Podcasts about Serranos

Municipality in Southeast, Brazil

  • 37PODCASTS
  • 54EPISODES
  • 44mAVG DURATION
  • ?INFREQUENT EPISODES
  • Sep 5, 2024LATEST
Serranos

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Best podcasts about Serranos

Latest podcast episodes about Serranos

Jean & Mike Do The New York Times Crossword
Wednesday, September 4, 2024 - No ELAND is an ELAND unto itself

Jean & Mike Do The New York Times Crossword

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2024 14:54


A witty Wednesday crossword by Kareem Ayas, his fourth for the NYTimes since 2023, so he is on a roll! The theme was surprising, especially for a Wednesday, and we'll just let that sentence hang in the air rather than go into the deets here -- but rest assured that the podcast does just that.Besides our in-depth dive through the grid, we also have a spot of listener mail, so to get in on all of that, download now!Show note imagery: For the record, SERRANOS are mid-orangeWe love feedback! Send us a text...Contact Info:We love listener mail! Drop us a line, crosswordpodcast@icloud.com.Also, we're on FaceBook, so feel free to drop by there and strike up a conversation!

Dossier Negro
El Rambo de Requena (II): el fugitivo invisible - episodio 70

Dossier Negro

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2024 29:44


En los primeros meses de 2020, un misterioso individuo mantuvo en vilo a los habitantes de las comarcas de los Serranos y de la Foia de Buñol, en el interior de Valencia. Ocupaba casas, hacía acopio de víveres y robaba vehículos a punta de escopeta.Por su habilidad en camuflarse y desaparecer por los bosques y montes de la zona, los medios de comunicación lo bautizaron como el Rambo de Requena. Y el Rambo hizo honor a su apodo burlando una y otra vez los controles de la Guardia Civil.Cuando el Gobierno español decretó el estado de alarma para contener la espiral de contagios provocados por el virus covid-19, las fuerzas del orden concentraron sus esfuerzos en garantizar la aplicación de las medidas extraordinarias que se decretaron y relajaron la persecución del fugitivo.Las apariciones esporádicas del Rambo de Requena se mantuvieron en plena pandemia y cada vez fueron más agresivas. En la aldea de Ahillas, llegó a disparar a bocajarro al viticultor Juan José Martínez, a quien le intentaba robar su coche.La víctima, sin embargo, no sufrió ni un rasguño. En una casa ocupada por el Rambo se descubrió que vaciaba meticulosamente los perdigones de los cartuchos que cargaba en su arma. En realidad sus disparos eran de fogueo.

Radio Valencia
La València Olvidada: la campana 'muda' de las torres de Serranos

Radio Valencia

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2024 9:01


LatinX Can
062: Español - Resilencia y pasion: la travesia de una biologa marina, con Xaymara Serrano

LatinX Can

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2023 51:26


En este cautivador episodio de podcast, nos sumergimos en la inspiradora trayectoria de la Dra. Xaymara Serrano, una bióloga marina puertorriqueña que trabaja actualmente con NOAA. Únete a nosotros mientras Xaymara comparte su increíble historia de su jornada en busca de su trabajo soñado, dedicando su carrera a la preservación de los arrecifes de coral. A través de sus experiencias reveladoras y su apasionada dedicación, los oyentes obtienen una comprensión más profunda del trabajo vital que se realiza para proteger los frágiles ecosistemas de nuestros océanos. La Dra. Serranos nos conciencia que la clave para su exito fue la persistencia, la paciencia y la capacidad para aceptar sus errores. El viaje de la Dra. Serrano comienza en las vibrantes costas de Puerto Rico, donde su pasión por la biología marina se encendió durante su infancia. Únete a nosotros mientras comparte su inspirador camino, desde sus raíces en la isla hasta su emigración a los Estados Unidos en busca de su sueño. Te conmoverá su determinación mientras describe los obstáculos que superó para ingresar a la escuela de posgrado, asegurando becas y financiamiento en el camino. Pero el viaje no estuvo exento de desafíos, y ella habla de la nostalgia de vivir lejos de su familia. La resiliencia de la Dra. Serrano brilla a medida que relata su incansable búsqueda de su trabajo soñado. Revela cómo la flexibilidad y aprovechar otras oportunidades allanaron el camino para que lograra sus metas. La Dra. Serrano nos aconseja a ser resilientes, y a levantarnos no importa cuantas veces nos caigamos. Que nuestro deseo de alcanzar ese sueño y la pasion sean quien nos conduzca en nuestro camino. Tambien nos aconseja a no perder la paciencia al momento de ser rechazado, sino que lo aceptemos y seamos flexible al momento en que otras oportunidades se presenten, eso si, sin perder nuestro enfoque en la meta final. Su sugerencia es: “toma todas las oportunidades que te provea al mundo”. Como parte integral de la Administración Nacional Oceánica y Atmosférica (NOAA), la Dra. Serrano habla sobre su papel crucial en la protección de los ecosistemas marinos. Ella nos explica los impactos del cambio climático en los ecosistemas marinos, especialmente el blanqueo de los arrecifes de coral. Este episodio es un tesoro de consejos para los aspirantes a biólogos marinos, ya que la Dra. Serrano comparte su sabiduría y experiencias. Únete a nosotros en este extraordinario viaje de pasión, determinación y esperanza mientras navegamos por los mares de la biología marina con la Dra. Xaymara Serrano.

Conversas de Bancada
[ T6 ] Ep.173 (com João Traquina) - Antevisão Flash ao Covilhã!

Conversas de Bancada

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2023 26:32


Quem melhor do que o marcador de um bis no último jogo do SC Covilhã, para fazer a antevisão do jogo contra os Serranos? Pois é, trouxemos até à nossa Bancada João Traquina, que entre "declarações de amor" à Académica, nos ajudou a perceber o que podemos esperar do jogo frente ao SC Covilhã, de sexta-feira.

Rádio Gaúcha
Para fechar o mês Farroupilha, Os Serranos no Timeline

Rádio Gaúcha

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2023 24:11


Para fechar o mês Farroupilha, Os Serranos no Timeline

Timeline Gaúcha
Para fechar o mês Farroupilha, Os Serranos no Timeline

Timeline Gaúcha

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2023 45:53


Para fechar o mês Farroupilha, Os Serranos no Timeline 

Jose Candeias - HÀ Conversa
Manjares Serranos - Associação dos Amigos da Cortelha

Jose Candeias - HÀ Conversa

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2023 7:59


Com: Francisco André

MateCast
EDSON DUTRA (OS SERRANOS) | MATECAST #67

MateCast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2023 98:43


Neste episódio do MateCast Guri de Uruguaiana bate um papo com o líder de Os Serranos, o dr. Edson Dutra!

Haunted Basement
Episode 002 | Favorite Films of 2022

Haunted Basement

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2023 43:29


Producer Brian Lemieux joins the Serrano siblings to discuss their favorite films of 2022. Subscribe//Follow for future episodes. For more about the Serranos' video production company, Haunted Basement, check out the site: hauntedbasement.video

Haunted Basement
Episode 001 | The Muppet Christmas Carol

Haunted Basement

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2022 33:03


The Serrano siblings discuss the beloved holiday classic, The Muppet Christmas Carol, and how they used to sing the Scrooge song to their dad when he came home from work. Humbug! Subscribe//Follow for future episodes. For more about the Serranos' video production company, Haunted Basement, check out the site: hauntedbasement.video

Rádio Terra FM
ENTREVISTA: Clube de Leituras promove fandango nesta sexta com Os Serranos e Grupo Nativo Serrano

Rádio Terra FM

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2022 14:47


Nesta sexta-feira, dia 25 de novembro, fandango de formatura de curso de danças, na Clube de Leituras com animação de Os Serranos e Grupo Nativo Serrano. Destacou o tema em entrevista ao Terra em Uma Hora, da Terra FM, desta quarta-feira, dia 23, o presidente do Clube de Leituras, Telmo Kist. Ingressos antecipados, no primeiro lote ao valor de 40,00 por pessoa, podem ser adquiridos com os formandos, na Ortobom e no Clube de Leituras. Reservas de mesas e camarotes pelo 3741-1680.

Lestin
Hreinsuð tónlist, Famu og suður-Amerísk matvöruverslun

Lestin

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2022


Íslendingar elska suður og miðameríska matargerð. mexíkóostur, mexíkósk kjúklíngasúpa með dorítos útí, Serranos, tex-mex takós og hveittortíllur frá sænsk-finnska matvælafyrirtækinu Santa Maria. Æ fleiri eru reyndar að átta sig á því að þetta er allt annað en þú myndir borða í mexíkó eða annars staðar í mið eða suðurameríku. En hvert fer maður þá til að finna mat sem er sannarlega rómansk-amerískur. Jú, í matvörubúðina Blóm í Eggi. Núna á sunnudag verður í Bíó Paradís sérstök sýning á nokkrum skólaverkefnum íslenskra kvikmyndagerðarmanna frá kvikmyndaskólanum FAMU í Prag í Tékklandi. FAMU er einn elsti kvikmyndaskóli heims, stofnaður 1946 og einn sá virtasti, en þar lærðu meðal annars Milos Forman, Emir Kusturica, Agnieska Holland og rithöfundurinn Milan Kundera svo einhverjir séu nefndir. Það er athyglisvert að nokkur fjöldi íslenskra kvikmyndagerðarmanna hefur stundað nám við skólann. Sjö stuttmyndir frá íslenskum kvikmyndagerðarmönnum frá FAMU verða sýndar um helgina, en viðburðurinn er hluti af Arctic Festival í Reykjavík. Við ræðum Grímur Hákonarson og Eydís Eir Brynju-Björnsdóttir, sem gengu bæði í FAMU og eiga myndir á Arctiv Festival.

Lestin
Hreinsuð tónlist, FAMU og suðuramerísk matvöruverslun

Lestin

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2022 55:00


Íslendingar elska suður- og miðameríska matargerð. Mexíkóostur, mexíkósk kjúklíngasúpa með dorítos út í, Serranos, tex-mex-takós og hveititortíllur frá sænsk-finnska matvælafyrirtækinu Santa Maria. Æ fleiri eru reyndar að átta sig á því að þetta er allt annað en þú myndir borða í Mexíkó eða annars staðar í Mið- eða Suður-Ameríku. En hvert fer maður þá til að finna mat sem er sannarlega rómansk-amerískur. Jú, í matvörubúðina Blóm í eggi. Núna á sunnudag verður í Bíó Paradís sérstök sýning á nokkrum skólaverkefnum íslenskra kvikmyndagerðarmanna frá kvikmyndaskólanum FAMU í Prag í Tékklandi. FAMU er einn elsti kvikmyndaskóli heims, stofnaður 1946, og einn sá virtasti. Þar lærðu meðal annars Milos Forman, Emir Kusturica, Agnieska Holland og rithöfundurinn Milan Kundera svo einhverjir séu nefndir. Það er athyglisvert að nokkur fjöldi íslenskra kvikmyndagerðarmanna hefur stundað nám við skólann. Sjö stuttmyndir eftir íslenska kvikmyndagerðarmenn frá FAMU verða sýndar um helgina og viðburðurinn er hluti af Arctic Festival í Reykjavík. Við ræðum við Grím Hákonarson og Eydísi Eiri Brynju Björnsdóttir, sem gengu bæði í FAMU og eiga myndir á Arctic Festival.

Lestin
Hreinsuð tónlist, FAMU og suðuramerísk matvöruverslun

Lestin

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2022


Íslendingar elska suður- og miðameríska matargerð. Mexíkóostur, mexíkósk kjúklíngasúpa með dorítos út í, Serranos, tex-mex-takós og hveititortíllur frá sænsk-finnska matvælafyrirtækinu Santa Maria. Æ fleiri eru reyndar að átta sig á því að þetta er allt annað en þú myndir borða í Mexíkó eða annars staðar í Mið- eða Suður-Ameríku. En hvert fer maður þá til að finna mat sem er sannarlega rómansk-amerískur. Jú, í matvörubúðina Blóm í eggi. Núna á sunnudag verður í Bíó Paradís sérstök sýning á nokkrum skólaverkefnum íslenskra kvikmyndagerðarmanna frá kvikmyndaskólanum FAMU í Prag í Tékklandi. FAMU er einn elsti kvikmyndaskóli heims, stofnaður 1946, og einn sá virtasti. Þar lærðu meðal annars Milos Forman, Emir Kusturica, Agnieska Holland og rithöfundurinn Milan Kundera svo einhverjir séu nefndir. Það er athyglisvert að nokkur fjöldi íslenskra kvikmyndagerðarmanna hefur stundað nám við skólann. Sjö stuttmyndir eftir íslenska kvikmyndagerðarmenn frá FAMU verða sýndar um helgina og viðburðurinn er hluti af Arctic Festival í Reykjavík. Við ræðum við Grím Hákonarson og Eydísi Eiri Brynju Björnsdóttir, sem gengu bæði í FAMU og eiga myndir á Arctic Festival.

Una Ciudad Para Pasear
UN PASEO POR EL CARMEN

Una Ciudad Para Pasear

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2022 28:48


Nuestro paseo de hoy transcurre por uno de los barrios con más encanto de València, el Carmen. Nos sumergiremos en su pasado musulmán, recorriendo sus pintorescos rincones. Lo hacemos en compañía de Elisa Peris Roca, orfebrera de nacimiento. Ella es la tercera generación de una familia de orfebres artesanos iniciada hace más de 100 años. Especializada en la realización y diseño de joyas y complementos, Elisa ha sido galardonada con el Premio Tradición Artesana en los Premios Artesanía de la Comunidad Valenciana. NOTAS DEL PODCAST - Barrio el Carmen - http://www.jdiezarnal.com/valenciabarriodelcarmen.html - Elisa Peris Roca - https://orfebresperisroca.es/ - Guia Barrio El Carmen, Iglesia San Nicolás - https://triptotripvalencia.com/es/itinerary/barrio-del-carmen-iglesia-de-san-nicolas-y-copa-de-agua-de-valencia/ - Torres de Serranos - https://www.visitvalencia.com/que-hacer-valencia/cultura-valenciana/monumentos-en-valencia/torres-serranos - Refugio antiaéreo - https://www.visitvalencia.com/que-hacer-valencia/cultura-valenciana/refugios-antiaereos - Calle Caballeros - http://www.jdiezarnal.com/valenciacallesdevalenciacallecaballeros.html - Restaurante La Cabila - https://www.lacabilarestaurant.com/ - Restaurante La Cigrona - https://www.lacigrona.com/ - Museo de los Soldaditos de Plomo - https://www.visitvalencia.com/que-hacer-valencia/cultura-valenciana/museos-en-valencia/liber-museo-soldaditos-plomo - Portal de Valldigna - http://www.jdiezarnal.com/valenciaportaldelavalldigna.html - Iglesia de San Nicolás - https://www.visitvalencia.com/que-hacer-valencia/cultura-valenciana/monumentos-en-valencia/san-nicolas-bari - Centro del Carme Cultura contemporanea - https://www.visitvalencia.com/que-hacer-valencia/cultura-valenciana/museos-en-valencia/centre-carme-cultura-contemporanea - Curiosidades - https://blog.visitvalencia.com/curiosidades-barrios-de-valencia-para-contar-ninos - Teatro Talia - https://www.teatretalia.es/?gclid=Cj0KCQjwzLCVBhD3ARIsAPKYTcTZPPFPegqQOPu2xRM_YiV2pRjV7B2MBm8o5NXrUH7CR2dz2x9Cp2MaAsFgEALw_wcB - Plaza del Tossal - https://www.lovevalencia.com/plaza-del-tossal.html

Una Ciudad Para Pasear
UN PASEO POR EL JARDÍN DEL TURIA II

Una Ciudad Para Pasear

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2022 29:20


Hoy toca disfrutar de nuevo de un paseo por el Jardín del Turia, concretamente por la parte que transcurre desde la Ciudad de Las Artes y Las Ciencias hasta Las Torres de Serranos, una de las puertas de la muralla medieval que permitían la entrada a la ciudad fortificada de Valencia. Lo hacemos en compañía de Gema Payá, periodista, runner e influencer. Desde hace años Gema fusiona la comunicación y la moda con uno de sus principales hobbies, el running. Su presencia en el Jardín del Turia es muy habitual, es su lugar favorito para entrenar. Notas del podcast - Gema Paya - https://missleggingsrun.com/bio/ - Museo Fallero - https://www.visitvalencia.com/que-hacer-valencia/cultura-valenciana/museos-en-valencia/museo-fallero -Skate Park - https://www.europapress.es/comunitat-valenciana/noticia-valencia-repara-skatepark-gulliver-prepara-proceso-participativo-reforma-completa-20211113144444.html -Parque Gulliver - https://parcdelturia.es/actividades/parque-gulliver/ -Puente del Angel Custodio - http://www.jdiezarnal.com/valenciapuentedelangelcustodio.html - Palau de la Música - https://www.palauvalencia.com/ - Fuente Palau De La Música - https://valenciaplaza.com/la-fuente-del-palau-de-la-musica-disenada-por-ricardo-bofill-pierde-su-color-rojo-por-la-suciedad - Puente De Aragón - http://www.jdiezarnal.com/valenciapuentedearagon.html - Escudos de Valencia - https://valenciasecreta.com/el-escudo-de-valencia-hecho-de-flores-un-secreto-bajo-el-puente-de-aragon/ - Puente del Mar - http://www.jdiezarnal.com/valenciapuentedelmar.html - Carril Bici - https://www.lovevalencia.com/14-kilometros-de-carril-bici-en-el-jardin-del-cauce-del-rio-turia.html - Museo de Bellas Artes - https://museobellasartesvalencia.gva.es/es

Una Ciudad Para Pasear
UN PASEO POR EL JARDÍN DEL TURIA

Una Ciudad Para Pasear

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2021 31:27


Nuestro paseo de hoy transcurre por el Jardín del Turia, el gran pulmón de la ciudad de València del que tanto presumimos los valencianos. Situado en el antiguo cauce del Rio Turia, este es sin duda uno de los mejores parques urbanos del país. Un espacio verde con más de 9 kilómetros que atraviesa la ciudad, repleto de zonas lúdicas y deportivas, el lugar perfecto para un paseo de ensueño. Para ello hemos quedado con Vicent Molins, responsable creativo de la agencia Districte. Su pasión por València le mantiene siempre en plena actividad con la ciudad, escribiendo en medios como Valencia Plaza, Guía Hedonista o Lletraferit. Ha publicado libros como La Nova Guía de Valencia o Easy Does It. Su estrecha vinculación al Jardín del Turia lo convierten en el representante perfecto para recorrer la zona y descubrir todas sus posibilidades. Notas del podcast -Torres de Serranos - http://www.jdiezarnal.com/valenciatorresserranos.html -Jardín del Turia - https://www.valenciabonita.es/2021/06/14/jardin-del-turia/ -Puente de San José - http://www.jdiezarnal.com/valenciapuentedesanjose.html -Proyecto Abstracte - https://www.valencia.es/cas/actualidad/-/content/vuelve-el-proyecto-abstracte-un-riu-d-art- -IVAM - https://www.ivam.es/es/ -Puente de las Artes - http://www.valencia-cityguide.com/es/atracciones-turisticas/puentes/puente-de-las-artes.html -Centro Del Carmen Cultura Contemporánea - https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centre_del_Carme - MAPA DESCARGABLE PATRIMONIO JARDÍN DEL TURIA - https://cultural.valencia.es/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/Planol_All_llar_del_Jardi_del_Turia.pdf -Puente 9 de Octubre - http://www.jdiezarnal.com/valenciapuentenuevedeoctubre.html -Parque de Cabecera - https://jardins.valencia.es/es/jardin/parque-de-cabecera -Bioparc Valencia - https://www.bioparcvalencia.es/

GolfWRX Radio
Golf's Perfect Imperfections: Great Talk with Rick Serranos' Top 20 Teachers in Maryland

GolfWRX Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 29, 2021 49:58


Discussing topics we have in common such as the advent of the long game and the quest for more distance and speed to managing yourself in improving your scores to get to your next level.

Linha Campeira
Explicando a Letra #02 - De Chão Batido

Linha Campeira

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 29, 2021 7:59


Conheça a história e a explicação da letra desse clássico da música fandangueira: De chão Batido, do Grupo Renascença. Já gravada pelos Serranos, Monarcas e Baitaca.

De Buenas a Primeras
Amaneceres | Verderones serranos

De Buenas a Primeras

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2021 1:40


Un bandito de verderones serranos, habitantes del límite superior del bosque, entre los pinos y las praderas alpinas de un puerto de montaña.

Rádio Gaúcha
A História da Minha Vida, Edson Dutra, fundador do grupo Os Serranos

Rádio Gaúcha

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2021 40:53


A História da Minha Vida, Edson Dutra, fundador do grupo Os Serranos by Rádio Gaúcha

Ten Laws with East Forest
Shane Norte - Native Mushroom Church (#152)

Ten Laws with East Forest

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2021 54:00


Shane Norte is the Founder of this site and Church "OTPFCME”. He is mixed ancestry with a majority bloodline of Native American. He is enrolled in the Morongo Band Of Mission Indians that have blood-ties to the Paiutes, Lakotas, Serranos, and Luisenos. Currently, he operates a church on his lands on the la Jolla Indian Reservation. His  mission is to help those seeking to better their spiritual knowledge and overall knowledge about being a better Indigenous person and human being here on Earth. From their website, "We are 501(c)3organization state registered church Here at the Church of the People for Creator and Mother Earth we seek to teach and to inspire the uttermost respect amongst each and for the spaces we occupy as Native People. This church is based out of the La Jolla Indian Reservation near Palomar Mountain. Our goal is to rejuvenate old lost ways of ceremony and worship and to provide a safe space for ceremony and to heal with the changing of times and adapting to the new days for the people. We also wish to establish beautiful communities again based off of new and old ways to which our ancestors used to live here in balance with Creator and Mother Earth." churchofthepeopleforcreatorandmotherearth.com  ***Join the East Forest Council via the new East Forest Council on Patreon.  Monthly Zoom Council, Podcast exclusives, private Patreon live-stream ceremony, and more.  Check it out and a great way to support the podcast and directly support the work of East Forest! - http://patreon.com/eastforest ***Catch East Forest LIVE - Pledge your interest in the upcoming East Forest Ceremony Concert events this Spring/Summer 2021.  More info and join us at eastforest.org/tour Join the newsletter and be part of the East Forest Council Community. Listen to East Forest guided meditations on Spotify & Apple Check out the East Forest x Ram Dass album on (Spotify & Apple) + East Forest's Music For Mushrooms: A Soundtrack For The Psychedelic Practitioner 5hr album (Spotify & Apple). *****Please rate Ten Laws w/East Forest on iTunes.  It helps us get the guests you want to hear.  Stay in the East Forest flow:Mothership:  http://eastforest.org/IG:  https://www.instagram.com/eastforest/FB:  https://www.facebook.com/EastForestMusic/TW:  https://twitter.com/eastforestmusicPATREON: http://patreon.com/eastforest

Emprende2
Enrique Serranos - Ciberseguridad - Founder & CEO at Hackrocks

Emprende2

Play Episode Play 59 sec Highlight Listen Later Feb 16, 2021 42:55


Enrique es ingeniero informático por la Universidad Pontificia de Salamanca, comenzó en el mundo la Ciberseguridad como investigador hace más de 13 años.Es fundador y CEO de Hackrocks, cofundador de Mundo Hacker y Stop Haters y ha sido emprendedor en varias empresas. Trabajó en IBM durante más de 6 años, siendo Hacker Ético, Business Developer, Security Account Manager y Security Advisor en el equipo de X-Force, concienciando sobre Ciberseguridad de manera internacional.Posteriormente, fue parte del equipo de Cymulate Ltd., empresa de ciberseguridad israelí líder en su sector, desarrollando negocio internacionalmente.Está en la lista de Business Insider de los 23 jóvenes españoles menores de 35 años llamados a liderar la revolución tecnológica (2019). Participa activamente en eventos de hacking y privados, colegios y universidades, programas de televisión y radio, libros y foros de networking y emprendimiento.Contacto: https://www.linkedin.com/in/enriqueite/

Las Siripecias de Iratxe Gómez
Cuerpos serranos

Las Siripecias de Iratxe Gómez

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2020 58:55


Digamos.... diferencias entre expectativa y realidadSíguenos en TWICH:https://www.twitch.tv/macilustratedÚnete al chat de TELEGRAM:https://t.me/MACiLustratedVisita nuestra WEB:www.macilustrated.comContacta con nosotros en:hola@macilustrated.comSíguenos en Twitter:@macilustratedSíguenos en Instagram:@macilustratedDonaciones de apoyo al canal:https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/macilustrated

Radio Anime Teziutlan
Entrevista a miembros del Club Rotarios Serranos A.C. en el programa Foro Anime

Radio Anime Teziutlan

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2020 17:37


Entrevista a miembros del Club Rotarios Serranos A.C. en el programa Foro Anime conducido por Miguel Gallegos

Pura Verdad
Néstor Castillo ,empleado de Postres Serranos: “La empresa ya venía mal antes del gobierno de Macri"

Pura Verdad

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2020 9:47


“La empresa ya venía mal desde antes del gobierno de Macri. Nos quieren arreglar con máquinas en lugar de la indemnización” comentó Néstor Castillo, empleado de "Postres Serranos", habló en PLX Pulxo 951

Diocese da Campanha
9° Dia da Novena em Honra a Nossa Senhora do Carmo

Diocese da Campanha

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2020 16:21


Novena em Louvor a Nossa Senhora do Carmo – padroeira da Diocese da Campanha/MG Produção e edição – Pastoral da Comunicação (PASCOM) Apresentação: Cônego Marcos Antônio Menezes Participação: Irmãs do Carmelo São José de Três Pontas, Juliana de Paula Carvalho (Três Corações), Odilon José de Oliveira (Jesuânia), Pe. Guilherme Vilela Gouvêa da Costa, pároco da paróquia Nossa Senhora do Bom Sucesso de Serranos

Ventana o Pasillo
Los secretos de València

Ventana o Pasillo

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2020 25:13


Ventana o Pasillo, el podcast de viajes de Valencia Plaza, dedica su segundo programa dedicado a redescubrir València a esos pequeños rincones que a veces pasan desapercibidos o que incluso no se conocen. En otras palabras, hoy hablamos de los secretos de València. En esta segunda entrega conoceremos algunos secretos de València, como la casa más estrecha de Europa que, sí, está en el cap i casal o la curiosa casa de los gatos del Barrio del Carmen. Además, descubriremos qué escondieron las Torres de Serranos durante la Guerra Civil o qué hay más allá de Bombas Gens. Sin olvidar rincones tan secretos como el cementerio británico de València o la capilla neobizantina del Centro Cultural de la Beneficencia. Una visita que en esta ocasión la periodista Olga Briasco (@obriasco) realizará junto a Clara Estrems, del blog de viajes Las Sandalias de Ulises (@lassandaliasde). En cada episodio, Olga Briasco propone viajar a un destino diferente, donde también analizará temas relacionados con el mundo del turismo y los viajes o entrevistará a protagonistas de este sector.El podcast Los secretos de València ha sido publicado en Plaza Radio

Half the City
14| On Hitting Rock Bottom and Rising Again, “No Where To Go But Up” Host Sean Dustin (part 1)

Half the City

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2020 85:17


Sean Dustin is the writer, producer, and host of the podcast "No Where To Go But Up".In part 1 of this 2-part interview, Sean shares his wild story that begins with getting expelled from elementary school and ends with going to prison.  Show Notes Follow Sean on Instagram No Where To Go But Up Podcast Theme music by: Ruel Morales Audio Transcript Brian Schoenborn: [00:00:00] Hello. Hello everybody. A guest today. He had a time where he hit rock bottom like many of us, and he has turned that around and become a huge success story. We're gonna learn about all of that and more, uh, is coming up. We've got the host, creator and writer of the “No Where To Go But Up” podcasts with Sean Dustin. Give it up for my friend Sean Dustin. So what's up man? How you doing? Sean Dustin: [00:00:24] I'm doing well. You gave me a lot of credit. Uh, a little bit too much, cause, uh, I definitely don't write a whole lot of anything Brian Schoenborn: [00:00:32] in writing is, it's proverbial, right? I mean, you know, I'd be, the way I see, I'm writing a book right now about my own story, right? But I actually record it. I'm actually making a podcast version of it first. So it's more of a docudrama narrative kind of thing. And then I take that audio and I transcribe that, and then I turn that into book form. So I've actually got a book agent, Sean Dustin: [00:00:52] uh, Brian Schoenborn: [00:00:53] waiting for me as she's collecting the chapters and we're working on, you know, negotiating, uh, Sean Dustin: [00:00:59] you Brian Schoenborn: [00:00:59] know, distributor deals, publisher deals. Sean Dustin: [00:01:01] Um, but I'm doing that basically by telling my story. Brian Schoenborn: [00:01:04] So, I mean, I guess I'm a writer too, Sean Dustin: [00:01:05] technically, but Brian Schoenborn: [00:01:06] how much fucking writing am I actually doing? You know, it's all coming out of my mouth. Sean Dustin: [00:01:11] I don't know. Shoot, shoot, shoot me your agent's contact because that's the key. That's the kind of book I need to write. And I got about three of them within my, within my story itself. Right. Um, there's offshoots to all the different, like smaller subs. Set of stories that came from that crazy ass life. Nice. Brian Schoenborn: [00:01:32] So, um, Sean Dustin: [00:01:33] so Brian Schoenborn: [00:01:33] really quick, I mean, you know, we're, we're recording live in quarantine as, as the rest of the world. I'm in LA. Where, where are you Sean? Sean Dustin: [00:01:42] I'm in California, Northern California. In the Bay area. Oh, okay. Right on. Brian Schoenborn: [00:01:46] Yeah. So we've got buried LA. We're just making it work, guys. Fuck it. We're gonna live. Um, anyways, uh, so maybe you could tell, tell the listeners a little bit about your story. Sean Dustin: [00:01:58] Um, Brian Schoenborn: [00:01:59] I want to hear about, I've been dying to hear about it. I'll share mine with you as well once we're, once we get through, here's a little bit. Sean Dustin: [00:02:04] All right. Yeah, I was trying to, I've been trying to refine my story down cause you know how it goes when you're trying to tell it you and you haven't written a written it down like as in like pieces and you just, it sort of goes everywhere. You know what I mean? You jumped from here to here to here and you're like, Oh damn, I forgot I was the best part. Um, yeah. So basically, man, I, I grew up a middle class neighborhood. I look like I'm Hispanic, but I sound like I'm white. So I grew up kind of different than everybody else. You know, there was a black family in my, in my neighborhood, and there was also a, uh, Filipino family next door. And then my best friend was Portuguese, but I was probably the darkest, uh, aside from, from the, the black dude that was down the street. Right. And so I got teased all the time, man. Uh, and I was smaller and so I got picked on and bullied and all of that stuff. My parents ended up splitting when I was around five years old, my mom ended up having to put me into daycare and the only place that she could find was like one town over, cause she worked in San Francisco. Uh, and so she had to commute every day. So I was there for a little while. Uh, I ended up getting expelled from preschool. Brian Schoenborn: [00:03:19] How does that happen? Sean Dustin: [00:03:23] That was a bad ass kid, man. I just, yeah, so you want to know the story about how you got kicked out of preschool? So, I mean, I was. You know, always it just into shit. Right. And, uh, you know, whether it was playing house or doctor, you know, with the, with the little girls running around and just, just always getting into shit. Right. I guess somehow the elementary school that I went to was right behind the daycare, maybe about a quarter mile. So I mean you can literally, you could see the school from the field, right? So you just walked through the field and go there and well kids will go back and forth from school cause there was neighborhoods over here. There's neighborhoods over there. And so I don't even know what the hell got into me. I don't know why he did it, but there was. Uh, to a little girl, a little boy walking by and for, and I just happened to, there was some dirt clods on the ground, right. And I just picked one up and I started throwing it at him, and I didn't realize that there was a rocking in inside one of the dirt, the piece of dirt around it. Right? So it ended up hitting the girl right in her face, uh, right in your nose. Right. And if it was, if it had been dirt, it would have been. It probably would have scratched her and burps it open, but instead it was a rock and it really fucked her up pretty good. So I got in trouble for that and got expelled from there. So I ended up having to go to the school that was down the street from my house. Right. And that was within walking distance, maybe two miles. And I was, that was the third grade. Right. So for the third grade on, I was a latchkey kid. And that's a horrible idea. Whoever came up with the idea of, of having a latchkey kid, that's a horrible idea. Um, because kids need supervision. They need discipline, they need structure. They need all of the things that being a latchkey kid does not have. The components are not there. Um. And so I basically had the run of the house to myself. You know, when I go to home, my mom was always working in the city, so I knew exactly when she would be home. If it was tax season, she would, she worked for a tax firm. Uh, she would be drawn sometimes until nine, 10 o'clock at night. So I have to, you know, make my dinner or fend for myself and do all that stuff. So what ended up happening is, you know, when you're a kid by yourself, when you're in a house by yourself, w w, w what is it? What is any third year a third grader? Do you Brian Schoenborn: [00:05:53] get into trouble, man? Sean Dustin: [00:05:54] Oh, you're rooting through everybody's shit cause nobody's there, right? So I'm going through my mom's stuff looking through every single drawer, trying to find this, trying to find that. Found some marijuana in a bunk. And, uh, for some reason, I don't even know. I, I didn't know what it was, but I knew what to do with it. That's crazy. Yeah. So, and I, I think it was, cause I seen the charred black, you know what I mean? Like something, it didn't burn in the bowl. And so I was just like, Oh well I stuffed it in there and I. I took a puff and cough my lungs out, got my bearings, and felt really good. You know, I felt like, wow. All right. I jumped on my grid. Yeah. I jumped on my skateboard, right. Because we lived on a Hill, like a pretty steep Hill. And I've never would like, I would always get going and then I would be too scared and jump off. Right. Cause I didn't want to get speed wobbles and fall and I jumped on that mother, that damn thing and went straight down the Hill. No speed wobbles doing like 25 miles an hour. Wow. Yeah, it was, from that point on, I was like, Holy shit, this is like, this is like. Superman stuff. Brian Schoenborn: [00:07:11] Nice. I, I won't tell you why when I was, when I was that age, man, like, you know, my parents didn't have that stuff unfortunately because I probably would have bumped into it as well at that time. Uh, but what I did find was my older sister had a huge collection of Barbie dolls. Right. And I, and one time, you know, my parents would take us to a baseball game every summer. We'd go to, you know, grew up in Michigan, so we'd go to the tigers games, and one year I got this like miniature baseball bat, right? It was like a souvenir or something. And so I got the idea. Pulling off the Barbie heads from all of her Barbies, and we started using that as a baseball. Sean Dustin: [00:07:49] So we pitched to each other and we'd Brian Schoenborn: [00:07:51] have some, Sean Dustin: [00:07:55] we'd run around, we could do it inside the living room, we Brian Schoenborn: [00:07:57] could do it outside either way, it didn't matter. We were just like beating the Sean Dustin: [00:08:00] shit out of those things. Probably a couple of weeks went by and his sister finally discovered what was happening, and she was just like, Brian Schoenborn: [00:08:07] she wants me to, Sean Dustin: [00:08:09] but I couldn't. Brian Schoenborn: [00:08:10] I think, you know, talking about weed, like the first time I smoked weed was in like, I want to say the last, it was the last day of school of seventh grade. Sean Dustin: [00:08:19] And Brian Schoenborn: [00:08:19] so you'd beat me by a couple of years. Um, but I'm not, speaking of Superman stuff. I remember, uh, uh, you know, me and my best friend, uh, we went over to this guy who was a little bit older than us and his group of friends, and they're all smoking weed, and they're like, Hey, you want to hit this? I'm like, sure. And, uh, you don't smoke it or whatever. And. And there was this guy that was a little bit older than me. He was, he was a badass, right? He was into like four wheelers and dirt bikes and all that shit. I had a lot of respect for him, you know, and we're all stoned and he looks at me, he goes, Hey Brian, you want to slap box? Sean Dustin: [00:08:51] And I'm like, Brian Schoenborn: [00:08:53] I'm like, all right. Sean Dustin: [00:08:54] And so, Brian Schoenborn: [00:08:55] so we're in this dude's bedroom, but beauty, heaven slap box, you know, I've just figured, but just like fucking around whatever is, I'm just going to lightly hit and I'm lightly hitting him. You know? He's lightly hitting me back and then he gives me good in the face and I like lean back. I Sean Dustin: [00:09:07] wound up and I just. Oh, pay maker do Brian Schoenborn: [00:09:12] goes flying over over our other friend's bed. They're Sean Dustin: [00:09:15] like into this fan. Brian Schoenborn: [00:09:18] I was like, Holy shit. Sean Dustin: [00:09:20] I just did that and he Brian Schoenborn: [00:09:21] got up and he's just like, dude, you just kicked my Sean Dustin: [00:09:24] ass. That is funny. At that point I was like, yeah, that's some super mad Brian Schoenborn: [00:09:28] shit right there. Sean Dustin: [00:09:35] Yeah. The days that we're kids, man, those are great. Um, yeah. Fuck. I was going to say something. I mean, I have to say, Oh look, you're talking about the cool guy with the, with the dirt bikes. I'll see. What I started thinking is Kelly Lee from the, from the bad news bears. Yeah, I kind of like that. Brian Schoenborn: [00:09:53] He's like two or three years old, you know, he had a goatee, you know, he was like ninth grade or something. He had to go to you. Sean Dustin: [00:09:59] That's big. Like fire red. It was Brian Schoenborn: [00:10:03] bad ass dude. You know where the Fox Sean Dustin: [00:10:04] shit and all that stuff. Right? Yeah. Just to kind of wrap it up, cause I mean this thing, this thing could take forever if I try to go through it, go through the whole thing. Right. So. You know, I ended up, uh, doing that, right. I went to a, uh, I was in junior high also. It was fast forward to junior high. I'm seeing my dad every now and then, you know, he does the every other weekend deal, but not nearly long enough, uh, time around for, for a young boy. Uh, to have influenced by, by having a man in the, in the, in the picture, you know what I mean? Like full time, like, like, like, like how I am with my kid, you know? So what ended up happening is I was just, you know, doing whatever I wanted. I was cutting school, like taking my, my buddy had a. Uh, and this is my first crack at fraud as well. It was my buddy had a, these, uh, he'd stolen these things from the dentist's office. Right. And there were, there were like passes or slips that, that you'd fill out to take to school with you to give you an excused absence. Right. Awesome. Yeah. And so I, that was doing that, I was just forging those forging nos, and we would stay home all day long and just like hang out at his house and drink his dad's vodka, all his, all his booze and get drunk. And so, you know, it was doing that, uh, just really not, I was getting suspended and, and, uh, put on, sent to the office constantly. You know, I was a class clown, you know, they literally had my, my. When I was in third and fourth grade, my teachers would, would, uh, wrap my, my desk in corrugated paper wall around me. Right? So I can't communicate with anybody cause I'm always cracking jokes or you just, just a clown, you know what I mean? Talking shit, whatever. I ended up buying, I bought a butterfly knife from somebody right in schools and Hey, you went by butterfly. And I'd be like, yeah, that's fucking cool. I'll buy that. Right. And so, yeah. And so I was playing around with it. In school. And like right before, cause we, you know, junior high, you're now going from class to class, switching periods, right? I'm sitting in there in my history class and I would sit in the back. I always sit in the back and I'm sitting there and the teacher, the teacher's not, not in the classroom. Right? I'm trying to be cool in front of all these, all my classmates and I'm playing and I hear them coming to me. Oh shit. I put it in my pocket. Right? And uh. He comes into the, he comes in that he didn't see that, uh, I missed my pocket and like, literally I moved around and it fucking went to tank tank. Okay. So I got expelled from there twice. Okay. That's two times already. I've been expelled from a school. I got expelled from there. I went and moved down to my uncle's in, uh, South San Francisco, San Bruno area. And then I went to junior high there. Like I went to school there, got kicked out of that place. Um, got shuttled up to my dad's in Sacramento. Uh, he wasn't prepared to deal with the likes of me and that's for sure. And he's 65, like 200 something pounds. I mean, we. We, I was rebelling, uh, you know, and he was just, he wasn't, he wasn't having it, man. So I ended up, uh, flunking out of, uh, seventh grade up there, and then had to go to summer school. And then finally, he's just like, he's like my mom. He's like, take him. I can't deal with his ass. So I mean, you know, there's just like. Well, what am I going to think? You know, what am I supposed to think? Like, damn, nobody wants me, you know, I'm just, just fuck up. You know, I can't seem to do anything. Right. And, um, so when I went back to high school or went back to the school that they kicked me out, the first one or the second one, uh, for the, the knife, and they agreed to let me come back. Right. They're like, all right, well, you know, you're in a bind and you need to finish the school year and we'll, we'll go ahead and let you back in. Um. So about three weeks, three weeks before the, uh, the end of the school year, and I was eighth grade right now. And so my next step is high school, uh, three weeks, uh, before the end of school, I got sent to the office and I, and after coming back, I mean, I was still getting sent to the office all the time and they finally just said, you know what? Go home. Just go home. I'm like, let me go home. He's like, Oh, we're going to socially promote you to the ninth grade. You've got straight F's. Uh, you know what I mean? What? You're just, you're a pro problem. Go home. Don't come back. And so that's how I get suspended. And he was like. No, you're getting it early. You're getting an early summer vacation. Get out of the huts. Brian Schoenborn: [00:14:58] That's crazy. Wait, so you flunked every class. They promoted you anyways, and you didn't have to go for the last three weeks. Sean Dustin: [00:15:08] I want to know who won that one. Oh man. That's how bad I was. And it's like, and I'm like, okay. Cause then it's like now I get to stay home all day and nobody's there cause my mom's in, right. So one of the worst things that I did now in this time period, right when I came back and when I was a junior or a. A freshmen in high school. And mind you, I hung out with all of the older kids, right? Because when I was a freshman, I hung out with the seniors and the juniors just because people that were in my neighborhood, they all knew me. Right. And, um, and they were seniors and juniors and, uh, and I think one, my best friend was one grade ahead of me. Um, so when I, the summer, I think the summer. Yeah. Right. When I was, I think like the first, first year of when I was a freshman, like the first couple of months. Somehow I got it into my head. And so I learned how to steal my mom's truck. Right. Enjoy ride it while she was sleeping because she would go out and she was, she was single and she would go out and she'd come home and like I would know she's been drinking because I could hear her snoring right from below. Right? So I'll like, Oh yeah, I'm like, mom's drunk. She's out. She's out. And so I would literally. I remember, I remember going up to her room right the first time I ever, I ever did this. And before I found that there was a spare key and I knew where to get the spare key. So I would commando on my stomach through her, like where her bed was on the ground, right. And I put my hand up and try to get her keys if they were in her, uh, her purse. And, or if they were out and I would go in and I would open the garage door. And this wasn't a, this was like the old Raj door we got in her bedrooms right next door. Right. So I'm like trying to, thinking that every noise that I'm making is like 10 times louder than it is. I jumped in the truck, right? It was the old, uh, 85, uh, Toyota pickup, uh, with the sr 22 engine that everybody wants. Open it up. I would put the keys in there. I would put it in neutral and I would go down. Remember I told you I live on a steep Hill, right? And so I would back out, like push it back out and coast it all the way down the street. Going backwards backwards to the next street, go up and then bam. Right? So I did this in the summertime for the first time, and I did it because I, there was this chick that wanted to hook up and I was a Virgin at the time. And so I'm like, I'm like, I'm going to get fucked. That's worth it. You know, risk versus reward. Right. So I go over there, right? And I pick her up. Uh, and, and, and uh, take her out to the back roads. I bring a plane, a blanket, and a pillow, you know, cause that's, I got class. Right, right. I'm a gentlemen, gentlemen, you know, I handle my business in the back roads and I take her to drop her off. And then I roll back up and install. In order to get back in there, I have to be going at least 50 or 60 miles an hour up the Hill so I could kill it and coast right back up into the driveway and into the end of the thing. Right. So the first time I did that, the second time I did that, cause she wanted to do it again. But this time she got a little bit bolder and said, Hey, why don't you just come to my house. No, you can sneak into my room. And I'm like, Oh, okay, cool. That's even easier. And so I did that. And the first, the, and this is, this is the last time I did it, and this is why I get there. I park. I get out, I start walking, walk into her house. So the side of the thing and a pit bull is fucking out there. And he chases me up and I jump onto the roof of the fucking car, right? And he's like, wow. And he finally, he goes away. Um, I ended up, I go in there, uh, I get into her room handling business and her dad fucking knocks on the door. Oh shit. Yeah. And I'm like, Oh my God. So I jumped out. I didn't have no clothes on. Right. I jumped out blood ass naked out of the window. I jumped out of the window. Yeah. Well, I jumped into the window to get there. So Brian Schoenborn: [00:19:31] I mean, I figured if you're naked, you would've been like hiding in the closet or under the bed or some shit out of the window naked. Sean Dustin: [00:19:40] I jumped out of the window into the backyard. Right. That's awesome. I couldn't leave my keys cause it's in my pants, right? So I'm like, Oh, Brian Schoenborn: [00:19:48] I'm going to go. Sean Dustin: [00:19:52] And so there's a shed right by the fence and there's about this much of a gap in between it. So I go and I shoved my ass in there and I fucking screwed into the middle. And I'm like. Sitting there, right? Just frozen. There's a motherfucking dog in my ass on the other side of the fucking fence sniffing parking. I'm like, Brian Schoenborn: [00:20:13] shut up. Shut up Sean Dustin: [00:20:16] dad. The dad comes out and, uh. And it starts looking, you know what I mean? You know, I, he, I know, he knows that his daughter, his daughter was getting fucking nailed, right. But for some reason he didn't. He didn't find me to know where I was. Right. So I got out of that one. Uh, she threw the bed clothes out the window and I hopped out after about a half hour, 45 minutes being just stuck there like. That's like 30 minutes of your life too. You're Brian Schoenborn: [00:20:45] right. Sean Dustin: [00:20:47] I'm only like 15 and I'm like, should I go? Should I, what do I do? So that's the last time I did that. Right. Well. My first, my first, uh, time with the law. Right. The interaction, you know, where I got caught up with the law was directly related to this girl that I screwed because I didn't know that she was, had a boyfriend at the time and he was a gang member. Oh shit. Yeah. You know, you guys have the Serranos down there, the Southsiders, we've got North siders up here, so. I didn't know that. I didn't even know that she had a boyfriend. Um, and so anyways, he called me up and he, uh, left a message on my answering machine. Uh, you know, with the tape, the tape player answering machine. For those of you millennials out there that don't understand, don't know what that is. I got, I took that tape down to school and I, like I said, I knew everybody. Like I hung out with the gang members. I hung out with, uh, with the blacks, the whites, the jocks, the drama geeks. I, I re, I hung out with everybody. I knew them all. So I let some of my friends listen to this tape and they're like, Oh, fuck that shit, man. Brian Schoenborn: [00:21:55] Fuck that shit. We're Sean Dustin: [00:21:56] going to get that dude. Let's go, let's go. And I'm like, yeah, fuck yeah, let's go. You know, I'm a little bitch, dude. I'm not a fighter, right. I went back then, I wasn't. And so I'm like, hell yeah. You know, we're going to go do this. And uh, by the time we got there, there was four carloads of dudes. Damn, four, four carloads of guys Brian Schoenborn: [00:22:16] on your side or on their side, Sean Dustin: [00:22:18] my side. Brian Schoenborn: [00:22:19] Oh damn. Sean Dustin: [00:22:21] And so we start walking down. Yeah. We walked down into the, uh, to where the area is, where everybody comes to the convenience store, lunch break and whatever from this high school on the next town over, and we start walking down there. I see them, her and him walking towards us. She bolts out of Brian Schoenborn: [00:22:39] here Sean Dustin: [00:22:42] and he still keeps walking. Man. I'm like. And so I was, I didn't know what I was going to do. I was like, I guess I'm just going to ask me, why did you call my house? I didn't have a plan. You know, these guys had a plan. I did. I did. It was just along for the ride guys. We called up the wrong dudes house brother, but I mean, I felt like a hot shot, you know what I mean? Because it's like, yeah, looking back, got my backup boy now. And uh, so anyways, he comes walking up and I just start to say something to him and before I could even get a word out of my mouth. He, he's reaching for his pocket for something and he just, somebody from the side just hits him. Uh. And then he ends up like boom, boom, gets a pin, pin bald, runs into them, runs into the store, and there's like three more dudes ready to, you know, grab him, bring him back, throw him on top of the counter where the cash register is, not the cash register off. Just literally. And drugs and drug his ass. He ends up getting a hold of the knife, right. And slide is one of my friends across the face. Damn. And I don't blame him, man. I a Brian Schoenborn: [00:24:00] fucking Sean Dustin: [00:24:00] slice. I just thought, I mean, Brian Schoenborn: [00:24:02] I'm just thinking like how much does it got to suck that you're cheated on by your girlfriend and then you get your ass kicked by a fucking gaggle of dudes. Talk about bottoms, man. Jesus Christ. Sean Dustin: [00:24:19] Yeah. So anyways, all of that's on video cause it's in a store. Yeah. I never touched the dude once. I never got to hit him. So anyways, long story short, I ended up getting charged with inciting a riot. Uh, and so I, uh, from that point on, um, my mom got, uh, you know, I was, uh. She couldn't control me, obviously. Um, you know, no, no. My dad's still in and out of the picture, sort of, but I mean, he's like, you know, after that old deal where me and him had a falling out was, it wasn't when, when I got kicked out of school and, and left from there at one point I went up there because I was trying to hook up with this chick and I knew my dad was on, uh, on vacation and I still had keys to his place. And I was, I wanted to hook up with this one broad. Uh, did I went to the junior high with go still in contact with her. So I, I, I drove up there or somehow I got up there. I don't know how I got up there. I think, I mean, I'd taken a bus up there like Greyhound and. Aye went to his house and I jumped over the fence and went in and his neighbor saw me going in and called him. Well, what I didn't know is that my grandmother at the time, uh, his mom was, had, was having issues and was in the hospital dying. Right. Brian Schoenborn: [00:25:43] Oh shit. Okay. Sean Dustin: [00:25:44] And so he had to come all the way up there, leave her come all the way up there and get me, and she died on our way back. That's great. So, yeah. So, uh, that, that, uh, that really put a monkey wrench in our relationship because, you know, I was the reason why you, you know, and couldn't be there for the last Brian Schoenborn: [00:26:07] moments. Sean Dustin: [00:26:07] Yeah. Yeah. And, uh, I mean, I get it, man, if that happened to me, you know, with my mom and him and his mom were pretty close, so. I mean, it makes sense. I, you know, yeah. And so, anyways, now that's on my mind, you know, that, that weighs on me now. So I've got these accumulation of things, you know, like, fucking nobody wants me. I'm a, I'm a fuck up. I can't do anything right. Everything I touch turns to shit. Look, when I, my dad fucking doesn't even like me anymore. So I've got this narrative that's getting built in my own head. Right. And, uh, so I ended up. Trying meth for the first time. Uh, and the reason why I did that, and I think that was like the summer of my, uh, freshman year. Right. So, and, uh. The reason why I wanted to try it so bad was is that all my friends were doing it and it wasn't meth at that time. It was crank back then. Bikers were still doing it. They still are, but they've changed. They've refined their process. Right. All of my friends were doing it and like when we would hang out, they would all disappear and go into their room and go into a room and lock it, and I wouldn't, that was the youngest. Obviously they didn't want to be responsible for. Turning the youngest dude onto it. And all of these other guys had already done it, and they knew I didn't do it. So, I mean, w thank you. That was cool. But it just made me want me to make me to want to do it more. And so I was hanging out with, my dad ended up marrying, uh, the neighbor down the street. He divorced my mom, and then the neighbor that lived down the street and another court, uh, I guess he met her in somewhere. And, uh. She had a sister, two sisters, and they were both stoners and like they were all, they were like meth, meth addicts. And so I think I had known that that was available there. And so I went down and started hanging out there because she was like my step grandmother. So she's letting me come down and hang out all the time cause I just really, really live right up the block. And that's where I got it. That's where I got it. Got it from her. I got it from my aunt. She was like, she was like 10 years older than you at the time. Brian Schoenborn: [00:28:08] Did she know that she was giving it to you or. Sean Dustin: [00:28:11] I don't know. I probably Brian Schoenborn: [00:28:13] like stealing it or we're like, I mean, Sean Dustin: [00:28:16] no, she gets, she, I, she smoked foil, smoked it on the foil right there. Right. And so I think, I think I probably, probably, if anything, I probably lied about it and said, Oh, you have done it before. Brian Schoenborn: [00:28:29] Well, yeah, because if you've done it before, then the pressure's off, right? You're like, all right, well, you know what you're getting into. Sean Dustin: [00:28:34] Yeah. Well, it's not my fault, right. He's going to get it from somewhere. Brian Schoenborn: [00:28:39] That's funny, man. That that kind of reminds me of not, not the segue a little bit, but, uh, you know, it kinda reminds me that there's a lot of parallels between our childhoods. I think, Sean Dustin: [00:28:48] um, like. Brian Schoenborn: [00:28:50] Somehow I was able to pull up good grades. I graduated top 10 in my class. I knew everybody, you know, but it was a small Podunk town in the middle of Michigan and 95% white people. Uh, one black family, one, uh, one Asian family that owned the, the, the son of the black family was the star running back and the Asian family owned the Chinese restaurant. Go figure. Sean Dustin: [00:29:11] Uh, Brian Schoenborn: [00:29:12] everyone else, everyone else was white except for like the last little 5% were basically Mexican. Are Latinos right? Everyone got along. And, you know, like I said, I was smart and I was popular, that kind of stuff. But I was also a fucking rebel dude. Like, you know, like I said, the first time I smoked pot was the last day of seventh grade. Sorry, mom and dad, if he didn't know. Oh, well. Um, you know, it was a long time ago, but, you know, I dabbled a little bit, a couple other things in high school. I didn't do math until I was in the military. Um, but that was after I'd already had PTSD and I was kind of fucked up. So I started, dabbled with it for a little bit. Um, but I was always more into other things. Like. Uh, I liked ecstasy, acid, stuff like that. But I mean, even when I was in high school, like I was in a punk band. I did some sports and some other shit too, but I was in a punk band. Um, and like headlining, like every weekend. Um, our bandwidth, and I can't tell you how many times I was like tripping while I'm on stage. Sean Dustin: [00:30:07] I'm like 16, 17 years old, right. Brian Schoenborn: [00:30:10] If I could Sean Dustin: [00:30:10] flip it the fuck out, Brian Schoenborn: [00:30:12] but like, still being able to play, Sean Dustin: [00:30:14] um. Brian Schoenborn: [00:30:15] You know, and, and, you know, fucking around sneaking into places like I used to, uh, speaking of sneaking out Sean Dustin: [00:30:21] like, God, I used to sneak out almost every night. Brian Schoenborn: [00:30:25] Like we had a pretty big house. It was a small town. It's a pretty big house. My parent's bedroom was all the way on the, on the East end of the house. And the door that we always used to go in and out was always on the West end. Right? So it'd be, I figured out how to like, open the door without, Sean Dustin: [00:30:39] without squeaking, Brian Schoenborn: [00:30:41] just real careful. And they'd always hang their keys, like, uh, in the kitchen. They're hanging up in the kitchen so I could grab them real Sean Dustin: [00:30:48] quick and Brian Schoenborn: [00:30:49] go out and I'd take off and, you know, whether it was going to like, get laid or like just hang out with my friends or whatever, you know, we'd, we'd like to smoke cigarette or have some beers, smoke some weed, whatever, that, you Sean Dustin: [00:30:58] know, whatever the fuck else. Um. Brian Schoenborn: [00:31:03] Yeah, I miss those days. It was fun. But like back then, it seems so dangerous. You're like, Oh, we're fucking rebels. We're doing crazy shit, whatever. Sean Dustin: [00:31:11] And now it's just like, you know, it's life. Brian Schoenborn: [00:31:15] It's life. You know? Sean Dustin: [00:31:16] That's funny. So part of it, so part that I, that I skipped, so this is, uh, I just kinda missed it so. In the ninth grade, towards the end of the ninth grade, I ended up, uh, so since I know how to drive this truck and I have this, uh, the spare key now, right. Or know where it is at least. So I'm like, you know, I just, I want to cut school and I want to go hang out and do this, uh, whatever. So I decided to take the bus. To the Bart station, right. And go to the Bart station that my mom parks her truck at two for her commute to go to the city. Right. And I steal it from there and I drive it back home. Right. And I'm rolling around school, you know, get them, get a group of people together with me. And this is probably about. Maybe nine. I mean, yeah, probably about, no, about 10, 11 o'clock. Right. And I already know my mom's not going to be home till around, or at least get to the Bart station until nine, nine 30, something like that. Cause it's tax season. And so I, you know, we're partying at the house, drinking a little bit and, uh, but not getting drunk, uh, just having some drinks and, you know, at my house and my friends, so my other friend stole his mom's car and it was, uh, it was a, uh, a Mustang. And it was way better than, than that little tan pickup, right? And so I'm like, Hey, I want to drive that back to the Bart station, and then you can drive the truck. You know what I mean? That's got a good deal for you, right? And he's like, yeah. He's like, I don't know how to drive a stick. And I'm like, Oh, man. I said, does anybody know how to drive a stick? And my buddy Eric, he was like, yeah, I think so. You know, I didn't, you know, I was thinking, Oh, sounds like get a guest to me. So I tried to tell, I'm like, well, I'll teach you how to do it right. And so. We're backing it up and he punches it and I'm like, I'm like, are you sure you got this? And he's like, yeah, yeah, yeah, it's all good. And he didn't turn the wheel because it was a manual steering. Right. And he didn't turn the wheel after he went this way, cause the wheel just automatically rolled around and luckily didn't hit anything. And he, and he punches it again. Son of a bitch sister. Me and him are both in there, right? He hops the curb and he runs right into my fucking house. Brian Schoenborn: [00:33:41] Shit. Sean Dustin: [00:33:45] Doing about five to seven miles an hour. Oh my God. Your mom must have been so busy. That's not the end of it. Brian Schoenborn: [00:33:59] Go on. Sean Dustin: [00:34:01] All right, so anyways, like the four dudes that were sitting on the up, I'm up on the by the front door and like they just watched this whole thing. They're just like, they're just, they're blessed and a laughing, right? I just like, fuck you. Me and him get out of the car and I'm like. I'm like, how am I going to hide this Brian Schoenborn: [00:34:24] in Sean Dustin: [00:34:24] your house? Yeah. I wasn't thinking about like, Oh man, this is horrible, man. What am I going to tell my mom? I'm like, how am I, how can I hide this? What can I do to hide this? Cause like I could and like everything started going through my head, like what I could do to get out of this what I do, you know what I mean? And that's how my mind works. It, my mind always worked on how can I get out of getting, or how can I get out of trouble? And then how can I get out of doing anything else, like a work around? And so anyways, I ended up having to drive it back. I grabbed a pillow and a blanket and a like, of course I'm like, dude, what am I, what am I going to do? I can't hide it. I have to. I have to come clean. You know what I mean? It's like probably the first time in my life I ever told the truth. And so anyways, I go and I park and I fall asleep and I told my mom. And so anyway. Once this I like, I had to tell her everything that happened, and this is like 10 o'clock at night. Dude. She literally dragged me over to homeboy's house that, that, uh, drew was driving, right? Uh, and in some other person's house and like all my friends, dude. And so, like embarrassed the shit out of me. That's great. Yeah. I mean, didn't get anything out of it that she wanted. I was like, dude, they're not going to pay for it. I'm going to told him to get in the car and drive. And, uh, so yeah, there was a hole in my room and it hit right perfectly in between, in the stud between the fucking wall in the room. So there's a hole in this room, and then there's a hole in this room. So after, after that, she, uh. I think it was either after that or there was another incident where my aunt came in to live with us and I threw a party, uh, during lunchtime. In like Brian Schoenborn: [00:36:08] a lunch party. Sean Dustin: [00:36:09] Yeah. Like we cut school again. I had a bunch of people come up and I drank too much and passed out and got drunk and somebody ripped off like jewelry and fucking all kinds of shit. So there was that, uh, she ended up sending me to a, you know, what outward bound is. That wilderness program where they send the kids that are bad to try to build confidence and whatever. And so I ended up going to this one in Joshua tree. There was a two week program in Joshua tree and literally like they see they. You have to, they drop you off, you get a map, uh, and you're with some guys and a bunch of people and there's a counselor, and then you have to figure out where your food drops are and all this other stuff. It's really to build confidence in teenagers because, you know, lack confidence and do stupid shit. Right? So I went through that and, uh, uh, I mean, just nothing worked, man. I was just a bad kid. Ended up, uh. Doing a one 51 what did, juvenile hall did? A one 51 at the boys ranch ended up, and this isn't an order, but this was just around that same time. And as a consequence of, of all of that behavior, uh. I ended up getting a violation and they gave me an option to do a night, uh, six month drug rehab, inpatient or, uh, 99 months in juvenile hall. So, of course, I wanted the six months in a, in a, in a group home setting where there was females there, right. The opposite sex. So, I mean, that's all I was thinking around. Um, went to that place. Uh, you know, six months turned into 18 months because you. When you're in a drug rehab, it's not about time. It's about progress. I was manipulating my way through the whole thing. Uh, you know, whether it was having dude, people from the emancipation house buy cigarette packs, bring them to me and I'm selling them for a dollar a piece, $2 a piece to the clients, cause you're only allowed seven. So I'm hustling in there cutting hair. Yeah, well, I think when I got finally somebody ratted on me and they went into the event and they found like a roll of fucking cash, like Lucy's, of course there's a sex story in here. I ended up, I ended up hooking up with this one chicken there, and I was like, you know, we're never going to get away with it and trying to screw here, so let's just leave. I had cash, right. Because I was, I, you know, so what we did is, uh, we took off, uh, we're hanging out. When we got on the Bart train, uh, I was like, there was nowhere for us to go. And I'm like, well, fuck, let's just go to my house. I know what my mom's going to be leaving at some time. Right. So we went to the house, but she had locked everything up. So I, there all of my ways to get in, I couldn't get in anymore. But what I did have was I had this, uh, we hung out, we lived in that were Hills were right. And so there's Hills all around the houses. So I had a Fort that was up in the Hills that when I had left, I remember I had a tent up there cause I would go up there and I'd sleep sometimes. Uh, you know, it's replaced to, I tried to grow weed and I tried to do all this. It was like my spot, right? Yeah. And so I took her up there and I banged her in the in the tent and got what I wanted, and then I was like, all right, well. What are we going to do? And so as soon as my mom came home, I'm like, all right, well, I'm ready to go back. Uh, we packed it, went back to the treatment place. It was in big trouble. Uh, and, uh, yeah, I, I made it through there and then I did good for a little while. And, uh. Once I got out of there, you know, I got a job and I was like 18. When I got out. I got my GED. I was in there doing, uh, this is where I first got my, my, uh, introduction to public speaking because I was doing so well in there. And I'd written some, uh, some, uh, essays and gotten a couple of scholarships for my writing. And. Also did a, uh, outreach to high school. So I go to high schools and I would go and tell my story to all the kids, right. And, uh, but I couldn't figure out a way how to transition that when I got out. How to, how to turn it into something because none of this was available, you know, and podcasts hadn't come out. Uh, Tony Robbins was just scratching the surface, you know, and there was a couple of the guys that were before him, um. So I just kinda like, alright, well I went back home and somehow I ended up moving up to Sacramento. Uh, I used the girl and, uh, I here, this is a shady story, but this is just kinda like to paint a picture of like how, like how my, what my mindset was, man. Brian Schoenborn: [00:41:03] I mean I sit there and I like, I'm laughing cause I'm like, on one sense it just sounds like Sean Dustin: [00:41:08] pure Brian Schoenborn: [00:41:08] like. In a sense, right? Just doing stupid shit, whatever. Right? But on the other side of things is, you know, that's also like a pattern of stuff too, right? So it's like, you know, like the more, the more stupid shit you do, the harder it is to kind of get away from continuing. You know, it's like that cycle, right? It's like a virtuous cycle or the fun virtuous cycle, wherever the fuck you want to call it. Uh, but I'm Sean Dustin: [00:41:31] laughing because I'm like, Brian Schoenborn: [00:41:32] dude, this was a bunch of shit that I would have Sean Dustin: [00:41:34] done to like, see, you know, you know, um. Brian Schoenborn: [00:41:38] But anyways, Sean Dustin: [00:41:38] go ahead. Yeah, yeah. So it, uh, that's, that's kind of where it went. Right. And, and, uh. I moved up to Sacramento and how I had, I had done this, me and my buddy, we were like, Oh, we gotta get outta here. Let's get out of, and me and him were, were doing meth together, right. Or, or crank, whatever it was. And me and him had become best friends. And he went and was staying at my house all the time. And, uh. And this is when I was out. So I really wasn't doing anything, didn't have a job, wasn't doing anything. Mmm. And I'm like, dude, we gotta get outta here. Let's go, let's go move to, uh, to Sacramento. I got, I got a bunch of money coming, and that's what we did. We went and moved up there. I was with this one chick and she was my girlfriend, and she had. Bought a car and put it in my name after I got up there. Right. Because she needed a car. Somehow the, the loan didn't go through and they, uh, had me returned, returned the car, and, uh. They gave me the check, they wrote the check and put it in my name. Brian Schoenborn: [00:42:45] Hmm, nice. Because the Sean Dustin: [00:42:47] title was in your name for the down for the down payment. Right. Bad, bad idea. So needless to say that she was gonna, uh. Do something like she was saving money to, to move out and do this, but she wanted to get this car or whatever. Well, I ended up cashing that check and I blew all that money. It was like 2,500 or something like that. And, uh, she ended up having it broken. I'll have her. And so she moved up there. Um, but I in no way, shape or form boyfriend material, you know what I mean? I had friends that were living in Chico. Uh, I would. I would go up there and I would sell a get an ounce of crank from, from one of my buddies and I'd go up there to Chico state and I'd sell fucking like the whole thing in twenties wow. You know what I mean? Cause all the kids are up there trying to cram for finals and stuff like that. And so they're like. They don't know. They don't know, well, let me just get a teen or let me get a ball. They're like, let me get 10 twenties and I'm like, alright, I'll give you one. And so I'd stay on for. For days at a time, man, and never even contact her or, or anything like that. I, you know, I cheated on a surf umpteen times up there. Fuck dude, I'm in a college town on, on crank, you know, so. Uh, she ended up, that lasted for a little while and I had jobs in between here and there, here and there. But I'm attaching some, she's the fuck up, man. Everything, everything I did didn't, never really, I never took anybody's else's feelings into consideration. Every, every person was a, as a stone for me. You know what I mean? What can I, what can I do to, to, how can you have, be, be of service to me and my needs and what I need from you? And, um. So, yeah, she gave me a dose of my own medicine, cause you know, we lived in a two bedroom apartment upstairs and one of my buddies was a grower up there and she killed me, grown indoors. And so I went and bought all of the shit to do, uh, to do indoor growing. Right. So I had 2000 white lights on a sun circle that's fun around, set up this whole upstairs room to do, to do all this stuff right. Uh, had everything on timers and shit, but I didn't know what I was doing because I had all this equipment, but I didn't know how to really utilize it. I didn't know how to grow weed, even though I'd been trying to do it my whole life. Um, and so it just, you know, I had at one point, I had like 16 plants in here, but they were all real stringy buds cause it was like 90 degrees in there the whole time. You know what I mean? And so it, it, it was kind of a bust, but I had a new one going and I'd figured something out. Well, she had gotten tired of my shit, right. And she's, uh, I knew that something was up. And, uh, she was, she went to go hang out with you. I want to go spend the night at my friend's house. And I'm like, alright, I knew something was up. Right. And so. Mind you, I talked her into becoming a stripper too. Alright, so not, it's not only, not only did you know that's how good of a dude I was like, damn, how can I get the most money out of you? Well, Brian Schoenborn: [00:46:05] I mean, it's also the oldest profession, so I mean, you know, Sean Dustin: [00:46:10] and so I do, I live literally, I, uh, delivered her to the door, cause just like, you know, I used to be a stripper. She went and she auditioned. She got into it. Uh, I knew something was up. And so when I just kinda like, like hung low and it was like surveilling her when she left and it turns out she was fucking around with the, uh, with the door guy. Right. And I didn't try it. I didn't try Brian Schoenborn: [00:46:34] mother Sean Dustin: [00:46:35] fucker. And I was like, all right, it's cool. I know, you know, that's really what I want. I just wanted to know Brian Schoenborn: [00:46:39] you didn't roll up four Sean Dustin: [00:46:40] cars deep. Nah, Brian Schoenborn: [00:46:43] not that time, Sean Dustin: [00:46:44] at that time. Uh, so yeah. Uh, what ended up happening there is I, you know, I told her, Hey, I know what's going on. And I, I whatever, it's uh, you know, and I think one day when I was, uh, at work, cause I was working at a Marie Callender's. Somebody called and asked if I was working right. And I didn't think anything of it. Well, when I went to go home, um, because she had, had been staying with dude and would come when I'm not there and, but the place was even her name, so she was just kind of really waiting for me to get my shit out. Hmm. I think, I don't know. I don't even know what it was. But anyways, I showed up there. The locks were changed. I couldn't get in. Uh, all my stuff is inside and the grow room and all of that equipment. Right. So I hopped up, I hopped the, uh, the balcony, and I. Rip the sliding glass thing off the off the tracks and get in and out. All my plants, all my equipment, everything's gone. My dog's gone. Uh, all everything that we've gotten together was gone on. So she'd had that dude, did she see now she went and moved in with him and he helped her do all that right. And so she'd had a couple of bags of her clothes that she had left there, you know, couldn't get whatever. I took all those, dumped them in the middle of the fucking floor bottles of bleach and, uh, persisted to plead shit out of her clothes. Yeah. I bleached symphony the whole fucking living room of the apartment. Even the, even the, uh. The, what's McAllen? And then to top it off, uh, I was like, all right, well there was a 50 gallon fish tank and it was my fish tank. And I'm like, why? I know where to put them on fucking now. So, uh, boom, busted it fucking, Brian Schoenborn: [00:48:36] no Sean Dustin: [00:48:36] shit. Uh, flood flooded out the, uh, the downstairs neighbors apartment. Right. So, so she got, so I hope that, uh, I mean, and I'm not advocating people do that now, but I mean, my mindset back then was like, well, I hope all my shit was worth it. Brian Schoenborn: [00:48:54] Yeah. You're not vindictive at all right Sean Dustin: [00:48:58] now. I'm not petty. It's like Brian Schoenborn: [00:48:59] somebody, Sean Dustin: [00:49:00] somebody call me Tom petty the other day. So anyways, yeah, I didn't get in trouble for that. She ended up getting foot, having to foot the bill for all the repairs of that. I was friends with the manager, uh, cause she has a chick that I used to hang out with. And so she ended up running me another apartment. She knew who I was growing the weed. She knew I was doing all this other shit, and she just let me rent one right down the way for after about four months, like let it cool down a little bit. Um, and then from there, man, I just, uh, you know, I just got involved with, uh, there was another incident where my homeboy. I was living in, I was living in an apartment. My boy, another buddy moved in with me. He was working, he was a bartender at one of these really popular, uh, uh, nightclubs in Sacramento and, uh, where the Kings used to hang out. Right? The second one, the Kings, this was way back, not, not any time recently. Um, and so anyways. We were hanging out and my other buddy was, you know, his ex was a stripper, and I guess he had done, she had done him dirty and she was like, he was like, well dude, you want to hit a lick? And I'm like, yeah, I'm always down to get free money with them. What's up? So he was like, I know where my ex keeps all of her cash. And, uh, she's got about 20 or 30,000 in there. And, uh, she all, I saw, I got just figure out how to get in the house and I'm like, done. Went and got a lock pick set, uh, taught my other buddy how to do it, you know what I mean? Cause he was going to be the one I said, I'm paying for the lockpick sex. I'm the only one that's got any money and the rest of the year you're going to have to figure out how to do the rest. Right. I didn't want to get my hands dirty. So anyways, he ended up doing that. And uh. We ended up making like seven or $8,000, and we split it. And, uh, so I was trying to be a baller. I live in like a baller hanging out. Uh, we were going to nightclubs. And I remember this one that I took a limo. Uh, so that nightclub right where he worked and, and he was giving us a, you know, we would just give him like. A car and he would hold it and then act like it was a tab, and then we just pay him out some cash for a tip at the end of the night. Right. So it looked like, it looked like we were balling. We ran, I ran into this one dude who I started selling cocaine for, and there was a, there, there was somebody who was trying to confront him, and I didn't really even know him. Uh, but we were talking and we were cool. Right. And, uh, somebody ran up on him and I had, uh, a group of people with me, like an entourage could, we came in, in the thing. And so I had gathered all of them and you had this dudes back, and from that moment on, so you know, when you, have you ever, you ever been friends with a dude? Kinda like, like right when you meet. It's like you two were just, Oh yeah, for sure. Joined at the hip. You know what I mean? It's like, damn. It's like, and it doesn't happen all the time. No, Brian Schoenborn: [00:52:06] it's a straight up romance dude. That's what it is. It's fucking romance. Sean Dustin: [00:52:10] And so, yeah, so it was like. He kind of took me under his wing and like I was at his house all the time and he was married so, and his wife likes me. And so that's where I really started selling drugs at. And, uh, I was in a raid with him at his house cause he had gotten busted and he went to prison. Um, and, uh. Yeah. That was a whole fucked up situation because then I went and lived with her too. You know what I mean? Like help her out with the rent and everything else. Uh, you know, I wasn't fucking around with her or even try to, um, but I was still partying all the time cause I hung out with all these strippers and figuring out how to do what I was doing. Right. I was working in the strip clubs. I was, you know, I think my, my schedule was, the only day I was off was Mondays. It's Tuesday through Sunday. I was either selling in any of the nightclubs, because at one point I was a bouncer of one of these nightclubs. And so I knew all the, all the people that worked there, I was selling ecstasy, GHB, cocaine, mushrooms, uh, you know, you name it, man. When I was living in Sacramento, dude, I was fucked. And so like to the point where I would have people come into my townhouse, like we'd all go party at the, at the club, and after hours was always at my place, and then that's where I would sell more drugs. You know, I'd fucking bring the people there. We have a DJ there. My homeboy's a DJ. And so, um, yeah, that's, you know, that was my life. And I mean, I even had the, my nickname was mr. After hours, if anybody out there listening in Sacramento, Roseville, California area, remember that name, mr. After hours. There we go. That's, uh. Yeah. So, uh, it just, you know, it just kept, I, I just never, you know, I, I ended up hooking up with this other strip for the, you know, I was at one of the clubs that I was selling at. Um, I just got into all kinds of shit, man. I was a there. There's, when I was doing GHB, you remember what that is right. Yeah, well, yeah. Well, I mean, that's what they call it. It can be used for that. Yeah. And so I was on that. I was taking that quite a bit. Right. And it for, it's kind of like marijuana, when you build a tolerance to it, it's your functional on it, right. To a point on it. And so I would get to that point, man, where I would black out standing up. I would, I would black out cause I would just take so much of it. Right. But my, my mind is still going, but my body or, or the other way around, I don't know which one it was, but one of them was still going and the other one wasn't. Yeah. And so I could drive this way and there would be times when I would, uh, I would be driving and I knew that like, here's the exit that I wanted to take. I knew that I knew I want to get off over here and I'd be 20 miles down the road. And I came to not knowing how I got there. Oh, it hadn't wrecked. Yeah. And so just constantly things like that, you know what I mean? And, um. What, how I got to Vegas from there. Um, you know, cause I was into raves and the rave culture, I was going to raves all the time. There was tons of people. Uh, I almost in that period of time, I almost died like three times on overdoses. From ecstasy, you know, mixing drugs, ecstasy, GHB, alcohol. Um, and that was, uh, that really gave me an idea of how insignificant I was, even though I was popular. Um, they all, they, they left me there, you know what I mean? I was falling at the mouth and it's like, they were just like, Oh, well he can say he'll sleep it off. And now, luckily I did wake up, you know, and, uh. Yeah. Because you know, when you're foaming at the mouth like that, that's an obvious sign that you're having a reaction. Brian Schoenborn: [00:55:58] Well, I mean, I'll tell you too, like, I wasn't on the rave scene for awhile too, when I was younger, man. And, uh, you know, this was back when the, uh, when the, when the rave scene was underground warehouses. Sean Dustin: [00:56:09] Right? Brian Schoenborn: [00:56:09] Yeah. And, uh, I mean, I didn't fuck with Jay. I've been drugged three times at probably GHB, but it's been against my knowledge or against my will, obviously. So I don't really know what that feels like. But like, my rave drugs of choice were always acid ecstasy. Ketamine was a good booster for that shit, Sean Dustin: [00:56:27] you know? Brian Schoenborn: [00:56:28] Um, but I mean, if there were, if there were enough of it that, you know, if I took enough of it, I'd be tripping for like. Yeah. That's the one time at trip for like three days straight, dude. I was like, when the fuck is this coming out? But I was never foaming at the Sean Dustin: [00:56:40] mouth, so I was never at the point where like, Brian Schoenborn: [00:56:42] you know, am I overdosing or not? It was just, you know, it was just fucked up for more than one day, Sean Dustin: [00:56:48] which is crazy to think about. You know? Yeah. So the last thing I remember before that happened, right, cause I was already, you know, I started the night with some cocaine, you know, doing Coke, cause that's what I was selling to. Um, and then I, you know, was drinking, doing some, uh, I did a couple of tabs E in that night, in that timeframe, uh, did some G and then when I came back to that apartment, I took a shot of a tequila and then I, and then I dropped a hit. I dropped the tag, a gel cap shoved in my ass. So I mean, that's the last thing I remember and it was, then I woke up in the morning and that wasn't enough for me because as soon as I got up, I was looking for the GHB so I could still, I mean, it was, I could never get high enough. Oh, I said, I said that wasn't enough because after I woke up and I passed out and woke up, I went looking for the GHB so I can get high again. Um, you know, so that was never enough for me. Yeah. I just wanted to keep going and stepping it up and stepping it up. Brian Schoenborn: [00:57:52] So did you say you were in Vegas for what? Like were you living in Vegas or were you just like, they're raving? Sean Dustin: [00:57:56] Yeah. Well, no, I lived in Vegas after I lived in SAC. So the reason why I left. Brian Schoenborn: [00:58:00] When did you live in Vegas? I lived in Vegas too, actually. So Sean Dustin: [00:58:04] I lived in Vegas. Early to the early 2000 yeah, 2000 because my daughter was born their first daughter, so that's 2000 through probably 2004 is when I got arrested and went to prison. Brian Schoenborn: [00:58:18] I was there from 2006 to 2009 so yeah. Would have just missed each other. Sean Dustin: [00:58:25] This is a weird place. Brian Schoenborn: [00:58:26] Vegas is crazy. It's, dude, it's such a weird place. Like, it's a lot of fun. It's a lot of fun. Like, I, you know, like I knew, I knew like some of the top photographers and shit like that inside the clubs. So like, you know, I never had to, never had to wait in line. You know, if I, if me and my friends saw group of hot chicks, we'd bring them with us and we never had a pink cover, you know, half the time we'd get free booze or whatever, table service, whatever else. Sean Dustin: [00:58:50] Um. I had a pluggage raise, uh, for awhile before, before drays was what it is now. Brian Schoenborn: [00:58:56] Yeah. I remember that. Sean Dustin: [00:58:58] This was the small, small drains, you know what I mean? Just like a little, like a dungeon when you go down in there. Brian Schoenborn: [00:59:04] So, so when I was there, I mean, I like, so my, a friend of mine. Uh, he is now like the most prominent photographer in Vegas. He shoots everything at the, uh, the T-Mobile arena or whatever it is. When, when they do the awards shows, sporting events, Las Vegas nights, he does all the UFC shit, uh, everything ESPN related. Like he's, he's big time. But he got us started. He was one of the first photographers that was going into nightclubs and taking pictures of people having fun. And then they would put it in posted on a website. I don't know if you ever heard about that shit. I don't know if that was after you, um, after you went to prison or whatever. But that was, that was the early, that was like 2005, two thousand fourteen thousand five, 2006 when that stuff was starting to happen. Sean Dustin: [00:59:50] Yeah. Um. Brian Schoenborn: [00:59:52] And, I mean, he's making fucking buck now, dude. He's, he's trying, he's probably closing in on like half a million a year, Sean Dustin: [00:59:59] right? Yeah, yeah. To a regular dude like us. You know what I mean? Right. Brian Schoenborn: [01:00:06] Total baller status, dude. Especially when you start by like just taking pictures for free and posting them on a website. Sean Dustin: [01:00:12] Yeah. Like what everybody does now. Brian Schoenborn: [01:00:14] Yeah. It was one of the first guys to do it. Sean Dustin: [01:00:17] That's funny. That's what Instagram is now, right? Brian Schoenborn: [01:00:20] No, Sean Dustin: [01:00:20] absolutely. Yeah. Precursor. So anyways, Sacramento, why we, why we left Sacramento? I ended up hooking up with a stripper. I got her pregnant. Um, I was hanging out with some rough dudes, uh, from the city. Um, I was hanging out with a lot of guys that were, uh, I don't know if you've ever heard of area 51 productions. I was a rape company out here. Yeah. They were, uh, uh, bringing in shit from Amsterdam and, you know, rolling heavy in, in the, in the ecstasy game. And, uh, I was just like, I had gotten into some funk with this dude and he was, he was crazy. It was a black dude. And it was my homeboy, cause my homeboy rich is, uh, uh, one of his friends. And, uh. We, we had gotten to some fuck man, and it was one of those things where if. If we cross paths again, somebody wasn't gonna walk away. Yeah. And so I, I kind of, I kind of, cause the dude was a lot like he was, he was a lot, he was a lot more strict than I was, let's say that, you know what I mean? He was kind of, he's kind of rough and I was a little scared of him. Um, and so I was like, well, you know what? This would be a good time to leave. This isn't a good time to leave Sacramento. Uh, and so I'm like. You know, my check's already stripping cause I'm with a stripper, right? I'm like, well shit, you got about what. You know, at least five months that you could still work. Correct. Right. So let's go to Vegas. You can go work at one of those strip clubs there, you know, that'd be great for you. You know what I mean? Cause I'm not worried about where I'm going to work. I'm just, we need to know where you're going to go because you got to pay for me. There he is again. You know that guy. That's always an angle into it to make sure that he's taken care of right. So many ways. We moved to Vegas. Uh, had my daughter. Um, things are okay. We're whatever I'm drinking. No, none of the hardcore fucking. And then my homeboy, my homeboy moves up there and, uh, with his, uh, check his stripper, right? So he moves up there and, uh, I had moved him out at one point, uh, from like when she went into Vegas to work, you know, when we were living in SAC, I had moved him and all of his shit out of her house once. Right? And he ended up getting back together with her, and then they moved up there. I ended up hooking up with him and, uh. Yeah. Do we, we just started partying together and hanging out, and then I moved. I moved him out of there into my house. So the same thing. She went to Vegas again and fucking, when she came back, all his shit was gone and he was living with me now and Vegas and me and him just, we're going to strip clubs and just doing all kinds of shit. Fucking doing drugs, whatever, party

Planeta M - Tertulia de marketing digital
85. Métricas SEO estimadas VS reales

Planeta M - Tertulia de marketing digital

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2020 62:00


En el episodio 85 de Planeta M hablamos sobre métricas SEO, implementación analítica, atribución de canales y cagadas varias con Álex Serranos, Álvaro Peña, David Ayala y Pol Rodríguez. - Qué son las métricas SEO? - Métricas estimadas VS reales - Analítica web - .... Toda la información en el blog: www.planetampodcast.com/metricas-SEO/

Planeta M - Tertulia de marketing digital
85. Métricas SEO estimadas VS reales

Planeta M - Tertulia de marketing digital

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2020 62:00


En el episodio 85 de Planeta M hablamos sobre métricas SEO, implementación analítica, atribución de canales y cagadas varias con Álex Serranos, Álvaro Peña, David Ayala y Pol Rodríguez. - Qué son las métricas SEO? - Métricas estimadas VS reales - Analítica web - .... Toda la información en el blog: www.planetampodcast.com/metricas-SEO/

Ciencia Del Fitness
EP 4. Intro al Músculo con Nathan Serrano M.S.

Ciencia Del Fitness

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2020 32:44 Transcription Available


En este episodio entrevisto a Nathan Serrano, estudiante de doctorado en Biología sobre el músculo. Discutimos varios temas incluídos: powerlifting vs. weightlifting (min 7:15), tipos de fibras muscilares y sus características (min 8:40), perfiles musculares y entrenamiento (min 12:30), programación de ejercicio para clientes (min 16:00), cuál es un perfil muscular saludable (min 17:50), adaptaciones fisiológicas al ejercicio (min 22:40) y recomendaciones en tiempos de coronavirus (min 30).Para traducción, visiten la páina web: cienciadelfitness.com Sígan a Nathan Serrano en: Instagram @_nateserrano_ o twitter @nathan_serranoSíganos en Instagram @cienciadelfitness o @shethescientist

WORLDSOUND SERIES
WSS JAN 20 Rehmark Live From Serranos Kitchen Streaming

WORLDSOUND SERIES

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2020 60:59


Hi there and welcome back to the WSS radio show . You can follow me al all RRSS and we share this podcast at Soundcloud , Mixcloud , Apple Music , Spotify etc... So , enjoy this session and hope to see you again next month here , on WSS by Rehmark RRSS: www.instagram.com/rehmark/ www.facebook.com/rehmark/ www.soundcloud.com/rehmarkmusic

Hollyweird Paranormal
EP. 38 Braken Fern Manor Lockdown with OC Ghosts & Legends | Interview & Ghost Investigation

Hollyweird Paranormal

Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2019 141:21


On May 18, 2019 Hollyweird Paranormal was apart of a Lockdown at the infamous Braken Fern Manor hosted by OC Ghosts & Legends.   Tune in and listen to our interviewS with the rest of the OC Ghost and Legends members along with our sit down with Dixie Tantardini, OC Ghosts & Legends' Psychic and Medium.   We talk about mobster ghosts, ghost hunting tools one should always carry during an investigation, how to protect yourself during a paranormal investigation and the creepy EVPs we collected during our investigation with OC Ghosts & Legends. OC GHOSTS & LEGEND ( CLICK HERE FOR MORE INFO) Braken fern manor built in 1926 was originally known as “The Crib” while the Tudor House formerly known as “Club Arrowhead of the Pines” became a social hideaway for Hollywood's elite. The Manor- This 10 room, 10 bathroom was said to have been used as a brothel during prohibition while The Tudor House was used to house illegal gambling, liquor, and other illegal pastimes. Infamous mobster Benjamin “Bugsy” Siegel was said to have funded the construction and built the locations as a sanctuary of escape for Hollywood’s big wigs and Mob members. Bracken Fern Manor is across the street from Tudor House in Lake Arrowhead. Nestled in  San Bernardino National Forest, surrounded by pine, cedar, and dogwood, at an altitude of 5100’, is Lake Arrowhead, CA, an area described as the "Alps of Southern California" in 1826. At that time, about 40 Paiute Indians, a warlike tribe, used the mountains for their hunting grounds. They lived in the high desert area. Many were killed in a fight with the white men of Little Bear Valley. At the same time, a more peaceful tribe of Indians, the Serranos, lived very near Little Bear Valley, in an area now known as Rock Camp, on the north side of the mountain.  They would take their old and sick to Arrowhead Hot Springs for rejuvenation and healing. They hunted in the beautiful and bountiful valley and lived relatively peaceful, somewhat nomadic lives descending to the desert highlands and warmer inland valleys during the winter months. Beneath the historic Arrowhead, sits the equally unique Arrowhead Springs. The Arrowhead Springs is a place deeply rooted in legend, with the most ancient one possibly being passed down from the Native Americans. The legend goes like this: The Great Spirit had an arrow, which was to guide the Native Americans to the spot where they were to make their home. The Great Spirit, having selected the place, fixed the arrow to mark it forever. It is believed that the native inhabitants of the San Bernardino Mountains through the Arrowhead directed the way to the hot springs with healing properties and therefore considered it holy ground. Fast forward to the 1920s and prohibition.   We touched on this subject in Ep. 30 on Famous Haunted Hollywood Bars.  Police were cracking down on the mob in the city so the mob moved their operations in less discrete areas.  One famous mobster who was rumored to lead this move was the notorious mobster, Benjamin “Bugsy” Siegal. Rumor has it that Bugsy talked the Chicago Mob into backing his new venture, which is now known as Bracken Fern Manor. This Alpine-style inn opened as Club Arrowhead in The Pines on July 4th,  1926. The inn had state of the art amenities, such as electricity! More importantly, it catered to the rich and famous, offering gambling, illegal liquor and "working girls." Other amenities included an Olympic size swimming pool, skiing, tennis courts, a bathhouse, and more.   The brothel continued operations through World War II. Gambling was maintained in the speakeasy (across the street) up until 1955.  Today, Bracken Fern Manor is a Certified Historic Landmark in the State of California. Across from Bracken Fern Manor is where gambling took place at The CLUB.  Now called "The Tutor House." The story has it that when cops were on their way up the mountain from San Bernardino, and administrators were alerted,

Food Quest: Central Valley
Los Serranos Taco Truck

Food Quest: Central Valley

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2019 14:12


Juan and Anthony visit Los Serranos Taco Truck in Winton, CA.

Low Season Traveller Insider Guides
Low Season Valencia

Low Season Traveller Insider Guides

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 29, 2018 29:43


In this first episode of Low Season Traveller Insider Guides, we speak with Miguel Angel Perez, the Brand Manager for Turismo Valencia, about why Valencia is such a great low season destination and he also shares some of his top tips on getting the most our of your visit. We talk about the City of Arts and Sciences, The River Turia Park, The Holy Grail, Torres de Serranos (city gates), Michelin starred restaurants, the annual Flamingo migration, Horchata (sweet and delicious), Agua de Valencia, Paella (no chorizo!) and skydiving! I hope you enjoy this, my first podcast, and if you do, please like, comment and subscribe and tell your friends and family about it.  We'll be featuring a different destination every week to learn why we should travel there in the low seasons. Thanks a million for taking the time - I appreciate it more than you can imagine! Keep in touch and drop me a line if you have any suggestions or recommendations. Oh, and A Very Happy and Healthy New Year 2019 to you - hope its a cracker! Ged :-)

TSF - TSF à Mesa - Podcast
O Maximino distingue-se pelos pratos serranos

TSF - TSF à Mesa - Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2018


Edição de 26 de novembro 2018

TSF - TSF à Mesa - Podcast
Edição de 26 de Novembrto 2018 - O Maximino distingue-se pelos pratos serranos

TSF - TSF à Mesa - Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2018


Edição de 26 de Novembrto 2018 - O Maximino distingue-se pelos pratos serranos

/Film Daily
Water Cooler: Walter Mitty, Annihilation, Won't You Be My Neighbor, Mission: Impossible, Rampage, Searching, Blindspotting & More

/Film Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2018 65:07


On the July 24, 2018 episode of /Film Daily, /Film editor-in-chief Peter Sciretta is joined by /Film Managing Editor Jacob Hall, Weekend Editor Brad Oman, senior writer Ben Pearson and writers Hoai-Tran Bui and Chris Evangelista we'll discuss what we've been up to at the Water Cooler and answer some listener mail in The Mail Bag.   You can subscribe to /Film Daily on iTunes, Google Play, Overcast, Spotify and all the popular podcast apps (here is the RSS URL if you need it).     In The Mail Bag: Jorge Z from Australia writes in “I am 42 years old and as you all mentioned, time changes us. Not only that, having kids changes us even more. I don't really know what my opinion would be if I was 42 with no kids. I do know that if I was 28 I would be frustrated about all of this. The point that I am trying to get to is that now having kids, even with the guy apologising, I would be very uncomfortable if I learned that he and my children were in the same room. Then I thought to myself, what about my friend with kids and my friends without kids? What do they think about it? I can tell you the the opinion of my friends without kids varied and most of them said: I don't know what to think of this; maybe it was an overreaction. “ Carrie P writes in “I finished listening to your episode on the firing of James Gunn. I have been a podcast subscriber for a couple of months and enjoy and respect everyone's opinions.  I will play devil's advocate you sometimes do. I have been in education for 14 years and there is a federal push for teaching digital citizenship. We are doing our best to educate our students that the footprint they leave on social media can have a huge effect on their future. A lot of teenagers are fans of Marvel and James Gunn. This might be a good learning experience for them to see how comments they have made in the past can keep them from potential jobs and future successes.” L from Texas writes in: “I just thought I would share some thoughts on your discussion of cleaning up after yourself in a theater. I worked in a theater for 6 years most of that time I spent as an usher. At the chain I worked at we were cross trained but each shift we were in a specific area so if you were working an usher shift you were an usher and the same goes for Box Office, Concessions and Booth.  The chain I worked at had a system for cleaning theaters, on the busy nights and days, which was called the ten step system in which if you have at least five usher working to clean a theater it would go like this.  1 - Gather all supplies 2- Turn on cleaning lights  3-2 ushers go to the top of the theater and alternate rows picking up any "big trash" your popcorn bags food containers drinks basically anything big enough to pick up and throw in the trash  4 - Clean any wet or stick spills - The big trash users would let one of the other users know that there was a need for a mop and then it would be cleaned 5- once the 2 ushers for step 3 are about 5 rows down 1 or 2 ushers with a large push broom will go down each row and get all the popcorn and other debris from under and in front of the seats  6 - 2 ushers will go down each side and sweep up the piles left by the #4 ushers and also spot check to make sure there is nothing left in the rows 7 - wipe down any seats that need it and return them to the correct position 8 - Vacuum any carpet that needs vacuuming ( we usually just had hand powered vacuums 9 - Empty the trash cans outside the theater  10 - Cleaning lights off and inform the podium the theater is ready to seat I know this was long but all this to say that if everyone would just take what ushers would consider "big trash" out with them we could eliminate an entire step here and theaters would get cleaned faster.  I will say that there is a lot of down time for ushers when it is not busy or theaters are not that busy but having been a manager as well I know that there is always something that an usher can be doing to keep the theater clean and organized and the managers can always find something for them to do while they are on the clock. So don't worry about someone losing their job just because you took you popcorn bag out to the trash!”   At The Water Cooler: What we've been Doing:Chris traveled to see Seals at a La Jolla Cove in San Diego Jacob visited the San Diego Zoo and did some Comic-Con shopping. Brad canceled MoviePass and signed up for AMC A-List, crashing at SlashFilm HQ. Hoai-Tran saw the premiere of her friend's play Heartbreak Hitman at D.C.'s Capital Fringe Festival and celebrated two giỗ (death anniversaries) with her family. Peter went to the Magic Castle for Future Stars of Magic week. What we've been Reading:Jacob read Lee Child's Without Fail as part of his plan to always read Jack Reacher books on planes What we've been Watching:Ben saw The Secret Life of Walter Mitty, Annihilation, and North By Northwest Peter saw Won't You Be My Neighbor and has been watching Who Is America? On Showtime Jacob revisited the first Mission: Impossible and Mission: Impossible 3 Brad saw Death of Stalin and Mission: Impossible - Fallout Chris saw Mission: Impossible – Fallout and Rampage Hoai-Tran saw Searching and Blindspotting, and watched Mary and the Witch's Flower on Netflix. What we've been Eating:Brad and Peter went to the Taco Bell from 2032 as part of a Demolition Man promotion Peter ate Bagels with no spread at Comic-Con and it divided the /Film staff. Jacob explored the San Diego culinary scene: Breakfast Republic, Carnitas Snack Shack, La Puerta, Blind Burro, and Serranos (and also drank a whole bunch of tequila). Brad had a Cruffin from Kettle Glazed. What we've been Playing:Jacob got sucked into Lumines Remastered on the Nintendo Switch Pokemon Go at Comic-Con where he got nearly 40 Unown, and Ghostbusters World   Other articles mentioned: How Coco's Family Reminded Me of Mine Be Well and Taco Bell: ‘Demolition Man' Inspires a Fine Dining Experience from the Future [Comic-Con 2018]   All the other stuff you need to know:   You can find more about all the stories we mentioned on today's show at slashfilm.com, and linked inside the show notes.   /Film Daily is published every weekday, bringing you the most exciting news from the world of movies and television as well as deeper dives into the great features from slashfilm.com.   You can subscribe to /Film Daily on iTunes, Google Play, Overcast, Spotify and all the popular podcast apps (RSS).   Please feel free to send your feedback, questions, comments and concerns to us at peter@slashfilm.com. Please leave your name and general geographic location in case we mention the e-mail on the air.   Please rate and review the podcast on iTunes, tell your friends and spread the word!   Thanks to Sam Hume for our logo.

All About Us Teen Talk Radio
The Healthy Heart Show w/Alishia Louis-Potter

All About Us Teen Talk Radio

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2017 61:00


Tonight!!! Tune in at 7pm ET/6pmCT for my exclusive interview w/ Tyisha Chambers the face of the 7 children found dead in their home along w/their father in April 2015. In her first on-camera interview she shares a candid perspective of life without them and her mission to share the real story behind why she wasn't in the home. This is a Healthy Heart Show Exclusive as we continue our Mother's Day series-A Mother's Grief. A Mother's Mission.  Also, meet The Serranos! Our newest edition to the Healthy Heart Show family. Hear what you can expect from them in our all new segment Marriage Matters!!! 

Wrestling Pov Podcast
EPISODE 35 Ric Serranos 3rd round bracket

Wrestling Pov Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2016 68:14


In this Episode we discuss WWE RAW and WWE Smackdown, Rics Serranos 3rd round fantasy bracket. Miguel Coles new segment and new intro!

LA VENTANA DE LA MODA
Ventana Moda I 9-7-2016

LA VENTANA DE LA MODA

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2016 60:54


Esta semana abrimos el último programa de la temporada de La Ventana de la moda con Inma Aznar y las secciones habituales: José Tellez del salón José Tellez Peluqueros nos cuenta todo sobre cómo maquillarnos en verano, hablamos con Carlos Boronat, secretario patronal de la Fundación Cursol para hablar sobre la exposición de esculturas solidarias. Y tendremos el espacio habitual con los comercios de la calle Serranos y Roteros de Valencia. El único programa sobre moda de la radio a nivel nacional, presentado y dirigido por Inma Aznar. ¡Volvemos en septiembre. FELIZ VERANO!

LA VENTANA DE LA MODA
La Ventana de la Moda I 2-7-16

LA VENTANA DE LA MODA

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2016 60:42


Esta semana abrimos La Ventana de la moda con Inma Aznar y las secciones habituales: José Tellez del salón José Tellez Peluqueros nos cuenta todo sobre el evento de EASD Valencia en el IVAM donde él es parte protagonista con peluquería y maquillaje y trucos sobre cómo cuidar el contorno de ojos para ojeras y bolsas. Inma Aznar entrevista a Judith Mas, blogger de Aspirante a Miss Divina, para hablar de la moda nacional y valenciana. Y tendremos el espacio habitual con los comercios de la calle Serranos y Roteros de Valencia. El único programa sobre moda de la radio a nivel nacional.

LA VENTANA DE LA MODA
La Ventana de la Moda 25-06-2016

LA VENTANA DE LA MODA

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2016 60:33


Esta semana abrimos La Ventana de la moda con Inma Aznar y las secciones habituales: José Tellez del salón José Tellez Peluqueros nos cuenta todo sobre el evento de EASD Valencia en el IVAM donde él es parte protagonista con peluquería y maquillaje. Inma Aznar entrevista a Arantxa Ruiz, directora de Vlc Loves Design para hablar de la importancia de una buena organización de eventos de moda. Y tendremos el espacio habitual con los comercios de la calle Serranos y Roteros de Valencia. El único programa sobre moda de la radio a nivel nacional.

LA VENTANA DE LA MODA
La Ventana de la Moda 18-06-2016

LA VENTANA DE LA MODA

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2016 62:22


Esta semana abrimos La Ventana de la moda con Inma Aznar y las secciones habituales: José Tellez del salón José Tellez Peluqueros nos cuenta cómo conseguir un long-bob y porqué el éxito de esta tendencia.Analizamos el mejor vestido y los estilismos de los candidados a la presidencia del gobierno, Albert Rivera, Pedro Sánchez, Pablo Iglesias y Mariano Rajoy con las diseñadoras Andra Cora y Elena Bellver. Y tendremos el espacio habitual con los comercios de la calle Serranos y Roteros de Valencia. El único programa sobre moda de la radio a nivel nacional.

LA VENTANA DE LA MODA
La Ventana de la Moda 11-06-2016

LA VENTANA DE LA MODA

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2016 61:52


Esta semana abrimos La Ventana de la moda con Inma Aznar y las secciones habituales: José Tellez del salón José Tellez Peluqueros nos cuenta cómo conseguir un cambio de look sin cortar el cabello. Inma Aznar entrevista a Reme hidalgo, estilista, asesora de imagen y férrea defensora de la moda valencia. Hablamos del poder de las prendas para comunicar. Y tendremos el espacio habitual con los comercios de la calle Serranos y Roteros de Valencia. El único programa sobre moda de la radio a nivel nacional.

LA VENTANA DE LA MODA
La Ventana de la Moda 04-06-2016

LA VENTANA DE LA MODA

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2016 61:43


Esta semana abrimos La Ventana de la moda con Inma Aznar y las secciones habituales: José Tellez del salón José Tellez Peluqueros nos cuenta cómo conseguir el color rubio perfecto en nuestro cabello. Inma Aznar entrevista a Julián López, consultor de RRHH de Page Personnel para conocer los tips sobre cómo vestir, hombres y mujeres, para una entrevista de trabajo. Y tendremos el espacio habitual con los comercios de la calle Serranos y Roteros de Valencia. El único programa sobre moda de la radio a nivel nacional.

LA VENTANA DE LA MODA
La Ventana de la Moda 28-05-2016

LA VENTANA DE LA MODA

Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2016 60:41


Esta semana abrimos La Ventana de la moda con Inma Aznar y las secciones habituales: José Tellez del salón José Tellez Peluqueros nos cuenta tips para cuidar nuestra piel para la exposición solar. Conoceremos la segunda parte de los museos europeos decicados a la histia y cultura de la moda. Y tendremos la tertulia habitual con los comercios de la calle Serranos y Roteros de Valencia con Segwaytrip Valencia, Sisters and Ro y Beers and Travles para conocer todo sobre ele evnto que aúna moda , belleza, música y cultura en este barrio. El único programa sobre moda de la radio a nivel nacional.

LA VENTANA DE LA MODA
la ventana de la moda 21-05-2016

LA VENTANA DE LA MODA

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2016 59:10


Esta semana abrimos La Ventana de la moda con Inma Aznar y las secciones habituales: José Tellez del salón José Tellez Peluqueros nos cuenta tips para paraecer más jóvenes en cuanto peluquería y maquillaje. Inma Aznar entrevistará a Amparo Ferrando, directora de la fundación Coso Moda y Paloma Silla organizadora de este evento. Un evento solidario en la ciudad de Valencia organizado por la fundación Coso Moda en el que van a intervenir once diseñadoras valencianas con el objetivo de poder conseguir becas de costura de dos años para las mujeres de Costa de Marfil, en África. El objetivo lo respalda la ONG Harambee, un proyecto internacional solidario que promueve iniciativas de educación en África. El broche final para este evento será el día 25 de mayo con una gala, presentada por Paloma Silla, en la hípica de Valencia para conseguir estas becas de costura para las mujeres de Costa de Marfil. Y tendremos la tertulia habitual con los comercios de la calle Serranos y Roteros de Valencia con Wakanda, Gloria Bonita y HI Services. El único programa sobre moda de la radio a nivel nacional.

LA VENTANA DE LA MODA
La Ventana de la Moda 14-05-2016

LA VENTANA DE LA MODA

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2016 63:33


Esta semana abrimos La Ventana de la moda con Inma Aznar y las secciones habituales: José Tellez del salón José Tellez Peluqueros nos cuenta tips para paraecer más jóvenes en cuanto peluquería y maquillaje, guía de los museos basadas en la historia y la cultura de la moda en España y Europa y tendremos la tertulia habitual con los comercios de la calle Serranos y Roteros de Valencia donde conocemos la esencia mediterránea y la nórdica de cervezas de Beers And Travels y de la tienda Sister´s and Ro. El único programa sobre moda de la radio a nivel nacional.

LA VENTANA DE LA MODA
La Ventana de la Moda 07-05-2016

LA VENTANA DE LA MODA

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2016 61:37


Esta semana abrimos La Ventana de la moda con Inma Aznar y las secciones habituales: José Tellez del salón José Tellez Peluqueros estará en directo en el I encuentro nupcial de la revista Telva en Valencia donde es protagonista, Paqui Guerri directora de la clínica PO Estétic nos presenta sus promociones exclusivas corporales y de rostro para los oyentes de La Ventana de la moda y tendremos la tertulia habitual con los comercios del barrio del Carmen y Serranos de Valencia para hablar de las ventajas del pequeño comercio. El único programa sobre moda de la radio española.

Kulturradion: Kosmo
Jesus - Messias på Manhattan och Kristus som konst

Kulturradion: Kosmo

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2012 41:51


Kosmo handlar om Jesusgestalten. Vem skulle han vara idag och hur får man gestalta honom? James Frey är kanske mest känd för ha suttit hos en kränkt Oprah Winfrey och förklarat varför han ”ljugit” i sin bok Tusen små bitar. TV-stjärnan Oprah Winfrey hade verkligen gillat  James Freys bok och hösten 2005 blev boken utvald till Oprah´s Book Club, vilket ledde till toppnoteringar för James Freys roman på New York Times bästsäljarlistor. Boken som marknadsfört som helt sann och självupplevd visade sig bitvis vara god fiktion. Frey hotades att stämmas, jagades av paparazzifotografer och kände sig tvingad att med sin familj lämna landet och leva i Europa under en period. Nu är han åter aktuell med romanen Sista testamentet, där han tagit på sig uppgiften att skildra en slutgiltig version av en Messias han själv skulle kunna tro på. En Jesusgestalt på New Yorks gator, utrustad med samma övermänskliga krafter som den Jesus vi känner från Nya Testamentet. Men Freys Jesus är drogliberal, bisexuell, med en uteliggares attribut och med ett kärleksbudskap som inte på något vis utesluter ett vilt, fritt sexliv. Marie Lundström har träffat James Frey på plats i New York, där han jobbar och bor. Patricia Lorenzoni är idéhistoriker vid Göteborgs universitet och aktuell med boken Mama Dolly - bilder av moderskap från jungfru Maria till Alien. Anneli Dufva tog tåget till Göteborg för att träffa henne och höra hennes tankar om moderskap, kön, helighet och om Jesus som gestalt. Hur förhåller man sig till bilderna av Jesus ur ett feministiskt perspektiv? 1989 var startskottet för en av vår tids mest långdragna konststrider. Konstnären Andres Serrano hade placerat ett litet plastkrucifix med Jesus i en behållare som han fyllt med sin egen urin. Fotografiet har kantats av konstpolitiska bråk och skandaler, inte minst i Serranos hemland USA där frågan nått ända in i senaten.  Så sent som förra året vandaliserades också fotografiet på en utställning i Avignon i södra Frankrike. Anders Serrano som själv är född katolik har sagt att han gjorde Piss Christ som en kommentar till hur religion så ofta missbrukas. Cecilia Blomberg berättar Piss Christs historia. Och så rapporterar Sveriges Radios kulturkorrespondent Gunnar Bolin från Zürich där Elfride Jelinek har haft världspremiär med sin tolkning av en av de stora klassikerna: Faust. Prodgramledare: Anneli Dufva Producent: Marie Liljedahl