Podcast appearances and mentions of stephen jay

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Best podcasts about stephen jay

Latest podcast episodes about stephen jay

That Millwall Podcast
Millwall walk 500 miles as Tanganga returns

That Millwall Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2024 54:15


Omer, Stephen Jay and Ben bring you their thoughts as Japhet Tanganga becomes the second Millwall signing of the summer window following Macauly Langstaff earlier this week. If you're listening on audio please be sure to follow us and leave a review, if on YouTube like and subscribe and provide us a comment. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

walk omer millwall tanganga japhet tanganga stephen jay
Monday Moms
Obituary - Stephen Jay Bittman

Monday Moms

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2023 2:38


Stephen Bittman, 73, of Glen Allen, VA, formerly of Binghamton, NY, passed away on Sunday, August, 6, 2023, after a brief illness. Stephen was born on January 23, 1950, in Binghamton, NY. Stephen was predeceased by his mother and father, Helen Pitler Bittman, and Edward Bittman and brother-in-law, Edward Carroll. They will always remain in our hearts. He is survived by his beloved wife and best friend, Nancy (Becker), cherished daughter Lonni (Andrew) Rosenthal and adored son, Brian (Kyla) Bittman, sister Judith Carroll, uncle Lawrence Pitler, and the lights of his life, grandchildren Brody and Tessa Rosenthal. Stephen graduated Binghamton...Article LinkSupport the show

ny va obituaries binghamton bittman stephen jay nancy becker
Drinks with Tony
Stephen Jay Schwartz #238

Drinks with Tony

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2023 61:12


Stephen Jay Schwartz is the author of Stormy Whether or not we believe it is Still Stormy Weather. We discuss: The horrors of online dating. Stephen's father's suicide. When your […]

schwartz stephen jay
Go(o)d Mornings with CurlyNikki
Your Light is of the Essence ✨

Go(o)d Mornings with CurlyNikki

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2023 10:15


I don't speak in words. I speak in Light.I speak in Love.   That feeling of Peace, that's My language. It's your sign, 'that something is being prepared for you that only you can receive'*. I Love you, Niknikki@curlynikki.com   Please help me keep the show ad free + Get Merch!▶▶https://www.patreon.com/goodmornings________________________________Today's Quotes:  p.s. Hawaii trip where mom and I met Stephen Jay (recently transitioned

Salt Lake Dirt
Stephen Jay Schwartz - Episode 100

Salt Lake Dirt

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2023 64:51


Stephen Jay Schwartz returns to Salt Lake Dirt for our 100th episode. Stephen was actually our guest back on episode one so I'm thrilled he could return for this special episode. I asked Stephen back in 2020 to be on the show because I'm a huge fan of his work. I love his novels Boulevard and Beat (Hayden Glass LAPD detective series). His nonfiction collection Hollywood vs the Author is not to be missed if you're interested in how some novels are adapted for Hollywood. His new book is called Stormy Whether or Not We Believe it is Still Stormy Weather. It is a collection of Stephen's short stories, poetry and other writings. I highly recommend it. Thanks for listening! Kyler @saltlakedirt

RNZ: Morning Report
High power demand forces blackouts in some areas

RNZ: Morning Report

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2021 6:35


Thousands of New Zealanders had their power cut off last night on one of the coldest nights of the year. It wasn't a power cut, but a deliberate rolling blackout to manage electricity demand which had reached an all-time high. Transpower's general manager Stephen Jay spoke to Corin Dann.

Rock com Ciência
Insetos Sociais (S12E25)

Rock com Ciência

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2021 72:52


Neste novo episódio do Rock com Ciência, conversamos com o Professor Dr. Weyder Santana sobre insetos sociais. Existem diferentes graus de socialidade? O que são castas e como elas funcionam? É realmente vantajoso viver em sociedade? Descubra a resposta para essas e outras perguntas no episódio de hoje! Participantes: Francisco Sassi (@sassichico), Beatriz Alonso (@btz_alonso) e Weyder Santana (weyder.santana@ufv.br) Edição por: Beatriz Alonso Aconselhamos o uso de fones de ouvido para uma melhor experiência! Rock 1: Ants Marching - David Matthews Band Rock 2: Killing in the Name - Rage Against the Machine Rock 3: All My Friends are Insects - Weezer Ah, você não gosta das músicas? É uma pena, mas não tem problema! Agora você pode ouvir a versão sem músicas! Esse é o nosso Lado B!   Assine o Lado B para sempre ter acesso ao episódio editado sem as músicas! Gostou do episódio? Não gostou do episódio? Encontrou alguma falha gritante (ou pequena que seja)? Envie seu comentário! Pode ser aqui mesmo no site ou pelo email rock@rockcomciencia.com.br. Ou ainda pelo Twitter (@rockcomciencia) ou Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/rockcomciencia/)! Referências citadas durante o episódio: https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Donald_Hamilton Hamilton, W. (1964). "The genetical evolution of social behaviour. I https://www.uvm.edu/pdodds/files/papers/others/1964/hamilton1964a.pdf Hamilton, W. (1964). "The genetical evolution of social behaviour. II https://joelvelasco.net/teaching/167win10/Hamilton64b-thegeneticalevolutionofsocialbehavior.pdf Hamilton, W. (1966). "The moulding of senescence by natural selection" http://max2.ese.u-psud.fr/epc/conservation/PDFs/HIPE/Hamilton1966.pdf Richard Dawkins, autor de O Gene Egoísta (1976) Edward Osborne Wilson, autor de "Sociobiology: the New Synthesis" GOULD, Stephen Jay. Darwin e os grandes enigmas da vida. 2 ed. São Paulo: Martins Fontes, 1999. 274p https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Osborne_Wilsonhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_von_Frisch   Apis mellifera - abelha melífera ocidental Apis cerana - abelha melífera oriental Apis dorsata Apis florea Abelha melífera no Brasil é a abelha africanizada, um polihíbrido entre as subespécies ou raças abaixo: Linhagens europeias trazidas para o Brasil Apis mellifera iberica (não durou) Apis mellifera mellifera (alemã) Apis mellifera carnica (carniola) Apis mellifera ligustica (italiana) Linhagem africana Apis mellifera scutellata https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Donald_Hamilton

Joe Kelley Radio
Bassist Stephen Jay (Weird Al Yankovic) Interview

Joe Kelley Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2021 19:58


Stephen Jay is a composer, bassist, vocalist, and multi-instrumentalist. His original music is bass-driven, innovative, and exotic, blending world influenced polyrhythmic grooves with elements of Jazz and Rock. His combinations of ethnic and modern instruments and styles result in unique, richly textured musical images. Stephen's bass recording credits include 4 Grammy winners and many Grammy nominated albums. He is the credited bassist, backing vocalist and orchestrator on "Weird Al" Yankovic's recent Billboard #1 album, "Mandatory Fun", also on 9 RIAA Gold and 5 Platinum albums, doubling on backing vocals, and other instruments including banjo, flute, keyboards, dundun, gulu, percussion and backing vocals. His past work includes bass performance and recording with Wayne Shorter, Hugh Masekela, Alex Acuna, Luis Conte, Rick Derringer, Isah Hamani, Joe Higgs, Betty Buckley, and Jimmy Haskell. He is an original and continuing member of "Weird Al" Yankovic's band, recording and touring since 1982. Stephen's own polymetric funk band, "Ak & Zuie", has toured the US, Canada, and Australia, and has appeared on PBS. He was voted one of "Today's 20 Top Bassists" by "International Musician and Recording World" magazine. Originally recorded November 2016 www.stephenjay.com www.joekelleyradio.com

New Growth with Nikki Walton
Ep. 18 – A Glimpse Into Your Spiritual Identity with Stephen Jay

New Growth with Nikki Walton

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2021 68:52


Author and spiritual teacher, Stephen Jay, joins Nikki to discuss the Infinite Way, Herb Fitch, Joel Goldsmith, and discovering your true identity by remembering who you are.Stephen Jay is an author and spiritual teacher whose lifework alongside his wife, Lynn Jay, is aimed at sharing the wisdom teachings of transformational 20th century mystic, Herb Fitch. Chosen to carry the Infinite Way teachings lineage started by Joel Goldsmith; Stephen, alongside Lynn, has written three volumes of the Condensed Wisdom of Herb Fitch, and continues to share the deep wisdom encased in discovering one's spiritual identity.Wake up when you wake up: Join Nikki for a daily new morning podcast dharma series: Go(o)d Mornings with Curly NikkiPrivacy Policy and California Privacy Notice.

RNZ: Morning Report
Transpower downplaying speculation about problems from low lake levels

RNZ: Morning Report

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2021 5:38


The national grid operator Transpower is downplaying speculation about low hydro lake levels and the potential for power shortages. The lakes are at their lowest levels in 25 years, and the Tiwai Point aluminium smelter, which uses 13 percent of the country's power, has agreed to cut back to help ensure security of the electricity supply. Stephen Jay is the general manager of operations at Transpower.

RNZ: Morning Report
Transpower downplaying speculation about problems from low lake levels

RNZ: Morning Report

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2021 5:38


The national grid operator Transpower is downplaying speculation about low hydro lake levels and the potential for power shortages. The lakes are at their lowest levels in 25 years, and the Tiwai Point aluminium smelter, which uses 13 percent of the country's power, has agreed to cut back to help ensure security of the electricity supply. Stephen Jay is the general manager of operations at Transpower.

Salt Lake Dirt
Stephen Jay Schwartz - Episode 01

Salt Lake Dirt

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2020 76:55


"Los Angeles Times Bestselling Author Stephen Jay Schwartz spent a number of years as the Director of Development for Wolfgang Petersen (Das Boot, In the Line of Fire, Air Force One, Troy, The Perfect Storm) where he worked to develop screenplays for production. His two novels, Boulevard and Beat,  follow the journey of sex-addicted LAPD detective Hayden Glass. Stephen  was a judge for the 2012 Edgar and ITW Awards. His work was included in  the short story collection The Los Angeles Fiction Anthology alongside T.C. Boyle, published by Red Hen Press, as well as the short story collection Jewish Noir, published by PM Press. Stephen is a regular moderator at the Los Angeles Times Festival of  Books and judged the Los Angeles Times Book Prize in the  mystery/thriller category in 2015 and 2016. His film work has been  exhibited in the A.F.I. Los Angeles International Film Festival and the  Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC. He is currently editing a compilation  of short, non-fiction stories called Hollywood versus the Author for Rare Bird Books as well as writing his third novel, a standalone  mystery/thriller. Stephen received his MFA in Creative Writing from UC  Riverside and is currently on faculty at Emerson College Los Angeles." (http://www.stephenjayschwartz.com/) SLDirt Podcast Credits:  Host: Kyler Bingham Music: Open Licensed Music Podcast - Ralph Wacksworth; Free Salt Lake by Politically Erect. Intro/Outro Spoken Word: Paul "Mousie" Garner

Pa Soup
From Baba Ganoush to Bach

Pa Soup

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2020 60:16


Pa Soup welcomes Stephen Jay into the studio. Among many other credits, Steve is the former Dean of the Manhattan School of Music. In a wide ranging conversation, Art and Jake learn about Dean Jay's early days in New York City, along with his ongoing love for Middle Eastern food. Cheers to one helluva debut special guest. Check out all the show notes on Instagram @PaSoupShow !

In This Climate
Earth Day Live

In This Climate

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2020 60:37


On the 50th anniversary of Earth Day, we went live on Facebook to reflect on historical Earth Days and discuss present issues in environmental health and climate communications. 6:45 - James Capshew and Ellen Ketterson 25:45 - Janet McCabe and Stephen Jay 39:30 - Jim Shanahan and Enrique Saenz

Who Gets What?
What is Public Health

Who Gets What?

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2020 28:46


Dr. Stephen Jay, a founder of the I.U. Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health, answers the question:  What is public health?   Do autocrats utilize public health to win elections? Do domestic violence, suicide by guns, coughing in church, or arthritis, constitute public health problems?  Do they infect like a virus. Answers are here. A movie suggestion appears at the end.  

viruses public health stephen jay richard m fairbanks
Palaeo After Dark
Podcast 182 - The Pain; Happy Birthday

Palaeo After Dark

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2020 92:26


The gang celebrates their 7th anniversary by inflicting pain on themselves for your amusement by discussing a classic paper, Gould's "Paradox of the First Tier". They discuss the paper in its historical context, and also how our knowledge of mass extinctions has changed and evolved from this paper. Meanwhile, James comes up with unconventional ways to communicate, Amanda may need some more whiskey to get through this, and Curt is all smiles.   Up-Goer Five (Curt Edition): Our friends have fun on the day that comes around every year which is when they first started doing this thing. They talk about a paper that is old but looking to the time ahead. This paper is interested in how things die, especially when a lot of things die. There are bad times in the past when lots of things have died all at once. This paper points out that these bad times might be really important. These bad times when lots of things die all at once might act to change the direction of how life is changing through time. Life might be changing in one way and doing just fine, but when one of these bad times happens the things that were doing well might do bad but the things that were doing bad might do really well. Our friends talk about how the ideas brought up in this old paper have changed over time.   References: Gould, Stephen Jay. "The paradox of the first tier: an agenda for paleobiology." Paleobiology 11.1 (1985): 2-12.

Planetary Gig Talk
#104 Nathan Black, Rhythmist (and financial guy)

Planetary Gig Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2019 53:30


I met Nathan at Victor Wooten’s Spirit of Music camp. We were talking about random stuff and Nathan said he runs a research firm and investment fund in which he focuses on volatility to understand the dynamics of markets, which he said relates to music in that volatility is really just vibrations, like music. So, I knew we had to do a podcast interview. Nathan grew up in a musical family; both of his parents played music. Nathan distinctly remembers seeing some kid play a drum solo in a talent show in 5th grade and knowing instantly he was going to play drums the rest of his life (he also plays bass and guitar). He is into listening, and sometimes hooks up to an EEG when playing, where he can observe his heart rate, brain waves, and internal rhythms. Nathan says, “The groove emerges from listening.” And being present starts from listening, too. “Everything emerges from listening and feeling.” Nathan says money is like a language; it’s a medium of exchange that conveys economic intent. Exchanging value is fundamental to cooperation, he says, and that we can express ourselves through money. “Money is a tool of communication,” he says. Music and money are both about expression. Nathan believes we can think of music as a life form, as Stephen Jay says, and then also as an organism, and the same could be said about money. How markets change is musical, he says. The market is like macro vibrations arising from micro vibrations, and is interrelated to so many things, just like music. He also says fear manifests in markets, and that humans are often playing out of tune in the markets, because of different national versions of money and tribal mindsets. To get the system operating better, Nathan believes that it starts with listening and understanding flows of money or blocks to the money flow. He says there is a lot of overlap in dynamics of money and music, how things change, the vibrations of the world, and Nathan thinks the markets are more natural than people think. He says we can be more in tune with our vibrations through this understanding.

Planetary Gig Talk
#101 Stephen Jay, Bassist Composer

Planetary Gig Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2019 83:22


Stephen Jay is a fabulous musician, composer, and really smart and spiritual guy! He has played based in Weird Al Yankovic’s band for decades, but also has amazing insights and stories, such as music in Africa during his younger years. He also is working on new discoveries about rhythm and pitch, as he explains in this podcast. We recorded this under the Pavilion one afternoon at Wooten Woods during Spirit of Music Camp. Stephen’s mother was a beautiful pianist and his father played several instruments. So, seeing his mother in such joy while playing, Stephen knew when he was only about 5 years old that he wanted to be a musician. Music was simply paramount around the house when he was young, he says. He started piano first, then guitar when he was about 10, and bass when he joined a band at 13. His high school group Covington Tower was good enough to get a record deal! He majored in music and composition in college, and was fortunate to hang around with some real luminaries on the cutting edge of music, including John Cage! Nonetheless, he’d always been inspired by African drumming, so he and his wife Barbara left for West Africa in 1971. It was quite a trip to get there, which he describes in the podcast, but central to the experience was that the Africans he met in the villages were really still of the hunter/gatherer culture and they had a really special relationship with music. Musical instruments were seen as living beings, and “music nourished every phase of life; … music was everywhere, and it was alive and beautiful.” Everyone did music, and musicians were not in some rarefied atmosphere as today in modern areas. Stephen says, they had no written religion, other than “a sanctity and respect for all things, including inanimate things.” He says quantum physics has shown this to be correct. There was also no money or ownership out in the wild; everyone shared everything. He says Africans felt “music was a life form, not an art form. Gigantic, spanning the entire universe, and all know time, that lives, and needs musicians to help it live, at least in the audio realm.” He is currently exploring pitch and rhythm and you will have to listen to understand it. Essentially, he says, harmonic intervals each have their own signature rhythms. You can check out www.stephenjay.com for an article on this topic, among others. Stephen says that we have tapped into music to make a better world; look at how much peace, fellowship, and brotherly love music has brought to us. He says music has an inescapable beauty. When you witness something so beautiful and so much larger than yourself, it diminishes ego, and with that you worry less of things that are to come, have less fear of the unknown, and so we can get to more love and peace. “Music is sacred; it’s not a commodity.” He also says, “Music can help us distrust our fears.” “Music, and art, is our savior,” says Stephen Jay.

Planetary Gig Talk
#100 Roy "Futureman" Wooten

Planetary Gig Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2019 69:41


Roy “Futureman” Wooten has been playing music with his brothers his entire life. I was fortunate to be able to talk with him for the 100th Planetary Gig Talk podcast at Wooten Woods while there for Victor Wooten’s Spirit of Music camp. Please check out this amazing performer and futurist thinker. Here are some of the conversational tidbits for you: - Roy says artists and musicians are carrying the weight of the world, because what we do with art will speak for the ages. - His mother loved music, especially listening to Nina Simone on the Sunday morning radio, and she said that music helps people get through the week, and could carry people through tough times. - Roy says, “Music is taking us on a journey, and … if we have a question about something, the question is the beginning of the quest; … if you stick with your questions, it’s gonna take you on a quest with intention.” He says, “You don’t know how you’re influencing people when you are doing what you love.” - Roy discovered the seminal book A Course in Miracles when he was young; he still remembers the line in the ad he saw from the Course: “Only the veil that is drawn across reality is lifted, nothing has changed, yet the awareness of changelessness comes swiftly as the veil of time is pushed aside.” - Roy says he and his brothers used to discuss spiritual principles like those in the course quite a lot. Victor mentioned the Course to me when I interviewed him last year for this podcast. - The Course says, according to Roy, there is only love and fear, and love has to take the form of forgiveness, which is the axis of the world. - Roy also talked about the principles of the Hawaiian principles of Ho’oponopono, based on the book Zero Limits. Roy says it is really about forgiving ourselves first. Ho’oponopono says everything is in you, and if you can look at life in a different way, it can change you. - Roy says the world often leans toward a chaotic place, but that the artist is the centering thing; the artist has a role in society that is more than most artists know. There is a heroic journey for artists. - He says, “The only thing that will create cohesion and order is frequency.” Music has a sacred quality, and “when we are dealing with music, we are dealing with the theory of everything.” - He says, “Musicians are magicians; there is magic happening [in music].” - He talked about the theories of the Dogon tribe in Africa, where Stephen Jay visited, who believed that, “Music is a conscious force and what we call god is really music.” - “Music knows who you are … when you join music, music joins you, and you begin to be able to speak your voice.” - “Some people are afraid of their truth … a lot of times your genius is residing in you, but it’s in a comfortable place, and you have to get uncomfortable before it can come out, before you are willing to let it come out.”

Who Gets What?
Public Health with Stephen Jay

Who Gets What?

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2019 28:59


The enduring topic of vaccinations is covered in this conversation, and a new program is presented. The new program is an effort by The State of Indiana to provide counseling to pregnant women.  This program is proven to have reduced infant mortality.   (And Indiana is 7th among the states in infant mortality.)

Rare Bird Radio
Doug Cooper in conversation with Stephen Jay Schwartz

Rare Bird Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2019 42:48


Doug Cooper is the author of the award-winning novels 'Outside In' and 'The Investment Club'. Always searching, he has traveled to over twenty-five countries on five continents, exploring the contradictions between what we believe and how we act in the pursuit of truth, beauty, and love. Originally from Port Clinton, Ohio, he has also called Cleveland, St. Louis, Detroit, New York, Las Vegas, and Oslo, Norway home. 'Focus Lost' is his third novel. Los Angeles Times Bestselling Author Stephen Jay Schwartz spent a number of years as the Director of Development for Wolfgang Petersen (Das Boot, In the Line of Fire, Air Force One, Troy, The Perfect Storm) where he worked to develop screenplays for production. He also worked as a freelance screenwriter before writing his two novels, Boulevard and Beat, which follow the journey of sex-addicted LAPD detective Hayden Glass. The Hayden Glass series was optioned by producer Ben Silverman (Ugly Betty, The Office, The Tudors) for development as a TV series. Stephen’s short fiction was most recently included in the collection The Los Angeles Fiction Anthology alongside T.C. Boyle, published by Red Hen Press, as well as the short story collection Jewish Noir, published by PM Press. He recently edited a collection called “Hollywood Versus the Author,” published by Rare Bird Books in 2018, featuring essays from Michael Connelly, Jonathan Kellerman, Lawrence Block, T. Jefferson Parker, Tess Gerritsen, Lee Goldberg and more. He is a regular moderator at the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books and has judged and been the panel chair for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize in the mystery/thriller category since 2015. His film work has been exhibited in the A.F.I. Los Angeles International Film Festival and the Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC. Stephen received his MFA in Creative Writing from UC Riverside and is currently on faculty at Emerson College Los Angeles. You can learn more about him at his website, www.stephenjayschwartz.com.

Rare Bird Radio
Erik Tarloff in conversation with Stephen Jay Schwartz

Rare Bird Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2019 31:32


Erik Tarloff has written for the stage, the screen (both large and small), and publications like Slate, The Atlantic, The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Financial Times, Prospect, Vogue, and many others. He contributed to speeches by Bill Clinton and Al Gore. He currently lives in Berkeley, California, with his wife, economist Laura Tyson. This is his fourth novel. Los Angeles Times Bestselling Author Stephen Jay Schwartz spent a number of years as the Director of Development for film director Wolfgang Petersen (whose credits include Das Boot, In the Line of Fire, Air Force One, The Perfect Storm, Troy) where he worked with writers, producers and studio executives to develop screenplays for production. Among the film projects he helped developed are Air Force One, Outbreak, Red Corner, Bicentennial Man and Mighty Joe Young. Stephen's own film work has exhibited at the AFI Los Angeles International Film Festival, the Directors Guild of America, The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, and the Walt Disney Studios in Burbank, California. He also worked as a screenwriter and freelance "script doctor," developing concepts, treatments and feature films for independent film producers. His writing credits include Inside the Space Station, narrated by Liam Neeson and produced as a "Watch with the World" special for The Discovery Channel.

Rare Bird Radio
Stephen Jay Schwartz In Conversation With Rex Weiner

Rare Bird Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2019 31:35


Los Angeles Times Bestselling Author Stephen Jay Schwartz spent a number of years as the Director of Development for film director Wolfgang Petersen (whose credits include Das Boot, In the Line of Fire, Air Force One, The Perfect Storm, Troy) where he worked with writers, producers and studio executives to develop screenplays for production. Among the film projects he helped developed are Air Force One, Outbreak, Red Corner, Bicentennial Man and Mighty Joe Young. Stephen's own film work has exhibited at the AFI Los Angeles International Film Festival, the Directors Guild of America, The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, and the Walt Disney Studios in Burbank, California. He also worked as a screenwriter and freelance "script doctor," developing concepts, treatments and feature films for independent film producers. His writing credits include Inside the Space Station, narrated by Liam Neeson and produced as a "Watch with the World" special for The Discovery Channel. Rex Weiner’s screenwriting credits include The Adventures of Ford Fairlane, based on his original stories, directed by Renny Harlin and starring Andrew Dice Clay for 20th Century Fox. As one of the first writers brought on board to launch the TV series Miami Vice, Weiner wrote the now classic 9th episode, “Glades.” As a journalist, Weiner’s articles have appeared in Vanity Fair, The Paris Review, The New Yorker, LA Weekly, L’Officiel Hommes, and Rolling Stone Italia. “Lost & Found,” his column about Hollywood entertainment history, appeared weekly in Variety where was a staff reporter. He is one of the founding editors of High Times Magazine and former editor of Swank (“The Magazine For Men”). He is also the co-author of The Woodstock Census (Viking), one of the key texts analyzing the impact of the Sixties Generation on American society. A native New Yorker, Mr. Weiner lives in Los Angeles and in Baja California Sur, Mexico, where he is co-owner of Casa Dracula, a 160-year old hacienda in the historic pueblo magico of Todos Santos.

Rare Bird Radio
Peter Leonard In Conversation With Stephen Jay Schwartz

Rare Bird Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2018 42:18


Los Angeles Times Bestselling Author Stephen Jay Schwartz spent a number of years as the Director of Development for film director Wolfgang Petersen (whose credits include Das Boot, In the Line of Fire, Air Force One, The Perfect Storm, Troy) where he worked with writers, producers and studio executives to develop screenplays for production. Among the film projects he helped developed are Air Force One, Outbreak, Red Corner, Bicentennial Man and Mighty Joe Young. Peter Leonard, the son of legendary crime novelist, Elmore Leonard, continues the life of his fathers character Raylan Givens in 'Raylan Goes to Detroit'. Peter is also a national bestselling author of seven thrillers, including 'Quiver', 'Trust Me', 'All He Saw was the Girl', 'Voices of the Dead', 'Back from the Dead', 'Eyes Closed Tight', and 'Unknown Remains'.

Rare Bird Radio
Martin Jay Weiss In Conversation With Stephen Jay Schwartz

Rare Bird Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2018 46:58


Martin Jay Weiss is an award-winning filmmaker who has written, directed and produced a vast anthology of commercials, films, and television projects. He has a BS in Journalism from the University of Illinois and an MFA in Film from New York University. Born and raised in Chicago, he now lives in California with his wife and two children. His first novel 'The Second Son' was released in August 2018. His next novel 'Flamingo Coast' will be release in January 2019. Los Angeles Times Bestselling Author Stephen Jay Schwartz spent a number of years as the Director of Development for film director Wolfgang Petersen (whose credits include Das Boot, In the Line of Fire, Air Force One, The Perfect Storm, Troy) where he worked with writers, producers and studio executives to develop screenplays for production. Among the film projects he helped developed are Air Force One, Outbreak, Red Corner, Bicentennial Man and Mighty Joe Young.

Drinks with Tony
Stephen Jay Schwartz and Bent Hamer Ep. #11

Drinks with Tony

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2018 98:27


Stephen Jay Schwartz is the editor of Hollywood vs. the Author, stories behind the scenes from those who have experienced what has been called development hell. He's also the author […]

hollywood schwartz stephen jay bent hamer
Das E&U-Gespräch
Folge 052 – Kate Bush & Stephen Jay Gould

Das E&U-Gespräch

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 30, 2018


Mit seinem Gast Nils (@ngeisemeyer) redet Markus über die britische Musikerin Kate Bush, die große Geschichtenerzählerin des Pop, und (ab 1:04:55) über den amerikanischen Paläontologen, Wissenschaftshistoriker und Evolutionstheoretiker Stephen Jay Gould. Folge 052 – jetzt abspielen Kate Bush, Björk (E&U 018), Tori Amos, der Song Wuthering Heights und seine zwei Musikvideos, der Roman Sturmhöhe von … Folge 052 – Kate Bush & Stephen Jay Gould weiterlesen

Wonderland with DJ Cheshire Cat from WESU Middletown
Volume 03 Episode 21 - Woke Up Without a Plan

Wonderland with DJ Cheshire Cat from WESU Middletown

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2018 54:34


Writer Types
Lawrence Block, Karen Olson, Stephen Jay Schwartz

Writer Types

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2018 32:53


The legendary Lawrence Block stops by and we are geeking out. Also Karen Olson sits down for a chat and we ask five questions with Stephen Jay Schwartz. Plus an Unpanel of award winners Meg Gardiner, Attica Locke and Kristen Lepionka. All music used by permission under the creative commons license. Music in this episode includes: Real Swing Shet by Menage Quad Reckoning by Podington Bear Super Bubbly by Jesse Spillane Ground Cayenne by Good Lawdz Run In The Night by The Good Lawdz Blue Highway by Podington Bear Cockpit by Silent Partner It's All Happening by Huma-Huma

Where We Buy: Retail Real Estate with James Cook
The Six Dimensions of Retail Experience - Where We Buy #79

Where We Buy: Retail Real Estate with James Cook

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2018 18:26


James Cook talks with Stephen Jay and Ashley Rowland at Big Red Rooster, a JLL company. Big Red Rooster is a brand experience firm.  They discuss some of the findings of their Beyond Buying report, a study which defines the six dimensions of retail experience and then surveys 2,000 consumers to find out how 20 top retailers stack up. Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Android  Listen: WhereWeBuy.show  Alexa: Say "Enable the Where We Buy skill" Tweet: @JamesDCook Email: jamesd.cook@am.jll.com  Instagram: @jamcoo Leave a message on the Where We Buy hotline. We may use it on an upcoming show. Call (602) 633-4061  Read more retail research here. James Cook is the director of retail research in the Americas for JLL.  Theme music is Run in the Night by The Good Lawdz, under Creative Commons license.

Palaeo After Dark
Podcast 129 - Curt Made Us Talk About Exaptation

Palaeo After Dark

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2018 73:36


The gang discuss a recent paper which suggests that pollinating butterflies and moths may have evolved well before the evolution of flowering plants (angiosperms). Curt seizes this opportunity to force them all to read about exaptation. Meanwhile, James has some unique ideas about automotive safety and Amanda demonstrates her amazing Google skills in the face of uncertainty.    Up-Goer Five (Amanda Edition):   Today our friends talk about a thing that is very important. Many people have an idea that a thing came about because it had a use. But it might be, sometimes, that a thing came about because it was together with a thing that had a use. Or maybe it even came about because it just did. Maybe not everything has to come about because it has a use. One of the things our friends read comes up with a name for this idea. And it talks about things that mean maybe that idea is right. And it also talks a lot about words and one of our friends thinks that that part is not fun. The other thing our friends read is about little things that fly and are colored pretty. These little pretty-colored things that fly are thought to have come about along with green things that smell good. But it seems that maybe these pretty-colored things that fly come about a lot earlier than the green things that smell good. This is just like that idea where a thing has come about even though it had no use for it yet.   References: Gould, Stephen Jay, and Elisabeth S. Vrba. "Exaptation—a missing term in the science of form." Paleobiology 8.1 (1982): 4-15.   van Eldijk, Timo JB, et al. "A Triassic-Jurassic window into the evolution of Lepidoptera." Science advances 4.1 (2018): e1701568. 

Success Talks - Stegela Success Mastery
ST55 : Stephen Interviews Jay Wong

Success Talks - Stegela Success Mastery

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2017 19:41


    entrepreneur, business advisor, real estate investor and host of The Inner Changemaker; rated #1 Self-Help Podcast on iTunes and is actively listened in 122+ countries worldwide.

NewMercuryMedia
PNN - DNC - Just a Religion

NewMercuryMedia

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2017 120:00


PNN - DNC - Not a party with rules and members...Just a Religion | PNN explores the trials and denials of the DNC  Our senior Political Commentator Brook Hines has arranged an interview with one of the Attorneys on the case against the DNC We've had trouble getting anyone to go ao the record even to even discuss the case. So to give depth and perspective we decided to get Senator Sanders to weigh in on WHERE TO NOW democrats. We thought we'd like to hear what he has to say, since the folks at the DEMOCRATIC IDEAS EVENT - the -  “Ideas Conference” held Tuesday by the Center for American Progress, the central policy and personnel clearinghouse for Democratic administrations. We welcome Afifa Kashif to give us an update on here perspective on 100+ days in on the lawless Trump Fiasco-Administration We also have a special guest Stephen Jay producer and host of the World Stage media launch - with guests from across the globe to tell us about the effects of the project. We may also be fortunate enough to have Wendy Sejour. TUNE IN Sunday 7pm Eastern / 4pm Pacific  

NewMercuryMedia
PNN - May-Day-May-Day

NewMercuryMedia

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2017 120:00


PNN - May-Day-May-Day Brook Hines leads the charge this week as discussions of the TRUMPEAN GOVERNANCE and their Collaborators in the House take the stage and the rose garden in a PYRRIC Victory sure to be short lived. We will also provide commentary from Denis Campbell from the UK who weighs in on UK Election politics, France's dalliance with the right and delivers a few words on the ANTI-HEALTHCARE Richman's Giveaway that is the republicans anti-Health Care Legislation. We will also have a few words of sanity from Stephen Jay on his new project starting next week - the Worlds Stage - tune in for more details. Brook will of course provide her scintillating analysis of the Democrats in Florida and beyond. TUNE IN LIVE Sunday 7-9pm (Eastern   

NewMercuryMedia
PNN - Southern Discomfort

NewMercuryMedia

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2017 119:00


PNN - Southern Discomfort - Voices of Southern Activists Brook Hines will lead off with her keen insight into Democratic politics. Stephen Jay  - CO-PRODUCER of Media Democracy in Action coming up May 15-19  - He'll tell us all about it. Brian Stettan - Webcaster and economic theorist. - Sarah Coutu - North Florida Activist and Progressive Leader will talk about her work in Washington DC and in North Florida Democratic politics. Laurie Prim - Womens Reproductive Rights Activist and Martin County Florida Progressive talks about her work rehabilitating a REPUBLICAN CONGRESSMAN. TUNE IN Sunday 4/16/17 7pm Eastern / 4pm Pacific 

Palaeo After Dark
Podcast 62 - Brachiopods and Bivalves; The Most Interesting and Amazing Lifeforms on the Planet

Palaeo After Dark

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2015 72:42


The gang discusses two papers about the effects of the Permian Mass Extinction on the evolutionary and ecological patterns of brachiopods and bivalves. Also, Amanda finds her true calling, James indiscriminately throws shade, and Curt feels the pain of being the only person to vaguely remember what the papers were about.  'Up goer five' summary: The group talks about two types of animals with hard parts to hide in, one which is food and one which is not food. It used to be thought that the food animals were better than the not food animals, and that they had beaten them over a long time so that there were more of them today than the not food animal. The first paper shows that this is not true, and that both animals did as well as each other until they both had a very bad day, and that the food animal just got over this very bad day faster. The second paper is making sure that we have not got anything wrong by only looking at one way we can find both the food and not food animals.   References: Gould, Stephen Jay, and C. Bradford Calloway. "Clams and brachiopods-ships that pass in the night." Paleobiology (1980): 383-396. Clapham, Matthew E. "Ecological consequences of the Guadalupian extinction and its role in the brachiopod-mollusk transition." Paleobiology 41.02 (2015): 266-279.

Palaeo After Dark
Podcast 41 - Hallucigenia; Eating Planets and Crapping Rainbows

Palaeo After Dark

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2014 106:03


In this episode of Palaeo After Dark, the gang discusses the complicated history of Hallucigenia, and somehow gets completely derailed into rambling conversations about Star Trek 5, proper pronunciation, Gould's “Wonderful Life”, microwave ovens, the effects of aging on your storytelling abilities, natural kinds versus individuals, puppy petting, poor puns, minions, food, Hell and Michael Bolton, LSD, oracles, stilt walkers, emus, otaku cat people, evolutionary convergence, My Little Pony, tripe, confusing a camera with a mouth, rubber bands, contingency, the importance of bricks, improper ways to train your cat/James, choking hazard candies, milk allergies, sharing, and historically important beers. Also, Amanda shares her reconstruction of Hallucigenia in its natural habitat (why it has a shapely pair of human legs, no one can say). If you want to get the point where we actually start talking about science, skip to 19:39 (it's one of those podcasts).   References: Ramsköld, Lars. "The second leg row of Hallucigenia discovered." Lethaia 25.2 (1992): 221-224. Hou, Xianguang, and Jan Bergström. "Cambrian lobopodians–ancestors of extant onychophorans?." Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 114.1 (1995): 3-19. Gould, Stephen Jay. Wonderful life: the Burgess Shale and the nature of history. Random House, 2000. Smith, Martin R., and Javier Ortega-Hernández. "Hallucigenia/'s onychophoran-like claws and the case for Tactopoda." Nature (2014).

Palaeo After Dark
Podcast 38 - Podcast Team VS The League of Sinister Papers

Palaeo After Dark

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2014 115:11


This week, instead of picking papers with a similar theme the gang decided to talk about the craziest papers they could find. The end result: yetis and airplanes... Maybe this was a mistake. Meanwhile, James describes his theory of automobile evolution, Amanda discusses swimming polar bears, and Curt describes the life and times of the podcast gang in Tomodachi Life.   References: Sykes, Bryan C., et al. "Genetic analysis of hair samples attributed to yeti, bigfoot and other anomalous primates." Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 281.1789 (2014): 20140161. Miller, Webb, et al. "Sequencing the nuclear genome of the extinct woolly mammoth." Nature 456.7220 (2008): 387-390. Barnett, Ross, et al. "Evolution of the extinct Sabretooths and the American cheetah-like cat." Current Biology 15.15 (2005): R589-R590. Bejan, A., J. D. Charles, and S. Lorente. "The evolution of airplanes." Journal of Applied Physics 116.4 (2014): 044901. Gould, Stephen Jay. "Entropic homogeneity isn't why no one hits. 400 any more." Discover, August (1986): 60-66.

Acmecast
Acmecast #197 - the Firm of Jagger, Carradine & Dali!

Acmecast

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2014 87:54


Jermaine, Stephen & Jay take a first look at the brand-new Hornhead, debate the very merits of art as an institution (and the legalities therein), and dig into the June Previews cataloge to unearth the mysteries of Carpenter's Lo Pan, Jorodowsky's Dune and Bob's Burgers! Show Notes: "Netflix 'Daredevil' Series Casts Charlie Cox As Matt Murdock" at Comics Alliance.com. "Skottie Young Vs. Redbubble" at Bleeding Cool.com. "The Redbubble Problem" at Bleeding Cool.com. Jacob Chabot's "Only Decent Drawing of Mr. Stay Puft on the Internet" at Facebook.com. Shepard Fairey's "Andre the Giant Has a Posse" at Wikipedia.org. "Casino mogul Steve Wynn pays $28 million for Popeye statue" at Yahoo News.com. "Multiversity is Coming" at DC Comics.com, originally announced on September 29, 2009 accompanied by Frank Quitely preview art. "Marvel Reveals Heroic Lineup to Fall's AXIS Event" at IGN.com. "The Strain Trailer (Teaser Reel)" at IMDB.com. "Snowpiercer (2013)" at IMDB.com, citing an August 1, 2013 release date. Dark Horse 8.14 Solcitiations - the Strain: Night Eternal #1, Dark Horse Presents #1, Blacksad Amarillo OGN, Pop #1 & Art of the Venture Bros. DC 8.14 Solicitations - the Multiversity #1, Batman 75th Anniversary Commemorative HC, Sensastion Comics #1, New Teen Titans tpb #1, Punk Rock Jesus HC, Y the Last Man TP #1 & Batman the Animated Series figures. IDW 8.14 Solicitations - Walter Simonson Manhunter Artist Edition & Little Nemo Return to Slumberland #1. Image 8.14 Solicitations - the Fade Out #1, Imperial #1, Dead @ 17 Blasphemy Throne #1 & Howtoons Reignition #1. Marvel 8.14 Solicitations - Axis #1, Ultimate FF #6, Fantastic Four by Jonathan Hickman HC #2, Marvel 75th Anniversary HC, Infinity TPB, Superior Spider-man #32 & the Pulse TPB.

Acmecast
Acmecast #196 - We Need You To Hope Again!

Acmecast

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2014 70:08


Jermaine, Stephen & Jay look back on last week's Godzilla, look ahead to this week's X-Men Days of Future Past, close the book on Forever Evil and try a suss out what's going on in Original Sin! Show Notes: The San Fransisco skyscraper that Stephen was referring to was the Transamerica Pyramid. He thought Godzilla would impale one of the other monsters on it! "'Man of Steel' Sequel Will Now Be Called 'Batman V Superman: Dawn of Justice' For Some Reason" at Comics Alliance.com. "New Full-Length 'The Flash' Trailer Completely Nails It" at Comics Alliance.com. "Second 'Guardians of the Galaxy' Trailer Sees Groot Speak" at Comics Alliance.com. "First Big Hero 6 Trailer Shows Slapstick Construction Of A Robotic Hero" at Comics Alliance.com. "'X-Men: Apocalypse' Movie Gets Cast And Plot Details" at Comics Alliance.com. Comics at the Table - Forever Evil #7, Justice League #30, Original Sin #2, MPH #1!