Podcasts about Suspenders

Shoulder straps worn to hold up trousers

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Suspenders

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Best podcasts about Suspenders

Latest podcast episodes about Suspenders

MDR KULTUR trifft: Menschen von hier
MDR KULTUR trifft Tobias Rosenthal

MDR KULTUR trifft: Menschen von hier

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2025 47:21


Er sang im Thomanerchor Leipzig, absolvierte eine Ausbildung zum Musikalienhändler in Hamburg und Bonn. Es folgte ein Jura-Studium in Hamburg und Leipzig, 1999 gründete er die Agentur Rosenthal Musikmanagement.

“Fun with Annuities” The Annuity Man Podcast
Belt & Suspenders Annuity Strategies: Shootin' It Straight With Stan (TAM Classic)

“Fun with Annuities” The Annuity Man Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2025 11:36


In this episode, The Annuity Man discussed:  State guaranty funds  The true safety of the industry  Life insurance companies are more regulated  Assigning unused money to beneficiaries   Key Takeaways:  If you look at the state guaranty fund, each state has a specific rule in place to protect you and your money in case something happens to the carrier.  You should be buying the claims-paying ability of the life insurance company from the standpoint of safety. The true safety of the annuity industry is the industry policing itself.  Life insurance companies are not smarter than banks, they're just more regulated. The company is handcuffed from making financially stupid decisions.  You can structure an annuity so that 100% of any unused money goes to your family or beneficiaries.    "You can protect yourself and your hard-earned money in a myriad of ways. You can protect it by buying very good companies, by buying underneath the state guarantee fund within your state, and by structuring the policy so that 100% of any unused money goes to your family or beneficiaries." —  Stan The Annuity Man.    Connect with The Annuity Man:  Website: http://theannuityman.com/  Email: Stan@TheAnnuityMan.com  Book: Owner's Manuals: https://www.stantheannuityman.com/how-do-annuities-work YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCCXKKxvVslbeGAlEc5sra2g  Get a Quote Today: https://www.stantheannuityman.com/annuity-calculator!

Blood Podcast
A “belt and suspenders” approach to PNH; oral pathogens exacerbate chronic GVHD; microbial metabolome changes may adversely impact CAR-T outcomes

Blood Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2025 19:09


In this week's episode, we'll hear about a “belt and suspenders” approach to paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria, or PNH. We'll review long-term efficacy data for danicopan—an oral complement factor D inhibitor recently approved as an add-on to C5 inhibitor therapy.After that: researchers show how oral pathogens may exacerbate chronic graft-versus-host disease. And they assess targeted interventions to mitigate these effects. Finally, we move from the oral to the gut microbiome. New findings suggest that intestinal dysbiosis, induced by antibiotics, may adversely affect outcomes among patients who are receiving CAR-T cell therapy.Featured Articles:Long-term efficacy and safety of danicopan as add-on therapy to ravulizumab or eculizumab in PNH with significant EVHOral inflammation and microbiome dysbiosis exacerbate chronic graft-versus-host diseaseAntibiotic-induced loss of gut microbiome metabolic output correlates with clinical responses to CAR T-cell therapy

This Week's Episode
This Week's Episode Ep. 284: Gym Suspenders

This Week's Episode

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2025 78:33


On this month's episode of This Week's Episode, Evan talks the gang into getting some therapy with the first 2 episodes of Shrinking. Angie visits the Queer Eye team, Karen heads to Ireland with some Derry Girls and Kris revisits Trigun. All this and so much more! This week's episode Shrinking - Coin Flip & Fortress of Solitude (S01E01&02) Homework Star Wars - Skel;ton Crew Season 1 Support Us Geekade Patreon Karen's Etsy Store Angie's Website Angie's Twitch Channel Kris' SAG Youtube Tales of Cape Fear Social Stuff Discord Geekade Facebook Twitter Instagram YouTube Twitch

What Sid Thinks
WST 208: The One About the Thing

What Sid Thinks

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2025 21:46


Suspenders v Suits. The plain cabbage win. The futility of talking about beliefs. And finally…A special announcement. ORDER YOUR COPY: Ultrarunning for Normal People Coaching: Private Coaching: SMALL STEP INTENSIVEOnline Program: SMALL STEPPERS – 40% off thru 1/31/25! USE CODE: “SmallSteps2025” at checkout MORE STUFF: PATREON BOOKS MUSIC Please support the Rancho Compasión Farm Sanctuary

Stoneybrook Reunion: The Baby-Sitters Club Book Club
The Presence of Suspenders, Period.

Stoneybrook Reunion: The Baby-Sitters Club Book Club

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 25, 2024 91:44


A prank gone awry during a gig lands Claudia in the hospital and launches her into an existential crisis. If babysitting is this risky, she's not sure it's for her! While Claudia recovers and once again mulls whether she'll leave the club, the BSC takes on the serious business of sitting for and waging a practical joke war with the new problem child charge, Betsy. Sit beside us on the Sobaks' sofa (but watch out for that whoopee cushion!) as we discuss Claudia and the Bad Joke, and what Lady Gaga and Kristy Thomas have in common. Grandma's/Home from School Programs List Noozles Barney & Friends Wheel of Fortune -or- Jeopardy The Price is Right Your soap of choice Your afternoon talk show of choice A 3+ hour block of Designing Women Where did you find the finest prank goods for grade school hijinks? Let us know at stoneybrookreunion@gmail.com.  Follow us on Instagram @stoneybrookreunion.

Stocks And Jocks
Jet Bridges, Air Bridges, Belts, and Suspenders

Stocks And Jocks

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2024 113:37


Lou and Tom expound on airport protocol, jet bridge Jesus, and bunker busting bombs followed by new guest Bill Moriarty in second hour to educate us on civil infrastructure projects after hurricanes and other disasters.

Is This Good?
Matt & JD | Suspenders On Suspenders [Patreon Exclusive]

Is This Good?

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2024 0:51


Audiostretto 59/4/24 English

There are things such as braces that are very useful and functional - but only if they are connected to what they were made for: the braces without trousers can hardly be used for anything else, while the trousers can still be worn, even without braces. That seems unfair: you can do without one and the other is useless without the other. What is certain, however, is that the combination of both creates the best solution or situation. In some cases in our lives, it really is the case that it doesn't depend on us and others manage well without us - but if we are involved, the whole situation becomes better, perhaps even more successful. It is true that many things can be done without us, even if it hurts us in certain situations and relationships. Sometimes we simply have to accept this without resentment or frustration. But with the joy that when we are integrated, it's nicer after all. I wish you an extraordinary day!

ACRO's Good Clinical Podcast
S2: E5 RBQM: Moving Beyond a Belt and Suspenders Approach to Data Quality

ACRO's Good Clinical Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2024 28:50


On this episode, Danilo Branco (Director, Central Monitoring Operations, Fortrea), Cris McDavid (Director, Global Clinical Operations, RBQM, Parexel), and Valarie McGee (Senior Director, Clinical Systems Optimization, the PPD Clinical Research Business of Thermo Fisher Scientific) join the podcast to discuss insights from 5 years of data on industry RBM/RBQM adoption collected by ACRO's RBQM Working Group has and how industry can drive further RBQM adoption.They dive deeper into ACRO's annual RBQM landscape survey findings, challenges and opportunities presented by the growth of centralized monitoring and reduced SDR/SDV, and the role that RBQM can play in the future of clinical research.

The Debaters
1829: Belts vs. Suspenders & Move to Hamilton

The Debaters

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2024 34:47


Elvira Kurt and Graham Chittenden have no time to waist when they discuss if belts are superior to suspenders.  Then, should everyone move to Hamilton? Gavin Stephens and Ron Sparks bring the Hammer down on each other in their debate for this Ontario city.

hamilton ontario hammer belts suspenders gavin stephens graham chittenden ron sparks
The Enginerdy Show
EPISODE 583: Suspenders and Pants

The Enginerdy Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2024


This week we talk about curb ramps at road intersections. Consumption: Mr. Pold - Casablanca, My Effin' Life St. Jimmy - The Mule, Damsel, Game of Thrones season 2 D'Viddy - The Tourist season 1, License to Kill, Farscape season 1 Master Z - Wonka Music Provided By: Greg Gibbs / Most Guitars Are Made of Trees Section 27 / The King's Betrayal Derek Clegg / Too Late

“Fun with Annuities” The Annuity Man Podcast
Belt & Suspenders Annuity Strategies: Shootin' It Straight With Stan

“Fun with Annuities” The Annuity Man Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2024 13:11


In this episode, The Annuity Man discussed:  State guaranty funds  The true safety of the industry  Life insurance companies are more regulated  Assigning unused money to beneficiaries   Key Takeaways:  If you look at the state guaranty fund, each state has a specific rule in place to protect you and your money in case something happens to the carrier.  You should be buying the claims-paying ability of the life insurance company from the standpoint of safety. The true safety of the annuity industry is the industry policing itself.  Life insurance companies are not smarter than banks, they're just more regulated. The company is handcuffed from making financially stupid decisions.  You can structure an annuity so that 100% of any unused money goes to your family or beneficiaries.    "You can protect yourself and your hard-earned money in a myriad of ways. You can protect it by buying very good companies, by buying underneath the state guarantee fund within your state, and by structuring the policy so that 100% of any unused money goes to your family or beneficiaries." —  Stan The Annuity Man.    Connect with The Annuity Man:  Website: http://theannuityman.com/  Email: Stan@TheAnnuityMan.com  Book: Owner's Manuals: https://www.stantheannuityman.com/how-do-annuities-work YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCCXKKxvVslbeGAlEc5sra2g  Get a Quote Today: https://www.stantheannuityman.com/annuity-calculator! 

Wind Machine Podcast - Not your average Eurovision podcast
Episode 92 – “1979: Concentric Circles, Stereotypes, and Glittering Suspenders”

Wind Machine Podcast - Not your average Eurovision podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 29, 2023 93:14


In this episode, we chat about host city of Jerusalem, the hosts of 1979, the postcards, the controversies, the fashion at Eurovision 1979, the interval act, European and Australian news, what was happening in entertainment, the WTF and OMG moments of the contest, the voting, and play our top 10 of 1979 based on a … Continue reading Episode 92 – “1979: Concentric Circles, Stereotypes, and Glittering Suspenders”

Call Chelsea Peretti
SLURP WARS

Call Chelsea Peretti

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2023 77:44 Transcription Available


Tim Heidecker joins Chelsea in her 500 degree studio to take turns spiraling and ask callers to play a game called: "Who's Slurpin'?" Han calls. A 28 year old caller from Perth has searing insight into Tim's past visits to Perth! Ghosts, energy, spirit, and soul. Tim plays one of his songs. A caller shares some acting class lunacy involving bone breakage. We examine the irksome blase tone of cooking content. Daddy's dinner bell. Tim's fans call and promote his entire body of work. A poly dude whose therapist skipped out on him buries the lede. Library intrusive thought direction. Suspenders, California. Olives, meatballs, lemons, empanadas, mac n cheese, green bean casserole, pizza, and balsamic glaze. A loose goose-attack framework. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Heather and Poolboy - HERE'S WHAT YOU MISSED!
Thriller Thursday 10-26-23 (1)

Heather and Poolboy - HERE'S WHAT YOU MISSED!

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2023 18:13


Kicking off the last Thriller Thursday of the year withWest Virginia Ouija, Courteous Casper, Tunnel of Terrors, Little Shop Of Horrors, & Suspenders!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Hallmark Happenings Podcast
PREVIEW: Top 5 Hallmark Christmas Movies of 2023 - SUSPENDERS UNBUTTONED PODCAST (Sarah & Julie)

Hallmark Happenings Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2023 29:20


Follow Suspenders Unbuttoned Podcast: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-T_VW4XW2RpgCt-WhwahZgFollow LOVE AND LATTES PODCAST: https://www.loveandlattespodcast.comhttps://www.amazon.com/shop/loveandlattespodcasthttps://www.facebook.com/loveandlattespodcast https://twitter.com/loveandlatteshttps://www.instagram.com/loveandlattespodcast https://www.youtube.com/@loveandlattespodcast 

1000 Sketches In 1000 Days
Day 957 - Suspenders

1000 Sketches In 1000 Days

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2023 9:36


Sketch 1184 - Suspenders

Dear Hallmark
Candid Conversations with Suspenders Unbuttoned

Dear Hallmark

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2023 98:26


Julie and Sarah from the Suspenders Unbuttoned podcast come into the home of Dear Hallmark to talk candidly about podcasting within the Hallmark community, diversity within Hallmark, as well as our favorite Hallmark movies and actors. Suspenders Unbuttoned on Youtuber: https://www.youtube.com/@suspendersunbuttonedpodcast To purchase "Chasing Wind": https://amzn.to/3IGUI6g For other Hallmark movie reviews, be sure to check out the Dear Hallmark YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCe7R8-e6d13cee5QMo_Oltw Dear Hallmark's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dearhallmark/ Dear Hallmark's Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/dearhallmarkpodcast  --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/dearhallmark/message

Scott and Sadie's 20 Minute Morning Show
Episode 541: I'm bringing suspenders back.

Scott and Sadie's 20 Minute Morning Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2023 22:32


Uh-huh. Sure you are.

Cast Iron Brains -- A Podcast
A Classic Body Shape for Suspenders

Cast Iron Brains -- A Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2023 105:32


CIB reluctantly repels into the news of the week to find a man-child sharing top secret government intelligence with his gamer buddies, less-than-amusing one-off castle-defense shootings, and The Atlantic pricking the bubble of Millennial malaise. All of that plus little league fun, online shopping for mens' athletic wear, and Mark Strassmann. Listen, if you must! Has something we said, or failed to say, made you FEEL something? You can tell us all about it on Facebook or Twitter, leave a comment on the show's page on our website, or you can send us an email here. Enjoy!Show RundownOpen — Birthdays abound, What Not To Wear: Abe's Indecent Exposure Edition, and youth sport18:24 — 21-year-old junior airman revealed as source of massive US intelligence documents breach39:00 — Defending your property with extreme prejudice59:36 — The Atlantic on The Myth of the Broke Millennial1:16:15 — Wrap-up! Mark Strassmann gets a tax-day treat, Abe goes to the movies, and SuccessionRelevant Linkage can be found at the page for this episode on our website at https://www.brainiron.com/podcast/episode0140

Random Richards
Ep.048: Fist Bumps over handshakes. You can't cancel Bud Light! BEER is uncancelable!!! Pepsi/Coke making balls great (and big) again.

Random Richards

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2023 99:53


Lots to chew on in this episode. What would you do if you had "fuck you money"? For Christ's sake leave the Tranq alone!!! Pepsi and coke drinkers rejoice, you're getting more than some sugar with that drink. Suspenders...why? Driving pet peeves. Tip entitlement run amuck.  Raining worms? Melly mel dissing rappers. Down goesTakashi 69!! Ja Morant loves dem strippers....and guns. Dude murders guy with propane tank and it's on twitter for everyone to see. Chick with the moustache, amazon commercial.  Challenging people to a duel with a glove slap. Homemade slow down sign. Never name your boy precious. National X Day. The cancellation of Bud Light. Shaking hands or fist bump???Support the show

HUNKS Podcast
S4E39 Suspenders are Cool

HUNKS Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2023 33:42


On this episode of the hunks pidcast everyone agrees with Tim that suspenders are actually cool. Brought to you By: The Sonar Network https://thesonarnetwork.com/

The Cavalry
"In What Context Have You Worn Suspenders?"

The Cavalry

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2023 61:20


It's episode 140 of The Cavalry! Johnny needs backup on not returning gifts for anything except for a different size. Andrew needs backup on being able to pay extra for UPS to backdate when you dropped a package off. Enjoy! Join the Patreon to hear post-show banter and our bonus episodes! 

Talking Dicks Comedy Podcast: A podcast with a touch of crass.
Talking Dicks Comedy Podcast Vol 66: A pod without suspenders.

Talking Dicks Comedy Podcast: A podcast with a touch of crass.

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2022 22:01


Dusted off from our Classic Vault. https:/patreon.com/thetwodickshttps://www.instagram.com/thetalkingdickscomedypodcast/https://twitter.com/DicksTwohttps://www.facebook.com/thetwodickshttps://www.facebook.com/The-Talking-Dicks-Comedy-Podcast-107101331446404Support the show

Sports Bizarre
The dodgy road to the Qatar World Cup: Part Three

Sports Bizarre

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2022 40:20


It's part three of our look at the history of FIFA, and in this episode, we introduce a young man with a sparkle in his eye, Sepp Blatter. Part Bond villain, part, well actually, all Bond villain; under Blatter, FIFA made the final step towards adopting corruption as the sole reason for its existence. Titus O'Reily and Mick Molloy examine the rise of Blatter, from President of a pressure group encouraging women to wear suspenders, the World Society of Friends of Suspenders, to President of FIFA. Follow Sports Bizarre on: Instagram Facebook Twitter TikTok YouTube

Talking Dicks Comedy Podcast: A podcast with a touch of crass.
Talking Dicks Comedy Podcast Vol 62: A pod without suspenders from the Vault.

Talking Dicks Comedy Podcast: A podcast with a touch of crass.

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2022 24:13


Always a surprise. Give a listen. From our Vault! https:/patreon.com/thetwodickshttps://www.instagram.com/thetalkingdickscomedypodcast/https://twitter.com/DicksTwohttps://www.facebook.com/thetwodickshttps://www.facebook.com/The-Talking-Dicks-Comedy-Podcast-107101331446404Support the show

Emma Arnold Podcasts
SUSPENDERS UP

Emma Arnold Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2022 67:18


We're talking teenagers and suspenders. Theme Music is La La La (Love You Like) by Duce Williams

Topic Lords
156. Society Is Moving In A Direction

Topic Lords

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2022 65:26


Support Topic Lords on Patreon and get episodes a week early! (https://www.patreon.com/topiclords) Lords: * Alex * https://twitter.com/alexicographic * https://www.twitch.tv/damaplaysgames/ * JP * http://vectorpoem.com/ Topics: * Your gravestone has a button people can press to play a sound clip, 10 seconds or less. It can loop or be a one-shot, your preference. What sound clip does your gravestone play? * https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9u8Fd7EHYAg * Counting the beats in eenie-meenie * SoundScan and the SoundScan Era * https://www.theringer.com/music/2021/5/25/22452539/soundscan-billboard-charts-streaming-numbers * There Will Come Soft Rains * https://poets.org/poem/there-will-come-soft-rains * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ThereWillComeSoftRains(shortstory) * The scorched-earth strategy for Lowest Positive Unique Integer * "Leaving beautiful ruins" in a videogame Microtopics: * A return of many-storied adventure game developers. * A point and click adventure game that changed the trajectory of your life. * Suspenders as an architectural feature. * Onesie pajamas with a trap door. * People sneaking up behind you and trying to unbutton your poop flap. * Thoughts that are meant to remain unthought. * The famous elongated "some." * A marketing executive saying "nobody will know what a 'tetralogy' is." * Whether your game studio logo has a sound. * Console startup noises. * The button your loved ones can press on your gravestone to hear the Dreamcast startup sound. * King Solomoning the gif-vs-gif debate. * The governing body that decides whether your death is cool enough to warrant a gif of your death on your tombstone. * The kind of people who gravitate to a job that rates everyone's deaths on a five-star scale. * The IP situation surrounding your gravestone's looping wav button. * Your tombstone jukebox that plays David Bowie songs when people put a quarter in and the quarters all end up in your casket and if David Bowie wants them he can damn well come and get them. * Wagering on your ability to read emergent situations. * Electric Football. * Covering a metal plate with quarters and flipping the switch that makes the plate vibrate, creating the quarter configuration for optimal money gouging. * Becoming really good at beating a rigged game. * Becoming really good at funnel cake. * Dentists not understanding the motivations people have for drinking soda. * Largest Sip. * The liminal space between a Sip and a Gulp. * Gaming the outcome in Eenie Meenie Miney Moe. * Whether Eenie Meenie Miney Moe is a solved game. * A great opportunity to practice believing the lies that we form our wesociety on. * When Billboard switched from a call-stores-and-ask data collection system to an automated system to gather song sales data, and rap and R&B suddenly started dominating the charts. * Rockists fudging the numbers. * The pros and cons of getting a Billboard Hot 100 hit. * Jukebox charts. * The Billboard Humming chart based on them listening to the songs people are humming to themselves on the street. * Who loves the radio hits that everyone you know hates? (People you don't know.) * Knowing where to stick that quarter. * White dudes making 17 minute songs. * Axis of Discourse. * A directory of mp3s in your Jellyfin server. * Napster pivoting to NFTs but nobody notices or cares. * Nostalgia for the Spanish Flu. * A giant ball of iron with life forms clinging to it. * The earth continuing to be a lump of iron no matter how badly we treat it. * Potential human extinction and whether birds would notice it. * A fully-automated human house of the near to far future. * A band of roving pranksters in the post-apocalypse who are running around transmitting bad Roomba firmware updates. * Rolling up on prom with your entourage of four Half-Life scientists and five Barneys. * Rolling up on the rap battle with your entourage of backup singer Roombas trailing behind you. * The Mad Max series as prepper porn. * A good shelf to rest on in the collective psyche. * Friend deterrent strategies. * How strategy disclosure alters the gameplay of Rock Paper Scissors. * Disclosing ahead of the game or Rock Paper Scissors that your strategy will be to punch your opponent repeatedly, and how that affects the way the game is played. * Satisfactory: an open-world factory building game. * Building your factories and then leaving them behind. * Emergent haunted houses in abandoned player-built structures in persistent-world multiplayer games. * Having an idea for a game feature and having to build the whole game to try the feature out. * Being scared of weird old crap. * Adding Pokemon to Minecraft. * The last gasp of mainstream PC gaming before phones happened. * An 11 year old game developer getting thrown into the Capitalist snake pit. * The Human Attention Zoo. * Kids (or adults) having goofs. * The Golden Age of the Moddable Game Engine. * Getting a job based on your Roblox portfolio.

The Bike Shed
354: The History of Computing

The Bike Shed

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2022 31:16


Why does the history of computing matter? Joël and Developer at thoughtbot Sara Jackson, ponder this and share some cool stories (and trivia!!) behind the tools we use in the industry. This episode is brought to you by Airbrake (https://airbrake.io/?utm_campaign=Q3_2022%3A%20Bike%20Shed%20Podcast%20Ad&utm_source=Bike%20Shed&utm_medium=website). Visit Frictionless error monitoring and performance insight for your app stack. Sara on Twitter (https://twitter.com/csarajackson) UNIX philosophy (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unix_philosophy) Hillel Wayne on why we ask linked list questions (https://www.hillelwayne.com/post/linked-lists/) Transcript: JOËL: Hello and welcome to another episode of The Bike Shed, a weekly podcast from your friends at thoughtbot about developing great software. I'm Joël Quenneville. And today, I'm joined by fellow thoughtboter, Team Lead, and Developer Sara Jackson. SARA: Hello, happy to be here. JOËL: Together, we're here to share a little bit of what we've learned along the way. So, Sara, what's new in your world? SARA: Well, Joël, you might know that recently our team had a small get-together in Toronto. JOËL: And our team, for those who are not aware, is fully remote distributed across multiple countries. So this was a chance to get together in person. SARA: Yes, correct. This was a chance for those on the Boost team to get together and work together as if we had a physical office. JOËL: Was this your first time meeting some members of the team? SARA: It was my second, for the most part. So I joined thoughtbot, but after thoughtbot had already gotten remote. Fortunately, I was able to meet many other thoughtboters in May at our summit. JOËL: Had you worked at a remote company before coming to thoughtbot? SARA: Yes, I actually started working remotely in 2019, but even then, that wasn't my first time working remotely. I actually had a full year of internship in college that was remote. JOËL: So you were a pro at this long before the pandemic made us all try it out. SARA: I don't know about that, but I've certainly dealt with the idiosyncrasies that come with remote work for longer. JOËL: What do you think are some of the challenges of remote work as opposed to working in person in an office? SARA: I think definitely growing and maintaining a culture. When you're in an office, it's easy to create ad hoc conversations and have events that are small that build on the culture. But when you're remote, it has to be a lot more intentional. JOËL: That definitely rings true for me. One of the things that I really appreciated about in-person office culture was the serendipity that you have those sort of random meetings at the water cooler, those conversations, waiting for coffee with people who are not necessarily on the same team or the same project as you are. SARA: I also really miss being able to have lunch in person with folks where I can casually gripe about an issue I might be having, and almost certainly, someone would have the answer. Now, if I'm having an issue, I have to intentionally seek help. [chuckles] JOËL: One of the funny things that often happened, at least the office where I worked at, was that lunches would often devolve into taxonomy conversations. SARA: I wish I had been there for that. [laughter] JOËL: Well, we do have a taxonomy channel on Slack to somewhat continue that legacy. SARA: Do you have a favorite taxonomy lunch discussion that you recall? JOËL: I definitely got to the point where I hated the classifying a sandwich. That one has been way overdone. SARA: Absolutely. JOËL: There was an interesting one about motorcycles, and mopeds, and bicycles, and e-bikes, and trying to see how do you distinguish one from the other. Is it an electric motor? Is it the power of the engine that you have? Is it the size? SARA: My brain is already turning on those thoughts. I feel like I could get lost down that rabbit hole very easily. [laughter] JOËL: Maybe that should be like a special anniversary episode for The Bike Shed, just one long taxonomy ramble. SARA: Where we talk about bikes. JOËL: Ooh, that's so perfect. I love it. One thing that I really appreciated during our time in Toronto was that we actually got to have lunch in person again. SARA: Yeah, that was so wonderful. Having folks coming together that had maybe never worked together directly on clients just getting to sit down and talk about our day. JOËL: Yeah, and talk about maybe it's work-related, maybe it's not. There's a lot of power to having some amount of deeper interpersonal connection with your co-workers beyond just the we work on a project together. SARA: Yeah, it's like camaraderie beyond the shared mission of the company. It's the shared interpersonal mission, like you say. Did you have any in-person pairing sessions in Toronto? JOËL: I did. It was actually kind of serendipitous. Someone was stuck with a weird failing test because somehow the order factories were getting created in was not behaving in the expected way, and we herd on it, dug into it, found some weird thing with composite primary keys, and solved the issue. SARA: That's wonderful. I love that. I wonder if that interaction would have happened or gotten solved as quickly if we hadn't been in person. JOËL: I don't know about you, but I feel like I sometimes struggle to ask for help or ask for a pair more when I'm online. SARA: Yeah, I agree. It's easier to feel like you're not as big of an impediment when you're in person. You tap someone on the shoulder, "Hey, can you take a look at this?" JOËL: Especially when they're on the same team as you, they're sitting at the next desk over. I don't know; it just felt easier. Even though it's literally one button press to get Tuple to make a call, somehow, I feel like I'm interrupting more. SARA: To combat that, I've been trying to pair more frequently and consistently regardless of if I'm struggling with a problem. JOËL: Has that worked pretty well? SARA: It's been wonderful. The only downside has been pairing fatigue. JOËL: Pairing fatigue is real. SARA: But other than that, problems have gotten solved quickly. We've all learned something for those that I've paired with. It goes faster. JOËL: So it was really great that we had this experience of doing our daily work but co-located in person; we have these experiences of working together. What would you say has been one of the highlights for you of that time? SARA: 100% karaoke. JOËL: [laughs] SARA: Only two folks did not attend. Many of the folks that did attend told me they weren't going to sing, but they were just going to watch. By the end of the night, everyone had sung. We were there for nearly three and a half hours. [laughs] JOËL: It was a good time all around. SARA: I saw a different side to Chad. JOËL: [laughs] SARA: And everyone, honestly. Were there any musical choices that surprised you? JOËL: Not particularly. Karaoke is always fun when you have a group of people that you trust to be a little bit foolish in front of to put yourself out there. I really appreciated the style that we went for, where we have a private room for just the people who were there as opposed to a stage in a bar somewhere. I think that makes it a little bit more accessible to pick up the mic and try to sing a song. SARA: I agree. That style of karaoke is a lot more popular in Asia, having your private room. Sometimes you can find it in major cities. But I also prefer it for that reason. JOËL: One of my highlights of this trip was this very sort of serendipitous moment that happened. Someone was asking a question about the difference between a Mac and Linux operating systems. And then just an impromptu gathering happened. And you pulled up a chair, and you're like, gather around, everyone. In the beginning, there was Multics. It was amazing. SARA: I felt like some kind of historian or librarian coming out from the deep. Let me tell you about this random operating system knowledge that I have. [laughs] JOËL: The ancient lore. SARA: The ancient lore in the year 1969. JOËL: [laughs] And then yeah, we had a conversation walking the history of operating systems, and why we have macOS and Linux, and why they're different, and why Windows is a totally different kind of family there. SARA: Yeah, macOS and Linux are sort of like cousins coming from the same tree. JOËL: Is that because they're both related through Unix? SARA: Yes. Linux and macOS are both built based off of different versions of Unix. Over the years, there's almost like a family tree of these different Nix operating systems as they're called. JOËL: I've sometimes seen asterisk N-I-X. This is what you're referring to as Nix. SARA: Yes, where the asterisk is like the RegEx catch-all. JOËL: So this might be Unix. It might be Linux. It might be... SARA: Minix. JOËL: All of those. SARA: Do you know the origin of the name Unix? JOËL: I do not. SARA: It's kind of a fun trivia piece. So, in the beginning, there was Multics spelled M-U-L-T-I-C-S, standing for the Multiplexed Information and Computing Service. Dennis Ritchie and Ken Thompson of Bell Labs famous for the C programming language... JOËL: You may have heard of it. SARA: You may have heard of it maybe on a different podcast. They were employees at Bell Labs when Multics was being created. They felt that Multics was very bulky and heavy. It was trying to do too many things at once. It did have a few good concepts. So they developed their own smaller Unix originally, Unics, the Uniplexed Information and Computing Service, Uniplexed versus Multiplexed. We do one thing really well. JOËL: And that's the Unix philosophy. SARA: It absolutely is. The Unix philosophy developed out of the creation of Unix and C. Do you know the four main points? JOËL: No, is it small sharp tools? It's the main one I hear. SARA: Yes, that is the kind of quippy version that has come out for sure. JOËL: But there is a formal four-point manifesto. SARA: I believe it's evolved over the years. But it's interesting looking at the Unix philosophy and seeing how relevant it is today in web development. The four points being make each program do one thing well. To this end, don't add features; make a new program. I feel like we have this a lot in encapsulation. JOËL: Hmm, maybe even the open-closed principle. SARA: Absolutely. JOËL: Similar idea. SARA: Another part of the philosophy is expecting output of your program to become input of another program that is yet unknown. The key being don't clutter your output; don't have extraneous text. This feels very similar to how we develop APIs. JOËL: With a focus on composability. SARA: Absolutely. Being able to chain commands together like you see in Ruby all the time. JOËL: I love being able to do this, for example, the enumerable API in Ruby and just being able to chain all these methods together to just very nicely do some pretty big transformations on an array or some other data structure. SARA: 100% agree there. That ability almost certainly came out of following the tenets of this philosophy, maybe not knowingly so but maybe knowingly so. [chuckles] JOËL: So is that three or four? SARA: So that was two. The third being what we know as agile. JOËL: Really? SARA: Yeah, right? The '70s brought us agile. Design and build software to be tried early, and don't hesitate to throw away clumsy parts and rebuild. JOËL: Hmmm. SARA: Even in those days, despite waterfall style still coming on the horizon. It was known for those writing software that it was important to iterate quickly. JOËL: Wow, I would never have known. SARA: It's neat having this history available to us. It's sort of like a lens at where we came from. Another piece of this history that might seem like a more modern concept but was a very big part of the movement in the '70s and the '80s was using tools rather than unskilled help or trying to struggle through something yourself when you're lightening a programming task. We see this all the time at thoughtbot. Folks do this many times there is an issue on a client code. We are able to generalize the solution, extract into a tool that can then be reused. JOËL: So that's the same kind of genesis as a lot of thoughtbot's open-source gems, so I'm thinking of FactoryBot, Clearance, Paperclip, the old-timey file upload gem, Suspenders, the Rails app generator, and the list goes on. SARA: I love that in this last point of the Unix philosophy, they specifically call out that you should create a new tool, even if it means detouring, even if it means throwing the tools out later. JOËL: What impact do you think that has had on the way that tooling in the Unix, or maybe I should say *Nix, ecosystem has developed? SARA: It was a major aspect of the Nix environment community because Unix was available, not free, but very inexpensively to educational institutions. And because of how lightweight it was and its focus on single-use programs, programs that were designed to do one thing, and also the way the shell was allowing you to use commands directly and having it be the same language as the shell scripting language, users, students, amateurs, and I say that in a loving way, were able to create their own tools very quickly. It was almost like a renaissance of Homebrew. JOËL: Not Homebrew as in the macOS package manager. SARA: [laughs] And also not Homebrew as in the alcoholic beverage. JOËL: [laughs] So, this kind of history is fun trivia to know. Is it really something valuable for us as a jobbing developer in 2022? SARA: I would say it's a difficult question. If you are someone that doesn't dive into the why of something, especially when something goes wrong, maybe it wouldn't be important or useful. But what sparked the conversation in Toronto was trying to determine why we as thoughtbot tend to prefer using Macs to develop on versus Linux or Windows. There is a reason, and the reason is in the history. Knowing that can clarify decisions and can give meaning where it feels like an arbitrary decision. JOËL: Right. We're not just picking Macs because they're shiny. SARA: They are certainly shiny. And the first thing I did was to put a matte case on it. JOËL: [laughs] So no shiny in your office. SARA: If there were too many shiny things in my office, boy, I would never get work done. The cats would be all over me. MID-ROLL AD: Debugging errors can be a developer's worst nightmare...but it doesn't have to be. Airbrake is an award-winning error monitoring, performance, and deployment tracking tool created by developers for developers, that can actually help cut your debugging time in half. So why do developers love Airbrake? It has all of the information that web developers need to monitor their application - including error management, performance insights, and deploy tracking! Airbrake's debugging tool catches all of your project errors, intelligently groups them, and points you to the issue in the code so you can quickly fix the bug before customers are impacted. In addition to stellar error monitoring, Airbrake's lightweight APM helps developers to track the performance and availability of their application through metrics like HTTP requests, response times, error occurrences, and user satisfaction. Finally, Airbrake Deploy Tracking helps developers track trends, fix bad deploys, and improve code quality. Since 2008, Airbrake has been a staple in the Ruby community and has grown to cover all major programming languages. Airbrake seamlessly integrates with your favorite apps to include modern features like single sign-on and SDK-based installation. From testing to production, Airbrake notifiers have your back. Your time is valuable, so why waste it combing through logs, waiting for user reports, or retrofitting other tools to monitor your application? You literally have nothing to lose. Head on over to airbrake.io/try/bikeshed to create your FREE developer account today! JOËL: So we've talked a little bit about Unix or *Nix, this evolution of systems. I've also heard the term POSIX thrown around when talking about things that seem to encompass both macOS and Linux. How does that fit into this history? SARA: POSIX is sort of an umbrella of standards around operating systems that was based on Unix and the things that were standard in Unix. It stands for the Portable Operating System Interface. This allowed for compatibility between OSs, very similar to USB being the standard for peripherals. JOËL: So, if I was implementing my own Unix-like operating system in the '80s, I would try to conform to the POSIX standard. SARA: Absolutely. Now, not every Nix operating system is POSIX-compliant, but most are or at least 90% of the way there. JOËL: Are any of the big ones that people tend to think about not compliant? SARA: A major player in the operating system space that is not generally considered POSIX-compliant is Microsoft Windows. JOËL: [laughs] It doesn't even try to be Unix-like, right? It's just its own thing, SARA: It is completely its own thing. I don't think it even has a standard necessarily that it conforms to. JOËL: It is its own standard, its own branch of the family tree. SARA: And that's what happens when your operating system is very proprietary. This has caused folks pain, I'm sure, in the past that may have tried to develop software on their computers using languages that are more readily compatible with POSIX operating systems. JOËL: So would you say that a language like Ruby is more compatible with one of the POSIX-compatible operating systems? SARA: 100% yes. In fact, to even use Ruby as a development tool in Windows, prior to Windows 10, you needed an additional tool. You needed something like Cygwin or MinGW, which were POSIX-compliant programs that it was almost like a shell in your Windows computer that would allow you to run those commands. JOËL: Really? For some reason, I thought that they had some executables that you could run just on Windows by itself. SARA: Now they do, fortunately, to the benefit of Ruby developers everywhere. As of Windows 10, we now have WSL, the Windows Subsystem for Linux that's built-in. You don't have to worry about installing or configuring some third-party software. JOËL: I guess that kind of almost cheats by just having a POSIX system embedded in your non-POSIX system. SARA: It does feel like a cheat, but I think it was born out of demand. The Windows NT kernel, for example, is mostly POSIX-compliant. JOËL: Really? SARA: As a result of it being used primarily for servers. JOËL: So you mentioned the Ruby tends and the Rails ecosystem tends to run better and much more frequently on the various Nix systems. Did it have to be that way? Or is it just kind of an accident of history that we happen to end up with Ruby and Rails in this ecosystem, but just as easily, it could have evolved in the Windows world? SARA: I think it is an amalgam of things. For example, Unix and Nix operating systems being developed earlier, being widely spread due to being license-free oftentimes, and being widely used in the education space. Also, because it is so lightweight, it is the operating system of choice. For most servers in the world, they're running some form of Unix, Linux, or macOS. JOËL: I don't think I've ever seen a server that runs macOS; exclusively seen it on dev machines. SARA: If you go to an animation company, they have server farms of macOS machines because they're really good at rendering. This might not be the case anymore, but it was at one point. JOËL: That's a whole other world that I've not interacted with a whole lot. SARA: [chuckles] JOËL: It's a fun intersection between software, and design, and storytelling. That is an important part for the software field. SARA: Yeah, it's definitely an aspect that deserves its own deep dive of sorts. If you have a server that's running a Windows-based operating system like NT and you have a website or a program that's designed to be served under a Unix-based server, it can easily be hosted on the Windows server; it's not an issue. The reverse is not true. JOËL: Oh. SARA: And this is why programming on a Nix system is the better choice. JOËL: It's more broadly compatible. SARA: Absolutely. Significantly more compatible with more things. JOËL: So today, when I develop, a lot of the tooling that I use is open source. The open-source movement has created a lot of the languages that we know and love, including Ruby, including Rails. Do you think there's some connection between a lot of that tooling being open source and maybe some of the Unix family of operating systems and movements that came out of that branch of the operating system family tree? SARA: I think that there is a lot of tie-in with today's open-source culture and the computing history that we've been talking about, for example, people finding something that they dislike about the tools that are available and then rolling their own. That's what Ken Thompson and Dennis Ritchie did. Unix was not an official Bell development. It was a side project for them. JOËL: I love that. SARA: You see this happen a lot in the software world where a program gets shared widely, and due to this, it gains traction and gains buy-in from the community. If your software is easily accessible to students, folks that are learning, and breaking things, and rebuilding, and trying, and inventing, it's going to persist. And we saw that with Unix. JOËL: I feel like this background on where a lot of these operating systems came but then also the ecosystems, the values that evolved with them has given me a deeper appreciation of the tooling, the systems that we work with today. Are there any other advantages, do you think, to trying to learn a little bit of computing history? SARA: I think the main benefit that I mentioned before of if you're a person that wants to know why, then there is a great benefit in knowing some of these details. That being said, you don't need to deep dive or read multiple books or write papers on it. You can get enough information from reading or skimming some Wikipedia pages. But it's interesting to know where we came from and how it still affects us today. Ruby was written in C, for example. Unix was written in C as well, originally Assembly Language, but it got rewritten in C. And understanding the underlying tooling that goes into that that when things go wrong, you know where to look. JOËL: I guess that that is the next question is where do you look if you're kind of interested? Is Wikipedia good enough? You just sort of look up operating system, and it tells you where to go? Or do you have other sources you like to search for or start pulling at those threads to understand history? SARA: That's a great question. And Wikipedia is a wonderful starting point for sure. It has a lot of the abbreviated history and links to better references. I don't have them off the top of my head. So I will find them for you for the show notes. But there are some old esoteric websites with some of this history more thoroughly documented by the people that lived it. JOËL: I feel like those websites always end up being in HTML 2; your very basic text, horizontal rules, no CSS. SARA: Mm-hmm. And those are the sites that have many wonderful kernels of knowledge. JOËL: Uh-huh! Great pun. SARA: [chuckles] Thank you. JOËL: Do you read any content by Hillel Wayne? SARA: I have not. JOËL: So Hillel produces a lot of deep dives into computing history, oftentimes trying to answer very particular questions such as when and why did we start using reversing a linked list as the canonical interview question? And there are often urban legends around like, oh, it's because of this. And then Hillel will do some research and go through actual archives of messages on message boards or...what is that protocol? SARA: BBS. JOËL: Yes. And then find the real answer, like, do actual historical methodology, and I love that. SARA: I had not heard of this before. I don't know how. And that is all I'm going to be doing this weekend is reading these. That kind of history speaks to my heart. I have a random fun fact along those lines that I wanted to bring to the show, which was that the echo command that we know and love in the terminal was first introduced by the Multics operating system. JOËL: Wow. So that's like the most common piece of Multics that as an everyday user of a modern operating system that we would still touch a little bit of that history every day when we work. SARA: Yeah, it's one of those things that we don't think about too much. Where did it come from? How long has it been around? I'm sure the implementation today is very different. But it's like etymology, and like taxonomy, pulling those threads. JOËL: Two fantastic topics. On that wonderful little nugget of knowledge, let's wrap up. Sara, where can people find you online? SARA: You can find me on Twitter at @csarajackson. JOËL: And we will include a link to that in the show notes. SARA: Thank you so much for having me on the show and letting me nerd out about operating system history. JOËL: It's been a pleasure. The show notes for this episode can be found at bikeshed.fm. This show is produced and edited by Mandy Moore. If you enjoyed listening, one really easy way to support the show is to leave us a quick rating or even a review on iTunes. It really helps other folks find the show. If you have any feedback, you can reach us at @_bikeshed or reach me @joelquen on Twitter or at hosts@bikeshed.fm via email. Thank you so much for listening to The Bike Shed, and we'll see you next week. Byeeeeee!!!! ANNOUNCER: This podcast was brought to you by thoughtbot. thoughtbot is your expert design and development partner. Let's make your product and team a success.

Wichita Life Podcast
Dr. Jessica Provines – Assistant Vice President for Wellness, Chief Psychologist at WSU, Suspenders4Hope

Wichita Life Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2022 39:44 Transcription Available


September is Suicide Awareness Month. Our guest today, Dr. Jessica Provines is the Assistant Vice President for Wellness, Chief Psychologist at WSU and a 3x psychology graduate from Wichita State as well. We talk all about psychology, mental wellness, the resources available to students or the community, the Suspenders 4 […] The post Dr. Jessica Provines – Assistant Vice President for Wellness, Chief Psychologist at WSU, Suspenders4Hope appeared first on Wichita Life ICT.

Stories and Songs for Fabulous Children with GramNinny
Finale to Jack Prelutsky's Poems in “The Frogs Wore Red Suspenders”

Stories and Songs for Fabulous Children with GramNinny

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2022 5:03


Delightful children's poem collection

Stories and Songs for Fabulous Children with GramNinny
The Frog Wore Red Suspenders -part 1

Stories and Songs for Fabulous Children with GramNinny

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 20, 2022 7:55


Poems by Jack Prelutzky

Talking Dicks Comedy Podcast: A podcast with a touch of crass.
Talking Dicks Comedy Podcast Vol 49: A pod without suspenders. A VAULT CLASSIC.

Talking Dicks Comedy Podcast: A podcast with a touch of crass.

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2022 16:43


The two loons are loonyer than ever. https:/patreon.com/thetwodickshttps://www.instagram.com/thetalkingdickscomedypodcast/https://twitter.com/DicksTwohttps://www.facebook.com/thetwodickshttps://www.facebook.com/The-Talking-Dicks-Comedy-Podcast-107101331446404Support the show

BJ Shea Daily Experience Podcast -- Official
Should you be wearing suspenders?

BJ Shea Daily Experience Podcast -- Official

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2022 8:57


A texter wants to know if he should wear suspenders because of his plumbers crack.

Taco the Town
Episode 168: WEST COAST SUMMER TACO-CATION! On Location in Hollywood! (w/ Michael McMillian)

Taco the Town

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2022 106:18


Summer Taco-cation season is upon us so Dave hits the road up and down the West Coast with his pal Actor MICHAEL McMILLIAN (True Blood, Crazy Ex-Girlfriend, Bigfoot Collectors Club Podcast, Slate Your Name Podcast!) They review 5 West Coast Taco chains: TREJO'S TACOS, TACO TIME, JIMBOYS TACOS, DEL TACO & the LA Valley Legend CASA VEGA! Michael also tells Dave about the crazy Taco Bell Drive thru incident that changed his Taco Bell life! Dave & Michael break down the history of all 5 Taco chains as well as taco 'bout: Suspenders! The Jimmy Kimmel Connection! Taco Synchronicities! Del Taco's Taco being named the #1 Fast Food Taco by Thrillest! When will KC be getting a Del Taco? Are Chicken Tenders and Chicken Fingers the same thing? Dave & Michael remember the first summer vacation they took together as kids to Muskegon, Michigan and the time they fought over an older woman! Melted Cheese on a Taco: Game Changer or Difference Maker? Sacramento Delicacies! A very controversial Taco Time Menu Item is ordered and consumed! DRIVE THRU RASCALS! Michael tells us about working with the man, the myth, the legend GUY FIERI and his podcasts BIGFOOT COLLECTORS CLUB & SLATE YOUR NAME! ALL THIS AND: Bad Churros ordered at a Pizza Place! THIS TACO-CATION RE-CAP IS READY TO RUMBLE DOWN TUMWATER BOULEVARD!!! HAPPY TACO-CATION SEASON FROM TACO THE TOWN!!! Editor: MATT ALLEN. Music: SUNEATERS courtesy of Lotuspool Records. Sponsors: KCK Taco Trail & Our Music by Bump Funk. 

Remote Ruby
How Thoughtbot Works with Steve “Four-peat” Polito

Remote Ruby

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2022 39:58 Very Popular


[00:09:02] We find out what Steve is doing now and what he did before thoughtbot.[00:13:30] Steve explains how the team works at thoughtbot.[00:17:00] Since people roll in and out of the team, how does Steve manage to bring someone up to speed quickly?[00:20:02] We learn what the onboarding process is when they get new clients so the team can easily jump in.[00:23:46] Jason brings up a thoughtbot gem called Suspenders and Steve tells us more about it.[00:25:26] Steve explains how working at IMPACT set him up for what he's doing now. [00:29:26] Andrew wants to know what Steve's response would be to someone asking him to stop building maintainable software and just pump out code.  [00:31:39] Chris wonders if Steve works with their client's developers or his own team.[00:33:45] Steve spoke earlier about leaving notes using the Rails Note tool and how important is to comment, and Jason highlights why he thinks that is so important.  [00:35:20] We find out some other things Steve's working on besides finishing up on building Rails Auth from scratch. Panelists:Jason CharnesChris OliverAndrew MasonGuest:Steve PolitoSponsor:HoneybadgerLinks:Remote Ruby Podcast Chris Oliver TwitterJason Charnes TwitterAndrew Mason TwitterRuby Radar NewsletterRuby Radar TwitterSteve Polito TwitterSteve Polito BlogSteve Polito LinkedInLearn Ruby on Rails For Free thoughtbot Suspenders

Talking Dicks Comedy Podcast: A podcast with a touch of crass.
Talking Dicks Comedy Podcast Vol 37: FROM THE VAULT! A pod without suspenders.

Talking Dicks Comedy Podcast: A podcast with a touch of crass.

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2022 11:57


From the vault series. 2020 replay. Short and sweet!https:/patreon.com/thetwodickshttps://www.instagram.com/thetalkingdickscomedypodcast/https://twitter.com/DicksTwohttps://www.facebook.com/thetwodickshttps://www.facebook.com/The-Talking-Dicks-Comedy-Podcast-107101331446404Support the show

Coder Radio
462: Account Suspenders

Coder Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2022 51:54


We get a bit gleeful over some choice tech monopoly hypocrisy and then spicy with our 18-month outlook.

All Jupiter Broadcasting Shows
Account Suspenders | Coder Radio 462

All Jupiter Broadcasting Shows

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2022


We get a bit gleeful over some choice tech monopoly hypocrisy and then spicy with our 18-month outlook.

Coder Radio Video
Account Suspenders | Coder Radio 462

Coder Radio Video

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2022


We get a bit gleeful over some choice tech monopoly hypocrisy and then spicy with our 18-month outlook.

The Ryan Kelley Morning After
04-08-22 Segment 3 Cuts, Bowling, and EMOTD

The Ryan Kelley Morning After

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2022 46:12


Iggy sings Bad Romance. Donuts. Discussion of follow-ups. What's the right window? More Masters updates. Sandy Lyle's Suspenders. Bowling lessons. Cuts. EMOTD.

The Worst Thing You’ve Ever Done
Episode 2. Season 3. Suspenders & Benders. Suits & Boots.

The Worst Thing You’ve Ever Done

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2022 51:32


Forever friend Nick comes on and is not afraid of being fetishized. Brendan makes a friend in the dark. 2 emails about bad relationships. Concept and editing by Brendan Joel Bartlett. Cover Art by Kevin Fitzsimmons. Musical arrangements by Anthony Bevilacqua. Vocals by Kevin Lynch. Advice and Logistics by Andrew Wallace. Concept Inspiration by Kevin Kage. Send your emails to Worstthingeverdone@gmail.com --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

Talking Dicks Comedy Podcast: A podcast with a touch of crass.
Talking Dicks Comedy Podcast Vol 14: From The VAULT! A pod without suspenders.

Talking Dicks Comedy Podcast: A podcast with a touch of crass.

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 3, 2021 15:19


You're listening to an episode from the early in the pandemic 2020. https:/patreon.com/thetwodickshttps://www.instagram.com/twodicks2/https://twitter.com/DicksTwohttps://www.facebook.com/thetwodickshttps://www.facebook.com/The-Talking-Dicks-Comedy-Podcast-107101331446404Support the show

Talking Dicks Comedy Podcast: A podcast with a touch of crass.
Talking Dicks Comedy Podcast Vol 154: A pod without suspenders.

Talking Dicks Comedy Podcast: A podcast with a touch of crass.

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2021 39:23


The boys were at Raymond James Stadium when Jon Gruden  was inducted into the Buccaneer Ring of Honor.Talking Dicks are big in Yangon (formerly Rangoon).https:/patreon.com/thetwodickshttps://www.instagram.com/twodicks2/https://twitter.com/DicksTwohttps://www.facebook.com/thetwodickshttps://www.facebook.com/The-Talking-Dicks-Comedy-Podcast-107101331446404Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/thetwodicks)

You're Gonna Die Out There
Some Protective Flare for Your Suspenders

You're Gonna Die Out There

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2021


Happy Beginning of Halloween, Nature Nerds! This week, we have a special Limerick by listener Bob Potts to share! Jen does a downer science news and Megan attempts to bring it back up with campfire stories and social science research from Polly Wiessner about the Ju/'hoansi people of the Dobe Region. Organization to support: https://campfire.org/ Started as Camp Fire Girls in 1910,and founded by Dr. Luther Halsey Gulick and his wife, Charlotte Vetter Gulick. They believed girls deserved the outdoor learning experiences that boys had and wanted to help “guide young people on their journey to self-discovery.”

All Serious Subjects
Ass-less Chaps With Suspenders

All Serious Subjects

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 26, 2021 52:34


hampster AI, Casa Bonita, Air Bud's death and The Rock for President

Gold Don't Rust
Only Built 4 Cuban Linx

Gold Don't Rust

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2021 92:06


The Boys are on their cocaine selling hustle as they take a track by track deep dive into Raekwon's debut solo album (or duo album with Ghostface??) Only Built 4 Cuban Linx. All of the Wu Tang trivia you've ever wanted to know is laid out before the boys review it on the GDR scale of Rust to Gold. Later, they discuss their top 3 favorite pieces of hip hop memorabilia in another edition of Top 3. *This episode of GDR is brought to you by Ceelo Green's Suspenders and Sunnies. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/golddontrustpod/message

Bourbon and Brothers Comedy Podcast
Ep 11: You Can't Put Suspenders on Hot Dog Buns

Bourbon and Brothers Comedy Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2021 93:50


The takes keep on coming in episode 11 of the Bourbon & Brothers Podcast. The guys go in depth putting their [lack of] fashion sense on display with a discussion about belts and their role in the wardrobe as somehow Flynn gets his back called out. They get personal in a confessional of some of their recent shortcomings. Finally, the guys put their hot takes out there and Kevin gets a little burnt with his. Follow our Facebook on Twitter and Instagram at @AiredBnB.   Original Artwork by: Sam “Slam” Kremer   Original Music by: @the_real_priddy   Voiceover work by: @thekatmoser

Here’s The Scenario
#7 - A Santa Claus Bowtie

Here’s The Scenario

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2021 61:43


What movie would you do a total remake of? You now have to kill everything you eat, would you still eat meat? Suspenders or bowties? Gills or wings? The boys answer these questions and more on this week's episode. New episodes drop every Wednesday via The Laugh Button www.heresthescenario.com FOLLOW THE SHOW Instagram: www.instagram.com/HeresTheScenarioPod Twitter: www.twitter.com/ScenarioPod Patreon: www.patreon.com/ScenarioPod FOLLOW THE HOSTS Mike Feeney: @iammikefeeney Mike Cannon: @iammikecannon Brendan Sagalow: @BrendanSagalow For advertising opportunities email: advertise@thelaughbutton.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices