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The Common Reader
Frances Wilson: T.S. Eliot is stealing my baked beans.

The Common Reader

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2025 65:41


Frances Wilson has written biographies of Dorothy Wordsworth, Thomas De Quincey, D.H. Lawrence, and, most recently, Muriel Spark. I thought Electric Spark was excellent. In my review, I wrote: “Wilson has done far more than string the facts together. She has created a strange and vivid portrait of one of the most curious of twentieth century novelists.” In this interview, we covered questions like why Thomas De Quincey is more widely read, why D.H. Lawrence's best books aren't his novels, Frances's conversion to spookiness, what she thinks about a whole range of modern biographers, literature and parasocial relationships, Elizabeth Bowen, George Meredith, and plenty about Muriel Spark.Here are two brief extracts. There is a full transcript below.Henry: De Quincey and Lawrence were the people you wrote about before Muriel Spark, and even though they seem like three very different people, but in their own way, they're all a little bit mad, aren't they?Frances: Yes, that is, I think, something that they have in common. It's something that I'm drawn to. I like writing about difficult people. I don't think I could write about anyone who wasn't difficult. I like difficult people in general. I like the fact that they pose a puzzle and they're hard to crack, and that their difficulty is laid out in their work and as a code. I like tackling really, really stubborn personalities as well. Yes, they were all a bit mad. The madness was what fuelled their journeys without doubt.Henry: This must make it very hard as a biographer. Is there always a code to be cracked, or are you sometimes dealing with someone who is slippery and protean and uncrackable?And.Henry: People listening will be able to tell that Spark is a very spooky person in several different ways. She had what I suppose we would call spiritual beliefs to do with ghosts and other sorts of things. You had a sort of conversion of your own while writing this book, didn't you?Frances: Yes, I did. [laughs] Every time I write a biography, I become very, very, very immersed in who I'm writing about. I learned this from Richard Holmes, who I see as a method biographer. He Footsteps his subjects. He becomes his subjects. I think I recognized when I first read Holmes's Coleridge, when I was a student, that this was how I also wanted to live. I wanted to live inside the minds of the people that I wrote about, because it was very preferable to live inside my own mind. Why not live inside the mind of someone really, really exciting, one with genius?What I felt with Spark wasn't so much that I was immersed by-- I wasn't immersed by her. I felt actually possessed by her. I think this is the Spark effect. I think a lot of her friends felt like this. I think that her lovers possibly felt like this. There is an extraordinary force to her character, which absolutely lives on, even though she's dead, but only recently dead. The conversion I felt, I think, was that I have always been a very enlightenment thinker, very rational, very scientific, very Freudian in my approach to-- I will acknowledge the unconscious but no more.By the time I finished with Spark, I'm pure woo-woo now.TranscriptHenry: Today, I am talking to Frances Wilson. Frances is a biographer. Her latest book, Electric Spark, is a biography of the novelist Muriel Spark, but she has also written about Dorothy Wordsworth, Thomas De Quincey, DH Lawrence and others. Frances, welcome.Frances Wilson: Thank you so much for having me on.Henry: Why don't more people read Thomas De Quincey's work?Frances: [laughs] Oh, God. We're going right into the deep end.[laughter]Frances: I think because there's too much of it. When I chose to write about Thomas De Quincey, I just followed one thread in his writing because Thomas De Quincey was an addict. One of the things he was addicted to was writing. He wrote far, far, far too much. He was a professional hack. He was a transcendental hack, if you like, because all of his writing he did while on opium, which made the sentences too long and too high and very, very hard to read.When I wrote about him, I just followed his interest in murder. He was fascinated by murder as a fine art. The title of one of his best essays is On Murder as One of the Fine Arts. I was also interested in his relationship with Wordsworth. I twinned those together, which meant cutting out about 97% of the rest of his work. I think people do read his Confessions of an English Opium-Eater. I think that's a cult text. It was the memoir, if you want to call it a memoir, that kick-started the whole pharmaceutical memoir business on drugs.It was also the first addict's memoir and the first recovery memoir, and I'd say also the first misery memoir. He's very much at the root of English literary culture. We're all De Quincey-an without knowing it, is my argument.Henry: Oh, no, I fully agree. That's what surprises me, that they don't read him more often.Frances: I know it's a shame, isn't it? Of all the Romantic Circle, he's the one who's the most exciting to read. Also, Lamb is wonderfully exciting to read as well, but Lamb's a tiny little bit more grounded than De Quincey, who was literally not grounded. He's floating in an opium haze above you.[laughter]Henry: What I liked about your book was the way you emphasized the book addiction, not just the opium addiction. It is shocking the way he piled up chests full of books and notebooks, and couldn't get into the room because there were too many books in there. He was [crosstalk].Frances: Yes. He had this in common with Muriel Spark. He was a hoarder, but in a much more chaotic way than Spark, because, as you say, he piled up rooms with papers and books until he couldn't get into the room, and so just rented another room. He was someone who had no money at all. The no money he had went on paying rent for rooms, storing what we would be giving to Oxfam, or putting in the recycling bin. Then he'd forget that he was paying rent on all these rooms filled with his mountains of paper. The man was chaos.Henry: What is D.H. Lawrence's best book?Frances: Oh, my argument about Lawrence is that we've gone very badly wrong in our reading of him, in seeing him primarily as a novelist and only secondarily as an essayist and critic and short story writer, and poet. This is because of F.R. Leavis writing that celebration of him called D.H. Lawrence: Novelist, because novels are not the best of Lawrence. I think the best of his novels is absolutely, without doubt, Sons and Lovers. I think we should put the novels in the margins and put in the centre, the poems, travel writing.Absolutely at the centre of the centre should be his studies in classic American literature. His criticism was- We still haven't come to terms with it. It was so good. We haven't heard all of Lawrence's various voices yet. When Lawrence was writing, contemporaries didn't think of Lawrence as a novelist at all. It was anyone's guess what he was going to come out with next. Sometimes it was a novel [laughs] and it was usually a rant about-- sometimes it was a prophecy. Posterity has not treated Lawrence well in any way, but I think where we've been most savage to him is in marginalizing his best writing.Henry: The short fiction is truly extraordinary.Frances: Isn't it?Henry: I always thought Lawrence was someone I didn't want to read, and then I read the short fiction, and I was just obsessed.Frances: It's because in the short fiction, he doesn't have time to go wrong. I think brevity was his perfect length. Give him too much space, and you know he's going to get on his soapbox and start ranting, start mansplaining. He was a terrible mansplainer. Mansplaining his versions of what had gone wrong in the world. It is like a drunk at the end of a too-long dinner party, and you really want to just bundle him out. Give him only a tiny bit of space, and he comes out with the perfection that is his writing.Henry: De Quincey and Lawrence were the people you wrote about before Muriel Spark, and even though they seem like three very different people, but in their own way, they're all a little bit mad, aren't they?Frances: Yes, that is, I think, something that they have in common. It's something that I'm drawn to. I like writing about difficult people. I don't think I could write about anyone who wasn't difficult. I like difficult people in general. I like the fact that they pose a puzzle and they're hard to crack, and that their difficulty is laid out in their work and as a code. I like tackling really, really stubborn personalities as well. Yes, they were all a bit mad. The madness was what fuelled their journeys without doubt.Henry: This must make it very hard as a biographer. Is there always a code to be cracked, or are you sometimes dealing with someone who is slippery and protean and uncrackable?Frances: I think that the way I approach biography is that there is a code to crack, but I'm not necessarily concerned with whether I crack it or not. I think it's just recognizing that there's a hell of a lot going on in the writing and that, in certain cases and not in every case at all, the best way of exploring the psyche of the writer and the complexity of the life is through the writing, which is a argument for psycho biography, which isn't something I necessarily would argue for, because it can be very, very crude.I think with the writers I choose, there is no option. Muriel Spark argued for this as well. She said in her own work as a biographer, which was really very, very strong. She was a biographer before she became a novelist. She thought hard about biography and absolutely in advance of anyone else who thought about biography, she said, "Of course, the only way we can approach the minds of writers is through their work, and the writer's life is encoded in the concerns of their work."When I was writing about Muriel Spark, I followed, as much as I could, to the letter, her own theories of biography, believing that that was part of the code that she left. She said very, very strong and very definitive things about what biography was about and how to write a biography. I tried to follow those rules.Henry: Can we play a little game where I say the names of some biographers and you tell me what you think of them?Frances: Oh my goodness. Okay.Henry: We're not trying to get you into trouble. We just want some quick opinions. A.N. Wilson.Frances: I think he's wonderful as a biographer. I think he's unzipped and he's enthusiastic and he's unpredictable and he's often off the rails. I think his Goethe biography-- Have you read the Goethe biography?Henry: Yes, I thought that was great.Frances: It's just great, isn't it? It's so exciting. I like the way that when he writes about someone, it's almost as if he's memorized the whole of their work.Henry: Yes.Frances: You don't imagine him sitting at a desk piled with books and having to score through his marginalia. It sits in his head, and he just pours it down on a page. I'm always excited by an A.N. Wilson biography. He is one of the few biographers who I would read regardless of who the subject was.Henry: Yes.Frances: I just want to read him.Henry: He does have good range.Frances: He absolutely does have good range.Henry: Selina Hastings.Frances: I was thinking about Selina Hastings this morning, funnily enough, because I had been talking to people over the weekend about her Sybil Bedford biography and why that hadn't lifted. She wrote a very excitingly good life of Nancy Mitford and then a very unexcitingly not good life of Sybil Bedford. I was interested in why the Sybil Bedford simply hadn't worked. I met people this weekend who were saying the same thing, that she was a very good biographer who had just failed [laughs] to give us anything about Sybil Bedford.I think what went wrong in that biography was that she just could not give us her opinions. It's as if she just withdrew from her subject as if she was writing a Wikipedia entry. There were no opinions at all. What the friends I was talking to said was that she just fell out with her subject during the book. That's what happened. She stopped being interested in her. She fell out with her and therefore couldn't be bothered. That's what went wrong.Henry: Interesting. I think her Evelyn Waugh biography is superb.Frances: Yes, I absolutely agree. She was on fire until this last one.Henry: That's one of the best books on Waugh, I think.Frances: Yes.Henry: Absolutely magical.Frances: I also remember, it's a very rare thing, of reading a review of it by Hilary Mantel saying that she had not read a biography that had been as good, ever, as Selina Hastings' on Evelyn Waugh. My goodness, that's high praise, isn't it?Henry: Yes, it is. It is. I'm always trying to push that book on people. Richard Holmes.Frances: He's my favourite. He's the reason that I'm a biographer at all. I think his Coleridge, especially the first volume of the two-volume Coleridge, is one of the great books. It left me breathless when I read it. It was devastating. I also think that his Johnson and Savage book is one of the great books. I love Footsteps as well, his account of the books he didn't write in Footsteps. I think he has a strange magic. When Muriel Spark talked about certain writers and critics having a sixth literary sense, which meant that they tuned into language and thought in a way that the rest of us don't, I think that Richard Holmes does have that. I think he absolutely has it in relation to Coleridge. I'm longing for his Tennyson to come out.Henry: Oh, I know. I know.Frances: Oh, I just can't wait. I'm holding off on reading Tennyson until I've got Holmes to help me read him. Yes, he is quite extraordinary.Henry: I would have given my finger to write the Johnson and Savage book.Frances: Yes, I know. I agree. How often do you return to it?Henry: Oh, all the time. All the time.Frances: Me too.Henry: Michael Holroyd.Frances: Oh, that's interesting, Michael Holroyd, because I think he's one of the great unreads. I think he's in this strange position of being known as a greatest living biographer, but nobody's read him on Augustus John. [laughs] I haven't read his biographies cover to cover because they're too long and it's not in my subject area, but I do look in them, and they're novelistic in their wit and complexity. His sentences are very, very, very entertaining, and there's a lot of freight in each paragraph. I hope that he keeps selling.I love his essays as well, and also, I think that he has been a wonderful ambassador for biography. He's very, very supportive of younger biographers, which not every biographer is, but I know he's been very supportive of younger biographers and is incredibly approachable.Henry: Let's do a few Muriel Spark questions. Why was the Book of Job so important to Muriel Spark?Frances: I think she liked it because it was rogue, because it was the only book of the Bible that wasn't based on any evidence, it wasn't based on any truth. It was a fictional book, and she liked fiction sitting in the middle of fact. That was one of her main things, as all Spark lovers know. She liked the fact that there was this work of pure imagination and extraordinarily powerful imagination sitting in the middle of the Old Testament, and also, she thought it was an absolutely magnificent poem.She saw herself primarily as a poet, and she responded to it as a poem, which, of course, it is. Also, she liked God in it. She described Him as the Incredible Hulk [laughs] and she liked His boastfulness. She enjoyed, as I do, difficult personalities, and she liked the fact that God had such an incredibly difficult personality. She liked the fact that God boasted and boasted and boasted, "I made this and I made that," to Job, but also I think she liked the fact that you hear God's voice.She was much more interested in voices than she was in faces. The fact that God's voice comes out of the burning bush, I think it was an image for her of early radio, this voice speaking, and she liked the fact that what the voice said was tricksy and touchy and impossibly arrogant. He gives Moses all these instructions to lead the Israelites, and Moses says, "But who shall I say sent me? Who are you?" He says, "I am who I am." [laughs] She thought that was completely wonderful. She quotes that all the time about herself. She says, "I know it's a bit large quoting God, but I am who I am." [laughs]Henry: That disembodied voice is very important to her fiction.Frances: Yes.Henry: It's the telephone in Memento Mori.Frances: Yes.Henry: Also, to some extent, tell me what you think of this, the narrator often acts like that.Frances: Like this disembodied voice?Henry: Yes, like you're supposed to feel like you're not quite sure who's telling you this or where you're being told it from. That's why it gets, like in The Ballad of Peckham Rye or something, very weird.Frances: Yes. I'm waiting for the PhD on Muriel Sparks' narrators. Maybe it's being done as we speak, but she's very, very interested in narrators and the difference between first-person and third-person. She was very keen on not having warm narrators, to put it mildly. She makes a strong argument throughout her work for the absence of the seductive narrative. Her narratives are, as we know, unbelievably seductive, but not because we are being flattered as readers and not because the narrator makes herself or himself pretty. The narrator says what they feel like saying, withholds most of what you would like them to say, plays with us, like in a Spark expression, describing her ideal narrator like a cat with a bird [laughs].Henry: I like that. Could she have been a novelist if she had not become a Catholic?Frances: No, she couldn't. The two things happened at the same time. I wonder, actually, whether she became a Catholic in order to become a novelist. It wasn't that becoming a novelist was an accidental effect of being a Catholic. The conversion was, I think, from being a biographer to a novelist rather than from being an Anglican to a Catholic. What happened is a tremendous interest. I think it's the most interesting moment in any life that I've ever written about is the moment of Sparks' conversion because it did break her life in two.She converted when she was in her mid-30s, and several things happened at once. She converted to Catholicism, she became a Catholic, she became a novelist, but she also had this breakdown. The breakdown was very much part of that conversion package. The breakdown was brought on, she says, by taking Dexys. There was slimming pills, amphetamines. She wanted to lose weight. She put on weight very easily, and her weight went up and down throughout her life.She wanted to take these diet pills, but I think she was also taking the pills because she needed to do all-nighters, because she never, ever, ever stopped working. She was addicted to writing, but also she was impoverished and she had to sell her work, and she worked all night. She was in a rush to get her writing done because she'd wasted so much of her life in her early 20s, in a bad marriage trapped in Africa. She needed to buy herself time. She was on these pills, which have terrible side effects, one of which is hallucinations.I think there were other reasons for her breakdown as well. She was very, very sensitive and I think psychologically fragile. Her mother lived in a state of mental fragility, too. She had a crash when she finished her book. She became depressed. Of course, a breakdown isn't the same as depression, but what happened to her in her breakdown was a paranoid attack rather than a breakdown. She didn't crack into nothing and then have to rebuild herself. She just became very paranoid. That paranoia was always there.Again, it's what's exciting about her writing. She was drawn to paranoia in other writers. She liked Cardinal Newman's paranoia. She liked Charlotte Brontë's paranoia, and she had paranoia. During her paranoid attack, she felt very, very interestingly, because nothing that happened in her life was not interesting, that T.S. Eliot was sending her coded messages. He was encoding these messages in his play, The Confidential Clerk, in the program notes to the play, but also in the blurbs he wrote for Faber and Faber, where he was an editor. These messages were very malign and they were encoded in anagrams.The word lived, for example, became devil. I wonder whether one of the things that happened during her breakdown wasn't that she discovered God, but that she met the devil. I don't think that that's unusual as a conversion experience. In fact, the only conversion experience she ever describes, you'll remember, is in The Girls of Slender Means, when she's describing Nicholas Farrington's conversion. That's the only conversion experience she ever describes. She says that his conversion is when he sees one of the girls leaving the burning building, holding a Schiaparelli dress. Suddenly, he's converted because he's seen a vision of evil.She says, "Conversion can be as a result of a recognition of evil, rather than a recognition of good." I think that what might have happened in this big cocktail of things that happened to her during her breakdown/conversion, is that a writer whom she had idolized, T.S. Eliot, who taught her everything that she needed to know about the impersonality of art. Her narrative coldness comes from Eliot, who thought that emotions had no place in art because they were messy, and art should be clean.I think a writer whom she had idolized, she suddenly felt was her enemy because she was converting from his church, because he was an Anglo-Catholic. He was a high Anglican, and she was leaving Anglo-Catholicism to go through the Rubicon, to cross the Rubicon into Catholicism. She felt very strongly that that is something he would not have approved of.Henry: She's also leaving poetry to become a prose writer.Frances: She was leaving his world of poetry. That's absolutely right.Henry: This is a very curious parallel because the same thing exactly happens to De Quincey with his worship of Wordsworth.Frances: You're right.Henry: They have the same obsessive mania. Then this, as you say, not quite a breakdown, but a kind of explosive mania in the break. De Quincey goes out and destroys that mossy hut or whatever it is in the orchard, doesn't he?Frances: Yes, that disgusting hut in the orchard. Yes, you're completely right. What fascinated me about De Quincey, and this was at the heart of the De Quincey book, was how he had been guided his whole life by Wordsworth. He discovered Wordsworth as a boy when he read We Are Seven, that very creepy poem about a little girl sitting on her sibling's grave, describing the sibling as still alive. For De Quincey, who had lost his very adored sister, he felt that Wordsworth had seen into his soul and that Wordsworth was his mentor and his lodestar.He worshipped Wordsworth as someone who understood him and stalked Wordsworth, pursued and stalked him. When he met him, what he discovered was a man without any redeeming qualities at all. He thought he was a dry monster, but it didn't stop him loving the work. In fact, he loved the work more and more. What threw De Quincey completely was that there was such a difference between Wordsworth, the man who had no genius, and Wordsworth, the poet who had nothing but.Eliot described it, the difference between the man who suffers and the mind which creates. What De Quincey was trying to deal with was the fact that he adulated the work, but was absolutely appalled by the man. Yes, you're right, this same experience happened to spark when she began to feel that T.S. Eliot, whom she had never met, was a malign person, but the work was still not only of immense importance to her, but the work had formed her.Henry: You see the Wasteland all over her own work and the shared Dante obsession.Frances: Yes.Henry: It's remarkably strong. She got to the point of thinking that T.S. Eliot was breaking into her house.Frances: Yes. As I said, she had this paranoid imagination, but also what fired her imagination and what repeated itself again and again in the imaginative scenarios that recur in her fiction and nonfiction is the idea of the intruder. It was the image of someone rifling around in cupboards, drawers, looking at manuscripts. This image, you first find it in a piece she wrote about finding herself completely coincidentally, staying the night during the war in the poet Louis MacNeice's house. She didn't know it was Louis MacNeice's house, but he was a poet who was very, very important to her.Spark's coming back from visiting her parents in Edinburgh in 1944. She gets talking to an au pair on the train. By the time they pull into Houston, there's an air raid, and the au pair says, "Come and spend the night at mine. My employers are away and they live nearby in St. John's Wood." Spark goes to this house and sees it's packed with books and papers, and she's fascinated by the quality of the material she finds there.She looks in all the books. She goes into the attic, and she looks at all the papers, and she asks the au pair whose house it is, and the au pair said, "Oh, he's a professor called Professor Louis MacNeice." Spark had just been reading Whitney. He's one of her favourite poets. She retells this story four times in four different forms, as non-fiction, as fiction, as a broadcast, as reflections, but the image that keeps coming back, what she can't get rid of, is the idea of herself as snooping around in this poet's study.She describes herself, in one of the versions, as trying to draw from his papers his power as a writer. She says she sniffs his pens, she puts her hands over his papers, telling herself, "I must become a writer. I must become a writer." Then she makes this weird anonymous phone call. She loved the phone because it was the most strange form of electrical device. She makes a weird anonymous phone call to an agent, saying, "I'm ringing from Louis MacNeice's house, would you like to see my manuscript?" She doesn't give her name, and the agent says yes.Now I don't believe this phone call took place. I think it's part of Sparks' imagination. This idea of someone snooping around in someone else's room was very, very powerful to her. Then she transposed it in her paranoid attack about T.S. Eliot. She transposed the image that Eliot was now in her house, but not going through her papers, but going through her food cupboards. [laughs] In her food cupboards, all she actually had was baked beans because she was a terrible cook. Part of her unwellness at that point was malnutrition. No, she thought that T.S. Eliot was spying on her. She was obsessed with spies. Spies, snoopers, blackmailers.Henry: T.S. Eliot is Stealing My Baked Beans would have been a very good title for a memoir.Frances: It actually would, wouldn't it?Henry: Yes, it'd be great.[laughter]Henry: People listening will be able to tell that Spark is a very spooky person in several different ways. She had what I suppose we would call spiritual beliefs to do with ghosts and other sorts of things. You had a sort of conversion of your own while writing this book, didn't you?Frances: Yes, I did. [laughs] Every time I write a biography, I become very, very, very immersed in who I'm writing about. I learned this from Richard Holmes, who I see as a method biographer. He Footsteps his subjects. He becomes his subjects. I think I recognized when I first read Holmes's Coleridge, when I was a student, that this was how I also wanted to live. I wanted to live inside the minds of the people that I wrote about, because it was very preferable to live inside my own mind. Why not live inside the mind of someone really, really exciting, one with genius?What I felt with Spark wasn't so much that I was immersed by-- I wasn't immersed by her. I felt actually possessed by her. I think this is the Spark effect. I think a lot of her friends felt like this. I think that her lovers possibly felt like this. There is an extraordinary force to her character, which absolutely lives on, even though she's dead, but only recently dead. The conversion I felt, I think, was that I have always been a very enlightenment thinker, very rational, very scientific, very Freudian in my approach to-- I will acknowledge the unconscious but no more.By the time I finished with Spark, I'm pure woo-woo now. Anything can happen. This is one of the reasons Spark was attracted to Catholicism because anything can happen, because it legitimizes the supernatural. I felt so strongly that the supernatural experiences that Spark had were real, that what Spark was describing as the spookiness of our own life were things that actually happened.One of the things I found very, very unsettling about her was that everything that happened to her, she had written about first. She didn't describe her experiences in retrospect. She described them as in foresight. For example, her first single authored published book, because she wrote for a while in collaboration with her lover, Derek Stanford, but her first single authored book was a biography of Mary Shelley.Henry: Great book.Frances: An absolutely wonderful book, which really should be better than any of the other Mary Shelley biographies. She completely got to Mary Shelley. Everything she described in Mary Shelley's life would then happen to Spark. For example, she described Mary Shelley as having her love letters sold. Her lover sold Mary Shelley's love letters, and Mary Shelley was then blackmailed by the person who bought them. This happened to Spark. She described Mary Shelley's closest friends all becoming incredibly jealous of her literary talent. This happened to Spark. She described trusting people who betrayed her. This happened to Spark.Spark was the first person to write about Frankenstein seriously, to treat Frankenstein as a masterpiece rather than as a one-off weird novel that is actually just the screenplay for a Hammer Horror film. This was 1951, remember. Everything she described in Frankenstein as its power is a hybrid text, described the powerful hybrid text that she would later write about. What fascinated her in Frankenstein was the relationship between the creator and the monster, and which one was the monster. This is exactly the story of her own life. I think where she is. She was really interested in art monsters and in the fact that the only powerful writers out there, the only writers who make a dent, are monsters.If you're not a monster, you're just not competing. I think Spark has always spoken about as having a monster-like quality. She says at the end of one of her short stories, Bang-bang You're Dead, "Am I an intellectual woman, or am I a monster?" It's the question that is frequently asked of Spark. I think she worked so hard to monsterize herself. Again, she learnt this from Elliot. She learnt her coldness from Elliot. She learnt indifference from Elliot. There's a very good letter where she's writing to a friend, Shirley Hazzard, in New York.It's after she discovers that her lover, Derek Stanford, has sold her love letters, 70 love letters, which describe two very, very painfully raw, very tender love letters. She describes to Shirley Hazzard this terrible betrayal. She says, "But, I'm over it. I'm over it now. Now I'm just going to be indifferent." She's telling herself to just be indifferent about this. You watch her tutoring herself into the indifference that she needed in order to become the artist that she knew she was.Henry: Is this why she's attracted to mediocrities, because she can possess them and monsterize them, and they're good feeding for her artistic programme?Frances: Her attraction to mediocrities is completely baffling, and it makes writing her biography, a comedy, because the men she was surrounded by were so speck-like. Saw themselves as so important, but were, in fact, so speck-like that you have to laugh, and it was one after another after another. I'd never come across, in my life, so many men I'd never heard of. This was the literary world that she was surrounded by. It's odd, I don't know whether, at the time, she knew how mediocre these mediocrities were.She certainly recognised it in her novels where they're all put together into one corporate personality called the pisseur de copie in A Far Cry from Kensington, where every single literary mediocrity is in that critic who she describes as pissing and vomiting out copy. With Derek Stanford, who was obviously no one's ever heard of now, because he wrote nothing that was memorable, he was her partner from the end of the 40s until-- They ceased their sexual relationship when she started to be interested in becoming a Catholic in 1953, but she was devoted to him up until 1958. She seemed to be completely incapable of recognising that she had the genius and he had none.Her letters to him deferred to him, all the time, as having literary powers that she hadn't got, as having insights that she hadn't got, he's better read than she was. She was such an amazingly good critic. Why could she not see when she looked at his baggy, bad prose that it wasn't good enough? She rated him so highly. When she was co-authoring books with him, which was how she started her literary career, they would occasionally write alternative sentences. Some of her sentences are always absolutely-- they're sharp, lean, sparkling, and witty, and his are way too long and really baggy and they don't say anything. Obviously, you can see that she's irritated by it.She still doesn't say, "Look, I'm going now." It was only when she became a novelist that she said, "I want my mind to myself." She puts, "I want my mind to myself." She didn't want to be in a double act with him. Doubles were important to her. She didn't want to be in a double act with him anymore. He obviously had bought into her adulation of him and hadn't recognised that she had this terrifying power as a writer. It was now his turn to have the breakdown. Spark had the mental breakdown in 1950, '45. When her first novel came out in 1957, it was Stanford who had the breakdown because he couldn't take on board who she was as a novelist.What he didn't know about her as a novelist was her comic sense, how that would fuel the fiction, but also, he didn't recognize because he reviewed her books badly. He didn't recognise that the woman who had been so tender, vulnerable, and loving with him could be this novelist who had nothing to say about tenderness or love. In his reviews, he says, "Why are her characters so cold?" because he thought that she should be writing from the core of her as a human being rather than the core of her as an intellect.Henry: What are her best novels?Frances: Every one I read, I think this has to be the best.[laughter]This is particularly the case in the early novels, where I'm dazzled by The Comforters and think there cannot have been a better first novel of the 20th century or even the 21st century so far. The Comforters. Then read Robinson, her second novel, and think, "Oh God, no, that is her best novel. Then Memento Mori, I think, "Actually, that must be the best novel of the 20th century." [laughs] Then you move on to The Ballad of Peckham Rye, I think, "No, that's even better."The novels landed. It's one of the strange things about her; it took her so long to become a novelist. When she had become one, the novels just landed. Once in one year, two novels landed. In 1959, she had, it was The Bachelors and The Ballad of Peckham Rye, both just completely extraordinary. The novels had been the storing up, and then they just fell on the page. They're different, but samey. They're samey in as much as they're very, very, very clever. They're clever about Catholicism, and they have the same narrative wit. My God, do the plots work in different ways. She was wonderful at plots. She was a great plotter. She liked plots in both senses of the world.She liked the idea of plotting against someone, also laying a plot. She was, at the same time, absolutely horrified by being caught inside someone's plot. That's what The Comforters is about, a young writer called Caroline Rose, who has a breakdown, it's a dramatisation of Sparks' own breakdown, who has a breakdown, and believes that she is caught inside someone else's story. She is a typewriter repeating all of her thoughts. Typewriter and a chorus repeating all of her thoughts.What people say about The Comforters is that Caroline Rose thought she is a heroine of a novel who finds herself trapped in a novel. Actually, if you read what Caroline Rose says in the novel, she doesn't think she's trapped in a novel; she thinks she's trapped in a biography. "There is a typewriter typing the story of our lives," she says to her boyfriend. "Of our lives." Muriel Sparks' first book was about being trapped in a biography, which is, of course, what she brought on herself when she decided to trap herself in a biography. [laughs]Henry: I think I would vote for Loitering with Intent, The Girls of Slender Means as my favourites. I can see that Memento Mori is a good book, but I don't love it, actually.Frances: Really? Interesting. Okay. I completely agree with you about-- I think Loitering with Intent is my overall favourite. Don't you find every time you read it, it's a different book? There are about 12 books I've discovered so far in that book. She loved books inside books, but every time I read it, I think, "Oh my God, it's changed shape again. It's a shape-shifting novel."Henry: We all now need the Frances Wilson essay about the 12 books inside Loitering with Intent.Frances: I know.[laughter]Henry: A few more general questions to close. Did Thomas De Quincey waste his talents?Frances: I wouldn't have said so. I think that's because every single day of his life, he was on opium.Henry: I think the argument is a combination of too much opium and also too much magazine work and not enough "real serious" philosophy, big poems, whatever.Frances: I think the best of his work went into Blackwood's, so the magazine work. When he was taken on by Blackwood's, the razor-sharp Edinburgh magazine, then the best of his work took place. I think that had he only written the murder essays, that would have been enough for me, On Murder as a Fine Art.That was enough. I don't need any more of De Quincey. I think Confessions of an English Opium-Eater is also enough in as much as it's the great memoir of addiction. We don't need any more memoirs of addiction, just read that. It's not just a memoir of being addicted to opium. It's about being addicted to what's what. It's about being a super fan and addicted to writing. He was addicted to everything. If he was in AA now, they'd say, apparently, there are 12 addictions, he had all of them. [laughs]Henry: Yes. People talk a lot about parasocial relationships online, where you read someone online or you follow them, and you have this strange idea in your head that you know them in some way, even though they're just this disembodied online person. You sometimes see people say, "Oh, we should understand this more." I think, "Well, read the history of literature, parasocial relationships everywhere."Frances: That's completely true. I hadn't heard that term before. The history of literature, a parasocial relationship. That's your next book.Henry: There we go. I think what I want from De Quincey is more about Shakespeare, because I think the Macbeth essay is superb.Frances: Absolutely brilliant. On Knocking at the Gate in Macbeth.Henry: Yes, and then you think, "Wait, where's the rest of this book? There should be an essay about every play."Frances: That's an absolutely brilliant example of microhistory, isn't it? Just taking a moment in a play, just the knocking at the gate, the morning after the murders, and blowing that moment up, so it becomes the whole play. Oh, my God, it's good. You're right.Henry: It's so good. What is, I think, "important about it", is that in the 20th century, critics started saying or scholars started saying a lot, "We can't just look at the words on the page. We've got to think about the dramaturgy. We've got to really, really think about how it plays out." De Quincey was an absolute master of that. It's really brilliant.Frances: Yes.Henry: What's your favourite modern novel or novelist?Frances: Oh, Hilary Mantel, without doubt, I think. I think we were lucky enough to live alongside a great, great, great novelist. I think the Wolf Hall trilogy is absolutely the greatest piece of narrative fiction that's come out of the 21st century. I also love her. I love her work as an essayist. I love her. She's spooky like Spark. She was inspired.Henry: Yes, she is. Yes.Frances: She learnt a lot of her cunning from Spark, I think. She's written a very spooky memoir. In fact, the only women novelists who acknowledge Spark as their influencer are Ali Smith and Hilary Mantel, although you can see Spark in William Boyd all the time. I think we're pretty lucky to live alongside William Boyd as well. Looking for real, real greatness, I think there's no one to compare with Mantel. Do you agree?Henry: I don't like the third volume of the trilogy.Frances: Okay. Right.Henry: Yes, in general, I do agree. Yes. I think some people don't like historical fiction for a variety of reasons. It may take some time for her to get it. I think she's acknowledged as being really good. I don't know that she's yet acknowledged at the level that you're saying.Frances: Yes.Henry: I think that will take a little bit longer. Maybe as and when there's a biography that will help with that, which I'm sure there will be a biography.Frances: I think they need to wait. I do think it's important to wait for a reputation to settle before starting the biography. Her biography will be very interesting because she married the same man twice. Her growth as a novelist was so extraordinary. Spark, she spent time in Africa. She had this terrible, terrible illness. She knew something. I think what I love about Mantel is, as with Spark, she knew something. She knew something, and she didn't quite know what it was that she knew. She had to write because of this knowledge. When you read her, you know that she's on a different level of understanding.Henry: You specialise in slightly neglected figures of English literature. Who else among the canonical writers deserves a bit more attention?Frances: Oh, that's interesting. I love minor characters. I think Spark was very witty about describing herself as a minor novelist or a writer of minor novels when she was evidently major. She always saw the comedy in being a minor. All the minor writers interest me. Elizabeth Bowen, Henry Green. No, they have heard Elizabeth Bowen has been treated well by Hermione Lee and Henry Green has been treated well by Jeremy Treglown.Why are they not up there yet? They're so much better than most of their contemporaries. I am mystified and fascinated by why it is that the most powerful writers tend to be kicked into the long grass. It's dazzling. When you read a Henry Green novel, you think, "But this is what it's all about. He's understood everything about what the novel can do. Why has no one heard of him?"Henry: I think Elizabeth Bowen's problem is that she's so concise, dense, and well-structured, and everything really plays its part in the pattern of the whole that it's not breezy reading.Frances: No, it's absolutely not.Henry: I think that probably holds her back in some way, even though when I have pushed it on people, most of the time they've said, "Gosh, she's a genius."Frances: Yes.Henry: It's not an easy genius. Whereas Dickens, the pages sort of fly along, something like that.Frances: Yes. One of the really interesting things about Spark is that she really, really is easy reading. At the same time, there's so much freight in those books. There's so much intellectual weight and so many games being played. There's so many books inside the books. Yet you can just read them for the pleasure. You can just read them for the plot. You can read one in an afternoon and think that you've been lost inside a book for 10 years. You don't get that from Elizabeth Bowen. That's true. The novels, you feel the weight, don't you?Henry: Yes.Frances: She's Jamesian. She's more Jamesian, I think, than Spark is.Henry: Something like A World of Love, it requires quite a lot of you.Frances: Yes, it does. Yes, it's not bedtime reading.Henry: No, exactly.Frances: Sitting up in a library.Henry: Yes. Now, you mentioned James. You're a Henry James expert.Frances: I did my PhD on Henry James.Henry: Yes. Will you ever write about him?Frances: I have, actually. Just a little plug. I've just done a selection of James's short stories, three volumes, which are coming out, I think, later this year for Riverrun with a separate introduction for each volume. I think that's all the writing I'm going to do on James. When I was an academic, I did some academic essays on him for collections and things. No, I've never felt, ever, ready to write on James because he's too complicated. I can only take tiny, tiny bits of James and home in on them.Henry: He's a great one for trying to crack the code.Frances: He really is. In fact, I was struck all the way through writing Electric Spark by James's understanding of the comedy of biography, which is described in the figure in the carpet. Remember that wonderful story where there's a writer called Verica who explains to a young critic that none of the critics have understood what his work's about. Everything that's written about him, it's fine, but it's absolutely missed his main point, his beautiful point. He said that in order to understand what the work's about, you have to look for The Figure in the Carpet. It's The Figure in the CarpetIt's the string on which my pearls are strung. A couple of critics become completely obsessed with looking for this Figure in the Carpet. Of course, Spark loved James's short stories. You feel James's short stories playing inside her own short stories. I think that one of the games she left for her biographers was the idea of The Figure in the Carpet. Go on, find it then. Find it. [laughs] The string on which my pearls are strung.Henry: Why did you leave academia? We should say that you did this before it became the thing that everyone's doing.Frances: Is everyone leaving now?Henry: A lot of people are leaving now.Frances: Oh, I didn't know. I was ahead of the curve. I left 20 years ago because I wasn't able to write the books I wanted to write. I left when I'd written two books as an academic. My first was Literary Seductions, and my second was a biography of a blackmailing courtesan called Harriet Wilson, and the book was called The Courtesan's Revenge. My department was sniffy about the books because they were published by Faber and not by OUP, and suggested that somehow I was lowering the tone of the department.This is what things were like 20 years ago. Then I got a contract to write The Ballad of Dorothy Wordsworth, my third book, again with Faber. I didn't want to write the book with my head of department in the back of my mind saying, "Make this into an academic tome and put footnotes in." I decided then that I would leave, and I left very suddenly. Now, I said I'm leaving sort of now, and I've got books to write, and felt completely liberated. Then for The Ballad of Dorothy Wordsworth, I decided not to have footnotes. It's the only book I've ever written without footnotes, simply as a celebration of no longer being in academia.Then the things I loved about being in academia, I loved teaching, and I loved being immersed in literature, but I really couldn't be around colleagues and couldn't be around the ridiculous rules of what was seen as okay. In fact, the university I left, then asked me to come back on a 0.5 basis when they realised that it was now fashionable to have someone who was a trade author. They asked me to come back, which I did not want to do. I wanted to spend days where I didn't see people rather than days where I had to talk to colleagues all the time. I think that academia is very unhappy. The department I was in was incredibly unhappy.Since then, I took up a job very briefly in another English department where I taught creative writing part-time. That was also incredibly unhappy. I don't know whether other French departments or engineering departments are happier places than English departments, but English departments are the most unhappy places I think I've ever seen.[laughter]Henry: What do you admire about the work of George Meredith?Frances: Oh, I love George Meredith. [laughs] Yes. I think Modern Love, his first novel, Modern Love, in a strange sonnet form, where it's not 14 lines, but 16 lines. By the time you get to the bottom two lines, the novel, the sonnet has become hysterical. Modern Love hasn't been properly recognised. It's an account of the breakdown of his marriage. His wife, who was the daughter of the romantic, minor novelist, Thomas Love Peacock. His wife had an affair with the artist who painted the famous Death of Chatterton. Meredith was the model for Chatterton, the dead poet in his purple silks, with his hand falling on the ground. There's a lot of mythology around Meredith.I think, as with Elizabeth Bowen and Henry Green, he's difficult. He's difficult. The other week, I tried to reread Diana of the Crossways, which was a really important novel, and I still love it. I really recognise that it's not an easy read. He doesn't try, in any way, to seduce his readers. They absolutely have to crawl inside each book to sit inside his mind and see the world as he's seeing it.Henry: Can you tell us what you will do next?Frances: At the moment, I'm testing some ideas out. I feel, at the end of every biography, you need a writer. You need to cleanse your palate. Otherwise, there's a danger of writing the same book again. I need this time, I think, to write about, to move century and move genders. I want to go back, I think, to the 19th century. I want to write about a male writer for a moment, and possibly not a novelist as well, because after being immersed in Muriel Sparks' novels, no other novel is going to seem good enough. I'm testing 19th-century men who didn't write novels, and it will probably be a minor character.Henry: Whatever it is, I look forward to reading it. Frances Wilson, thank you very much.Frances: Thank you so much, Henry. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.commonreader.co.uk/subscribe

Yotas Yotas Yotas Podcast
#66 : Alex & Berg - New River Run / Superstition OHV Recap

Yotas Yotas Yotas Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2025 104:57


Alex & I decide to do a little trail ride and podcast to recap the Joshua Tree / Superstition OHV trip. Technically this would be the Joshua Tree Road Trip Part II that didn't get recorded whilst in the dunes of Superstition OHV. I think we made up for it well. Enjoy my friends. Welcome aboard. 

The Storm Skiing Journal and Podcast
Podcast #207: Sun Valley COO & GM Pete Sonntag

The Storm Skiing Journal and Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2025 66:01


The Storm Skiing Journal and Podcast explores the world of lift-served skiing year-round. Join us.WhoPete Sonntag, Chief Operating Officer and General Manager of Sun Valley, IdahoRecorded onApril 9, 2025About Sun ValleyClick here for a mountain stats overviewOwned by: The R. Earl Holding family, which also owns Snowbasin, UtahPass affiliations:* Ikon Pass – 7 days, no blackouts; no access on Ikon Base or Session passes; days shared between Bald and Dollar mountains* Mountain Collective – 2 days, no blackouts; days shared between Bald and Dollar mountainsReciprocal pass partners: Challenger Platinum and Challenger season passes include unlimited access to Snowbasin, UtahLocated in: Ketchum, IdahoClosest neighboring ski areas: Rotarun (:47), Soldier Mountain (1:10)Base elevation | summit elevation | vertical drop:Bald Mountain: 5,750 feet | 9,150 feet | 3,400 feetDollar Mountain: 6,010 feet | 6,638 feet | 628 feetSkiable Acres: 2,533 acres (Bald Mountain) | 296 acres (Dollar Mountain)Average annual snowfall: 200 inchesTrail count: 122 (100 on Bald Mountain; 22 on Dollar) – 2% double-black, 20% black, 42% intermediate, 36% beginnerLift fleet:Bald Mountain: 12 lifts (8-passenger gondola, 2 six-packs, 6 high-speed quads, 2 triples, 1 carpet - view Lift Blog's of inventory of Bald Mountain's lift fleet)Dollar Mountain: 5 lifts (2 high-speed quads, 1 triple, 1 double, 1 carpet - view Lift Blog's of inventory of Dollar Mountain's lift fleet)Why I interviewed him (again)Didn't we just do this? Sun Valley, the Big Groom, the Monster at the End of The Road (or at least way off the interstate)? Didn't you make All The Points? Pretty and remote and excellent. Why are we back here already when there are so many mountains left to slot onto the podcast? Fair questions, easy answer: because American lift-served skiing is in the midst of a financial and structural renaissance driven by the advent of the multimountain ski pass. A network of megamountains that 15 years ago had been growing creaky and cranky under aging lift networks has, in the past five years, flung new machines up the mountain with the slaphappy glee of a minor league hockey mascot wielding a T-shirt cannon. And this investment, while widespread, has been disproportionately concentrated on a handful of resorts aiming to headline the next generation of self-important holiday Instagram posts: Deer Valley, Big Sky, Steamboat, Snowbasin, and Sun Valley (among others). It's going to be worth checking in on these places every few years as they rapidly evolve into different versions of themselves.And Sun Valley is changing fast. When I hosted Sonntag on the podcast in 2022, Sun Valley had just left Epic for Ikon/Mountain Collective and announced its massive Broadway-Flying Squirrel installation, a combined 14,982 linear feet of high-speed machinery that included a replacement of North America's tallest chairlift. A new Seattle Ridge sixer followed, and the World Cup spectacle followed that. Meanwhile, Sun Valley had settled into its new pass coalitions and teased more megalifts and improvements to the village. Last December, the resort's longtime owner, Carol Holding, passed away at age 95. Whatever the ramifications of all that will be, the trajectory and fate of Sun Valley over the next decade is going to set (as much or more than it traces), the arc of the remaining large independents in our consolidating ski world.What we talked aboutThe passing and legacy of longtime owner Carol Holding and her late husband Earl – “she was involved with the business right up until the very end”; how the Holdings modernized the Sun Valley ski areas; long-term prospects for Sun Valley and Snowbasin independence following Mrs. Holding's passing; bringing World Cup Downhill races back to Sun Valley; what it took to prep Bald Mountain for the events; the risks of hosting a World Cup; finish line vibes; the potential for a World Cup return and when and how that could happen; the impact of the Challenger and Flying Squirrel lift upgrades; potential upgrades for the Frenchman's, River Run, Lookout Express, and Christmas lifts; yes Sun Valley has glades; the impact of the Seattle Ridge chairlift upgrade; why actual lift capacity for Sun Valley's legacy high-speed quads doesn't match spec; explaining Sun Valley's infrastructure upgrade surge; why Mayday and Lookout will likely remain fixed-grip machines; the charm of Dollar Mountain; considering Dollar lift upgrades; what happened to the Silver Dollar carpet; why Sun Valley is likely sticking with Ikon and Mountain Collective long-term after trying both those coalitions and Epic; whether Sun Valley could join Ikon Base now that Alterra ditched Ikon Base Plus; RFID coming at last; whether we could still see a gondola connection between Sun Valley Village and Dollar and Bald mountains; and why Sun Valley isn't focused on slopeside development at Bald Mountain.Why now was a good time for this interviewSince I more or less covered interview timing above, let me instead pull out a bit about Sun Valley's megapass participation that ended up being timely by accident. We recorded this conversation in April, well before Vail Resorts named Rob Katz its CEO for a second time, likely resetting what had become a lopsided (in Alterra's favor) Epic-versus-Ikon battle. Here's what Sonntag had to say on the pod in 2022, when Sun Valley had just wrapped its three-year Epic Pass run and was preparing for its first season on Ikon:… our three-year run with Epic was really, really good. And it brought guests to Sun Valley who have never been here before. I mean, I think we really proved out the value of these multi-resort passes and these partner passes. People aspire to go other places, and when their pass allows them to do that, that sometimes is the impetus. That's all they need to make that decision to do it. So as successful as that was, we looked at Ikon and thought, well, here's an opportunity to introduce ourselves to a whole new group of guests. And why would we not take advantage of that? We're hoping to convert, obviously, a few of these folks to be Sun Valley regulars. And so now we have the opportunity to do that again with Ikon.When I asked Sonntag during that conversation whether he would consider returning to Epic at some point, he said that “I'm focused on doing a great job of being a great partner with Ikon right now,” and that, “I'm not ready to go there yet.”With three winters of Ikon and Mountain Collective membership stacked, Sonntag spoke definitively this time (emphasis mine):We are very very happy with how everything has gone. We feel like we have great partners with both Ikon, which is, you know, partnering with a company, but they're partners in every sense of the word in terms of how they approach the partnership, and we feel like we have a voice. We have access to data. We can really do right by our customers and our business at the same time.Should we read that as an Epic diss on Broomfield? Perhaps, though saying you like pizza doesn't also mean you don't like tacos. But Sonntag was unambiguous when I asked whether Sun Valley was #TeamIkon long-term: “I would see us staying the course,” he said.For those inclined to further read into this, Sonntag arrived at Sun Valley after a long career at Vail Resorts, which included several years as president/COO-equivalent of Heavenly and Whistler. And while Sun Valley is part of a larger company that also includes Snowbasin, meaning Sonntag is not the sole decision-maker, it is interesting that an executive who spent so much of his career with a first-hand look inside the Epic Pass would now lead a mountain that stands firmly with the opposition.What I got wrongI mischaracterized the comments Sonntag had made on Epic and Ikon when we spoke in 2022, making it sound as though he had suggested that Sun Valley would try both passes and then decide between them. But it was me who asked him whether he would decide between the two after an Ikon trial, and he had declined to answer the question, saying, as noted above, that he wasn't “ready to go there yet.”Why you should ski Sun ValleyIf I was smarter I'd make some sort of heatmap showing where skier visits are clustered across America. Unfortunately I'm dumb, and even more unfortunately, ski areas began treating skier visit numbers with the secrecy of nuclear launch codes about a decade ago, so an accurate map would be difficult to draw up even if I knew how.However, I can offer a limited historical view into the crowding advantages that Sun Valley offers in comparison to its easier-to-access peer resorts. Check out Sun Valley's average annual skier visits from 2005 to 2011, compared to similarly sized Breckenridge and Keystone, and smaller Beaver Creek:Here's how those four ski areas compare in size and average skier visits per acre:Of course, 2011 was a long time ago and multi-mountain passes have dramatically reworked visitation patterns. Breck, Keystone, and Beaver Creek, all owned by Vail during the above timeframe, joined Epic Pass in 2008, while Sun Valley would stand on its own until landing on Mountain Collective in 2015, then Epic in 2019, then back to MC and Ikon in 2022. Airline service to Sun Valley has improved greatly in the past 15 years, which could also have ramped up the resort's skier visits.Still, anecdote and experience suggest that these general visitation ratios remain similar to the present day. Beaver Creek remains a bit of a hidey-hole by Colorado standards, but Breck and Keystone, planted right off America's busiest ski corridor in America's busiest ski state, are among the most obvious GPS inputs for the Epic Pass masses. No one has to try that hard to get to Summit County. To get to Sun Valley, you still have to work (and spend), a bit more.So that's the pitch, I guess, in addition to all the established Sun Valley bullet points: excellent grooming and outrageous views and an efficient and fast lift network. By staying off the Ikon Base Pass, not to mention Interstates 70 and 80, Sun Valley has managed to achieve oxymoron status: the big, modern U.S. ski resort that feels mostly empty most of the time. It's this and Taos and Telluride and a few others tossed into the far corners of the Rockies, places that at once feel of the moment and stand slightly outside of time.Podcast NotesOn Sun Valley/Pete 1.0Sonntag first joined me on the pod back in 2022:On Carol HoldingLongtime Sun Valley owner Carol Holding passed away on Dec. 23, 2024. Boise Dev recalled a bit of the family legacy around Sun Valley:“One day, I spotted Earl and Carol dining on the patio and asked him again,” Webb told Bossick. “And Carol turned to him and said, ‘Earl, you've been saying you're going to do that for years. If you don't build a new lodge, I'm going to divorce you.' That's what she said!”The lodge opened in 2004, dubbed Carol's Dollar Mountain Lodge.In a 2000 interview with the Salt Lake Tribune, Carol made it clear that she was as much a part of the business as Earl, whose name caught most of the headlines.“I either became part of his business or lived alone,” she said.The pair often bought distressed or undervalued assets and invested to upgrade them. She told the Tribune that paying attention to the dollars in those early years made a big difference.“I still have the first dollar bill that anyone gave me as a tip,” she said.Once they bought Sun Valley, Robert and Carol wasted no time.Wally Huffman, the resort's GM, got a call to the area above the Ram Restaurant. Someone was stuffing mattresses out the window, and they were landing with a thud on the kitchen loading dock below. Huffman called Janss – the person who had owned the resort – and asked what to do.“I think you should do whatever Mr. Holding tells you to do.”Robert and Carol had purchased the property, and upgrades were well underway. They didn't know how to ski. But they did know hospitality.“Why would anyone who didn't know how to ski buy a ski resort? That wasn't why we bought it—to come here to ski,” Carol said. “We bought it to run as a business.”Earl Holding's 2013 New York Times obituary included background on the couple's purchase of Sun Valley:A year later, Carol Holding, who was her husband's frequent business partner, showed him a newspaper article about the potential sale of Sun Valley. He bought the resort, which had fallen into disrepair since its glory years as a getaway for Ernest Hemingway and others, after he and his wife spent a day there skiing. They had never skied before.Davy Ratchford, President of sister resort Snowbasin, told a great story about Carol Holding on the podcast back in 2023 [31:20]:Mrs. Holding is an amazing woman and is sharp. She knows everything that's going on at the resorts. She used to work here, right? She'd flip burgers and she'd sell things from the retail store. I mean she's an original, right? Like she is absolutely amazing and she knows everything about it. And I was hired and I remember being in our lodge and I had all the employees there and she was introducing me, and it was an amazing experience. I remember I was kneeling down next to her chair and I said, “You know, Mrs. Holding, thank you for the opportunity.” And she grabs both your hands and she holds them in tight to her, and that's how she talks to you. It's this amazing moment. And I said, “I just want to make sure I'm doing exactly what you want me to do for you and Earl's legacy of Snowbasin.” I know how much they love it, right? Since 1984. And I said, “Can I just ask your advice?” And this is exactly what she said to me, word for word, she said, “Be nice and hire nice people.” And every employee orientation since then, I've said that: “Our job is to be nice and to hire nice people.”Listen to the rest here:On Sun Valley's evolutionWhen the Holdings showed up in 1977, Sun Valley, like most contemporary ski areas, was a massive tangle of double and triple chairs:The resort upgraded rapidly, installing seven high-speed quads between 1988 and 1994: Unfortunately, the ski area chose Yan, whose bungling founder's shortcuts transformed the machines into deathtraps, as its detachable partner. The ski area heavily retrofit all seven machines in partnership with Doppelmayr in 1995. Sun Valley has so far replaced three of the seven Yans: the Seattle Ridge sixer replaced the detach quad of the same name last year and the Broadway sixer and Flying Squirrel quad replaced the Broadway and Greyhawk quads in 2023, on a new alignment:Sonntag outlines which of the remaining four Yan-Doppelmayr hybrids will be next on the pod.I've summarized the Yan drama several times, most recently in the article accompanying my podcast conversation with Mammoth COO Eric Clark earlier this year:On World Cup resultsWhile we talk in general about the motivation behind hosting the World Cup, what it took to prep the mountain, and the energy of the event itself, we don't get a lot into the specifics of the events themselves. Here are all the official stats. Videos here.On gladesYes, Sun Valley has glades (video by #GoProBro, which is me):On Ikon Pass' evolutionI feel as though I publish this chart every other article, but here it is. If you're reading this in the future, click through for the most current:On the Sun Valley Village masterplanWe discuss an old Sun Valley masterplan that included a gondola connection from the village to Dollar and then Bald mountains:The new village plan, which is a separate document, rather than an update of the image above, doesn't mention it:Why? We discuss.The Storm Skiing Journal and Podcast is a reader-supported publication. Please support independent ski journalism, or we'll all be reading about bros backflipping over moving trains for the rest of our lives. Get full access to The Storm Skiing Journal and Podcast at www.stormskiing.com/subscribe

South Church
Anthem: "Let the River Run" By Carley Simon Arr. Craig Hella Johnson

South Church

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2025


Anthem: "Let the River Run" By Carley Simon Arr. Craig Hella Johnson The South Church Chancel Choir Director, Organist, and Pianist: Frank R. Zilinyi

anthem organists riverrun craig hella johnson
HC Audio Stories
Questions for Candidates: Philipstown Town Board

HC Audio Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2025 15:13


There are four Democratic candidates for two open seats on the Philipstown Town Board - Ben Cheah, John Maasik, Nat Prentice and Ned Rauch. They will compete in a primary on June 24 for the two Democratic lines on the general-election ballot in November. Cheah and Rauch, who were endorsed by the Philipstown Democratic Committee, also filed independent nominating petitions and will appear on the November ballot on the Philipstown Focus party line regardless of the primary outcome. There are no candidates from other parties. We asked each candidate to answer four questions in a total of 500 words or less. The responses are below, presented in alphabetical order by last name. For information on voting and a link to reader endorsements, see below. What in your background makes you the best candidate? Ben Cheah: I believe that a great board member brings passion, dedication, teamwork and expertise - and I'll bring all of that to the Philipstown board. Ten years ago, my wife Megan and I chose to raise our two sons in Philipstown. We love this community and feel lucky to call it home. Both of us have always been active volunteers. I've served on the Philipstown Recreation Commission, Cold Spring Planning Board (current), as Cub Scouts Pack 137 treasurer and on the Putnam County Industrial Development Agency board. Running for Town Board feels like a natural next step - one I'm genuinely passionate about. I'm especially focused on the challenges of rising costs and tightening budgets. I plan to be hands-on with budgeting and long-term planning to help keep costs and taxes under control. I bring to the table an MBA in finance from New York University's Stern School of Business; 25 years of project management and executive experience in the film and TV industry; and a strong creative background in sound design for film, with credits on Men in Black, The Big Lebowski, The Birdcage and The Wire. John Maasik: I've lived in Philipstown for over 20 years: 10 in Cold Spring and 10 in Garrison, where my wife and I raised our two sons. I've spent thousands upon thousands of hours volunteering with community-based organizations, including the Philipstown Recreation Commission, Philipstown Soccer Club, Friends of Philipstown Recreation and Scouting America, in addition to participating in the Haldane turf field effort and the Garrison School Safety Committee. I also helped launch events such as the Castle-to-River Run and Winter Carnival, raising thousands in non-taxpayer dollars and donations for town programs. These efforts have helped me build strong relationships across Cold Spring, Continental Village, Garrison and Nelsonville. Professionally, I've led large teams and managed multimillion-dollar budgets in the private sector, experiences that have shaped my ability to listen carefully, act with integrity and lead without ego. The values that guide me most deeply come from my family's story. My parents were Estonian refugees who fled Soviet occupation after my grandfather was killed by the Russians. My grandmother brought her three children to the U.S. in search of safety, freedom and a new beginning. I was raised with a deep respect for civic responsibility, community and the promise of American democracy. Nat Prentice: Experience, experience, experience. I have had a career in finance and investments. I grew up in Garrison and moved back here 25 years ago. Since moving back, I have attended most of the Town Board's monthly meetings, so I know the commitment that is required to address Philipstown's challenges and opportunities. I helped create the Town's 2007 Comprehensive Plan, and in 2018 I was appointed chair of the Comprehensive Plan Committee that published an update adopted in 2021. Working on the plan meant partnering with a multitude of people from the North Highlands to Continental Village. I know the town's goals and priorities really well. In addition, I work with emergency services (commissioner, Garrison Fire District; me...

Talk North - Souhan Podcast Network
Dialed In Angling Podcast - The Rainy River Run 2025

Talk North - Souhan Podcast Network

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2025 58:30


We bring you this week's podcast from the shores of the Rainy River. Tony is joined by friend and fellow guide Nick Cekalla. The two recap their annual spring voyage to this walleye factory. They break down this year's bite and what techniques were working best. The crew also chats about other spring fishing opportunities that are just around the corner.   Presented by: Strike Master (https://www.rapala.com/us_en/strikemaster) & On-X Fish (www.onxmaps.com/fish)

Dancing with Dragons
Game of Thrones: S3 | EP3 "Walk of Punishment"

Dancing with Dragons

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2025 51:13 Transcription Available


In EP 63 of the Dancing with Dragons Podcast, Minwa and Tony dissect how The power dynamics in Westeros shift dramatically as characters face life-altering moments that challenge their identities and force tough decisions. We travel to Riverrun for a Tully funeral, watch scheming in King's Landing, and witness pivotal moments in the journeys of Jon Snow, Daenerys, and Jaime Lannister.Support the showFollow Dancing with Dragons on Instagram Follow Tony on IG: Sirtone_Reviews Follow Minwa on IG: TheArabKhaleesihttps://dancingwithdragons.buzzsprout.comEmail us @DancewithDragons62@gmail.com

Lifepoint Church: Audio Podcast
Let the River Run

Lifepoint Church: Audio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2025 38:36


Sometimes life can feel heavy, as if we are trying to push upstream, going against the current. Charlotte Gambill teaches us that when we allow ourselves to be out of control, God can be in control, and we can truly experience the beauty of a surrendered life.

The Holmes Archive of Electronic Music
Chapter 07, Computer Music Basics

The Holmes Archive of Electronic Music

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2025 84:55


Episode 146 Chapter 07, Computer Music Basics. Works Recommended from my book, Electronic and Experimental Music  Welcome to the Archive of Electronic Music. This is Thom Holmes. This podcast is produced as a companion to my book, Electronic and Experimental Music, published by Routledge. Each of these episodes corresponds to a chapter in the text and an associated list of recommended works, also called Listen in the text. They provide listening examples of vintage electronic works featured in the text. The works themselves can be enjoyed without the book and I hope that they stand as a chronological survey of important works in the history of electronic music. Be sure to tune-in to other episodes of the podcast where we explore a wide range of electronic music in many styles and genres, all drawn from my archive of vintage recordings. There is a complete playlist for this episode on the website for the podcast. Let's get started with the listening guide to Chapter 07, Computer Music Basics from my book Electronic and Experimental music.   Playlist: Early Computer Synthesis     Time Track Time* Start Introduction –Thom Holmes 01:30 00:00 1 Max Mathews, “Numerology” (1960). Direct computer synthesis using an IBM 7090 mainframe computer and the Music III programming language 02:45 01:32 2 James Tenney, “Analog #1: Noise Study” (1961). Direct synthesis and filtering of noise bands at Bell Labs' facilities. 04:24 04:04 3 Lejaren Hiller, “Computer Cantata” (third movement) (1963). Direct computer synthesis using an IBM 7094 mainframe computer and the Musicomp programming language. 05:41 08:28 4 Jean-Claude Risset, “Mutations I” (1969). Used frequency modulation. 10:23 14:06 5 Charles Dodge, “The Earth's Magnetic Field” (Untitled, part 1) (1970). Used an IBM mainframe computer and the Music 4BF programming language to convert geophysical data regarding the Earth's magnetic field into music. 14:00 24:28 6 Laurie Spiegel, “Appalachian Grove I” (1974). Used the Groove program at Bell Labs. 05:23 38:22 7 Curtis Roads, “Prototype” (1975). Used granular synthesis. 06:11 43:48 8 John Chowning, “Stria” (1977). Used the composer's patented FM synthesis algorithms. 05:14 50:00 9 Jean-Baptiste Barriere, “Chreode” (1983). Granular synthesis using the Chant program at IRCAM; computer-controlled organization of material—a grammar of musical processes prepared with IRCAM's Formes software. 09:24 55:10 10 Barry Truax, “Riverrun” (1986). Composed using only granulated sampled sound, using Truax's real-time PODX system. 19:42 01:04:30   Additional opening, closing, and other incidental music by Thom Holmes. My Books/eBooks: Electronic and Experimental Music, sixth edition, Routledge 2020. Also, Sound Art: Concepts and Practices, first edition, Routledge 2022. See my companion blog that I write for the Bob Moog Foundation. For a transcript, please see my blog, Noise and Notations. Original music by Thom Holmes can be found on iTunes and Bandcamp.

Painted Arrow
Episode 175 - Painted Arrow ON THE GO - Fort Worth Trinity River Run

Painted Arrow

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2025 38:15


This is the first ever Painted Arrow on the go podcast. This podcast took place in Fort Worth Texas next to the Trinity River. We would love feedback from you all if this is something you want to hear more episodes of as we are in the process of building a brand. Enjoy.

The Thieves Guild
Episode 127: Let the River Run Red

The Thieves Guild

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2025 13:35


Some secrets are worth dying for. Some are worth killing for.---Rogers heads to the Lower Quarter, only to discover the civil war has already begun.---Intimidated that you're dozens of episodes behind and afraid to start listening? Don't be. Here's a handy Listener's Guide that let's you know spots where you can start listening further in the story:https://jakekerr.com/blog/2024/11/06/the-thieves-guild-listening-guide/---If you would like to view a map of Ness, you can find it here:https://jakekerr.com/public/ness-map.jpg---Receive copies of the first two Thieves Guild ebooks for FREE when you sign up for Jake Kerr's mailing list. Details can be found here. The next book will be released in 2025 and subscribers receive that book (and all subsequent books!) for free, too:https://jakekerr.com/subscribe/----Grab some Thieves Guild merch!https://store.podcastalchemy.studio----Check out our other drama podcasts!Artifacts of the ArcaneA historical urban fantasy set at the beginning of World War Two. The world has abandoned magic, but magic hasn't abandoned the world.https://podcastalchemy.studio/arcaneThursdayA cyberpunk VR thriller.No one can be trusted when nothing is real.https://podcastalchemy.studio/thursdayJake's Theatre of the MindNebula Award nominee Jake Kerr narrates short stories twice a week. ----Find out more about writer Jake Kerr: https://www.jakekerr.comFollow Jake on Bluesky @jakekerr.com

Gateway People Audio Podcast
Gateway Church Live | “Let the River Run” by Charlotte Gambill | January 7

Gateway People Audio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2025 41:16


This evening, author and speaker Charlotte Gambill continues F1RST by encouraging the Gateway family to trust in God during all new seasons, no matter the circumstances. We just have to remember that Jesus always makes a way for us, we only have to submit to Him! 

Gateway People Video Podcast
Gateway Church Live | “Let the River Run” by Charlotte Gambill | January 7

Gateway People Video Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2025 41:16


This evening, author and speaker Charlotte Gambill continues F1RST by encouraging the Gateway family to trust in God during all new seasons, no matter the circumstances. We just have to remember that Jesus always makes a way for us, we only have to submit to Him! 

Gateway Church Audio Podcast en Español
Gateway Church Live | “Let the River Run” by Charlotte Gambill | January 7

Gateway Church Audio Podcast en Español

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2025 41:16


This evening, author and speaker Charlotte Gambill continues F1RST by encouraging the Gateway family to trust in God during all new seasons, no matter the circumstances. We just have to remember that Jesus always makes a way for us, we only have to submit to Him! 

Gateway Church Video Podcast en Español
Gateway Church Live | “Let the River Run” by Charlotte Gambill | January 7

Gateway Church Video Podcast en Español

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2025 41:16


This evening, author and speaker Charlotte Gambill continues F1RST by encouraging the Gateway family to trust in God during all new seasons, no matter the circumstances. We just have to remember that Jesus always makes a way for us, we only have to submit to Him! 

The Eyeopener from CBC Radio Calgary (Highlights)
Calgary Eyeopener podcast - Thursday, January 23

The Eyeopener from CBC Radio Calgary (Highlights)

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2025 27:02


On today's show: homes that were acquired for a train line that may never exist are now being demolished. We hear from a former resident of the River Run townhomes in Eau Claire; we take you to the Foothills west of Nanton to hear from a ranching family about coal mining's potential return to the Eastern Slopes; we talk about Robbie Burns Day with the organizers of Kilts for a Cause.

A vivir que son dos días
45 RPM | 'Let The River Run'

A vivir que son dos días

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2025 22:36


El amigo secreto y Máximo Pradera se atreven con los primeros acordes de una de las canciones de Carly Simon más recordadas. Al ritmo de 'Let The River Run' empezamos la mañana.

The Ghosts of Harrenhal: A Song of Ice and Fire Podcast (ASOIAF)
Chapter Forty-Four - Jaime 7 - A Feast for Crows | A Song of Ice and Fire (ASOIAF)

The Ghosts of Harrenhal: A Song of Ice and Fire Podcast (ASOIAF)

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2025 73:31


Send us a textJaime won Riverrun but lost the Blackfish. He confirms that Jeyne Westerling is not pregnant with Robb Stark's child and gives Sybell her rewards for her scheming as well as a piece of his mind. He learns that Ryman Frey is dead and that Cersei is in trouble. Neither concern him much, as he ignores Cersei's plea for help. Simon and Mackelly set their quills down.Chapter Review:Jaime Lannister discovers that during the change of hands of Riverrun Brynden Blackfish Tully has gone missing. A well-placed threat to Edmure Tully reveals the truth. The Blackfish swam away in the night. All search parties have come up empty to this point. He meets with Sybell and Jeyne Westerling. Jeyne is still in mourning over the death of her husband King Robb and isn't afraid to let Jaime see it. On the other hand, Sybell speaks of her role in Robb's death and preventing Jeyne from getting pregnant. She wants good marriages for her children in return, as promised by Tywin. Jaime agrees, but also tells her to stay out of his way until she leaves for the west.He crosses the Tumblestone and meets with Edwyn Frey and Walder Rivers. They inform him that Edwyn's father Ryman was hanged on his way back to the Twins. Edwyn thinks his brother Black Walder is responsible. Jaime isn't broken up about it and notices Edwyn's eyes are dry too.One night he dreams of his mother. She says Tywin wanted him to be a great knight and Cersei a queen. Jaime says they both met those goals, but his mother only sheds a tear. Jaime wakes to snow falling on Riverrun. With it, the hope for one more harvest is gone. Maester Vyman arrives with an urgent letter from Cersei. Jaime reads it and asks Peck to burn it, with no response.Characters/Places/Names/Events:Jamie Lannister - Twin and lover to Cersei. Lord Commander of the Kingsguard. Biological father of King Tommen.Sybell Westerling - Wife of Lord Gawen and mother of (once) Queen Jeyne Stark.Genna Lannister - Sister to Tywin, aunt to Jaime.Emmon Frey - Husband to Genna. New lord of Riverrun - if and when it falls.Brynden Blackfish Tully - Uncle to Edmure Tully. De facto Lord of Riverrun.Edmure Tully - Stripped of his lordship of Riverrun, captive of the Freys.Ryman Frey - Heir to the twins. Abuser of Edmure.Edwyn Frey - Son of Ryman. Support the showSupport us: Buy us a Cup of Arbor Gold, or become a sustainer and receive cool perks Donate to our cause Use our exclusive URL for a free 30-day trial of Audible Buy or gift Marriott Bonvoy points through our affiliate link Rate and review us at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, podchaser.com, and elsewhere.Find us on social media: Discord Twitter @GhostsHarrenhal Facebook Instagram YouTube All Music credits to Ross Bugden:INSTAGRAM! : https://instagram.com/rossbugden/ (rossbugden) TWITTER! : https://twitter.com/RossBugden (@rossbugden) YOUTUBE! : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kthxycmF25M

RNZ: Saturday Morning
Kate de Goldi: Summer reading

RNZ: Saturday Morning

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2024 17:54


With the summer holidays almost here, for many finding a spot in the shade and a good book is the best way to spend an afternoon. But what to read? Kate De Goldi is one of New Zealand's most celebrated authors, an Arts Foundation Laureate, and a voracious reader. She shares her recommendations for the summer. The Land in Winter by Andrew Miller; Sceptre, UK Theory & Practice by Michelle de Kretser; Text Publishing, Australia The Case of the Lonely Accountant by Simon Mason; RiverRun, UK Tiger, Tiger, Burning Bright; an animal poem for every day of the year, selected by Fiona Waters, illustrated by Betta Teckentrup The Thames and Tide Club: The Secret City, by Katya Balen, Bloomsbury, UK

If It Ain't Baroque...
Saints: A New Legendary of Heroes, Humans and Magic with Amy Jeffs

If It Ain't Baroque...

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2024 41:40


Let's talk about ...Saints!Please give a massive round of applause for Amy Jeffs, author of a new book Saints: a New Legendary of Heroes, Humans and Magic. Published by Riverrun.This chat has it all, a cult of Edward the Confessor, a definition of what a saint actually is and was, a mention of a man covered in pricks (yes, those) and why Henry VIII is to be blamed for everything yet again... we throw in some salmon fishing in the Thames, a medieval c**k-ring and ...it's definitely time to put on headphones and dive into this episode!Get Saints:https://www.quercusbooks.co.uk/titles/amy-jeffs/saints/9781529416619/Find Amy:https://www.quercusbooks.co.uk/contributor/amy-jeffs/https://www.amyjeffshistoria.com/https://www.instagram.com/amyjeffs_author/If you would like to join Natalie on her Royal London Walking Tour, where we talk all things Edward the Confessor, please see:https://www.getyourguide.com/london-l57/london-the-royal-british-kings-and-queens-walking-tour-t426011/For more history fodder please visit https://www.ifitaintbaroque.art/ and https://www.reignoflondon.com/ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Talk Art
Joelle Taylor

Talk Art

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2024 72:43


We meet legendary poet Joelle Taylor.Joelle Taylor is the author of 4 collections of poetry. Her most recent collection C+NTO & Othered Poems won the 2021 T.S Eliot Prize, and the 2022 Polari Book Prize for LGBT authors. C+NTO is currently being adapted for theatre with a view to touring. She is a co- curator and host of Out-Spoken Live at the Southbank Centre, and tours her work nationally and internationally in a diverse range of venues, from Australia to Brazil. She is also a Poetry Fellow of University of East Anglia and the curator of the Koestler Awards 2023. She has judged several poetry and literary prizes including Jerwood Fellowship, the Forward Prize, and the Ondaatje Prize. Her novel of interconnecting stories The Night Alphabet will be published by Riverrun in Spring of 2024. She is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, and the 2022 Saboteur Spoken Word Artist of the Year. Her most recent acting role was in Blue by Derek Jarman, which was directed by Neil Bartlett and featured Russell Tovey, Jay Bernard, and Travis Alabanza. Blue sold out its run across the UK and more dates are expected for the future.Follow @JTaylorTrashVisit: https://joelletaylor.co.uk/ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The Ghosts of Harrenhal: A Song of Ice and Fire Podcast (ASOIAF)
Chapter Thirty-Eight - Jaime 6 - A Feast for Crows | A Song of Ice and Fire (ASOIAF)

The Ghosts of Harrenhal: A Song of Ice and Fire Podcast (ASOIAF)

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2024 65:00


Send us a textJaime takes control of the debacle that is the siege of Riverrun. He gets only scorn from the Blackfish, but he makes Edmure Tully an offer that would be hard to refuse. Simon and Mackelly consider the intestinal fortitude of the tormented Lord of Riverrun.Chapter Review:Jaime parlays with Brynden Blackfish Tully. He makes zero progress. The older man is resigned to Edmure's death, accuses Jaime of oathbreaking and cowardice, and won't believe Jaime's offer of pardons for all within.Jaime calls a war council that is closer to a war. All parties bring their high-horses and nobody budges an inch. The enmity within the besiegers camp is greater than that between the besiegers and the besieged.He gives up, dismisses Ryman Frey back to the Twins for his incompetence and elevates Ryman's son Edwyn to head the Frey contingent. He frees Edmure from his torment and brings him back to be bathed and fed. The kindness comes with an offer and a threat. Edmure will be returned to Riverrun. If he then surrenders the castle the original offer remains - all will be spared. But if he doesn't, everyone inside will die and Edmure's soon-to-be-born baby will be trebucheted over the walls. Tully is left to consider these options as a singer plays the Rains of Castermere.Characters/Places/Names/Events:Jamie Lannister - Twin and lover to Cersei. Lord Commander of the Kingsguard. Biological father of King Tommen.Daven Lannister - Son of Stafford Lannister (the late Stafford was Tywin's cousin). New Warden of the West.Genna Lannister - Sister to Tywin, aunt to Jaime.Emmon Frey - Husband to Genna. New lord of Riverrun - if and when it falls.Brynden Blackfish Tully - Uncle to Edmure Tully. De facto Lord of Riverrun.Edmure Tully - Stripped of his lordship of Riverrun, captive of the Freys.Ryman Frey - Heir to the twins. Abuser of Edmure.Edwyn Frey - Son of Ryman.Riverrun - Capital of the Riverlands. Seat of House Tully. Gifted to the Freys by the crown. Under siege. Support the showSupport us: Buy us a Cup of Arbor Gold, or become a sustainer and receive cool perks Donate to our cause Use our exclusive URL for a free 30-day trial of Audible Buy or gift Marriott Bonvoy points through our affiliate link Rate and review us at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, podchaser.com, and elsewhere.Find us on social media: Discord Twitter @GhostsHarrenhal Facebook Instagram YouTube All Music credits to Ross Bugden:INSTAGRAM! : https://instagram.com/rossbugden/ (rossbugden) TWITTER! : https://twitter.com/RossBugden (@rossbugden) YOUTUBE! : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kthxycmF25M

The Bullhucker Podcast
Episode 185 Juan Ayala. Blue ball river run

The Bullhucker Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2024 69:10


https://www.bullhucker.com/​ https://www.facebook.com/brushemporiumandpizzaporium The Bullhucker podcast is a show where we bring on a guest who will tell 3 stories about their life. The kicker is….only two of the stories are true. Our two hosts try and figure out which one is not true or as we call it…The Bullhucker.

WBZ NewsRadio 1030 - News Audio
Hundreds Participated In The Annual 5k Boston River Run Charity Event

WBZ NewsRadio 1030 - News Audio

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2024 0:56 Transcription Available


The Boston River Run is back for its 13th charity event, raising scholarships for students at Bunker Hill Community College. For more, ask Alexa to play WBZ NewsRadio on #iHeartRadio.

The Ghosts of Harrenhal: A Song of Ice and Fire Podcast (ASOIAF)
Chapter Thirty-Five - Samwell 4 - A Feast for Crows - A Song of Ice and Fire (ASOIAF)

The Ghosts of Harrenhal: A Song of Ice and Fire Podcast (ASOIAF)

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2024 55:18


Send us a textAboard the Cinnamon Wind, Sam and Gilly mourn the loss of Maester Aemon. The old man succumbed as the ship neared Dorne. Their tears bring them into each other's arms and Sam's vows are history. Simon and Mackelly sprinkle rose petals in the bathtub and try to light a scented candle.Chapter Review:Samwell Tarly eulogizes Maester Aemon to the crew of the Cinnamon Wind. The Summer Islanders honor their elderly and their funeral rites involve drinking and love-making. The news of the dragons that Xhondo provided put a spring in Aemon's step, but it couldn't last and as the ship made its way around Dorne, he succumbed after a period of sporadically lucid dream and prophecy. Part of which was a realization that the Prince Who Was Promised is in fact Daenerys. Drunk on rum, Sam and Gilly make love in the women's section of the boat. Sam has fleeting regrets about his vows, but they're swept away by his feelings for Gilly. The next day the regrets are in ascendancy, and he avoids Gilly all day. Sam has paid for passage with the books intended for the Citadel, and with his labor. But the captain assures him that the Citadel shan't miss out - he'll sell them the books and make a healthy profit from them. He uses the excuse of work to avoid Gilly but eventually he's taken aside by the captain's daughter Kojja who tells him to go to Gilly or swim. Characters/Places/Names/Events:Samwell Tarly - brother of the Night's Watch, friend to John Snow. Slayer of Others.Gilly - Daughter of Craster. Beloved of Samwell.Maester Aemon - 102 year-old maester of the Night's Watch. Xhondo Dhuro - mate on the Cinnamon Wind. From the Summer Isles.Quhuru Mo - captain of the Cinnamon Wind.Kojja Mo - Daughter of the captain.Narrow Sea - Separating Westeros from Essos. Support the showSupport us: Buy us a Cup of Arbor Gold, or become a sustainer and receive cool perks Donate to our cause Use our exclusive URL for a free 30-day trial of Audible Buy or gift Marriott Bonvoy points through our affiliate link Rate and review us at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, podchaser.com, and elsewhere.Find us on social media: Discord Twitter @GhostsHarrenhal Facebook Instagram YouTube All Music credits to Ross Bugden:INSTAGRAM! : https://instagram.com/rossbugden/ (rossbugden) TWITTER! : https://twitter.com/RossBugden (@rossbugden) YOUTUBE! : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kthxycmF25M

The Ghosts of Harrenhal: A Song of Ice and Fire Podcast (ASOIAF)
Chapter Thirty-Three - Jaime 5 - A Feast for Crows - A Song of Ice and Fire (ASOIAF)

The Ghosts of Harrenhal: A Song of Ice and Fire Podcast (ASOIAF)

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2024 63:09


Send us a textJaime arrives at Riverrun hopeful of ending the siege without breaking his oath to Catelyn (not to take up arms against the Tullys). He gets some home-truths from his aunt Genna. Simon and Mackelly weigh up the impact.Chapter Review:Jaime Lannister arrives at Riverrun and meets with his cousin Daven Lannister, the new Warden of the West. They have a good rapport. The younger man is modest about his new-found honors, and thinks that his father's cousin Kevan should have been made Warden of the West. Jaime doesn't disagree. Devan has had it with the Freys. Their cruelty and belligerence are doing nothing to help end this siege.Jaime is concerned that so few Riverlands houses are represented. They may have bent the knee but their hearts are clearly not in it. He intends to parley with Brynden Blackfish Tully, who holds Riverrun but first meets with his Aunt Genna and her husband Emmon Frey, to whom Riverrun is promised.Emmon whines about the damage to his new castle. Genna catches up on family news before concluding they should have been given Darry instead. She explains her loyalty to her big brother Tywin, and while expressing her fondness for Jaime, confesses that Tyrion was the child most like his father. But when she told Tywin that, it was met by half a year of silence. Characters/Places/Names/Events:Jamie Lannister - Twin and lover to Cersei. Lord Commander of the Kingsguard. Biological father of King Tommen.Daven Lannister - Son of Stafford Lannister. New Warden of the West.Kevan Lannister - Uncle to Jaime, sidelined from power by Cersei.Genna Lannister - Sister to Tywin, aunt to Jaime.Emmon Frey - Husband to Genna. New lord of Riverrun - if and when it falls.Brynden Blackfish Tully - Uncle to Edmure Tully. De facto Lord of Riverrun.Edmure Tully - Stripped of his lordship of Riverrun, captive of the Freys.Ryman Frey - Heir to the Twins. Abuser of Edmure.Riverrun - Former capital of the Riverlands. Seat of House Tully. Gifted to the Freys by the crown. Under siege.  Support the showSupport us: Buy us a Cup of Arbor Gold, or become a sustainer and receive cool perks Donate to our cause Use our exclusive URL for a free 30-day trial of Audible Buy or gift Marriott Bonvoy points through our affiliate link Rate and review us at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, podchaser.com, and elsewhere.Find us on social media: Discord Twitter @GhostsHarrenhal Facebook Instagram YouTube All Music credits to Ross Bugden:INSTAGRAM! : https://instagram.com/rossbugden/ (rossbugden) TWITTER! : https://twitter.com/RossBugden (@rossbugden) YOUTUBE! : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kthxycmF25M

The Ghosts of Harrenhal: A Song of Ice and Fire Podcast (ASOIAF)
Chapter Thirty - Jaime 4 - A Feast for Crows | A Song of Ice and Fire (ASOIAF)

The Ghosts of Harrenhal: A Song of Ice and Fire Podcast (ASOIAF)

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2024 76:11


Send us a textJaime tarries in Darry to confront his cousin Lancel. He finds a man lost to his faith, a faith that has taken up arms with relish. Mackelly and Simon consider converting.Chapter Review:Jaime Lannister finds Darry being rebuilt but still scarred by recent wars. His uncle Kevan has left, having quarreled with Lancel after the wedding of Lancel to Amerei Frey - heir to Darry.Jaime encourages his squire Peck to make a move with the freed girl Pia - between whom a romance has bloomed. Jaime advises the young lad to seek her permission and to treat her kindly. At dinner Amerei Frey-Darry-Lannister beseeches Jaime to stay and protect Darry from the wolves and brigands that plague the region. Jaime demurs, but others are willing to help.Jaime finds Lancel in the sept where he doesn't eat, but does sleep. Lancel confesses all his crimes, including the fact that he already confessed those crimes to the former High Septon. His new plan is to set aside Amerei and to return to King's Landing as a member of the Faith Militant. Jaime cannot understand why anyone would give up all Lancel has, but Lancel points out that Jaime did.Jaime spars with Ilyn Payne and unburdens his own crimes to the mute. He slept with Cersei over King Robert's drunken body, right here in this castle. The executioner just laughs.Characters/Places/Names/Events:Jamie Lannister - Twin and lover to Cersei. Lord Commander of the Kingsguard. Biological father of King Tommen.Cersei Lannister - Mother to King Tommen, Queen Regent of the Seven Kingdoms.Addam Marbrand - Commander of the Gold Cloaks. Friend of Jaime's.Ilyn Payne - King's Justice who lost his tongue, so is unable to read, write, or speak.Kevan Lannister - Uncle to Jaime, father of Lancel. Lancel Lannister - Son of Kevn, new husband of Amerei Frey. Former lover of Cersei. Amerei Frey - Daughter of Mariya Darry-Frey. New wife to Lancel and Lady of Darry.Mariya Darry-Frey - Former Lady of Darry.Castle Darry - Not on the way from Harrenhal to Riverrun. Support the showSupport us: Buy us a Cup of Arbor Gold, or become a sustainer and receive cool perks Donate to our cause Use our exclusive URL for a free 30-day trial of Audible Buy or gift Marriott Bonvoy points through our affiliate link Rate and review us at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, podchaser.com, and elsewhere.Find us on social media: Discord Twitter @GhostsHarrenhal Facebook Instagram YouTube All Music credits to Ross Bugden:INSTAGRAM! : https://instagram.com/rossbugden/ (rossbugden) TWITTER! : https://twitter.com/RossBugden (@rossbugden) YOUTUBE! : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kthxycmF25M

The Shifting World
Ep. 7 - River Run For it!

The Shifting World

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2024 91:32


Support us by rating us and leaving a review! Follow us on Instagram @⁠⁠⁠⁠shiftingworldpod⁠⁠⁠⁠ Your GM is David Crennen @⁠⁠⁠⁠adventuringlife⁠⁠⁠⁠ Deeva Buttercup is Alejandra Cejudo @⁠⁠⁠⁠empressalejandra⁠⁠⁠⁠ Ren is Jennifer Holcombe @⁠⁠⁠⁠jenncredible_holc⁠⁠⁠⁠ Thunderfoot is Roman Banfield @⁠⁠⁠⁠romanimal⁠⁠⁠⁠ Sound Mixing and Editing By Brad Parsons And Roma Deshchenko Produced By Hunter Ausfahl @⁠⁠⁠⁠yikesitshunter⁠⁠⁠⁠ Send us stuff and get in contact: hunter@dungeoninabox.com Roll High!

Paddle N' Fin
S01-Ep.016 - The River Run Podcast- Remi Keroack - Team Brother Fishing

Paddle N' Fin

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2024 102:24


Don't miss the next thrilling episode of The River Run Podcast! Host Adam Fraser Pross from Paddle n Fin is gearing up for an exciting discussion with Remi Keroack, a dedicated Pro Staff member for Quebec's premier Kayak Fishing trail series "Team Brother Fishing." Join us as we explore the exhilarating TBF trail format and immerse ourselves in Remi's deep-seated love for kayak fishing. This is going to be an unforgettable show - make sure to tune in! Join us for an exciting evening of streaming tonight at 7 pm on The Paddle N Fin social media platforms and The River Run Podcast TV YouTube channel! Don't miss out on the fun and great conversations! Streaming Tonight at 7 pm on Paddle N Fin's YouTube and Facebook The River Run Podcast TV YouTube Channel Podcast & Website- www.paddlenfin.com YouTube- https://www.youtube.com/paddlenfin Email- paddlenfin@gmail.com Social Media- @paddlenfin Pelican Professional- www.pelican.com Rocktown paddlesports - rocktownadventures.com Zero Litium- https://www.zprolithium.com/ The River Run Podcast: The River Run Podcast Instagram - @Theriverrunpodcast Adam Fraser Pross Instagram -@Riverrunfishing River Run Fishing YouTube- https://www.youtube.com/@riverrunfishing Jackson Kayak - https://www.jacksonkayak.com DUBRO Fishing- https://www.dubrofishing.com Hard Knox Kayak Fishn' - @hardknoxkayakfishn Kayak Bass Canada - @kayakbasscanada Big Country Kustoms - https://www.facebook.com/BigCountryKustoms1 Dubro Fishing Promo code: RRUN10 save 10% on your next Dubro Fishing purchase. Subscribe, Follow, Like, Comment and share. We appreciate your support. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Paddle N' Fin
S01 - EP.15 - The River Run Podcast -Nelson Brunes

Paddle N' Fin

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2024 99:09


Get ready for an exciting episode of Paddle N Fin's The River Run Podcast! Host Adam Fraser Pross is joined by the one and only Nelson Brunes. Nelson is a dedicated Ontario kayak angler who competes in the Ontario Kayak Bass Trail and The Ontario Kayak Bassmaster series. With his popular YouTube channel "Nelly's Fishing Adventures," Nelson is a well-known figure in the kayak community. Join us as we dive into the world of content creation and the dedication it takes to produce high-quality videos. Sit back, relax, and join us on Nelson's thrilling journey as a kayak angler! Join us for an exciting evening of streaming tonight at 7 pm EST on The Paddle N Fin social media platforms and The River Run Podcast TV YouTube channel! Don't miss out on the fun and great conversations! Podcast & Website- www.paddlenfin.com YouTube- https://www.youtube.com/paddlenfin Email- paddlenfin@gmail.com Social Media- @paddlenfin Pelican Professional- www.pelican.com Rocktown paddlesports - rocktownadventures.com Zero Litium- https://www.zprolithium.com/ The River Run Podcast The River Run Podcast Instagram - @Theriverrunpodcast Adam Fraser Pross Instagram -@Riverrunfishing The River Run Podcast TV YouTube- https://www.youtube.com/@riverrunfishing Jackson Kayak - https://www.jacksonkayak.com DUBRO Fishing- https://www.dubrofishing.com Hard Knox Kayak Fishn' - @hardknoxkayakfishn Kayak Bass Canada - @kayakbasscanada Big Country Kustoms - https://www.facebook.com/BigCountryKustoms1 Dubro Fishing Promo code: RRUN10 save 10% on your next Dubro Fishing purchase. Subscribe, Follow, Like, Comment and share. We appreciate your support. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Ghosts of Harrenhal: A Song of Ice and Fire Podcast (ASOIAF)
Chapter Twenty-Seven - Jaime 3 - A Feast for Crows | A Song of Ice and Fire (ASOIAF)

The Ghosts of Harrenhal: A Song of Ice and Fire Podcast (ASOIAF)

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 3, 2024 63:08


Send us a textJaime is booted from King's Landing by Cersei to settle matters in the Riverlands. He finds a sparring partner, installs new leadership at Harrenhal, and sends Wylis Manderly home. Finally, he defends the honor of Brienne of Tarth. Mackelly and Simon give high fives.Chapter Review:Jaime Lannister thinks the plan is folly. Queen Cersei doesn't care for his opinions on the matter. He'll go to the Riverlands, sort out Harrenhal, find Wylis Manderly, and end the siege at Riverrun. Jaime reluctantly agrees but insists on having Addam Marbrand and Ilyn Payne accompany him. Throughout their journey, Jaime finds a private place for Ser Ilyn and him to spar. Ilyn soundly defeats Jaime at every opportunity, and Jaime chose him as his partner because the silent knight can't tell anyone the embarrassing details.Once at Harrenhal, Jaime is disappointed to learn that no Bloody Mummers are captives but is pleased that Wylis Manderly is alive and in one piece. Jaime announces that Bonifer Hasty will take command of the castle. Bonifer wants no part of Gregor Clegane's men, so Jaime agrees to take them with him to Riverrun. At dinner, Ser Bonifer insists his Holy Hundred warriors can hold the castle, and Jaime hopes they can fight as well as they pray.Jaime leaves Ser Bonifer to find Ser Ilyn. Instead, Jaime finds Ronnet Connington overlooking the bear pit. Red Ronnet wanted to see where Brienne of Tarth fought the bear. He tells Jaime that he and Brienne were betrothed once. However, upon their meeting, he rejected the girl. Ronnet says the bear was surely less hairy than that freak. Jaime socks him in the face with his golden hand, sending Ronnet tumbling. Jaime insists Ronnet call her Brienne.Characters/Places/Names/Events:Jamie Lannister - Twin and lover to Cersei. Biological father of Cersei's children.Cersei Lannister - Mother to King Tommen, Queen Regent of the Seven Kingdoms.Addam Marbrand - Commander of the Gold Cloaks. Friend of Jaime's.Ilyn Payne - King's Justice who lost his tongue, so is unable to read, write, or speak.Wylis Manderly - Son and heir of Wyman Manderly of White Harbor.Bonifer Hasty - Pious knight and leader of the Holy Hundred."Red" Ronnet Connington - Knight once betrothed to Brienne of Tarth. Support the Show.Support us: Buy us a Cup of Arbor Gold, or become a sustainer and receive cool perks Donate to our cause Use our exclusive URL for a free 30-day trial of Audible Buy or gift Marriott Bonvoy points through our affiliate link Rate and review us at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, podchaser.com, and elsewhere.Find us on social media: Discord Twitter @GhostsHarrenhal Facebook Instagram YouTube All Music credits to Ross Bugden:INSTAGRAM! : https://instagram.com/rossbugden/ (rossbugden) TWITTER! : https://twitter.com/RossBugden (@rossbugden) YOUTUBE! : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kthxycmF25M

Militant Thomist
Testing the Holy Fire w/ Riverrun

Militant Thomist

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2024 114:04


You know the drill... Patreon: patreon.com/militantthomist Donate christianbwagner.com/donate NEW AQUINAS ACADEMY Link: https://www.christianbwagner.com/newaquinasacademy Discord: https://aquinas.cc/la/en/~DePrinNat.C1 Donate: https://www.patreon.com/newaquinasacademy FURTHER RESOURCES To get Tutoring: https://www.christianbwagner.com/book-online Annotated Thomist: https://www.christianbwagner.com/annotated-thomist Scholastic Courses: https://www.christianbwagner.com/courses SPONSOR Use the code “Militant” for 20% off to learn Greek here: https://fluentgreeknt.com/ MUSIC https://youtu.be/ePYe3lqsu-g https://youtu.be/Hi5YgbiNB1U SUPPORT Subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCQ5DQ8zCOmeAqOcKTbSb7fg Become a Patron: https://www.patreon.com/MilitantThomist Donate: https://www.paypal.com/donate/?business=9XM8FACTLFDW2&no_recurring=0&item_name=Support+my+Apostolate¤cy_code=USD FOLLOW Website: https://www.christianbwagner.com/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MilitantThomist Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/543689120339579 Twitter: https://twitter.com/MilitantThomist Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/militantthomist/ WATCH https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCQ5DQ8zCOmeAqOcKTbSb7fg LISTEN Podcast: https://www.christianbwagner.com/podcast Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/0exZN1vHDyLuRjnUI3sHXt?si=XHs8risyS1ebLCkWwKLblQ Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/militant-thomist/id1603094572 Anchor: https://anchor.fm/militantthomist SHOP Book Store: https://www.christianbwagner.com/shop Merch: https://www.christianbwagner.com/merch

Paddle N' Fin
S01-Ep.014 - The River Run Podcast - Chuck Earls

Paddle N' Fin

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2024 109:25


Get ready for an adrenaline-fueled episode of The River Run Podcast! Hang on tight as host Adam Fraser Pross from Paddle N Fin dives into an epic conversation with cold water specialist and Lake Erie Kayak guide, Chuck Earls. Chuck fearlessly takes on the exhilarating Lake Erie conditions in search of various freshwater species through his guiding business. As if that's not enough, he's a fierce competitor in the Walleye series as a kayak walleye angler. Plus, you can tap into Chuck's wealth of knowledge on cold-water safety through his action-packed YouTube Channel. If you're eager to discover the secrets of safe kayak fishing during the colder months, this podcast is a can't-miss. Don't miss out – tune in and get ready for an unforgettable show! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Paddle N' Fin
S01.-Ep013 - The River Run Podcast - Matt Campbell - Mid Atlantic Kayak Bass Fishing Series

Paddle N' Fin

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 24, 2024 98:44


Get ready for an exhilarating episode of the River Run Podcast! Join Paddle n Fin host Adam Fraser Pross as he catches up with his Jackson Kayak fishing teammate, the one and only Matt Campbell. Hear all about Matt's thrilling experiences as a competitive kayak angler, including his recent epic battle at the B.A.S.S kayak Susquehanna River event. And that's not all – Matt is also a key player in the Mid-Atlantic Kayak Bass Fishing Series! Sit back, relax, and get ready for an unforgettable show. Tonight Aug 22, 2024, at 10 pm EST Streaming on: Paddle N Fin's YouTube channel Paddle N Fin's Facebook page The River Run Podcast YouTube channel Subscribe, Follow, Like, Comment and share. We appreciate your support. Dubro Fisihing Promo code: RRUN10 save 10% on your next Dubro Fishing purchase.

EntrePastors
When a Congregation Embraces an Entrepreneurial Spirit with Dan Scott (#207)

EntrePastors

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 23, 2024 38:50


In this episode of the EntrePastors Podcast Les talks with long-time pastor Dan Scott.  Dan served Christ Church during a season in which a powerful move of the Holy Spirit took place as people were inspired, equipped, and released to go into the world and lean into their God-given gifts and talents in the marketplace.  Dan captures many of the amazing stories that came out of this transformative season in his book Let the River Run.  There were several national and international platforms that were launched out of this church during this season including Dan Miller's 48 Days to Work You Love and Dave Ramsey's Financial Peace ministry.  We encourage pastors to listen to this conversation through the lens of what's possible when we see our people as uniquely shaped by God not just work inside our churches, but to be sent out to have an impact far beyond the four walls of the church.Guest Info/Links:Website: https://pastordanscott.com/ Call to Action:Get our FREE EntrePastors Get Started Guide https://www.entrepastors.com/start 

Paddle N' Fin
S01-Ep.12 - The River Run Podcast- Wade Clements - Yak Attack

Paddle N' Fin

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2024 103:03


Get hyped for an epic episode of Paddle N Fin's The River Run podcast! We've got the amazing Wade Clements, marketing coordinator for Yak Attack and a dedicated river kayak angler, joining us as our special guest. Get ready for thrilling river tales and a deep dive into the excitement of fishing Virginia Rivers. And wait, there's more! Don't forget to participate in our special giveaway! Tune in for an adrenaline-pumping episode packed with adventure and lively conversation. Streaming Tonight at 7 pm on Paddle N Fin's YouTube and Facebook The River Run Fishing Podcast YouTube Channel Podcast & Website- www.paddlenfin.com YouTube- https://www.youtube.com/paddlenfin Email- paddlenfin@gmail.com Social Media- @paddlenfin Pelican Professional- www.pelican.com Rocktown paddlesports - rocktownadventures.com Zero Litium- https://www.zprolithium.com/ The River Run Podcast: The River Run Podcast Instagram - @Theriverrunpodcast Host: Adam Fraser Pross Instagram -@Riverrunfishing The River Run Podcast YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/@riverrunfishing Jackson Kayak - https://www.jacksonkayak.com DUBRO Fishing- https://www.dubrofishing.com Hard Knox Kayak Fishn' - @hardknoxkayakfishn Kayak Bass Canada - @kayakbasscanada Big Country Kustoms - https://www.facebook.com/BigCountryKu... Dubro Fisihing Promo code: RRUN10 save 10% on your next Dubro Fishing purchase. Subscribe, Follow, Like, Comment and share. We appreciate your support. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Paddle N' Fin
S01 - EP.11 - The River Run Podcast - Eric Siddiqi- Professional Kayak Angler

Paddle N' Fin

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2024 65:19


On this episode of The River Run Podcast, Adam Fraser Pross sits down with Eric Siddiqi, a professional kayak angler and qualifier for various prestigious tournaments, including KBF, Hobie, B.A.S.S, Pan Am, and the World Championship. Eric's vast experience across multiple tournament trails solidifies his position as a strong competitor in the kayak fishing community. Streaming Tonight at 7 pm on Paddle N Fin's YouTube and Facebook River Run Fishing YouTube Podcast & Website- www.paddlenfin.com YouTube-   / paddlenfin   Email- paddlenfin@gmail.com Social Media- @paddlenfin Pelican Professional- www.pelican.com Rocktown paddlesports - rocktownadventures.com Zero Litium- https://www.zprolithium.com/ The River Run Podcast The River Run Podcast Instagram - @Theriverrunpodcast Adam Fraser Pross Instagram -@Riverrunfishing River Run Fishing YouTube-   / @riverrunfishing   Jackson Kayak - https://www.jacksonkayak.com DUBRO Fishing- https://www.dubrofishing.com Hard Knox Kayak Fishn' - @hardknoxkayakfishn Kayak Bass Canada - @kayakbasscanada Big Country Kustoms - Dubro Fisihing Promo code: RRUN10 save 10% on your next Dubro Fishing purchase. Subscribe, Follow, Like, Comment and share. We appreciate your support. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Paddle N' Fin
S01 - EP.011 - The River Run Podcast - Robert Martin - Tight Lines Tackle

Paddle N' Fin

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2024 99:53


Host Adam Fraser Pross of Paddle N Fin's The River Run Podcast interviews Robert Martin, a passionate angler and proprietor of one of Canada's rising tackle stores in Cornwall, Ontario. Martin shares his journey from owning a flower shop to a tackle store and his experiences as an avid tournament angler in bass boat series, focusing on smallmouth bass. Streaming Tonight at 7 pm on Paddle N Fin's YouTube and Facebook River Run Fishing YouTube Podcast & Website- www.paddlenfin.com YouTube-   / paddlenfin   Email- paddlenfin@gmail.com Social Media- @paddlenfin Pelican Professional- www.pelican.com Rocktown paddlesports - rocktownadventures.com Zero Litium- https://www.zprolithium.com/ The River Run Podcast Facebook - The River Run Podcast Page Instagram - @theriverrunpodcast Host Instagram - @riverrunfishing River Run Fishing YouTube-   / @riverrunfishing   Jackson Kayak - https://www.jacksonkayak.com DUBRO Fishing- https://www.dubrofishing.com Hard Knox Kayak Fishn' - @hardknoxkayakfishn Kayak Bass Canada - @kayakbasscanada Tight Lines Tackle - @tightlinestacklecornwall https://www.tightlinetackle.ca Dubro Fisihing Promo code: RRUN10 save 10% on your next Dubro Fishing purchase. Subscribe, Follow, Like, Comment and share. We appreciate your support Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Paddle N' Fin
S01-EP.009 River Run Podcast Antoine D.G. Hobie Fishing Worlds - Canada Pro

Paddle N' Fin

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2024 84:07


In the upcoming episode of Paddle n Fin's River Run podcast, host Adam Fraser Pross will be joined by esteemed Canadian kayak tournament competitor, Antoine D.G. With a robust track record in international tournaments, Antoine's accomplishments are truly noteworthy. Beyond his successful tournament endeavors, Antoine fulfills the role of a sales representative for Canada Pro and acts as a respected ambassador for Feel Free kayaks. This promises to be an engaging and informative episode that enthusiasts of the sport will surely appreciate. River Run Fishing YouTube Podcast & Website- www.paddlenfin.com YouTube- https://www.youtube.com/paddlenfin Email- paddlenfin@gmail.com Social Media- @paddlenfin Pelican Professional- www.pelican.com Rocktown paddlesports - rocktownadventures.com Zero Litium- https://www.zprolithium.com/ The River Run Podcast Host Instagram - @riverrunfishing The River Run Podcast Instagram - theriverrunpodcast River Run Fishing YouTube- https://www.youtube.com/@riverrunfishing Jackson Kayak - https://www.jacksonkayak.com DUBRO Fishing- https://www.dubrofishing.com Hard Knox Kayak Fishn' - @hardknoxkayakfishn Kayak Bass Canada - @kayakbasscanada Big Country Kustoms - @BigCountryKustoms1 Dubro Fisihing Promo code: RRUN10 save 10% on your next Dubro Fishing purchase. Subscribe, Follow, Like, Comment and share. We appreciate your support. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

For Your Amusement: A Theme Park Podcast

Go to Trymiracle.com/FYA and use promo code FYA to save 40% plus 3 FREE TOWELS and an additional 20%! HELLO, RAFTERS! Join us Happy Campers on a white water adventure, as we discuss Grizzly River Run at Disney California Adventure. Bloopers! Behind the scenes looks! Other exclusive content available at http://www.patreon.com/watcher Get Watcher merch at https://watcherstuff.com/ CREATED & HOSTED BY Ryan Bergara & Byron Marin EDITOR Shannon Fan PRODUCER Matt Real EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS Steven Lim  Ryan Bergara Shane Madej Social: http://www.instagram.com/fyapod http://www.instagram.com/ryanbergara http://www.instagram.com/byronamarin https://twitter.com/fyapod https://twitter.com/ryansbergara https://twitter.com/byronamarin Business Inquiries:  hello@watcherentertainment.com SFX by Audio-blocks FYA Logo by Arthur Kierce (@theonekierce) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Paddle N' Fin
River Run Podcast- Brian Schiller, DUBRO Fishing & New Products at ICAST 24

Paddle N' Fin

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2024 113:01


In this episode of the River Run podcast, I'm thrilled to be joined by the legendary Brian Schiller. This episode marks the exciting start of Icast 2024 for Paddle and Fin. Not only is Brian Schiller the godfather of Paddle and Fin, but he also serves as the Marketing Director for Dubro Fishing. Get ready to sit back and savor the show.  Podcast & Website- www.paddlenfin.com YouTube- https://www.youtube.com/paddlenfin Email- paddlenfin@gmail.com Social Media- @paddlenfin DUBRO Fishing- www.dubrofishing.com Yak Gadget- www.yakgadget.com Pelican Professional- www.pelican.com Rocktown paddlesports - rocktownadventures.com ZPro Litium- https://www.zprolithium.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Paddle N' Fin
S01 - EP.006 River Run Podcast - Jeff Little - Boonedox - Smallies - Torqeedo

Paddle N' Fin

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2024 95:43


On this episode of Paddle N Fin's The River Run podcast, your host, Adam Fraser Pross, sits down with Jeff Little. Jeff is a pioneer of river fishing in the kayak fishing world, especially his content he creates for the “The Little Stuff” on YouTube. Jeff has worked for years in the industry, with Torqeedo, and has now started a new chapter with Boonedox. Jeff Little is all over the country working and fishing. Sit back and enjoy the show. DUBRO FISHING PROMO CODE: RRUN10 save 10% on your next purchase at Dubro Fishing. Podcast & Website- https://www.paddlenfin.com YouTube- https://www.youtube.com/paddlenfin Email- paddlenfin@gmail.com Social Media- @paddlenfin Pelican Professional- https://www.pelican.com Rocktown paddlesports - https://www.rocktownadventures.com Zero Litium- https://www.zprolithium.com/ The River Run Podcast Host IG - @riverrunfishing YouTube- https://www.youtube.com/@riverrunfishing Jackson Kayak - https://www.jacksonkayak.com DUBRO Fishing- https://www.dubrofishing.com Hard Knox Kayak Fishn' Kayak Bass Canada BE A HERO FOR CHEO (Children's Hospital Of Eastern Ontario) Donation Link Kayak Fishing Life 4th Annual Benefit for CHEO https://cheofoundation.donordrive.com/index.cfm... Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Paddle N' Fin
S01 - EP.007 River Run Podcast - Steve Eidt -Hard Knox Kayak Fish'n

Paddle N' Fin

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2024 78:14


Tune in this week to Paddle N Fin's The River Run podcast, where host Adam Fraser Pross interviews Steve Eidt, founder of Southern Ontario Kayak Fishing group 'Hard Knox Kayak Fishin'. This grassroots organization unites anglers who share a passion for kayak fishing. Streaming Tonight at 7 pm on Paddle N Fin's YouTube & Facebook River Run Fishing YouTube Podcast & Website- www.paddlenfin.com YouTube-   / paddlenfin   Email- paddlenfin@gmail.com Social Media- @paddlenfin Pelican Professional- www.pelican.com Rocktown paddlesports - rocktownadventures.com Zero Litium- https://www.zprolithium.com/ The River Run Podcast Host Instagram - @riverrunfishing River Run Fishing YouTube-   / @riverrunfishing   Jackson Kayak - https://www.jacksonkayak.com DUBRO Fishing- https://www.dubrofishing.com Hard Knox Kayak Fishn' - @hardknoxkayakfishn Kayak Bass Canada - @kayakbasscanada Here is the Link for The Kayak Fishing Life Benefit for CHEO! Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario. We can all be a Hero FOR a CHEO

Funny, They Don't Look Jewish!
Episode 30 - DC's The Golem (Part 2)

Funny, They Don't Look Jewish!

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2024 78:56


Welcome to Funny; They Don't Look Jewish, “Where Judaism appears in the panels.” Our purpose is to find characters, stories and issues of comics that explore explicitly Jewish content.In this episode Brandon and Henry wrap of their coverage of DC's The Golem!Comics and TV covered in this episode:Swamp Thing (Vol. 2) #153, Apr 1995“River Run, Chapter 2: Twilight of the Gods”Written by Mark MillarPenciled by Chris WestonInked by Kim DeMulderColored by Tatjana WoodLettered by ComicraftEdited by Stuart Moore and Julie RottenbergHellblazer #167, Oct 2001“Highwater, Conclusion”Written by Brian AzzarrelloPenciled and inked by Marcelo FrusinColored by ZylonolLettered by Clem RobinsEdited by Will DennisSuperboy, Season 3: Ep 14 - The GolemJanuary 19, 1991Director: Robert WiemerWriter: Paul Stubenrauch “An elderly Jewish man creates the mythical creature Golem to protect him from racial bigotry. But when Golem goes on a rampage, Superboy has to step in and save the day.” Follow us at https://twitter.com/JewishComicsPod, https://www.facebook.com/jewishcomicspod Please give us a rating and review at https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/funny-they-dont-look-jewish/id1454459953

Paddle N' Fin
S01 - Eps. 005 The River Run Podcast - Nicolaos Cousvis -Trophy Smallmouth Bass Hunter

Paddle N' Fin

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2024 91:14


This week on the River Run Podcast Live we are joined by special guest Nick Cousvis. Nick is a Trophy Smallmouth Bass Hunter up here in Canada. Nick continuously catches huge Smallmouth Bass year-round in Ontario waters. We could all learn from the expert angler and Megabass pro-Nick Cousvis. Sit back and enjoy the show. Let's hit the river! Watch live on Thursday, June 13th at 7 pm EST on the Paddle N Fin Podcast Network, Facebook and YouTube channels. Podcast & Website- www.paddlenfin.com YouTube-   / paddlenfin   Email- paddlenfin@gmail.com Social Media- @paddlenfin Pelican Professional- www.pelican.com Rocktown paddlesports - rocktownadventures.com Zero Litium- https://www.zprolithium.com/ DUBR The River Run Podcast Host IG - @riverrunfishing YouTube-   / @riverrunfishing   Jackson Kayak - www.jacksonkayak.com DUBRO Fishing- www.dubrofishing.com Hard Knox Kayak Fishn' - Instagram & Facebook Kayak Bass Canada - Instagram & Facebook DUBRO Fishing PROMO CODE: RRUN10 Save 10% on your next Dubro Fishing purchase! Here is the Link for The Kayak Fishing Life Benefit for CHEO! We can all be a Hero FOR a CHEO

Paddle N' Fin
S01 - EP.004 - The River Run - Drew Gregory - From Hooked On Wild Waters to the Kayak Adventure Series

Paddle N' Fin

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2024 81:09


Your Paddle N Fin host Adam Fraser Pross sits down with one of the most iconic kayak anglers, Drew Gregory. Drew Gregory is out on the tournament circuit leading the pack. Drew is an innovator and pioneer of kayak fishing designs and layouts. He has played a major role in the development of some of the most popular models in the industry and his innovations have set the standard for features on fishing kayaks at Crescent Kayaks . This year, Drew started the Kayak Adventure Series, going across the nation this summer. Sit back and enjoy the show with this week's The River Run Podcast guest Drew Gregory. Watch Live on the Paddle N Fin podcast on Facebook and YouTube. Podcast & Website- www.paddlenfin.com YouTube-   / paddlenfin   Email- paddlenfin@gmail.com Social Media- @paddlenfin Pelican Professional- www.pelican.com Rocktown paddlesports - rocktownadventures.com Zero Litium- https://www.zprolithium.com/ The River Run Podcast Host IG - @riverrunfishing YouTube-   / @riverrunfishing   Jackson Kayak - www.jacksonkayak.com DUBRO Fishing- www.dubrofishing.com Hard Knox Kayak Fishn' - On Facebook & Instagram @Hardknoxkayakfishn Kayak Bass Canada - On Facebook & Instagram @KayakBassCanada Here is the Link for The Kayak Fishing Life Benefit for CHEO! We can all be a Hero FOR a CHEO

The Catch Podcast - Fishing
S2E22 W/ Adam Pross: River Run Fishing

The Catch Podcast - Fishing

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2024 82:00


On this episode, Matt and Brad welcome back on Adam Pross for the second time to talk about his new podcvast he started over on the Paddle N Fin Podcast Network called The River Run Podcast. The guys also dive into some blind rankings of baits and do a lightning round game with Adam. Follow adam on instagram below: https://www.instagram.com/riverrunfishing/ Sponsored by: Dark Horse Tackle Use promo code THECATCH5OFF to save $5 off your first monthly subscription to the box. Use code CATCHABYOB to save 25% off your build a box feature. Click the link below! https://darkhorsetackle.com/collections/subscription-products --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/the-catch-pod/support

Paddle N' Fin
S01 - EP.002 - The River Run - Adam Merrifield “Mighty Smallmouth catching big bass in small water”.

Paddle N' Fin

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2024 102:08


Your host, Adam Fraser Pross, will be sitting down with the author of “Mighty Smallmouth Catching Big Bass In Small Water”. Adam Merrifield has written one of the most educational and spectacular smallmouth bass books and just happens to be an avid southern Ontario smallmouth bass angler. Whether he's wading or floating down the river, he is catching big smallmouth bass in small water. Get ready for The River Run Podcast show this Thursday, May 2nd at 7 pm EST on the Paddle N' Fin network. Sit back and enjoy the show as we dive into Adam Merrifield's “Mighty Smallmouth" Book. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Not A Podcast ASOIAF Re-Read Podcast
Episode 218: A STORM OF SWORDS, DAENERYS VI: "The Lonely God"

Not A Podcast ASOIAF Re-Read Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2024 96:00


Hello and welcome to the NotACast, the one true chapter-by-chapter podcast going through A Song of Ice and Fire! In this episode, Daenerys decides to stay in Slaver's Bay. Only for a little while, though... Next time: ASOS Jaime IX, in which we set up a bunch of storylines for the next couple books. Brienne, Riverrun, Jeyne Poole, we're playing all the hits! Emmett's twitter: twitter.com/PoorQuentyn Manu's Twitter: https://twitter.com/ManuclearBomb  Manu's patreon: https://www.patreon.com/ManuclearBomb Our patreon: www.patreon.com/NotACastASOIAF Our merch store: https://notacastasoiaf.threadless.com     Our twitter: twitter.com/NotACastASOIAF   Our facebook: www.facebook.com/groups/289889118235797/   Our youtube page: www.youtube.com/channel/UCmmDfPdG…iew_as=subscriber   Our Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/notacastasoiaf/ 

Game of Thrones The Podcast
Electric Bookaloo: Catelyn VI (Clash)

Game of Thrones The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2023 61:58 Very Popular


Lt. Col. ML Cavanaugh (PhD and military strategist) joins the podcast to talk about defending Riverrun and a few metacritical aspects of warfare. Theme song: Game of Thrones (80's TV Theme) by Highway Superstar Check out https://support.baldmove.com/ to find out how you can gain access to ALL of our premium content, as well as ad-free versions of the podcasts, for just $5 a month! Join the discussion:  book@baldmove.com  | Discord | Reddit | Forums Leave Us A Review on Apple Podcasts Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices