Podcasts about Sidney Lee

19th/20th-century English biographer and critic

  • 31PODCASTS
  • 43EPISODES
  • 57mAVG DURATION
  • ?INFREQUENT EPISODES
  • Dec 2, 2024LATEST
Sidney Lee

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Best podcasts about Sidney Lee

Latest podcast episodes about Sidney Lee

Ed Makes Books and Music
Never Gut-Shoot a Wampus [The Almighty Dollar, EdReads Free Sci-fi Audiobooks, vol.VI] [19/21]

Ed Makes Books and Music

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2024 32:31


When the rich can buy anything and anyone, when laws and ethics are irrelevant, what level are they willing to go? Next week, in 'Marvels of Machinery', Across the frozen cliffs they loomed—the unbelievably ancient towers with the unimaginable engines deep inside them still pouring out their endless power. Dr. Sidney Lee, back from living death, vowed to find the secret of... Free audiobook channel: sci-fi, ghost crime and romance.

Fitness M/K
#394 Judo!

Fitness M/K

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2023 106:12


Lærke Marie Olsen er en af Danmarks ganske få kampsportsatleter. Hun er en af verdens bedste judokas og hun kan formentlig rive dig rundt på flere måder end Sidney Lee kunne drikke en breezer. Lyt med til lørdagens podcast til en snak om kast, hænder, et meget dynamisk forhold til regler, ringorm og meget, meget andet.

hun judo lyt danmarks kampsport sidney lee marie olsen
Lad Mig Smage
SÆRAFSNIT 10. Ready To Get Hurt Again - Hazy Bear

Lad Mig Smage

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2023 15:23


I dette særafsnit sidder Søren på samme side af bordet som Kenneth og Jacob, for vores trofaste lytter Michael har sendt os en pakke med øl som Søren intet ved om!! Vi smager på 'Ready To Get Hurt Again' fra det danske bryggeri Hazy Bear. En amerikans porter der smager som en boksekamp mellem Stig Tøfting og Sidney Lee der sammen smager en hjemmebagt chokoladekage med tilhørende vandrisgrød!!Spørgsmålet er om det er godt eller skidt?!Afsnittet er lavet i samarbejde med BeerByMike.dkSKÅL!!

ManFred
Sidney Lee og J. Aksglæde <33

ManFred

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2023 85:45


Vi taler i dagens afsnit om, hvor den omdiskuterede realitygenre ligger blandt pop-kultur, finkultur og lavkultur i anledning af dokumentarserien om Sidney Lee. I anden time kan I høre et super sprødt og eksklusivt interview med Jacob Aksglæde. PS. Jacob Aksglædes interview starter ved minut 44 Dagens værter: Simon Mogenstrup Stine Kisling Majken Børch Emma Kragh Marie Vilén Natashia Lindqvist

ps dagens sidney lee
Kaffe & Kimono
Kaffe & Kimono #157

Kaffe & Kimono

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2023 61:31


Hende Majestæt har føller, der er jobnyt på flere måder, vi runder Sidney Lee, den værste alder, velkomstshots og haveinspiration, og så har det været en god dag på kontoret. Alt dette + det løse. Vi lyttes! /Cecilie & Tanja Mixet af Thorbjörn Appehl aka Lydhjælpen   Følg os på Kaffe & Kimono Instagram eller Kaffe & Kimono Facebook

Småt Brændbart
DRs ligestillingskiks, Hans Helligheds tungeslaskeri og Joachims apanage-gate

Småt Brændbart

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2023 76:49


Vi kommer vidt omkring i ugens afsnit af  Småt Brændbart. Meny puster til Irma-ilden i ny reklame. DR er kommet på glat is i deres iver for ligestilling – de kunne med fordel have risikovurderet, inden de tog fat i en kvindelig politiker fra Danmarksdemokraterne. 11 virksomheder i Vestjylland har indført fælles rygeforbud, så kan medarbejderne nemlig ikke søge andre steder hen. Hans Hellighed Dalai Lama er endt i noget af et stormvejr, men hans tilhængere siger at han er blevet helt misforstået. Dokumentar om Sidney Lee og s Prins Joachim og apanagegate – to politikere skulle nok have sagt: ”Ingen kommentarer”. Gæst: Natasha Holst-BülowSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

4. division
Dametaskens symbolværdi og en AI-genskabt Sidney Lee

4. division

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2023 114:03


En Burberry-taske til 20.000 kr. fik internettet til at koge over, da fjerde sæson af den populære tv-serie Succession løb over skærmen i denne uge. Samtidig slog et museum i Aarhus dørene op for en helt ny udstilling om håndtaskens kulturhistorie fra middelalder til i dag. For er en taske bare en taske? Vi taler med en modeekspert om dametaskens værdi, i dollars og som eksklusivt statussymbol. I en ny dokumentar taler Sidney Lee til seerne fra graven - eller sådan lyder det i hvert fald. TV 2 har genskabt hans stemme ved hjælp af kunstig intelligens, så man med jævne mellemrum kan høre den afdøde realitystjerne i en helt ny speak. Hans familie har sagt god for det. Faktisk er de overbeviste om, at Sydney Lee ville have elsket det. Men er den slags leg med virkeligheden etisk forsvarlig? Og hvor går grænsen for AI-genskabelser? Vi skal også omkring big business i fodboldverdenen, et nyt borgerforslag om begrænsning af skærmtid for børn og meget mere. Værter: Mikkel Frey Damgaard, Sanne Cigale og Jesper Dein.

Curlingklubben
Hygiejnebind, Realityawards og en henvendelse fra mor

Curlingklubben

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2023 83:13


I onsdags var der Reality Awards, og det bliver vi nødt til at tale om, for de har blandt andet indført Sidney Lee-prisen (R.I.P.) - og så har Maria engang forsøgt noget ekstremt mediebranchet i den forbindelse. Så er der en ordentlig bunke lytterhenvendelser fra jer, specielt ovenpå den vildt ærgerlige episode i sidste afsnit, hvor Christian mente, at folk havde krøller, fordi de brugte krøllejern, og glat hår, fordi de brugte glattejern. I den forbindelse er der en lytter, som gerne vil vide, hvad Christian egentlig ved om hygiejnebind. Så har vi også fået en henvendelse fra Christians mor, som har hørt fra en kollegas to tvillinger i starten af tyverne i København, at vi er blevet en podcast for pengenes skyld - og det rygte skal vi naturligvis have manet i jorden, for det passer ikke. Så er der noget med en bager, som vi ikke behøver at gå for meget i detaljer med. Rigtig god fornøjelse og god weekend! Husk, at I altid kan kontakte os på Curlingklubben@dr.dk

christians husk rigtig sidney lee curlingklubben
ManFred
Hvad ved du egentlig om Sidney Lee?

ManFred

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2022


Denne onsdag kan du møde Simon, som er ny radiovært på ManFred onsdag. Herudover har vi besøg af musikeren Jonathan Almind, som bliver en del af ManFreds Vennebog. I programmet rater vi endnu en kanelsnegl i Onsdagsneglen, som ikke ligefrem vælter kegler, og så fortæller Mathilde om ikonet Sidney Lee i Vidste du ik' det? Dine værter: Natashia Lindqvist Bernburg, Simon Juul Mogenstrup og Mathilde Carlsen

The Spouter-Inn; or, A Conversation with Great Books

—Mr Brandes accepts it, Stephen said, as the first play of the closing period.—Does he? What does Mr Sidney Lee, or Mr Simon Lazarus as some aver his name is, say of it?—Marina, Stephen said, a child of storm, Miranda, a wonder, Perdita, that which was lost. What was lost is given back to him: his daughter's child. My dearest wife, Pericles says, was like this maid. Will any man love the daughter if he has not loved the mother?—The art of being a grandfather, Mr Best gan murmur. L'art d'être grand...—Will he not see reborn in her, with the memory of his own youth added, another image?Do you know what you are talking about? Love, yes. Word known to all men.James Joyce's novel Ulysses is sometimes considered the greatest novel of all time, and sometimes considered an impenetrable brick of a book. In celebration of its centenary and on the anniversary of the day the book is set (Bloomsday!) Chris and Suzanne trace the paths of its characters through the streets of Dublin, revel in its sensuous writing, and consider what approaches to reading the book encourages.SHOW NOTES.James Joyce: Ulysses. [Bookshop. Project Gutenberg.]Also by Joyce: Chamber Music. Dubliners. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. Finnegans Wake.We refer to several books we've discussed in previous episodes: The Odyssey; Mrs. Dalloway; The Divine Comedy; Middlemarch; A Moveable Feast; W; I Am Woman.Don Gifford: Ulysses Annotated.Harry Blamires: The New Bloomsday Book.Patrick Hastings: Ulyssesguide.com and The Guide to James Joyce's Ulysses.The Joyce Project offers a heavily annotated copy of the text.An overview of the censoring of Ulysses in the US.An image of the edition with giant letters.A lecture by Johnna Purchase on graphic design and Ulysses.Écriture feminine.James Heffernen on Woolf's reading of Joyce. The pharmacy mentioned in Ulysses.Tracing Stephen Dedalus's gay desires.Kate Bush is having a moment right now, so let's add her adaptation of Molly's speech, The Sensual World.Next: Ralph Ellison: Invisible Man. [Bookshop.]Support The Spouter-Inn on Patreon.

Genlüd
Clickbait sidste sender - Sidney 4-ever :i <3

Genlüd

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2022 55:57


Lyt med til Clickbaits sidste sender til ære for Sidney Lee

Du lytter til Politiken
25. maj: Da vi først havde fået øje på Sidney Lee, kunne vi ikke kigge væk

Du lytter til Politiken

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2022 30:39


Der var en gang, hvor godt tv var berømte skuespillere i flotte kostumer, der opførte fantastiske historier, som dygtige forfattere havde fundet på. Den slags kan man stadig få folk til at kigge på. Men i dag er der også virkeligt mange seere til almindelige mennesker, der iført deres eget tøj, vasker op og får børn, fordi det var det, de skulle, den dag kameraet kom forbi. Det er på en måde virkeligheden, men det er også reality. Tv-genren, der er på alle platforme og en del af vores fælles fortælling. De fleste af os kender Mads Skjern, Birgitte Nyborg og hende politikvinden med den færøske sweater. Men vi ved nok også hvem og Biker-Jens, Amalie Szighety og Gustav er. Så da Mr. Reality Himself, Sidney Lee, i sidste uge døde, var det tid til at stoppe op og prøve at forstå, hvad det er, vi har kigget på de seneste 15 år. Det fortæller Politikens Felix Thorsen Katzenelson om i dagens podcast.

Kaffe & Kimono
Kaffe & Kimono #117

Kaffe & Kimono

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2022 63:28


Vi har fået en Se & Hør inspireret To Talks tilsendt fra en lytter, og vi taler derfor om alt fra Herlufsholm, til en nøgen Sussi, Jørgen Klubien, H.M. Dronning Fuld Fart, Sidney Lee, Third Ear og Mette F's podcast. Og skulle vi så se at få styr på det penalhus? Vi lyttes! /Cecilie & Tanja   Mixet af Thorbjörn Appehl aka Lydhjælpen Følg os her Facebook eller Instagram

Sort Søndag
Sort Søndag: #540: R.I.P. Sidney Lee + R.I.P. Trevor Strnad

Sort Søndag

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2022 92:34


Det har været en uge med tragiske dødsfald i både Danmark og udlandet. Herhjemme mistede vi vores rockelskende spraytan-fan med den smukke "Death"-tatovering, reality-stjernen Sidney Lee. Og i udlandet har vi måtte sige farvel til en af de mest betydningsfulde sangere og musikere for ekstremmetallens mange udtryk, The Black Dahlia Murder forsangeren Trevor Strnad. Sort Søndag giver dig interview med Simon Olsen fra Beast, som fortæller om hvordan det var at arbejde sammen med Trevor og giver en forklaring på, hvorfor han har så respekteret af undergrunden og vigtig for især yngre metalbands. Desuden er der interview med det danske band Galge, optaget på Spot Festival 2022 og Giro 666 med lækker tysk space-black-metal og Pantera! Værter: Anders Bøtter og Jakob Trolle Medvirkende: Simon Olsen (Baest), Galge Udsendelse nr. 540. Sort Søndag er Danmarks vigtigste metal podcast. Hver uge får du 1 times tonser tunge toner, i selskab med værterne Anders Bøtter og Jakob Trolle. Sort Søndags trofaste "Giro 666 lyttere" byder ind med både nye og gamle numre, "Musiknyt" sørger for at holde dig helt opdateret og hver måned gennemgås et klassisk metal album i "Månedens Mesterværk".

KRÆS
KLIP FRA UGEN

KRÆS

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2022 54:40


Her er samlet det bedste fra uge 20. Danmarks første reality-legende, Sidney Lee er død. Han var den første reelle reality-stjerne, der forstod at gøre sig selv til et brand. Gæst: Maria Hougaard, forfatter til biografien My Reality. Medlem af Etisk Råd er bekymret for, om operaen Manualen kan inspirere publikum til at begå selvmord. Gæster: Morten Bangsgaard, medlem af Etisk Råd, Louise Alenius, komponist og John Fulljames, operachef på Det Kongelige Teater. Alternativets kampagneplakater til afstemningen om forsvarsforbeholdet krænker ophavsretten til Rick Astleys megahit 'Never Gonna Give You Up'. Gæster: Anna Lidell, forperson i Autor og Morten Rosenmeier, professor i ophavsret på Københavns Universitet. Der skal unikt indhold til på den nye reklamefinansierede streamingtjeneste Pluto TV, hvis den skal blive en reel konkurrent til f.eks. Netflix. Gæster: Jesper Dahl, nordeuropæisk chef for Pluto TV og Jakob Isak Nielsen, Lektor i Film og Medier på Aarhus Universitet. Vært: Maja Hald. Tilrettelagt af: Lene Grønborg Poulsen, Søren Berggreen Toft, Joachim Vestergård Jensen og Esben Lund. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Det, vi taler om
Den kulørte time: Hvem skal afløse Martin Jensen i X Factor & Susan Astanis grove beskyldninger

Det, vi taler om

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2022 59:48


Vi kommer ikke uden om Sidney Lee. Han blev 43 år og levede alle voksne dage af folkets opmærksomhed og kærlighed. Men der var også meget had - og hvad skete der, når Sidney var helt alene? Om natten. Bag tiltrukket gardiner… Vi talte også om, hvem der skal afløse Martin som dommer i X Factor, og Jonas havde et rigtig godt bud! Susan Astani, som er gift med Christian Kjær har smidt nogle grove beskyldninger mod Herlufsholm, og den ridsede kostskole svarede for sig i programmet. I studiet sad chefredaktør på BT, Jonas Kuld Rathje, teaaterredaktør på Berlingske, Jakob Steen Olsen og en ny dame og gammel kending: Caster, bogudgiver, agent og i virkelig god form, Elisa Lykke. Sophie Lier producerede Ditte Okman var vært See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Q&CO
Alle elsker pludselig Sidney Lee - med René Fredensborg

Q&CO

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2022 57:22


Der er kun to historier på programmet i denne uges Q&Co, og begge historier kredser om Sidney Lee. 24syv/Radio Loud har nemlig efter Sidney Lees uge reklameret med to programmer som det gamle Radio24syv lavede. Vi har besøg af programdirektøren for det nye 24syv/Radio Loud, Simon Andersen. Vi taler og hylder også den nu afdøde realitystjerne Sidney Lee i selskab med Ekstra Bladets René Fredensborg. Vært: Henrik Qvortrup. Producer: Rasmus Søgaard. Lyddesign: Søren Gregersen. Programansvarlig: Sofie Rye og Knud Brix.

4. division
4. division: Realityfænomenet Sidney Lee og statsministerens nye podcast - 20. maj 2022

4. division

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2022 114:10


I denne uge døde Danmarks første - og måske største - realitystjerne. I løbet af sin karriere medvirkede Sidney Lee i omkring 50 programmer, og nåede derigennem at blive et kulturelt fænomen. Det er også blevet sagt om ham, at han satte standarden for reality-tv. Men hvem var Sidney Lee egentlig? Og hvorfor var han så god på fjernsyn? Vi taler med en reality-ekspert om det aftryk, Sidney Lee efterlader på den danske reality-scene. Mette Frederiksen springer ud som podcastvært i dag, hvor der er premiere på 'Statsministeren spørger'. Hun siger selv, at hun vil skabe et rum, hvor der er mere tid til nogle af de store spørgsmål, der præger vores samfund. Men hvordan lyder det så, når landets statsminister stiller spørgsmålene? Og er der noget at hente i første afsnit? Det diskturer vi i dagens udsendelse. Vi skal også omkring den dramatiske retssag mellem skuespiller Johnny Depp og ekskonen Amber Heard, en ny bog om cykelsport og meget mere. Værter: Cecilie Nielsen, Gitte Løkkegaard og Mikael Jalving.

Det, vi taler om
Den, vi taler om: Sidney Lee

Det, vi taler om

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2022 45:42


Igennem to årtier fyldte han fladerne med sin selvbrunede hud, cowboy-støvler og bandana, men hvem var sønnen af bibliotekaren og læreren? Hvem var festaben og fænomenet? Hvem var spilletalentet og den evige unge Sidney? Men måske endnu vigtigere; hvem var Søren Hassel Hansen? Denne uges "Den, vi taler om" handler om Sidney Lee. Manden, der har selv kaldt sig familiens sorte får, og som skilte sig ud allerede i folkeskolen. Og anden uddannelse fik han aldrig - han ville nemlig være tv-stjerne. Journalist Karin Heurlin Lange og caster og podcastvært på “Realityportalen” Marlene Weybøll, fortalte om rollen og fænomenet, Sidney. Mads Brügger var med om samarbejdet på Radio24syv og det ultra-populære format "Genialos". Og så havde vi også Sidneys Lees gode ven, Mitchel Linow Nebelong med på en telefon. Han fortalte om vennen. Om mennesket. Og om den ensomhed, Sidney selv omtalte, og som med mellemrum ramte den ellers feterede personlighed. Sophie Lier producerede Ditte Okman var vært See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Ytringspligt Podcast
Mette F's Hemmelige Politianmeldelse!

Ytringspligt Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2022 76:21


Sidney Lee er død, Claus Hjort skal smides under bussen og hemmelighederne i Mette F's dukkeafbrændingsdrama fortsætter. Ses vi kl 19:00 i aften?Politisk merch i salg på: https://ytringspligt.com/Bruger du ikke allerede en VPN? Hvis du køber StrongVPN via Ytringspligt sikrer du dit privatliv på internettet og støtter proaktivt op om podcasten! https://strongvpn.com/?tr_aid=61e9aa5c54c65Støt podcasten på: https://www.patreon.com/ytringspligtYtringspligt er en uafhængig podcast produceret af Alexander Valeur @Eventyrmand og @Lars Andersen https://www.instagram.com/ytringspligt/https://www.instagram.com/eventyrmand/https://www.instagram.com/larsandersen1620/

RADIO4 MORGEN
Radio4 Morgen - 17. maj - kl. 6-7

RADIO4 MORGEN

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2022 54:58


Alzheimerforeningen: Målet, om at halvere forbruget af antipsykotisk medicin til demente i 2025, er urealistisk. Transportminister: Det er misforstået omsorg, når forældre kører deres børn alle mulige steder hen. Gode danske chancer ved filmfestival i Cannes. Podcastvært: Sidney Lee var Danmarks første og eneste reality-legende. Sneakers er udsolgt på ingen tid. Værter: Anne Philipsen & Claus Elgaard See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Påstand mod påstand
Påstand mod påstand: Sidney, we salute you! - 17. maj 2022

Påstand mod påstand

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2022 120:00


Vi kan ikke komme uden om, at hele Danmarks mediedarling Sidney Lee er gået bort. Vi laver en hyldestblok til manden. Fra én darling til en anden. Rwandas præsident Paul Kagame vandt valget i 2017 med 98,8% af stemmerne. Vi spørger, om dette er et tegn på, at han er diktator eller bare en vaskeægte darling? Kan Anders Bondo forveksles med en mindreårig? Han blev i hvert fald spurgt om billed-ID, da han den anden dag ville købe en flaske vin i Netto. Vi spørger ekspert i nonverbale indtryk og ansigtsudtryk, Pernille Slot. "Alt, der er købt, er solgt" sådan lyder dagens lytterpåstand, som vi skal undersøge! Værter: Sebastian Johan Lund og Martin Plauborg. Producerende redaktør: Simon De Assis. Praktikant: Sarah Sabir. Journalist: Nicholas Schrøder.

stand id alt salute sidney fra danmarks netto paul kagame sidney lee rwandas sebastian johan lund
KRÆS
Reality-legenden Sidney Lee er død: "Han forstod at dyrke sit brand"

KRÆS

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2022 54:59


(02:02) Danmarks første reality-legende, Sidney Lee er død. Han var den første reelle reality-stjerne, der forstod at gøre sig selv til et brand. Gæst: Maria Hougaard, forfatter til biografien My Reality. (14:00) Medlem af Etisk Råd er bekymret for, om operaen Manualen kan inspirere publikum til at begå selvmord. Gæster: Morten Bangsgaard, medlem af Etisk Råd, Louise Alenius, komponist og John Fulljames, operachef på Det Kongelige Teater. (34:50) Det er tid til en ny aktivisme med fokus på åndelighed og dybde, lyder det fra forfatteren til digtsamlingen "Læg en besked". Gæster: Naiha Khiljee, forfatter og Jeppe Svan Sørensen, medlem af Den Grønne Ungdomsbevægelse. Vært: Maja Hald. Tilrettelagt af: Lene Grønborg Poulsen, Søren Berggreen Toft og Esben Lund. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

KLUB Podcast
Sidney Lee: Reality-ikonet, der aldrig blev voksen

KLUB Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2022 54:01


(01:47) R.I.P. Sidney Lee. Reality-ikonet, der er kendt for sin denim, selvbruner og bandana gik bort mandag. Men hvem gemmer sig bag det flamboyante ydre? Og kan vi lære noget af tv-personligheden, de fleste opfattede som uintelligent? Vi skraber i overfladen og kommer helt tæt på Sidney Lee.(34:25) Det kan koste dig dyrt, hvis du bringer et billede af Den Lille Havfrue på Langelinie. Men har Edvard Eriksen-familien patent på den måde, den lille havfrue ser ud? Eller kan vi finde en lignende portrættering i historiebøgerne? Det undersøger Babylon i dag.Gæster:Kit Nielsen, caster og ejer af Reality AwardsMitchel Nebelong, tv-personlighed og ven til Sidney LeeGustav Salinas, tv-personlighed og sundhedscoachChrisstoffer Paluszewski, stifter og medejer af Bip Bip Bar på Nørrebro i KøbenhavnStine Bødker, journalist og forfatter bl.a. til 'Havfruer - magiske fakta og fortællinger'Vært:Frederik WestergaardTilrettelæggere:Kirstine MossinCecilie DumanskiFrederik WestergaardProducer:Kirstine MossinRedaktør:Cecilie Dumanski

Introductions | WFMT
LIVE | Sidney Lee, 18, viola

Introductions | WFMT

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2022 38:44


A live performance — from Rogers Park's Rhapsody Theater — of music by Clarke, Bach, Brahms, and Prokofiev. The post LIVE | Sidney Lee, 18, viola appeared first on WFMT.

En go' morgen
Koldfronten - 2021-12-13

En go' morgen

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2021 56:29


Der er sket fremskridt i jagten på et interview med Frederik Cilius og Rasmus Bruun. Søren fortæller om den forfærdelige snestorm der ramte ham og resten af Nordjylland i starten af december. Der er julepakke-kaos i danske pakkeshops. Sidney Lee er tilbage. Og så får du en forklaring på, hvorfor der ikke var nogen episode i sidste uge.

ManFred
ManFred 17/09-21

ManFred

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2021 80:41


I dagens afsnit snakker dine to værter om diverse konspirationsteorier. Der bliver snakket om alt fra Sidney Lee til de islandske alfer. Og så vender vi selvfølgelig også et lille dilemma. Dine værter idag er, Caroline Køster og Ilias Ismail Send us your feedback online: https://pinecast.com/feedback/manfred/5ddb22bb-96b5-4a95-aea4-1496491c1652

dine manfred sidney lee
Farmænd
Farmænd S9E7 – Lærke Bagger

Farmænd

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2021 54:51


Vi drikker Arnbitter og bajer, mens vi snakker om de tre klassiske emner: Kids, børnenavne og Michael Learns To Rock med Danmarks svedigste strikdesigner og Sidney Lee-fan, Lærke Bagger! Hun er genial. Nyd afsnittet! Annonce Farmænd Podcast er selvfølgelig lavet i samarbejde med altid skønne SimpleFeast.com

Brian Mørk Show
Brian Mørk Show #327: LIVE fra Aalborg m. Nicolaj Lange & Jimmy lauridsen

Brian Mørk Show

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2020 48:53


Optaget live på et udsolgt Skråen i Aalborg. Gæsterne er en sygeplejerske som har et væskende skinnebenssår på størrelse med Inger Støjberg og en influencer på 35 kilo der var kæreste med Sidney Lee da han sprang i luften som en ballon. Megen moro.

Iværksæt med omtanke
36# Terrassehygge hos Mc Niller

Iværksæt med omtanke

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2020 48:44


Vi vender situationen i USA, hvorfor Mads endte bag Sidney Lee til reality awards. Vi snakker om den evige saga om Carol Baskin og resten kan I lægge øre til her. God lytter!

Danskerbingo
Danskerbingo: Sidney Lee i slikafdelingen og grundigt tjek af understellet

Danskerbingo

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2020 64:31


Vi skal i mål med vores åbne-lukke-epos og have svar på, hvad en for sen lukning kan medføre. Kristoffer skulle klart have lukket sit Oddset-væddemål noget før, og Jens når lige at få besøg af Singleliv-legenden Sidney Lee, da han glemmer at få lukket Fakta til tiden. Bjørne Corydons mave rumler, og vi går på jagt efter nogen, der har oplevet noget fantastisk samtidig med, at der skete noget forfærdeligt. Martin havde altid drømt om at køre i ambulance, og det fik han lov til, da hans Toyota Aygo blev lavet til en cabriolet i en unødvendig bilulykke. Davids mor fik overbragt en rigtig god nyhed juleaften lige efter, at en storm og et kastanjetræ slap gårdens 22 svin løs lige, før julemaden var sat på bordet. Oliver får den afsprittede depeche i hånden og bliver det nye led i "Sjovt Du Sir' Det"-kæden. Oliver og kammeraterne, der mestrer fynsk kussehårs-præcision, fandt nemlig en ny og voldsom måde at få åbnet for det flydende brød. 2x Silke deltager i dagens radiofoniske fokusgruppe, hvor vi dykker ned i, hvad vores nye lyttere, der stadig er i corona-lockdown, gerne vil have mere af i deres radio. Der bliver noteret; at mange nye lyttere hedder Silke, at Andreas skal tale mere om noget, han ikke ved noget om, og at astrofysik er the shit. Jacob har fået færdiggjort serien "Adventure Time", hvilket han har haft virkelig svært ved, da han ikke kunne bære, at det skulle være slut. Vi leder efter nogen, der har haft det på samme måde som Jacob. Aksel kan ikke nænner at se afslutningen på sine "actionpacked" yndlingsserier, i hvert fald ikke før han er sikker på, at der kommer nye sæsoner. Nanna Nørgaard har nyheder med fra formiddagens pressemøde. Med udgangspunkt i nyheden om, at Danmark skal i gang med at teste amok, løber Jacobs seddel med sejren i Nyhedsbingo. Vi går derfor på jagt efter nogen, der er kommet galt afsted med en test. Tobias' besøg ved lægen tog en uventet drejning, da han endte med ben og bar' røv i vejret. Vi får endnu en gang bekræftet, at Ugens Værste Tidspunkt er kl. 11.45 hver tirsdag. Sarah har købt en alt for lille bil, og Kasper fik en grim overraskelse ved tandlægen. Værter: Andreas Kousholt og Jacob Weil.

Genialos
Året der kommer 2019

Genialos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2020 63:32


Som traditionen foreskriver, så kigger Holger Bech Nielsen og Sidney Lee fremad mod året der kommer.

kommer sidney lee
Genialos
Året der gik 2019

Genialos

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2019 48:41


Det største der er sket for Holger Bech Nielsen og Sidney Lee i 2019. D. 1 januar kan du høre hvad Holger og Sidney glæder sig mest til i 2020.

sidney holger sidney lee
Getting to the Bottom of It
'Getting to the Bottom of It' Navigating the back-to-school season

Getting to the Bottom of It

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2019 11:46


On this week’s episode, culture editor Sidney Lee walks freshman through everything they need to before their first day. Also check out our breakdown of the new first-year student orientation.

Det Ka' Noget
Ep 20 - Anders' oplevelse med Jørgen Leth

Det Ka' Noget

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2019 53:32


En eller anden tumpe havde fået den fremragende idé, at vi skulle ud i det danske sommervejr med podcasten. Men sådan nogle indetype som os er ikke vant til at skulle deale med blæst, regnvejr og de ca. 1 million fluer der valgte at formere sig på Anders’ ben, som var det Thylejren anno 1970. I denne episode hører vi om Anders’ helt egen Tour De Leth. Han fortæller om hvordan det har været at tilbringe en uge med legenden selv, og holdet bag Jørgen Leth’s tour 2019. Som at sende Sidney Lee til Cern for at lære om kvantefysik. Hør og se episode 20 lige nu. Du fortjener det!

Getting to the Bottom of It
'Getting to the Bottom of It' Throwing caps off for the Class of 2019

Getting to the Bottom of It

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2019 14:36


On this week’s episode, assistant news editor Lia DeGroot recounts the class of 2019's graduation ceremony on the National Mall. Editors also discuss University budget allocations and the hundreds of thousands of dollars lost in library funding. Getting to the Bottom of It” is hosted by Meredith Roaten and features culture editor Sidney Lee. This podcast is produced by assistant video editor Jacob Folvag and podcast host Meredith Roaten. Music is produced by Aulx Studio. Special thanks to Lia DeGroot, Jared Gans and Zach Schonfeld for joining us.

Getting to the Bottom of It
'Getting to the Bottom of It': Addressing sewage leaks in psychology building

Getting to the Bottom of It

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2019 13:32


On this week’s episode, assistant news editor Jared Gans spoke with more than 15 faculty and staff who have complained about conditions in the psychology department building. Editors also discuss disability discrimination complaints against GW and what graduates are doing after they receive their diplomas. “Getting to the Bottom of It” is hosted by Meredith Roaten and features culture editor Sidney Lee. This podcast is produced by assistant video editor Jacob Folvag and podcast host Meredith Roaten. Music is produced by Aulx Studio. Special thanks to Jared Gans, Shannon Mallard and Zach Schonfeld for joining us.

Getting to the Bottom of It
'Getting To The Bottom Of It': Cutting daily costs for students

Getting to the Bottom of It

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2019 13:22


On this week’s episode, outgoing Student Association President Ashley Le talks about how she and her executive cabinet have worked with administrators to cut costs for printing, laundry and reserving rooms. Editors also discuss a Corcoran student’s Quinceañera-themed senior thesis project and the results of SA diversity town halls. “Getting to the Bottom of It” is hosted by Meredith Roaten and features culture editors Sidney Lee and Molly Kaiser. This podcast is produced by assistant video editor Jacob Folvag and podcast host Meredith Roaten. Music is produced by Aulx Studio. Special thanks to Ashley Le and Paige Morse for joining us.

Getting to the Bottom of It
‘Getting to the Bottom of It’: Eliminating library late fees

Getting to the Bottom of It

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2019 12:06


On this week’s episode, The Hatchet’s news team reflects the University's decision to late fees on general collection books for less than 40 days. Editors also discuss dinners Student Association leaders are hosting for student organizations and living quarters for freshmen in Fulbright Hall. "Getting to the Bottom of It" is hosted by Meredith Roaten and features culture editors Sidney Lee and Molly Kaiser. This podcast is produced by assistant video editor Jacob Folvag and podcast host Meredith Roaten. Music is produced by Aulx Studio. Special thanks to Jared Gans, Lia DeGroot and Paige Morse for joining us.

Cancer Stories: The Art of Oncology
Conversations with the Pioneers of Oncology: Dr. Samuel Hellman

Cancer Stories: The Art of Oncology

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2018 31:21


The purpose of this podcast is to educate and to inform. This is not a substitute for professional medical care and is not intended for use in the diagnoses or treatment of individual conditions. Guests on this podcast express their own opinions, experience, and conclusions. The mention of any product, service, organization, activity, or therapy should not be construed as an ASCO endorsement. Hello. Welcome to "Cancer Stories." I'm Dr. Daniel Hayes, a medical oncologist, and translational researcher at the University of Michigan Rogel Cancer Center, and I've also been the past president of ASCO. I'll be your host for a series of interviews with the founders of our field. Over the last 40 years, I've been fortunate to have been trained, mentored, and inspired by many of these pioneers. It's my hope that through these conversations we can all be equally inspired, by gaining an appreciation of the courage, the vision, and the scientific understanding that led these men and women to establish the field of clinical cancer care over the last 70 years. By understanding how we got to the present and what we now consider normal in oncology, we can also imagine and work together towards a better future, where we offer patients better treatments and we're also able to support them and their families during and after cancer treatment. Today, My guest on this broadcast is Dr. Samuel Hellman, who is generally considered one of the fathers of modern radiation oncology in the United States and frankly, worldwide. Dr. Hellman is currently a professor emeritus at the University of Chicago Pritzker Medical School, where he served as the dean from 1988 to 1993. And he's been the A.N. Pritzker Professor of the Division of Biological Sciences. He's also served as the vice president of the University of Chicago Medical Center. Prior to moving to Chicago in the late 1980s, he had previously been physician in chief and the professor of radiation oncology at the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. He served there from 1983 to 1988, and he was also chair of the Department of Radiation Therapy at the Harvard Medical School, where he served as the co-founding director of the Joint Center for Radiation Therapy. Dr. Hellman has authored over 250 peer-reviewed papers, and he's been one of the co-editors of one of the leading textbooks on oncology, Cancer, Principles and Practice. Dr. Hellman has won many awards and honors, including being named a fellow of the National Academy of Medicine, formerly the Institute of Medicine, and of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He is frankly, one of the few individuals to serve as president of both the American Association of Cancer Research and the American Society of Clinical Oncology, for which he was actually, I believe-- correct me if I'm wrong Dr. Hellman-- the first radiation oncologist to hold that position, which he served in 1986 to 1987. Dr. Hellman, welcome to our program. Thank you for having me. I hope I got all that right. Your introduction has taken longer than some of the others. You have been so prominent in the field. I have a series of questions. The whole point of this is sort of like Jerry Seinfeld's Riding in a Cab with Friends. I've always said, if I had an opportunity to right with some of the giants in our field, what would I ask them during a cab ride? So I get to ask the questions, and you get to answer. I know you grew up in the Bronx. Can you tell us a little bit more about your background? I'm particularly intrigued about the fact that a boy from the Bronx ended up at Allegheny College in Pennsylvania. Why'd you go there? What was your interest? Was it always in science and medicine, or did you have something else in mind? OK. Well, start with the Bronx. I was born in 1934 in the Bronx in a nice part of the city, which doesn't often go with descriptions of the Bronx today, but it was at that time. And about well, 1950, which was when I entered my senior year in high school, I had gone to high school at DeWitt Clinton High School. And as I say, my senior year, we moved to Long Island, and I spent my senior year at Lawrence High School. The important part of this is that Clinton had about 4,500 to 5,000 boys, and Lawrence High School was much smaller and most importantly, coeducational, and that made me very much want to go to a smaller school for college and definitely one that was coeducational. And so my mother and I took a little tour of colleges not too far from New York, but Allegheny was the farthest, I think. It's in Western Pennsylvania, very close to the Ohio border. And it was a beautiful day. I had a very nice two people showing me around, and I became enamored of the place. It was a very good fit for me, but I must say, my method was not a very analytic one, but that's how I got to Allegheny College. And was science and medicine in your thoughts then, or did you have other things that you thought you'd do? No, no. I was a middle-class Jewish boy from the Bronx. You're programmed to be interested in medicine. The old comment was, you know what a smart boy who can't stand the sight of blood becomes? The answer is a lawyer. And I was not offended by the sight of blood. So I actually heard about your decision to go to SUNY Upstate Syracuse and the serendipity involved. And I'm always struck by how so many of us have what we plan and what we end up doing. Can you give us that story? I though it was really fascinating. Well, I'm not sure what part of it you want, but I went to Syracuse Upstate because I won a state scholarship, and I hadn't applied to any New York state schools. And fortunately, the medical school advisor and a former Alleghenian, who was at Upstate, arranged an expedited interview, et cetera. So anyway, that's why I ended there. Why I ended up in radiation oncology-- Well, that was my next question is, how did we get lucky that you decided to go into oncology? Well, I interned at Boston at the Beth Israel Hospital, which was essentially very oriented to cardiovascular disease. Our chairman was a renowned cardiologist. He was the first one to use radioactive tracers. He used radium, as it turned out, and there is an award given by the nuclear medicine society. Their big award, their annual award is the Hermann Blumgart Award, and Blumgart was my chairman. And Paul Zoll, the external defibrillator inventor, was there. Louis Wolff of Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome was there. So it was a cardiac place. And internal medicine was what I wanted to do, but my father was quite hard of hearing and had a lot of trouble making a living, because he was so impaired. And electronic devices, of course, weren't available at that time. And it was widely thought that otosclerosis which is what he had, was a hereditary disease. And so I was discouraged somewhat from entering medicine, not being able to be sure I could use a stethoscope. Parenthetically, I have never had any trouble, and the disease is no longer thought to be hereditary but rather the sequelae of infectious diseases, either diphtheria or influenza. This was the great influenza epidemic. The two, one of those two. But anyway, that's what he had, so I sought to do something else. And I was a little bit put off by taking care of disease which we really could not alter the course of. We could modify it. We could palliate, but probably if I were more dexterous, I would have become a surgeon. But I wasn't, and so I decided I didn't know what to do. I'd take a radiology residency and see where that led. This was late in the year, and there were no radiology residences, literally, in Boston that were available. But a new chief had come to Yale, and he was starting a new program. And one of radiologists in a neighboring institute told me go there. So I did. Well, he turned out to be a radiation oncologist, and he, Morton Kligerman and Henry Kaplan, were the two chairmen of departments of radiology who were radiation oncologists. And Henry had been at the NIH and got them to, with the National Cancer Institute, I guess, to start a fellowship program to encourage radiation oncology. And Kligerman applied for one, got one. I was there. I was captivated by the opportunity to do some curative treatment. I was a chemistry major in college, and physics and chemistry were things I enjoyed. Sounded like a good choice, so that's what happened. So there could not have been very many specific radiation oncology fellowship programs at that time in the United States. Is that true? Yeah, very much true. The ones that stood out was, I say, Henry Kaplan's. There was a very good one at UCSF. And there was one in Penrose Cancer Hospital and one at the MD Anderson, and those were the ones. So your decision to go oncology then, really your decision to go into radiology-- diagnostic radiology originally, sorry-- didn't sound like you were-- Not really. I took a radiology residency, because I thought it would be helpful whatever I decided to do. I really didn't expect to go into diagnostic radiology, but I figured that's something I could do. I didn't have much training or any training in that before. There was a great dynamic radiologist at the Beth Israel Hospital, and he captivated me. And so I figured, there's a lot to learn there, and I'll try it. I think a lot of the younger doctors don't realize that the two were together for a long time. What's your perspective of the split between diagnostic and therapeutic radiology-- I've actually heard you talk about this, so I think I know what you're going to say-- and bringing them back together? Well, I was a great proponent of it. The whole fields are entirely different. But having diagnostic radiology is extremely helpful in radiation oncology, because we depend on images to determine how we treat, where we treat, and so forth, so it was there. But they were interested in entirely different things. And just parenthetically, when I took the Harvard job, I wasn't going to take it unless I had a promise that we could start a Department of Radiation Oncology. Shortly after I came, and the decision was made with just a shake of the hand that, after a year or two, I'd be able to do that, and that's what happened. Actually, that segues into another question I had is I was looking over your background. I met you first when I was a first-year fellow at the medical oncology. That was 1982, by the way, a long time ago, when it was still the Sidney Farber. And I'd heard about your legendary efforts starting the Joint Center and also your teaching methods with your own residencies. But you were rubbing shoulders with Sidney Farber and Francis "Franny" Moore and Tom Frei. That must have been pretty intimidating for a relatively young guy trying to start a whole new department. What was the impetus behind that? It was an interesting experience. Dr. Farber was, of course, the dominant figure in cancer at Harvard, and nationally, he was one of, if not the great leader. I mean, but he was a difficult man, and I don't like to speak disparaging, but we had a rocky relationship. When the Joint Center-- I'm getting ahead of my story, but it's appropriate to this question. When the Joint Center was started, it was started by Harvard Medical School, and the dean for hospital affairs was a man named Sidney Lee. Dr. Lee had formerly been the head of the Beth Israel Hospital, the director, not the chairman of medicine but the director. And he got the idea that all the hospitals in the Harvard area were relatively small, the Mass General was across town and quite large, but that was not true for the Brigham or the BI or the Deaconess or what at that time was the Boston Hospital for Women. And so he got them all together. So there were those, and I think I left out the Children's, but Children's was amongst them, as well as the Sidney Farber, as you say. Or at that time, it wasn't called that. It was called the Jimmy Fund, but that's another story, and one you know better than I, I suspect. But anyway, those six were to get together when I started the Joint Center. Because Dr. Farber and I had so much difficulty with each other-- he wanted really for me to be reporting to him and being part of the Jimmy Fund but that wouldn't have worked with the other hospitals. He was not liked by any of the places, including Children's, which is where he was the pathologist. So those six initial institutions, when we finally came to sign, turned out to be only four because the Children's wouldn't come in, and the Jimmy Fund wouldn't come in. For a number of reasons, two years later, they acquiesced, mostly because we were successful, and they were without supervoltage treatment, and it was just not sensible for them not to join. But that's my relationship with Sidney. Franny Moore is a different story. Franny Moore was an internationally-known surgeon and expected to have his way, but he was very graceful, very nice. I had very few disagreements with him. He expected, and I think, deserved certain deferences. Sydney did, too, but it just made it too difficult to do that but Franny was not that way. Franny and I came to the treatment, conservative treatment of breast cancer from different points of view. He didn't agree with it, but he was entitled to his opinion, and he was fine. Tom is a different story. I got there ahead of Tom, and he came, and if anything, I helped out Tom, although he was much senior. Harvard has its own culture, as you know, and he needed at least an introduction. I mean, he sailed along fine after that. And in fact, at one time, he and I wanted to start a joint residency program. It was to be a four-year program, which would have people take two years together and two years in their respective specialty. But the boards were not in agreement, so it was dropped. But Tom and I always got along fine. Actually, that raises one of my other questions. I spent a lot of time in Europe, and the field of so-called clinical oncology still remains, combining radiation and medical oncology. In fact, they style it as a particular specialty in Great Britain. How did it evolve not that way in the United States? Radiation oncology went off on its own. And I think you had a lot to do with really professionalizing radiation oncology as a specialty in this country. Is that not true? I'd be interested in your perspectives on this, too. Well, I should parenthetically say that I spent a year in the National Health Service in 1965, while I was a fellow at Yale, in clinical oncology at the Royal Marsden Hospital, their major teaching hospital for cancer. And I always believed in the joint efforts of a non-surgical oncology program. You can include the surgeons, mostly because their lives are so different and their technical training is much more extensive, but you can work closely with them, and I've been fortunate to be able to do that. But medical oncology and radiation, in my judgment, would be better off close together. And your comment about me and ASCO, being the first president as a radiation oncologist, and I never call myself a radiation oncologist, at least not initially. I always call myself an oncologist. But I do, I agree and then describe what I do as radiation. But I agree with you, they have the best title-- clinical oncologists. And why it occurred the way it occurred, I'm not sure. I know we started in radiology and medical oncology started in hematology. I mean, the real revolution, and leaving aside Dave Karnofsky and his work, the real changes occurred in acute leukemia. And the real founders of the specialty, Dave was surely one of them, but a great many of them were all hematologists, leukemia doctors, and it grew from there. It grew out of hematology. And a lot of major oncology papers were in Blood, the journal Blood before they were in JCO. So that's the best I can do with it. Our big thing was to separate from diagnostic. Getting closer to medical oncology is much easier, because we have the same book. You said I wrote the textbook with Vince and Steve, and so I did. And that was very easy. We spoke the same languages. We saw the same things, not completely. I saw more head and neck. Vince saw more of the hematologic malignancies, but the rules were similar. It was no-- it was easy. And I've heard Dr. Frei-- I trained with him when he was alive and obviously, Dr. DeVita talked about what it was like to give chemotherapy when they started. And how we really professionalized, in many ways, and split up giving chemotherapy, the different responsibilities. What was it like with radiation oncology back 40 years ago? I mean, how did you-- the safety issues, were you all cognizant of the safety issues related to radiation at the time? How did you do your planning? What was that like? Well, safety was-- Hiroshima made everybody know a lot. In fact, if anything, we were more conservative than we probably needed to be because of radioactivity being an evil and all the things that happened after '45 and at Hiroshima and Nagasaki experience. And so safety wasn't a problem that way. But there were a lot of people in the field who were using the field, who are not radiation oncologists. Some of them were radiologists, diagnostic radiologists and did it part time. They had a cobalt unit, before that, just an orthovoltage, conventional energy, much less effective and more damaging. And also gynecologists, and when I visited Memorial Hospital early on in my training, and the surgeons would send a prescription blank, a regular prescription dying down to the radiation therapist. And that's what they were, technicians, or often were. And they may have differed with the prescription but only by being careful and discussing it with the surgeons and convincing them that some change should be. That's very different. How was the planning done? How was the planning done? The planning was fairly primitive. Well, most places had a physicist, usually a physicist, who did both diagnostic machines and conventional radiation oncology, and they were important in that department and those people subspecialized, too. And in fact, when I came to Boston in 1968, Herb Abrams, who was the new chairman of radiology-- he's the one who chaired the committee that selected me-- but he and I jointly started a physics department. So it was still in diagnosis as well as therapy, but we realized that wasn't a good idea and separated. So physics was evolving, but treatment planning before supervoltage, and even with supervoltage before multileaf collimators and a lot of the newer, what then were newer techniques, was reasonably rudimentary. When I did my residency, we did our own planning, and usually, it got checked by the physicist but not all the time. It's a lot different now. Yes, it is. I want to turn this to an area that's more personal to me and that is your role, out of all the many contributions you've made to the field, your role in the field of breast-preserving therapy. I came in just as you and Jay Harris were really making that institutionalized. Just for our listeners, what were the hurdles there? They must have been both personal and professional and technical. And did you ever doubt that this be successful in the long run? You must have had some second thoughts about getting into this. Well, I have to back up. It was well before Jay, but it was at Yale. And apropos of how many-- going back to our previous question-- how few radiation oncologists there were. There was a club. Before there was a specialty, before there was a society, there was the American Club of Radiation Therapy. And all you had to do to belong to it was do radiation therapy without doing diagnostic radiology. And I was in the low 200ths of the consecutive order of people who belonged to the specialty from its very inception at the turn of the century. So there were very few of us, and we knew each other extremely well and had these little conversing meetings. And a number of people would talk about patients who had medical diseases which wouldn't allow them to have their breasts removed. They still had localized, apparently localized breast cancer, and the radiation therapist took care of them, and I did, too. I had these people. And we also had the Europeans, especially the French, who were treating breast cancer with radiation. In fact, they were doing it with a fundamental difference with what we did from the beginning and they do now. And that is, they did it without removing the breast cancer, because they were doing it primarily for cosmetic reasons. And they felt that taking out the breast cancer might damage the cosmetic effect. So we weren't alone. We weren't first. So I knew that other people had done it. Some people who did, Simon Kramer in Pennsylvania at Jefferson, Thomas Jefferson, did a great deal of it. And we did it, because we had a surgeon at Yale who was interested in sending patients. You mentioned Jay, but really, before Jay, there was Lenny Prosnitz, who you may or may not know of, who was a long-time chairman at Duke. But Len was a medical oncologist at Yale, who was about, I don't know, three or four years behind me in training, and I was either a young assistant professor there at the time or a fellow, I can't remember which. And he came over to me and said, you've got a nice life. You do interesting things. I'm not so crazy with this. Can I get into it? And Lenny, obviously, being trained in medical oncology, being a boarded internist was also interested in breast cancer. Because that's the one disease, even in the beginning that medicine, or one of the few diseases that medicine was interested in for the hormonal aspects of the disease. So Lenny took over when I left with the surgeon Ira Goldenberg, and he kept it up. And when I went to Harvard, I had all those different hospitals, and I had a very good colleague there, who was the only radiation oncologist in those hospital complex, and he also treated some. So we continued to do it. One of the nice things about Harvard at that time was, at least for this purpose, was we had this women's hospital, Boston Hospital for Women. And gynecologists in those days did everything for women and that included breast surgery. And those guys delivered their babies and when they got breast cancer, took care of them. They weren't interventional. They were their private primary care docs, and they were much more sensitive to the cosmetic aspects and the self-image aspects of breast cancer surgery. And so they knew we did it, and they became a big source of suggesting patients and sending them to us. Anyway, Marty, Marty Levine, the fellow I was talking about, and I developed a reasonable number of them. One of my residents, Eric Weber said, why don't you write a paper about this? I said, it's all done. The French have it. The Brits have it. Even the Canadians have it. He said, we don't. So I said all right. We sent out the paper, and the first paper is with Eric and Marty and me, and it was a JAMA paper and that gets to another point. What year was that? I had to bully pulpit. What year was that, the JAMA paper? The JAMA paper? About '75-- '74, '75. And it made a big splash. And then Lenny and Simon Kramer and Luther Brady, two Philadelphia people who had big experience, and us put all of our stuff together. And Lenny brought it all together, and so there was another big paper. I think that one was in JCO, but maybe not. I can't remember. And I think that's how it got started. And my issue with it and my involvement in it is, yes, pioneering the treatment in America. I don't claim to have pioneered it anywhere else. It wouldn't be true. But what I did do is use the bully pulpit of being the Harvard professor, and I went everywhere and talked about it. And I took on the surgeons in a number of places and talked about it. And if I made a contribution to it, it was that. I can remember being in an audience and hearing you talk about the Halstead theory and then the Fisher theory and what became known, in my opinion, as the Hellman theory, which is a combination of the two. That both local and systemic therapies make a difference, and the mortality rate of breast cancer has dropped by almost one-half over the last 30 years, and you should be proud of that. Oh, I'm proud of it. I'm proud of it. But people don't do things in a vacuum. You build on people and on their doings. Well, I want to be respectful of your time, if I can finish up here. I really just touched the surface of many of the contributions you've made. I wanted to talk a little bit about your role in getting radiation oncologists to think about what we now call translational science. But at the end here, what do you think are your greatest accomplishments? What do you think your legacy has been to the field? Do you think it's the science or your administration or your teaching and mentoring or all of those together? I think all of us would like to think about what our legacies would be. Oh, I would say, it's an interesting and not an easy question, because I'm interested in all of those things. But I like to remind people that, and it's been commented on by others, I am one of the few people who maintained a practice of medicine, a real practice, all through being a dean. I always think of myself first as a doctor. And I am an investigator, and I am interested in research, both basic and clinical, and did both of them, but I'm a doctor first, that's number one. Second to that, I was very involved in teaching and believe-- and that's why I became a dean and before that, started a department in Harvard and gave courses in oncology, and my residents are my greatest legacy, if you really want to know. Nobody lives forever, and what you did in the lab and your patients, that passes, but your residents are your history. They continue it, and their residents continue it and so forth. And just to end on a high note that you mention, is that the Karnofsky lecturer this year was one of my residents. Yes, he was. Of course, that's Ralph Weichselbaum. He was. I actually chaired the selection committee, and I can't tell you how proud I was to stand up and introduce him. He did a wonderful job. In addition to your own residents, I'm going to tell you, you're also passing this on to the medical oncology fellows who were hanging around the Farber in those days. And to this day, I tell patients I wear two hats. My first hat is to take care of them as I can with the knowledge I have today, and my second hat is to do research to make it better. But my first hat always wins, because Dr. Hellman said you're a doctor first. So there you go. Well, I haven't changed on it. That's very nice to hear though. OK. I think on that note, we'll end up. I had planned over about half an hour. We're just over that. So thank you very much, both from me, personally, and from those of us in the field and from our patients who have benefited. Dr. Hellman, you are truly a pioneer and a giant in our field. So thank you so much. Well, you're very kind to say so. For more original research, editorials, and review articles, please visit us online at jco.org. This production is copyrighted to the American Society of Clinical Oncology. Thank you for listening.

Another View The Radio Show Podcast
African Americans and PTSD

Another View The Radio Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2014 60:00


WHRO is proud to be a part of a multi-year Veterans initiative to engage the community to help support veterans as they transition to civilian life in Hampton Roads. On the next edition of Another View, we'll talk about African American veterans and Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. One in three African American Vietnam vets suffer with PTSD, and studies show that Black female veterans from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan disproportionately suffer with PTSD as compared to male veterans. On the next Another View we'll talk about veterans and PTSD - what it is, how to treat it and how families can assist the veteran with this psychological and physical disorder. Our guests include Ryan Douglas who served as an Army Scout for five years during the Iraq/Afghan wars and has PTSD; Sidney Lee, President of the African American Post Traumatic Stress Disorder Association; and Robin Renee Thompson, MSW and Certified Service Officer for Disabled Veterans. Plus Lisa Godley talks with S. Epatha Merkerson, star of the hit television series, Law and Order. It's all on Another View, Friday, July 18 at noon on 89.5 WHRV-FM, or stream us on this blog!

King Leir and His Three Daughters by ANONYMOUS

sidney lee
King Leir and His Three Daughters by ANONYMOUS

sidney lee