Podcast appearances and mentions of ricky james

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Best podcasts about ricky james

Latest podcast episodes about ricky james

The Radio Vagabond
350 EXTRAORDINARY TRAVELS: How Young Explorers See the Globe Differently

The Radio Vagabond

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2025 58:19


Welcome to a new season with all new episodes. In this first one, you can join me for an inspiring episode recorded at the Extraordinary Travel Festival in Bangkok – a celebration of extreme travel and adventure. This episode features four remarkable young travellers: Adam Ryan, Andriel Viana Souza, Cameron Mofid, and Ricky James. They share their unique approaches to travel, from cultural immersion and slow travel to philanthropy and tackling remote destinations. Key takeaways include: Adam Ryan: Discovering patience and adaptation on a transformative journey through India. Andriel Viana Souza: Exploring Afghanistan's culture through photography and personal connections. Cameron Mofid: Building schools in Lagos, Nigeria, through his nonprofit, Humanity Effect. Ricky James: Gaining deep cultural insights from slow travel and immersive stays in conflict zones. Recorded during ETF, this conversation offers a glimpse into the lives of adventurous travellers, redefining what it means to explore. If you're interested in unique perspectives on travel or dream of your next big trip, don't miss this episode.

Radiovagabond med Palle Bo fra rejse hele verden rundt
399 EKSTRAORDINÆRE REJSER: Hvordan unge rejsende redefinerer oplevelser

Radiovagabond med Palle Bo fra rejse hele verden rundt

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2025 58:19


Velkommen til en ny sæson af Radiovagabond med helt nye episoder. Denne er optaget i Bangkok under Extraordinary Travel Festival – en begivenhed, der hylder ekstrem rejse og eventyr. Festivalen samler nogle af verdens mest inspirerende rejsende, der deler deres ekstraordinære historier og oplevelser. Jeg taler med fire unge rejsende, der er et levende eksempel på festivalens ånd: Adam Ryan, der deler, hvordan Indien har lært ham tålmodighed og tilpasning. Andriel Viana Souza, der tager os med på sin rejse til Afghanistan, fanget gennem sit kamera. Cameron Mofid, der bruger rejser til at gøre en forskel gennem sin nonprofit Humanity Effect, som driver skoler i Lagos, Nigeria. Ricky James, der omfavner langsom rejse og meningsfulde forbindelser, selv i konfliktzoner. Extraordinary Travel Festival er ikke kun for dem, der vil besøge alle lande – den er for alle, der elsker inspirerende rejsefortællinger. Lyt med og bliv inspireret. Læs mere og lyt til episoden her: Radiovagabond.dk/399-etf

Valeesse - One Night - One Dance
ONE DANCE - One night - Valeesse - Puntata 3

Valeesse - One Night - One Dance

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2020 60:08


Tracklist - 15 GENNAIO 20201. Alan Walker - Darkside (feat. Au_Ra & Tomine Harket)2. R City ft Adam Levine - Locked Away (Diesis 2K20 Bootleg)3. TY1 Ft Capo Plaza Dosseh - Cest la vie (Ricky James extended boot)4. Younotus Janieck Senex - Narcotic (Umberto Balzanelli Francesco Palla Michelle Bootleg)5. Nirvana - Smells Like Flashdance Alex Nocera Sergio Mauri Re-Work6. Aya Nakamura - Mexer Pookie (Rivaz & Botteghi TOOL)7. Dombresky feat. Migos- Soul Sacrifice vs Bad and Boujee (MATTZ Mashup)8. King Africa - Salta (Mauri J Big Reunion Tribal Edit)9. Justin Bieber vs Crazibiza vs Eva Simmons - That Power Around Policeman (Matt Ban Showcase Mashup)10. Danzel - Pump It Up 2019 (Fraxwell DJ Bootleg Mix)11. Edward Maya Vika Jigulina - Stereo Love (Umberto Balzanelli Francesco Palla Michelle Rework)12. Daddy Yankee - Con Calma (Valeesse Remix)13. Felguk INGEK x Tom Jane - Get Get Down x Take Control Criminal Noise (Franz Ragga Edit)14. Disco Fries - Family Affair (VIP Mix)15. Meduza - Piece of your heart (Valeesse Remix)16. Alicia Keys & Jack Bugs - This Girl Is Dirty (Braaten & Chrit Leaf Mashup)17. Fisher vs Salmo - You Little Charlie (Rudeejay & Da Brozz Mashup)18. Meduza Vs Supermode - Tell Me Why You Lose Control (Djs From Mars vs Prezioso Bootleg)19. Swedish House Mafia - Antidote (Valeesse "Blue" Mash up)ULTIMO DISCO20. Dj Ross - Dreamland

Crime In Music
001 - I'm Rick James B_itch!

Crime In Music

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2018 43:30


We tell the tale of James Abrose Johnson Jr., from Buffalo, NY. Meeting musical legends like; John Coltrane, Etta James and Miles Davis, while collecting book with his mother at the age of 10, Little Ricky James Matthews starts his journey into musical fame and fortune. Count how many times Ricky James flees the country in our 1st ever episode of Crime in Music! #MurderMystery #TrueCrime #MusicHistory #CrimeHistiry #MusicLife #MusicBusiness #RickJames #SuperFreak #podcast

Bionic Planet: Your Guide to the New Reality
032 | How the Trump Administration Is Undermining the Clean Water Act, Part One

Bionic Planet: Your Guide to the New Reality

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2018 54:19


This is the fifth in a five-part series. You can find the first installment here. US Environmental Protection Agency boss Scott Pruitt is gone – not because of his environmental malfeasance, but because his $43,000 phone booth, his $100,000 trip to Disneyland, and his attempts to get his wife a lucrative job were too tacky even for an administration built on bling. His replacement, Andrew Wheeler, is less embarrassing but more dangerous. A coal lobbyist until last year, Wheeler is also a long-time adviser to climate-science denier James Inhofe and a sure bet to continue Pruitt’s policies – albeit with more stealth and fewer attention-grabbing abuses of power. Pruitt’s departure comes just one week after Justice Anthony Kennedy announced his own retirement from the US Supreme Court, and those two departures have overshadowed the publication of a document that Pruitt and Army Public Works boss Ricky James dropped on us last Friday – a document that mentions Kennedy 64 times and illustrates as well as anything the underhanded way Pruitt subverts environmental protections: not through argumentation, but through sabotage in the name of regulatory certainty (and just in time for summer break). It’s a document that will show up on the Federal Register any day now, and that you and any member of the public will then have 30 days to comment on, but which you’ll only understand if you know a bit of history, and that’s by design. It’s part of an effort to torpedo a Supreme Court opinion that Kennedy penned in 2006 – an opinion that builds on decades of precedent and practice, and that provides the foundation for the 2015 Waters of the United States (WOTUS) Rule (also known as the “Clean Water Rule”), which sets the ground rules for determining which of the waters of the United States are protected by the Clean Water Act (CWA). If Wheeler and James can rescind that rule, they’ll manage to undermine the popular Clean Water Act without the voting public knowing until it’s too late, and last week’s document is part of their effort to do just that. Specifically, it’s a supplemental notice to the Trump Administration’s year-old proposal to repeal the WOTUS rule and instead “recodify” the mess that predated it in accordance with an opinion written by the late Justice Antonin Scalia – an opinion mostly ignored by courts and practitioners, for reasons we covered in earlier installments of this series. Scalia, as we saw in part three, believed the CWA should only protect “relatively permanent, standing or flowing bodies of water” – basically, lakes rivers, and streams, but not the wetlands or creeks that feed them, and not waterbodies that only flow intermittently. The repeal would leave 80 percent of US waterways unprotected by federal authorities, and it’s one part of a multi-pronged attack on WOTUS that includes a two-year delay on its implementation and a more insidious order to ignore the local scientists and specialists who review dredging permits and instead “involve the Administrator’s Office early on in the process of developing geographic determinations” – a move that Kyla Bennett, director of science policy for Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER) described as “a crude Clean Water Act coup d’état.” “This latest move by Pruitt is his Plan B as it is becoming increasingly clear that his Clean Water rewrite plan is illegal and will be tossed out in court,” she said. In this, the fifth, final, and long-overdue installment in a five-part series on the Clean Water Rule, we try to offer a clear and simple explanation of the state of WOTUS in the current administration. You can see the first installment here. More on the Bionic Planet Podcast The story continues below, but I’ll also be editing audio from the interviews I conducted with Shrader and others for this series into episode 32 of the Bionic Planet podcast, which which I hope to have ready over the weekend. You can access Bionic Planet via iTunes, TuneIn, Stitcher, and pretty much anywhere you access podcasts, as well as on this device here: Timeline The story continues below, but here is a timeline to help you keep key dates in order: June 19, 2006: The Supreme Court’s Rapanos v United States split decision introduces massive uncertainty over what are and are not protected waters, sparking hundreds of court cases and demands for clarity. Over time, Justice Kennedy’s “significant nexus” guidance becomes the rule of the land. August 27, 2015: As the Obama Administration prepares to implement the WOTUS Rule, a district court in North Dakota issues a preliminary injunction against the rule until arguments can be heard, essentially freezing the rule in 13 states. October 9, 2015: The Sixth Circuit Court issues a nationwide stay, which the Obama Administration begins to fight before the 2016 elections sweep Donald Trump into office. February 28, 2017: Donald Trump signs an executive order instructing the EPA to scrap the WOTUS rule and “consider interpreting the term ‘navigable waters’…in a manner consistent with the opinion of Justice Antonin Scalia.” July 27, 2017: Pruitt and acting Army Civil Works boss Douglas Lamont publish their proposal to rescind the 2015 WOTUS Rule – a move that cannot be challenged in court until the rule becomes official. January 22, 2018: The Supreme Court rules that challenges to the WOTUS rule must be filed in district courts, forcing the Sixth Circuit Court to vacate its nationwide stay but leaving the North Dakota injunction intact. February 6, 2018: With the Sixth Circuit Court’s stay vacated, Pruitt and Lamont implement an “applicability date” two years in the future – namely, in February, 2020 – sparking an immediate court challenge. March 30, 2018: EPA boss Scott Pruitt directs the agency to ignore local experts and defer instead to his own office when issuing permits. June 29, 2018: Pruitt and James issue a supplemental notice to the earlier proposal. The new notice summarizes existing court challenges and argues that their existence introduces more uncertainty than existed before the rule was created. July 5, 2018: Scott Pruitt resigns, and former coal lobbyist Andrew Wheeler is named his replacement. New Notice, Old Arguments Last week’s supplemental notice will soon be listed in the Federal Register, after which the public has 30 days to comment on it. Some organizations, like the American Farm Bureau, a longstanding WOTUS opponent, have welcomed the notice. “The issuance of this additional notice shows that EPA listened to public comments that showed confusion over what was being proposed and why,” they said in a statement. “This supplemental notice will provide a more meaningful opportunity for public comment by clarifying that EPA’s proposal is to permanently repeal the 2015 WOTUS rule because that rule was illegal in multiple respects.” Beyond clarifying the position, however, the notice does little to bolster the Administration’s claim that the existing rule should be repealed before the agency can “recodify” the mess that the rule was created to fix. After finding that the previous regime was riddled with uncertainty, the agency has a duty to explain why it must repeal the whole rule rather than leaving the rule in place while working to correct whatever problems the agency claims to have found in the rule. “It’s ironic that they claim they’re doing this to provide certainty, considering the fact that before 2015 there was a world of very little certainty,” says Bethany Davis-Noll, Litigation Director at New York University’s Institute for Policy Integrity. “Getting rid of the 2015 rule doesn’t reduce regulatory uncertainty; it creates regulatory uncertainty.” In addition, the administration has yet to explain how returning to the confusing regime in place before the 2015 rule complies with the Clean Water Act or how the agency is justified in imposing forgone wetlands benefits on the public. “Without that explanation, this could be a pretty good lawsuit for anybody who wants to challenge the agency,” says Davis-Noll That is, in fact, a pillar of the suit currently underway to block the delayed implementation of the rule. The Lack of Analysis or Reason This series began back in February, when 11 states sued to block the delay in implementing the WOTUS rule, based in part on their contention that the new applicability date was pulled out of thin air while going through the motions of scientific review and public consultation as required by the Administrative Procedures Act. A key argument is that the Trump Administration ignored the existing cost/benefit analysis and failed to conduct one of its own. Columbia University Assistant Professor Jeffrey Shrader says the Trump Administration not only overstates the costs of implementing the rule, but ignores the benefits of scenic beauty, resilient agricultural systems, and income from mitigation banking. “They left out any benefit from mitigation or protection of wetlands,” says Shrader, who co-wrote an analysis called “Muddying the Waters: How the Trump administration is obscuring the value of wetlands protection from the Clean Water Rule”. Specifically, he points out, the administration simply ignored all wetland benefit studies published between 1986 and 2000 on the premise that their age makes them untrustworthy, but the administration also took its own cost analysis from the same period – despite the fact that more recent studies focused on coastal wetlands show that valuation benefits have increased since then. At the same time, the rise of mitigation banking has both reduced the cost of compliance and created income for people who restore degraded landscapes. The End of the Restoration Economy? Proponents of the repeal argue that states will pick up the slack, but current laws evolved because upstream cities and states had little inclination to do that. “About half of the states have laws on the books that say they cannot implement stricter protection for wetlands than the federal government, and those are the states where the largest at-risk wetlands are located,” says David Groves, a former policy advisor to the Obama Administration who now works as Director of Business Development at The Earth Partners, an environmental consultancy. “The vast majority of economic activity in the mitigation banking industry is in the southeast, which is made up of states with no state-level protections,” he adds. “Significantly reducing the scope of the Clean Water Act would present an existential threat to the mitigation banking industry and would destroy a huge amount of value.” The result, he says, would be more taxpayer spending overall, but the costs would flow to downstream states.  

SCI Bootcamp
Fireside Chat with 'Iron Man' Ricky James

SCI Bootcamp

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2012 50:57


A one on one fireside chat with Ricky James. Great story and Ricky gets real about the injury, his recovery and how it's all helped him become an Iron Man, in more ways than one.