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Rob Madden joins Andrew to discuss grief and masculinity, writing alongside photography, and his chapbook second hand smoke (Pinhole Poetry, 2024). It's a rich discussion! -- Rob Madden is a writer living on the traditional and unceded territories of the Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh nations in the City of North Vancouver, BC. His chapbook second hand smoke was published in 2024 by Pinhole Poetry, and has had work published in Grain, Prairie Fire, SubTerrain and other literary magazines. He holds a certificate in Creative Writing from the Writer's Studio at SFU from 2005. -- Andrew French is a poet from North Vancouver, British Columbia. They have published three chapbooks, most recently Buoyhood (forthcoming with Alfred Gustav Press, 2025). Andrew holds a BA in English from Huron University College at Western University and an MA in English from UBC. They write poems, book reviews, and have hosted this very podcast since 2019.
ABOUT THIS EPISODE: In this episode, host Megan Cole talks to Bradley Peters. Bradley is the author of Sonnets from a Cell, which is a finalist for the 2024 Dorothy Livesay Poetry Prize. In their conversation Bradley talks about how the sonnet was the perfect form to write about prison. He also talks about how he was introduced to poetry. Visit BC and Yukon Book Prizes: https://bcyukonbookprizes.com/ About Sonnets from a Cell: https://bcyukonbookprizes.com/project/sonnets-from-a-cell/ ABOUT BRADLEY PETERS: Bradley Peters is a poet, actor, and carpenter from Mission, BC. His poetry has been published in numerous literary magazines, has been shortlisted for The Fiddlehead‘s Ralph Gustafson Award, has twice been the runner-up for Subterrain‘s Lush Triumphant Award, and in 2019 placed first in Grain Magazine‘s Short Grain contest. Sonnets from a Cell is his first book. ABOUT MEGAN COLE: Megan Cole the Director of Programming and Communications for the BC and Yukon Book Prizes. She is also a writer based on the territory of the Tla'amin Nation. Megan writes creative nonfiction and has had essays published in Chatelaine, This Magazine, The Puritan, Untethered, and more. She has her MFA in creative nonfiction from the University of King's College and is working her first book. Find out more about Megan at megancolewriter.com ABOUT THE PODCAST: Writing the Coast is recorded and produced on the territory of the Tla'amin Nation. As a settler on these lands, Megan Cole finds opportunities to learn and listen to the stories from those whose land was stolen. Writing the Coast is a recorded series of conversations, readings, and insights into the work of the writers, illustrators, and creators whose books are nominated for the annual BC and Yukon Book Prizes. We'll also check in on people in the writing community who are supporting books, writers and readers every day. The podcast is produced and hosted by Megan Cole.
Kevin Spenst is back to talk about his latest poetry collection, A Bouquet Brought Back from Space. Andrew celebrates 5 years of Page Fright. Everyone's thinking about words!-- Kevin Spenst is the author of sixteen chapbooks and three full-length books of poetry plus his newest collection A Bouquet Brought Back from Space (Anvil Press, 2024). He is one of the organizers of the Dead Poets Reading Series, has a chapbook review column for subTerrain magazine, occasionally co-hosts Wax Poetic on Vancouver Co-op Radio, and teaches poetry through The Writer's Studio at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver on unceded xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish) and səl̓ilw̓ətaʔɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) territory where he cohabitates with the one and only Cheryl Rossi. -- Andrew French is an author from North Vancouver, British Columbia. They have published two chapbooks, Poems for Different Yous (Rose Garden Press, 2021) and Do Not Discard Ashes (845 Press, 2020). Andrew holds a BA in English from Huron University College at Western University and an MA in English from UBC. They write poems, book reviews, and host this very podcast.
Oh, wow, get ready for Adrienne Gruber's amazing conversation about her fourth book, which is also her first essay collection, MONSTERS, MARTYRS AND MARIONETTES: ESSAYS ABOUT MOTHERHOOD, and the numerous threads that connect it to Sarah Manguso's memoir ONGOINGNESS: THE END OF A DIARY. We talk about Gruber's movement from poetry to prose, about the expansiveness of Manguso's memoir, the lack of expansiveness in motherhood in general, how both books talk about the postpartum haze, how parenthood does wild things with the concept of linear time, the surrealness of Gruber's pandemic pregnancy, the gift of knowing you want children, what kinds of experiences need to be lived before than can be imagined, and so much more. I hope you enjoy this one as much as I did. Monsters, Martyrs, and Marionettes is a revelatory collection of personal essays that subverts the stereotypes and transcends the platitudes of family life to examine motherhood with blistering insight.Documenting the birth and early life of her three daughters, Adrienne Gruber shares what it really means to use one's body to bring another life into the world and the lasting ramifications of that act on both parent and child. Each piece peers into the seemingly mundane to show us the mortal and emotional consequences of maternal bonds, placing experiences of “being a mom” within broader contexts—historical, literary, biological, and psychological—to speak to the ugly realities of parenthood often omitted from mainstream conversations.Ultimately, these deeply moving, graceful essays force us to consider how close we are to death, even in the most average of moments, and how beauty is a necessary celebration amidst the chaos of being alive.ADRIENNE GRUBER is an award-winning writer originally from Saskatoon. She is the author of five chapbooks, three books of poetry, including Q & A, Buoyancy Control, and This is the Nightmare, and the creative nonfiction collection, Monsters, Martyrs, and Marionettes: Essays on Motherhood. She won the 2015 Antigonish Review's Great Blue Heron poetry contest, SubTerrain's 2017 Lush Triumphant poetry contest, placed third in Event's 2020 creative non-fiction contest, and was the runner up in SubTerrain's 2023 creative non-fiction contest. Both her poetry and non-fiction has been longlisted for the CBC Literary Awards. In 2012, Mimic was awarded the bp Nichol Chapbook Award. Adrienne lives with her partner and their three daughters on Nex̱wlélex̱m (Bowen Island), B.C., the traditional territory of the Coast Salish peoples. Get full access to Pickle Me This at kerryreads.substack.com/subscribe
In this episode of Narcissist Apocalypse, Brandon reads letters and poems from survivors of domestic violence, coercive control, and narcissistic abuse about their experiences. Plus, Brandon analyzes the letters to discuss the big themes of being good enough, survival, and your basic human rights. *** CONTENT WARNING - This episode discusses sexual abuse and physical abuse. *** If you want to be a guest on our survivor story podcast, please click here or send us an email at narcissistapocalypse@gmail.com To help out our podcast, please fill out our listener survey, click here. The poets you heard today were Kate Rogers and Patrick Grace - They are published by River Street Writing. About the author Kate Rogers: Kate Rogers' poetry and critical writing have appeared in many literary journals and anthologies both in Canada and abroad, including The Montreal International Poetry Prize Anthology (Véhicule Press), Looking Back at Hong Kong (CUHK Press), subTerrain, ARC, PRISM, and many others. Her most recent poetry collection is Out of Place (Aeolus House/Quattro Books 2017.) She is a co-director of the Art Bar Poetry Reading Series in Toronto. About Patrick Grace: Patrick Grace is an author and teacher who divides his time between Vancouver and Victoria, BC. His poems have been published widely in Canadian literary magazines, including Arc Poetry Magazine, Best Canadian Poetry, Columba, EVENT, The Ex-Puritan, The Fiddlehead, The Malahat Review, Prairie Fire, and more. His work has been a finalist for literary contests with CV2 and PRISM international, and in 2020, his poem "A Violence" won The Malahat Review's Open Season Award for poetry. He has published two chapbooks: a blurred wind swirls back for you (Turret House Press, 2023), and Dastardly (Anstruther Press, 2021), both of which explore aspects of love, fear, and trauma that represent a personal queer identity. Deviant, his first full-length poetry collection, continues to explore these themes. Follow him on IG: @thepoetpatrick. PODCAST RECOMMENDATIONS: Perfect Prey With Dr. Christine Cocchiola | Click Here The Covert Narcissism Podcast | Click Here Something Was Wrong | Click Here If you or someone you know are experiencing abuse, you are not alone. DomesticShelters.org offers an extensive library of articles and resources that can help you make sense of what you're experiencing, connect you with local resources and find ways to heal and move forward. Visit www.domesticshelters.org to access this free resource. If you need help moving due to domestic violence, Shelter Movers may be able to help you. They operate by referral. Clients may be referred by any person of authority (social worker, doctor, police, crisis counselor, teacher, etc.) or public agency (shelter, hospital, school, workplace, place of worship, sexual assault centre, etc.). To reach them, click here. Join our new Community Social Network at https://community.narcissistapocalypse.com/ Join our Instagram Channel at https://www.instagram.com/narcissistapocalypse Join our Youtube Channel at https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCpTIgjTqVJa4caNWMIAJllA Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this episode of Narcissist Apocalypse, Brandon reads letters and poems from survivors of domestic violence, coercive control, and narcissistic abuse about their experiences. Plus, Brandon analyzes the letters to discuss the big themes of being good enough, survival, and your basic human rights. *** CONTENT WARNING - This episode discusses sexual abuse and physical abuse. *** If you want to be a guest on our survivor story podcast, please click here or send us an email at narcissistapocalypse@gmail.com To help out our podcast, please fill out our listener survey, click here. The poets you heard today were Kate Rogers and Patrick Grace - They are published by River Street Writing. About the author Kate Rogers: Kate Rogers' poetry and critical writing have appeared in many literary journals and anthologies both in Canada and abroad, including The Montreal International Poetry Prize Anthology (Véhicule Press), Looking Back at Hong Kong (CUHK Press), subTerrain, ARC, PRISM, and many others. Her most recent poetry collection is Out of Place (Aeolus House/Quattro Books 2017.) She is a co-director of the Art Bar Poetry Reading Series in Toronto. About Patrick Grace: Patrick Grace is an author and teacher who divides his time between Vancouver and Victoria, BC. His poems have been published widely in Canadian literary magazines, including Arc Poetry Magazine, Best Canadian Poetry, Columba, EVENT, The Ex-Puritan, The Fiddlehead, The Malahat Review, Prairie Fire, and more. His work has been a finalist for literary contests with CV2 and PRISM international, and in 2020, his poem "A Violence" won The Malahat Review's Open Season Award for poetry. He has published two chapbooks: a blurred wind swirls back for you (Turret House Press, 2023), and Dastardly (Anstruther Press, 2021), both of which explore aspects of love, fear, and trauma that represent a personal queer identity. Deviant, his first full-length poetry collection, continues to explore these themes. Follow him on IG: @thepoetpatrick. PODCAST RECOMMENDATIONS: Perfect Prey With Dr. Christine Cocchiola | Click Here The Covert Narcissism Podcast | Click Here Something Was Wrong | Click Here If you or someone you know are experiencing abuse, you are not alone. DomesticShelters.org offers an extensive library of articles and resources that can help you make sense of what you're experiencing, connect you with local resources and find ways to heal and move forward. Visit www.domesticshelters.org to access this free resource. If you need help moving due to domestic violence, Shelter Movers may be able to help you. They operate by referral. Clients may be referred by any person of authority (social worker, doctor, police, crisis counselor, teacher, etc.) or public agency (shelter, hospital, school, workplace, place of worship, sexual assault centre, etc.). To reach them, click here. Join our new Community Social Network at https://community.narcissistapocalypse.com/ Join our Instagram Channel at https://www.instagram.com/narcissistapocalypse Join our Youtube Channel at https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCpTIgjTqVJa4caNWMIAJllA
Love har lyssnat på "den felande länken mellan King Crimson och Madness", alias Cardiacs. Robert hakar i Loves tema från förra avsnittet och lyfter hjältemodigt fram två svenska 70-talskvinnor strax utanför musikrörelsen. Några nyss avlidna uppmärksammas: Shuhada' Sadaqat, Sixto Rodriquez, Robbie Robertson och den näst minst kände Smiths-medlemmen. Ett lyssnarbrev från "Svante" besvaras med stor intellektuell skärpa, spänst och espri. Robert har inte kunnat släppa pappers- och tryckmässan Drupa och har därför satt ihop ett kort potpurri av låtar på temat "Düsseldorf". Love har vistats i ett trångt utrymme med en gammal glamrockare och gjort en förstklassig M A Numminen-mashup. Dessutom ger han oss några mycket upptagna produktioner signerade The Squires of the Subterrain, Of Montreal och Bob Drake, vilket osökt leder över till den käre Esquivel. I Roberts last.fm-historik hör vi turkisk surfrock, tysk progfolk och norsk Ulver. Vidare förekommer Michael Bublé, Aztec Camera, Felt, Bruno Mars, Prefab Sprout och två exempel på fenomenet "svarslåtar", varav ett avgjort bisarrt. Och så har Love gjort ungefär 1,5 låtar. Gör oss sällskap på Discord: https://discord.gg/Cywtq7vaqZ Gilla, kommentera och recensera på The Facebook: https://facebook.com/musikensmaktpodcast/ Bidra till Loves fysiska överlevnad och få lite bonusmaterial: https://www.patreon.com/musikensmakt
Love har lyssnat på "den felande länken mellan King Crimson och Madness", alias Cardiacs. Robert hakar i Loves tema från förra avsnittet och lyfter hjältemodigt fram två svenska 70-talskvinnor strax utanför musikrörelsen. Några nyss avlidna uppmärksammas: Shuhada' Sadaqat, Sixto Rodriquez, Robbie Robertson och den näst minst kände Smiths-medlemmen. Ett lyssnarbrev från "Svante" besvaras med stor intellektuell skärpa, spänst och espri. Robert har inte kunnat släppa pappers- och tryckmässan Drupa och har därför satt ihop ett kort potpurri av låtar på temat "Düsseldorf". Love har vistats i ett trångt utrymme med en gammal glamrockare och gjort en förstklassig M A Numminen-mashup. Dessutom ger han oss några mycket upptagna produktioner signerade The Squires of the Subterrain, Of Montreal och Bob Drake, vilket osökt leder över till den käre Esquivel. I Roberts last.fm-historik hör vi turkisk surfrock, tysk progfolk och norsk Ulver. Vidare förekommer Michael Bublé, Aztec Camera, Felt, Bruno Mars, Prefab Sprout och två exempel på fenomenet "svarslåtar", varav ett avgjort bisarrt. Och så har Love gjort ungefär 1,5 låtar.
In a special summertime "minisode" of All Write in Sin City, we connect with our friend and poet Kevin Spenst to find out what can happen on a no-holds-barred poetic romp across Canada. When he visited Windsor, he performed at the City of Windsor's birthday celebrations with our Poets Laureate, at the Art Windsor-Essex Gallery, and at Biblioasis bookstore. He was recorded live by Kim Conklin and interviewed by Irene Moore Davis. Kim Conklin and Sarah Jarvis did the editing (Kim did most of the editing - sj). Kevin Spenst, a Pushcart Poetry nominee, is the author of Ignite, Jabbering with Bing Bong, and Hearts Amok: a Memoir in Verse (all with Anvil Press), and over a dozen chapbooks including Surrey Sonnets (JackPine Press), Upend (Frog Hollow Press) and a holm with the Alfred Gustav Press coming out at the end of 2022. In 2019, he was writer-in-residence at the Joy Kogawa House. His work has won the Lush Triumphant Award for Poetry, been nominated for both the Alfred G. Bailey Prize and the Robert Kroetsch Award for Innovative Poetry, and has appeared in dozens of publications including Event, the Malahat Review, Prairie Fire, CV2, the Rusty Toque, Lemon Hound, Poetry is Dead, and the anthologies Best Canadian Poetry 2019, Best Canadian Poetry 2020 and Sweet Water: Poems for the Watersheds. He co-organizes the Dead Poets Reading Series, writes a chapbook column in subTerrain magazine, is an occasional co-host with RC Weslowski on Wax Poetic on Co-op Radio, teaches Creative Writing at Vancouver Community College and is the 2022 Poetry Mentor at SFU's Writers Studio. He lives in Vancouver on unceded Musqueam, Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh territory.https://kevinspenst.com/about/
New show! This time, Ian and Eric look to the Gerry Anderson shows of their childhoods, and we're starting with the very first episode of Fireball XL5.
New show! This time, Ian and Eric look to the Gerry Anderson shows of their childhoods, and we're starting with the very first episode of Fireball XL5.
Today, Sara Flemington (EGG ISLAND) talks to us about her debut novel, moving it from short story to longer narrative, its path to publication, the lit scene in Toronto, writing mantras, and more! Sara Flemington is the author of the novel, Egg Island. Her work has previously appeared in publications such as subTerrain, The Humber Literary Review, The Feathertale Review, and Paper Darts, among others. Sara lives in Toronto, Canada. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
On a mission to destroy an unstable ghost planet, Zodiac and Matic are caught in a Subterrain trap.
Eh Poetry Podcast - Canadian poems read 3 times - New Episodes six days a week!
Welcome to Eh Poetry Podcast's first episode. In today's episode, I read "In the Boxcar of Surrey around Guildford Castle." by Kevin Spenst. Kevin is a Pushcart Poetry nominee, is the author of Ignite, Jabbering with Bing Bong, and Hearts Amok: a Memoir in Verse (all with Anvil Press), and over a dozen chapbooks including Surrey Sonnets (JackPine Press), Upend (Frog Hollow Press) and a holm with the Alfred Gustav Press coming out at the end of 2022. In 2019, he was writer-in-residence at the Joy Kogawa House. His work has won the Lush Triumphant Award for Poetry, been nominated for both the Alfred G. Bailey Prize and the Robert Kroetsch Award for Innovative Poetry, and has appeared in dozens of publications including Event, the Malahat Review, Prairie Fire, CV2, the Rusty Toque, Lemon Hound, Poetry is Dead, and the anthologies Best Canadian Poetry 2019, Best Canadian Poetry 2020 and Sweet Water: Poems for the Watersheds. He co-organizes the Dead Poets Reading Series, writes a chapbook column in subTerrain magazine, is an occasional co-host with RC Weslowski on Wax Poetic on Co-op Radio, teaches Creative Writing at Vancouver Community College and is the 2022 Poetry Mentor at SFU's Writers Studio. He lives in Vancouver on unceded Musqueam, Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh territory. Please take a minute or two to read more about Kevin Spenst by visiting his website here or follow his social media accounts below: INSTAGRAM: kevin_spenst TWITTER: @kevinspenst His book Hearts Amok: A Memoir In Verse, published by Anvil Press can be found at your local bookstore. If they don't have it, I'm sure they would be very happy to order it! :) Eh Poetry Podcast's intro music by ComaStudio from Pixabay --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/ehpoetrypodcast/message
In this episode, we are joined by jaye simpson to talk about centaurs! jaye is an Oji-Cree Saulteaux Indigiqueer from the Sapotaweyak Cree Nation. They are a writer, advocate and activist published in several magazines including Poetry Is Dead, This Magazine, PRISM international, SAD Magazine: Green, GUTS Magazine, SubTerrain, Grain and Room. They are in two anthologies: Hustling Verse (2019) and Love After the End (2020). jaye joins us to discuss Firenze and the characterization of centaurs in Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix.You can follow jaye on Twitter @fka_jayesimpson and support their GoFundMe for gender affirming care, here. They're the best and deserve all the love — which will be obvious when you listen to this fun and engaging episode!***Shoutout to everyone who helped us reach our $5000 USD/month goal by becoming Patrons or upgrading their Patreon Tier. Everyone who joined our Patreon, no matter the tier, is invited to attend a LIVE recording of #WitchPleaseTellMe (our Q&A series) on January 29th. Join Patreon today at $2/month (or $5, $10, $13, or $30) to attend the Zoom!Stay connected and follow Witch, Please on Twitter and Instagram @ohwitchplease and let us know what you think of the show through a review on Apple Podcasts. Your support keeps Witch, Please running! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this episode, we are joined by jaye simpson to talk about centaurs! jaye is an Oji-Cree Saulteaux Indigiqueer from the Sapotaweyak Cree Nation. They are a writer, advocate and activist published in several magazines including Poetry Is Dead, This Magazine, PRISM international, SAD Magazine: Green, GUTS Magazine, SubTerrain, Grain and Room. They are in two anthologies: Hustling Verse (2019) and Love After the End (2020). jaye joins us to discuss Firenze and the characterization of centaurs in Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix.You can follow jaye on Twitter @fka_jayesimpson and support their GoFundMe for gender affirming care, here. They're the best and deserve all the love — which will be obvious when you listen to this fun and engaging episode!***Shoutout to everyone who helped us reach our $5000 USD/month goal by becoming Patrons or upgrading their Patreon Tier. Everyone who joined our Patreon, no matter the tier, is invited to attend a LIVE recording of #WitchPleaseTellMe (our Q&A series) on January 29th. Join Patreon today at $2/month (or $5, $10, $13, or $30) to attend the Zoom!Stay connected and follow Witch, Please on Twitter and Instagram @ohwitchplease and let us know what you think of the show through a review on Apple Podcasts. Your support keeps Witch, Please running! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
No Fun City Podcast #17 - Aaron is Living in a Minefield Aaron Chan is a musician, filmmaker, and writer born and raised on unceded Coast Salish territories (Vancouver). He holds a BFA in Creative Writing from the University of British Columbia, and his writing has been published in literary magazines and publications including Plenitude, filling Station, Polychrome Ink, and Xtra. His piece “A Case of Jeff” won subTerrain‘s Lush Triumphant Literary Award in Creative Non-Fiction, and he has published a poetry chapbook, Romantic Hopeless. His first book, This City Is a Minefield (Signal 8 Press), is a collection of memoir and personal essays. Join our conversation as Aaron discusses the details of his book as well as his life growing up in Vancouver as a openly queer Asian Canadian. No Fun City podcast presents a new guest in every episode. Thanks for watching and be sure to hit subscribe for your chance to win an awesome prize pack and to stay up to date with all my new videos.
Kevin Spenst returns to talk Hearts Amok: A Memoir in Verse. Andrew celebrates a year of Page Fright. It's a fun episode for all! ----- Listen to more episodes of Page Fright here. ----- Kevin Spenst, a Pushcart Poetry nominee, is the author of Hearts Amok, Ignite, Jabbering with Bing Bong (both with Anvil Press), and over a dozen chapbooks including Pray Goodbye (the Alfred Gustav Press), Ward Notes (the serif of nottingham), Flip Flop Faces and Unexpurgated Lives (JackPine Press), and most recently Upend (Frog Hollow Press). His work has won the Lush Triumphant Award for Poetry, been nominated for both the Alfred G. Bailey Prize and the Robert Kroetsch Award for Innovative Poetry, and has appeared in dozens of publications including Event, the Malahat Review, subTerrain magazine, Prairie Fire, CV2, the Rusty Toque, BafterC, Lemon Hound, Poetry is Dead, and the anthology Best Canadian Poetry 2019. He co-organizes the Dead Poets Reading Series, and teaches Creative Writing at Vancouver Community College. He lives on unceded Coast Salish territory (Vancouver) with the love of his life Shauna Kaendo. ----- Andrew French is an author from North Vancouver, British Columbia. Andrew holds a BA in English from Huron University College at Western University, and is pursuing an MA in English at UBC. He writes poems, book reviews, and hosts this very podcast.
Murf is a legend in London but barely known globally. A music buyer for record shops & a human house & techno encyclopedia, Murf is easily my favourite DJ in the world. We lived on the same small street in our late teens & he went on to become resident DJ of Subterrain at The End. Both his solo & our back to back sets are that of London rave folklore. Enjoy 6 hours of excellence. I love Murf.
Murf is a legend in London but barely known globally. A music buyer for record shops & a human house & techno encyclopedia, Murf is easily my favourite DJ in the world. We lived on the same small street in our late teens & he went on to become resident DJ of Subterrain at The End. Both his solo & our back to back sets are that of London rave folklore. Enjoy 6 hours of excellence. I love Murf.
Blade, Star Wars, The Rise of Skywalker, Michael Bay, JJ Abrams, "fuck Pearl Harbor", The Games of the Year, Pathologic 2, DOOM, Alien Vanguard, Subterrain, Immortal Redneck, Ancestors, Hunt: Showdown, Sea of Thieves, Swarm Lake, For the King, The Outer Worlds, Space Beast Terror Fright, Paratopic, The Land of Pain, Monster Hunter World: Iceborne, Noita, Baba is You, Fire Emblem Three Houses, GRIS, Die Young, The Outer Wilds, Disco Elysium, Control, Off-Peak, The Norwood Suite, Bernie Sanders, Sekiro, Devil May Cry 5, Remnant: From the Ashes, Evactor, Death Stranding, Apex Legends.
Halloweenie St. Subterrain If naming saints was a novelty game And the bottle it washed out over night He had a faded picture in his pocket Of Greta Garbo Who he said he once met on an elevator She was going up And he was going down Let's pitch in to give him a name Call him saint of the sub terrain Let's pitch in to give him a name Call him saint of the sub terrain He won't let it get him down He's the king of the underground He holes up in the shadows of the light Eeking from exposure He had faded picture in his pocket Of Greta Garbo Who he said he once met on an elevator She was going up And he was going down Let's pitch in to give him a name Call him saint of the sub terrain Let's pitch in to give him a name Call him saint of the sub terrain He won't let it get him down He's the king of the underground All songs written in Oct. 2019 by Viktor Recorded and Produced by Viktor and Kuz Music by Viktor and Kuz www.viktor.digital
Cats, Sonic the Movie, Kangaroo Jack, VFX critique, Dances with Wolves, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, James Bond, Kame Korner, QuakeCon, Todd Howard, Fallout 76, Assassin's Creed: Odyssey, Pokemon, Pokemon Home, subscription services, Pepsi cola, weaponized fandom, Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six Siege, League of Legends, Steel Division, Brood War, Apex Legends, Chivalry, plotting against Regan, "Jellicles", Subterrain, Sword Mans, Half Dead 2.
Rachel interviews Carleigh Baker, an editor with Joyland, who talks about the difference between her first and future books, “You can only gaze at your navel for so long. If that’s what you needed to heal, great, but I’m really looking forward to turning my gaze outward.” And about the positive changes and communities that have grown out of dark times in CanLit: “I’m hopeful because I see a lot of women and some men speak up about sexual assault.” Carleigh Baker is a Cree-Métis/ Icelandic writer living on unceded Coast Salish territory. She is the Vancouver editor of Joyland and also editing an upcoming issue of Poetry is Dead. Carleigh’s work has appeared in subTerrain, PRISM International, Joyland, and Matrix. She won the Lush Triumphant award for short fiction in 2012 and is a two-time Journey Prize nominee. In submissions to her, she says she likes bees, spawning salmon, and apocalyptic romance, and tight economical prose with a ton of subtext, a sense of humour (the darker the better) and a deep appreciation of how flawed and confusing humans are. Notes On Problems in the CanLit Community This episode is the first of a few coming up, where Rachel interviews writers and editors closely affected by what’s been happening in CanLit culture, specifically with the University of British Columbia firing of a prof and the fall out when literary heavyweights signed a letter calling for “due process” of the accused. As Carleigh put it in our interview, “Last winter was a dark winter in CanLit.” It’s basically CanLit’s #MeToo moment, but it hasn’t played out the way it has in Hollywood. In this movement, it has been the less powerful people in CanLit speaking up and demanding true accountability from our community. In the show notes on litmaglovepodcast.com, are links to articles that will provide some background on this, though you don’t need to know all the minutiae of this story to listen to the episode. For one, there’s a really familiar pattern here, unfortunately, and for another, we talk about other things, like Carleigh’s enthusiastic interest in heavy metal music, the difference between her first and second book, where she can now look outward, and her activism on Twitter. And we also talk about what makes her hopeful for the future, including the foundation of the UBC Indigenous reading group. And as always it’s full of behind the scenes insights from a literary journal, and tips for you on submitting to lit mags.
Rachel interviews Carleigh Baker, an editor with Joyland, who talks about the difference between her first and future books, “You can only gaze at your navel for so long. If that’s what you needed to heal, great, but I’m really looking forward to turning my gaze outward.” And about the positive changes and communities that have grown out of dark times in CanLit: “I’m hopeful because I see a lot of women and some men speak up about sexual assault.” Carleigh Baker is a Cree-Métis/ Icelandic writer living on unceded Coast Salish territory. She is the Vancouver editor of Joyland and also editing an upcoming issue of Poetry is Dead. Carleigh’s work has appeared in subTerrain, PRISM International, Joyland, and Matrix. She won the Lush Triumphant award for short fiction in 2012 and is a two-time Journey Prize nominee. In submissions to her, she says she likes bees, spawning salmon, and apocalyptic romance, and tight economical prose with a ton of subtext, a sense of humour (the darker the better) and a deep appreciation of how flawed and confusing humans are. Notes On Problems in the CanLit Community This episode is the first of a few coming up, where Rachel interviews writers and editors closely affected by what’s been happening in CanLit culture, specifically with the University of British Columbia firing of a prof and the fall out when literary heavyweights signed a letter calling for “due process” of the accused. As Carleigh put it in our interview, “Last winter was a dark winter in CanLit.” It’s basically CanLit’s #MeToo moment, but it hasn’t played out the way it has in Hollywood. In this movement, it has been the less powerful people in CanLit speaking up and demanding true accountability from our community. In the show notes on litmaglovepodcast.com, are links to articles that will provide some background on this, though you don’t need to know all the minutiae of this story to listen to the episode. For one, there’s a really familiar pattern here, unfortunately, and for another, we talk about other things, like Carleigh’s enthusiastic interest in heavy metal music, the difference between her first and second book, where she can now look outward, and her activism on Twitter. And we also talk about what makes her hopeful for the future, including the foundation of the UBC Indigenous reading group. And as always it’s full of behind the scenes insights from a literary journal, and tips for you on submitting to lit mags.
It's been another busy week here at TA towers, so we've enlisted the help of our Editorial Manager, Mark, to help us go through all of this week's games, news and listener questions. On this week's show, we give you the chance to win an Xbox One download code for Subterrain by listening for our inconspicuous contest claxon, we talk some more about For Honor, Rich finally tries ReCore, we give you the low-down on this week's ID@@Xbox releases and three of us play Polychromatic to deliberately mess up our nicely rounded GamerScores. We also go through all of this week's big news announcements, take a look at what we've been playing, look at the games coming our way next week, and answer your questions including our question of the week. Links: The Community and Events Team Are Recruiting! March Games With Gold Announced Full List of Free Xbox 360 Games 15 Windows Phone Games Removed from the Store A King's Tale: Final Fantasy XV to Be Free Starting March 1st Phil Spencer Previews Xbox in 2017, Confirms Two Titles for Play Anywhere Mass Effect: Andromeda Gameplay Series Starts With Combat Battlefield 1 Winter Update Details and Stream Rocket League Hot Wheels Patch Aims at Buggy Achievements Borderlands 2, Assassin's Creed Rogue and More Now Backward Compatible
Esta semana en el programa 41 os traemos las noticias de la semana, con Phil Spencer de viaje por japon en busca de juegos para xbx one, y mas actualidad.. Ademas debatimos sobre xbox one s Ps4 y por que microsoft parece haber tirado la toalla. Comentamos las impresiones de Nioh y de Subterrain
Esta semana en el programa 41 os traemos las noticias de la semana, con Phil Spencer de viaje por japon en busca de juegos para xbx one, y mas actualidad.. Ademas debatimos sobre xbox one s Ps4 y por que microsoft parece haber tirado la toalla. Comentamos las impresiones de Nioh y de Subterrain
This week the gang (EIC Ben, Reviews Editor Richard, PC Gaming Editor Adam and contributor Joel) talk about: New Mass Effect Andromeda trailer Square Enix are making MARVEL games February’s Games with Gold New Xbox One guide Play Dead the makers of INSIDE (our GOTY) already teasing a new game The sad passing of John Hurt this morning Rise & Shine, Siegecraft Commander, Astroneer, Resident Evil 7: Biohazard, Sky Force Anniversary, She Remembered Caterpillars, UltraHDMI, Maldita Castilla EX, Pit People, Subterrain, Shantae: Half Genie Hero, Last Guardian, Halo Wars 2 Blitz Beta, Virginia,
The On Edge Reading Series presents: Gurjinder Basran and Jim Oaten - November 17, 2011. Gurjinder Basran’s debut novel, Everything Was Good-bye (Mother Tongue, 2010), was the winner of the Search for the Great BC Novel Contest in 2010 and the Ethel Wilson Fiction Award for most outstanding work of fiction by a BC author. Her work has earned her a place in the Vancouver Sun's annual "Ones to Watch." A graduate of SFU's Writer's Studio, Gurjinder lives in Delta, BC. Jim Oaten’s first book—Accelerated Paces: Travels across Borders and Other Imaginary Boundaries—was published in late 2008 by Anvil Press, and his current project, Runtime, is a collection of short pieces exploring twinned themes of technology and loss. The inaugural winner of subTerrain magazine's creative non-fiction award, he has had work published in Vancouver Magazine, Vancouver Review, the Vancouver Sun, Pacific Rim, Where and the National Post. He has also won a National Magazine Award (Honourable Mention) and has been a Western Magazine Award finalist. The On Edge series gratefully acknowledges the support of the Canada Council and Emily Carr University.
OH MY LORD!! What can I say about this one? THE ambassador of all that is good and decent and DIRTY in underground house music graced us with his presence at the RED-ZONE. We managed to grab him just before he jetted off to a new life in LA (although he will be coming back to do his amaaaazing Superfreq parties once a month) and what a set he played!! Of course he put us all to shame with his 10 years of experience in radio dating back to Dance FM and Kiss 100 even though this was his first time doing radio for a long time... He also took some time out to tell us what he's been up to since the closing of The End and the rise of Superfreq and spoke some wise words for the younglings :) Mr C we salute you. Enjoy x