Podcasts about selcer

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Best podcasts about selcer

Latest podcast episodes about selcer

Les interviews d'Inter
Noham Selcer

Les interviews d'Inter

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2024 8:42


durée : 00:08:42 - Nouvelles têtes - par : Mathilde Serrell - Il est prof de maths et publie son premier roman, « Les chaînes de Markov », chez Gallimard. Noham Selcer est ce matin l'invité de Mathilde Serrell.

Le sept neuf
Roch-Olivier Maistre/David Lisnard/Aurélie Trouvé et Jean-Marc Daniel/Teddy Lussi-Modeste/Noham Selcer

Le sept neuf

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2024 178:37


durée : 02:58:37 - Le 7/10 - par : Nicolas Demorand, Léa Salamé, Sonia Devillers, Anne-Laure Sugier - Au programme du 7/10 : Roch-Olivier Maistre, président de l'ARCOM, David Lisnard, maire LR de Cannes et président de l'Association des Maires de France, un débat sur les accords de libre-échange, le cinéaste Teddy Lussi-Modeste et le romancier Noham Selcer.

Hot Spotting Real Estate Podcast with Mike Tohikian
Hot Spotting Real Estate Podcast – Ep. 29 – Steve Selcer

Hot Spotting Real Estate Podcast with Mike Tohikian

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2023 33:42


In today's Hot Spotting Real Estate Podcast we'll be chatting with Steve Selcer.Steve Selcer is the President of Selcer Group & Selcer Realty Inc.Topics DiscussedSteve shares the beginning of his commercial real estate industry journey and how it led to where he is today. Mike and Steve discuss what it takes to make the shift from a broker to a developer in the industry.Steve talks about his personal insights on commercial real estate and development. Steve shares his advice based on his professional experience in regard to becoming a developer.Mike and Steve chat about e projects that Steve is currently involved in.  "Alessandra Wants to Know" segment of the show*How to contact our guests*Steve Selcer – steve@theselcergroup.comSteve Selcer's LinkedInThe Selcer Group Website

The Chemical X Podcast
#102 - Do You Have What It Takes To SUCCEED In Business? FT Daniel Selcer

The Chemical X Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2022 75:51


In this special episode we interview the entrepreneur and successful business owner, Daniel Selcer. Daniel explains how he built his two companies, Something Neon & Go Test Rapide, from the ground up and why timing is SO important when starting a business. He also talks how pivoting his businesses to keep up with the changing times has in-turn become his biggest asset and how being a successful entrepreneur might be something you're born with. Lastly, he gives insight, advice and tips for any one looking to start their own business or become an entrepreneur. Enjoy! All x's, no o's. SPONSORS ♡ ✔ MANSCAPED - https://ca.manscaped.com/ Use code CHEMICALX for 20% off + FREE SHIPPING @Manscaped ✔ IZOTTI - https://izotti.com/password Use code CHEMICALX for 20% off

succeed selcer
Temple Talks
#20: From Decoding To Comprehending (Dae Selcer & Rabbi Jason Klein)

Temple Talks

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2022 34:20


An edited excerpt from this week's Temple Talks follows below. Rabbi KleinIn thinking of my own Jewish education, I first learned to read Hebrew, and only much later got to a point where I could speak with any similar fluency to what I read. It took years in the making and maybe that's because it should have been flipped over—speaking before reading.Dae SelcerExactly. And in fact, one of the real science-based practices is moving from speech to print, and that's actually the title of a very excellent book by Dr. Louisa Moats for anyone out there who's interested to dig in more. There's some technical stuff in there, but it's a little bit more accessible than reading an article in a scholarly journal. I highly recommend it. But yes, moving from speech to print is the way that we develop very strong readers.And as you say, language is so important, and we should be thinking about reading as a manifestation of language. There's a famous idea out there in the research called the simple view of reading which was proposed by Gough and Tunmer in the eighties. It says that good reading comprehension is the product of one's ability to decode multiplied by your ability to comprehend language.You need both those pieces, right? You need to be able to associate speech sounds to words, but you also need to understand the language that you're speaking.You could probably teach me to read in Finnish pretty quickly because Finnish is a very regular language. However, I wouldn't have good reading comprehension because I wouldn't understand the words that I was reading. You need both. You need associating sounds with words and letters, but you also need deep comprehension of spoken language, which is something that's often neglected.So bringing it back to the Jewish lens: what did the rabbis teach us about prayer? It's not enough to just be saying the words, you must look at the words. But it's not enough to just look at the words, you must have that kavannah, that intention inside of you. And when I think about the science of reading, I think of that kavannah as really comprehending what we're reading.We need to be skilled decoders, but we also need to be thinking about what it is that we're doing at the same time. ****************Welcome to Temple Talks, a new podcast from Temple Israel in Minneapolis, where Jewish wisdom meets our ever-changing world. Join us as we talk with our favorite partners and thought leaders, from around town and around the world. We hope these talks will inspire you, challenge you, and give us all new ideas about Judaism, religious life, and social justice. Join us for services, learning, and community at TempleIsrael.com.  

Smalltown Hunter
EP 10: NE Montana mule deer hunt with Joe Don Baker, Micah Selcer and Tyler “brow tine” Loveland

Smalltown Hunter

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2021 114:44


This episode we discuss the 2021 deer season in Montana. 3 tags and 3 bucks. We're going back to Oklahoma a little heavier than we left. It was an amazing trip with lifelong memories.

The Woodshed Podcast Live from The Hearing Room
The Woodshed Podcast 63 featuring Kenny Selcer

The Woodshed Podcast Live from The Hearing Room

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2020 99:15


"a sizzling blend of Americana, folk, rock, roots, reggae, and everything in between, that will get your toes tappin', your head noddin' up and down, your mouth singin', your brain thinkin' and maybe even get you dancin' in the aisles!"Ask Kenny Selcer why it is that he plays music, and he's likely to respond as though he was on stage. Without missing a beat, he becomes electric. He speaks of defying categories, breaking down barriers and fusing idioms and cultures. Of his live performances (whether solo or with his band) he says, "It's as though someone keeps changing the channel."Indeed, Kenny weaves a masterful, fluid thread through genre after genre in his riveting live performances in his solo performances (and with his bands). He traverses the musical map with infectious melodies and unstoppable rhythms. He soothes the spirit, rocks the house and melts into a seductive, bluesy groove. It's a unique uplifting sound that comes through both live and on disc! It's an uplifting and transcendent romp through style after style.Kenny is at equally at home on solo acoustic guitar as he is with a band. He has performed everywhere as a solo singer/songwriter honing his songs and solo performing on the vital New England acoustic scene. He has also led bands from duos to 6 pieces led by his mesmerizing guitar & intimate vocals. Whatever the musical situation he paints sparkling vignettes and visions exploring life's complexities and wonders. His latest CD is I Simplify.“Through candid storytelling and inspired guitar play, Kenny Selcer delivers a stimulating mind-body listening experience. Engaging tales of relationship pain, frustration, hope and desire will provoke listeners to revisit thoughts of their own relationships. Listeners will not, however, find themselves stewing in self-reflection for very long as Selcer's lively guitar licks send them truckin' on down the road to relationship renewal.” - Dennis Carlan, Lyric Tree Publishing"Kenny Selcer has put together an album of memorable tunes and sensational picking." - Joseph Tortelli, Music Business News"The entire work is one warm vibe that you ride through on the strength of Selcer's pleasant, mellifluous vocal." - Bill Copeland, www.billcopelandmusicnews.com/“Imagine David Bromberg, Jackson Browne, early Donovan, Steve Forbert, Tom Petty, and Paul Simon percolating in ...a room. That paints a clearer picture of Kenny's latest material. Further accented by his own copyright stamp the results are pure pleasure from the opening tune (the title cut) to the finale (which by the way ends with the reprise).” – Craig Fenton, Jefferson Airplane/Starship biographer“Selcer produces well-crafted songs with a variety of deliveries that makes the album an unexpected listening experience.” – Austindaze.comKenny's latest CD: “This is a wonderful CD! It is an excellent collection of well-crafted songs, sensitively presented. Your voice shines, your guitar-playing is perfection, the arrangements are excellent, whether you are playing & singing alone or presenting a song with one or more of your talented accompanists. I've enjoyed the album on a first listen, and even more on a second listen. It's a very hopeful collection of pieces. The songs go down easily – excellent melodies and chord choices.” Ellen Schmidt, musician, producer“The most powerful thing I've noticed about Kenny Selcer's album, Don't Forget About Me, is this: listening to it makes me feel good. Don't get me wrong- this isn't simple, superficial music. Nothing of the sort. These songs are songs that tell the truth about what it is like to be alive - facing loss, facing the future, facing our task here on earth: to create a life that is authentic & meaningful. How can I help but feel good in the presence of music that is this kind of real? Add to this, the fact that these are wonderfully crafted songs- that Kenny's voice rings true, and that his guitar playing is transcendental- and you have a winning combination. Thanks for making this for us all - you have cooked us up a delicious banquet of sound!” - Lynn McKenna, music lover, singer, musician

New Books in Environmental Studies
Perrin Selcer, "The Postwar Origins of the Global Environment" (Columbia UP, 2018)

New Books in Environmental Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2018 66:30


Having been born into a world in which people knew about anthropogenic global warming, I grew up in the “global environment.” Although the category “global environment” seems normal, if not natural, Perrin Selcer shows just how recent its origins actually are. In his innovative new book, The Postwar Origins of the Global Environment: How the United Nations Built Spaceship Earth(Columbia University Press, 2018), Selcer investigates how cosmopolitan scientists in the post-WWII era attempted and failed to build a social-democratic world community, but, in the process, constructed the category of the “global environment.” Also in that process, they cobbled together a transnational community of experts and a global knowledge infrastructure in specialized UN bodies, such as Unesco and the Food and Agriculture Organization, that helped make the global environment knowable. The book will interest a broad range of scholars, including historians of global institutions, environmental studies scholars, historians of science, and anyone that wants to historicize the categories that are closest to us. Dexter Fergie is a first-year PhD student of US and global history at Northwestern University. He is currently researching the 20th-century geopolitical history of information and communications networks. He can be reached by email at dexter.fergie@u.northwestern.edu or on Twitter @DexterFergie. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Off the Page: A Columbia University Press Podcast
Perrin Selcer, "The Postwar Origins of the Global Environment" (Columbia UP, 2018)

Off the Page: A Columbia University Press Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2018 66:30


Having been born into a world in which people knew about anthropogenic global warming, I grew up in the “global environment.” Although the category “global environment” seems normal, if not natural, Perrin Selcer shows just how recent its origins actually are. In his innovative new book, The Postwar Origins of the Global Environment: How the United Nations Built Spaceship Earth(Columbia University Press, 2018), Selcer investigates how cosmopolitan scientists in the post-WWII era attempted and failed to build a social-democratic world community, but, in the process, constructed the category of the “global environment.” Also in that process, they cobbled together a transnational community of experts and a global knowledge infrastructure in specialized UN bodies, such as Unesco and the Food and Agriculture Organization, that helped make the global environment knowable. The book will interest a broad range of scholars, including historians of global institutions, environmental studies scholars, historians of science, and anyone that wants to historicize the categories that are closest to us. Dexter Fergie is a first-year PhD student of US and global history at Northwestern University. He is currently researching the 20th-century geopolitical history of information and communications networks. He can be reached by email at dexter.fergie@u.northwestern.edu or on Twitter @DexterFergie.

New Books in Science, Technology, and Society
Perrin Selcer, "The Postwar Origins of the Global Environment" (Columbia UP, 2018)

New Books in Science, Technology, and Society

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2018 66:30


Having been born into a world in which people knew about anthropogenic global warming, I grew up in the “global environment.” Although the category “global environment” seems normal, if not natural, Perrin Selcer shows just how recent its origins actually are. In his innovative new book, The Postwar Origins of the Global Environment: How the United Nations Built Spaceship Earth(Columbia University Press, 2018), Selcer investigates how cosmopolitan scientists in the post-WWII era attempted and failed to build a social-democratic world community, but, in the process, constructed the category of the “global environment.” Also in that process, they cobbled together a transnational community of experts and a global knowledge infrastructure in specialized UN bodies, such as Unesco and the Food and Agriculture Organization, that helped make the global environment knowable. The book will interest a broad range of scholars, including historians of global institutions, environmental studies scholars, historians of science, and anyone that wants to historicize the categories that are closest to us. Dexter Fergie is a first-year PhD student of US and global history at Northwestern University. He is currently researching the 20th-century geopolitical history of information and communications networks. He can be reached by email at dexter.fergie@u.northwestern.edu or on Twitter @DexterFergie. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in Intellectual History
Perrin Selcer, "The Postwar Origins of the Global Environment" (Columbia UP, 2018)

New Books in Intellectual History

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2018 66:30


Having been born into a world in which people knew about anthropogenic global warming, I grew up in the “global environment.” Although the category “global environment” seems normal, if not natural, Perrin Selcer shows just how recent its origins actually are. In his innovative new book, The Postwar Origins of the Global Environment: How the United Nations Built Spaceship Earth(Columbia University Press, 2018), Selcer investigates how cosmopolitan scientists in the post-WWII era attempted and failed to build a social-democratic world community, but, in the process, constructed the category of the “global environment.” Also in that process, they cobbled together a transnational community of experts and a global knowledge infrastructure in specialized UN bodies, such as Unesco and the Food and Agriculture Organization, that helped make the global environment knowable. The book will interest a broad range of scholars, including historians of global institutions, environmental studies scholars, historians of science, and anyone that wants to historicize the categories that are closest to us. Dexter Fergie is a first-year PhD student of US and global history at Northwestern University. He is currently researching the 20th-century geopolitical history of information and communications networks. He can be reached by email at dexter.fergie@u.northwestern.edu or on Twitter @DexterFergie. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books Network
Perrin Selcer, "The Postwar Origins of the Global Environment" (Columbia UP, 2018)

New Books Network

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2018 66:30


Having been born into a world in which people knew about anthropogenic global warming, I grew up in the “global environment.” Although the category “global environment” seems normal, if not natural, Perrin Selcer shows just how recent its origins actually are. In his innovative new book, The Postwar Origins of the Global Environment: How the United Nations Built Spaceship Earth(Columbia University Press, 2018), Selcer investigates how cosmopolitan scientists in the post-WWII era attempted and failed to build a social-democratic world community, but, in the process, constructed the category of the “global environment.” Also in that process, they cobbled together a transnational community of experts and a global knowledge infrastructure in specialized UN bodies, such as Unesco and the Food and Agriculture Organization, that helped make the global environment knowable. The book will interest a broad range of scholars, including historians of global institutions, environmental studies scholars, historians of science, and anyone that wants to historicize the categories that are closest to us. Dexter Fergie is a first-year PhD student of US and global history at Northwestern University. He is currently researching the 20th-century geopolitical history of information and communications networks. He can be reached by email at dexter.fergie@u.northwestern.edu or on Twitter @DexterFergie. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in History
Perrin Selcer, "The Postwar Origins of the Global Environment" (Columbia UP, 2018)

New Books in History

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2018 66:30


Having been born into a world in which people knew about anthropogenic global warming, I grew up in the “global environment.” Although the category “global environment” seems normal, if not natural, Perrin Selcer shows just how recent its origins actually are. In his innovative new book, The Postwar Origins of the Global Environment: How the United Nations Built Spaceship Earth(Columbia University Press, 2018), Selcer investigates how cosmopolitan scientists in the post-WWII era attempted and failed to build a social-democratic world community, but, in the process, constructed the category of the “global environment.” Also in that process, they cobbled together a transnational community of experts and a global knowledge infrastructure in specialized UN bodies, such as Unesco and the Food and Agriculture Organization, that helped make the global environment knowable. The book will interest a broad range of scholars, including historians of global institutions, environmental studies scholars, historians of science, and anyone that wants to historicize the categories that are closest to us. Dexter Fergie is a first-year PhD student of US and global history at Northwestern University. He is currently researching the 20th-century geopolitical history of information and communications networks. He can be reached by email at dexter.fergie@u.northwestern.edu or on Twitter @DexterFergie. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in World Affairs
Perrin Selcer, "The Postwar Origins of the Global Environment" (Columbia UP, 2018)

New Books in World Affairs

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2018 66:30


Having been born into a world in which people knew about anthropogenic global warming, I grew up in the “global environment.” Although the category “global environment” seems normal, if not natural, Perrin Selcer shows just how recent its origins actually are. In his innovative new book, The Postwar Origins of the Global Environment: How the United Nations Built Spaceship Earth(Columbia University Press, 2018), Selcer investigates how cosmopolitan scientists in the post-WWII era attempted and failed to build a social-democratic world community, but, in the process, constructed the category of the “global environment.” Also in that process, they cobbled together a transnational community of experts and a global knowledge infrastructure in specialized UN bodies, such as Unesco and the Food and Agriculture Organization, that helped make the global environment knowable. The book will interest a broad range of scholars, including historians of global institutions, environmental studies scholars, historians of science, and anyone that wants to historicize the categories that are closest to us. Dexter Fergie is a first-year PhD student of US and global history at Northwestern University. He is currently researching the 20th-century geopolitical history of information and communications networks. He can be reached by email at dexter.fergie@u.northwestern.edu or on Twitter @DexterFergie. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Women of Substance Music Podcast
#659 Music by Ree Boado, Alicia Mathewson, Mary Beth Stone, Chrissy, Jenna Laurise, Amethystone, Eljuri, Elaine Peacock, Lauri Jones, Jill Stein & Ken Selcer, Nat Kelly, Rose Angelica, Ute Passionflower, k'annibal woman

Women of Substance Music Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2017 60:15


To get live links to the music we play and resources we offer, visit This show includes the following songs: Ree Boado - Children of This Light Alicia Mathewson - Freedom (Is An Inside Job) Mary Beth Stone - Does't Anybody Think About The Horses Chrissy - The Truth Has A Sound Jenna Laurise - Nemesis Amethystone - Mission Incredible Eljuri - Bang Bang Elaine Peacock - God's Teardrops Lauri Jones - Watch Love Rise Jill Stein & Ken Selcer - Sisters Nat Kelly - Bleeding Soul Rose Angelica - The Wish Ute Passionflower - We Are The Ones k'annibal woman - It's So Sad For Music Biz Resources Visit   Visit our Sponsor Female Mixing Engineers at: Visit our Sponsor Cecilia Otto American Songline at: Visit our Sponsor Florence Foxwell at:

Women of Substance Music Podcast Volume 1
#659 Music by Ree Boado, Alicia Mathewson, Mary Beth Stone, Chrissy, Jenna Laurise, Amethystone, Eljuri, Elaine Peacock, Lauri Jones, Jill Stein & Ken Selcer, Nat Kelly, Rose Angelica, Ute Passionflower, k'annibal woman

Women of Substance Music Podcast Volume 1

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2017 60:15


To get live links to the music we play and resources we offer, visit This show includes the following songs: Ree Boado - Children of This Light Alicia Mathewson - Freedom (Is An Inside Job) Mary Beth Stone - Does't Anybody Think About The Horses Chrissy - The Truth Has A Sound Jenna Laurise - Nemesis Amethystone - Mission Incredible Eljuri - Bang Bang Elaine Peacock - God's Teardrops Lauri Jones - Watch Love Rise Jill Stein & Ken Selcer - Sisters Nat Kelly - Bleeding Soul Rose Angelica - The Wish Ute Passionflower - We Are The Ones k'annibal woman - It's So Sad For Music Biz Resources Visit   Visit our Sponsor Female Mixing Engineers at: Visit our Sponsor Cecilia Otto American Songline at: Visit our Sponsor Florence Foxwell at:

Women of Substance Music Podcast
#659 Music by Ree Boado, Alicia Mathewson, Mary Beth Stone, Chrissy, Jenna Laurise, Amethystone, Eljuri, Elaine Peacock, Lauri Jones, Jill Stein & Ken Selcer, Nat Kelly, Rose Angelica, Ute Passionflower, k'annibal woman

Women of Substance Music Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2017 60:15


To get live links to the music we play and resources we offer, visit This show includes the following songs: Ree Boado - Children of This Light Alicia Mathewson - Freedom (Is An Inside Job) Mary Beth Stone - Does't Anybody Think About The Horses Chrissy - The Truth Has A Sound Jenna Laurise - Nemesis Amethystone - Mission Incredible Eljuri - Bang Bang Elaine Peacock - God's Teardrops Lauri Jones - Watch Love Rise Jill Stein & Ken Selcer - Sisters Nat Kelly - Bleeding Soul Rose Angelica - The Wish Ute Passionflower - We Are The Ones k'annibal woman - It's So Sad For Music Biz Resources Visit   Visit our Sponsor Female Mixing Engineers at: Visit our Sponsor Cecilia Otto American Songline at: Visit our Sponsor Florence Foxwell at:

Women of Substance Music Podcast
#594 Music by Ree Boado, Alicia Mathewson, Mary Beth Stone, Chrissy, Jenna Laurise, Amethystone, Eljuri, Elaine Peacock, Lauri Jones, Jill Stein & Ken Selcer, Nat Kelly, Rose Angelica, Ute Passionflower, k'annibal woman

Women of Substance Music Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2017 60:10


To get live links to the music we play and resources we offer, visit This show includes the following songs: Ree Boado - Children of This Light Alicia Mathewson - Freedom (Is An Inside Job) Mary Beth Stone - Does't Anybody Think About The Horses Chrissy - The Truth Has A Sound Jenna Laurise - Nemesis Amethystone - Mission Incredible Eljuri - Bang Bang Elaine Peacock - God's Teardrops Lauri Jones - Watch Love Rise Jill Stein & Ken Selcer - Sisters Nat Kelly - Bleeding Soul Rose Angelica - The Wish Ute Passionflower - We Are The Ones k'annibal woman - It's So Sad For Music Biz Resources Visit Visit our Sponsor Amanda Abizaid at: Visit our Sponsor Chrissy at: Visit our Sponsors Ed & Carol Nicodemi at:  Visit our Sponsor Debra Hadraba at:

Women of Substance Music Podcast
#594 Music by Ree Boado, Alicia Mathewson, Mary Beth Stone, Chrissy, Jenna Laurise, Amethystone, Eljuri, Elaine Peacock, Lauri Jones, Jill Stein & Ken Selcer, Nat Kelly, Rose Angelica, Ute Passionflower, k'annibal woman

Women of Substance Music Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2017 60:09


To get live links to the music we play and resources we offer, visit This show includes the following songs: Ree Boado - Children of This Light Alicia Mathewson - Freedom (Is An Inside Job) Mary Beth Stone - Does't Anybody Think About The Horses Chrissy - The Truth Has A Sound Jenna Laurise - Nemesis Amethystone - Mission Incredible Eljuri - Bang Bang Elaine Peacock - God's Teardrops Lauri Jones - Watch Love Rise Jill Stein & Ken Selcer - Sisters Nat Kelly - Bleeding Soul Rose Angelica - The Wish Ute Passionflower - We Are The Ones k'annibal woman - It's So Sad For Music Biz Resources Visit Visit our Sponsor Amanda Abizaid at: Visit our Sponsor Chrissy at: Visit our Sponsors Ed & Carol Nicodemi at:  Visit our Sponsor Debra Hadraba at:

Women of Substance Music Podcast Volume 1
#594 Music by Ree Boado, Alicia Mathewson, Mary Beth Stone, Chrissy, Jenna Laurise, Amethystone, Eljuri, Elaine Peacock, Lauri Jones, Jill Stein & Ken Selcer, Nat Kelly, Rose Angelica, Ute Passionflower, k'annibal woman

Women of Substance Music Podcast Volume 1

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2017 60:09


To get live links to the music we play and resources we offer, visit This show includes the following songs: Ree Boado - Children of This Light Alicia Mathewson - Freedom (Is An Inside Job) Mary Beth Stone - Does't Anybody Think About The Horses Chrissy - The Truth Has A Sound Jenna Laurise - Nemesis Amethystone - Mission Incredible Eljuri - Bang Bang Elaine Peacock - God's Teardrops Lauri Jones - Watch Love Rise Jill Stein & Ken Selcer - Sisters Nat Kelly - Bleeding Soul Rose Angelica - The Wish Ute Passionflower - We Are The Ones k'annibal woman - It's So Sad For Music Biz Resources Visit Visit our Sponsor Amanda Abizaid at: Visit our Sponsor Chrissy at: Visit our Sponsors Ed & Carol Nicodemi at:  Visit our Sponsor Debra Hadraba at: