Raised source of light beside a road or path
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Enjoy the stories!TIMESTAMPS:0:00:00 "Facebook Said I Died Four Months Ago. I'm Still Alive, But No One Believes Me"0:40:35 "Do You Know How to Spot a Kinda Thing?"1:20:54 "STREETLIGHTS"
What if the streetlights in your neighborhood could charge your EV overnight? Voltpost is making this vision a reality by transforming existing lampposts into modular, upgradeable EV charging stations managed by a mobile app. By partnering with utilities, the company is accelerating EV charging infrastructure deployment by retrofitting what's already in place. Listen in as we sit down with James Everley, Director of Business Development, to explore how Voltpost's streetlight EV charging solutions blend seamlessly into the urban landscape. From pricing that respects overnight charging habits to design choices that fit historic districts, you'll discover why low-power, on-street Level 2 charging is a critical piece of the broader EV ecosystem. We'd love to hear from you. Share your comments, questions and ideas for future topics and guests to podcast@sae.org. Don't forget to take a moment to follow SAE Tomorrow Today—a podcast where we discuss emerging technology and trends in mobility with the leaders, innovators and strategists making it all happen—and give us a review on your preferred podcasting platform. Follow SAE on LinkedIn, Instagram, Facebook, X, and YouTube. Follow host Grayson Brulte on LinkedIn, X, and Instagram.
Get in touch - leave me a messageStreetlights sound boring. Until the grid fails and they're the only lights left on.In this episode of Climate Confident, I'm joined by Liam Ryan, CEO of Streetleaf, a climate tech company rethinking one of the most overlooked pieces of public infrastructure: the streetlight. And yes, I know. Streetlights. Hardly the sexiest corner of the energy transition. But this conversation quickly becomes about something much bigger: resilience, decarbonisation, public safety, emissions reduction, and how we build communities that keep functioning as extreme weather puts more pressure on the grid.You'll hear why the real cost of streetlighting often isn't the electricity at all. It's trenching, wiring, maintenance, utility control, copper theft, repair delays, and infrastructure that can take far too long to fix. Liam explains how solar-plus-battery streetlights can avoid much of that mess while helping cities, developers, and communities move closer to net zero.We dig into how Streetleaf's lights performed during hurricanes, why three to five days of battery backup matters, how monitoring changes maintenance, and why policy can help but won't replace cost and performance. You might be shocked to learn that in some cases, utilities can delay streetlight repairs for months while the customer keeps paying. Delightful system design, if your goal is public frustration.This is a practical episode about climate tech that works in the real world: faster installs, fewer wires, lower emissions, better uptime, and infrastructure that earns its keep when conditions get ugly.
In this edition of Streetlights Academy, we dive into the charismatic dimension of evangelism. If you've ever wondered what it truly means to evangelize and see the signs follow, this teaching is for you. Listen and be stirred to step in faith, knowing that you'll see the charismatic power of God still accompanies the preaching of the Gospel today.
In a city known for keeping things weird, one neighborhood took civic engagement to a whole new level—by electing a dog as mayor.This week on The Ebone Zone, we head to Austin, Texas, where the iconic 37th Street Lights tradition collided with local politics in the most unexpected way. Residents cast more than 12,000 votes in a pet mayoral race that crowned Mo Bamba, a pug-Chihuahua mix rescue, as the neighborhood's newest leader. What started as a quirky stunt to boost voter turnout has evolved into a full-blown community event—complete with campaign strategies, smear ads, and a peaceful transfer of power between animals. But beneath the humor is something deeper: a creative response to political disengagement, a reflection of community identity, and a reminder that sometimes the most unconventional ideas bring people together.Is this just a joke… or a model for rethinking civic participation? This Week's Featured Hashtag#WhatICantSayNoToSend a text to The Ebone Zone! Support the showIf you have questions or comments email ebonezonepodcast@yahoo.com Follow the Ebone Zone on Twitter: https://twitter.com/OfficialEBZLike the Ebone Zone on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ebonezoneofficial/Visit www.ebonezone.com for more content!
This episode is presented by Create A Video – I regret to inform you that those "crime watch" signs around neighborhoods are racist now, apparently. Plus, an inventor came up with a lock box to prevent thieves from stealing copper wiring inside street lights in Los Angeles, but the city rejected his cheap and simple fix - instead opting for expensive solar lights to replace the existing ones.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-pete-kaliner-show--6946691/support.Subscribe to the podcast All the links to Pete's Prep are free!Get exclusive content here!Media Bias Check: GroundNews promo code!Advertising and Booking inquiries: Pete@ThePeteKalinerShow.com
Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass wants Los Angeles residents to approve an assessment to fix street lights. Copper wire is being stolen from lights rendering them inoperable. The city wants to swap the lights out to solar but residents need to pay for it. Please Like, Comment and Follow 'Broeske & Musson' on all platforms: --- The ‘Broeske & Musson Podcast’ is available on the KMJNOW app, Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever else you listen to podcasts. --- ‘Broeske & Musson' Weekdays 9-11 AM Pacific on News/Talk 580 AM & 105.9 FM KMJ | Facebook | Podcast| X | - Everything KMJ KMJNOW App | Podcasts | Facebook | X | InstagramSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Property Owners are getting an assessment in the mail so Karen Bass can pay for the streetlights that were vandalized on her watch Plus Randy speaks with mayoral candidate Assad AlnajjarSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
International Dark Sky Week is hailed as a global celebration of the night and a call for less light pollution. In some cities internationally, local governments are trying to find a solution to lighting the night can better serve critical wildlife ecosystems and humans alike. Malcolm Brabant reports from Denmark. PBS News is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy
International Dark Sky Week is hailed as a global celebration of the night and a call for less light pollution. In some cities internationally, local governments are trying to find a solution to lighting the night can better serve critical wildlife ecosystems and humans alike. Malcolm Brabant reports from Denmark. PBS News is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy
Tim Conway Jr Show Hour 3 (3.25) Tim Conway Jr. covers L.A. Mayor Karen Bass’s plan to replace city streetlights with solar-powered lights, while also digging into the growing battle over California’s proposed billionaire tax as some of the state’s wealthiest residents push an alternative ballot measure. Then, Tim looks at the surprising return of rain to Southern California, rising egg prices, and soaring Easter chocolate costs, along with the debate over Ruth’s Chris Steak House and whether its dress code still makes sense. Later, Tim talks about why “Opening Day” is a phrase almost entirely owned by Major League Baseball, the Mega Millions ticket worth $3 million sold in Torrance, concern from Monrovia business owners after the sudden closure of LOOK Dine-In Cinemas, the death of “Wild Thing” songwriter Chip Taylor at 86, and how zip codes can have a major impact on life expectancy. #TimConwayJr #KarenBass #LosAngeles #SolarLights #CaliforniaPolitics #BillionaireTax #SoCalRain #EggPrices #EasterChocolate #RuthsChris #OpeningDay #MLB #MegaMillions #Torrance #Monrovia #ChipTaylor #WildThing #LifeExpectancy #KFIAM640 See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
You make hundreds of decisions a day. Most of them invisibly. A few of them under real pressure, with incomplete information and no clear right answer. So how do the people who do this for a living like firefighters, surgeons, military commanders, and get it right when the stakes are highest? That's the question Dr. Gary Klein has spent his entire career answering. Not in a lab. In the field. With people whose next call might be life or death. Gary is a cognitive psychologist, a Senior Scientist at MacroCognition LLC, and the Chief Scientist at ShadowBox LLC. He's one of the founding figures of naturalistic decision making, the study of how people actually decide in the real world, under time pressure and uncertainty. He built the Recognition-Primed Decision model, which has been incorporated into Army and Marine Corps doctrine. He created the PreMortem method of risk assessment, endorsed by Nobel Prize winners Daniel Kahneman and Richard Thaler. He's the author of several influential books, including Sources of Power, The Power of Intuition, Streetlights and Shadows, Snapshots of the Mind, and Seeing What Others Don't, a fascinating deep dive into how insight actually works. Malcolm Gladwell put it simply: "No one has taught me more about the complexities and mysteries of human decision-making than Gary Klein." In this conversation, we get into everything from how Gary personally works through a tough decision to when you should, and shouldn't, trust your gut. We cover the value of first-person expertise, the difference between knowledge and knowing, how to use a pre-mortem, and why more information doesn't necessarily mean better decisions. Then we spend time on AI: what happens when people start outsourcing their thinking, and what might get lost in the shuffle. I also ask him to audit my use of his framework for managing uncertainty because there's a lot of that going around right now. Some highlights from the episode: 02:35 The White House Situation Room (and why he can't talk about it) 05:17 Writer's block, pen and paper, and how Gary structures his thinking 07:37 Walking through a real decision: the medical scenario 10:53 Intuition: when to trust it, when to question it 13:00 Pattern matching, mental simulation, and the Recognition-Primed Decision model 18:00 The AI concern: outsourcing decisions and eroding expertise 18:42 The pre-mortem: how it works and why Nobel Prize winners endorsed it 22:35 The 80/20 of decision making: build experience and frame the problem 27:12 AI and the younger generation: old fogey worry or real risk? 31:49 Why curiosity about failure is the thing AI can't replicate 33:06 Tacit knowledge: the invisible layer AI can't scrape 39:07 Five sources of uncertainty — and tools for managing them 42:36 Wrapping up: the cognitive dimension and what makes humans indispensable We go from the mechanics of expert decision making to a surprisingly urgent question: in an age of AI, what happens to the skills you never knew you were building? Enjoy!
One hour Amazon delivery. John Lennon's piano sells for $3.2 million. U.S. senate candidate, Marisa Simonetti, was found guilty of harassment and assault. The streetlight is back at the Larocque household.
Quick recap of the year. JLR picks an emailer's meal. $35 oil changes. St. Patrick's Day shenanigans. Warner Bros. Discovery has been acquired by Paramount Skydance for $110 billion. Deaf woman kicked off a plane. Mayor of NYC is lowering school zone speed limits. Meteor reported to have been the cause of the sonic boom. Stopping for the bus. A bill in Florida to ban marrying first cousins fails to pass. Duji learned about inbreeding through the show X-Files. Will JLR be the official WWE correspondent if Rover paid for Netflix? JLR was gifted a vSeeBox. A wife in England has been accused of stealing her husband's $172 million crypto wallet. One hour Amazon delivery. John Lennon's piano sells for $3.2 million. U.S. senate candidate, Marisa Simonetti, was found guilty of harassment and assault. The streetlight is back at the Larocque household.
Quick recap of the year. JLR picks an emailer's meal. $35 oil changes. St. Patrick's Day shenanigans. Warner Bros. Discovery has been acquired by Paramount Skydance for $110 billion. Deaf woman kicked off a plane. Mayor of NYC is lowering school zone speed limits. Meteor reported to have been the cause of the sonic boom. Stopping for the bus. A bill in Florida to ban marrying first cousins fails to pass. Duji learned about inbreeding through the show X-Files. Will JLR be the official WWE correspondent if Rover paid for Netflix? JLR was gifted a vSeeBox. A wife in England has been accused of stealing her husband's $172 million crypto wallet. One hour Amazon delivery. John Lennon's piano sells for $3.2 million. U.S. senate candidate, Marisa Simonetti, was found guilty of harassment and assault. The streetlight is back at the Larocque household. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
One hour Amazon delivery. John Lennon's piano sells for $3.2 million. U.S. senate candidate, Marisa Simonetti, was found guilty of harassment and assault. The streetlight is back at the Larocque household. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Malicious streetlights are an evil trick from Dark Data Journalism. Some annoying enemy has a valid complaint. So you use FACTS and LOGIC to prove that something similar-sounding-but-slightly-different is definitely false. Then you act like you've debunked the complaint. My "favorite" example, spotted during the 2016 election, was a response to some #BuildTheWall types saying that illegal immigration through the southern border was near record highs. Some data journalist got good statistics and proved that the number of Mexicans illegally entering the country was actually quite low. When I looked into it further, I found that this was true - illegal immigration had shifted from Mexicans to Hondurans/Guatemalans/Salvadoreans etc entering through Mexico. If you counted those, illegal immigration through the southern border was near record highs. But the inverse evil trick is saying something "directionally correct", ie slightly stronger than the truth can support. If your enemy committed assault, say he committed murder. If he committed sexual harassment, say he committed rape. If your drug increases cancer survival by 5% in rats, say that it "cures cancer". Then, if someone calls you on it, accuse them of "literally well ackshually-ing" you, because you were "directionally correct" and it's offensive to the victims to try to defend assault-committed sexual harassers. This is the sort of pathetic defense I called out in If It's Worth Your Time To Lie, It's Worth My Time To Correct It. But trying to call out one of these failure modes looks like falling into the other. I ran into this on my series of posts on crime last week. I wrote these because I regularly saw people make the arguments I tried to debunk. https://www.astralcodexten.com/p/malicious-streetlight-effects-vs
Denmark's Red Street Lighting Solves A Problem Every City Has - Newsweek Denmark Just Switched to Red Streetlights to Solve an Urban Crisis Most Modern Cities Still Ignore | Daily Galaxy Contact the show - coolstuffdailypodcast@gmail.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Watch the January 26th Kewanee City Council meeting below. The Hutchison Engineering Pavement Index presentation aims to address road conditions and future maintenance. Council members will also discuss a side letter of agreement linked to the firefighters' union, potentially affecting local emergency response. Streetlights may soon brighten neighborhoods, pending approval of Ameren Illinois' proposal to install them for public safety. Dana Peterson is under consideration for a cash rent farming lease. A proposed agreement could see Kewanee police providing security at Wethersfield school events. Finally, the council will review ordinances on regulating substances like tianeptine and kratom.
Tonight's Creepypasta draws from chilling true scary stories and urban legends, revealing what happens when a single streetlight exposes things that should never be seen. From a lonely window overlooking a quiet street, the narrator begins to notice figures that only appear beneath one flickering light—watching, waiting, and vanishing the moment darkness returns. This slow-burn horror story builds relentless tension through isolation, paranoia, and the fear of being observed, making it a must-listen for fans of unsettling scary stories where reality bends just enough to let something in. If you enjoy atmospheric dread, creeping mystery, and Creepypasta that lingers in your mind long after the video ends, this is one you won't forget.
021026 Epstein Insights No One Is Saying and Insights on Guthrie Case ; Covid and Streetlights! by Kate Dalley
Streetlights are on, so you know what that means. It's time to get in the house and listen to another episode of the Cinescare Horror Podcast! Join the gang as they tackle some very disturbing abduction horror films. Remember, always carry your pepper spray, don't take candy from strangers, and always listen to Cinescare!
Seeing the Street Lights turn on.... wow - The Muppets are so back - We Preview Season 2 Episode 5 of The Pitt - Cam Heyward Talking about his connection to the McCarthy family and coming back to play for the Steelers next season - More Butt Tattoo Talk - Lets Go US Womens Hockey - Power Ranking Our Top 5 Super Bowl Snacks - Say Something Nice... Leave Us A Talkback message through the iHeartRadio App and tell us something good that is happening in your world.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Notes and Links to Larry Strauss' Work Larry Strauss is the author of five novels, most recently Light Man and Now's the Time—now an Earphone Award winning audiobook—and numerous non-fiction titles, including Students First and Other Lies, a collection of essays mostly about education, and 2025's A Lasting Impact in the Classroom and Beyond, a guide for new and struggling teachers. His short fiction has appeared in Streetlight, Extract(s), and elsewhere. Op-eds and other non-fiction have appeared in USA Today, for which he is an opinion columnist, and The Guardian, among others. If you grew up in the 1980s, you might have seen some of the episodes he wrote for the first-generation Transformers cartoons. Buy A Lasting Impact in the Classroom and Beyond Larry Strauss' Article Listing The Chills at Will Podcast, Episode 83, with Larry Strauss At about 1:45, Larry highlights positive feedback for his book, including a lawyer who found the book so instructive At about 4:50, Larry recounts a tale from the book's Preface, At about 7:40, Larry talks about the “contagion” that is fun that can and should come with teaching, and how this relates to him wanting to write the book At about 9:20, Larry talks about his first teaching job allowed him to “find [his] way” At about 10:30, Larry reflects on a Catch-22 that balances systematic change and day-to-day work At about 13:10, Larry recounts conversations dealing with guilt for teachers in taking days off At about 15:20, Larry talks about administration and the demands they feel and what they ask of teachers At about 16:00, The two discuss the travails of teaching during the early days of the Covid pandemic-Larry had an active 40 person class! At about 20:30, Larry reflects on ideas of “saving kids” as a teacher At about 23:55, Larry talks about learning, including in literature, as “life-saving” and “writers as the first psychologists" At about 25:30, The two discuss cinematic displays of teaching and “inspirational” teaching At about 28:25, The two reflect on early days for teachers and ideas of teaching “authenticity” At about 33:30, Larry talks about At about 34:25, Larry references Willy Loman in talking about “salesman” as one of the myriad roles that a teacher plays, and Pete cites extracurriculars like basketball and the difference in working with students in a voluntary situation At about 36:20, Larry expands on his first year(s) teaching and ways in which students bought in At about 39:00, The two discuss the importance of passion and enthusiasm and getting to know students At about 40:40, Larry responds to Pete's question about how he came to understand that a loud classroom is not necessarily a bad thing At about 44:10, Larry recounts a story of a former student discovering journalism stories that already existed in his life At about 45:30, Larry reflects on a revelation he had about never surrendering to resistant learners and about how all/most students want to learn At about 47:25, the two talk about being adaptable as students both change and remain the same At about 50:20, Larry draws a distinction between talking about students' incredible qualities versus complaining to other teachers about the students At about 52:45, Larry talks about a second-generation student and parent complaints At about 55:25, Larry and Pete discuss the need for adaptability and “improv” as a teacher, illustrated by a lesson that has become a stalwart At about 57:20, The two discuss the need for joy and empathy in the midst of sadness and the grind of teaching-a great Cain and Abel story! At about 58:50, The two discuss the pros and cons of small schools At about 1:05:15, Pete highlights an early publication of Larry's as the two talk about supporting the students unconditionally At about 1:07:00, The two discuss different ways of being an advocate as a teacher At about 1:08:10, Pete compliments the book's mixture of art and science At about 1:08:45, Larry talks about unique new writing assignments for himself At about 1:11:30, in talking about horrible hires for US Secretary of Education, Larry highlights the way in which John King's fifth-grade teacher “saved his life” through field trips and other ways You can now subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts, and leave me a five-star review. You can also ask for the podcast by name using Alexa, and find the pod on Stitcher, Spotify, and on Amazon Music. Follow Pete on IG, where he is @chillsatwillpodcast, or on Twitter, where he is @chillsatwillpo1. You can watch other episodes on YouTube-watch and subscribe to The Chills at Will Podcast Channel. Please subscribe to both the YouTube Channel and the podcast while you're checking out this episode. Pete is very excited to have one or two podcast episodes per month featured on the website of Chicago Review of Books. The audio will be posted, along with a written interview culled from the audio. His conversation with Jeff Pearlman, a recent guest, is up soon at Chicago Review. Sign up now for The Chills at Will Podcast Patreon: it can be found at patreon.com/chillsatwillpodcastpeterriehl Check out the page that describes the benefits of a Patreon membership, including cool swag and bonus episodes. Thanks in advance for supporting Pete's one-man show, DIY podcast and extensive reading, research, editing, and promoting to keep this independent podcast pumping out high-quality content! This month's Patreon bonus episode features an exploration of formative and transformative writing for children, as Pete surveys wonderful writers on their own influences. Pete has added a $1 a month tier for “Well-Wishers” and Cheerleaders of the Show. This is a passion project, a DIY operation, and Pete would love for your help in promoting what he's convinced is a unique and spirited look at an often-ignored art form. The intro song for The Chills at Will Podcast is “Wind Down” (Instrumental Version), and the other song played on this episode was “Hoops” (Instrumental)” by Matt Weidauer, and both songs are used through ArchesAudio.com. Please tune in for Episode 321 with Carolina Ixta, a writer from Oakland, California. Her debut novel, Shut Up, This Is Serious, was a Morris Award finalist, an LA Times Book Prize finalist, and the winner of the Pura Belpré Award. Few Blue Skies is her sophomore novel, forthcoming from HarperCollins on February 3, 2026. The episode airs on February 3, Pub Day. Please go to ceasefiretoday.org, and/or https://act.uscpr.org/a/letaidin to call your congresspeople and demand an end to the forced famine and destruction of Gaza and the Gazan people.
Agradece a este podcast tantas horas de entretenimiento y disfruta de episodios exclusivos como éste. ¡Apóyale en iVoox! Nuevo episodio con retornos sonados, clásicos inmortales y un recuerdo muy sentido. Tributo y recuerdo a Francis Buchholz Nuevos: Dan Lucas, Boys from heaven, Streetlight, Deserta, Lost Wingman, Revolution Rebels, Axel Rudi Pell, Lou Gramm, White Skies, Dark Heart Clásicos: Misha Calvin, Scorpions, Dreamtide, Neil Normal & bobby Sexton, Saints & SinnersEscucha este episodio completo y accede a todo el contenido exclusivo de AOR Diamonds. Descubre antes que nadie los nuevos episodios, y participa en la comunidad exclusiva de oyentes en https://go.ivoox.com/sq/75094
WBZ NewsRadio’s James Rojas reports.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Traffic grinds to a halt in El Monte after a suspicious device is discovered, setting off a major law enforcement response. Meanwhile, coyotes are turning up everywhere across L.A. — from Dodger Stadium to inside apartment buildings — raising concerns about just how bold they’ve become. The conversation shifts to Hollywood, where new streetlights come with a shocking price tag of nearly a million dollars. Plus, controversy brews after a Starbucks employee draws a pig on a police officer’s cup, and alarming reports reveal more than 100 LAFD fire trucks, engines, and ambulances are out of service and in need of repair. The show wraps with crime in the San Fernando Valley, where two suspects are arrested in a robbery spree targeting multiple 7-Eleven stores. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
It's the first full day of the Moreno administration and she wants your help getting the streetlights fixed
Aliens, spies, or animals? Let's revisit Ms. Jean's favorite mini from last year, "Purple Street Lights," and celebrate a year full of faith!
Dan Lettieri of Streetlight Brasserie on New Year's Eve preps full 226 Tue, 30 Dec 2025 08:41:00 +0000 Gov1Rp9M9kP7xBqjNkzPzGkWhwFWgzJr news & politics,news WBEN Extras news & politics,news Dan Lettieri of Streetlight Brasserie on New Year's Eve preps Archive of various reports and news events 2024 © 2021 Audacy, Inc. News & Politics News False https://player.amperwavepodcast
In our next-to-last episode of 2025, Tim, Jon, and BibleProject CEO, Steve Atkinson, review all the resources we released this year, while reflecting on the bigger worldwide movement of people reading the Bible as a unified story that leads to Jesus. The guys then share about some of what's coming up next for BibleProject in 2026.TIMESTAMPSGratitude for Our Mission (0:00-4:08)New “One Story That Leads to Jesus” Reading Plan (4:08-9:01)A Year Studying Themes From Exodus (9:01-16:15)How the Bible Was Formed and the Deuterocanon / Apocrypha (16:15-17:53)The Bigger Movement of Reading the Bible as One Story (17:53-27:34)2025 Classroom Releases (27:34-30:02)2025 Updates to the BibleProject App (30:02-31:58)Ten Years of the BibleProject Podcast (31:58-33:09)What Are We Releasing in 2026? (33:09-38:38)Gratitude for Our Volunteers, Prayer Team, and Patrons (38:38-45:01)OFFICIAL EPISODE TRANSCRIPTView this episode's official transcript.REFERENCED RESOURCESSubscribe to the “One Story That Leads to Jesus” annual reading plan on The Bible App by YouVersion.Check out our 2025 collections of resources! Each has a video, podcast series, scholar-written guide, reading plan, and group study.The MountainThe Exodus WayRedemptionThe WildernessListen to the 2025 podcast series How the Bible Was Formed.Watch the 2025 overview video series on The Deuterocanon / Apocrypha.Listen to the 2025 Advent podcast series.Check out OneStory, a creative nonprofit that develops free Bible studies, lessons, and homeschool curricula—all featuring BibleProject resources.See how Streetlights has localized BibleProject videos for their audience.Watch or listen to the final installment of our Genesis Classroom series, Joseph. Also check out the second installment of the Gospel of Matthew Classroom series, The Messianic Torah, which focuses on the Sermon on the Mount.Download the BibleProject App from the iOS App Store or Android Google Play Store.SHOW MUSICBibleProject theme song by TENTS SHOW CREDITSProduction of today's episode is by Lindsey Ponder, producer, and Cooper Peltz, managing producer. Tyler Bailey is our supervising engineer, who also edited today's episode and provided the sound design and mix. JB Witty writes the show notes. Our host and creative director is Jon Collins, and our lead scholar is Tim Mackie. Special thanks to our guest, Steve Atkinson.Powered and distributed by Simplecast. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Gov. Tim Walz signed two executive orders to address gun violence across the state Tuesday. We heard reaction from the state lawmaker who represents the area of south Minneapolis where the Annunciation school shooting took place.The governor's executive orders come days after a shooting at a high school in southern Minnesota last Friday left one student dead and the Stewartville community reeling. It's been a turbulent year for farmers. We heard from one of the state's three agricultural mental health specialists on the challenges they're facing.A Minnesota nonprofit is among a list of organizations that has won grant money from the foundation arm of OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT.Songs recorded decades ago by Minnesota folklorist Ellen Stekert are being released for the first time — with the restoration help of artificial intelligence.Our Minnesota Music Minute was "Streetlights" by Minnesota artist Crescent Moon + Big Trouble. Our Song of the Day was “Gold Tide” by middleson.
Originally presented as Episode 52, December 16, 2024. Our stories today have us deep into holiday excitement in the Village. We'll stop by the bookstore in Snow and Streetlights and pursue the shelves, sip some hot cocoa, and smile at the merriment in downtown. Then we'll unwrap the buildings of the little Christmas village, plugging in their bulbs and arranging them on the tree skirt in Under the Tree. Finally, we'll head out to the Inn, where they are getting ready for a week of guests. The mantle is decorated, and from the windows in the ballroom, you can see the ice spreading on the lake in The Innkeeper's Holiday. From infant to age 5, Primrose Schools is The Leader in Early Education and Care. Learn more at PrimroseSchools.com. Subscribe to our Premium channel. The first two months are on us.
Originally presented as Episode 52, December 16, 2024. Our stories today have us deep into holiday excitement in the Village. We'll stop by the bookstore in Snow and Streetlights and pursue the shelves, sip some hot cocoa, and smile at the merriment in downtown. Then we'll unwrap the buildings of the little Christmas village, plugging in their bulbs and arranging them on the tree skirt in Under the Tree. Finally, we'll head out to the Inn, where they are getting ready for a week of guests. The mantle is decorated, and from the windows in the ballroom, you can see the ice spreading on the lake in The Innkeeper's Holiday. From infant to age 5, Primrose Schools is The Leader in Early Education and Care. Learn more at PrimroseSchools.com. Subscribe to our Premium channel. The first two months are on us.
Agradece a este podcast tantas horas de entretenimiento y disfruta de episodios exclusivos como éste. ¡Apóyale en iVoox! Nuevos: Transatlantic Radio, Jim Peterik, Jimi Jamison, It'sAlie, Van Zant, Brazen Abbot (reedición), Autumn's Child, Lebrock, AM 1984, Asia, Streetlight, Festivales melódicos que cogen forma: Frontiers + Rock The Sun Clásicos: Jeff Paris, Norway, M.ill.ion... Triumph, vuelta 30 años después David Coverdale desaparece de la vida públiaEscucha este episodio completo y accede a todo el contenido exclusivo de AOR Diamonds. Descubre antes que nadie los nuevos episodios, y participa en la comunidad exclusiva de oyentes en https://go.ivoox.com/sq/75094
This episode's guests:Dr. Amardeep Dugar, Lighting Designer.Dani Robertson, Author / Dark Sky Officer.Stephane Picard, CEO of Cliff Valley Astronomy.Bill's News Picks:Ikea just made a mini bed for your phone, Grace Snelling, Fast Company. Individual-Level Exposure to Light at Night and Sleep Health: A Comparison between Real-Time Mobility-Based Measurements and Indoor Residence-Based Measurements, Environmental Science & Technology. We've Lit Our Way Into a Complex Problem, Inside Lighting. In the dark: Streetlight fight divides Florida neighborhood, Susannah Bryan, Tampa Bay Times. Artificial outdoor light at night and depression in older adults in the USA, England, Northern Ireland, and Ireland, Environment International. Send Feedback Text to the Show!Support the showA hearty thank you to all of our paid supporters out there. You make this show possible. For only the cost of one coffee each month you can help us to continue to grow. That's $3 a month. If you like what we're doing, if you think this adds value in any way, why not say thank you by becoming a supporter! Why Support Light Pollution News? Receive quarterly invite to join as live audience member for recordings with special Q&A session post recording with guests. Receive all of the news for that month via a special Supporter monthly mailer. Satisfaction that your support helps further critical discourse on this topic. About Light Pollution News: The path to sustainable starry night solutions begin with being a more informed you. Light Pollution, once thought to be solely detrimental to astronomers, has proven to be an impactful issue across many disciplines of society including ecology, crime, technology, health, and much more! But not all is lost! There are simple solutions that provide for big impacts. Each month, Bill McGeeney, is joined by upwards of three guests to help you grow your awareness and understanding of both the challenges and the road to recovering our disappearing nighttime ecosystem.
This week is the second part of our "5 Deep" series, where we are highlighting the music of Streetlight Manifesto. Vinny follows up last week's episode with his 5 favorite songs that he feels help sum up the band's sound and music. It's an interesting discussion as Dan and Vinny not only talk about these songs, but also speak to each one's message. Streetlight Manifesto has a very unique way of making some hard topics sound fun and it is something that really shines through in their live shows. Are your favorite Streetlight Manifesto songs discussed? Let us know!
It's another edition of "5 Deep", where Dan and Vinny discuss five songs that highlight a band's discography. This time, Dan is presenting the five songs he feels best highlight the music of Streetlight Manifesto. If you've been following the show for a while, you know that Streetlight Manifesto ranks highly among Dan's favorite bands. We'll continue the discussion next week when Vinny will pick 5 different songs that he feels also reflect the best from the band. Do you have a favorite Streetlight Manifesto song? Let us know!
Andrew For America explores some of the many Charlie Kirk assassination conspiracy theories. Who are Erika Kirk's parents? Why was there a trap door built on the ground next to where Charlie Kirk was speaking? Was the shooting really a staged, coordinated event using Hollywood special effects, hologram projectors, and occult symbolism? Is Charlie Kirk alive and on an island in New Zealand at a retreat called Valhalla? You be the judge my fellow Americans!The song selection is the song, "Under the Streetlight" by the band Grade 2.Visit allegedlyrecords.com and check out all of the amazing punk rock artists!Visit soundcloud.com/andrewforamerica1984 to check out Andrew's music!Like and Follow The Politics & Punk Rock Podcast PLAYLIST on Spotify!!!Check it out here: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/1Y4rumioeqvHfaUgRnRxsy...politicsandpunkrockpodcast.comhttps://linktr.ee/andrewforamericaFollow Future Is Now Coalition on Instagram @FutureIsOrgwww.futureis.org
On this episode: Roderick & Cari are back for episode 383 of The Rise & Grind Podcast! The guys dive into Bryson Tiller's long-awaited release Solace and discuss new music coming from Leon Thomas with Just How You Are and his upcoming Pholks EP dropping October 24th. In news, they break down this year's Grammy consideration submissions, Bad Bunny being announced as the 2026 Super Bowl Halftime performer, updates surrounding Cardi B and Nicki Minaj, and Diddy's sentencing to 50 months. Intro: Bryson Tiller- Damn Roderick | Young Thug- Killed Before Cari | Jay 305 & Jay Anthony- NO GUESTLIST Subscribe to Apple Music now to hear all of the new albums & tracks we discuss: https://apple.co/3NgdXW
Mitty Fresh n' Da Gang - Concrete Flex www.nocturnalradio.live // www.mitchellfrederick.com This is a Mitty Fresh Production… Yeah… uh… New York state of mind… Streets talk, we don't rewind… Concrete flex, money on deck, Diamonds on ice, but the city in check, Runnin' these blocks, we earnin' respect, From the Bronx to BK, we stack and protect. Corner store dreams, lit by the neon, Shooters stay quiet, but they always see one, Moves on the low, gotta play it strategic, Flows mathematical, grind encyclopedic. Hustle in the cold, where the night don't sleep, Voices in the stairwell, secrets they keep, Concrete jungle, survival is law, Money on the table, ambition raw. Concrete flex, money on deck, Diamonds on ice, but the city in check, Runnin' these blocks, we earnin' respect, From the Bronx to BK, we stack and protect. Brownstones echo, subway shake, Dreams built bigger than the risks we take, Trap on fire, but the flow stay froze, Power in the voice, everybody knows. Triple-time cadence, words overlap, Numbers go crazy when I drop that rap, Hov in the blueprint, kings with a pen, But the style stay fresh when the beat drop in. Streets don't sleep, they just rotate, Life on the line, gotta hold weight, Checks get signed, but the grind pure pain, Concrete flex, put respect on the name. Concrete flex, money on deck, Diamonds on ice, but the city in check, Runnin' these blocks, we earnin' respect, From the Bronx to BK, we stack and protect. This is New York, born from the grind, Legends made here, one of a kind, Concrete flex, it's more than a rhyme, Mitty Fresh on the beat, timeless design. This is a Mitty Fresh Production… Yeah… uh… Bright lights fade… but the hustle alive, In the city of stone, only strong survive. Concrete flex, pressure applied, From Queens to the Heights, we let the money decide, Steel veins pumping, respect worldwide, This the part two, watch the city collide. Subway roar, echo in the veins, Streetlights flicker, blood in the drains, Every block built on stories untold, Legends carved deep in the concrete cold. Wordplay heavy, cadence cut raw, Every rhyme brick like a hustler's law, Shadow in the alley, voice in the rain, Power in the pain, ambition remains. Concrete flex, pressure applied, From Queens to the Heights, we let the money decide, Steel veins pumping, respect worldwide, This the part two, watch the city collide. Gold on my wrist but the soul stay hungry, Boardroom suits still built from the ugly, Flow stay surgical, bars like a scalpel, Life in the jungle, the grind is the chapel. Triplets in the rhyme, flow like a chase, Gunna-type bounce with a Brooklyn bass, Every word sharp, double-time precision, Blueprint dreams with a Hov-like vision. Skyscrapers watch, shadows move fast, History repeats, but the future gon' last, Concrete flex, yeah the city's our stage, Written in the lights, every block, every page. Concrete flex, pressure applied, From Queens to the Heights, we let the money decide, Steel veins pumping, respect worldwide, This the part two, watch the city collide. Concrete flex, part two in the book, Streets still talking, take another look, From the bottom to the top, the design stays true, New York heartbeat, forever brand new.
A proposed state law aims to expand street-side healthcare. The L.A. City council approves extra funding for streetlight repairs. Today is the first day of school for Palisades Charter High School. Plus, more.Support The L.A. Report by donating at LAist.com/join and by visiting https://laist.comVisit www.preppi.com/LAist to receive a FREE Preppi Emergency Kit (with any purchase over $100) and be prepared for the next wildfire, earthquake or emergency! Support the show: https://laist.com
Originally presented as Episode 11 of Season 14 Our story tonight is called When the Streetlights Come On, and it's a story about a trip to the mailbox through the last lit moments of the day. It's also about bikes being wheeled into the garage for the night, things learned from the farmer's almanac, layers of paint peeling away under your hand, and a tender way to shepherded home and sent to dreamland. BIOptimizers' Probiotic Breakthrough: Click here and use code NOTHINGMUCH for 10% off any order! Subscribe to our Premium channel. The first month is on us.
A strange glow has Discovery Mountain buzzing! What's behind the purple lights? Three friends get caught up in a lively debate.
On this episode, we dig into the chilling account of a woman at her lowest, caught between betrayal, regret, and a life unraveling. One winter night, after a violent altercation and a desperate plea for help, she walks into the darkness… and finds something-or someone—waiting. What happened on the steps of that old church may have saved her life, but it left behind questions no one has yet been able to answer. Was it divine intervention, a ghostly protector, or something even more mysterious? This is the story of The Man Under the Streetlight—a moment frozen in time that changed everything.
On this episode, we dig into the chilling account of a woman at her lowest, caught between betrayal, regret, and a life unraveling. One winter night, after a violent altercation and a desperate plea for help, she walks into the darkness… and finds something-or someone—waiting. What happened on the steps of that old church may have saved her life, but it left behind questions no one has yet been able to answer. Was it divine intervention, a ghostly protector, or something even more mysterious? This is the story of The Man Under the Streetlight—a moment frozen in time that changed everything.
In our final episode of 2024, Tim, Jon, and BibleProject CEO, Steve Atkinson, reflect on ten years of the project, all the resources we got to make and share this year, and the patrons who made it possible. The guys then give a sneak peek of what's coming up next for BibleProject in 2025.TimestampsTen Year Anniversary and Our Patron Community (0:00-9:25)Strategic Relationships (9:25-19:49)2024 Engagement With Our Resources (19:49-30:51)Looking Back at a Year in the Sermon on the Mount (30:51-35:41)2025 Podcast Themes (35:41-37:43)Reading the Bible in Community (37:43-41:54)In Space With Astronaut Tracy Caldwell-Dyson (41:54-44:29)Gratitude (44:29-47:39)Official Episode TranscriptView this episode's official transcript.Referenced ResourcesWatch our 2024 end of year video, where Jon and Tim explore “purple dot moments”—experiences of God's Kingdom here on Earth. Plus, catch a glimpse of what's coming in 2025. Check out Tim's library here.You can experience our entire library of resources in the BibleProject app, available for Android and iOS.Show MusicBibleProject theme song by TENTSShow CreditsProduction of today's episode is by Lindsey Ponder, producer, and Cooper Peltz, managing producer. Tyler Bailey is our supervising engineer. Aaron Olsen edited today's episode and also provided the sound design and mix. JB Witty does our show notes, and Hannah Woo provides the annotations for our app. Our host and creative director is Jon Collins, and our lead scholar is Tim Mackie. Special thanks to our guest, Steve Atkinson. Powered and distributed by Simplecast.