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Many mothers go to the doctor because they feel exhausted, overwhelmed, and they aren't sleeping - and leave with a depression diagnosis and a prescription. The message is: your brain isn't working right, and medication will help you cope. But what if the problem isn't your brain at all? In this episode, I talk with journalist Bob Whitaker, who has spent decades investigating psychiatric treatment in the U.S. We look at how women's distress has been medicalized instead of taken seriously as a response to impossible circumstances. We look at how antidepressants work, which is quite different from what the drug companies have been telling us for years. He also shares the results of a New Zealand study on postpartum depression that should have changed how we support new mothers - but didn't. Questions this episode will answer Is it burnout or depression? Burnout and depression share a lot of the same symptoms - exhaustion, low mood, difficulty functioning - but they have different roots. Burnout is a response to sustained, unmanageable circumstances. Depression, as it's currently diagnosed and treated, is framed as a brain malfunction. This episode looks at why this difference matters, and why so many mothers get a depression diagnosis when they're experiencing burnout. Why are mothers more likely to be diagnosed with depression? Mothers in the US are frequently carrying an unequal share of household work, childcare, and mental load - often while also working full time - with little support. When that situation becomes unsustainable, the distress it causes is then treated as an individual brain problem rather than a response to a broken system. What prevents postpartum depression? A study out of New Zealand found that consistent, practical support - help with the actual work of running a household - significantly reduced postpartum depression. But even though the findings were significant, more support has not become the standard of care. Should I take antidepressants? Antidepressants may reduce symptoms for some people, but research shows they are far less effective than we've been told - and for mothers whose distress is rooted in unsustainable circumstances, medication addresses the symptom rather than the source. If antidepressants are helping you, that's OK (and do keep taking them!). But antidepressants should be used to help create space for other interventions to work, rather than used long-term. How does society affect women's mental health? When we treat women's distress as a potentially life-long medical problem rather than a signal about unsustainable circumstances, we direct attention away from the structural changes that would actually help. This episode traces how that pattern developed - and what a different approach might look like. What you'll learn in this episode Why the mental load of motherhood is a structural problem, not a brain problem that medication should fixHow psychiatry functions as social control when it diagnoses individuals instead of the broken systems they're living inWhat the New Zealand postpartum depression study found - and why its results were largely ignoredHow drug advertising has shaped what we believe about women's distress - from Valium in the 1960s to antidepressants todayHow to shift from asking "what's wrong with my brain" to "what would actually need to change in my situation" If you want to learn more about Bob's work and the research on depression and antidepressants, go to https://madinamerica.com/. Want to go deeper? The full one-hour conversation with Bob is available to Parenting Membership members. In it, Bob traces exactly how depression came to be understood as a chemical imbalance - not because research proved it, but because psychiatry in the U.S. wanted to rebrand itself as a legitimate medical discipline in the 1980s. He walks us through how pharmaceutical companies funneled money to academic psychiatrists to become "thought leaders," how Prozac was marketed as making people "feel better than well," and how the industry captured the entire profession so thoroughly that by 1998, the New England Journal of Medicine couldn't find a single academic expert on depression in the US who wasn't taking money from pharmaceutical companies. We went deep on the STAR*D trial - the largest antidepressant study ever conducted. The public was told 70% of patients got better. The actual stay-well rate at one year, once a researcher used a Freedom of Information request to get the raw data: 3%. Bob walks through exactly how that number was inflated - the protocol violations, the patients who were already in remission when they enrolled, the switched measurement scales - and why he calls it a straight-out public betrayal. The whole episode is available to you in your private podcast feed immediately after joining the Parenting Membership. Inside the membership, you'll find research-based modules on the specific challenges that make family life hard - from navigating parenting as a team to raising siblings who get along. Monthly group coaching calls give you a chance to talk through your specific situation directly with me. And you'll find a community of parents who share your values and are working through parenting challenges together, and with my support. If you've been told the problem is your brain, and something in this episode made you wonder whether that's the whole story - the membership is where you get help to figure out what's right for you and your family. Click the banner to learn more Jump to highlights: 01:50 Introduction to today's episode and guest 05:04 Just remember what the disease model does. It focuses on the problems in the head of the individual, not in the social way we arrange our society. 06:25 From hysteria and electroshock therapy (mostly given to women) in the 1800s, to marketing benzodiazepines to wives in the 1960s, the pattern of pathologizing women's distress has been consistent. 08:32 When benzodiazepines were recognized as addictive in the late 1970s, psychiatry reframed anxiety as a type of depression and switched women to antidepressants, another numbing drug that keeps women quiet and functioning in an impossible situation. 13:31 In the New Zealand study, it says that when women got daily help with housework for six months, postpartum depression was prevented. Yet this support became standard care nowhere, because the system still believes the problem is in people's brains, not in their circumstances. 14:17 Wrapping up today's topic
Plongez dans l'histoire des grands personnages et des évènements marquants qui ont façonné notre monde ! Avec enthousiasme et talent, Franck Ferrand vous révèle les coulisses de l'histoire avec un grand H, entre mystères, secrets et épisodes méconnus : un cadeau pour les amoureux du passé, de la préhistoire à l'histoire contemporaine.Hébergé par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
The SEC Spring Meetings have been going on all week and boy oh boy do they have their hands full. Georgia's 2027 class was looking sparse but they add a timely 3 Star D-line Stud from Grayson. Georgia Baseball is poised to host a Regional to see if they can make a run for Omaha. As always thanks for listening and ...Go DAWGS !
The Taproot Therapy Podcast - https://www.GetTherapyBirmingham.com
If you have ever felt like a failure because the "evidence-based" protocol didn't fix you, or if you are a clinician feeling the crushing weight of a system that rewards compliance over competence—this episode is your validation. The wall is hollow. The science has become science-flavored capitalism. But the real work is still happening in the cracks of the system, in the rooms where two human beings are brave enough to put down the worksheets and simply look at each other. "The way a profession defends a failed paradigm against its own data is the same way a patient defends a failed self-image against their own felt experience." In the explosive penultimate episode of Psychotherapy on the Couch, Joel takes a magnifying glass to the single greatest crisis of modern American psychiatry: the moment the apparatus proved its own foundation was a lie, and then decided to just keep building on it anyway. This episode dives deep into the STAR*D study—a $35 million federal initiative designed to prove the medication-first paradigm worked. It didn't. But instead of changing course, the industry buried the data, ignored the severe suicidality rates, and proceeded to build decades of clinical guidelines on a fiction. This isn't just a story about bad science; it's a clinical case study in institutional dissociation. When the cold machine looks in the mirror and sees a monster, it doesn't change—it just shatters the glass.
Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-buckeye-scoop--4429642/support.Thank you for being part of the Scoop Family!
Le Wi-Fi, cette technologie invisible qui connecte aujourd'hui des milliards d'appareils, doit une partie de son existence… à une star d'Hollywood. Une actrice, icône de beauté, mais aussi inventrice de génie : Hedy Lamarr.Née Hedwig Kiesler en Autriche, elle devient célèbre dès 1933 avec le film Extase, qui fait scandale à l'époque. Mais derrière cette image sulfureuse se cache un esprit brillant. Passionnée de science et de technologie, Hedy Lamarr va, en pleine Seconde Guerre mondiale, contribuer à une invention révolutionnaire.À cette époque, les États-Unis cherchent un moyen de guider les torpilles par radio sans que le signal puisse être intercepté ou brouillé par l'ennemi. Le problème est crucial : si l'adversaire capte la fréquence, il peut neutraliser l'arme.C'est là qu'intervient une idée aussi simple que géniale. Avec le compositeur George Antheil, Hedy Lamarr imagine un système de communication basé sur le “saut de fréquence”. Le principe : au lieu d'émettre sur une seule fréquence radio, le signal change constamment de fréquence, de manière synchronisée entre l'émetteur et le récepteur. Résultat : le signal devient extrêmement difficile à intercepter ou à brouiller.Leur invention est brevetée en 1942. À l'époque, elle est jugée trop complexe pour être utilisée immédiatement par l'armée. Elle tombera dans l'oubli pendant plusieurs années.Mais l'histoire ne s'arrête pas là.Des décennies plus tard, ce principe de saut de fréquence devient la base de nombreuses technologies de communication sans fil. C'est lui qui est à l'origine de systèmes modernes comme le Bluetooth… et surtout le Wi-Fi. Sans cette idée fondatrice, nos réseaux sans fil seraient beaucoup moins fiables, beaucoup plus vulnérables aux interférences.Ce qui rend cette histoire fascinante, c'est le contraste. Pendant des années, Hedy Lamarr a été réduite à son image d'actrice, considérée comme l'une des plus belles femmes de son époque. Son rôle d'inventrice a été largement ignoré.Ce n'est que bien plus tard qu'elle sera reconnue pour sa contribution. Aujourd'hui, elle est même célébrée comme une pionnière de la technologie moderne.Alors la prochaine fois que vous vous connectez au Wi-Fi, imaginez ceci : derrière ce signal invisible, il y a l'idée lumineuse d'une actrice hollywoodienne, qui, entre deux tournages, a contribué à changer le monde.Une preuve éclatante que le génie peut surgir là où on ne l'attend pas. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Elle s'appelait Hedy Lamarr, de son vrai nom Hedwig Kiesler, c'était une actrice américaine d'origine autrichienne. En 1933, elle devient célèbre grâce au film "Extase" où elle est la première actrice à jouer à nue et à simuler un orgasme sur grand écran. Mais Hedy Lamarr ne se contente pas d'être jolie. Non, elle a des idées. Passionnée de technologies, elle se marie avec un riche fabricant d'armes. Dans "Ah Ouais ?", Florian Gazan répond en une minute chrono à toutes les questions essentielles, existentielles, parfois complètement absurdes, qui vous traversent la tête. Un podcast RTL Originals.Hébergé par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Join as a Ryan118 member for BONUS content and perks!!!: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrHWCUDb945_ar1vLoYxJ2w/join TIMESTAMPS: The Sellik, The Thunder is a Celtic Football Club fan led podcast. Hosted by Ryan Fitzsimons (Ryan118), our regular contributors are Kieran Auld, Calum Craig and Dylan Murdoch. We look to cover all aspects of what's happening at Celtic in a lighthearted manner, every week, to the best of our 'abilities'. We are regularly invited along to Celtic fan media press conferences to speak with the manager and players, so listen for more exclusives every week. Oh, and we love a good quiz! Join us on our journey to bring you the best Celtic fan led podcast by listening to the show, rating us 5 stars, and subscribing on YouTube. https://www.tiktok.com/@thesellikthethunder Follow us on Twitter @SellikPodcast @RyanStevenF2 @kieran_auld @calumcraig1234 @DylanMurdoch3 #CelticFC #Celtic #Football Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
In Episode 292 of Outside The Round, host Matt Burrill sits down with Shane Quick, partner at Peachtree Entertainment and President of Live Events, for a deep dive into one of the fastest-growing forces in the live music space. Shane breaks down the evolution of Peachtree from a Southeast staple to a nationwide powerhouse, highlighting a massive 2025 and the continued expansion of festivals like Rock The South and Rock The Country. He shares behind-the-scenes insight on building large-scale events, why festivals remain a core part of music culture, and how bringing live experiences to small-town America creates real impact far beyond the stage. The conversation also dives into Peachtree's reputation for identifying talent early, from artists like Morgan Wallen and Luke Combs to newer names like Ella Langley and Gavin Adcock, and the importance of investing in artists before the rest of the industry catches on. Shane reflects on his entrepreneurial mindset, owning multiple businesses, and how his passion for building opportunities extends beyond music into local communities. From tornado relief efforts that sparked Rock The South to scaling national festivals, to balancing life, business, and mental health, this episode is packed with insight on leadership, growth, and creating something bigger than yourself in the music industry. Follow on Social Media: Shane Quick: @shanequick Matt Burrill: @raisedrowdymatt Outside The Round: @outsidetheround Raised Rowdy: @raisedrowdy Chapters (00:00:00) - Morgan Wallen On His First Show Back at Auburn Rodeo(00:03:57) - Peachtree Music Festival: Celebrating 25 Years(00:06:19) - Coleman, Alabama(00:12:29) - Peachtree Music Festival: A Throwback Night in Opel(00:16:55) - Raised Rowdy: Ella Langley's Rise to Stard(00:23:03) - Peachtree Entertainment: Growing the Community(00:26:43) - Peachtree Music Festival: How Do You Balance It?(00:33:01) - Peachtree Live Events: A Family Business(00:39:39) - What do you look for when you do a site check for a(00:41:47) - Celebrating America's 250th Anniversary(00:45:08) - Country Music Festival: We're Pro-God and Country(00:46:51) - Peachtree Music Festival + Raised Rowdy(00:51:17) - Auburn Rodeo and Chili Fest(00:56:20) - Running With Peachtree Entertainment's Shane Quick
Les footballeurs parlent aux footballeurs ! « Rothen s'enflamme », le rendez-vous des passionnés du ballon rond revient pour une deuxième saison !
Danny and Paul break down Dundee's impressive 3-2 win over Aberdeen. They also discuss THAT goal and subbuteo hands.Intro track title: ChangeArtist: My Monthly DateMaterial: https://bit.ly/3jOgoq1License: https://bit.ly/3VEly4ZEdit: Voiceover added to trackLicense terms: Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0)Edited by: Ryan Norrie Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Sa carrière d'acteur est peut-être la plus belle qu'ait connu Hollywood ; mais qui fut, derrière Ben-Hur, Charlton Heston ?Entrez dans l'univers fascinant de Charlton Heston, l'un des acteurs les plus emblématiques d'Hollywood !
Dans cette "Minute Crooner Attitude", Jean-Baptiste Tuzet vous dévoile le succès retentissant d'une icône des années 90 : Hélène Rollès ! Loin de se limiter à la nostalgie française, l'actrice et chanteuse a conquis le cœur de l'Empire du Milieu.Découvrez comment l'interprète de "Je m'appelle Hélène" vient de se produire en prime time sur la chaîne nationale chinoise CCTV devant 800 millions de téléspectateurs, à l'occasion du Nouvel An chinois. Vous entendrez même un extrait de sa reprise de "La Belle et la Bête", interprétée en mandarin et en duo avec le crooner américain John Legend. Une réussite internationale impressionnante qui lui a même valu d'être conviée à l'Élysée lors de la visite du président chinois Xi Jinping. Une chronique qui célèbre le rayonnement de la culture française à l'international.La Minute Crooner Attitude, le billet d'humeur de Jean-Baptiste Tuzet, tous les jours de la semaine, 9 h 15 et 19 h 15 sur Crooner Radio. Plus d'informations et podcasts www.croonerradio.frHébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
[REDIFFUSION] Dans cet épisode Andréa Brusque vous parle d'une icône glamour du Hollywood des années 40. Sacrée plus belle femme du monde, à son époque, elle était aussi belle que brillante. Scientifique méconnue pendant longtemps, c'est aussi grâce à elle que nous avons aujourd'hui des technologies telles que le bluetooth et le wifi. Son nom : Hedy Lamarr. De sa vie d'actrice à ses inventions, découvrez son Fabuleux destin. Une jeune fille déjà ambitieuse Hedwig Kiesler est née le 9 novembre 1914 à Vienne. Fille d'une famille juive, son père était banquier et sa mère une ancienne pianiste de renom. Elle a grandi dans un milieu privilégié qui lui permet d'apprendre plusieurs langues telles que l'anglais ou l'italien. Jeune fille très curieuse, elle adore quand son père lui explique comment fonctionnent les technologies de l'époque. Pleine d'énergie, Hedwig a des semaines bien chargées entre l'équitation, la danse et le piano. Elle parvient aussi à garder du temps pour se consacrer à sa passion : bricoler des gadgets. A l'âge de 13 ans, Hedwig s'intéresse ensuite beaucoup au cinéma. Un jour, elle va avec ses parents voir “Métropolis” de Fritz Lang et là, c'est la révélation. Hedwig veut devenir actrice et fera tout pour réaliser son rêve. Un podcast Bababam Originals Ecriture : Clémence Setti Voix : Andréa Brusque Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The Taproot Therapy Podcast - https://www.GetTherapyBirmingham.com
The Story Science Forgot: Why Psychotherapy Needs Narrative More Than Ever by Joel Blackstock LICSW-S MSW PIP no. 4135C-S | Dec 15, 2025 | 0 comments Joseph Campbell is arguably one of the most influential intellectuals of the twentieth century. If you have watched a Marvel movie or read a modern fantasy novel or sat in a screenwriter's workshop you have encountered his fingerprints. George Lucas explicitly credited Campbell's The Hero with a Thousand Faces as the structural backbone of Star Wars. Every major Hollywood studio has copies of his work floating around their development offices. Even filmmakers who actively deconstruct his monomyth model still have to be in conversation with Campbell to do so. You cannot escape him if you are telling stories in the Western tradition. But here is the thing about Joseph Campbell that we need to hold in our minds when we think about what psychology has become. He was a showman. He was a legitimate scholar but also someone who understood that the truth sometimes needs a little theatrical assistance. The Showman and the Bear Bones One of Campbell's favorite presentation techniques involved showing an image of ancient bear bones that were perhaps two million years old and discovered in a cave. The bones had been arranged in a particular way with pieces shoved back into the bear's mouth. Campbell would present this with his characteristic gravitas and explain that the ancients understood that nature must eat of itself. They knew that to take life is to participate in a cyclical loop of giving and receiving. The bear consuming itself was a ritual recognition that we are all food for something else. It is a beautiful interpretation. It is probably even partially true. We know through depth psychology and early anthropology that prehistoric humans were almost certainly trying to make meaning of existential realities. Ritual practices around death and consumption are well documented across cultures. Campbell was not fabricating this from nothing. But also come on Campbell. These are two million year old bones shoved in a hole. Maybe the jaw just collapsed that way. Maybe soil shifted. Maybe an animal disturbed them centuries after burial. He did not know. He could not know. And yet he presented it with the confidence of revealed truth. Here is why this matters. Campbell's influence is incalculable despite his methodological looseness. He told a story that resonated so deeply with something in the human psyche that it became the invisible architecture of our entire entertainment industry. He was not objectively right about those bear bones but he was pointing at something real about how humans make meaning. The story he told about that meaning making was more powerful than any peer reviewed paper could have been. We need to remember this when we think about psychotherapy and what it has become. The Dream I Had and the World I Found When I first entered the field of psychotherapy I had a fantasy. I thought I was going to be Joseph Campbell. I was going to find my way to someplace like Berkeley and immerse myself in the grand conversation between psychology and mythology and anthropology and philosophy. I imagined something like the Esalen Institute in the 1970s where Fritz Perls developed Gestalt therapy and where researchers and mystics and clinicians sat together in hot springs and argued about the nature of consciousness. Those places barely exist anymore. What I found instead was a competitive model built on H-indexes and impact factors. I found academic departments that had been siloed into increasingly narrow specializations. Each department defended its territorial boundaries against incursion from neighboring disciplines. The institute model where a psychologist might spend an afternoon talking to an anthropologist about ritual has been systematically dismantled. What we have instead are specialists who do not read outside their sub specialty and researchers whose entire careers depend on defending one narrow hypothesis. We have an incentive structure that actively punishes the kind of cross pollination that leads to genuine discovery. The Hollow Room: How the Biomedical Model Fails This is not just an academic inconvenience. It is a catastrophe for the human sciences and for the actual treatment of patients. There is a reason Freud stuck around. It is not because psychoanalysis was rigorously validated through randomized controlled trials. It is because as the science writer John Horgan observed old paradigms die only when better paradigms replace them. Freud lives on because science has not produced a theory of and therapy for the mind potent enough to render psychoanalysis obsolete once and for all. The biomedical model promised us a better story. It told us that humans are biological machines and that suffering is just a mechanical malfunction. It promised that if we could just find the right neurotransmitter or the right gene we could fix the machine. But look at what that looks like in practice. It looks like the 15 minute medication management appointment. A person comes in with their life falling apart. They are grieving a divorce or wrestling with the trauma of their childhood or facing a crisis of meaning. And the doctor looks at a checklist. They ask about sleep. They ask about appetite. They ask about energy levels. They treat the symptoms like check engine lights on a dashboard. They prescribe a pill to dim the lights and they send the person away. It looks like manualized Cognitive Behavioral Therapy. This is the gold standard of evidence based treatment. But in the vacuum of a manual it becomes absurd. A patient might be crying about the loss of a child and a therapist who is strictly adhering to the protocol has to redirect them to the agenda for Module 3 which is identifying cognitive distortions. The model has no room for the tragedy of the situation. It only has room for the erroneous thought that the patient is having about the tragedy. The result is that by most measures we are not actually helping people more effectively than we were fifty years ago. To understand the depth of this failure, we must look at the “smoking gun” of the psychiatric establishment: the STAR*D study. For nearly two decades, this massive, taxpayer-funded study was held up as the irrefutable proof that the “medication merry-go-round” worked. It cost $35 million and was cited thousands of times to justify the idea that if a patient didn't get better on one antidepressant, you simply switched them to another, and then another. The study claimed a “cumulative remission rate” of 67%. It told us that two-thirds of people would be cured if they just complied with the protocol. This was a lie built on methodological quicksand. A forensic re-analysis of the data (Pigott et al., 2023) revealed that the researchers had inflated their success rates through a series of stunning methodological sleights of hand. The original design called for the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HRSD) to be the primary outcome measure. But when that scale wasn't showing the numbers they wanted, investigators switched to a secondary, unblinded, self-report questionnaire (the QIDS-SR) which painted a rosier picture. Furthermore, the re-analysis exposed that hundreds of patients who dropped out due to side effects were excluded from the failure count, effectively scrubbing the negative data. Even worse, over 900 patients who didn't even meet the minimum severity for depression were included to boost the numbers. When the data was re-analyzed using the study's original criteria and including all participants, the cumulative remission rate plummeted from 67% to 35%. But the most damning statistic is the sustained recovery rate. Of the 4,041 patients who entered the trial, only a tiny fraction achieved remission and actually stayed well. When accounting for dropouts and relapses over the one-year follow-up period, a mere 108 patients achieved remission and stayed well without relapsing. That is a sustained recovery rate of 2.7%. If a heart surgery or cancer treatment had a failure rate of 97.3%, it would be abandoned. Yet, this study was championed by investigators with deep financial ties to the pharmaceutical industry, and the results were codified into clinical guidelines that still rule the profession today. This is the indictment: we have built an entire system of care on a statistical fabrication, prioritizing the protection of the model over the healing of the human. I have big problems with Freud. I have big problems with classical psychoanalysis. I am more of a Jungian. But here is what the depth psychologists understood that the biomedical model forgot. Humans are not just biological machines. We are meaning making creatures who navigate the world through story. When you take away our stories you do not make us more rational. You make us lost. The Flock of Dodos This separation of science from narrative has hurt the researchers too. In his book The Ghost Lab journalist Matt Hongoltz-Hetling uses the flock of dodos metaphor to describe this phenomenon. He argues that specialized creatures that are perfectly adapted to narrow environments become extinct when conditions change. Academic science has become a flock of dodos. A neuroscientist studies one particular brain region. A psychologist studies one particular therapeutic intervention. An anthropologist studies one particular culture. Nobody is allowed to step back and ask what all of this means together. When you silo information into separate academic disciplines instead of organizing it into a holistic understanding you kill the narratives that are already there. You cannot see the story until you step back far enough to recognize the pattern. Heidegger and the AI Bubble One of the primary functions of a subjective narrative in an objective field like psychotherapy is that it lets us start with things we consider self evident. These are things that do not need evidence because they are the ground upon which evidence stands. Things like humanity is important. Things like we contain multiplicities and conflicting parts. Things like consciousness is a mystery. The biomedical model has no way to accommodate these self evident truths because they are not measurable. You cannot run a randomized controlled trial on human dignity. Martin Heidegger understood this trajectory. He warned that science and technology were becoming self justifying systems that asked only whether something could be done and never whether it should be done. We are watching this play out right now with Large Language Models and Artificial Intelligence. The tech industry is boiling seawater and consuming enormous amounts of our remaining resources to build ever larger systems. As Ed Zitron has documented the current AI boom is likely a bubble that will crash and burn. It may leave us with a Google monopoly on Gemini that will not actually help anybody. Should we be doing this? Should we be fundamentally restructuring our economy around technology whose benefits are speculative at best? The Heideggerian answer is that we are not even capable of asking these questions properly because we have lost the narrative framework within which “should” makes sense. When everything is reduced to capability and efficiency the concept of values disappears. The Perennial and the Possible Can we just recognize that having a livable planet is probably a self evidencing goal? Can we recognize that having a psychotherapy willing to engage with perennial philosophy might be more valuable than another meta analysis demonstrating small effect sizes for manualized interventions? This is what I mean by reintroducing narrative. I do not mean replacing evidence with myth. I mean recognizing that the facts do not speak for themselves. Data requires interpretation. Interpretation requires a framework. And frameworks are stories about what matters. The story science forgot is the story of science itself. It is the story of how inquiry emerged from human communities trying to understand their world. We can recover this story. We can rebuild the connections that the academic silos have severed. The path is there. It always has been. We just need to be brave enough to walk it. The Exodus of the Sick If academic science has become a flock of dodos clinical practice has become something arguably worse. It has become a reenactment of the Milgram experiment where the system plays the role of the authority figure and the patient plays the victim. We often remember Stanley Milgram's famous 1961 study as a lesson about the capacity for evil but its deeper lesson was about the capacity for distance. When the subject had to physically touch the victim compliance with the order to harm them dropped to 30 percent. The White Coat only retained its authority when it created a buffer between the human actions and their consequences. Modern psychotherapy has built a massive administrative White Coat that separates the healer from the healed. This is not just a metaphor. It is a structural reality that is actively driving patients out of the profession and into the arms of pseudoscience. The Bureaucracy as Trauma For a patient in crisis the Evidence Based system often functions as a machine of exclusion. A study on healthcare administrative burdens reveals that the psychological cost of navigating billing and insurance denials and intake forms acts as a friction that hits the most vulnerable the hardest. We ask trauma survivors to retell their stories to three different intake coordinators before they ever see a therapist. This process is itself retraumatizing. When they finally reach a provider they are often met with the biomedical gaze which is a checklist driven assessment that reduces their complex narrative of suffering to a code for billing. As the Australian Psychological Society has noted the chemical imbalance theory and the medicalization of distress have failed to reduce stigma and have instead left patients feeling defective and unheard. The result is a profound Low Trust environment. Theodore Porter in his book Trust in Numbers argues that we only rely on strict mechanical numbers when we do not trust people. We use the DSM and manualized protocols because insurers do not trust clinicians to judge and clinicians do not trust themselves to deviate. The Great Split: Why Research and Practice Are Divorcing This creates a fundamental schism that explains why the profession feels like it is cracking in half. On one side you have the academic researchers who are incentivized by grant funding and publication metrics. To get these rewards they must isolate variables and create reproducible manualized protocols. This means they must strip away the very thing that makes therapy work which is the messy and unrepeatable human relationship. On the other side you have the clinicians who are incentivized by patient outcomes. They are in the room with the messiness. They see that the manualized protocol fails the complex trauma patient so they improvise. They integrate. They use intuition. The academic looks at the clinician and sees a cowboy who ignores the data. The clinician looks at the academic and sees a bureaucrat who has never treated a suicidal patient. This is why the research is no longer informing the practice. We have created two different languages. The researcher speaks in p-values and population averages while the clinician speaks in case studies and individual breakthroughs. Why Pseudoscience Wins the Trust War This low trust environment creates a vacuum that wellness influencers are all too happy to fill. We often mock the public for turning to unverified supplements and TikTok diagnosticians and quantum mysticism. But we have to ask what these influencers are providing that we are not. They are providing narrative. They are providing connection. They are providing a. parasocial yes but still, High Trust experience. A recent analysis suggests that wellness fads thrive not because people are stupid but because the influencers offer a feeling of personal validation that the medical system denies. Even AI chatbots are now being described by users as more humane than doctors because the AI listens to the whole story without looking at a watch or a checklist. When a patient is told by a doctor that their pain is idiopathic or psychosomatic because it does not show up on a lab test and then an influencer tells them I see you and I believe you and here is a story about why this is happening the patient will choose the influencer every time. The trust gap drives them away from care that might actually help and toward solutions that feel good but do nothing. The Clinician's Moral Injury This leaves the ethical psychotherapist in a state of moral injury. We are forced to participate in a system that we know is alienating the very people we are trying to help. We are trained to value the therapeutic alliance or the bond of trust above all else yet we work in a system designed to sever it with paperwork and time limits and standardized protocols. We have to put down the White Coat of administrative distance. We have to stop hiding behind the Evidence Based label when that label is being used to deny the reality of the person in front of us. Proposals for a Unified Future If we want to stop this exodus and heal the split we need specific structural changes. We cannot just hope for better insurance reimbursement. We need to change what we consider valid science. First we must re-legitimize the systematic case study. For a century the detailed narrative of a single patient was the gold standard of learning. We replaced it with the aggregate data of the randomized controlled trial. We need to bring it back. We need journals that publish rigorous detailed accounts of what actually happens in the room when a patient gets better. Second we need to build open source repositories for clinical observation. Currently the wisdom of the field is locked behind for profit paywalls or lost in the private notes of isolated therapists. We need a Wikipedia of Clinical Practice where thousands of clinicians can document what they are seeing in real time. If ten thousand therapists report that somatic processing helps complex trauma that is a data set that rivals any RCT. Third we need to teach philosophy and narrative in graduate school again. We are training technicians when we should be training healers. A therapist who knows how to read a spreadsheet but does not know how to understand a story is useless to a human being in crisis. If we do not offer a therapy that is human and narrative and deeply relational we will continue to lose our patients to those who do even if what they are offering is a lie. The Mirror and the Map: Why Math is a Story We often treat mathematics as if it were the bedrock of reality itself. We act as though a p-value is a piece of the universe, like a rock or a proton. But we must remember that math is not the thing itself. It is a representation of the thing. It is a map, not the territory. It is a mirror, not the face. Theodore Porter's work in Trust in Numbers reminds us that we reach for these mirrors when we do not trust our own eyes. But the mirror is useless without someone to look into it and interpret the reflection. Data by itself is pointless. It is a pile of bricks without an architect. It requires interpretation to become meaning, and interpretation is fundamentally a narrative act. When we try our best to make a purely objective study, we are still telling a story. We are saying, “These numbers represent this phenomenon.” Then another researcher comes along, looks at the same numbers, and tells a different story: “No, they represent that.” This conflict isn't a failure of science; it is science. The Storytellers of Science The greatest breakthroughs in history did not come from people who just crunched numbers. They came from people who could see the story the numbers were trying to tell. These stories are really damn interesting, often stranger and more beautiful than fiction. Consider August Kekulé. He didn't discover the structure of the benzene molecule by staring at a spreadsheet. He discovered it by dreaming of a snake eating its own tail—the Ouroboros. His subjective, narrative brain provided the image that unlocked the objective chemical reality. The data was there, but it needed a myth to make it intelligible. Look at Quantum Physics. The raw math of quantum mechanics is cold and abstract. But when physicists like Erwin Schrödinger or Werner Heisenberg looked at that data, they saw a story about uncertainty, about cats that are both alive and dead, about a universe that only decides what it is when it is observed. They didn't just calculate; they interpreted. They told a story about reality that was so radical it changed how we understand existence. Even in psychology, the data of the “talking cure” was messy and anecdotal until Freud and Jung gave us the language of the Unconscious and the Archetype. Were they objectively “right” in every detail? No. But they gave us a framework—a story—that allowed us to navigate the chaos of the human mind. They provided the map that allowed us to enter the territory. The Final Integration We have spent the last fifty years trying to strip this storytelling capacity out of our profession in a misguided attempt to be taken seriously by the “hard” sciences. In doing so, we have thrown away our most powerful tool. The brain is a story-processing machine. To treat it with checklists and spreadsheets is to deny its fundamental nature. We need to be brave enough to pick up the mirror again. We need to be brave enough to look at the data—whether it's the 2.7% recovery rate of STAR*D or the trembling pupil of a trauma patient—and ask, “What is the story here?” The path forward isn't about choosing between science and narrative. It is about realizing that science is a narrative. It is the grandest, most complex, most rigorous story we have ever tried to tell. And it is time we started telling it properly again. More @ https://gettherapybirmingham.com/
In this episode, we examine groundbreaking research that challenges the widespread clinical belief that SSRI side effects improve with time. Using data from the landmark STAR*D trial, we explore which patients actually experience side effect resolution and which face worsening symptoms. Faculty: Paul Zarkowski, M.D. Host: Richard Seeber, M.D. Learn more about our membership here Earn 0.75 CME: Quick Take Vol. 75 Do SSRI Side Effects Improve Over Time?
Jodie Foster, tête d'affiche d'un film français ! L'actrice américaine retrouve le cinéma français plus de 20 ans après Un long dimanche de fiançailles.Vie privée sera l'un des grands rendez-vous cinéma de cet automne. Le film d'abord présenté hors compétition à Cannes a fait la tournée des festivals, et il sort enfin partout en France.Dans Vie privée, Jodie Foster campe Lilian Steiner, une psychiatre reconnue. Un jour, elle apprend la mort de l'une de ses patientes. Troublée, Lilian se persuade qu'il s'agit d'un assassinat, elle décide alors de mener son enquête... Un film savoureux qui mélange les genres entre comédie policière et une pointe de thriller et de drame.Vie privée de Rebecca Zlotowski avec Jodie Foster, Daniel Auteuil, Virginie Efira, Vincent Lacoste et un large casting arrive au cinéma le 26 novembre 2025CréditsJournaliste : Brigitte BaronnetMontage : Constance Mathews Hébergé par Audion. Visitez https://www.audion.fm/fr/privacy-policy pour plus d'informations.
Anything could happen and it probably will. Your own Budget Bingo card here and join in!https://bingobaker.com/#6926e46b7bd2d96e"By tradition, the Chancellor, unlike Ministers at the despatch box at any other time of the year, may drink alcohol during the Budget Speech if they wish." - parliament.ukStiggy @alexgroundwater and I will observe this tradition, live, during our broadcast, in solidarity with Britain's taxpayers.Alex Groundwater, aka Housing Stig, is a lifelong friend and a former Programme Director at the FT, Sony and Cisco. He's also a stats junkie and can't help himself but use public data to create graphs that debunk mainstream myths. Follow him on X to see his handiwork. https://x.com/alexgroundwater All my links: https://linktr.ee/movinghomewithcharlieSupport the showFollow me on X for daily updates: https://x.com/moving_charlie
CELÝ ROZHOVOR V DÉLCE 64 MIN. JEN NA HTTPS://HEROHERO.CO/CESTMIR A HTTPS://FORENDORS.CZ/CESTMIR „Jsem možná až naivně optimistický,“ říká youtuber, streamer a spisovatel Radek Starý alias Sterakdary, který dokáže mluvit o úspěchu stejně lehce jako o tom, co ho formovalo. Vypráví o komunitě sledujících, kterou bere jako „kámoše“, o tom, proč odmítá spolupráce, které nejdou dohromady s jeho přesvědčením a proč je pro něj přirozené být otevřený. Popisuje, jak to, kým dnes je, má v mnoha směrech původ v dětství - v době, kdy „každá věc byla vzácná“ poté, co jeho rodina spadla do dluhů kvůli ručení a on sám nosil jednu mikinu tak dlouho, až mu bylo řečeno, že to nejde. Mluví také o kinetóze, která ho izolovala od vrstevníků, i o tom, jak utíkal do fantazie, kde hledá útočiště dodnes. „Ať už je to v rámci her nebo knížek. Mám velkou vizuální představivost. Co mě napadne, můžu živě vidět,“ popisuje Starý vlastnost, která je dozajista dobrým předpokladem pro jeho současné řemeslo. A mluví i o tom, jak dlouho mu trvalo vůbec připustit, že se v jeho životě něco mění - třeba když poprvé natankoval plnou nádrž bez toho, aby sledoval čísla na stojanu a řekl si: „To je dobrá část života.“ Dnes přitom stojí Starý za rekordním projektem Startovače: na svou knižní trilogii Exarie vybral přes 12 milionů korun. „Prodáváš zážitek být součástí něčeho,“ říká, ale zároveň přiznává, že mnohem víc než kvalita knih lidi zajímá až „cenovka“, která jeho tvorbě dala nový rozměr. Přitom pořád věří na disciplínu jako na „sval, který můžeš trénovat“ a na to, že úspěch není o náhodě, ale o tom, že co si člověk neudělá sám, nemá. Jak se z kluka, který byl zvyklý nic nemít, stal autor, jemuž přispělo pět tisíc lidí? Co znamená mít komunitu, kterou člověk zná tak dobře, že ví, kdo má nemocného psa nebo mění práci? A dá se v době sociálních sítí vůbec zůstat „naivním optimistou“, který si občas vypne data a před světem se chrání vlastním rozumem? Poslechněte si celý rozhovor.
durée : 00:07:13 - Qu'est-ce qu'on mange ce soir ? - Aujourd'hui dans Qu'est-ce qu'on mange ce soir ? sur ICI Lorraine, la fine équipe s'intéresse à un fruit de saison réconfortant : la châtaigne. Entre tradition, chaleur et gourmandise, le chef Kevin Meige de l'Excelsior partage sa façon savoureuse de la sublimer en cuisine. Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les autres épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France.
Chaque matin, l'équipe vous parle du con du jour.Hébergé par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Episode #173 of Bears Film Room | Bears Bye Week: Insider Links Chicago to Star D-LinemanWith the Bears on their bye week, Dave and Ficky dive into the latest buzz surrounding Chicago's potential pursuit of a star defensive lineman. Could Ryan Poles be cooking something big?We break down the insider report, what it means for the Bears' defense, and how this could reshape the rest of the season. Plus, some much-needed midseason thoughts as the team regroups.
Welcome to Episode 32 of season 4 of The vaguely Vaping related Podcast Today we discuss new stuff ... well, it was new when we recorded this. Aspire Nautilus 3SR: https://www.ecigzoo.co.uk/products/aspire-nautilus-3sr-tank Aspire Zelos M80 https://www.ecigzoo.co.uk/products/aspire-zelos-m80-mod Vekto² DIY Rebuild Tool Kit By Graph-X https://ecigone.co.uk/products/vekto-diy-rebuild-tool-kit-by-graph-x GTX One Pro Mod By Vaporesso https://www.evolutionvaping.co.uk/products/gtx-one-pro-mod-by-vaporesso R3coil R3 RDA https://www.instagram.com/reel/DOE6CFgEgLl/# Enjoy Chandler, Jimmy & dave
We threw this one open to our listeners, with Jack and Ed punctuating things whilst getting views from Alfie, Chris, Stu, Fraser, Ollie, Tinty John, Dave, Iwan and a whole host of Twitterers and Blueskyers who replied to our appeal for post-match thoughts on the home defeat to Bristol Rovers. It's not the most uplifting listen, but huge thanks to everyone who contributed.As always, you can contact us via your social media platform of choice, and you can also donate as little as £2 via our ko-fi page towards our running costs - with a special gift coming next month for all monthly contributors. Thanks as always to the Riverside Sports Bar (the home of great sport and burgers in Newport) for their support; we'll be there after the Gillingham match for a live event if you want to come and say hullo. Thanks too to Tinty & The Bucket Hats for letting us use Discoland as our theme tune. Our outro music is Virgo by Sean T.We hope to be back next weekend with an Ian Street match diary from Tranmere. But until then: look after yourselves, look after each other, and above all – as always – Keep It County! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Sa carrière d'acteur est peut-être la plus belle qu'ait connu Hollywood ; mais qui fut, derrière Ben-Hur, Charlton Heston ? Mention légales : Vos données de connexion, dont votre adresse IP, sont traités par Radio Classique, responsable de traitement, sur la base de son intérêt légitime, par l'intermédiaire de son sous-traitant Ausha, à des fins de réalisation de statistiques agréées et de lutte contre la fraude. Ces données sont supprimées en temps réel pour la finalité statistique et sous cinq mois à compter de la collecte à des fins de lutte contre la fraude. Pour plus d'informations sur les traitements réalisés par Radio Classique et exercer vos droits, consultez notre Politique de confidentialité.Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Ce lundi 26 mai, Frédéric Simottel a reçu Thomas Chambon, fondateur de GeoRide, Philippe Dewost, fondateur de Phileos, ancien directeur général de l'EPITA, cofondateur de Wanadoo, et Augustin Sayer, cofondateur d'Ovni. Ils se sont penchés sur le but du recrutement de Jony Ive par OpenAI, et la conférence Google I/O, dans l'émission Tech & Co, la quotidienne, sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au jeudi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Nový týden znovu odstartujeme vidcastem, který jsme tentokrát natáčeli minulý pátek. I díky tomu si v něm můžete poslechnout hned dvojité dojmy z nového Dooma a vzpomínání na ty hry ze série, které nikdy nevyšly. Našimi hosty byli Marek Toušek a David Toušek, kteří hovořili mimo jiné o tom, jak u nás funguje vzdělávání v digitálních oblastech. A nechybí samozřejmě mišmaš. Ani ten Bludrův. Seznam témat 00:00 - Start 15:33 - Naše společné dojmy z Doom: The Dark Ages 51:17 - Hry ze série Doom, které nevyšly 1:08:22 - Rozhovor se zakladateli platformy Anomalia nejen o vzdělávání v herním vývoji 2:20:33 - Závěrečný mišmaš
On commence avec cette annonce du parquet de Paris qui indique que l'appel de Marine Le Pen dans l'affaire des assistants parlementaires européens pourrait avoir lieu durant l'été 2026… une bonne nouvelle au RN ?
On commence avec cette annonce du parquet de Paris qui indique que l'appel de Marine Le Pen dans l'affaire des assistants parlementaires européens pourrait avoir lieu durant l'été 2026… une bonne nouvelle au RN ?
Aujourd'hui, je reçois dans le podcast, une amie comédienne Bérangère Mcneese! Vous la connaissez peut-être grâce à ses rôles dans les séries “HPI” ou “Des gens bien”! Il se trouve qu'elle est, elle-même, quelqu'un de bien! Bonne écoute! S'inscrire à la newsletter du podcast!Rendez-vous au Théâtre de l'Oeuvre pour mon nouveau spectacle “Dédoublée”, du 5 au 29 mars du mercredi au samedi à 19h!Et en tournée, à:Rouen, le 27 févrierTours, 1er mars 2025Redon, le 8 marsBordeaux, le 12 marsJeumont, 21 marsLyon, le 26 marsToulon, 4 avrilMarseille, 17 avrilToulouse, le 16 maiPoitiers, le 21 maiNantes, le 22 maiRennes, le 23 maiBrest, le 14 novembreBruxelles, le 17 décembreLiège, le 18 décembreLille, le 5 mars 2026!Résas sur mon site internet! Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
durée : 00:01:59 - Les 80'' - par : Nicolas Demorand - La question est aussi vieille qu'Internet, et une nouvelle créature s'ajoute au bestiaire du web. Après le Panda, le bébé hippo, un nouvel animal fait l'objet d'un véritable culte sur Instagram et TikTok. C'est le Capybara, le plus grand de tous les rongeurs.
Kiwi Liam Lawson was officially made a Red Bull driver after the departure of Sergio Perez. Was Yuki done dirty by his parent team? Even more, will Liam be able to keep up with Max or will the 4 time world champion embarrass yet another teammate?
Nurses Out Loud with Melissa Schreibfeder, BSN, RN, BC-FMP – Psychiatric care in the U.S. is plagued by flawed research and unethical practices, with antidepressants like SSRIs linked to serious risks, including suicidality and sexual dysfunction. We explore the STAR*D trial scandal, ineffective treatments, and holistic approaches such as nutrient assessments, CBD, and nervous system regulation that offer safer mental health solutions.
Nurses Out Loud with Melissa Schreibfeder, BSN, RN, BC-FMP – Psychiatric care in the U.S. is plagued by flawed research and unethical practices, with antidepressants like SSRIs linked to serious risks, including suicidality and sexual dysfunction. We explore the STAR*D trial scandal, ineffective treatments, and holistic approaches such as nutrient assessments, CBD, and nervous system regulation that offer safer mental health solutions.
À l'occasion des fêtes de fin d'année, nous vous proposons de redécouvrir notre interview de la chanteuse australienne Tina Arena. Tête d'affiche du festival du Big Red Bash en juillet dernier, elle avait accepté de se livrer au micro du podcast Bouche à Bush avant de monter sur scène. Elle évoque sa présence au festival, ses projets, et son lien avec la France, le tout dans une interview intrégralement en Français.
In the Season Finale, the trio of high schoolers venture underneath the mall on their way to a ritual. If they don't put a stop to it, then a mind-shattering monster is going to end the world. And despite being old and selfish, Donald and Margaret have some tricks up their sleeve. It's up to Nick, CJ, and Misty to save the mall, the Jersey Shore, and the world! The Cast: - Daniel as CJ Milton: https://linktr.ee/danielkhargrove - Kala as Misty Davenport: https://linktr.ee/potionsandpotpourri - Cameron as Roach: https://linktr.ee/streamingrainbow - Taylor as Nick Anderson: https://linktr.ee/soyouwannabeadm - Justin as the Dungeon Master: https://linktr.ee/soyouwannabeadm --------------------------- We also have an email for questions, comments, and topic ideas Reach out to us at Soyouwannabeadm@gmail.com And CLICK HERE to support our Patreon, join our Discord, follow us on TikTok and Instagram, and see what we're up to! We Have a Twitch NOW!
Vendredi 8 novembre, Intel a été remplacé par Nvidia au sein de l'indice Dow Jones de la bourse de New-York. Une passation de pouvoir. Dans « La Story », le podcast d'actualité des « Echos », Pierrick Fay et Florian Dèbes reviennent sur le déclassement de l'ex-star des semi-conducteurs. La Story est un podcast des « Echos » présenté par Pierrick Fay. Cet épisode a été enregistré en novembre 2024. Rédaction en chef : Clémence Lemaistre. Invité : Florian Dèbes (journaliste au service High Tech des Echos). Réalisation : Willy Ganne. Chargée de production et d'édition : Michèle Warnet. Musique : Théo Boulenger. Identité graphique : Upian. Photo : Justin Sullivan/Getty Images via l'AFP. Sons : BFM Business, «Dow Jones» par The Undebites, Extrait «Le diner de cons», Intel, Euronews, Bloomberg TV, Extrait «Mon meilleur ami». Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Tête d'affiche du festival du Big Red Bash en juillet dernier, la chanteuse australienne Tina Arena a accepté de se livrer au micro du podcast Bouche à Bush avant de monter sur scène. Elle évoque sa présence au festival, ses projets, et son lien avec la France, le tous dans une interview intrégralement en Français.
What does it take to be a tough, rugged, bastard? And, is it something a man should strive to become? My guest today is a retired marine and after spending 20 years in special operations in the Marine Corps, has gone on to lead training for all Marine Raiders (after being disbanded after WWII) and developing many of the systems and leadership protocols for some of the most elite fighting members of our modern-day military. His name is John Dailey and, today, we talk about the future of combat, modern-day enlistment challenges for the US military, where mental toughness comes from and how to develop it, the issues with “moral injury” as it relates to PTSD, the rules of combat, standard operating procedures, and rules of engagement that hinder our efficacy, and how and why every man needs to become a tough, rugged bastard. SHOW HIGHLIGHTS (00:00) Episode Intro (04:02) Ethics and Challenges of Combat (18:47) Reflections on Combat Experience and Morality (26:26) History and Creation of Marine Raiders (33:04) Special Operations Deployment and Challenges (43:21) Role and Challenges in Marine Raiders (53:04) Recruitment Challenges in Military Forces (56:23) Challenges and Standards in Training (01:07:58) Appreciation for Military Service Battle Planners: Pick yours up today! Order Ryan's new book, The Masculinity Manifesto. For more information on the Iron Council brotherhood. Want maximum health, wealth, relationships, and abundance in your life? Sign up for our free course, 30 Days to Battle Ready
Would you take G's palmares, or Remco Evenepoel's? It's become a tricky question after everyone's favourite little bastard did the Olympic double last week. What a fella. Luke put that to G on the pod as the boys dug into all the action from the Olympics - and there's a lot to catch up on. We're also entering full on planning mode for our live show at the Lowry Theatre in Salford on November 8th - and to make Producer George's life a bit easier, he asked the listeners for their suggestions and got the boys to rank them. Got any ideas or know someone who deserves a shoutout? Let us know by emailing gtcc@crowdnetwork.co.uk. And if you've not got your tickets to the live show yet, head here now: https://premier.ticketek.co.uk/shows/show.aspx?sh=GERAINT24 See you next week. Watts Occurring is powered by Eurosport Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
This episode is sponsored by Magi Ancestral Supplements, whose leading team of neuroscientists, ethnophamacologists, and phytochemists, has unlocked the formulation of an ancient Eastern psychoactive elixir that was lost to time.Lets talk about ancient alchemy today! Today I chat with Dr. Shauheen Etminan, the founder of VCENNA an advanced biotech company specializing in natural drug discovery for mental health, seamlessly blends ancient Eastern medicine with modern science. As a scientist, researcher, product developer, and dedicated entrepreneur, Dr. Etminan is committed to creating holistic wellness solutions rooted in the convergence of medicine and …mysticism. Armed with an MSc and Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering, Dr. Etminan's expertise extends beyond the technicals. He is a mystic who has been practicing Sufi whirling meditation for many years, reflecting his deep commitment to holistic well-being. Renowned as a world expert in phytochemical extraction technology, Dr. Etminan explores the realm of psychedelics with a particular focus on ancient texts. Dr. Etminan and his team have unveiled neurological health properties in beta-carbolines. This groundbreaking discovery has led to the formulation and launch of multiple psychoactive supplements designed to promote longevity, mindfulness, and therapeutic benefits under Magi Ancestral Supplements.Ancestral Magi is co-founded by Dr. Shauheen Etminan and has the legendary Dr. Dennis McKenna on its scientific advisory board. They have combined modern neuroscience with ancient Eastern medicine to formulate 100% natural nootropic supplements that are psychoactive and legal!Magi's products' primary group of compounds are beta-carbolines extracted from the sacred plant, Espand, also known as Syrian rue. Their products promote neuro-longevity, mindfulness, and mental wellbeing. Did you know that Espand has the same psychoactive compounds that exist in the Ayahuasca vine? I'm not relating to DMT, but beta-carbolines. Experience the magic of their supplement, Stard, Magi's meditation supplement, which has been my favorite. It provides 60 to 75 minutes of pure bliss, where the mind stops wandering and can be present in the here and now. (Whether you're new to meditation or a seasoned practitioner, Stard is an ancestral catalyst that will take you further on your journey) Magi's supplements are fully legal and currently available in the US. Stay tuned, as they will be available in Europe in July. Check their website out at www.ancestral.magi.com.As the valued audience of The New Health Club podcast, you can use the coupon TNHC10 to get a 10% discount.Follow MagiInstagram @ancestralmagiWebsite: www.ancestralmagi.comShop here: Magi Homepage: https://ancestralmagi.com/ref/9/?utm_source=podcast&utm_medium=&utm_campaign=THNC.D1.Q22024&utm_id=20240606Magi Shop Page: https://ancestralmagi.com/shop/ref/9/?utm_source=podcast&utm_medium=TNHC&utm_campaign=THNC.D1.Q22024&utm_id=20240606Magi Stard Meditation Supplement: https://ancestralmagi.com/product/stard-deep-meditation-supplement/ref/9/?utm_source=podcast&utm_medium=TNHC&utm_campaign=THNC.D1.Q22024&utm_id=20240606 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Découvrez Hedy Lamarr, à la fois star du cinéma hollywoodien et mère de la technologie Wi-Fi ! Née en 1914 en Autriche, Hedy Lamarr devient très tôt une star du cinéma : à 18 ans, elle est une des premières actrices montrées nue à l'écran dans un film grand public, Extase. C'est un scandale, mais elle devient par la même occasion une célébrité et part poursuivre sa carrière de l'autre côté de l'Atlantique. Lamarr parvient à signer un contrat avec l'un des plus gros studios hollywoodiens, MGM. Mais l'actrice ne compte pas se limiter au cinéma. Sa passion, ce sont les inventions ! Retrouvez plus de portraits de femmes inspirantes dans la série “Les pionnières”, disponible avec l'abonnement ACDH + sur Apple Podcasts. https://podcasts.apple.com/fr/podcast/les-pionni%C3%A8res/id1736986468 "Au cœur de l'histoire" est un podcast Europe 1 Studio- Auteure et Présentatrice : Virginie Girod - Production : Caroline Garnier- Réalisation : Clément Ibrahim- Direction artistique : Julien Tharaud- Composition de la musique originale : Julien Tharaud et Sébastien Guidis- Edition et Diffusion : Nathan Laporte- Coordination des partenariats : Marie Corpet- Visuel : Sidonie Mangin Bibliographie :Hedy Lamarr, Extasy and Me, la folle autobiographie de Hedy Lamarr, réédition avec cahier photos, Séguier, 2018. Découvrez l'abonnement "Au Coeur de l'Histoire +" et accédez à des heures de programmes, des archives inédites, des épisodes en avant-première et une sélection d'épisodes sur des grandes thématiques. Profitez de cette offre sur Apple Podcasts dès aujourd'hui !
Écoutez la suite de la vie d'Hedy Lamarr, à la fois icône du cinéma et « mère » du Wi-Fi. Beauté fatale, ses traits ont inspiré le visage de Blanche-neige pour le film d'animation Disney. Mais Lamarr ne brille pas que par son physique, elle est surtout d'une grande intelligence. Familière du monde de l'armement depuis son premier mari, Hedy Lamarr va révolutionner le secteur. Alors que la guerre sous-marine fait des ravages, elle travaille sur une invention pour rendre les torpilles indétectables à l'ennemi durant la Seconde Guerre mondiale. Sans sa technologie, pas de GPS, ni Bluetooth, ni Wi-Fi ! Retrouvez plus de portraits de femmes inspirantes dans la série "Les pionnières", disponible avec l'abonnement ACDH + sur Apple Podcasts. https://podcasts.apple.com/fr/podcast/les-pionni%C3%A8res/id1736986468 "Au cœur de l'histoire" est un podcast Europe 1 Studio- Auteure et Présentatrice : Virginie Girod - Production : Caroline Garnier- Réalisation : Clément Ibrahim- Direction artistique : Julien Tharaud- Composition de la musique originale : Julien Tharaud et Sébastien Guidis- Edition et Diffusion : Nathan Laporte- Coordination des partenariats : Marie Corpet- Visuel : Sidonie Mangin Bibliographie :Hedy Lamarr, Extasy and Me, la folle autobiographie de Hedy Lamarr, réédition avec cahier photos, Séguier, 2018. Découvrez l'abonnement "Au Coeur de l'Histoire +" et accédez à des heures de programmes, des archives inédites, des épisodes en avant-première et une sélection d'épisodes sur des grandes thématiques. Profitez de cette offre sur Apple Podcasts dès aujourd'hui !
Dans cet épisode Andréa Brusque vous parle d'une icône glamour du Hollywood des années 40. Sacrée plus belle femme du monde, à son époque, elle était aussi belle que brillante. Scientifique méconnue pendant longtemps, c'est aussi grâce à elle que nous avons aujourd'hui des technologies telles que le bluetooth et le wifi. Son nom : Hedy Lamarr. De sa vie d'actrice à ses inventions, découvrez sa True Story. Une jeune fille déjà ambitieuse Hedwig Kiesler est née le 9 novembre 1914 à Vienne. Fille d'une famille juive, son père était banquier et sa mère une ancienne pianiste de renom. Elle a grandi dans un milieu privilégié qui lui permet d'apprendre plusieurs langues telles que l'anglais ou l'italien. Jeune fille très curieuse, elle adore quand son père lui explique comment fonctionnent les technologies de l'époque. Pleine d'énergie, Hedwig a des semaines bien chargées entre l'équitation, la danse et le piano. Elle parvient aussi à garder du temps pour se consacrer à sa passion : bricoler des gadgets. A l'âge de 13 ans, Hedwig s'intéresse ensuite beaucoup au cinéma. Un jour, elle va avec ses parents voir “Métropolis” de Fritz Lang et là, c'est la révélation. Hedwig veut devenir actrice et fera tout pour réaliser son rêve. Pour découvrir d'autres récits passionnants, cliquez ci-dessous : Le crash du vol Fuerza 571, l'une des pires tragédies humaines : un accident dramatique (1/4) Le crash du vol Fuerza 571, l'une des pires tragédies humaines : des restes humains comme dernier repas (2/4) Le crash du vol Fuerza 571, l'une des pires tragédies humaines : seuls en enfer (3/4) Le crash du vol Fuerza 571, l'une des pires tragédies humaines : l'expédition du dernier espoir (4/4) Un podcast Bababam Originals Ecriture : Clémence Setti Voix : Andréa Brusque Production : Bababam (montage Célia Brondeau, Antoine Berry Roger) Première diffusion le 9 février 2023. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Think antidepressants are a guaranteed cure for depression? Think again. This episode exposes a hoax: the major study of The STAR*D, touting the effectiveness of antidepressants, was riddled with fraud and protocol violations. Join Robert Whitaker, award-winning journalist and founder of Mad in America, as he dissects this scandal and its impact. We dive into the web of financial interests and potential conflicts of interest that influenced the research, and discuss how this deception has shaped public perception and potentially harmed countless patients. Discover how Mad in America is fighting for a more transparent and holistic approach to mental health, challenging the pharmaceutical industry's grip and empowering individuals to take control of their well-being.Love the show? Subscribe, rate, review, and share!Here's How »Join the On Your Mind Community today:journeysdream.orgTwitterInstagramFacebookYouTube
Go to http://Claritin.com right now for a discount so you can Live Claritin Clear. Use as directed.Try AG1 and get a FREE 1-year supply of Vitamin D3+K2 AND 5 free AG1 Travel Packs with your first purchase exclusively at https://drinkAG1.com/ADVSo much happening in China and the USA right now...Laowhy86 - China is Literally Sinking - https://youtu.be/4-NYz79Pcp4?si=BMOMnyKH75Cj90oaSupport the show here and see the Monday Exclusive show Xiaban Hou! - https://www.patreon.com/advpodcasts China Fact Chasers - Please subscribe!https://www.youtube.com/c/ChinaFactChasers Support the show here and see the Monday Exclusive show Xiaban Hou! - https://www.patreon.com/advpodcastsADVChina Subreddit - https://reddit.com/r/ADVChinaCartoon feat. Jüri Pootsmann - I Remember U https://soundcloud.com/nocopyrightsounds Track : Cartoon feat. Jüri Pootsmann - I Remember U Some sources - https://www.axios.com/2024/04/24/joe-biden-tik-tok-ban-bill https://www.politico.eu/article/eu-china-trade-war-nuctech-xi-jinping-von-der-leyen-ev/ https://www.cnn.com/2024/04/26/politics/blinken-china-interview-intl-hnk/index.html https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/berklee-college-music-student-convicted-stalking-threatening-individual-promoting-democracy https://www.justice.gov/usao-ma/pr/former-berklee-college-music-student-sentenced-prison-threatening-individual-promoting https://www.rfa.org/english/news/china/china-ambassador-harvard-speech-interrupted-04232024162731.html https://www.fbi.gov/investigate/counterintelligence/transnational-repression ♪ [non copyright music] Lofi Type Beat - imperfect | aesthetic lofi music / Lofiru Link : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YTQAjKBNp8g
In today's episode of the Psychedelic Therapy Frontiers, the podcast, Dr. Steve Thayer and Dr. Reid Robison deconstruct depression. They review recent research on psilocybin's effects on depression, discuss their own experiences with depression, explain how depression is defined and diagnosed, explore what makes depression “treatment resistant”, review the famous (or infamous depending on who you ask) STAR*D study, explore recent research on what makes psychedelic therapy effective, and much more.Learn more about our podcast at https://numinus.com/podcast/Learn more about psychedelic therapy training opportunities at https://numinus.com/training/Learn more about our clinical trials at https://www.numinus.com/clinical-trials Learn more about Numinus at https://numinus.com/Email us at ptfpodcast@numinus.com Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drstevethayer/https://www.instagram.com/innerspacedoctor/https://www.instagram.com/numinushealth/
Today, Theb and Tim discuss Theb's involvement in the TikTok ban and America's involvement in a genocide that has now claimed the lives of over 200 humanitarians, most recently 7 workers from World Central Kitchen.News Sources- Audio - ADL Director says Israel has a "Gen Z TikTok Problem" (note - this audio was confirmed as genuine by the ADL)- CNN - Israel attacked aid workers ‘systematically, car by car,' charity founder says, as fury builds over deadly s trike- Al Jazeera - Israel's war on Gaza updates: Biden threatens policy change on Gaza- NIH - Israel attacks Red Cross am bulancesSUBSCRIBE HEREATP Presents - YOU TUBE C HANNELATP Presents - APPLE PODCASTS CHANNEL America! The Podcast - SPOTIFYOther ATP Presents ShowsRoad Trip! A Journey Across America - APPLE, SPOTIFY, YOUTUBE America! The Conversation - APPLE, SPOTIFY, YOUTUBE I Do Not Trust This Person - APPLE, SPOTIFY
Check out Binchicken's Discord: https://discord.com/invite/bfggR9pRpmCheck out our STRAIN DATABASE aka CODEX: https://codex.thebreederssyndicate.com/Join this channel to get access to perks:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCp9mauDnr-JxOiG_ek4BWag/joinOr check out our Patreon here:https://www.patreon.com/breederssyndicateOUR MERCH STORE IS LIVE!!!! BREEDERS SYNDICATE LINKS: https://linktr.ee/riotseedsBREEDERS SYNDICATE MERCH! - https://www.syndicategear.comBreeders Syndicate website: http://www.breederpodcast.comIntro / Outro countresy of Sight of Wonders / Approaching the Middle East / courtesy of www.epidemicsound.com
Clear Skies. Clean Trash. Stard's Dad's Jordans. Heartbreak Feels Good Part II. Plane. You Can't Take The Reverb Factory Out Of The Band. K-Pop Management. From HBO's The Minx, it's actor/comedian/dancer Oscar Montoya!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.