guy's handing out cos beers in the in the stadium. So there was sponsors of the c y work. Life podcast, cosbi, yeah, jack j will be delighted. I give me some of that mountain man, beer in company with casern company founded in thousand eight hundred and seventy three okays, a hundred and forty eight years and they've, yet to still figure out to make a beer point no shape as a man. That's not drinking beer at the minute dan you could. You could have as money cause as you want just fucking. What was the line now used? Piss was rite, which kate says to me. All. The time was just part in o o an advertisement for chinos, because nell everybody was real, the chines and that that's that's the docket thing to it took me away because that i thought chines and khakis, but the same because it mentoit look up at this haly any difference. Apart from the thickness in the material, all right, obviously in kakis ave got pockets, but i was thinking, oh my god. For the years i thought i was ren chinos that to her khakis, i had no idea what i was wearing. She, no wine. I got colerne to it's. Just i think we is looking at to it. The majority was saying is more about the technic that we ever the actual things in the material so yeah, the more i or the more like. I assume what what you'd wear to know in the armed forces or to go adventuring. Perhaps i do the kaki yeah a skilled myself on the difference between chines and kakis. Here, okay- and we all now know that's great. Yes, they go to bricks. That's got britany room, they got the room, sniffins pants sniff in a pane and re logesi. Look at brit's vibrator. I am so jealous of you lintea. What are you doing in my mom's room? He's kind, the pats, a huge, no real bellarme kind of joke they had outside and they start shooting shooting basketball. You know, yeah we're really good at basketball. As long we have to run or dribble or anything like that, so you've got so so they bet these jokes. These jokes, like yeah, well, bet you two twenty dollar reimers like make it fifty do o got fifty dollar we've got twenty dollars, but he says we won't do what you guys do. You know this kind of the hood we're going to do the hood game that we know and it's baseball rules. So baseball rules is, you know, you've got a place that you shoot from and it's a single is a more difficult shot. The further away you go is that when i mentioned tors is that where horse comes, you mentions a hole yeah so horse. The only the only thing i know of horse right, i didn't know it was a thing. So if you miss a shot, you get a letter and if you get the forward horse, then that's when you that's, when you're out as it is, the only in is from those tony hawks games. You know the tony hawks pro skater games and you did you i was talking about you. There was a there was a bit of that where you had to do a various you to do a better trick than the person you're playing, and if i didn't, if you didn't get more points in thirty seconds on the first before due or hit the trick, you would get a letter, and that was horse. That's the only thing i knew it from right. Yeah re reference in two thousand and nine: it has the nba actually sanctioned a hall school petition. Okay, it was similar to the film, and that was renamed because of a sponsor, says sort of horse. It was called the nba all star, gyka competition, and you had to get ge. I co alright of ho. I see yo yehoi lasted two years because it's boring, i'm guessing stupid, yeah, so free froze. Ah it's like you're seven hand. Seven by in it, you need to get seventy one or ekart's by like having a toname with the affair, is to pinales out yeah, no sex, yeah you're all right, so they based this. This school they school these guys that coop spits beer at one of them is like. You can't do that. I said no, it's allowed it's a siout and they win, but the jokes get the girls is. What do we get, that it's the jobs? First, you get the jobs, then you get the khakis and then you get the cher an i'm like yeah nice that solace reference to it's a day later and they're playing in the driveway. The psycho in this case is steve. Perry, steve perry, that's go. Why is that boys? Why is the lead singer of journey a psycho? I could quite figure that out. Do any of us know anything about steve perry. That is he such a dig that no enough to sake anybody unattractive or what i don't an because he sings one of the songs. Lier one doesn't, i think, he's just the tone of his voice. He's kind of right. I have no idea. I know me and my friends used to play paul and we use to do psychos as well and the kinds of thing was. I just saying steve perry. That's like the shot. I always at everyone off well, we stay fire lit about journey in our in our current episode of everything we learned from the simpsons were man, tom were talking about the episode of vever ned flanders, which you can get elsewhere, just lit a good episode, so we learned a little bit about that. I used to use journeys, don't be be good to yourself. So as my interests music in wrestling, oh did you really really big uplifting song, and every time i hear i was like yeah, i'm gonna do me. Do you mentions now like yeah? I, like that great my question. My question to you is dean our journey crap rock or was rock? Oh man, the deftly l, the cheese scale, yeah very igh up on that because of everyone loves, don't stop believing, which is oh yeah. It was good, it's just it's well over played. Now it really is absolutely yeah. Well, i know someone who had it as their when they were getting married when they were coming down the aisle they played that so so, john, my jesus, so you did know them. You don't anymore yushan yourself from that a man well put it this way. It was part of the tv show, don't tell the bright, oh really right. If you ever watch that there was a show where they did the wrestling wedding m, and it was that wedding, i don't think they played. I because obviously coperate, but it was a way on. I think the wedding lasted about nine months. Jesus we well did this stop believing they told them not to stop believing that to parti didn't know who i so so that they're shooting and this this guy turns up this. This squeak right as to shut off the gaps right and this little tiny, scrawny actor gets mauled by the dog. I loved this character and i thought this character, as is basically just the butt of all the shitty things that happen to anybody. Yeah yeah the trip park arima on at de fate to get him a leading part. They only wanted to leads and the comedy and obviously gave him ham an exta all right. It would be the fort to get him an actual part in the movie he's brilliant. As sholde boy in orgasmo that guy i do that, have you seen it john yeah, a a bauta hamster style anymore. I knew you wouldn't as anymore, can't believe it's taken till now for you to tell us the story of how you don't want to do have stand. I do want to get the special edition. Dvid acts. Apparently they do a commentary matin tray and they do it completely drunk all right. Wow o, like im slagging, the movie off kind of jokingly, okay pop pot, the podcast before podcast yeah, a podcast for a thing yeah. I absolutely love these guys by the way, i can't believe i haven't had the opportunity to say it. I think they were robbed of best song for the south park. Blane, canada, yeah, absolutely brilliant. It's a great it's a great film. The music is exceptional. The writing is brilliant. It's i don't really watch south bark any more. I can't really watch the early stuff, because it's it's not great, but i can't watch any of the new stuff because i i don't know what's going on was what is going on with the new stuff. The last time i watched it, it was trump, possibly crooked, hillary yeah you, you do need to know what's going on in the current world. I i don't know half the things i talking about. Sometimes it's last time i watched it shif, wasn't it you're, ignorant you're, ignorant rage, train ride, train, that's still my utter favorite favorite episode that and you've been to you've been to japan dean. As you said, early run so you're a big fan of whale and dolphin. We and of an fukee yeah, i think about fuck, you wal fuck, you dolphin weekly and i haven't seen the episode in so long, but i think about that all the time i mean it makes sense. So this this character is shooting off the gas, isn't get more by the dog and they say, look take a shot and if you get the shot, then we'll let you shut off, shut off the gas. It takes the short and he misses. Of course, three months later, it's gained a crowd and it's basically this this kind of neighborhood game. That's people sat kind of on the garden and in the yard, watching them play it. Squeaks part of the team and one of the one of the lines is my absolute favorite of the syces. I hear your sister's going out with squeak. I go out with his sister now we're going to say, fucked up stuff to make a me shop wawes. We got out this sister fucked up. What's what's your favorite of the psychos boys, because it's plenty coming, i just i just i was a sucker for the nepean all right. Okay, i, like the one with the place, pinning small people, i'm so glad. You said that because that's like the last eva psycho, isn't it and it's really good. Just that the the mind one the mind one's creepy yeah. I like, of course i like there swear, he's, got his finger up and he cuts his finger off. It is yeah. It's like a fucking, forty movie. I really like that. All this as one way it makes their faces, where we all these retentis coming up to say i yeah that's a they're, all good they're, all good. To an extent that a d and squeak putting on all the masks in one of the montages, and only when he takes the mask off and they see, is real famous in a scare squeak, gets sacked and then move him in with them. Is it you guys rip on me? Thirty now forteen more times and i'm out of here we skipped to the final, it's being watched by there's a big crowd, there's local tv news and they win the world championship of basketball, which is like two neighborhoods: isn't it yeah? I got the shirts and skin steam, which is a tradicion method of denoting teams and school games yeah. This practice, not too short its promoted these days with, like girls and boys teams and and teachers being nance teachers are all manses. What do you? What did you leave tonight? Now, i'm going to get out stairs? I go. What did you learn tonight? Teachers are all not on yea a a suspicion. So let's say you got this, i know is an extra in this scene. I because i've seen this film so any time, but it's i've been watching it. So much s last couple of weeks and going back and watching bits here and they get notes. There's a scene where coo's about to shoot in the extra just behind him looks like he doesn't know how to clap. Oh right in he got make sound in on like extras and background and actors and he's got like a clear three inches of air between his hand. He's like doing this and at some point he looks, stops, looks down at his hands and starts doing it again. It's all these things are like a really awkward. I'm not going to go on see that now he's like second to the right second left of yeah taking the letter, the guy, when he's shooting and also you got the commentators in this game, one of them. The guy o, announces that the shirts, when the game is kato kalin right, i don't know if you know that is no, i don't anyone who's in to true crime will have. There is break up of that name. He is the most famous lodgin hollywood history, as he was living with o j simpson in his poor house with oj totally didn't, kill, nicol round simpson wow s. He was a prosecution star witness and his testimony win against o j's completely and he actually went out for burgers with oj right before he didn't do the thing he totally did. Do we his ain with the zuka previous firms of j simpson? I e linked in some sort of way, because that was on as before yeah i mean that that's great fact, but not only that it's it's super kind of like twisty. Isn't it you know, that's really come yeah. Maybe the gloves were him his, maybe that's why the glove didn't fit and that's why they had to acquit a is that the second week on the trut we've mentioned that o j simpson case is well john. She an that that episode isn't live, so you couldn't have known that we were talking about that now, yeah, that's always on people's minds. Oh no! It's absolutely people and again now. I said this last week and i'm not sorry to echo myself. Go away and watch that show the oj the people versus o j simpson. I think it's still on netflix ten. If you haven't seen it watch it. I know john hasn't seen it because he's got a week off so he's going to watch it this week at john, an it wants. Yet, as david swimmer go, that's who who's in it again david! So nathan, when i was a god's sake, is a was looking this up actually, so this isn't the face more a rumor, but apparently liam neeson has been approached by semantan were about reprising. The naked gun franchise o get out is so this year. Actually i to thousand and twenty one lea nesenus frank, drabbing yeah, i mean he's gone like full circle of his career, where he went like serious actor to random action star to like overplayed action. Stare he's like bruce willis at this point, where he he's doing any old crap with action in it, so him becoming a comedy actor. I, by there's a d of this, that i no t o from comin down to one of the first things: a shy. How we talk about spirits all the time on why it's not been an eye with peter o tool is a yeah is a great great funny is a funny steve, guttenberg film. I said it fine, i said it. Okay. Did you just see that? Yes, i said it's a steve, go funny, steve guttenberg film, and that first place comes to me movies. Great. I don't care who knows it. I bit about mission to moscow. Miami beach is pretty shit, but that's good to know. That's good, that we're in the same place jesus. What even is this a that we're not would not even we're not even in the fucking movie we're not even in the like today he sleep on sweet sic for the week yeah well, i could could well be the shirts when the skins do not. Here comes ted denslow, you love ted, denslow john, who is it yeah ogus, it's cabby canbys, giving new york in a it's. Do this see of jesus lay and gentlemen, the anti semitic podcast that you've always wanted i've written a board naniele i rat board name but sini translated. I borsten double oscar winner, of course, earlis borgnine, what you probably don't know about to, and actually we can't talk too much about him because we know he lived. He lived quite as old as he did because he liked wankin as we learned in the scannest, but he had a video documentary film about driving a called earnest borgnine on the bus. I get all the birds on my basket. Yehoi anis bore on on the bushes, where he drove a bus across the united states to meet his fans. You can get it it's on the internet somewhere. I couldn't find it for free, but i assume i'd be able to find it somewhere on the internet year. Forty five minutes in me, you find an panopeus me, a dish. Porlacu you give me a lift to to the station. You get darling. Look like a bus driver o. You look like a happy yeah on a helicopter pilot. One of the things on our show is we do. Are you a dead m yep? It's again will be sort of. I give some information about actor and we want to say when they died and how they died. So on a little mini game. When did his ball? Nine die, which yeah go you putting me on the spa, fucking podcast e went those born die two thousand and ten seven tis an incorrect, thud and entee is incorrect, is two thousand and twelve all right and how did you die got habeo cocteau, so i did elde failed miserably at the triple jump in the olympics in london. I assume you just died of old age, kidney failure right, okay, his kidneys died of old age, yeah yeah. So if he got a transplant, thou we'd have been pissing like a champion, find out later on. He in a movie which we will eventually get to. So we scored nothing there. Dan is what you're saying so we didn't add anything. Not anything. Co school draw, that's a ship. If ever there was a thing, so he says i i want to make basketball and actual will think he said you. He said the problem. Is you kids, with your dan fogelberg, you zima, and your pack, man, video games? You've got attention spans that are measured in miller seconds rather than minutes. Of course, you know me. I like to learn a little bit about whatever nonsense is just just mentioned in it. In a thing, zemer is a drink, zima, clear, molt, clear lightly, carbonated alcoholic beverage made en distributed by. Would you believe the cues viacom deal that phase in it yeah due one thousan, nine hundred and ninety three market is an alternative to be an example of what is now often referred to as a cooler, steve queen's a big fan. Four point: seven to five point: four percent algol by volume producing the united states ceased in october, two thousand and eight, but it's still marketed in japan and zima means winter in a number of slavic languages. They do like a cooler in japan. Actually do they really right? Okay, yeah, i think strong zeros are cool, is and apparently they're the ones that people drink it doesn't taste like alcohol is a like ten percent in and like giant can so you just will hammer them back and they absolutely kill people right. Okay thinks some term they use for as a guy jin killer, all right, okay, something like that. But yeah. Essentially people go over there drink them and they don't realize they have drunk. They are until they drunk out three or four of them, and i just staging around the place. I mean i'll, be honest with you. I like it. I like a strong beer like an pa or or something like that, i'm drinking a form bridge hook. Imperio. I pear at the moment seven point: four percent i'll know when i've drunk that i will sit ye. You just will know when i'm d pack, man, god. I can't believe we're talking about pack manners if three men of our rage and ours or just just general demean or don't know everything that there is to know about that fucking little yellow bastard, but listen, developed and owned by bandai. Namco, formerly an come midway of created them, a tari. Of course we know was the probably the big one mass mejor rink. The first entry was released. No kid in one thousand nine hundred and eighty packman is one of the longest running best selling and highest grossing video game franchises in history. Just behind dizzy. I assume no o, god yea a chuck egg, its willie h, horosho skin. It's regular releases over the last forty years, so many forty eight million copies across all platforms and as grossed fourteen billion dollars, most of which was from the original video game. Recently i played, i think it was packman infinite or something no packman, one thousand nine hundred nine on the switch, which was free, which was basically tetris, ninety nine, but with you doing pack man and when you got killed, you were out and if you didn't get killed you and not yet people get killed before you. You fuck off. Oh yeah. I've seen that and on lane thing, yeah, i'm teches. Ninety nine i'm one hundred percent behind it's brilliant yeah, because once i finished fourth fucking loser, i am packman of originally called puck. Man. Yes well do, but they change your name because of the graffiti nist. That's things we learned from scott pilgrim, the film yeah yeah, the future episode which i'm specifically laying off watching again. I've got a steel book blue rays somewhere on the shelf, but i'm specifically not watching it again until we do an episode, because i just i want to come into it- cleans yeah yeah what yo start hating the movie, because you've had to watch it so much. Well, i say yeah if you, if you want to look back through our back catalog every film that we've watched safer, probably airplane, i hate, because i've seen airplane or to link back to this movie so same director. Of course, i've seen air playing the same number of times, if not more than years. I've been on this earth, so i've seen airplane, probably forty five fifty times, and i'm only for two years old. So there you go that's and care mab dolge bar, which we all come to point eventually tonight. He wants it to be like the old days. No moving teams, no teams moving cities. He wants everyone to be paid the same just like when i was a kid and i want them all to be treated like indentured servants. I gin wow, so they agree they do it and five years later we're in this little statum. I think these stadium sets are really kind of the cute little sets that it looks really good. It's got like this. This, this baseball kind of diamond on the ground, yeah and they've all got this garage with this garage kind of a sad. What looks like a facade anyway, as we learned later on when coop goes flying a this loess. I thought t was quite funny. I like that at the house bands did anybody spot the house band for the beers, a real big fish, real big fish. I have seen real big fish, probably more times than i've seen any of the band. I have seen real big fish, maybe five or six times and i've got. To be honest, i have never seen the same line up twice at now. I think there's only one of them left i m by about them, but i'm guessing you know all about them anyway. Well, i they o listeners, don't so go for it. So there's a big scar, punk revival in the mid s, so they got pretty big off that they lacked the winston i lead to so they didn't they go. I got a son kind of popular, but not really big, because i need like a big front person charismatic or you know really good, looking to step over being scarp on to popular culture. Their albums actually tell a story as they go through them from the first one was everything sucks, which is a self release debut to turn the radio off. They were telling a story: the band trying to make it for me to style a pop, the culture, the biggest hit off, that album is called sell out, which they consider they actually did to get to the album release itself and the label contract. Then they had. Why do they rock so hard? This is the alban they released when the in the film. This is about how they made it during the tor on the album two members of the band leave, one of them after committing battery on a security yard at the venal. Oh you'll hate him specifically, then now we deserve it. He re, then they hit the area where they fed up with what they're doing and released cheer up, which was a contractual release and they made which they had to make and then follow that we we're not happy until you're happy, which is the bitter and angry album which they released. After being, let go from the label themselves so yeah they tell a story for other albums, but it's all bounty scarf funk anyway. Yeah no and i own each and every one of those albums on cd, because you know the s and w and yeah real a few episodes of that mostly featuring covers, which they do one in this film, which is a great cover. That's a funk ton there's only one original remaining member, and that is front man, aaron barret m yeah he's eating all the rest of them. I think, is a works. Yeah the it was weird because they always had kind of like there's, always a big offish job. It's weird, because there's there's two front men: isn't it you know they always kind of had you know the two from men depended on the song, but yeah you got me thinking about cheer up, which is a t he's a really fucking awful, like doldrum kind of album that ends with a wow. I just want to go. Listen real, big fishing in which it is a is a saturday night, and i am only forty two years old so on an they've. Also got these these fantastic and look. I've goin to love with it. They've got these absolutely superb cheer leaders these overly sexualized shibuya. So it's hard to believe that the commentation, a sense art believe five years ago. This was only played in driveways and it's hard to believe that five years ago those girls were in grade school. You just like a lamb, because the eldest, the oldest you can be in grade school. Gentlemen, he's fourteen years old that we're back to nuns teachers is a thanks. Not ten ounces, yeah, absolutely well yeah, there's plenty of them not just on the bbc wish. I was on the bbc gravy train anyway. Coop hits a home run and it's down to squeak to hit one so squeaks watching watching everything, even though it's this tiny little car and they do this on, but he's watching on this hand held tv and the one thing i thought about this, and i know dean you're a bit of a retro gamer as it were. All i could think was. Does anybody remember the game gear tv, which was the thing that you plugged in the top of your game? Gas? My so started game gear thing that you pulled in the top of your game, get which had a little dial on it where you strolled through to get your tv channel, and it also had a massive aerial that you put it like: a fucking police scanner, a antal tv anyway shock all right. Okay, that cause you yahmni. What was your model of handel tv job? It was all it was as alba old bo jessica, yeah like that, could have been that actually, you that are the usual technics techniques- ce right, okay, the model of tv he's watching the tv, the bright, yellow one is a v tg action, sport vision with a three point: two inch screen three point: two inches man, deponent of your pleasure, o like your pleasure right there. I did recently put the batteries in my in my game, boy color. So i could play monkey puncher after feature in on what the fuck do you want, because they were talking about monkey puncher in an episode, i've got a copy of monkey put jane. I put the batteries in, and i lasted probably about twenty minutes, for i have to give up with a headache. Yeah that screen is just far too small to small is far too small. Wasn't the back lit one either? No, no wit. No, it was the yeah just that just the standard one which i remember playing in the back of the car on the way home from a visit to family and when it gets dark. You know you can only play it when you know five. Second, two second intervals when you go past the street like yeah, so this is the denslow cup which is named after an this organized character. It's like the f, a cup final, of course, or the world series. Coops got the final shot dennis lo at the guy sykes him out by saying that looks like your boy: denzil is about to buy the farm he's choking on this hot dog, coop sies falls drops over, they lose he's like. I can't believe what you lose, do the happy dance and that and it just bought everything to swimming back the amount of times. I would say to myself and those pissed off tou the habitants to in the habitants. Do the song as well don't have to do this song. Do the sung during the happy dance haco tries to help denslow, but it's a dozen egg night, because that's what we do in american sports. We have stupid things to do so. We can't get to denslow because he's being he's been hit. Wele the slow motion looks like a kind of a thing out of an you know like an american war. Movie is been hit by all these these eggs and and he can't get to him now. I couldn't help but look up all of the stupid fucking ideas that american sports teams do to get people through right. So i came up with a couple. The seattle mariners apparently had a compost night right. Where, if you arrived for the game, they would send you home with a bag of compossible material. Now the composite material was a cigarette but a broken down hot dogs and all that shit yeah. That was underneath the bleachers. So let me do very well this one's brilliant, the charleston vever dogs, the nobody night. Apparently they thought it ud be a great idea and get the teams and headlines if they had an official attendance of zero for one of their games, which is why they called it. The nobody night fans would already paid for their ticket were locked out of the game and no one was allowed to enter the stadium until the fifth inning jesus, because that's when the games declared official and the attendance is recorded, they they lost five. Two and all of the runs were seen in the first five innings, the first four indins i mean fuck off american sports, just go home, you've drunk twenty cars and you can still probably drive, or even if you can't, you probably will, because america he gets to denslow denslow, is basically dying and he's like what is it at least he's waving the the hot dog bun. He paid love to get you one, but they stop serving them after the upto the seven days and in the you i look to it o. Is it true all right? Okay, so so, if you wanted, a hot dog lad, the the ball game, three dollars at yankee stadium at seven dollars, twenty five at the washington nationals, national park, jesus and six dollars. Seventy five, a it t park, which is home of san francisco dear dear dear, for got in bread in it, just basically be playing some baseball ik, because it's only fifty peop for a hot we're talking. So totanen was kate vine in london that it was the otto has like a little arena of the side of it. Was it round the back of the o tos that when he just put a couple of blokes in a cage in an alley this, the the indigo that was it so ben you on the side of it? I've seen cementeth to his spoken? More word? Oh a yeah! I was a lot like s, terrible acoustics in there. So him it was quite bad for the cage. Finding was quite good, but thou for one beer was eight pounds. Fifty for a pinted, belck, betes red shapes. Well, no you've been looking. It was red stroike to bog or something o fucking heats red sheep mine. I love red strike. No, it's not it's not gig! Unless it's red stripe, we hanekin, but all right. Okay, it's decent book! We went to were to new wore a couple of months ago in manchester in heaton park and the only beer i mean i was driving to a number beer any way, but the only beer on offer was, i think, seven quite a pint and it was pints of karlsburg. It was a pint can of karlsburg. They put they basically empty. A pint can into a plastic glass to set you on your way for seven quid, because you're a fucking cat go, go, don't do gangs better, they did yeah she'll, do the fucking ar so de denslow buys the farm, as is the line and they're interviewing the interviewing cooper at the end. In the thing, and it's a thing in a me in america, they're always wearing these like hats and tshirts, and things that save winner super bowl winner and all these kind things. But what they've done in this movie they've, given them their branded gear, but it says loser egret. This is a good time with that and the guys interview in him- and he says you know- is how are you doing this is yeah. I don't think i should be on my own tonightand, the guy. The guy turns away from him, and he just says it seems to be really raining shit on joe cooper tonight, they're in the car park, and he is so yasmin belief. I haven't thought about. Yasmin bleeds first for the i decades right, she's had some she's had some issues that girl she's had some many some problems, because she can't just run around in a red swimsuit, all the time yeah the these are gone. She wants celebrity jeopardy by the way ten ten sandolas to ten sandolas to bres canser jerry, let's disapear like post he playboy, because i in my head was like everyone from bay. What she's done play with, but he's never done it. No matter how far i looked, i could not find her naked sorry, it's folly, because i didn't struggle to find playmate of the year victoria self stead yeah en mcafee, obviously yeah. Absolutely i make to the year yeah, certainly better than seeing a cousin. It is which i discovered. I absolutely no idea her cousin is the actor musima lisele, no idea, i just don't know he married donny walberg as well. It was a new one, yeah and she's a fucking anti vaco, so fuck her. So you old rather see melis mock arfe than jenny mc coffee. These days yeah, i e donny walburg he's not the he's, not the one that hates asian people. That's his brother right, he's brothers, the one these brothers, the one that bad an asian guy because of vietnam was something fucking sees what our so people are still paying money to see. Marky mark films a mark anyway, i'm sure that's. We just keep reference in the same fucking things in series to very much nice series, one and so jesmin brief works for this dream. Come true foundation right yeah the dream come true foundation. Isn't a real thing, but the maker wish foundation is created in one thousand nine hundred and eighty. They do what it says on the tin and the celebrity that made the most wishes come true. Are there any guesses as tony that might be jesus? Well, he certainly made some nightmare come through jenny da. I know this is how do you now? You can't see me john seno, you can't see him, but you can still see him. Do six hundred and fifty making wish his co what s this john sena making come true. I just meeting him. I mean he's he's like a suber, really s a kiss e h. I s. He looks like a thong as well, but i know i've seen i seen him wrestle. I want some when i used to it for sky. I want some tickets for one of the wwf rest we for christ to mew rest wrestling things and i'm not in the w at all, but i went to see it with my ex. She has on the tickets at work and went see. Do what had a fantastic time. You know it was all done on a tv. It was in glasgow, john, at the at the ice hockey, the drina yeah, when e wan a fantastic time and it's i would rather go and watch it, i'm not massively into it, but i do like a smaller wrestling show which obviously donal appreciate, but we at a great time- and i kind of got back on w we for maybe six months till i realized it- was just all fucking putting money in the pockets of the worst human being alive, not donald trump, but one of his big supports. Yeah. I mean people. Look at johnsy, jose like the big suber and people look up to him. You think years ago, people looking up the whole cogan, hmm yeah yeah. Can i learn o coan, i learned the other day is a revisionist of history. He came out the other day to say that andrew the giant died two weeks after he power bombed him. We first of all, i do think hall co could ever power bombed and doing the giant to? I think they fought in like wrestle to right, which is something like seven years died in three there you can. Okay, yeah i mean revision is my free yeah. That was like a couple of years. I mean you died. Ninety two. So with me a free in track, the one recoes, a massive race, yeah he's awful yeah. Here you go, he loves. I ate one o cocolamus too much fuck too much of you not see that video google, that that's that's some shit right, okay, so contract. So i is signing autographs for them. Remer arrives and says it says. Oh, i know i love kids yeah and he says: hey kid. Heads up throws a ball at him. Hit him directly in the face and knocks him out. Travis is blind explains why i wasn't very good with his hands now this news report- and i think i probably mentioned this during the escape from new york episode. In fact, i know for a fact. I did because i wouldn't miss the opportunity, the guys talking about denslow. He says in a periods of time finally ran out for the old cock sucker, which i say it at the time, a lot of the time when somebody dies, especially if someone i don't like a lot of the time, a bit of audio, for that sounds so word because he's obviously a dr yes, when, yes, he said i've, no idea. Why, though, and if you try and look up online, if there's like any reason for it you to do old, cock ocker, it's worrying olthat, one yeah les before you got the rights when they start and winning the game. Can you tell me which sporting event in one tuan, nine hundred n? No nine is the first modern day right after a sporting event, which two teams are involved with it. They go will give you a bit of a clue which two teams evolved in the first ever sports, right, wolverhampton, wanderers yeah and i etonians ridges, so tic all right, jo rof course. It fucking was like an a v in it. Yeah o nine scottish cut fine. Also tic and ranges went to two or draw instead of going to an extra time the crowd invaded the pitch and the match was called off with a hundred people injured. O ousel abuse was up three hundred percent that day, as always, with a fucking old, firm game. That's a give the bloody are. This restaurant is round up pies the other line that he says is theodore denslow d, h, n. Eighty two, his hair piece was twenty four is now he's got this video will, which is really weird. So what i discovered from this was densil was an actor like he was a like a western movie actor right because he's talking throughout about about- and these are the chaps that i wore on rooting- toton some o god, so a yeah yeah and he says- and here's the poncho that saved me from the rain in such and such it's all kind of going on in the background. While everyone else is having a conversation, because i've watched it twice already, i was kind o what the fuck is dense saying in this scene. I do nothing, no vet and baxter as sat together, he's commiserating her. We all know she's going to be given the team there's this there's. This niece gets given a plate commemorating the pope's visit to dodger stadium, and i was like surely that never happened. Apparently, the pope visit dodger stadium in one thousand nine hundred and eighty seven, our old friend, pope j, p, doss, of course, so films don't always like it as it's the largest crowd in stadium history, at sixty three thousand and at the at the time at least. Now it's a hundred and fifteen thousand three hundred and one for a preseason friendly between the red socks and the dodges, a fucking preseason friendly. He leaves the team to coop, but only if they win the denslow cup this year and then, if they don't, if that will get the team, if that, of course, is his geny mccarthy, as e semi disgusted now coopid like to talk to you alone and nobody leaves the room like he gives them like seconds. Nobody leaves the room they all carry on. You remember that time. You had crabs and the only thing that would help was that lotion k now yeah. I well find another thing for it: us rubbin it into his body and singing i'm too sexy, which i mean i would like to say, really dates the film, but that sounds like seven years old at this point: yeah yeah, i'm too sexty by rights at fred. I sorry, if you got mtesa fred, do no no i've as got a fuck this guy on tunie hundred n ninety one w record number one in australia, austria, new zealand, holland, canada, the us and second in the uk, probably behind joe donty, should up be your face because that's always like number one over other things. Isn't it oh yeah, yes, number one over van correct to o vienna. It is platinum in australia and the us the fucks buy in that, even in ninety one, a lot of old shit, physical media yeah. Well i mean you know: welwet existed at the time, so why not? Oh janet jenna gets season tickets for the kids, which seems like a really like. Surely he could just do that even if he wasn't dead, you know. Why would you have to give those in his will and then that's only for like this season. I don't know there was just something about that. Just didn't didn't really make a lot of sense to me anyway. Yeah it's a bit easy like a millionaire, yeah yeah, i could have given it a lot more nolte or just created a box for the kids yeah exactly back to talking to a vet. You know look this isn't necessarily over for you maybe come over at some point and we can lay some carpets. I haven't mentioned that it's robert vaughan, robert bawn, is another one of these actors who seems to be very gain for all this kind of stuff like he, like borg, nine he's in on it. Isn't he he under one hundred percent, is in on the fun that they says and later on, we'll get to another zuckers kind of i wo
“Your Context is the lens through which you see the world. When your Context is rigid and fixed, that's when things become hard” In today's 1:40 episode of The Radio Free Enterprise Minute, life coach Reginald Jackson describes how changing your perspective can change what's possible for you to achieve. Watch, search, download, or listen to our entire conversation on Radio Free Enterprise, “Discovering Your Why in Business with Coach Reggie Jackson” (36:27): https://radiofreeenterprise.com/discovering-your-why-in-business-with-coach-reggie-jackson/ Learn more about Coach Reggie Jackson: https://www.totalbrilliancecoaching.com/
“The words that we use communicate thoughts, feelings, and expressions oftentimes that we're not even aware of.” In today's 1:17 episode of The Radio Free Enterprise Minute, life coach Reginald Jackson describes the power of our words to create excuses for inaction. Watch, search, download, or listen to our entire conversation on Radio Free Enterprise, “Discovering Your Why in Business with Coach Reggie Jackson” (36:27): https://radiofreeenterprise.com/discovering-your-why-in-business-with-coach-reggie-jackson/ Learn more about Coach Reggie Jackson: https://www.totalbrilliancecoaching.com/
“Education, always being willing to learn and being open to new things, is what allows you to grow.” In today's 1:38 episode of The Radio Free Enterprise Minute, life coach Reginald Jackson explains the importance of lifelong learning to support lifelong growth. Watch, search, or listen to our entire conversation on Radio Free Enterprise, “Discovering Your Why in Business with Coach Reggie Jackson” (36:27): https://radiofreeenterprise.com/discovering-your-why-in-business-with-coach-reggie-jackson/ Learn more about Coach Reggie Jackson: https://www.totalbrilliancecoaching.com/
“Any time someone asks me to speak to their group, the first question I ask is, ‘What do you want them to walk away with?' Most people aren't prepared to answer that question.” In today's 1:09 episode of The Radio Free Enterprise Minute, life coach Reginald Jackson explains the importance of clarity when hiring a speaker for your group. Learn more about Coach Reggie Jackson: https://www.totalbrilliancecoaching.com/
In this episode, Dr. Reginald Jackson (Michigan) places the recent NHK Black Lives Matter video in the context of historical depictions of Blackness dating back to the 16th century, discussing how the video reveals enduring anti-Black attitudes in Japan shaped by these earlier depictions along with reflecting on the racist roots of Japanese studies in the United States.
Reginald M. Jackson is an Independent running for Knox County Commission's District 1 seat.
Reginald Jackson's inspiring new book takes a transdisciplinary approach to rethinking how we read, how we pay attention, and why that matters deeply in shaping how we understand the past, live in the present, and imagine possible futures. Textures of Mourning: Calligraphy, Mortality, and The Tale of Genji Scrolls (University of... Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Reginald Jackson’s inspiring new book takes a transdisciplinary approach to rethinking how we read, how we pay attention, and why that matters deeply in shaping how we understand the past, live in the present, and imagine possible futures. Textures of Mourning: Calligraphy, Mortality, and The Tale of Genji Scrolls (University of... Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Reginald Jackson’s inspiring new book takes a transdisciplinary approach to rethinking how we read, how we pay attention, and why that matters deeply in shaping how we understand the past, live in the present, and imagine possible futures. Textures of Mourning: Calligraphy, Mortality, and The Tale of Genji Scrolls (University of Michigan Press, 2018) explores the relationship between reading, dying, and mourning across three central texts: the Heian period The Tale of Genji; the twelfth century Illustrated Handscrolls of the Tale of Genji (or, Genji Scrolls); and the twenty-first century Resurrected Genji Scrolls exhibition. The book’s analysis pivots on some key questions, including: “How does the desire to observe dying bodies potentially damage them?”; and “how do these deteriorating bodies in turn alter the texture of linguistic and visual representation?” The book addresses these questions while helping readers understand and appreciate calligraphy as a “kinetic medium” through which we might “chart the shifting contours of mortality’s link to legibility between terrains of written text and painted image.” In tracing Genji’s decompositional aesthetics across the four major parts of the book – Dying, Decomposing, Mourning, Resurrecting – Jackson’s writing simultaneously helps us to understand how mourning can itself be a kind of reading (and how “dwelling with the dead” can be a critical practice) at the same time that his writing becomes itself a form of mourning. As he reminds us in the book, mourning is not simply about experiencing loss: it can also be a resource for thriving. Textures of Mourning demonstrates what that might look like both when studying the medieval past, and when using it as a resource to inform the contemporary present and its many forms of violence. Ranging across art history, Japanese studies, and performance studies, this is a movingly and gorgeously composed book that should serve as a model for what transdisciplinary scholarship can be, and a reminder of the importance of performing and supporting more work that dances across disciplinary boundaries. Carla Nappi is the Andrew W. Mellon Chair in the Department of History at the University of Pittsburgh. You can learn more about her and her work here. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Reginald Jackson’s inspiring new book takes a transdisciplinary approach to rethinking how we read, how we pay attention, and why that matters deeply in shaping how we understand the past, live in the present, and imagine possible futures. Textures of Mourning: Calligraphy, Mortality, and The Tale of Genji Scrolls (University of Michigan Press, 2018) explores the relationship between reading, dying, and mourning across three central texts: the Heian period The Tale of Genji; the twelfth century Illustrated Handscrolls of the Tale of Genji (or, Genji Scrolls); and the twenty-first century Resurrected Genji Scrolls exhibition. The book’s analysis pivots on some key questions, including: “How does the desire to observe dying bodies potentially damage them?”; and “how do these deteriorating bodies in turn alter the texture of linguistic and visual representation?” The book addresses these questions while helping readers understand and appreciate calligraphy as a “kinetic medium” through which we might “chart the shifting contours of mortality’s link to legibility between terrains of written text and painted image.” In tracing Genji’s decompositional aesthetics across the four major parts of the book – Dying, Decomposing, Mourning, Resurrecting – Jackson’s writing simultaneously helps us to understand how mourning can itself be a kind of reading (and how “dwelling with the dead” can be a critical practice) at the same time that his writing becomes itself a form of mourning. As he reminds us in the book, mourning is not simply about experiencing loss: it can also be a resource for thriving. Textures of Mourning demonstrates what that might look like both when studying the medieval past, and when using it as a resource to inform the contemporary present and its many forms of violence. Ranging across art history, Japanese studies, and performance studies, this is a movingly and gorgeously composed book that should serve as a model for what transdisciplinary scholarship can be, and a reminder of the importance of performing and supporting more work that dances across disciplinary boundaries. Carla Nappi is the Andrew W. Mellon Chair in the Department of History at the University of Pittsburgh. You can learn more about her and her work here. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Reginald Jackson’s inspiring new book takes a transdisciplinary approach to rethinking how we read, how we pay attention, and why that matters deeply in shaping how we understand the past, live in the present, and imagine possible futures. Textures of Mourning: Calligraphy, Mortality, and The Tale of Genji Scrolls (University of Michigan Press, 2018) explores the relationship between reading, dying, and mourning across three central texts: the Heian period The Tale of Genji; the twelfth century Illustrated Handscrolls of the Tale of Genji (or, Genji Scrolls); and the twenty-first century Resurrected Genji Scrolls exhibition. The book’s analysis pivots on some key questions, including: “How does the desire to observe dying bodies potentially damage them?”; and “how do these deteriorating bodies in turn alter the texture of linguistic and visual representation?” The book addresses these questions while helping readers understand and appreciate calligraphy as a “kinetic medium” through which we might “chart the shifting contours of mortality’s link to legibility between terrains of written text and painted image.” In tracing Genji’s decompositional aesthetics across the four major parts of the book – Dying, Decomposing, Mourning, Resurrecting – Jackson’s writing simultaneously helps us to understand how mourning can itself be a kind of reading (and how “dwelling with the dead” can be a critical practice) at the same time that his writing becomes itself a form of mourning. As he reminds us in the book, mourning is not simply about experiencing loss: it can also be a resource for thriving. Textures of Mourning demonstrates what that might look like both when studying the medieval past, and when using it as a resource to inform the contemporary present and its many forms of violence. Ranging across art history, Japanese studies, and performance studies, this is a movingly and gorgeously composed book that should serve as a model for what transdisciplinary scholarship can be, and a reminder of the importance of performing and supporting more work that dances across disciplinary boundaries. Carla Nappi is the Andrew W. Mellon Chair in the Department of History at the University of Pittsburgh. You can learn more about her and her work here. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Reginald Jackson’s inspiring new book takes a transdisciplinary approach to rethinking how we read, how we pay attention, and why that matters deeply in shaping how we understand the past, live in the present, and imagine possible futures. Textures of Mourning: Calligraphy, Mortality, and The Tale of Genji Scrolls (University of Michigan Press, 2018) explores the relationship between reading, dying, and mourning across three central texts: the Heian period The Tale of Genji; the twelfth century Illustrated Handscrolls of the Tale of Genji (or, Genji Scrolls); and the twenty-first century Resurrected Genji Scrolls exhibition. The book’s analysis pivots on some key questions, including: “How does the desire to observe dying bodies potentially damage them?”; and “how do these deteriorating bodies in turn alter the texture of linguistic and visual representation?” The book addresses these questions while helping readers understand and appreciate calligraphy as a “kinetic medium” through which we might “chart the shifting contours of mortality’s link to legibility between terrains of written text and painted image.” In tracing Genji’s decompositional aesthetics across the four major parts of the book – Dying, Decomposing, Mourning, Resurrecting – Jackson’s writing simultaneously helps us to understand how mourning can itself be a kind of reading (and how “dwelling with the dead” can be a critical practice) at the same time that his writing becomes itself a form of mourning. As he reminds us in the book, mourning is not simply about experiencing loss: it can also be a resource for thriving. Textures of Mourning demonstrates what that might look like both when studying the medieval past, and when using it as a resource to inform the contemporary present and its many forms of violence. Ranging across art history, Japanese studies, and performance studies, this is a movingly and gorgeously composed book that should serve as a model for what transdisciplinary scholarship can be, and a reminder of the importance of performing and supporting more work that dances across disciplinary boundaries. Carla Nappi is the Andrew W. Mellon Chair in the Department of History at the University of Pittsburgh. You can learn more about her and her work here. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This is a Vintage Church Podcast sermon titled #doBetter Podcast given by Deacon Godsey, Felix Rodriguez, Kristina McCollum, Toni Detherage, Reginald Jackson. You can listen to other Vintage Church sermon podcasts by clicking here. You can subscribe to our podcasts through iTunes by clicking here. This will open iTunes.
Don't tell me. Charolastros never do anything the easy way. February 25, 2015 - Drunk Levels 3-5