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Nick's feature film work includes: The Arbor, The Selfish Giant, The Double, Life, On Chesil Beach, Dark River, A Private War, American Animals, True History Of The Kelly Gang, Nitram, The Order, and the upcoming Wizards. Nick's documentary features include: Taking Liberties, On A Knife Edge, and All Tomorrow's Parties.
This week, Will and Steve talk butlers, village noticeboards, and Shark Week.
Programmers love geeking out and creating specialized terms and vocabulary. Well I can do that too. In today's episode, we talk about "value objects", put our own special definition on it, and discuss when we might use these in a Laravel project.(00:00) - What I mean by "value object" (03:00) - Nicer to do in newer PHP versions (04:00) - Main use case for value objects (05:30) - Use them for everything then? (09:00) - A second reason to use a value object (10:45) - Silly bit Sign up for our newsletter and get short, practical Laravel tips delivered fresh to your inbox.
We got to know DJ JulesFlava a bit here. Santi also decided to take a few liberties at the end of this segment.
On this week's show, the hosts revisit Beetlejuice (1988), the seminal film that marked Tim Burton's arrival onto the scene as a sort of grim fairy tale teller. 36 years later, the director and much of the original cast return for its sequel, Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, a surprisingly sincere tale about the nature of death and grieving. Or, is it a total mess? The hosts discuss. Then, the three dive into English Teacher, a hilarious new FX series in which Brian Jordan Alvarez (previously known for online comedies like The Gay and Wondrous Life of Caleb Gallo) plays Evan Marquez, a high school English teacher in Austin, Texas. Finally, chat podcasts (like the one you're listening to right now) are like dating and improv – to work, they necessitate a certain level of chemistry, intimacy, and vulnerability. The hosts are joined by New York Times culture critic Reggie Ugwu to discuss his recent piece, “What Makes Good Chemistry? For Chat Podcasts, It's Fundamental,” as well as the Gabfest's early days, the hosts first impressions of one another, and how they went about building their own unique rapport. In the exclusive Slate Plus segment, Julia joins last week's productivity discourse and widens its scope, and the hosts discuss the nature of “hacking life” and how our relationship to productivity reflects current American ideals. Email us at culturefest@slate.com. Endorsements: Dana: A spice shop that's been in the news: Penzeys Spices, in Pittsburgh. Check out Helen Rosner's 2018 piece on the shop for The New Yorker, as well as Penzey's sweet and spicy Cake Spice. Steve: Howard's End, a novel by E.M. Forster. Julia: A two-parter: (1) The single best piece of criticism about Avatar: The Way of Water, performed by English Teacher cast member Jordan Firstman (it's the second slide in the Instagram reel). (2) Season 8, episode 5 of Frasier entitled “Taking Liberties.” Victor Garber is a hilarious guest star – this is Frasier at his best. Podcast production by Jared Downing. Production assistance by Kat Hong. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
On this week's show, the hosts revisit Beetlejuice (1988), the seminal film that marked Tim Burton's arrival onto the scene as a sort of grim fairy tale teller. 36 years later, the director and much of the original cast return for its sequel, Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, a surprisingly sincere tale about the nature of death and grieving. Or, is it a total mess? The hosts discuss. Then, the three dive into English Teacher, a hilarious new FX series in which Brian Jordan Alvarez (previously known for online comedies like The Gay and Wondrous Life of Caleb Gallo) plays Evan Marquez, a high school English teacher in Austin, Texas. Finally, chat podcasts (like the one you're listening to right now) are like dating and improv – to work, they necessitate a certain level of chemistry, intimacy, and vulnerability. The hosts are joined by New York Times culture critic Reggie Ugwu to discuss his recent piece, “What Makes Good Chemistry? For Chat Podcasts, It's Fundamental,” as well as the Gabfest's early days, the hosts first impressions of one another, and how they went about building their own unique rapport. In the exclusive Slate Plus segment, Julia joins last week's productivity discourse and widens its scope, and the hosts discuss the nature of “hacking life” and how our relationship to productivity reflects current American ideals. Email us at culturefest@slate.com. Endorsements: Dana: A spice shop that's been in the news: Penzeys Spices, in Pittsburgh. Check out Helen Rosner's 2018 piece on the shop for The New Yorker, as well as Penzey's sweet and spicy Cake Spice. Steve: Howard's End, a novel by E.M. Forster. Julia: A two-parter: (1) The single best piece of criticism about Avatar: The Way of Water, performed by English Teacher cast member Jordan Firstman (it's the second slide in the Instagram reel). (2) Season 8, episode 5 of Frasier entitled “Taking Liberties.” Victor Garber is a hilarious guest star – this is Frasier at his best. Podcast production by Jared Downing. Production assistance by Kat Hong. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
John Weir is the author of two novels, the Irreversible Decline of Eddie Socket, winner of the 1989 Lambda Literary Award for Gay Men‘s Debut Fiction, and What I Did Wrong. His collection of linked stories Your Nostalgia Is Killing Me, Linked Stories won theGrace Paley Prize in Short Fiction.He is an associate professor of English at Queens College CUNY where he teaches in the MFA program in creative writing and literary translation. In 1991 with members of Act Up New York, he interrupted Dan Rather's CBS Evening News to protest government and media neglect of AIDS. His nonfiction pieces have appeared in the New York Times, Rolling Stone,Spin, TriQuarterly, and Gulf Coast and many anthologies, including the Columbia Reader in Lesbian and Gay Studies, Taking Liberties and Beyond Queer He lives in Brooklyn, New York. Today John joins us to discuss his novels and writing during the AIDS pandemic.
Ask Dutch Anything 44 Have you ever wondered if wrestling in the West Indies was more dangerous than wrestling in Puerto Rico? Did you ever ask yourself why there aren't more midget wrestlers in the WWE Hall of Fame? Did it ever ponder Ta-Gar and wonder why he didn't make it big in wrestling? And then did you think, "I know, I'll ask Dutch Mantell by sending an email to questionsfordutch@gmail.com maybe he'll know the answer!" If you ALL answered "NO!" then at least 3 of you are lying because those are some of the many questions selected for this weeks episode of Ask Dutch Anything. Got a question for Dutch Mantell? Email it to: questionsfordutch@gmail.com PW Tees Store - https://www.prowrestlingtees.com/dutchmantell https://www.youtube.com/@ShaneDouglasOfficial https://www.youtube.com/@WSI https://www.facebook.com/storytimewithdutchmantell Email questions to: questionsfordutch@gmail.com Email for signed merch: dirtydutchmantell@gmail.com Got a question for Dutch Mantell? Email it to: questionsfordutch@gmail.com Want signed merchandise from Dutch Mantell? Email: dirtydutchmantell@gmail.com
Vince Amlin 2024.6.9 "Taking Liberties" --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/gilead-chicago/support
Cillian Green 2024.6.9 "Taking Liberties" --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/gilead-chicago/support
In this episode, Will & Jace discuss Frasier's new butler Ferguson. Also, Jace describes life on the Opera Board, and Will relays that funny joke about the Communist trying to get into heaven...For bonus content and early access to episodes, join our Patreon: www.patreon.com/willandjace
TAKING LIBERTIES In this episode, our speakers direct attention to a controversy at a highly reputed educational institution, LIBERTY UNIVERSITY. Liberty University has been found to have repeatedly violated the Clery Act by failing to report crimes and warn the campus community about safety threats. So how safe is your school and how can you find out? WANT THE VIDEOS HEAD TO YOUTUBE @sarahferrismedia And if you are wanting AD FREE | EARLY ACCESS | BONUS CONTENT HIT THE BANNER ON APPLE PODCASTS TO SUBSCRIBE OR SUPPORT US: Patreon.com/stopthekilling Send us your Listener Questions for our Tuesday episodes Message us on instagram : @conmunitypodcast @stopthekillingstories And for all things Katherine Schweit including where you can purchase her book STOP THE KILLING: How to end the mass shooting crisis head to: www.katherineschweit.com SUPPORTING OUR SPONSORS, SUPPORTS THE PODCAST CRIMECON UK TICKETS HERE CRIMECON US TICKETS HERE DON'T forget to use DISCOUNT CODE “FERRIS” BLENDJET Check out BlendJet: The original portable blender coupon: stk12 (case sensitive) custom URL: https://zen.ai/stk12 Go to blendjet.com and to save 12% use my special link, and the discount will be applied at checkout https://zen.ai/stk12 RESOURCES Stop the Bleed training FBI RUN, HIDE, FIGHT This is a CONmunity Podcast Production on the Killer Podcasts Network Check out more: CONNING THE CON KLOOGHLESS - THE LONG CON GUILTY GREENIE THE BRAVERY ACADEMY Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
A Democrat Senate staffer is out after making a s*x tape in the US senate. Bill Maher nails the Gaza/Israel situation. Satanic statue kerfuffle comes to a (goat) head. Confederate monument removed from Arlington cemetery. Tucker Carlson blames libertarian economics on our problems. ft @Miltimore79 And @LarrySharpe launches broadside against Reason mag for "Gold Face."
The state of Florida is severely lacking in education but that's not important. What's important to state politicians is outing transsexual high school athletes. Billy Corben discusses that with Jennifer Solomon of Equality Florida. David Samson joins Billy to talk about how the war between Israel and Hamas is causing an increase of hate crimes in America. Reporter Bob Norman joins the program to talk about the ménage à trois between Christian Ziegler, the chairman of the GOP of Florida, his wife, Bridgette, a co-founder of Moms for Liberty, and their former lover. Plus, Billy has a new Top 5. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
All aboard! Planet Poetry is going to rattle you into a Belfast haunted by absence. Here you'll meet Leontia Flynn and discover how the upheavals of Brexit and the pandemic have been echoed by ruptures and aloneness in her own life. Her magnificent response is the spare and intensely-moving collection Taking Liberties from Cape. Meanwhile Peter has been reading I will Not Fold These Maps by the Bidoon (stateless) poet Mona Kareem, whose refreshingly direct style adds a touch of surrealism to reflect the absurdity of not being a citizen of the country you were born in. Then Robin (thanks to the marginalian) is enchanted by the astronomer poet Rebecca Elson and her collection A Responsibility to Awe from Carcanet Classic. Sampling a poetry that places an awareness of the poet's own mortality against a backdrop of stars. Support the showPlanet Poetry is a labour of love, paid for out of our own pockets.If you enjoy the podcast, please show your support and Buy us a Coffee!
Tosca – Northern Ireland Opera - Star Wars: Ahsoka - Taking Liberties - Masters of Tradition fest – Bantry August 23-27
Patrick Deneen has released a new book, and predictably, Jonah has some pointed opinions on it. To critique Deneen's post-liberal vision for American society and the political right, Jonah is joined by a returning Stephanie Slade, senior editor at Reason and noted liberty-lover. With furious agreement and ornery hand-wringing, they take a deep dive into the strange world of the new right, analyzing how seriously we should take its vision for the conservative movement. They also provide a few thoughts on the state of Catholicism, what the Dobbs decision revealed about voters, and why nobody can agree about immigration. Show Notes: -Stephanie's page at Reason -Jonah: “Patrick Deneen's Otherworldly Regime” - Stephanie: “Liberalism Isn't Rule by Elites” -Stephanie: “The New Right Isn't So New” -Stephanie: “The Rise of Right-Progressivism” -Adrian Vermeule: “Integration From Within” Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Nick's feature film work includes: The Arbor, The Selfish Giant, The Double, Life, On Chesil Beach, Dark River, A Private War, American Animals, True History Of The Kelly Gang, and Nitram. Nick's documentary features include: Taking Liberties, On A Knife Edge, and All Tomorrow's Parties. Nick's musical collaborations include Sigur Ros, on their films Heima and Inni, and the film Bjork: Biophilia Live which he co-directed with Peter Strickland.
Another increasingly common David De Gea disasterclass see's Man United lose to West Ham and open the door to an increasingly improving Liverpool team. The race for top 4 is well and truly on. But how do these howlers impact De Gea's record breaking legacy.Amazing isn't good enough for Gundogan as he goes off in tears after one of the best games of his life against Sam Allardyce's Leeds United. No Big Sam didn't pull it out of the bag against Man City.Arsenal fight back against the dark arts of Newcastle and manage to keep the pressure on at the top. RATE US 5 STARS ON SPOTIFY TO HELP US UP THE CHARTSLeave a comment on this episode on Spotify!Leave us a 5 star review on Apple and we'll read it out on the show!EMAIL - ANONONSENSEPODCAST@GMAIL.COMHit us up with questions or feedback and we'll read it out on the next episode!Support the showWant to support us and also get some sweet bonus exclusive pods? Head to patreon.com/nononsensepod where you can get access to:* Weekly Bonus After The Nonsense. Where we talk everything but football.* Bonus European and midweek episodes.* A full archive of our bonus content in one handy to find spot!
After two Black Democrats were expelled from the House in Tennessee for protesting in favor of gun control, the state is in turmoil. Handel highlights California's race against time to build power lines. ChatGPT invented a sexual harassment scandal and then named a real law professor as the accused. And Florida's NAACP is urging Black people to avoid coming to the state, but critics worry the plan will backfire.
After two Black Democrats were expelled from the House in Tennessee for protesting in favor of gun control, the state is in turmoil. ChatGPT invented a sexual harassment scandal and then named a real law professor as the accused. Neil Saavedra is back for another edition of Foodie Friday! Chipotle is getting complaints over its spicy salsa and Costco has a new self-serving sample kiosk?!
During the Second World War, locals in Australia and Britain described American GIs as “overpaid, oversexed, and over here.” But this conflict between civilians and the military didn't only take place abroad. Civil-military tensions could be seen at ‘home' too. Nearly three-quarters of servicemen in the months leading up to D-Day were stationed domestically, while one in four never went abroad at all. In other words, a lot of GIs spent a lot of time in the continental United States. Their presence, combined with the anti-civilian culture that the US military cultivated during the war, made places like Times Square, Hollywood Boulevard, and Coney Island look like occupation zones. A new book tells this important yet overlooked history of the Second World War. In Taking Leave, Taking Liberties: American Troops on the World War II Home Front (U Chicago Press, 2020), Aaron Hiltner follows GIs as they traveled through transport hubs, trained at domestic military bases, and took leave in ‘liberty ports,” such as Boston and San Francisco. By doing so, Hiltner, a lecturer at University College London, shows how theft, assault, catcalling, murder, rape, drunkenness, harassment, rackets, and fist fights were a part of the everyday domestic wartime experience. The book, therefore, challenges our tendency to isolate the home front from the war and makes us rethink where US foreign relations take place. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
During the Second World War, locals in Australia and Britain described American GIs as “overpaid, oversexed, and over here.” But this conflict between civilians and the military didn't only take place abroad. Civil-military tensions could be seen at ‘home' too. Nearly three-quarters of servicemen in the months leading up to D-Day were stationed domestically, while one in four never went abroad at all. In other words, a lot of GIs spent a lot of time in the continental United States. Their presence, combined with the anti-civilian culture that the US military cultivated during the war, made places like Times Square, Hollywood Boulevard, and Coney Island look like occupation zones. A new book tells this important yet overlooked history of the Second World War. In Taking Leave, Taking Liberties: American Troops on the World War II Home Front (U Chicago Press, 2020), Aaron Hiltner follows GIs as they traveled through transport hubs, trained at domestic military bases, and took leave in ‘liberty ports,” such as Boston and San Francisco. By doing so, Hiltner, a lecturer at University College London, shows how theft, assault, catcalling, murder, rape, drunkenness, harassment, rackets, and fist fights were a part of the everyday domestic wartime experience. The book, therefore, challenges our tendency to isolate the home front from the war and makes us rethink where US foreign relations take place. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/history
During the Second World War, locals in Australia and Britain described American GIs as “overpaid, oversexed, and over here.” But this conflict between civilians and the military didn't only take place abroad. Civil-military tensions could be seen at ‘home' too. Nearly three-quarters of servicemen in the months leading up to D-Day were stationed domestically, while one in four never went abroad at all. In other words, a lot of GIs spent a lot of time in the continental United States. Their presence, combined with the anti-civilian culture that the US military cultivated during the war, made places like Times Square, Hollywood Boulevard, and Coney Island look like occupation zones. A new book tells this important yet overlooked history of the Second World War. In Taking Leave, Taking Liberties: American Troops on the World War II Home Front (U Chicago Press, 2020), Aaron Hiltner follows GIs as they traveled through transport hubs, trained at domestic military bases, and took leave in ‘liberty ports,” such as Boston and San Francisco. By doing so, Hiltner, a lecturer at University College London, shows how theft, assault, catcalling, murder, rape, drunkenness, harassment, rackets, and fist fights were a part of the everyday domestic wartime experience. The book, therefore, challenges our tendency to isolate the home front from the war and makes us rethink where US foreign relations take place. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/military-history
During the Second World War, locals in Australia and Britain described American GIs as “overpaid, oversexed, and over here.” But this conflict between civilians and the military didn't only take place abroad. Civil-military tensions could be seen at ‘home' too. Nearly three-quarters of servicemen in the months leading up to D-Day were stationed domestically, while one in four never went abroad at all. In other words, a lot of GIs spent a lot of time in the continental United States. Their presence, combined with the anti-civilian culture that the US military cultivated during the war, made places like Times Square, Hollywood Boulevard, and Coney Island look like occupation zones. A new book tells this important yet overlooked history of the Second World War. In Taking Leave, Taking Liberties: American Troops on the World War II Home Front (U Chicago Press, 2020), Aaron Hiltner follows GIs as they traveled through transport hubs, trained at domestic military bases, and took leave in ‘liberty ports,” such as Boston and San Francisco. By doing so, Hiltner, a lecturer at University College London, shows how theft, assault, catcalling, murder, rape, drunkenness, harassment, rackets, and fist fights were a part of the everyday domestic wartime experience. The book, therefore, challenges our tendency to isolate the home front from the war and makes us rethink where US foreign relations take place. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/american-studies
Buckle-up because you're about to jet-set into some fantastic stories when Kenny and Rob take the mic. On today's episode find out the origins to “Danger Zone” and “What a Fool Believes”, Why Steve Perry was coaching Cyndi Lauper at the “We are the World” recording, and if the new Top Gun movie will feature Kenny's classic tune. Got a question for Rob? Call our voicemail at (323) 570-4551. Yours could get featured on the show!
1 Samuel 13:1-10
David S. Goyer is a filmmaker who is well-known to a certain segment of the film-going population. But those who know him from his superhero work will be shocked when they watch his latest TV series, “Foundation.” And Goyer recently joined The Playlist Podcast to talk about his new show, as well as his legacy as the comic book film writer. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/theplaylist/message
Andrew For America discusses the trustworthiness of the media, the effectiveness of vaccines (that will soon become mandatory), and the damage that has been done to the American citizens due to the lockdowns. The song selection is the song, "Taking Liberties" by the band Fear The Lions. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/andrew-foramerica/support
We're sorry. Shit happens, ya know? But soon it'll all be different and you'll find out why when you listen. For real this time. Anyway, on this show, we review the April 29th, 2005 edition of TNA iMPACT! as well as WWE Armageddon 2008. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Welcome back! Sorry, we're late again everyone, but I should just note that we did actually already record this episode. It's just that Andrew's audio didn't record and then Texas went to shit so I couldn't record. It was a whole ordeal. Anyway, on this episode, we get a chance to take a look at TNA Lockdown 2005 as well as something I've wanted to review for ages: UWF. It'll be a helluva time. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
We're 2 days away from the 2/9/21 Abolish Slavery National Network Quarterly Meeting and one month post confederate insurrection. It's all interconnected like a time rhyme but in this moment, the Abolitionist are writing the script. The last quarterly preceded the abolition of slavery in Utah and Nebraska and everything we touched turned to gold. Helping abolitionist amendments pass in 6 states. 3 months later we're about to top that and make US history. Forewarned is forearmed. Hear it first at Abolition Today.
We're 2 days away from the 2/9/21 Abolish Slavery National Network Quarterly Meeting and one month post confederate insurrection. It's all interconnected like a time rhyme but in this moment, the Abolitionist are writing the script.
We're 2 days away from the 2/9/21 Abolish Slavery National Network Quarterly Meeting and one month post confederate insurrection. It's all interconnected like a time rhyme but in this moment, the Abolitionist are writing the script.
Welcome back! We're back with the follow-through. We told you guys that we'd back and we damn well meant it. Anyway, on this episode, we'll be reviewing the go-home show for the 2005 Lockdown PPV, as well as the two most important matches from Royal Rumble 2021! Yeah, don't expect recent stuff, but it was certainly fun. Hope you all enjoy it! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Welcome back! We're also back and it didn't even take us a whole month! This time we take a look at the April 15th, 2005 edition of iMPACT! as well as the legendary King of the Deathmatch tournament. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Label: Columbia 10919Year: 1979Condition: MPrice: $11.00The B side of this essential Elvis Costello tune is a previously unreleased, non-LP cut that later appeared on the collection Taking Liberties. Note: This beautiful copy comes in a vintage Columbia Records factory sleeve. It has no notable flaws, grading Mint across the board (Labels, Vinyl, Audio).
En este episodio hablo de la peli Takers o Ladrones! y como mejor disfrutarla en casa. No es un Podcast spoiler-free. Seguime en Twitter @podcast_ppc en Instagram @pelisparacasita_podcast.
Well goddamn, pals. We're back! Sorry for being away for exactly one month, but now we're here to stay! For real though. This is still a weekly show and we plan on getting back to it. Anyway, in this episode we take a look at the April 8th, 2005 episode of iMPACT! as well as a classic WWE PPV. Become a Patron: https://www.patreon.com/TLProWresPod --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
The post Beware of taking liberties with the Deen appeared first on Mahmood Habib Masjid and Islamic Centre - We came to give, not to take..
The post Beware of taking liberties with the Deen appeared first on Mahmood Habib Masjid and Islamic Centre - We came to give, not to take..
Welcome back! Thanks for coming out with a stunning episode 16 with us. During this episode, we break down the April fools episode of iMPACT, and I'm sure you can guess who the fools were. We also look at ECW Barely Legal 1997, so check it out and give it a like if you liked it! Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/TLProWresPod --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
And we are back! Hello everybody and welcome back, and thank you for patiently awaiting our return. We've missed so many weeks because of Andrew. He said that I could bury him so here it is. He's stinky. Anyway, we come at you this week by reviewing the next chronological iMPACT episode as well as OG NXT. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
On this episode, Audio Content Editor Laura Garcia speaks with Maite Garcia, an attorney and Pro Bono Mentor with the Florence Immigrant and Refugee Rights Project (FIRRP) in Arizona, about the intersection between immigration and criminal law, and the challenges that “crimmigration” issues pose for noncitizens and those aiming to provide them with meaningful legal […]
On this episode, Audio Content Editor Laura Garcia speaks with Maite Garcia, an attorney and Pro Bono Mentor with the Florence Immigrant and Refugee Rights Project (FIRRP) in Arizona, about the intersection between immigration and criminal law, and the challenges that “crimmigration” issues pose for noncitizens and those aiming to provide them with meaningful legal […]
Helloooo everybody! As always, welcome back, and thank you for checking out the show. This week we look at the March 18th, 2005 episode of iMPACT and it was certainly... a show. We also take a gander at some old wrasslin', something that neither of the cohosts has ever watched before, and I'd say we had a pretty damn good time watching it. Check out the show and let us know what you think! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Welcome back! This week we talk about Destination X 2005 as well as a Smackdown show from 2001. That Destination X show really took a lot out of us, but we hope you enjoy it! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
First thing's first: I'm sorry about the audio quality on my (Marquis) part. I'm not exactly quite sure what happened, but regardless I'll have that fixed by the next show. Anyway, welcome back! This week on the show we review the March 11, 2005 episode of iMPACT! as well as take a wonderful look into a bit of wrestling that we haven't really delved into a whole lot, but damn was it wonderful. We also have a pretty fun time with a guest. All in all, this show was a blast and you should check it out! Don't forget to follow the pod of Twitter @TLProWresPod and make sure to give a five star rating and review on Apple Podcast! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Chris Atkins is a documentary film maker, journalist and author. He found success early in life with documentaries Taking Liberties, Starsuckers, and UKIP: The First 100 Days. He has received 3 BAFTA nominations for his work and also gave evidence at the Leveson Inquiry. In 2016 he was sentenced to five years in prison for participating in a tax evasion schemes within the British film industry. He published a book about his time in prison entitled A Bit of a Stretch. But our conversation focuses on Chris' time after prison and how he used his time away to decide how we wanted to come back. We cover post-it notes, parties, pitches and people in a wonderfully open, self-aware and funny conversation.
Before The Unshackled was founded Editor in Chief…