POPULARITY
You can now text us anonymously to leave feedback, suggest future content or simply hurl abuse at us. We'll read out any texts we receive on the show. Click here to try it out!Welcome back to Bad Dads Film Review! Today, we're diving into the action-packed and satirically sharp world of Demolition Man. Released in 1993, this film directed by Marco Brambilla stars Sylvester Stallone and Wesley Snipes in roles that perfectly blend intense action with comedic timing.Demolition Man takes us to a future where violence is nearly obsolete, and the society of San Angeles is governed by a pacifist regime that has sanitized nearly every aspect of life. The film kicks off in 1996, with LAPD Sergeant John Spartan (Stallone), who is wrongly convicted of a crime during his pursuit of the psychopathic crime lord Simon Phoenix (Snipes). Both are cryogenically frozen as part of their sentence, with their release set for a time when their brand of violence is supposed to be outdated.Fast forward to 2032, Phoenix is accidentally thawed during a parole hearing and finds himself in a future ill-equipped to handle his brand of chaos. With no one able to match his violence, the pacified police force is helpless, leading to the decision to thaw Spartan, hoping his old-school ways can stop Phoenix once more. The film brilliantly juxtaposes Spartan's brute force and archaic methods with the gentle, almost comedic society of the future.Demolition Man explores the perennial debate of freedom versus safety. The film questions whether a society can become so obsessed with peace and order that it loses essential freedoms, and whether those like Spartan, who are deemed necessary evils, can ever truly fit in or retire in such a world.Why It's a Must-Watch For fans of classic action films and dystopian futures, Demolition Man offers a unique take that's both entertaining and insightful. It's a film that invites you not just to enjoy the explosive confrontations but also to ponder deeper questions about our future societal choices.So, buckle up as we revisit the thrilling, icy-cold showdowns of Demolition Man, exploring what happens when a society's desire for peace faces the ultimate test against unbridled chaos. Whether you're in it for the action or the social commentary, there's plenty to uncover in this Stallone-Snipes classic.
With innocent victims caught in the crossfire in Los Angeles' intensifying war on crime, both cop John Spartan (Sylvester Stallone) and violent thug Simon Phoenix (Wesley Snipes) are sentenced to a state of frozen incarceration known as "CryoPrison." When Spartan is finally thawed 36 years later, it's 2032, and Los Angeles is now a pacifist utopia called San Angeles. But with Phoenix again on the loose, Spartan must team up with future cop Lenina (Sandra Bullock) to apprehend the killer.
Just over thirty years ago, we saw the unheralded release of this latest futuristic action thriller directed by Marco Brambilla starring Sylvester Stallone and Wesley Snipes....only it was actually more of a comedy. :o And Stallone was actually being INTENTIONALLY funny for a change.....and here was Snipes at the peak of his stardom playing a Joker-like homicidal villain....and playing a prominent supporting role was a younger up-and-coming actress named Sandra Bullock who kind of steals the movie? Yup this movie ended up surprising audiences and critics alike, not only becoming a solid box office hit but building a legacy of being one of the more quotable and meme-able comedies of its era. It takes place in the not-too-distant future of 2030 in the utopian (?) metropolis of San Angeles where there is no crime, no profanity, and no place to eat out besides Taco Bell! :) A master criminal Simon Phoenix (Snipes) has been released into this environment and they are clearly NOT ready for him....so what better way to take on a maniac than sending in ANOTHER maniac from the past who would be the notorious cop John Spartan (Stallone)? It's STALLONE vs. SNIPES! Host & Editor: Geoff GershonProducer: Marlene Gershon https://livingforthecinema.com/Facebook:https://www.facebook.com/Living-for-the-Cinema-Podcast-101167838847578Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/livingforthecinema/Letterboxd:https://letterboxd.com/Living4Cinema/
Directed by Marco Brambilla, Demolition Man is the science fiction action film starring Sylvester Stallone and Wesley Snipes. Luke and Jae return to 1993 to review and celebrate the 30th anniversary of this futuristic flick which had a four-part limited-series comic adaption published by DC Comics, written by Gary Cohn. With innocent victims caught in the crossfire in Los Angeles' intensifying war on crime, both cop John Spartan (Sylvester Stallone) and violent thug Simon Phoenix (Wesley Snipes) are sentenced to a state of frozen incarceration known as "CryoPrison." When Spartan is finally thawed 36 years later, it's 2032, and Los Angeles is now a pacifist utopia called San Angeles. But with Phoenix again on the loose, Spartan must team up with future cop Lenina (Sandra Bullock) to apprehend the killer.
Happy Thanksgiving to our beloved BIG 4-0 listeners! Today, November 23, 1983 saw the release of James L. Brooks' debut film AND multiple Oscar-winner, TERMS OF ENDEARMENT - a film Ron and Peter had been avoiding all these years due to its tearjerking, cancer subject matter; so we felt we needed a big action-comedy as an emotional palate cleanser to follow, so we decided to tackle the Sylvester Stallone-Wesley Snipes-Sandra Bullock futuristic (though we're getting closer to 2032 every year) thriller DEMOLTION MAN, which celebrated its BIG 3-0 just last month, and is a movie Peter never cared for (?!). Find out if our opinions on either film have changed over the years and if we think we'd be better off in a society like San Angeles 2023. As always please remember to rate, like, and subscribe. We'll be back after the holiday to make your day, celebrating the BIG 4-0's of two 1983 icons: Al Pacio in Brian DePalma's SCARFACE and the fourth and biggest Dirty Harry instalment, SUDDEN IMPACT.
Demolition Man (1993) DirecteWritten by Daniel Waters, Robert Reneau, Peter M. Lenkov Starring Sylvester Stallone, Wesley Snipes, Sandra Bullock, Bob Gunton, Benjamin Bratt, Denis Leary Release Date October 8th, 1993 d by Marco Brambilla With innocent victims caught in the crossfire in Los Angeles' intensifying war on crime, both cop John Spartan (Sylvester Stallone) and violent thug Simon Phoenix (Wesley Snipes) are sentenced to a state of frozen incarceration known as "CryoPrison." When Spartan is finally thawed 36 years later, it's 2032, and Los Angeles is now a pacifist utopia called San Angeles. But with Phoenix again on the loose, Spartan must team up with future cop Lenina (Sandra Bullock) to apprehend the killer.
CHAMPION. CHARISMA. CHARACTER. These are the qualities that make a badass. Next up in the Badass lineup is Demolition Man! Sylvester Stallone (badass status pending) and Wesley Snipes star in a movie that came out at the tail end of roided-up action flicks. San Angeles is a utopia/dystopia full of the ultimate cringe in laws, logic, and slang. And Stallone isn't having it. The cops release Snipes to take down the swearing, violent Stallone. Watch these two rampage across the nanny state. Hey there! 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 Club! Join the discussion: Email | Discord | Reddit | Forums Follow us: Twitch | YouTube | Twitter | Instagram | Facebook Leave Us A Review on Apple Podcasts Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Super Producer Stevens is missing this episode due to salary issues. The remaining Super Bros. talk about Shohei Otani and his possible payday, the Royal Coronation of King Charles III, and whether or not kids are wilder in 2023. This week Sylvester Stallone and Wesley Snipes face off in Demolition Man. After causing the deaths of multiple people, Officer John "Demolition Man" Spartan and master criminal Simon Phoenix are cryogenically frozen in 1996. When his violent nemesis is mistakenly released from cyro-prison, mayhem ensues in San Angeles. Having no other recourse, the SAPD thaws John Spartan into a brave new world he doesn't understand. What did Enrique enjoy about this futuristic tale? What Wesley Snipes movie is the best? Why was Jesse "The Body" Ventura in this movie, and why didn't he do anything? Take the plunge into this cool podcast cyro chamber to find out. Still not subscribed? Why not? Are you a caveman from the 20th century?! Want more Super Bros? www.linktr.ee/gungfusuperbros Our Socials: www.twitter.com/gungfusuperbros www.instagram.com/gungfusuperbrospod www.instagram.com/malofilms Please leave us a voicemail at www.gungfusuperbros.com or on our Google Voice number 661-401-5941 to be part of our show. Remember to rate, review, or leave a comment on Apple Podcasts and Spotify or wherever you listen to podcasts. Like, Comment, Subscribe, and ring the Bell Icon for notifications. New episodes on most Mondays. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/gungfusuperbros/message
We're police officers! We're not trained to handle this kind of violence! A first time guest has joined us, Bob Callahan is here to talk about the movie Demolition Man and how this futuristic looking town looks like the perfect utopia at first, but very quickly you find out that it's quite the opposite in fact. That's just San Angeles, but what about the other states in the US in this universe, are they living the same dystopia that San Angeles is? Plus, we go over the weird relationship that Dr. Raymond Cocteau and Simon Phoenix have in this movie and what Dr. Raymond's intensions truly are with the cryogenic prison device, why some people are evil and some are good while they're frozen and since this movie is set in 2032, we get to go over what the movie has gotten right about the future so far and the ones they "accidentally" got right as a result of the pandemic. Did this movie predict 2032 better than they predicted 1996?Bob's Links:TwitterSupport the show on Patreon!Join the watch party for the next movie!Music from https://filmmusic.io"Welcome to the Show" by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com)License: CC BY (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) Get bonus content on Patreon Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Episode 158 (Naming Hurricanes, San Angeles and Firefly Candy): We're ready to start naming hurricanes something like Firefly Candy or Rainbow Fantasy. But the reality is that will only ever happen when the San Andreas fault line has merged Los Angeles and San Francisco so they are parallel with one another. As always we opened the door to some pretty interesting conversations, personal stories, bad jokes and lots of laughs. Thanks for listening and remember to subscribe and review if you enjoy what we're doing. Continued thanks to friends and family for the ongoing support. Another big thank you to Bend Tech for laying some of the ground work to help us get this up and running. Last but not least, thank you to Vinnie's wife Jen for our podcast artwork. You can find us on Apple podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, Google Podcasts, Amazon Music and YouTube. We also have an Instagram account @withoutdefiniteaimpodcast. If for any reason you'd like to contact us we can be reached through our instagram or our gmail: withoutdefiniteaim@gmail.com Send us suggestions for topics you'd like us to cover (we like random, so go crazy)! If we use your random topic or how much, you will of course get a shoutout. ► Music Credit for our theme: LAKEY INSPIRED Track Name: "Distant" Music By: LAKEY INSPIRED Official "LAKEY INSPIRED" YouTube Channel License for commercial use: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported "Share Alike" (CC BY-SA 3.0) License. Music promoted by NCM here.
Pool Sceners. The Bangers Continue.. It's Stallone vs Snipes. It's John Spartan vs Simon Phoenix. It's from 1993 that takes place in the future of 1996 and 2032. Violence no longer exists. Swearing will cost you future credits. The "Hunka Chunka" is outlawed. Taco Bell is the last restaurant standing, and you will STILL have to use 3 Seashells to deal with the mess. Welcome to the world of "Demolition Man." It order to create harmony, we brought the "Pool Party" to San Angeles. This is such a great movie. So much backstory you will learn about. It was a great episode. Just absurd laughs. Enjoy and Be Well! SPREAD THE WORD POOL SCENERS! JOIN THE POOL SCENERS GROUP ON FACEBOOK FOR EXCLUSIVE AND INCLUSIVE CONTENT! LIKE. COMMENT. SUBSCRIBE. RATE AND FOLLOW... APPLE. SPOTIFY. PODBEAN. LEAVE A 5 STAR REVIEW. WE READ IT ON THE AIR. YOU WIN A PRIZE!!! HAVE AN IDEA FOR AN EPISODE OR A POOL CHECK...SEND US AN EMAIL OR MESSAGE US AT ONE OF THE LINKS BELOW. Email: PoolScenePodcast@gmail.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PoolScenePodacst Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/PoolScenePodcast Twitch: https://twitch.tv/poolscenepodcast YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/PoolScenePodcast
This week, the gang heads to San Angeles to watch “Demolition Man” and lament it wasn't created by The Raid guys or something. Originally recorded LIVE on 8/18/22. New episodes every Thursday at 4PM EST on our YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/cracked
In a second episode with my wife, Amberly, we talk about another movie. This time it's not a movie about Nietzsche, the man, but a film that I argue approximates some of Nietzsche's ideas about the decline of society, the weakness of modernity, and the need to rediscover the barbarian within us all. That film, of course, is Demolition Man (1993) by Paul Verhoeven, starring Sylvester Stallone, Wesley Snipes, and Sandra Bullock. In the film, the reanimation of a super-criminal from a cryogenic prison sees the law enforcement of a dystopian, future "San Angeles" unable to cope with the threat. Society has been transformed into what Sandra Bullock's character describes as a place of peace, comfort, and understanding. Everything potentially harmful, offensive, or disturbing to the public morality has been made illegal, and basic human drives such as sexuality have either been eliminated or translated into a virtual form. We discuss the relationship of this society to the values of the Last Man, argue over whether it is better to live in a soft, dying society or a hard, barbaric one, and get into the weeds on Star Trek a couple times (trust me, it's all related). I hope you all enjoy it, this was a lot of fun for us. Something a little different from the normal content. I'm not sure when this will release on the normal RSS feed, but it could be a couple weeks from now. This is the Trek episode we were talking about: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Apple_(Star_Trek:_The_Original_Series)
This week your favourite gingers go from the past to the future to a perfect world run by Taco Bell… or Pizza Hut… depending on the version of the movie. We follow John Spartan (Sylvester Stallone) as he takes on his arch nemesis Simon Phoenix (Wesley Snipes) in a battle for the soul of San Angeles! We watched… Demolition Man!
In 1996 Los Angeles, psychopathic criminal Simon Phoenix (Wesley Snipes) has taken 30 hostages inside an abandoned building and it is up to police sergeant John Spartan (Sylvester Stallone) to save the day. But before Spartan can get his man, Phoenix detonates the building, presumably killing the hostages. Phoenix is captured, but at the same time, Spartan is charged with manslaughter. Both are sentenced to an experimental new form of rehabilitation: cryogenically frozen while being exposed to subliminal messages. Decades later, with help from an unknown source, Phoenix is unthawed, breaks out of prison, and begins to run amok. The newly formed city, now known as San Angeles, is strikingly different and is a society in which pacifism and docility is strictly enforced, so much so that the police now have zero experience with violent criminals. The San Angeles police chief approves the unthawing of John Spartan with the orders to stop Phoenix once and for all. Demolition Man isn't a great, or even good movie, but the script contains some eliminates of thought with its social commentary. Snipes' outlandishly played Phoenix character is a scene stealer. The film isn't all kicks and punches, though, as its witty one-liners have its tongue planted firmly in its cheek. Release Year: 1993Genre: ActionStarring: Sylvester Stallone, Wesley Snipes, and Sandra Bullock.TrailerSummary: A police officer is brought out of suspended animation in prison to pursue an old ultra-violent nemesis who is loose in a non-violent future society. Join Our Community Sign Up for Email Updates | Patreon | Facebook | Twitter | Reddit Visit our online shop! https://shop.screenriot.net
Join Andrew, Bruce and Chris, coming to you live from San Angeles for the eighth episode of Season 4 of the Ten Point Podcast, it's Demolition Man chosen by Andrew! Tune in to the only podcast in town where you'll hear deep and meaningful discussions such as "Could this movie be the most accurate depiction of the future in a film?", "Is Sandra Bullock a great idiot?", "What makes a good bad guy?" and "Does anyone understand the three seashells?". The guys dive into topics including harsh cast criticism, the most featured actor of Ten Point Podcast, the monster that is Simon Phoenix, the possibility of a life without meat (yes, we know veggies and vegans exist), the scary future ahead of us and more! www.tenpointpodcast.com #SylvesterStallone, #WesleySnipes, #SandraBullock, #Action, #SciFi, #Futuristic, #DemolitionMan, ThreeSeaShells
Simon Williams (You're Gonna Need A Bigger Boat film quiz) and David Trumble (artist/cartoonist/illustrator) return to Flixwatcher remotely to review Simon's choice Demolition Man. Demolition Man is 1993 sci-fi action comedy film starring Sylvester Stallone as John Spartan (The Demolition Man), Wesley Snipes as Simon Phoenix and Sandra Bullock as Lieutenant Lenina Huxley. In the year 2032, Spartan and Phoenix are cryogenically frozen after the events in 1996 where hostages were killed and in this future crime has been eradicated in the newly formed San Angeles (a merger of Los Angeles, San Diego, and Santa Barbara). After Phoenix is thawed during a parole hearing and escapes, Spartan is thawed to chase him down and in doing so leaves a trail of demolition. Primarily an action film, Demolition Man is also very funny and quite ridiculous, the myth of the purpose of the three seashells lives on today and holds up as a satire still today. [supsystic-tables id=233] Demolition Man was a popular rewatch for Flixwatcher and guests and it scored highly on recommendability but less high on engagement to score a very respectable 4.05 overall. What do you guys think? Have you seen Demolition Man? What did you think? Please let us know in the comments below! Episode #221 Crew Links Thanks to Episode #221 Crew of Simon Williams (@film_quiz) and David Trumble (@Drumble) from You're Gonna Need A Bigger Boat Find their Websites online at https://www.quizevents.com/ And at https://www.film-quiz.com/ Please make sure you give them some love More about Demolition Man For more info on Demolition Man, you can visit Demolition Man IMDb page here or Demolition Man Rotten Tomatoes page here. Final Plug! Subscribe, Share and Review us on iTunes If you enjoyed this episode of Flixwatcher Podcast you probably know other people who will like it too! Please share it with your friends and family, review us, and join us across ALL of the Social Media links below.
Mellow Greetings, Distillers? What's your boggle? We watched Demolition Man this week! Lots to talk about, including what's outside San Angeles, our favorite one liners (boy, does this movie have one liners...), and do a round of Dream Casting! We've got new episodes (almost) every Monday so be sure to subscribe on your favorite podcast app to get notified each week. Follow us on Facebook and leave us a message, Tweet at us @TMDpod, follow us on Instagram @TMDpod or email us at thememorydistillery@gmail.com. Finally, check out https://www.tmdpod.com/ - just because it's our website, and we like it a lot. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thememorydistillery/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thememorydistillery/support
Today we try something different: we take a look at 1993's action-sci-fi romp, DEMOLITION MAN, starring the inimitable Sylvester Stallone and Wesley Snipes (before the tax evasion). Is there a deeper look at society going on in this seemingly shallow actioner? Indeed it seems much of what comes to pass in DEMOLITION MAN's future state of San Angeles is coming true now. I mean, being fined one credit for a breach of the Verbal Moralities Act just sounds like the PC Brigade got in power, doesn't it? Spoilers. Note: We encountered a technical difficulty half way through recording, hence the Part 1 and 2.
Today we try something different: we take a look at 1993's action-sci-fi romp, DEMOLITION MAN, starring the inimitable Sylvester Stallone and Wesley Snipes (before the tax evasion). Is there a deeper look at society going on in this seemingly shallow actioner? Indeed it seems much of what comes to pass in DEMOLITION MAN's future state of San Angeles is coming true now. I mean, being fined one credit for a breach of the Verbal Moralities Act just sounds like the PC Brigade got in power, doesn't it? Spoilers. Note: We encountered a technical difficulty half way through recording, hence the Part 1 and 2.
Batman vs The Joker, David vs Goliath...Wesley Snipes vs Sylvester Stallone! This week on Turd Night we re-watched the futuristic/action/(comedy?) Demolition Man. Join us this week as we discuss cryogenic freezing, San Angeles, Stallone as a comic actor, how you ACTUALLY use the three seashells, and how on fire Sandra Bullock was in the early 90’s. Email us your Turd Night movie suggestions at turdnight@gmail.com Follow us on Instagram @turdnight --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/turdnight/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/turdnight/support
Join us as we revisit the explosive, quirky, fluid exchange-free futurescape of "Demolition Man," a film that does a surprisingly good job of predicting some world events while existing very much in its own time of campy, muscle-bound superstars. Learn the bits, soak in the '90s nostalgia, and enjoy the brave new world of San Angeles. As always, follow us on Twitter and Instagram @LikeThisMovie and join in the conversation using #ITILTM (I Think I Like This Movie...simple enough). We'll announce next week's watch on Wednesday and we'll see you back here next Friday for Episode 2.
In this episode, Louis has picked the 1993 Sci-fi action film Demolition Man. Louis and Kate run through some plot, mixed in with an important discussion about the real issues that plague 2032 San Angeles, like how do the three seashells work, and how Taco Bell conquered all other chain restaurants. This strange, peculiar film is what is known to Louis as an "ITV classic", in that he first saw it on ITV as a youth. He promises it won't be the last time we get one of these picks either! The management would like to ask you to enhance your calm before listening. Be well!
Eli recorded LIVE at Lulu McKrappyPants's Komedy KrackHouse in San Angeles, CA on March 15, 2021.
*** Warning - Adult Language*** We look into the 1993 action movie "Demolition Man". Does this movie hold up? Are we closer to the world of San Angeles? How do the 3 sea shells actually work?
Breezie and Anthony breaks down Marco Brambilla's 1993 "Demolition Man" This movie voted on YOU the Fans. With innocent victims caught in the crossfire in Los Angeles' intensifying war on crime, both cop John Spartan (Sylvester Stallone) and violent thug Simon Phoenix (Wesley Snipes) are sentenced to a state of frozen incarceration known as "CryoPrison." When Spartan is finally thawed 36 years later, it's 2032, and Los Angeles is now a pacifist utopia called San Angeles. But with Phoenix again on the loose, Spartan must team up with future cop Lenina (Sandra Bullock) to apprehend the killer. Make sure to SMASH That SUBSCRIBE button by clicking on the link below. The XStream Show https://youtube.com/channel/UCMCnmHLeAKnmZRTXaasJZcw And Follow us on FACEBOOK, IG and Twitter @XStreamShow --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/stbnetworks/support
Mellow greetings listeners. We're about to be fined multiple credits for repeated violations of the verbal morality statute as we invite our maniac-friend Snobby Bobby of the Not For Everyone Podcast on to discuss the 90's classic: "Demolition Man" With innocent victims caught in the crossfire in Los Angeles' intensifying war on crime, both cop John Spartan (Sylvester Stallone) and violent thug Simon Phoenix (Wesley Snipes) are sentenced to a state of frozen incarceration known as "CryoPrison." When Spartan is finally thawed 36 years later, it's 2032, and Los Angeles is now a pacifist utopia called San Angeles. But with Phoenix again on the loose, Spartan must team up with future cop Lenina (Sandra Bullock) to apprehend the killer. So sit back, enhance your calm as we open the pod to the depths of the wasteland, and explore our joy-joy feelings and try to figure out how to use the three seashells on this one. Come back next week as we are joined once again by the great, Peter Quinones of the Free Man Beyond the Wall Podcast back to the familiar waters of Kevin Costner flicks as we will review "The Postman". Show Notes: http://www.lastnighters.com/145 Look for it at the Launch Pad Media, where they are always launching new ideas in your direction: http://www.thelaunchpadmedia.com Reel Unconventional Film Analysis. We use movies as a starting point for people who may not be familiar with this way of thinking. The point is to show what anarchy actually is with instances that are presented in film. SUBSCRIBE, RATE AND REVIEW ON APPLE PODCASTS (or iTUNES)
Actual Anarchy Podcast - AnCap Movie Reviews from a Rothbardian Perspective
Mellow greetings listeners. We're about to be fined multiple credits for repeated violations of the verbal morality statute as we invite our maniac-friend Snobby Bobby of the Not For Everyone Podcast on to discuss the 90's classic: "Demolition Man" With innocent victims caught in the crossfire in Los Angeles' intensifying war on crime, both cop John Spartan (Sylvester Stallone) and violent thug Simon Phoenix (Wesley Snipes) are sentenced to a state of frozen incarceration known as "CryoPrison." When Spartan is finally thawed 36 years later, it's 2032, and Los Angeles is now a pacifist utopia called San Angeles. But with Phoenix again on the loose, Spartan must team up with future cop Lenina (Sandra Bullock) to apprehend the killer. So sit back, enhance your calm as we open the pod to the depths of the wasteland, and explore our joy-joy feelings and try to figure out how to use the three seashells on this one. Come back next week as we are joined once again by the great, Peter Quinones of the Free Man Beyond the Wall Podcast back to the familiar waters of Kevin Costner flicks as we will review "The Postman". Show notes: http://www.actualanarchy.com/202 Presented by www.ActualAnarchy.com Robert and I analyze popular movies from a Rothbardian/Anarcho-Capitalist perspective. We use movies as a starting point for people who may not be familiar with this way of thinking. Discussion of the plot and decisions that characters make in relation to morality and violations of the non-aggression principle are our bread and butter. We also will highlight and discuss any themes or lessons from Austrian Economics that we can glean from the film. The point is to show what anarchy actually is with instances that are presented in film. We publish at least once per week; and occasionally will do specials surrounding holidays or events (elections/olympics) and have guests. SUBSCRIBE, RATE AND REVIEW ON APPLE PODCASTS (or iTUNES)
Listener Lockdown Choice Poll #2: We turned to our loyal Twitter binge lords to select Jason's next review. They spoke and selected the Sylvester Stallone Sci-Fi/Action oddity Demolition Man (1993)! This time Jason is joined by Producer The Reverend Combat Jones. The two discuss the politics of San Angeles, the inefficiency of three seashells in a Taco Bell world, and neuralink sex with Sandys. Hosts: Jason Special Guest: The Reverend Combat Jones Twitter: @PatandJason
In episode 613, Jack, Miles, and Jamie are joined by High & Mighty host and comedian Jon Gabrus to discuss open beaches in Florida, the future of America with coronavirus, The Last Dance doc-series, Demolition Man predicting our future, and more! FOOTNOTES: ‘Very, Very Scary’: Officials Dumbfounded as Florida Beaches Reopen, 3 Days After Death Spike The Coronavirus In America: The Year Ahead MJ played 4d chess Biggest Takeaways from Night 1 of Chicago Bulls Documentary 'The Last Dance' Demolition Man's Writer Wasn't Trying to Be Prescient, He Just Wanted to Make a Funny Movie WATCH: put me in coach WATCH: Christine and the Queens - I Disappear In Your Arms Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
From Training to Professional Speaking In today's episode Sheena Walker talks about moving from training to professional speaking. Please SUBSCRIBE ►http://bit.ly/JTme-ytsub ♥️ Your Support Appreciated! If you enjoyed the show, please rate it on YouTube, iTunes or Stitcher and write a brief review. That would really help get the word out and raise the visibility of the Creative Life show. SUBSCRIBE TO THE SHOW Apple: http://bit.ly/TSL-apple Libsyn: http://bit.ly/TSL-libsyn Spotify: http://bit.ly/TSL-spotify Android: http://bit.ly/TSL-android Stitcher: http://bit.ly/TSL-stitcher CTA link: https://speakersu.com/the-speakers-life/ FOLLOW ME: Website: https://speakersu.com LinkedIn: http://bit.ly/JTme-linkedin Instagram: http://bit.ly/JTme-ig Twitter: http://bit.ly/JTme-twitter Facebook Group: http://bit.ly/IS-fbgroup Read full transcript at https://speakersu.com/sl056-moving-from-training-to-professional-speaking-with-sheena-walker/ Hi, I'm James Taylor and I'm delighted today to have on the show Sheena Walker. Sheena Walker is an international speaker, corporate trainer and radio presenter. With a background in sports and performance coaching. She now helps individuals and organizations apply to their lives and businesses, the high performance strategies, methodologies and habits used by top Olympic athletes my great pleasure to have Sheena with us today. So welcome, Sheena. And thank you for having me, James. It's nice to be here. So here was a what's happening in your world at the moment? Well, actually, there's lots of things happening that's changed my perception of being a speaker and working in the corporate world. One of the things that's happened recently on in the last year is doing some film work. And last week, I was out doing some film work. And for STV and class, it's very small parts is about being able to communicate being able to mix with the people and I just love it. I can that really gives me a buy. So that's an area that I will be And more more of. And the second thing is that in the last six months, I've been working with people from Australia and Canada coaching online. And they've had tremendous success. And so now that actually asked me to come on to the stage. So that's a progression from doing complementing and advancing. So I'm really delighted about that. Now, I know we have a lot of American listeners, and I know that many of them will be loving your accent at the moment as well. So you're, you're from you're based in Scotland in the in the UK? Yeah, I'm based in Blige of Ireland, just outside Sterling. Fantastic. And and so you're, you've got a really interesting kind of background. So you went from a mindset of being the manager of the Special Olympics, to kind of doing the work you do. So take us back. How did you kind of get into all this work as a speaker think about before you kind of got into the work for you're known for today. And so I took you back. I mean, I already He was an athlete. And then I was a national coach. And it didn't quite pan out how I'd hoped it would pan out due to family circumstances. And then I became a coach. And then I ended up at special being the manager of Special Olympics. And that was actually amazing. Whilst I didn't live my dream going to the Olympics, I believed I was helping other people. And the start of my speaking career was that we didn't have lots of funding a few decades ago. So I went out as a speaker, fundraising, doing PR, trying to influence people try to negotiate with companies and people to actually sponsor all the athletes that we had going from Central Scotland. So that was the start of going out as a speaker. And then when I entered the world of work, I continued my sport into the world of work and then ended up working It char working in training and development, organizational change and design. So a large part of my role in the world of work was about speaking, presenting and duction. recruitment and selection. So I guess there was definitely aspects of speaking from fundraising to the professional world. So that was the stop me into speaking at that point. And is there a golden thread that kind of runs through all these things from going back to your athlete then manager fundraising for the Special Olympics and the Olympians there to HR team development to now kind of speaking coaching is what if you were to can, is there one kind of word or thread that kind of title these together for you? And the thread I would say, and I've used it yesterday, it was about an extra thing you do and then particularly when you're a speaker, and it's about having self mastery Each stage of your journey, I think that I discovered my speaking for fundraising was very different from when I was working in HR and during 100 people for boots, the chemist on a recruitment day. And so then I had to be have a different side of me. But self mastery, always making sure that whatever speaking role you have, that you know exactly what that role is, you know exactly what you're going to say you're well prepared, well planned, so that you can design and deliver and a great presentation and I guess that came from slumming, because you have to be very disciplined at five o'clock in the morning. And, and I had a coach that used to shout at me for being silly and all of that. So I still think I'll show him. I'm not silly as he thinks it out. And so that kind of runs through the the discipline, the grit, the determination Planning and streaming has kind of gone right through everything I done. Now I'm obviously your member of speakers use. I'm your coach, speaker and there is no shouting involved. So is that what you just mentioned there I think can go back you mentioned about this move from the type of presenting you do as a trainer at HR, HR training development to as a speaker, can you talk about that a little more cuz I think that's actually quite important thing because a lot of people who come from the world of training or you know, learning development, and then look to make that transition into being a speaker or keynote speaker, what what are the differences do you see? Well, first of all, I'd like to say that I'm a speaker is not a trainer, a trainer is not a speaker, a speaker is not a coach. And I think if you can be all three of those, like a speaker and you know how to train and then you can actually have a mentoring program. They are fairly different, and I think the Training aspect is about people learning a new skill. I see training very much as learning, maybe starting from scratch learning a brand new skill. And I think that the keynote speaking, if we look at keynote, I've got that two categories. And you can be a keynote, trauma daughter and I Lindley and Keynote. Usually as someone who's got a level of expertise and mastery, they have a system and a process. They're very consistent. And most times they would have a mentor and I can speak for myself, a mentor who would guide them through speaking and presenting and being able to have that final detail to content creation and storytelling and things like that. But assuming you don't have the same it's much, much more basic, I think as a trainer, but Do think gyms that if you are a speaker, and you are a trainer is very, very helpful. And when you're mentoring someone who says, Shin, I can't do that, explain it to me. And I think if you've been a trainer, it's very, very helpful. And the final part of that is the coach, I actually got inquiry and today from a previous client I've worked for who was asking her or as a various a fortune 100 company, and they said, James, we're having this issue with this thing with our sales leaders, and we're needing to someone who could come and be a keynote speaker. And to talk about this issue. This is really related, I guess, around around mindset around sales. But then we also want that person to be able to come and do executive coaching with us as well. And I was actually thinking about what actually really is very few speakers especially on that topic that I know of that can Great keynote speakers and also can do the coaching because they always feel quite distinct skills. And I know you've obviously you've experienced both of those as well. Yeah, I think that my business model no not probably can a little bit more from David Newman, who doesn't mince his words when you don't do something, but quite fits in and his blowin, as long as it's been, it's great. But I think what I do know my model is three steps. It's I great to present, whether that's in a seminal event or the corporate world, and then I'd go in and do a training deep based on what the leader of the seal is looking for. And then I would do mentoring. So there's a three step process there. And I think that one of the things that I think's been great is that when I left school, I went to Mati hosted, pe did sports so that my performance coaching was sports related. And as I've gone through my career, I've done and looked at different aspects of coaching, looking at results coaching and transformational coaching, looking at business coaching, and pastor back Kim spending two years in the Tony Robbins camp as well. That was another very hard two years of course me I've done transformational coaching that you can then use in the business world. So there's all these different areas of coaching James and I think are really good executive coach will choose the best one based on that information from whoever's deleted and company and use it mentioned that model you have the present, train and mentor. Do you put the things in between mentor and coach and as somebody who can they think these in different ways other people can can put them in together? Most lots of people put mentoring coaching together. I think I have some separately mentoring like for instance and and then In the chest, for instance, doctors get men to adapt to the standard 45 years training because they've got to learn brand new skills when they finish and graduate. So that's mentoring. It's learning a brand new skill. coaching, usually people have this skill, and you just need to look at, well, where are they? What's the goal? What's the reality? What options have they had, and what have they done so far, what's worked, what's not worked? What's the biggest challenge? And what's the consequences of not been able to step up and do things differently? So mentoring and coaching it was different and then an organization when you're there, sometimes you've got to spend a little bit more time looking at the skill aspect, particularly if it's to do with sales presentations, you'll then be doing some training and the follow up would be coaching. And you spoke about this idea of of performance in results performance coaching discipline. These are all kind of things that you learned from your athletic background as well. How do you apply some of those things into what you do now as a presenter, trainer, mentor. And well, a good example is that when you speak to CEOs or leaders, they say, Well, we've got the six months plan, and it's not working. But we've done a, b and c and hopefully by Christmas or summer holidays, this might work. But the methodology when you've worked in sport, like for instance, I was up the other day and demise hotel is three miles from here and I was just thinking about that. When Andy Murray gets a new gets fit back on his sim tennis, he goes out that afternoon that night, and he applies the new tools, tips and techniques that the courts has discovered them. He doesn't look back to yesterday. He doesn't look back to what he was doing at nine o'clock. Smoking. And so that's the methodology that I use. And when I'm working in the business world, it's how can we start to apply this in the next 24 hours? What is the new way we can start to think? How can we apply new techniques and new actions so that we can actually do things very differently? and sports methodology as athletes just do at gyms? You know, they don't see I'm not doing that at all. Think about it. There's just so committed to being the very best that they can be. And using that methodology. It's, I mean, I had a young man this morning, who hasn't followed through what it was supposed to do. And I started off being quite nice. And then I said, You know what, that was not what we agreed. We agreed that you would do A, B and C, and if not, if done a little bit of that, and so he said, Oh, my goodness. Are you giving me Have a backbone. I said, Yes, you've got to look at and correct and where you were at. And I'm giving you a new direction to get different results. So we need to follow through on that. Yeah, absolutely. You mentioned Andy Murray they I don't know whether you saw the I think the Netflix documentary about his recovery, going back into the game, after having some very serious and hip operations and things. And the thing I found really fascinating not not being a particular tennis fan, but just kind of watching it from a performance perspective, was seeing all those different people that he had around him and worked on different parts of his game and his mindset. So there was a someone that really worked on his core strength someone that worked on his strategic his game other people worked on his cardio someone else that worked on his, his flexibility, I think was someone else going to working on this in terms of my mindset. So you had all these different types of coaches, I guess, kind of working on him, or kind of doing what you were doing there just to that young young gentleman of saying, okay, that's not that's not where it is. This is this is this is the new This is what we need to be so kind of put that kind of, I suppose accountability, I guess. That's it's great speaking about Andy and I think he's just so inspired and could smile a little bit more. He's just built to tap the tennis courts in the grounds of his hotel, quite a small hotel, but it's got an adult tennis court and children, obviously, if people go on holiday, and I was up with a friend, and she said to me, shut up. We've come to comic house for a coffee. Please don't tell me that you're going to go in to the tennis court, analyze it. Think about what it means to you in performance. And my friends now. I said, we're going to leave you someplace else, you know It's all the time and that's what I did. I went in and got that feeling of being in 10. Scott, that feeling of not being average or good or great, but that feeling of one class and how do I teach CEOs and leaders of companies to make world class decisions so that they can maximize the staffs performance, and I get that feeling standing and, and tamales and tennis courts complex and I know that that's that visualization thing, but it's amazing I come back full of energy you know, it's great. Something else that came because really strong enough on the that documentary was his resilience, and being able to kind of come back from what would probably you know, completely devastate other people, he was able to have that resilience. Can you talk about in terms of your own work as a speaker, trainer, mentor a time when you give a talk or a presentation or you you you did something and it didn't quite go as you've planned, and more Important, what was the lesson that you learned from that experience? I can remember. And I had gone out in San Angeles to talk it was. It was, I mean, we've gone back maybe a decade, but Adam remember quite clearly. And it was all doctors and clinicians. And it was about patient patient service, and about how we improve with time. And so there's a whole host of things. So in my head, I thought, okay, I didn't link up with the organizer. They just said to me, they wanted me to speak on services. And when I got the agenda started to speak about what was the importance of customer service, and how could we apply that to patient services? Why would patients were eating 22 weeks for something that should be six lately? And I started speak about a process there. How important All that was, and I looked at the faces and I thought they have not a clue what I'm actually speaking about. And the biggest lesson I took from that was speaking to the organizer, and I do this all the time. Now, speaking to the organizer about this group of people that will be attending today. Whether they are what's the gap in the knowledge? What's the gap in the skill? If there's a gap in the skill? What is it you want them to take away from here today to go back and apply in the roles in the hospital? And because I didn't do that I just had a preconceived idea of what I should be telling them or what might be okay. And that was a huge landing. And after that, I thought that was not as good as I would have liked to have been as a presenter. And but I do think working with clinicians is different and you have to be a different type of speaker Westerman tries to understand where they're coming from, to really spend that time on that kind of pre event call. Just really focusing, I always find it challenging sometimes where. And if you experienced the same thing when you're maybe talking with the receivers, the event organizer, who is not maybe the decision maker at the end, so you, you can get through that you're having a conversation at sea with the conference organizer. And he or she doesn't really almost understand their audience. And maybe because they're not part of the organization. So let's see if it's something usually if it's an association don't really have that problem because those people are living day in day out thinking about their members and how to serve their members or someone internally within a same HR department. They're thinking what those challenges are, sometimes when you have an outside events company, they're a little bit more distant and and then you can have you asked the event was what is your client really looking to try and achieve with it? What's the thing all those things you You mentioned there, and they give one set of ideas. And then you end up in the room. And it's it seems to be a completely different audience that you're speaking to. Yeah, it's Yes. And, and I think it's really important, though, that rehearse because we understand who's in the audience, why they're there today, what that organization wants them to take away and what that organization would probably want them to start implementing or initiating or thinking about, I think that we're in a dynamic economy now. Companies are working with 50% less staffing. And so the people that are in companies now I've got to be a physician. I've got to be effective. I've got to be delivering outcomes and be more results focused. And I think my, my competitiveness and my, my sport background comes out in some of these conversations. And I think, Oh, I find that like a swimming coach there just for a moment. But that's the kind of way that we would We would speak to two athletes, you know, continue to do this and look at data that this is the plan. And this is where we want to be at the end of the week. So can you tell us about an perhaps an insight or a lightbulb moment you've had in your life as a speaker time when you went okay, this was an important distinction or this is you taking on one of those kind of eureka moments, right. Okay, this is this is what I want to do with my speaking and this is who I want to serve, or you made an important distinction. And yes, I got the opportunity probably about four or five years ago, and to speak at that all too. And it was a bit quite a small spots, 20 minutes or something like that. And, and I knew the topic and knew the theme. And I, I just I went up and thought like okay, I was so excited. It was the light bulb moment was, this is what I want to do. No. This is actually where I want to be been able to share your message, your expertise. To use knowledge and tips with other people. And when I look back seven, maybe seven years ago, I had a personal tragedy in my own life, which probably links to that. But it made me ask, am I in the right job? Am I doing the right thing? Is this where I want to be? And the answer to all of that Jim's was no. And it was just shortly after that, I thought, I'd like to be on the stage. I'd like to learn how to walk in front of cameras. I'd like to be able to learn all that not just for me, but so I can help other people to do that. So that light bulb moment that those two was, yes, this is what I want to be. This is this is what I'd like to do. And so now I am helping people speak to camera, not just on video, but to be able to speak to camera. I'm working with a company in London just now. And they've been sending me the studio shorts. And I had to try and be very polite. Yes. study about feedback. Because sitting on a sofa speaking to camera is quite different from sitting on a sofa standing on stage speaking to people, I just love it. It's a very different difference of those skills between the coaching and the training and speaking. I often think that when I see sometimes people that make the transition between being on a small screen, and then suddenly going into theater, for example, or of reverse and you saw that you see those people who've been on the theater a lot and they suddenly go into into doing TV or film and it looks a bit hammy who say, you know, looks a bit over emotive, but then you watch some of those great film actors or TV actors. And it's all very small motions, small movements, about how they hold hold the gaze or things anything that would never work if they had to try and move that on to onto larger stage because just it there's there's no You know, we're looking to using the stage in that way. So when you work with those, maybe people are very used to say speaking on stages. And then they have to go and maybe go and give a TV interview or do a series of online trainings or a webinar, for example. What what piece of advice do you give them to kind of do something that's more suited for that medium? Let me just give you feedback on something that I that and share what the feedback was that gave to someone yesterday, there was two presenters, and they had quite a famous cattle on that set up a football academy, basically, and the three of them when she sent it to me at the weekend, we're all sitting on the one sofa across the middle, just all on the one sofa. And so that doesn't look very good. It looks unprofessional sort of fit back, but we spent quite a bit of time on what's needed to solve first. We need to get Some photography up behind them that should really where the presenters needed to sit side by side, encouraging them to speak to one another. When they're speaking to one another, they face one another. But when one of them is speaking to the guest, they've got to be focused on the guest. And sometimes you think, Well, you'd think people would know to do that, but actually gyms, they don't. And so she was delighted. She said, Oh, I'll just go and I'll just got to fix this to do ocean. I'll just go in and I said, I'll send me what you fixed. And let's see. Let's do like a dummy run on that and to see if it's actually going to look more professional. And that's the bottom line and lots of things gyms in speaking of training and executive coaching as if it offered physically or is it professional and one class and we all want to aspire to that. I guess as you're saying, that actually makes me think when You're doing those kind of studio things you have, feels like you have a lot more control over your space, your environment you mentioned like moving certain things, think about where the cameras going to be and where as a speaker, if we have to go, we go from speak from one stage to another one can be a big stage with a runway and everything and then suddenly, you're speaking in a small room for 5050 people. So you have to get to work at your physicality in relation to that space and how to use and some some people are very good at being able to like do things like blocking and understanding the space how best to use the space, have fun with the space as well. So these are all things. So it's fascinating, just that anyone is listening just now who's speaking, there's a lot of people moving into online courses and webinars and, and online training just now, some of the things you just mentioned. And tell us about your speaker bag, that thing you carry with you to all of your various speaking engagements that you never leave home without what is in that bag that you carry with you What's in my speaker bag and all keynote was in Aberdeen last week and I thought about what have I got everything I need. I've got my speaker bag. I have a dress, a tinge of clothes. I've got my selfie stick, I've got a wireless selfie stick. I've got a spare clicker, batteries, a spare USB, and I have a USB with whatever it is I'm doing on two USB, so in case something fails. I've also got spare and handouts and some ebooks on what I might be talking about. So that's all in my personal bag. And I've just I've got a laser clicker as well. I've got about four different clickers. That one failed on me before Christmas. And I thought, oh, what's happened because sometimes it's nice as speakers Talk about not just, and we did speak about this a minute ago, you know, stage craft is not about being routed to the spot stuck in like a pig in mud. Stage craft is about whatever you're speaking about is being able to move and use the stage, depending on your content creation. So I'm fairly particular that I've got clickers and batteries that fit in them, and is a particular clicker that you you you prefer at the moment you mentioned going through this one and it's just as attentive thing as it's called Kingfisher off the top of my head, I like it. And it's got a little USB that sits in the end of it. I don't know. Yeah, I think I had when I did Logitech one like that as well. And then what about other any kind of online resources or tools or mobile apps that you find very useful in your work as a speaker? Yes, the online resources I've just one of the things that's come from you just know, I started. I've now got online courses and a membership site, which is gone up just started this year. So I'm very into online sources. What are people? What are the resources? It's there? Do they meet any needs in the market? So I've the first online resource I've done is keynote by design. So it's taken you from the stage to from stage craft, to actually speaking as a keynote speaker, and my membership site is for someone starting out, they can go and it's, I mean, the cost is, I think it's 999 a month or something like that. And you can get all sorts of resources, but my own sources that I really like, is a light using Apple clip for my videos. And I use it having a membership and have online courses or a particular platform that you've decided to use for hosting all of that. Cuz I know that a lot of speakers that just think about starting an online course it can be if you haven't done a lot of technology stuff, but it can be a little bit intimidating because there's so many different options now as to which platform you can use. Well, I actually have trained in sync effect teachable, all of these other ones that's fairly prominent because of Punjab is only seven. And I went and I thought they are far too complex, complicated for my little brain. I can't follow all this decade, it was quite difficult. But I started working last summer with them. A great, a great guy called john Lee, who has a company called wealth dragons. And he was quite keen for me to write material. And so I work alongside him and he said, Don't worry about platforms. So my material, my online courses goes on to his wealth diamonds. So you don't have to deal with any of that you can just do you can just focus on creating the content. Yes, I know that I do two or three videos a week for the membership site, I have no got permission to go in and, and upload that. And that's great. But I think it's the way forward and right now when we see what's happened with the virus, I think it's great if you've got online executive coaching online membership that you can actually use that I think that's really cool. What else I have is some video. And software's called the lumen five, I like that. Now I've heard of this lumen five is this, the one that actually uses artificial intelligence to transcribe things is that one was five. It's actually just recently it's moved on to actually, yes, if you use the script, and then when you put the script in, hit, it'll put it into the slides, if to deal with a little bit of maneuvering, but I do like lumen five, and I've done a few longer videos with lumen five, and what else without link there as well. And the other thing is, I've got ScreenFlow, which is quite good if people send me videos that I can use ScreenFlow to stop it at a particular point. If somebody sends me a video and I can give them, I can critique and get some feedback. So then when I send them back the video they can see when I'm asking them to do something different. I think that's quite great. And what about books? If you do recommend one book to our listeners, what would that be? Well, I've read lots of books, but my favorite book is Chris Anderson, the TED the TED creditor. I like his book. I've read many books, but what I liked about Chris was his quite elegant elegance that I'm going to describe a man but he's very eloquent and how he speaks Has description and how he thinks about a presentation just sits with me, you know, a TED talk it in minutes or 15 minutes, one idea, one direction and your own views on that direction and being able to link it into something that whether it's education or what's your audience I think that his his concept was really good. So highlight that fantastic more. But all these here on the show notes people just look for Sheena Walker on the site, then they can get all the show notes for this as well. And a final question for you. You know, I want you to imagine that you woke up tomorrow morning and you have to start from scratch. So you have all the tools, your trade all the knowledge that you've acquired over the years, but no one knows you and you know, no one what would you do? How would you restart things. And if I woke up and had to start from scratch, I think that one of the things that I would do very differently if I had the to having everything, all things being equal, I would actually ensure that I was the brand. And I would make my brand big, I would be thinking big and deliver big. I'd be competitive a big constant attack my expertise. And I would actually link up with people globally much, much quicker than then I've done. So people that are out there on the biggest stages, link up my thumb and look and see where I could do a showcase. I think that would be a huge, a huge step forward instead of waiting and hoping. Yeah, I think building your brand. I have a friend that has a company build a brand. And you know if I was advising someone to do things no to his lovely artistic class, learn how to build your brand. Learn how you can be the go to pass and learn how you can have a system have a conceptual model. How you consistent and how you can be positioned as a leader in the field and everything that you do much, much quicker, then what probably we all do. Fantastic. And then where is the best place to be able to go if you want to learn more about you and your program, the things you've got going on just now. And the best best probably is, is to go to my website is www dot seannal walker.com. And they can actually have a chat with me or discovery session on it can make an appointment on my website, they can email me. Sheena, Sheena walker.com I get quite a lot of referrals through LinkedIn, people see me on LinkedIn. But if anybody wants to get in touch or ask me ask a question. I'm more than happy to do that. Well, Kim, thank you so much for coming on today. Sharing all about your speakers life all the amazing journey you've had from athletes to To Trina to speak and to mentor as well. It's been absolute pleasure speaking with you all the best in the future. Well, thank you very much, Jim. It's been lovely speaking to you, too. More of Sheena Walker Learn More About SpeakersU #speakersU #speakersLife
Das 3HM Team is zurück mit einem Hörerwunsch – Demolition Man. LAPD Cop John Rambo äh.. John Spartan bringt unschuldige Opfer ins Kreuzfeuer und wird dafür eingefroren. Als Rocky--- ups, Spartan 36 Jahre später endlich wieder aufgetaut wird, ist es 2032, Los Angeles ist jetzt eine pazifistische Utopie namens San Angeles und beherbergt außerdem seine Nemesis aus dem 20. Jahrhundert – Dennis Rodman. Nein sorry, Simon Phoenix.
Hello and welcome to the first ever episode of Film Freakz, the podcast about movies! Each episode is all about a single movie and this episode is about Demolition Man from 1993. This podcast features YemmytheFerret (Yemmy), Coco Gamer (Coco), Taymation Studios (Tay), and GreedyWaffle (Nick). This movie was recommended by Kylex Plays, thanks! With innocent victims caught in the crossfire in Los Angeles' intensifying war on crime, both cop John Spartan (Sylvester Stallone) and violent thug Simon Phoenix (Wesley Snipes) are sentenced to a state of frozen incarceration known as "CryoPrison." When Spartan is finally thawed 36 years later, it's 2032, and Los Angeles is now a pacifist utopia called San Angeles. But with Phoenix again on the loose, Spartan must team up with future cop Lenina (Sandra Bullock) to apprehend the killer. Thanks for listening!
The movie review guys review a 1993 classic action movie, Demolition man. Starring Sylvester Stallone, Wesley Snipes, Sandra Bullock, and Benjamin Bratt.With innocent victims caught in the crossfire in Los Angeles' intensifying war on crime, both cop John Spartan (Sylvester Stallone) and violent thug Simon Phoenix (Wesley Snipes) are sentenced to a state of frozen incarceration known as "CryoPrison." When Spartan is finally thawed 36 years later, it's 2032, and Los Angeles is now a pacifist utopia called San Angeles. But with Phoenix again on the loose, Spartan must team up with future cop Lenina (Sandra Bullock) to apprehend the killer.Check us out on:iTunesFacebookTwitterStitcherPod DirectoryTunein
On this episode we welcome back an old friend Sylvester Stallone. It's 1995's Demolition Man. With innocent victims caught in the crossfire in Los Angeles' intensifying war on crime, both cop John Spartan (Sylvester Stallone) and violent thug Simon Phoenix (Wesley Snipes) are sentenced to a state of frozen incarceration known as "CryoPrison." When Spartan is finally thawed 36 years later, it's 2032, and Los Angeles is now a pacifist utopia called San Angeles. But with Phoenix again on the loose, Spartan must team up with future cop Lenina (Sandra Bullock) to apprehend the killer.
We travel to the year 2032 by way of 1993 to review the Action/Sci-Fi/comedy hit Demolition Man, starring Sylvester Stallone, Wesley Snipes and Sandra Bullock. So put on your happy joy joy feelings, grab some Taco Bell and enjoy this episode of VIA VHS. We have a brand new segment on this week’s show! The Director Spotlight focuses on famous directors celebrating birthdays. This week’s featured directors are: John Carpenter-https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000118/?ref=nvsr1 John Lasseter-https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0005124/?ref=nvsr1 John Mctiernan-https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0001532/?ref=nvsr_1 This week’s Flux Capacitor looks back on films from 1999, 1994, 1989 and 1984: Broadway Danny Rose-https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0087003/?ref=nvsr1 Cohen and Tate-https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0097074/?ref=nvsr1 Intersection- https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0110146/?ref=nvsr2 Still Crazy-https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0149151/?ref=nvsr1 REWIND REVIEW: Demolition Man is bizarre. On the surface it seems like your typical shoot-’em-up 90s action flick starring Sylvester Stallone and Wesley Snipes, but there’s much more to it than that. Demolition Man is a witty social satire, laced with Orwellian elements and blatant homages to Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, a denouncement of the PC culture nanny state and the lack of true humanity in the placid, rose colored Utopia many people crave. Demolition Man has aged well, perhaps to well. The fact that tho film is as relevant as it is almost 26 years after its release is actually frightening to me. Lenina Huxley, played by Sandra Bullock is a citizen of San Angeles in the year 2032. A soft, calm, tranquil society that is free of violence and crime, where harsh language and physical touch has been outlawed, especially real life intercourse. Lenina surrounds herself with relics of the 90s, a time when humans could be, well, human. Sure there was violence, crime and offensive language in the 90s but people could express themselves and not worry about offending anybody. People could enjoy many of their vices, as long as nobody else was getting hurt, they could take risks, have sex, laugh at vulgar jokes and watch R rated films. Of course, the real life 90s weren’t exactly perfect, but it was definitely a smorgasbord of culture compared to Lenina Huxley’s bland new world. One could argue even better than real life 2019. Of course, in this alternate universe of Demolition Man, a great Earthquake of 2010 precipitates a major paradigm shift in their culture. While the cultural change hasn’t been as dramatic, you can see a parallel in the change of culture in Lenina’s world to the shift we experienced in the 9/11 terror attacks, and this is portrayed in a film that was released 8 years before that event happened. I don’t think our world is in danger of becoming as ridiculously overbearing and neutered as Demolition Man’s version of 2032, but we aren’t as far off as I’d like. Demolition Man’s greatness comes in the form of two machismo maniacs and rivals from the 90s named John Spartan and Simon Phoenix, who are thrust into a docile daycare society after being unthawed from cryogenic freezing. These two turn San Angeles upside down as they settle scores with hand to hand combat, car chases, explosions, guns and bad one liners, as two muscle bound meatheads from a bygone era.
With innocent victims caught in the crossfire in Los Angeles' intensifying war on crime, both cop John Spartan (Sylvester Stallone) and violent thug Simon Phoenix (Wesley Snipes) are sentenced to a state of frozen incarceration known as "CryoPrison." When Spartan is finally thawed 36 years later, it's 2032, and Los Angeles is now a pacifist utopia called San Angeles. But with Phoenix again on the loose, Spartan must team up with future cop Lenina (Sandra Bullock) to apprehend the killer.
With innocent victims caught in the crossfire in Los Angeles' intensifying war on crime, both cop John Spartan (Sylvester Stallone) and violent thug Simon Phoenix (Wesley Snipes) are sentenced to a state of frozen incarceration known as "CryoPrison." When Spartan is finally thawed 36 years later, it's 2032, and Los Angeles is now a pacifist utopia called San Angeles. But with Phoenix again on the loose, Spartan must team up with future cop Lenina (Sandra Bullock) to apprehend the killer.
With innocent victims caught in the crossfire in Los Angeles' intensifying war on crime, both cop John Spartan (Sylvester Stallone) and violent thug Simon Phoenix (Wesley Snipes) are sentenced to a state of frozen incarceration known as "CryoPrison." When Spartan is finally thawed 36 years later, it's 2032, and Los Angeles is now a pacifist utopia called San Angeles. But with Phoenix again on the loose, Spartan must team up with future cop Lenina Huxley (Sandra Bullock) to apprehend the killer. We are the Reel Feels Podcast, every other Wednesday we'll bring you a new movie, of a different genre, with all the feels you can handle. We'll laugh, we'll cry and possibly restrain the frustrations to curse the heavens. But what you can count on is three guys sharing their love of cinema with you. Please leave us a review and share your "reel" feelings. Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/ReelFeelsPodcast Email: reelfeelspodcast@gmail.com Twitter: https://twitter.com/ReelFeelsPodFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/ReelFeelsPodcast/
Lebron Is Going to the San Angeles Miami Cavaliers! Book it! by Whoadiesan
With innocent victims caught in the crossfire in Los Angeles' intensifying war on crime, both cop John Spartan (Sylvester Stallone) and violent thug Simon Phoenix (Wesley Snipes) are sentenced to a state of frozen incarceration known as "CryoPrison." When Spartan is finally thawed 36 years later, it's 2032, and Los Angeles is now a pacifist utopia called San Angeles. But with Phoenix again on the loose, Spartan must team up with future cop Lenina (Sandra Bullock) to apprehend the killer.
Pappy pays the price for coming in last in the 50th episode Christmas Eve Eve Trivia Extravaganza by spoiling Demolition Man with Mikey and Stevie. The plot of this action film begins in 1996, with Los Angeles in a violence-crazed conflagration. One of the LAPD's most notorious cops, John Spartan (Sylvester Stallone), known as the demolition man, is in hot pursuit of blonde-haired psychopath Simon Phoenix (Wesley Snipes), who is so nasty he even kills sometimes just because he feels cranky. John captures Simon, but not before Simon kills innocent hostages. John is blamed for the deaths of the hostages, and both he and Simon are cryogenically frozen to remove their brand of ultra-violence from a society that is simply just too violent. The film shifts to the future world of 2032, where Los Angeles has become a megalopolis called San Angeles. There is no poverty, Arnold Schwarzenegger was (at one time) president of the United States, and Taco Bell is the sole survivor of the Franchise Wars. Into this peaceful and bland society, Simon is summarily defrosted by reigning benevolent dictator Dr. Cocteau (Nigel Hawthorne) to have Simon murder Edgar Friendly (Denis Leary), the leader of a group of underground rebels. But Cocteau bites off more than he can chew when the melted-down Simon proceeds to go on a murder-and-looting spree. Reluctantly, Cocteau defrosts John to hunt down his old adversary. As John adjusts to self-driving cars and having sex wearing helmets, he pairs up with Lenina Huxley (Sandra Bullock), a bored cop with a nostalgic fascination for 20th-century culture.~ Paul Brenner, All Movie Guide Release date: October 8, 1993 (USA) Director: Marco Brambilla Budget: 57 million USD Box office: 159.1 million USD Screenplay: Peter M. Lenkov, Daniel Waters, Robert Reneau podcastspoilers.com podcastspoilers@gmail.com @spoilers_pod (GIVE US @SPOILERS) Please leave us a review on itunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/spoilers/id1099500074?mt=2 Thanks for listening to Spoilers! Please also check out our 50th episode movie trivia extravaganza on SoundCloud: https://soundcloud.com/spoilers-105018977/50th-episode-movie-trivia-extravaganza
Welcome back for Episode 2 of Cinemastalgia, where we dig deep into the future dystopia that is the Sylvester Stallone/Wesley Snipes action flick Demolition Man: The Mystery of the Three Seashells. Warwick chose the movie for this episode, where the guys talk about Taco Bell being the restaurant of the future, and the logistical nightmare of life in the future of San Angeles. Meanwhile, Denis Leary does his best Denis Leary impersonation, Sandra Bullock continues to hone the driving skills she learned in Speed, and we contemplate the nightmare of engaging in the "hunka chunka" with Sly.
#143 - Awaken to a brave new future where violence is no more and neither freedom or good food. Travel with us to San Angeles in Demolition Man as we try to solve the riddle of the three sea shells. Only the riddle of steel is more perplexing. Category: Movies Please follow and contact us at the following locations: Facebook:Hans Shot First Twitter: http://twitter.com/hansshot1st Email: hansshotfirst@outlook.com iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/hans-shot-first/id778071182
In episode 59 of TripleCast, Cory and Travis inspire joy-joy feelings with their discussion of "Demolition Man." Frozen in 1996, Simon Phoenix, a convicted crime lord, is revived for a parole hearing well into the 21st century. Revived into a society free from crime, Phoenix resumes his murderous rampage, and no one can stop him. John Spartan, the police officer who captured Phoenix in 1996, has also been cryogenically frozen, this time for a crime he did not commit. In 2032, the former cities of Los Angeles, San Diego and Santa Barbara have merged into peaceful, utopian San Angeles. Unable to stop him with their non-violent solutions, the police release Spartan to help recapture Phoenix. Now after 36 years, Spartan has to adapt himself to the future society he has no knowledge about. Read More... The post TC59 – Cryogenics Demolition Man appeared first on Golden Spiral Media- Entertainment Podcasts, Technology Podcasts & More.
In episode 59 of TripleCast, Cory and Travis inspire joy-joy feelings with their discussion of "Demolition Man." Frozen in 1996, Simon Phoenix, a convicted crime lord, is revived for a parole hearing well into the 21st century. Revived into a society free from crime, Phoenix resumes his murderous rampage, and no one can stop him. John Spartan, the police officer who captured Phoenix in 1996, has also been cryogenically frozen, this time for a crime he did not commit. In 2032, the former cities of Los Angeles, San Diego and Santa Barbara have merged into peaceful, utopian San Angeles. Unable to stop him with their non-violent solutions, the police release Spartan to help recapture Phoenix. Now after 36 years, Spartan has to adapt himself to the future society he has no knowledge about. Read More... The post TC59 – Cryogenics Demolition Man appeared first on Golden Spiral Media- Entertainment Podcasts, Technology Podcasts & More.
This week, Simon says "Bleed... and then listen to our chatter about Dan's adventures in San Angeles, all about The Order, the Kirby curse, award-winning middleware, the magic of unaffiliated local TV, and the many endings of Red Dead Redemption. OK, youThis show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/5928697/advertisement
This week, Simon says "Bleed... and then listen to our chatter about Dan's adventures in San Angeles, all about The Order, the Kirby curse, award-winning middleware, the magic of unaffiliated local TV, and the many endings of Red Dead Redemption. OK, you
Estamos de volta com a série Napalm, recanto das homenagens aos clássicos filmes brucutus. O Demolidor, estrelado por Sylvester Stallone, Wesley Snipes e Sandra Bullock, mescla ação e ficção científica num estilo bem explosivo. O que seria na nossa vida se o futuro fosse igual ao mostrado no filme? Jurandir Filho (Juras), Thiago Siqueira (Siqueira) e Jotacê (Jotacê) relembraram o universo que se passa na fictícia San Angeles. Por que a cada cena de porrada tinha que ter uma frase de efeito? Era comum em todos os filmes da época? Por que o sexo mostrado no filme é muito parecido com as relações online? Como se usa as três conchas? Qual a relação dos filmes do Stallone com os do Arnold Schwarzenegger? Não esqueça de deixar o seu comentário.
Estamos de volta com a série Napalm, recanto das homenagens aos clássicos filmes brucutus. O Demolidor, estrelado por Sylvester Stallone, Wesley Snipes e Sandra Bullock, mescla ação e ficção científica num estilo bem explosivo. O que seria na nossa vida se o futuro fosse igual ao mostrado no filme? Jurandir Filho (Juras), Thiago Siqueira (Siqueira) e Jotacê (Jotacê) relembraram o universo que se passa na fictícia San Angeles. Por que a cada cena de porrada tinha que ter uma frase de efeito? Era comum em todos os filmes da época? Por que o sexo mostrado no filme é muito parecido com as relações online? Como se usa as três conchas? Qual a relação dos filmes do Stallone com os do Arnold Schwarzenegger? Não esqueça de deixar o seu comentário.