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Playfulness can improve your relationships, help you excel at work, and reduce stress. We explore a strategy shown to help you become more playful. Link to episode transcript: http://tinyurl.com/b5xc78r3 Episode summary: Patricia Mebrahtu used to have so much fun as a child. Now, as a medical assistant and mother of two young children, she found herself feeling burnt out and irritable. For our show, Patricia tried a practice to infuse more playfulness into her life. From singing karaoke with her family to playing in the rain, she tapped into her inner child. Through this practice, Patricia recognized the importance of taking time out for yourself, and that she can carve out opportunities to have fun and be playful, even as a busy adult. Later, we hear from psychologist René Proyer about the different types of playfulness, and how incorporating play can benefit our sense of wellbeing. Practice: Each day for a week, incorporate one playful activity into your routine – it can be anything you find enjoyable and playful. Every evening, write about the experience, and how it made you feel in the present moment. Today's guests: Patricia Mebrahtu is a mother and medical assistant in California. René Proyer is a psychologist from the Martin-Luther University Halle-Wittenberg. Learn about René's work: http://tinyurl.com/4sa9vye9 Follow René on Twitter: http://tinyurl.com/3x5986u6 Resources from The Greater Good Science Center: Can We Play? http://tinyurl.com/prhv22rf What Playfulness Can Do for Your Relationship: http://tinyurl.com/n9b3h7e4 Tuesday Tip: Play with Some Friends: http://tinyurl.com/mu837nwr More Resources on Being Playful: BBC - Playtime: Is it time we took 'play' more seriously? http://tinyurl.com/4jmx89vn NYT - Why We All Need to Have More Fun: http://tinyurl.com/335z4bdu Washington Post - Why it's good for grown-ups to go play: http://tinyurl.com/5w8shen TED - The Importance of PLAY in adulthood and childhood: http://tinyurl.com/4hsn9um4 How do you incorporate play into your life? Email us at happinesspod@berkeley.edu or use the hashtag #happinesspod. Help us share The Science of Happiness! Rate us on Spotify and share this link with someone who might like the show: http://tinyurl.com/up29j8zk
On my way to go see a dance piece, I stopped off at the Drama Bookshop and noticed that they had a collection of plays written by my old friend. I figured I should buy it, since I have a goal to dedicate a shelf, nay, a bookcase, to the work of my friends. Also, I wanted to read the plays. Over the years, we've been less in touch so I haven't managed to see everything or read everything. In our twenties, we were very close. We talked on the phone many nights a week and we'd go out and wander the streets of New York, finding delicious tidbits to eat. We talked about our ambitions and our hopes. He dreamed of seeing his plays on Broadway and I wanted that dream for him too. It was a time of much angst and sometimes we'd both of us slip into hopelessness. You really have no idea what's coming. I guess we never do. To keep reading Some Good News for Some Friends, From the Future, visit the Songs for the Struggling Artist blog. This is Episode 384 Song: Wednesday Image a page from the book I was quoted in - Feldenkrais for Actors
In this episode of the Gatty Lecture Rewind podcast, Dr. Su sits down to unpack her lecture titled, "The Border Within: Vietnamese Migrants Transforming Ethnic Nationalism in Berlin." The episode delves into the divide between Northern Vietnamese and Southern Vietnamese populations in Germany after its reunification in 1975. Beyond going over the contents of the lecture, Dr. Su opens up about her experiences in the field and the job market - sharing her honest advice for graduate students hoping to enter academia. Lightning Round: 02:52 Research and lecture summary: 06:24 Advice for researchers and recommendations: 24:43 Dr. Phi Su's Top Recommendations: Under Current Pasts: the 1990s' Silencing of Migrants to the GDR Lordy Rodriguez's "Territory States" The music on the podcast is from "Me and Some Friends", a musical project by a group of friends at Cornell, to experiment with how the beautiful timbres of Gamelan music can meld with hypnotic guitar parts to create a contemplative and unique experience. Check them out here.
On this week's episode, Francine sits down with Dr. Risa Toha, assistant professor of Political Science at Wake Forest University, to unpack her Gatty Lecture titled, "Can National Identity Trump Ethnic Favoritism? Experimental Evidence from Singapore." Throughout the episode, Francine and Mutty propose questions to Dr. Toha about her experiment design, what stood out most from the data collected, and the implications of her findings. Stay tuned for a preview about Dr. Toha's upcoming work, her recommendations, and advice for early career scholars! Lightning Round: 03:30 Research and lecture summary: 08:43 Advice for researchers and recommendations: 33:29 Dr. Toha's Top Recommendations: Ethnicity and Politics in Southeast Asia (link) The music on the podcast is from "Me and Some Friends", a musical project by a group of friends at Cornell, to experiment with how the beautiful timbres of Gamelan music can meld with hypnotic guitar parts to create a contemplative and unique experience. Check them out here.
On this week's episode, Francine sits down with Linna Chhun, Assistant Professor of American Studies at University of Texas - Austin, to unpack her first book manuscript Walking with the Ghost that analyzes memories of the Cambodian Genocide (1975-79) through the lens of personal and familial narratives. Join us for a thrilling conversation on autoethnographies, trauma, militarism, life as a graduate student, and hilarious dog stories! Lightning Round: 02:50 Research and lecture summary: 11:55 Advice for researchers and recommendations: 42:10 Dr. Chhun's Top Recommendations: A Nail the Evening Hangs On by Monica Sok (link) Ghost Face by Greg Santos (link) Afterparties: Stories by Anthony Veasna So (link) The music on the podcast is from "Me and Some Friends", a musical project by a group of friends at Cornell, to experiment with how the beautiful timbres of Gamelan music can meld with hypnotic guitar parts to create a contemplative and unique experience. Check them out here.
On this week's episode, Francine welcomes Dr. Sean Fear from Leeds University's School of History to unpack his virtual lecture, "Assessing Saigon's "Year of Sand": the 1968 Tet Offensive and Rise and Fall of South Vietnam's Second Republic". Stay tuned to hear Dr. Fear share his work which sheds new light on the South Vietnamese government, the role of language training in work, and fond memories of his time at Cornell University. Lightning Round: 03:40 Research and lecture summary: 09:30 Advice for researchers and recommendations: 41:40 Dr. Fear's Top Recommendations: Feature film: Dat Kho (Land of Sorrows). (Link) The music on the podcast is from "Me and Some Friends", a musical project by a group of friends at Cornell, to experiment with how the beautiful timbres of Gamelan music can meld with hypnotic guitar parts to create a contemplative and unique experience. Check them out here.
On this week's episode, guest host Mutty sits down with Stanford University Ho Center for Buddhist Studies Post Doctoral Fellow Dr. Trent Walker. In the episode, Dr. Walker unpacks his lecture titled "Songs of Love and Loss: Crafting Buddhist Poetry In Early Cambodia." He takes us through his journey of learning Khmer, shares tales from ordaining as a monk in Cambodia, and recites Buddhist poems for listeners. Lightning Round: 02:35 Research and lecture summary: 04:32 Advice for graduate students and recommendations: 45:00 Dr. Walker's Top Recommendations: Have a sip podcast: link The music on the podcast is from "Me and Some Friends", a musical project by a group of friends at Cornell, to experiment with how the beautiful timbres of Gamelan music can meld with hypnotic guitar parts to create a contemplative and unique experience. Check them out here.
On this week's episode, Francine sits down with Joseph Scalice (link), the Presidential Postdoctoral Fellow at Nanyang Technological University, to unpack his new book The Drama of Dictatorship (link) which examines the period leading up to the declaration of martial law in the Philippines by Ferdinand Marcos in 1972 and uncovers the prominent role played by two Communist Parties, the PKP and the CPP, in these events. Stay tuned for a discussion on the open source software, politically committed scholarship, post-graduate struggles, and more! Lightning Round: 03:20 Research and lecture summary: 08:00 Advice for researchers and recommendations: 32:40 Dr. Scalice's Top Recommendations: Obsidian note taking app (link) The Singapore Group by J.G. Farrell (link) Banaag at Sikat (Radiance and Sunrise) by Lope K. Santos, translated by Danton Remoto (link) Mga Ibong Mandaragit (The Preying Birds) by Amado V. Hernandez, translated by Danton Remoto (link) Maynila, sa mga Kuko ng Liwanag (Manila in the Claws of Light), a movie by Lino Brocka (link) The music on the podcast is from "Me and Some Friends", a musical project by a group of friends at Cornell, to experiment with how the beautiful timbres of Gamelan music can meld with hypnotic guitar parts to create a contemplative and unique experience. Check them out here.
On this week's episode, Francine is joined by guest host Aparjitya as they sit down with Dr. Alyssa Paredes from the University of Michigan. Dr. Parades unpacks her Gatty Lecture titled "Plantation Liberalism: Personhood and Property between Philippine Mindanao and the Black Atlantic". Get insights as to how she converted constructive criticism into the topic of her Gatty Lecture, her experience with transnational, multilingual research, and finally her advice for fresh graduates navigating the job market. Lightning Round: 04:08 Research and lecture summary: 12:16 Advice for Fresh Graduates and recommendations: 27:27 Dr. Paredes' Top Recommendations: Chemical cocktails defy pathogens and regulatory paradigms (link) Remaindered Life (link) The music on the podcast is from "Me and Some Friends", a musical project by a group of friends at Cornell, to experiment with how the beautiful timbres of Gamelan music can meld with hypnotic guitar parts to create a contemplative and unique experience. Check them out here.
On this week's episode, Francine sits down with MK Long, a graduate student in the Department of Asian Studies at Cornell University, to unpack her research analyzing the (auto)biographies of Burmese Buddhist nuns. These texts come from a 1982 volume of (auto)biographies of the founder and three generations of successors of a Buddhist nunnery established in central Burma in 1905. Stay tuned for a discussion on the importance of interpersonal relationships between nuns, kinship, language learning, graduate school, and more! Lightning Round: 03:00 Research and lecture summary: 12:15 Advice for researchers: 25:50 The music on the podcast is from "Me and Some Friends", a musical project by a group of friends at Cornell, to experiment with how the beautiful timbres of Gamelan music can meld with hypnotic guitar parts to create a contemplative and unique experience. Check them out here.
This week's Gatty Lecture Rewind podcast features ANU department of anthropology professor Dr. Sophie Chao. In the episode, Francine unpacks Dr. Chao's Gatty Lecture titled: We are (not) Monkeys: Raciality, Animality, and Cosmopolitical Struggles in Indonesian West Papua. They also dive further into what inspired her work, and the ways it connects with her expertise in environmental anthropology, and reflect critically on questions about the ethicality, justice, and positionality surrounding her research. Lightning Round: 03:19 Research and lecture summary: 8:41 Advice for researchers and recommendations: 43:06 Dr. Chao's Top Recommendations: The Nutmeg's Curse: Parables for a Planet in Crisis (link) Sydney Southeast Asia Centre Stories podcast: Sustainable Peatland Management and Transboundary Haze in Southeast Asia (link) The music on the podcast is from "Me and Some Friends", a musical project by a group of friends at Cornell, to experiment with how the beautiful timbres of Gamelan music can meld with hypnotic guitar parts to create a contemplative and unique experience. Check them out here.
On this week's episode, Francine welcomes Dr. Jeremy Ladd of Cornell University's Government Department to unpack his lecture titled, "The Unintended Consequences of Repression in the Electoral Regimes in the Social Media Era". During the episode, Francine delves into Dr. Ladd's utilization of social media data to explore the effects of political suppression on Cambodia's political scene during the 2010s. Stay tuned to hear about Dr. Ladd's work as a mixed-methods political theorist in Southeast Asia! Lightning Round: 04:02 Research and lecture summary: 8:11 Advice for researchers and recommendations: 39:00 Dr. Ladd's Top Recommendations: From Development to Democracy: The Transformations of Modern Asia (link) The Hidden History of Burma: Race, Capitalism, and the Crisis of Democracy in the 21st Century (link) The music on the podcast is from "Me and Some Friends", a musical project by a group of friends at Cornell, to experiment with how the beautiful timbres of Gamelan music can meld with hypnotic guitar parts to create a contemplative and unique experience. Check them out here.
On this week's episode, Francine sits down with Dr. Miles Kenney-Lazar, from the Department of Geography at the National University of Singapore, to unpack his research on the current efforts to devise new approaches for governing land and associated natural resources in Myanmar. Stay tuned for an interesting conversation on land reform in Myanmar, visualizing the future of land, resources to learn more about current events in Myanmar, and more! Lightning Round: 03:40 Research and lecture summary: 08:30 Advice for researchers and recommendations: 52:05 Dr. Kenney-Lazar's Top Recommendations: Frontier Myanmar magazine (link) Donate to CBN Myanmar (link) The music on the podcast is from "Me and Some Friends", a musical project by a group of friends at Cornell, to experiment with how the beautiful timbres of Gamelan music can meld with hypnotic guitar parts to create a contemplative and unique experience. Check them out here.
This week's episode has a special co-host! Welcome Tamar Law, a graduate student in Development Studies at Cornell University and the current co-chair of SEAP's graduate committee. On this week's episode, Francine and Tamar host a tag-team interview with Dr. Tania Li, Professor of Anthropology at the University of Toronto, and Dr. Pujo Semedi, Associate Professor of Anthropology at Gadjah Mada University, to unpack their new book Plantation Life (link) on the structure and governance of Indonesia's contemporary palm oil plantations. Join us for a lively yet informative discussion about Tania and Pujo's long-standing academic partnership, corporate occupation in the palm oil plantations, movie recommendations, and more from the dynamic duo! Lightning Round: 04:30 Research and lecture summary: 16:10 Advice for researchers and recommendations: 54:15 Tania and Pujo's Top Recommendations: Aroma of Heaven documentary (trailer) Durga/Umayi by Y.B. Mangunwijaya (link) In the Shadow of the Palms by Sophie Chao (link) The music on the podcast is from "Me and Some Friends", a musical project by a group of friends at Cornell, to experiment with how the beautiful timbres of Gamelan music can meld with hypnotic guitar parts to create a contemplative and unique experience. Check them out here.
On this week's episode, Francine sits down with author Sunisa Manning to unpack her debut novel A Good True Thai (link) which is a historical fiction set in Thailand during the 1970s student radicalization and revolution. Her book was a finalist for the 2020 Epigram Books Fiction Prize for Southeast Asian writers. Join us for a thought-provoking conversation on censorship in Thailand, Sunisa's mixed-race experiences, and her struggles in resolving her Thai and American identity! Lightning Round: 03:10 Research and lecture summary: 05:38 Advice for researchers and recommendations: 33:30 Manning's Top Recommendations: Buru Quartet by Pramoedya Ananta Toer (link) How to Read Now: Essays by Elaine Castillo (link) The music on the podcast is from "Me and Some Friends", a musical project by a group of friends at Cornell, to experiment with how the beautiful timbres of Gamelan music can meld with hypnotic guitar parts to create a contemplative and unique experience. Check them out here.
This week's episode has a special co-host! Welcome Hui-Yuan Neo, a graduate student in the Government Department at Cornell University. On this week's episode, Francine and Neo meet with Dr. Eddy Malesky, from the Department of Political Science at Duke University, to unpack his new publication on trade literacy among migrants in Vietnam and their enthusiasm for global economic knowledge, for purposes of analyzing trade shocks in emerging economies like Vietnam. Stay tuned for a lively yet informative discussion conversation on conducting surveys, analyzing statistics, competitive tennis, advice for fieldwork and more! Lightning Round: 04:30 Research and lecture summary: 16:33 Advice for researchers and recommendations: 50:50 Dr. Malesky's Top Recommendations: GRIT documentary (link) Ròm movie (trailer) Bad Genius movie (trailer) Bronze Drum by Phong Nguyen (link) The music on the podcast is from "Me and Some Friends", a musical project by a group of friends at Cornell, to experiment with how the beautiful timbres of Gamelan music can meld with hypnotic guitar parts to create a contemplative and unique experience. Check them out here.
On this week's episode, Francine sits down with Dr. Hitomi Fujimura, a Postdoctoral Fellow at the York University in Toronto, to unpack her research on Karen Baptists, the resurgence of Karen national identity, and the historicity of claiming national identity. Stay tuned till the end for some wonderful movie and reading recommendations! Lightning Round: 03:38 Research and lecture summary: 14:45 Advice for researchers and recommendations: 36:30 Dr. Fujimura's Top Recommendations: Belonging Across the Bay of Bengal by Michael Laffan (link) Stateless Short Film on Youtube (link) The music on the podcast is from "Me and Some Friends", a musical project by a group of friends at Cornell, to experiment with how the beautiful timbres of Gamelan music can meld with hypnotic guitar parts to create a contemplative and unique experience. Check them out here.
To enter the giveaway, fill out our listener survey here. On this week's episode, Francine sits down with Dr. Victoria Reyes, from the Department of Gender & Sexuality Studies at UC Riverside, to unpack her book Academic Outsider (link), which is a collection of feminist essays about the conditional citizenship awarded to women and people of color in academia. Stay tuned for a conversation on women's space in academia, mentorship, and carving your own journey! Lightning Round: 04:41 Research and lecture summary: 13:15 Advice for researchers and recommendations: 44:45 Dr. Reyes' Top Recommendations: The Best We Could Do by Thi Bui (link) What We Carry by Maya Lang (link) Beautiful Country by Qian Julie Wang (link) Fairest by Meredith Talusan (link) The Body Papers by Grace Talusan (link) The music on the podcast is from "Me and Some Friends", a musical project by a group of friends at Cornell, to experiment with how the beautiful timbres of Gamelan music can meld with hypnotic guitar parts to create a contemplative and unique experience. Check them out here.
To enter the giveaway, fill out our listener survey here. On this week's episode, Meredith Talusan joins Francine to discuss her book, Fairest, among a variety of other topics. Our producers giggle with Meredith Talusan as she reminisces over some of her experiences at Cornell University, and share what it feels like to be back in Ithaca. Stay tuned to find out some fun facts about Ms. Talusan and whether a second book is on the way! Lightning Round: 03:36 Gatty Lecture Discussion: 10:54 Recommendations and Advice: 54:46 Meredith's Top Recommendations: Song Exploder podcast (link) Dear Senthuran by Akwaeke Enezi (link) The music on the podcast is from "Me and Some Friends", a musical project by a group of friends at Cornell, to experiment with how the beautiful timbres of Gamelan music can meld with hypnotic guitar parts to create a contemplative and unique experience. Check them out here.
To enter the giveaway, fill out our listener survey here. In our latest episode, Francine chats with Dr. Nicholas Kuipers, Assistant Professor of Political Science at the National University of Singapore, about his research on bureaucratic selection and nation-building, specifically with regard to Indonesian civil service examinations. Dr. Kuipers is currently developing a monograph on his research. Lightning Round: 03:20 Research and lecture summary: 07:25 Advice for researchers and recommendations: 30:12 Dr. Kuipers's Top Recommendations: Pria (movie directed by Yudho Aditya) Dangdut music ____________________________________________________________________________________ The music on the podcast is from "Me and Some Friends", a musical project by a group of friends at Cornell, to experiment with how the beautiful timbres of Gamelan music can meld with hypnotic guitar parts to create a contemplative and unique experience. Check them out here.
To enter the giveaway, fill out our listener survey here. In our latest episode, Francine sits down with Dr. Ruth Toulson, Professor of Anthropology at Maryland Institute College of Arts, to unpack her book project on Chinese funeral parlors and the politicization of funeral rites in Singapore. Lightning Round: 03:00 Research and lecture summary: 11:35 Advice for researchers and recommendations: 37:30 Dr. Toulson's Top Recommendations: The Spirit Ambulance by Scott Stonington (link) Bad Blood: A Memoir by Lorna Sage (link) Writing Your Journal Article in Twelve Weeks by Wendy Laura Belcher (link) The music on the podcast is from "Me and Some Friends", a musical project by a group of friends at Cornell, to experiment with how the beautiful timbres of Gamelan music can meld with hypnotic guitar parts to create a contemplative and unique experience. Check them out here.
To enter the giveaway, fill out our listener survey here. In our latest episode, Francine chats with Professor Evyn Lê Espiritu Gandhi, Assistant Professor of Asian American Studies at UCLA, to discuss her research on the "refugee settler condition" through the lens of postwar Vietnamese refugees in Guam and Israel-Palestine. Lightning Round: 03:05 Research and lecture summary: 08:40 Advice for researchers and recommendations: 44:50 Dr. Gandhi's Top Recommendations: Afterparties by Anthony Veasna So (link) Time Is a Mother by Ocean Vuong (link) Distorted Footprints Podcast by Dr. Gandhi's Critical Refugee Studies course at UCLA (link) Vietnamese Boat People Podcast (link) The music on the podcast is from "Me and Some Friends", a musical project by a group of friends at Cornell, to experiment with how the beautiful timbres of Gamelan music can meld with hypnotic guitar parts to create a contemplative and unique experience. Check them out here.
Welcome to a new season! To enter the giveaway, fill out our listener survey here! Sadly, we are saying goodbye to our long-time host, Michael, a history PhD candidate. In this episode, he passes the reigns to our new host, Francine Barchett. Francine is a PhD Student in the department of the Natural Resources and the Environment, and her research involves the illegal wildlife trade in Vietnam, conservation efforts in Southeast Asia, and the Southern African trophy hunting industry. Having attended Cornell for both undergrad and graduate school, Francine shares her journey to Southeast Asia, as well as useful Southeast Asian language resources for those interested. Michael's Farewell: 02:10 Get to know Francine: 12:10 Behind the scenes: 37:10 Recommendations from Francine: Dilan 1991 Southeast Asian Language Resources: Critical Language Scholarship (link) Southeast Asian Studies Summer Institute (link) Embassy of Indonesia Language Programs (link) NRCs at Cornell University, Northern Illinois University, UC Berkeley, UCLA, University of Hawaii, UW-Madison, University of Washington The music on the podcast is from "Me and Some Friends", a musical project by a group of friends at Cornell, to experiment with how the beautiful timbres of Gamelan music can meld with hypnotic guitar parts to create a contemplative and unique experience. Check them out here.
Kareem Rahma is a three time Webby nominated comedian, writer, producer, and actor. Kareem wrote and stared in the new short film ‘Out of Order' directed by Nicolas Heller also known as New York Nico debut at Tribeca Festival. He hosts Live Laugh Love Live at Kelloggs Diner where I first met Kareem but he produces comedy shows all over the city. Kareem has a podcast company called Some Friends which is a media company that tells colorful stories. Be on the lookout for the new Wear Many Hats wheatpaste posters all around New York City along with the ‘ Out of Order' posters as well designed by Tom Sanford. Former Class Clown, cat daddy. Please welcome Kareem Rahma to Wear Many Hats. instagram.com/kareem instagram.com/wearmanyhatswmh instagram.com/rashadrastam rashadrastam.com wearmanyhats.com dahsar.com
Welcome to the start of Romcom month! Break out your glowsticks because we are about to get high on food with the 1999 movie Simply Irresistible. As we go through this movie, we will talk about cooking tips and orgasms, yes they somehow go together in this episode. Some Friends and Always Sunny in Philadelphia references make their way in as well. We hope you get a good laugh out of this episode because we sure did. Thank you for listening and don't forget to tell a friend about us! Send us an email with any movie suggestions, episode feedback or just to say hi at thefilmobsessedcouple@gmail.com Follow us on: Our website: https://thefilmobsessedcouple.podbean.com/ or social media at: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thefilmobsessedcouple/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thefilmobsessedcouple Twitter: https://twitter.com/obsessedcouple Tumblr: https://thefilmobsessedcouple.tumblr.com/
On episode #222 Toni-Ann and Dave welcome Some Friends of The Disney Crush on the show this week, joining us are. Tom Ellison Heidi Nena Amy Beckner Andy Hoffman Amy Guy Rhodes For the latest installment of "Five on Five" We ask them five Walt Disney World related Questions.. what another great group of Disney friends. www.thedisneycrush.com thedsineycrush@gmail.com If you would like to support the show please go to: www.patreon.com/thedisneycrush
The post Phil 2c: Some Friends appeared first on Brookhaven Fellowship.
This week I get to catch up with Sam and John of the Chicago based indie punk/emo/alt rock outfit KALI MASI. To try and describe the sound that is Kali Masi would be a disservice to its creators. Their latest album [laughs] has something for everyone with working ears. Sam, John, and I found ourselves diving down many different rabbit holes all the while pulling answers to our most serious questions with "[laughs]" and smiles. If there is a point while you are listening to this at home and your dog goes crazy, we're not sorry, that's just some of the fun we had. If there is a time and place to listen to KALI MASI that time is now! While "Some Friends" "Sputter," we had so much fun it "Hurts To Laugh!"KALI MASI - [laughs] OUT NOW!!!! check it out wherever you get you music
Some Friends stay,others Go away,Loved ones are Cherished, but not all will Stay ,Kids will Grow upand Fly away,There’s really no Saying how Things will Go,So sip your TeaNice and Slow.
Geoffrey Junior: Front man of the band, Some Friends, is this weeks featured guest back in studio! Find their new album out titled, NO COAST, at and use code "no-fux"
YO!! You Just Can't ("CAN'T MIX FRIENDS")... Some Friends, Can't Go EverywhereYou Go... It's Just Not Gonna Work!!!!!!!!!! You Let Me Know, About Your Friends?*And We Also Talk About "BAD ENERGY"... And That's A Hold Nother Level.*PLEASE SUBSCRIBE NOW!!
Hey everyone! I'm joined with one of my best friends, Dbello! Join us as we discuss #blacklove as a millennial & dating around! Nitty Gritty & Some Friends! Actually! Follow us: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nittygrittypodcast/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ngbbpod Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3fU0DdPnsftkJ4o28KcAPc Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/nitty-gritty-some-bang-bang/id1529689243 Support Us: https://anchor.fm/ngbb/support --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/ngbb/support
Part 2 of Friend's Actually because it was so long but YAY! A NEW EPISODE! Back at it again, Dbello and I are discussing the Brandy & Monica Verzuz, their discography, and simultaneously stan for Brandy Moesha Mitchell Norwood. PS the lil clickies are my Alex and Ani bracelets #notreallyanadbutyougetit Nitty Gritty & Some Friends! Actually! Follow us: Instagram Facebook Spotify Apple Podcasts Support Us: https://anchor.fm/ngbb/support --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/ngbb/support
After going over our thoughts on the dark arts and the movie Queen and Slim, we dive into something that's been on Kai's mind the best way to support a friend in need. Shout out to Tedsson for the song "Some Friends" https://open.spotify.com/track/5gK6RYT6JJRC7VULNXC7bB?si=WBksKlm4QmCn7IWaSMyRKA
The No Cover Podcast with Danny Carman Presented by House of Leopold Guest: Arnie DeWitt - Bassist, Some Friends
This Week, on NamePending? we get to see Bolus show off his stuff... again! Some Friends of Balgrax come ripping and roaring through Beliard; for what reason, we don't know. But the crew makes their way through and does what they can. The more pressing question is this: when will they make it to the Sacred Snappel Monastery? Sorry, still got a little Ushien in me, Sacred STONE Monastery. Thank you to everyone listening in we have reached 3k downloads and are quickly approaching about 100 downloads per episode. You guys rock! We have a website up and ready for you now. For you copy and paste people: https://namependingnetwork.wixsite.com/network-pending or... you can just click on it. :D Thank you to our sponsors: Anchor.fm -- a one-stop shop for creating, publishing and monetizing your podcast Flipboard.com -- Let them curate the worlds stories just for you! DiceEnvy.com -- Amazing sets of dice with subscription options and solo sets. Special thanks to friends of the show: TabletopAudio.com Stephen V. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/podcast-pending/support
Join Gene, Jack and Curt for a relatively short but not so sweet episode of the podcast. The Ambassadors trudge through some fun news, even funner box office report, mentions Some Friends of the Nation and then Gene Speaks with Scotty Wheels the Producer of “Once Upon a Superhero”. Tune In, Nerd out…
Little Blue Bastards Hello, and welcome to episode 288 of The Fantasticast. Each week, Steve Lacey and Andy Leyland guide you through every issue, guest-appearance and cameo of The Fantastic Four. This week, we return to the mystical swamps of Florida to witness the battle of life and death personified, as the Man-Thing goes up against the physical embodiment on entropy, inexplicably named Jude, while The Thing and Captain America try to recover the cosmic cube. Swamps will live, swamps will die, and the cube will never be the same again... Ralph Macchio, John Byrne, Some Friends, Phil Rachelson, Bruce Patterson, Roger Stern, Walt Simonson, and Jim Shooter present Marvel Two-in-One #43, which features lots of Smurfs, the inadvisable stroking of Jude The Entropic Man's tummy, and Andy's inability to recognise a basic narrative device. The Fantasticast is support by Stitcher Premium, home of Wolverine: The Long Night, launching March 12th. Starring Richard Armitage as Wolverine, this ten episode podcast audio drama is the first of its kind for Marvel. For a month's free trial to Stitcher Premium, head over to stitcher.com/premium and enter the promo code Fantasticast. Send in your feedback to fantastic4podcast@gmail.com, leave your comments at the libsyn site, or at www.TheFantasticast.com. Follow us on twitter, where we are @fantasticast The Fantasticast is Patreon supported. Visit www.patreon.com/fantasticast to donate and support us. The Fantasticast is part of the Flickering Myth Podcast network. Original artwork by Michael Georgiou. Check out his work at mikedraws.co.uk Episode cover design by Samuel Savage.
On this edition of the Oklahoma Lefty Podcast we have new stuff from Dizzy Bats, TV Crime, The Homeless Gospel Choir, and Fresh plus Higley, Red Forty, The Forgotten, and much more. 1. "Get Bent" by Fresh (from Fresh)2. "Clocking In" by TV Crime (from Clocking In / Clocking Out 7")3. "Maybeing" by Armchair Martian (from Hang on Ted)4. "Some Friends" by Kali Masi (from Wind Instrument)5. "I'm Listening" by Dizzy Bats (from I Don't Live Here Anymore)6. "Who We Are" by Descendents (from Who We Are)7. "Nothing" by Drawstring (from One)8. "And Such And Such" by The Forty Nineteens (from Good Fortune)9. "All the Same" by Needles//Pins (from Good Night, Tomorrow)10. "Lucky Seven" by The Scandals (from Lucky Seven)11. "2nd Class Citizen" by The Forgotten (from Veni Vidi Vici)12. "Novocaine" by The Carolyn (from Keepsake)13. "Seventeen" by Red Forty (from Discography)14. "Teenage Feelings" by Kamikaze Girls (from Seafoam)15. "5 Minutes" by Higley (from Higley)16. "Normal" by The Homeless Gospel Choir (from The Homeless Gospel Choir Presents Normal)17. "It's the End of the World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)" by R.E.M. (from MTV Unplugged)18. "Bad Art & Weirdo Ideas [Quiet Slang]" by Beach Slang (from We Were Babies & We Were Dirtbags)