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This content is for Members only. Come and join us by subscribing here In the meantime, here's some more details about the show: It's a warm welcome then to the man himself: Dr. Brad Stone - the JazzWeek Programmer of the Year 2017, who's here every Thursday to present The Creative Source - a two hour show, highlighting jazz-fusion and progressive jazz flavours from back then, the here and now, plus occasional forays into the future. Please feel free to get in touch with Brad with any comments or suggestions you might have; he'll be more than happy to hear from you: brad@soulandjazz.com or follow him via Facebook or Twitter. Enjoy! The Creative Source 24th April 2025 Artist - Track - Album - Year Nancy Kelly Devil May Care Be Cool 2025 Lorraine Feather Splat! The Green World 2025 Rodney Jordan The Storm Will Pass Memphis Blue 2024 Artemis Olive Branch Arboresque 2025 Marius Van Den Brink Jin Live at Dizzy's Club 2025 Hard Bop Messengers Just a Little Light Jazz Interpretations of the Grateful Dead 2025 Thokozile Thokozile Collective 2024 Salsa de la Bahia Can't Eat Clout (feat. La Dona) Vol. 3, Renegade Queens 2025 Hyldon/Adrian Younge Viajante Do Planeta Azul Jazz is Dead 23 2024 Zhengtao Pan Jazz Orchestra Windy Days Scenery in My Story 2025 Daggerboard & Erik Jekabson Orchestra Tar and Feather The Axes Volume II 2025 Ensemble C That Nabongo Feeling Every Journey 2024 Ben Patterson Jazz Orchestra Anne Marie Mad Scientist Music 2025 Seven Windows Steppes Seven Windows 2025 Seven Windows Light Brown Color Seven Windows 2025 Mads Tolling Armando's Rhumba Masters of Jazz Violin 2021 Thomas Marriott You Only Live Twice Screen Time 2024 Eric Alexander Wise One Chicago to New York 2025 John Ellis Fort Worth Heroes 2025 Sean Nelson New London Big Band More Than Once Don't Stop Now 2025 Dr. Purgatory Prologue (Barbados Speaks to the Animals) The Consumption: A Tragic Folktale in Six Parts 2025 Dr. Purgatory Creature (Graiae The One-Eyed Orphan) The Consumption: A Tragic Folktale in Six Parts 2025 Phil Haynes/Ben Monder Ben III Transition[s] 2025 Phil Haynes/Ben Monder Epilogue Transition[s] 2025 Whispering Worlds Pillars Cosmic Cliffs 2025 The post The Creative Source (#CreativeSource) – 24th April 2025 appeared first on SoulandJazz.com | Stereo, not stereotypical.
How to Split a Toaster: A divorce podcast about saving your relationships
Apologies and Relationships: How to Say Sorry and Mean ItIn this episode of How to Split a Toaster, Seth and Pete dive into the art of apologizing effectively with special guest Susan McCarthy, co-author of Sorry, Sorry, Sorry: The Case for Good Apologies. Together, they explore the anatomy of a sincere apology, discuss common pitfalls, and share insights on how mastering the apology can improve your relationships, especially during a divorce – and we're not just talking about with your spouse or ex but your kids as well!Susan, a renowned author who has written about animal behavior and humor, brings her expertise on crafting effective apologies to the conversation. Seth and Pete engage her in a thought-provoking discussion on why people struggle with apologizing, the importance of teaching children how to apologize correctly, and how a well-executed apology can make a significant difference in the divorce process.Questions we answer in this episode:What are the key components of a sincere apology?How can a genuine apology impact divorce proceedings?Why is it crucial to teach children the art of apologizing?Key Takeaways:A proper apology consists of six essential steps, including expressing remorse, acknowledging the specific wrongdoing, and demonstrating an understanding of the impact.Apologies can be powerful tools in mediation and can help couples reach agreements during a divorce.Mastering the art of apologizing can lead to healthier relationships and emotional well-being.This episode offers valuable insights for anyone looking to improve their communication skills and strengthen their relationships. Whether you're going through a divorce or simply want to learn how to apologize effectively, Seth, Pete, and Susan provide practical advice and real-life examples to help you navigate the complexities of saying "I'm sorry" and meaning it.Links & NotesSorryWatch.comGet Susan's and Marjorie's Book in hardback or paperbackSchedule a consult with SethGot a question you want to ask on the show? Click here! (00:00) - Welcome to How to Split a Toaster (00:26) - Meet Susan McCarthy (03:07) - Analyzing Apologies (03:30) - The 'Saving Your Pride' Problem (04:04) - Apologies in the Divorce Process (05:26) - Divorce and Apology Backstory (08:42) - Six Parts of a Good Apology (11:10) - Between Spouses (12:45) - In Mediation (14:19) - Not Making It Worse (16:41) - Getting Past Grudges (21:55) - Dissecting Apologies (24:27) - The Media Matters (27:03) - Positive Example (29:25) - Receiving an Apology (30:23) - Sorry Not Sorry (30:45) - Changes to Apologies in Modern Culture (33:29) - Apologies to Your Kids (37:30) - Over-Apologizing? (39:37) - Apologies with Gifts? (41:01) - Practicing (44:18) - Susan's Book (45:46) - Wrap Up
Allen Karpinski is a song writer, guitarist and founding member of the Ohio band The Six Parts Seven. Fellow Ohioan, Joey Beltram is this the singer, songwriter behind Goodmorning Valentine. Over the course of a weekend in 2006, the two bands came together in a small in studio in Kent, Ohio. What yielded was a beautiful collaborative collection of songs called Kissing Distance (out February 16th via Suicide Squeeze). Joey and Allen share the magic of the experience and the spark that inspired this collaboration. Joey tells us how an unusual spontaneity and openness in the studio led to a beautiful and novel experience for the band. Joey lends us some in-sight on the recording and writing process, they talk Kinkos, the fall of Pitchfork and we hear a couple tunes. The Six Parts Seven Goodmorning Valentine Episode supported by Distrokid Episode supported by Izotope
Crossposted from AI Impacts blog The 2023 Expert Survey on Progress in AI is out, this time with 2778 participants from six top AI venues (up from about 700 and two in the 2022 ESPAI), making it probably the biggest ever survey of AI researchers. People answered in October, an eventful fourteen months after the 2022 survey, which had mostly identical questions for comparison. Here is the preprint. And here are six interesting bits in pictures (with figure numbers matching paper, for ease of learning more): 1. Expected time to human-level performance dropped 1-5 decades since the 2022 survey. As always, our questions about ‘high level machine intelligence' (HLMI) and ‘full automation of labor' (FAOL) got very different answers, and individuals disagreed a lot (shown as thin lines below), but the aggregate forecasts for both sets of questions dropped sharply. For context, between 2016 and 2022 surveys, the forecast [...] --- First published: January 6th, 2024 Source: https://forum.effectivealtruism.org/posts/M9MSe4KHNv4HNf44f/survey-of-2-778-ai-authors-six-parts-in-pictures --- Narrated by TYPE III AUDIO.
Welcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: Survey of 2,778 AI authors: six parts in pictures, published by KatjaGrace on January 6, 2024 on LessWrong. Crossposted from AI Impacts blog The 2023 Expert Survey on Progress in AI is out, this time with 2778 participants from six top AI venues (up from about 700 and two in the 2022 ESPAI), making it probably the biggest ever survey of AI researchers. People answered in October, an eventful fourteen months after the 2022 survey, which had mostly identical questions for comparison. Here is the preprint. And here are six interesting bits in pictures (with figure numbers matching paper, for ease of learning more): 1. Expected time to human-level performance dropped 1-5 decades since the 2022 survey. As always, our questions about 'high level machine intelligence' (HLMI) and 'full automation of labor' (FAOL) got very different answers, and individuals disagreed a lot (shown as thin lines below), but the aggregate forecasts for both sets of questions dropped sharply. For context, between 2016 and 2022 surveys, the forecast for HLMI had only shifted about a year. 2. Time to most narrow milestones decreased, some by a lot. AI researchers are expected to be professionally fully automatable a quarter of a century earlier than in 2022, and NYT bestselling fiction dropped by more than half to ~2030. Within five years, AI systems are forecast to be feasible that can fully make a payment processing site from scratch, or entirely generate a new song that sounds like it's by e.g. Taylor Swift, or autonomously download and fine-tune a large language model. 3. Median respondents put 5% or more on advanced AI leading to human extinction or similar, and a third to a half of participants gave 10% or more. This was across four questions, one about overall value of the future and three more directly about extinction. 4. Many participants found many scenarios worthy of substantial concern over the next 30 years. For every one of eleven scenarios and 'other' that we asked about, at least a third of participants considered it deserving of substantial or extreme concern. 5. There are few confident optimists or pessimists about advanced AI: high hopes and dire concerns are usually found together. 68% of participants who thought HLMI was more likely to lead to good outcomes than bad, but nearly half of these people put at least 5% on extremely bad outcomes such as human extinction, and 59% of net pessimists gave 5% or more to extremely good outcomes. Download 6. 70% of participants would like to see research aimed at minimizing risks of AI systems be prioritized more highly. This is much like 2022, and in both years a third of participants asked for "much more" - more than doubling since 2016. If you enjoyed this, the paper covers many other questions, as well as more details on the above. Thanks for listening. To help us out with The Nonlinear Library or to learn more, please visit nonlinear.org
Link to original articleWelcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: Survey of 2,778 AI authors: six parts in pictures, published by KatjaGrace on January 6, 2024 on LessWrong. Crossposted from AI Impacts blog The 2023 Expert Survey on Progress in AI is out, this time with 2778 participants from six top AI venues (up from about 700 and two in the 2022 ESPAI), making it probably the biggest ever survey of AI researchers. People answered in October, an eventful fourteen months after the 2022 survey, which had mostly identical questions for comparison. Here is the preprint. And here are six interesting bits in pictures (with figure numbers matching paper, for ease of learning more): 1. Expected time to human-level performance dropped 1-5 decades since the 2022 survey. As always, our questions about 'high level machine intelligence' (HLMI) and 'full automation of labor' (FAOL) got very different answers, and individuals disagreed a lot (shown as thin lines below), but the aggregate forecasts for both sets of questions dropped sharply. For context, between 2016 and 2022 surveys, the forecast for HLMI had only shifted about a year. 2. Time to most narrow milestones decreased, some by a lot. AI researchers are expected to be professionally fully automatable a quarter of a century earlier than in 2022, and NYT bestselling fiction dropped by more than half to ~2030. Within five years, AI systems are forecast to be feasible that can fully make a payment processing site from scratch, or entirely generate a new song that sounds like it's by e.g. Taylor Swift, or autonomously download and fine-tune a large language model. 3. Median respondents put 5% or more on advanced AI leading to human extinction or similar, and a third to a half of participants gave 10% or more. This was across four questions, one about overall value of the future and three more directly about extinction. 4. Many participants found many scenarios worthy of substantial concern over the next 30 years. For every one of eleven scenarios and 'other' that we asked about, at least a third of participants considered it deserving of substantial or extreme concern. 5. There are few confident optimists or pessimists about advanced AI: high hopes and dire concerns are usually found together. 68% of participants who thought HLMI was more likely to lead to good outcomes than bad, but nearly half of these people put at least 5% on extremely bad outcomes such as human extinction, and 59% of net pessimists gave 5% or more to extremely good outcomes. Download 6. 70% of participants would like to see research aimed at minimizing risks of AI systems be prioritized more highly. This is much like 2022, and in both years a third of participants asked for "much more" - more than doubling since 2016. If you enjoyed this, the paper covers many other questions, as well as more details on the above. Thanks for listening. To help us out with The Nonlinear Library or to learn more, please visit nonlinear.org
In honour of the darkening season, LL presents professional actors reading tales of Caribbean monsters, ghostly queens, psychotic cats, murderous whales, headless women & a deadly game of hide-and-seek, from our shadow-haunted Halloween special! STORIES for DOOM & GLOOM (in running order) "Be Lucky, Girls" by Hannah Downes, read by Lucy Mabbitt "Come Find Me" by Pat Black, read by Lisa Rose "The Whale, in Six Parts" by Maria Kyle, read by Thomas Delacourt * INTERVAL & BOOK QUIZ * "Skinning the Cat" by Lanay Griessner, read by Silas Hawkins "By the Flower, not the Axe" by Leila Murton Poole, read by Clareine Cronin "When Duppy does come, who are you?" by Clarissa Angus, read by Sophie Cartman
Last week we dropped our most action-packed Maven Monday yet. This one is even better.Click to listen to part two of our SEO series and finalize your strategy to conquer the search engines for good!Specifically, we will cover:How to position the content and structure of your website for better rankingsThe tools you can count on to track your SEO progress (and the tools to avoid)How to decide if SEO is a worthwhile investment of time and moneyTOOLS AND LINKS MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE:Track your local search rankings: https://www.brightlocal.com/Track your organic traffic: https://search.google.com/search-console/aboutOur favorite authority on SEO research: https://moz.com/Mozlow's Hierarchy of SEO needs: https://moz.com/beginners-guide-to-seoTest your website load speed: https://gtmetrix.comGoogle Mobile Score: https://search.google.com/test/mobile-friendly00:00 Intro01:00 SEO in Six Parts...01:30 How Maps and your Website work together02:30 Cautionary tales of hiring SEO 'Managers'?04:30 How soon should you spend money on SEO?05:40 How Google analyzes your website07:20 Content, Content, Content09:00 Ask yourself this... and be honest10:00 Hit a home run with every keyword14:20 Is your website fast and functional?16:40 Is it safe and secure?17:08 The hidden details that make a difference19:50 A recap of it all...23:30 A fake shortcut could ruin your ranking forever25:40 How do you measure progress?28:45 How long will this all take?30:20 Should you use AI to write for SEO?30:55 One thing that's way more important than SEO32:30 OutroDo you have a marketing problem you'd like us to help solve? Send it to MavenMonday@FrankandMaven.com!Get a copy of our Best-Selling Book, The Maven Marketer Here: https://a.co/d/1clpm8a
You know how Netflix do that really annoying thing where they span a 45-minute story out into a six-part documentary series? Where there's just absolutely no substance to the story, but they somehow manage to keep it dragging its heels, kicking and screaming, scraping its fingernails along the floor, begging it to stop, for six whole parts?Don't you just find it really annoying? Don't you just think that if something should be 36-minutes long, they should just make it 36 minutes, and not try to span it out into a six part series?Yeah, I agree. They shouldn't do that. Six part series are a cheap way to generate fake FOMO and false engagement.Nobody should ever do that. Get full access to The Wednesday Audio at yeahwednesdays.substack.com/subscribe
Sháá Wasmud – Stop talking, start doing: A kick in the pants in six parts...with TRE's Hannah Murray
La participation est un principe central du travail d'Allan Kaprow. Rearrangeable Panels, vestige du décor du célèbre Eighteen Happenings in Six Parts de 1959, témoigne de sa volonté de confondre l'art et la vie et d'intégrer les spectateurs. Cet épisode donne à entendre l'artiste Jean-Jacques Lebel, ami de Kaprow et expert de l'histoire du happening, ainsi que le critique d'art Paul Ardenne à propos des artistes contemporains qui cherchent à renforcer le tissu social par leurs propositions d'art participatif dans l'espace public.Écriture et réalisation : Alice Maxia et Florence Sayag-MoratEnregistrement : Ivan Gariel Montage et mixage : Antoine Dahan Avec la participation d'Élisa Hervelin, Jean-Jacques Lebel et Paul ArdenneHabillage musical : Nawel Ben Kraïem et Nassim KoutiExtraits musicaux et sonores : The Dave Brubeck Quartet, Pick up Sticks, 1959 ; John Cage, Concerto for piano and orchestra, 1958 (interprété par l'Orchestre Philharmonique de la Radio Flamande, 2006) ; John Cage, Water Music, 1952 (adapté et interpreté par Luís Bittencourt, 2012) ; George Russell, A Helluva Town, 1959 ; Bod Dylan, Subterranean Homesick Blues, 1965; Allan Kaprow, How To Make A Happening, 1966 ; Helena Polka, Frank Yankovic & His Yanks, The All Time Great Polkas, 1959 ; Queen Latifah, U.N.I.T.Y., 1993 Voir Acast.com/privacy pour les informations sur la vie privée et l'opt-out.
Disciple Up #249 Just Pray? By Louie Marsh, 3-9-2022 Intro – Frustration about Ukraine, other situations. Links to help you pray for Ukraine https://www.24-7prayer.com/prayer_guide/pray-for-ukraine/ https://research.lifeway.com/2022/03/07/8-resources-to-help-pray-for-ukraine/ https://www.christianity.com/wiki/prayer/how-to-pray-for-the-ukraine.html https://worldventure.com/ukrainian-prayer-guide/ https://radical.net/article/how-to-pray-for-ukraine/ We Should Use the Model Jesus Gave Us "This, then, is how you should pray: Matthew 6:9a (NIV) The Six Parts of Prayer 1) I Begin by HONORING GOD. 9 …"'Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name, Matthew 6:9b (NIV) Two Kinds Of Praise PRAISE – Praising God for WHO He is THANKSGIVING– Praising God for WHAT He's done. 4 Enter his gates with thanksgiving, and his courts with praise! Give thanks to him; bless his name! Psalm 100:4 (ESV) 2) Purpose: I Commit Myself 100% to THE LORD. 10 Your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven. Matthew 6:10 (ESV) 1 I appeal to you therefore, brothers, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God, which is your spiritual worship. Romans 12:1 (ESV) 3) Provision: I Ask God To MEET MY NEEDS. 11 Give us this day our daily bread, Matthew 6:11 (ESV) What needs can I pray about? ALL OF THEM And my God will meet all your needs according to his glorious riches in Christ Jesus. Phil. 4:19 2 You desire and do not have, so you murder. You covet and cannot obtain, so you fight and quarrel. You do not have, because you do not ask. James 4:2 (ESV) 4) Pardon: I Ask God To REMOVE MY GUILT. 12 and forgive us our debts… Matthew 6:12a (ESV) 13 bearing with one another and, if one has a complaint against another, forgiving each other; as the Lord has forgiven you, so you also must forgive. Colossians 3:13 (ESV) 5) People: I Pray For MY ENEMIES. 12 ,,,as we also have forgiven our debtors. Matthew 6:12b (ESV) 1 First of all, then, I urge that supplications, prayers, intercessions, and thanksgivings be made for all people, 1 Timothy 2:1 (ESV) 6) Protection: I Ask For GUIDANCE & DELIVERANCE. 13 And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. Matthew 6:13 (ESV) The Bottom Line! Prayer Not Only CHANGES Things – It Changes ME And Brings About GOD'S WILL On Earth!
A lot of what you might read on the internet on how to learn German vocabulary words is really a lot of hot air & hooey. In this episode we'll bust 5 myths on vocabulary learning and give you a clearer picture of why vocabulary learning is important. After all, if you don't know what the words mean...you'll be up a creek without a paddle. The 5 Myths: You only need to learn 3,000 words to truly speak German! Vocabulary isn't as important as grammar. Learning vocabulary is as boring as watching paint dry. You need to learn all the German words RIGHT NOW! The only way to learn vocabulary is with flashcards (rote memorization). You can find the quote from my client on German vocabulary learning in the accompanying blog post. "The Six Parts of Learning German": https://www.germanwithnicole.com/blog/38444-what-are-the-six-parts-of-learning (https://www.germanwithnicole.com/blog/38444-what-are-the-six-parts-of-learning) The graphic in that blog post should be helpful for you if you are a visual learner. Weekly German Practice (including the German Vocabulary Masterclass) https://www.germanwithnicole.com/practice (https://www.germanwithnicole.com/practice) ******** Nicole Warner is the Nicole of GermanWithNicole.com and is a German learner (certified level C2) and a certified instructor for German as a Foreign Language. She lived in Germany from 2003-2008 and has traveled widely in Germany. Frau Warner has helped people learn to communicate in German since 2010. https://www.GermanWithNicole.com (GermanWithNicole.com) - Your anchor on the stormy seas of German learning.™ Music: Bonnie Ship the Diamond by https://timbeek.com/ (Tim Beek)
What we've found over the years is that when people go through the generational planning process, they experience two things: The first is great relief that it is done. The second is new excitement and renewed energy to focus on the non-financial aspects of generational planning.This is the reflective part. It's not legal and it's not business. It's the part where we get to look back on our personal journey and share the stories that we carry in our hearts. This is our gift to the next generation. They may be words or stories, pictures or actions. They may provide hope. They may provide healing.But just as important are the things we say and do that bring US meaning because we realize that WE are the carriers of wisdom for our family. And from generation to generation, each of us is a link in the chain that binds our families together. And that link is the mark we leave—our legacy.One of the reasons people don't get around to estate planning is that the task seems too overwhelming and they don't know where to start. My name is John Gigliello, and I am a CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER™ with the Albany Financial Group. You are listening to Invest in Knowledge, a podcast about all things financial. As a financial planner, I aim to educate my clients, and listeners of this podcast, so that you can take control of your financial future. You may be wondering, "Why is a financial professional talking about legacy planning for the generations?" Well, I do this as a service to my clients and my community because I've seen some difficult, unhappy situations when families don't think about these issues. When no legacy planning is done, we see a range of unhappy outcomes that often impact multiple generations. In this episode, I break legacy planning down into Six Parts that will help you to control the narrative of your life.
You might know Danny Jolles from Crazy Ex-Girlfriend or his excellent stand-up comedy, but WE know him as a wonderful friend and a TRUE mensch! We loved talking to Danny about keeping sane when Covid takes all your work and hope away, getting engaged during a pandemic, growing up Jewish in Virginia, Bar Mitzvahs, telling jokes, and so much more!! Follow Danny everywhere @DannyJolles and be sure to check out his comedy special Six Parts for FREE on Youtube! Follow the pod everywhere at @whosyourgodcast AND, we have a PATREON! YAY. We have multiple levels of patronage that include bonus eps, a fun Slack hangout, personal shout outs, free comedy show tickets (online and live!), merch, inclusion in our Book Club, exclusive religious media reviews, and more!! Go to Patreon.com/whosyourgod to subscribe. Email us at whosyourgodcast@gmail.com if you have questions or wanna say HELLO! And THANK YOU!!!
https://angelusnews.com/news/world/what-the-second-covid-easter-was-like-in-six-parts-of-the-world/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/restoring-the-faith-media/support
Comedian Danny Jolles (Crazy Ex-Girlfriend, Ramy) has a new special out on YouTube called Six Parts. Danny and Latif talk about the biz, musical theater, the best cities to start standup in, and the best and worst advice received in acting class.
Comedian, actor and writer Danny Jolles (Crazy Ex-Girflriend, Ramy) joins the show from the home he'll need to vacate in a few weeks to talk about his refusal to care about "stuff" and the house fire that probably accounts for this attitude, growing up in Virginia, his new special Six Parts which is streaming for free on YouTube, his friendship with Rachel Bloom, a terrible commercial he was in, working at Adafruit, vicious penguins, school grudges and more. We also did a round of HGFY! Full video on youtube.com/alisonrosen Products I Use/Recommend/Love: http://amazon.com/shop/alisonrosen Check us out on Patreon: http://patreon.com/alisonrosen Buy Alison's Book: Tropical Attire Encouraged (and Other Phrases That Scare Me) https://amzn.to/2JuOqcd This show is brought to you by: BETTER HELP: http://BetterHelp.com/BESTFRIEND (use code BESTFRIEND for 10% off) BROOKLINEN: http://Brooklinen.com (Get $25 off when you spend $100 or more when you use promo code BESTFRIEND) You probably need to buy the HGFY ringtone! https://www.alisonrosen.com/store/
Without really knowing that it was coming, we've been at The Comedy Bureau Field report, officially, for a year now (quarantine has a funny way of messing with our perception of time). On our anniversary(?), we're thrilled to have the great Danny Jolles with us to not only celebrate the release of his fabulous first hour special, Six Parts, but also recount his very long, delay-filled journey through the last year leading up to this point. Danny persevered despite, like so many folks in comedy, having their entire identities stripped of them (as well as so many life-changing career prospects). Also, "hot" takes on WGA Award winners, A Black Lady Sketch Show returning next month, and Russell Peters calling his upcoming podcast Culturally Cancelled. Oh, and there's a big shout out to the one of the best choreographers in the biz, Kat Burns.Follow Danny @dannyjolles on Twitter and IG and please watch/enjoy/share his hour special Six Parts, now streaming on YouTube.The Comedy Bureau @thecomedybureau across platforms and please, please support TCB via GoFundMe, Patreon, or on Venmo (@jakekroeger).Produced by Jake KroegerMusic by Brian GranilloArtwork by Andrew Delman and KT
Wrestling Inc. Managing Editor Nick Hausman is back to host the latest episode of our new podcast The Wrestling Inc. Daily! Today's episode includes: Justin LaBar joining Nick to talk all the pro wrestling news from the last twenty-four hours. Including Thunder Rosa and Britt Baker's bloody AEW Dynamite match, Danny Burch's injury on WWE NXT, Andrade confirming reports that he requested his WWE release, Charly Caruso reportedly having backstage heat, Shane McMahon vs. Braun Strowman possibly being pulled from WWE Fastlane, Eric Bischoff going into the WWE Hall of Fame, Kylie Rae returning to pro wrestling for Warrior Wrestling, and moreScott Fishman's interview with comedian Danny Jolles. Featuring Jolles discussing attending WCW Starrcade 1997, his memorable encounters with pro wrestlers, what Goldberg winning the WCW Championship meant to him, how MJF would fare as a stand-up comedian, his upcoming "Six Parts" comedy special dropping March 23, and moreThe latest installment of the Wrestling Inc. Daily mailbag discussing which pro wrestling show you thought was better last night: WWE NXT or AEW Dynamite
October and November 2020 - Day(s) of Recollection. There are 10 Lessons within Step Six. All Lessons are taught by Fr. B. Thomas Celso. Enjoy! Fiat!
Show Notes: On Episode 22, Pete shares some of his own work, poetry in progress, much of it written a long time ago and now being rediscovered and tinkered with: 1) "The Death of Humility: An Elegy in Six Parts"-read live on Oct 2, 2020, as part of "Voices of California" at Tia Chucha's in Sylmar, CA 2) "Grocery Store Paperbacks" 3) "Manly Qualifiers" 4) "Just Visiting (Napoli: July, 2009)” 5) "AD"/"The Barometer" You can now subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts; please leave me a five-star review. You can also ask for the podcast by name using Alexa, and find the pod on Spotify and, as of recently, on Amazon Music. Follow me on IG, where I'm @chillsatwillpodcast, or on Twitter, where I'm @chillsatwillpo1. This is a passion project of mine, a DIY operation, and I'd love for your help in promoting what I'm convinced is a unique and spirited look at an often-ignored art form. The intro song for The Chills at Will Podcast is “Wind Down” (Instrumental Version), and the other song played on this episode was “Hoops” (Instrumental)” by Matt Weidauer, and both awesome songs are used through ArchesAudio.com. For now, thanks again for listening, and I hope that these quarantine days bring you texts by writers with MAD Skills whose work gives you chills at will.
The Bottom Line, Part 3 Prayer By Louie Marsh, 6-30-2019 We Should Use the Model Jesus Gave Us "This, then, is how you should pray: Matthew 6:9a (NIV) The Six Parts of Prayer 1) I Begin by HONORING GOD. 9 …"'Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name, Matthew 6:9b (NIV) Two Kinds Of Praise PRAISE – Praising God for WHO He is THANKSGIVING– Praising God for WHAT He’s done. 4 Enter his gates with thanksgiving, and his courts with praise! Give thanks to him; bless his name! Psalm 100:4 (ESV) 2) Purpose: I Commit Myself 100% to THE LORD. 10 Your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven. Matthew 6:10 (ESV) 1 I appeal to you therefore, brothers, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God, which is your spiritual worship. Romans 12:1 (ESV) 3) Provision: I Ask God To MEET MY NEEDS. 11 Give us this day our daily bread, Matthew 6:11 (ESV) What needs can I pray about? ALL OF THEM And my God will meet all your needs according to his glorious riches in Christ Jesus. Phil. 4:19 2 You desire and do not have, so you murder. You covet and cannot obtain, so you fight and quarrel. You do not have, because you do not ask. James 4:2 (ESV) 4) Pardon: I Ask God To REMOVE MY GUILT. 12 and forgive us our debts… Matthew 6:12a (ESV) 13 bearing with one another and, if one has a complaint against another, forgiving each other; as the Lord has forgiven you, so you also must forgive. Colossians 3:13 (ESV) 5) People: I Pray For MY ENEMIES. 12 ,,,as we also have forgiven our debtors. Matthew 6:12b (ESV) 1 First of all, then, I urge that supplications, prayers, intercessions, and thanksgivings be made for all people, 1 Timothy 2:1 (ESV) 6) Protection: I Ask For GUIDANCE & DELIVERANCE. 13 And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. Matthew 6:13 (ESV) The Bottom Line! Prayer Not Only CHANGES Things – It Changes ME And Brings About GOD’S WILL On Earth!
Gary Garrels: In some cases, Celmins spends years working on a single work. It goes through a long process of looking, changing, looking again. Thinking about it, remembering. A relationship develops, I think, between Celmins and the work so that it becomes a very living experience. Vija Celmins: I had done this little tiny painting in 1986. The woman who owned the painting died and I got the painting back, which hardly ever happens, which is so great. Nancy Lim: She hadn't made paintings of the ocean in a really long time. Vija Celmins: So sometimes you see a work you've done a long time ago and you forgot that maybe it was, kind of had some terrific qualities to it. Uh, but I had it in my studio and I thought, “Oh my gosh! What a great image, a complicated image.” I was like almost 30 years older. And I wanted to see if I could do it again. So I did it again. So this work is the same image done with a totally different kind of beginning every time. Different colors, different time, different age. It took me another four and a half, almost five years to do the other five paintings. But it's an homage to the first painting that I can still manage this very knotted surface that I found about 50 years ago in a National Geographic Magazine.
Gary Garrels: In some cases, Celmins spends years working on a single work. It goes through a long process of looking, changing, looking again. Thinking about it, remembering. A relationship develops, I think, between Celmins and the work so that it becomes a very living experience. Vija Celmins: I had done this little tiny painting in 1986. The woman who owned the painting died and I got the painting back, which hardly ever happens, which is so great. Nancy Lim: She hadn't made paintings of the ocean in a really long time. Vija Celmins: So sometimes you see a work you've done a long time ago and you forgot that maybe it was, kind of had some terrific qualities to it. Uh, but I had it in my studio and I thought, “Oh my gosh! What a great image, a complicated image.” I was like almost 30 years older. And I wanted to see if I could do it again. So I did it again. So this work is the same image done with a totally different kind of beginning every time. Different colors, different time, different age. It took me another four and a half, almost five years to do the other five paintings. But it's an homage to the first painting that I can still manage this very knotted surface that I found about 50 years ago in a National Geographic Magazine.
“The Six Parts of Communication Part 1“ was given by Pastor Stephen Pope from the pulpit of Calvary Baptist Church on December, 16.2018 morning.
“The Six Parts of Communication Part 2“ was given by Pastor Stephen Pope from the pulpit of Calvary Baptist Church on December.16.2018 night.
Six Parts of Prayer, Daniel 9v1-14 by Rev V.P.Isaac
Kelli Peters was the heart of Plaza Vista School in Irvine, California. She was the PTA president and the volunteer director of the after school program. But then, one day, as she was filling in for a teacher, a police officer said he needed to speak with her. He took her out to the parking lot and asked for her car keys. Kelli was puzzled, but she handed them over. The officer dug through her car, and eventually pulled out a bag of pot, a pipe, some Percocet and some Vicodin. Kelli dropped to her knees. She sobbed. She pleaded with the officer. The drugs weren’t hers, she said. But if they weren’t hers, then why the hell were they in Kelli’s car? Then Kristin talks about two things she knows inside and out: fine wine, and the perils of having millions of dollars in spending money. In the early 2000’s, Rudy Kurniawan was just a young, geeky-looking guy bidding on California wines at high-end wine auctions. Hardly anyone paid attention to him. But then his bids got bigger. And bigger. He spent millions on wine, and then began selling it. But over time, the people who bought his wines got suspicious. The wines didn’t taste quite right. And some of the labels looked a little funny. Had they been duped? And now for a note about our process. For each episode, Kristin reads a bunch of articles, then spits them back out in her very limited vocabulary. Brandi copies and pastes from the best sources on the web. And sometimes Wikipedia. (No shade, Wikipedia. We love you.) We owe a huge debt of gratitude to the real experts who covered these cases. In this episode, Kristin pulled from: “Chateau Sucker,” by Benjamin Wallace for New York Magazine The documentary “Sour Grapes” “Prosecutors reveal evidence against accused wine counterfeiter,” Wine Spectator “Counterfeit fine-wine dealer sentenced to 10 years,” Wall Street Journal “Kurniawan to tell all in $3M settlement with billionaire Koch, as sentencing is delayed,” Decanter “Rudy Kurniawan’s court date is set,” Wine Spectator “Alleged counterfeit wines go on trial,” Wine Spectator In this episode, Brandi pulled from: “Framed: A Mystery in Six Parts” by Christopher Goffard, Los Angeles Times “Former Irvine attorney convicted of planting drugs in the car of PTA volunteer disbarred” by Sean Emery, The Orange County Register “Jury awards $5.7 million to Irvine PTA mom in drug-planting case” by Kelly Puente and Sean Emery, The Orange County Register “Irvine mom Kelli Peters writes book about drugs being planted in her car” by Kelly Puente, The Orange County Register
All thoughts are not created equal, all opinions are not valid, and no worldview matters but God's.
John, Janet, Mason and Scott discuss the recent changes regarding the fiduciary rule and review "Six Parts of a DoL-Friendly Financial Plan."
LIT LIT LIT LIT Publication Studio: 222 E Georgia St. Vancouver BC - Bradley Iles is reading from Derby: A Poem in Six Parts,a recent collaboration with Katrina Niebergal. Reincarnation, celebrity, the nature of the self, the selfhood of nature, Mustang-transcendentalism, a poem about a movie. Bradley lives on Melville street in Vancouver. Zuzia Juszkiewicz is a fragment in some kind of multi-faceted hybrid zone or something. She was born in Gdansk, and raised in South Africa, New Zealand, and Canada. She holds a BA in Visual Arts (Vancouver), Human Geography (Vancouver) and Urbanism at AHK (Amsterdam). She collaborates with writers, musicians, filmmakers and dancers. She often works under the name Modern Catalyst, with a focus on designing cross-disciplined artists.http://modercatalyst.ca . Ronan K. Nanning-Watson is a filmmaker, writer and artist from British Columbia. His work ranges in scope, medium, and aesthetic, but is consistently uncompromising. Recently he finished his first feature film “Crusade” about a group of young hipsters who start a holy war. The next two parts in the trilogy are in preproduction. Ingrid Olauson is a writer and trawler of people’s lives. She recently wrote, produced and acted in the play and collaborative art piece Fort Eff, which debuted at Deep Blue this past May.
LIT LIT LIT LIT Publication Studio: 222 E Georgia St. Vancouver BC - Bradley Iles is reading from Derby: A Poem in Six Parts, a recent collaboration with Katrina Niebergal. Reincarnation, celebrity, the nature of the self, the selfhood of nature, Mustang-transcendentalism, a poem about a movie. Bradley lives on Melville street in Vancouver. Zuzia Juszkiewicz is a fragment in some kind of multi-faceted hybrid zone or something. She was born in Gdansk, and raised in South Africa, New Zealand, and Canada. She holds a BA in Visual Arts (Vancouver), Human Geography (Vancouver) and Urbanism at AHK (Amsterdam). She collaborates with writers, musicians, filmmakers and dancers. She often works under the name Modern Catalyst, with a focus on designing cross-disciplined artists.http://modercatalyst.ca . Ronan K. Nanning-Watson is a filmmaker, writer and artist from British Columbia. His work ranges in scope, medium, and aesthetic, but is consistently uncompromising. Recently he finished his first feature film “Crusade” about a group of young hipsters who start a holy war. The next two parts in the trilogy are in preproduction. Ingrid Olauson is a writer and trawler of people’s lives. She recently wrote, produced and acted in the play and collaborative art piece Fort Eff, which debuted at Deep Blue this past May.