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In this episode we'll be covering the 27th Academy Awards or the films of 1954, but not before we revisit the 97th Academy Awards to discuss what happened at the ceremony. The nominees for the 27th Academy Awards were: The Caine Mutiny, The Country Girl, On the Waterfront, Seven Brides for Seven Brothers, and Three Coins in the Fountain. We also discuss the non-nominees Sabrina and Rear Window.Notes: SPOILERS - we talk through the full plots of all the movies we cover.Timestamps are approximate: 0:30 - 97th Academy Awards Review8:00 - Start of the 27th Academy Awards Episode19:25 - The Caine Mutiny33:05 - The Country Girl44:05 - Seven Brides for Seven Brothers59:00 - Three Coins in the Fountain1:08:50 - On the Waterfront1:30:35 - Should something else have been nominated? 1:31:00 - Sabrina1:41:20 - Rear Window1:51:15 - Did the Oscars get it wrong?1:54:15 - Jake Gyllenhaal Corner1:56:55 - Conclusions2:04:35 - Next Time--------------------------Want to know what episode we're currently prepping and suggest non-nominees that we should watch? Check us out on instagram at oscarswrongpod.Enjoying the podcast? Please leave us a rating or review on your podcast app of choice
We continue #SEXtember Part Deux by checking in on 1972's NIGHT CALL NURSES. Directed by Jonathan Kaplan, in his debut, and produced by Julie Corman, this is the third in Roger Corman's "NURSES" movie. Quentin Tarantino called it "a sexy version of Three Coins in the Fountain." IYKYK. We talk about the many, many, MANY plots this movie has to offer, the subtle product placement, and learn about Erica's favorite after work activity - no spoilers - but it's not what you would think! What is a night call nurse you ask? You'll have to listen in to find out!
My guests today on the Online for Authors podcast are the editors of Feisty Deeds: Historical Fictions of Daring Women with a forward by Aimie K Runyan. The stories in Feisty Women span six centuries. Within these stories, you'll find that even when time periods and geographical locations vary greatly, women's struggles as they confront adversity are often remarkably universal. The twenty-three stories in this collection follow ordinary women from the 1470s to the 1960s as they rise to meet life's challenges. Foreign invasions, the outbreak of war, rigid domestic authority, strictures of society and religion, the supernatural, love and family bonds all serve as catalysts for the feisty deeds of the women in these tales. Aimie K. Runyan is the internationally bestselling author of The School for German Brides, A Bakery in Paris, and Mademoiselle Eiffel. She writes to celebrate unsung heroines. She has written eight historical novels and is delving into the exciting world of contemporary women's fiction. She has been a finalist for the Colorado Book Award five times, a nominee for the Rocky Mountain Fiction Writers' 'Writer of the Year, ' and a Historical Novel Society's Editors' Choice selection. Aimie is active as a speaker and educator in the writing community in Colorado and beyond. She lives in the beautiful Rocky Mountains with her wonderful husband, two (usually) adorable children, two (always) sweet cats, and a pet dragon. Website: aimiekrunyan.com IG: @bookishaimie FB: @aimiekrunyan X: @aimiekrunyan After a career as a university professor teaching and publishing in philosophy, Carolyn Korsmeyer turned her hand to fiction. She has published two novels, one historical – Charolotte's Story, one a mystery – Little Follies: A Mystery at the Millennium. Her third novel, Riddle of Spirit and Bone, will be released in February 2025. Website: www.carolynkorsmeyer.com FB: @carolyn.korsmeyer IG: @carolyn.korsmeyer LinkedIn: carolyn-korsmeyer Christy Matheson writes romantic Regency fiction about friends, family, and finding one's place in an ever-changing world. Her debut novel was a finalist for the 2023 WFWA Rising Star Award, and is currently on submission, represented by Kristina Sutton Lennon. She is an award-winning spoken word poet. Christy is also an embroidery artist, classically trained pianist, and sews all of her own clothes. She lives in Oregon, on a country property that fondly reminds her of a Regency estate (except with a swing set instead of faux Greek ruins), with her five children, two Shelties, a bunny, and an improbable amount of art supplies. Website: christymatheson.com FB: @ Christy Matheson, Author IG: @christy_matheson_author X: @CMathesonAuthor Elaine Schroller reads and writes historical fiction to escape writing about computer software and to travel to other places in time. Her degree is in History, which gave her the perfect training for researching specific places and events in DARE NOT TELL and THE BRAVEST SOLDIER. She's traveled to all but one of the countries in the books and visited all the sites where the story takes place, some more than once. She was an oil brat, and attended high schools in Algiers, Algeria, Northwood, England, Clear Lake City, Texas, Beirut, Lebanon, and Kingston-upon-Thames, England. For many years, she's lived in Bellaire, Texas. She and her husband raised their son there. Now they have a rescue cocker spaniel underfoot and travel as often as they can convince their son to look after the dog for them. Elaine is a member of the Historical Novel Society and the Women's Fiction Writers Association. Website: www.elaineschroller.com IG: @elaineschroller FB: @elaine.aucoin.schroller After selling her European fashion specialty store in 2016, Kay Smith-Blum began writing the novel she had been percolating on for two decades. Three manuscripts later, Smith-Blum's debut novel, Tangles, depicts the human costs of the nuclear age and the dangerous legacy it leaves for future generations. “The Calf” is a companion piece, and the first in a series of short works and essays that will accompany the release of Smith-Blum's novel in November 2024. Winner of the 2023 Black Fox Lit short story contest, Smith-Blum has been published in multiple literary journals. Website: www.KaySmith-Blum.com IG: @discerningKSB FB: @kay.smithblum LinkedIn: kay-smith-blum-3877273 X: @kaysmithblum Kimberly Sullivan writes the women's fiction stories she loves to read, both contemporary and historic tales of women and the rich lives they lead along their journeys of self-discovery. She is an award-winning author of four novels and one short story collection - . Three Coins, Dark Blue Waves, In The Shadow of The Apennines, Drink Wine and Be Beautiful: Short Stories, and Rome's Last Noble Palace. Her new novel, EASTER AT THE THREE COINS INN, will be published in the autumn. A lifetime admirer and longtime resident of Italy, Kimberly is often guilty of sneaking the bel paese into her stories. Website: kimberlysullivanauthor.com IG: @kimberlyinrome Goodreads: Kimberly Sullivan BookBub: Kimberly Sullivan Books Teri M Brown, Author and Podcast Host: https://www.terimbrown.com FB: @TeriMBrownAuthor IG: @terimbrown_author X: @terimbrown1 #feistydeeds #womensfiction #historicalfiction #anthology #shortstories #terimbrownauthor #authorpodcast #onlineforauthors #characterdriven #researchjunkie #awardwinningauthor #podcasthost #podcast #readerpodcast #bookpodcast #writerpodcast #author #books #goodreads #bookclub #fiction #writer #bookreview
FOREVER PLAID Written by Stuart Ross Musical Continuity, Supervision, and Arrangements by James Raitt Director/Music Director Daniel Thomas Assoc. Music Director Tim Fletcher Choreographer Brittney Monroe April 18-May 5, 2024 Gateway Theatre, San Francisco FOREVER PLAID is a deliciously fun revue is chock-full of classic four-part harmonies and pitch-perfect melodies! Once upon a time, there were four guys (Sparky, Smudge, Jinx and Frankie) who discovered that they shared a love for music and then got together to become their idols – The Four Freshman, The Hi-Lo's and The Crew Cuts. Rehearsing in the basement of Smudge's family's plumbing supply company, they became “FOREVER PLAID”. On the way to their first big gig, the “Plaids” are broadsided by a school bus and killed instantly. It is at the moment when their careers and lives end that the story of FOREVER PLAID begins… Singing in close harmony, squabbling boyishly over the smallest intonations and executing their charmingly outlandish choreography with overzealous precision, the “Plaids” are a guaranteed smash, with a program of beloved songs and delightful patter that will keep you laughing when you're not humming along to some of the greatest pop hits of the 1950s. The hit parade of songs includes “Three Coins in the Fountain,” “Love Is A Many-Splendored Thing,” “16 Tons,” “Rags to Riches” and many more favorites!
Since it’s the season for Valentine’s, Arthur, Julian, and Steve examine the most romantic movies of all time, from “Casablanca” to “Titanic,” “When Harry Met Sally,” “Dirty Dancing,” “Three Coins in the Fountain” and much more. Grab a partner and tune in for a fun time when romance was not only a popular movie genre, […] The post Heartfelt Cinema | Tales From Hollywoodland appeared first on The ESO Network.
Since it's the season for Valentines, Arthur, Julian, and Steve examine the most romantic movies of all time, from "Casablanca" to "Titanic," "When Harry Met Sally," "Dirty Dancing," "Three Coins in the Fountain" and much more. Grab a partner and tune in for a fun time when romance was not only a popular movie genre, but a staple. Links Tales From Hollywoodland on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/talesfromhollywoodland Tales From Hollywoodland on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/talesfromhollywoodland/ Tales From Hollywoodland on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCdLX2kbwHqdn47FNN6vVN7Q We want to hear from you! Feedback is always welcome. Please write to us at talesfromhollywoodland@gmail.com and why not subscribe and rate the show on Apple Podcast, Spotify, iHeartRadio, PlayerFM, YouTube, Pandora, Amazon Music, Audible, and wherever fine podcasts are found. #RomanticHollywoodfilms #Classicromancemovies #Hollywoodlovestories #Romanticcinemahistory #Iconiclovefilms #Legendaryromanticmovies #Hollywoodromanceclassics #Famouslovestoriesinfilm #Bestromanticepics #Timelessromancemovies #Romanticmoviereviews #Hollywoodromanceretrospectives #Romanticfilmanalysis #Loveincinema #Hollywoodsgreatestromances #StevenJayRubin #TalesFromHollywoodland #ArthurFriedman #JulianSchlossberg
Join Tyler as he talks about arguably one of the greatest winners for Best Picture, On the Waterfront and how this film ushered in a new wave of actor. He also talks about the best pic nominees The Country Girl, The Caine Mutiny, Seven Brides for Seven Brothers and Three Coins in the Fountain.
To some, it's just a pocketful of change, but in these three old time radio mysteries, coins play central parts in the crimes. First, Philip Marlowe hunts for a coin worth a cool $37,000 in "The Collector's Item" (originally aired on CBS on August 25, 1950). Then, Orson Welles tells how a single shilling was tied to a murder in a syndicated Scotland Yard story from The Black Museum. Finally, Bob Bailey stars as Johnny Dollar in a case involving Civil War currency - "The Confederate Coinage Matter" (AFRS rebroadcast; originally aired on CBS on July 28, 1957). Note: No intro today but hopefully back soon. Thanks for your patience!
Finanzbildung oder in den meisten Fällen eher fehlende Finanzbildung wird in Österreich oft von Eltern an ihre Kinder vererbt, was dazu führen kann, dass finanzielle Ungleichheiten von einer Generation zur nächsten weitergegeben werden. Three Coins ist ein österreichisches Sozialunternehmen, das sich auf die Entwicklung und Umsetzung von Finanzbildungsprojekten spezialisiert hat. Das Hauptziel besteht darin, Finanzkompetenz auf eine praktische und effektive Weise zu vermitteln. Im Podcast sprechen wir mit Julia Vlahovic. Sie arbeitet seit über zwei Jahren als Projektleiterin bei Three Coins und ist speziell für den Bereich Kinder und Jugendliche verantwortlich. Ihre Projekte umfassen insbesondere Schulworkshops, die derzeit in Wien, Niederösterreich und dem Burgenland stattfinden. Darüber hinaus leitet sie den Finanzbildungspreis KARDEA, der für die besten Geldprojekte in ganz Österreich an Schüler*innen verliehen wird. Wie sie betont, ist ihre größte Motivation in dieser Arbeit die Möglichkeit, Menschen durch finanzielle Bildung zu einem selbstbestimmteren und freieren Leben zu verhelfen. Die Themen, die in dieser Folge behandelt werden: Wie Three Coins zur finanziellen Bildung von Kindern und Jugendlichen beitragen will Vererbte Finanzbildung in Österreich Der konkrete Ablauf von Finanzbildungsworkshops an Schulen Gefahren für Kinder und Jugendliche in sozialen Netzwerken Negative Trends wie Klarna- und Spielschulden Digitale Kompetenz als Chance für eine verbesserte Finanzbildung Die Rolle von Sexismus in der Wahrnehmung von Geld und Berufswahl bei Kindern und Jugendlichen Wie auch Eltern und Lehrkräfte von den Ressourcen und Angeboten von Three Coins profitieren können Wenn dir diese Folge gefallen hat, lass uns doch vier, fünf Sterne als Bewertung da und folge dem Podcast auf Spotify, Apple Music und Co. Für Anregungen, Kritik, Feedback oder Wünsche zu künftigen Gästen schick uns jederzeit gerne eine Mail an feedback@trendingtopics.at! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/trending-topics/message
In this video, we gain insight from Kimberly Sullivan, an experienced author of women's fiction, historical fiction, and short stories, on how to become an independent author and generate income. Learn from her expertise as she shares her tips and tricks for success! ABOUT THE GUEST Kimberly grew up in the suburbs of Boston and in Saratoga Springs, New York, although she now calls the Harlem neighborhood of New York City home when she's back in the US. She studied political science and history at Cornell University and earned her MBA, with a concentration in strategy and marketing, from Bocconi University in Milan. Afflicted with a severe case of Wanderlust, she worked in journalism and government in the US, Czech Republic and Austria, before settling down in Rome, where she works in international development, and writes fiction any chance she gets. She is a member of the Women's Fiction Writers Association and The Historical Novel Society and has published several short stories and three novels: Three Coins, Dark Blue Waves, and In The Shadow of The Apennines. Her first short story collection, Drink Wine and Be Beautiful, will be released in May 2023. After years spent living in Italy with her Italian husband and sons, she's fluent in speaking with her hands, and she loves setting her stories in her beautiful, adoptive country. Connect here: https://kimberlysullivanauthor.com/ https://www.instagram.com/kimberlyinr... ABOUT THE HOST Khudania Ajay, content entrepreneur, podcast host, and independent journalist, brings global Masters of Money and Business to his audience through The KAJ Masterclass LIVE. With over 20 years of experience in renowned organizations like CNBC (India), Reuters, and Press Trust of India, Ajay now helps his audience succeed through his LIVE Masterclasses. Connect with Ajay: https://linkedin.openinapp.co/kaj For event speaking or hosting inquiries: kajmasterclass@gmail.com ABOUT THE KAJ MASTERCLASS LIVE Join senior journalist Khudania Ajay on the KAJ Masterclass LIVE podcast, where you can learn and profit from the insights and experiences of global business leaders almost daily. If you're a driven young professional seeking career development, entrepreneurship, and innovative ways to make money, this is the place for you. Watch: https://yt.openinapp.co/kajmasterclass Listen: https://podlink.openinapp.co/kajmaste... Read: https://substack.oia.bio/kajmasterclass Apply to be a guest on the show: kajmasterclass@gmail.com LET'S BE FRIENDS Website: https://thekajmasterclass.live/ LinkedIn Page: https://bit.ly/3y2yKrM Twitter: https://twtr.openinapp.co/kajmasterclass Instagram: https://insta.openinapp.co/kajmasterc... …………………………………. BUY YOUR FAVOURITE PRODUCTS HERE Discover our curated selection of favourite products/services here. By purchasing through the provided links, you support our channel at no extra cost. We earn a small commission from each sale, helping us create high-quality content for you. Thank you for your support! Join our YouTube channel here: / @kajmasterclass News, Magazines & Podcasting: https://www.joinpodmatch.com/kaj (Connect with top hosts & guests for podcasting success. Get a Free 30-minute session from me on how best to use PodMatch) Apparel & Clothing: https://www.ethnicsland.com/ (Shop authentic handloom sarees - 15% off now!) Amazon Links: [ Photography equipment]
That's amore. Non paghiamo il fossile. And just like that... Boom, kiss, come on, God bless America. In 1966, a pilot for a potential Three Coins in the Fountain TV series was filmed on location in Rome. It only aired on TV once in August 1970, was not picked up thereafter and has never been made available ever since. Probably very few people have ever seen it at all. This week, we've unearthed it - and since it's turned out to be in the public domain, you can now watch it in full with English subtitles on the new SUDDENLY YouTube channel. In what somehow turns out to be our longest episode to date, Justin Gausman of TCBCast: An Unofficial Elvis Presley Fan Podcast joins us to examine "Caesar's Ghost", the first and only episode of the rejected Three Coins series. Is this the best manifestation of the franchise? Could it have been the Sex and the City of the 1960s if someone gave it a chance? We say yes - and it also turns out that this very obscure piece of lost media has significant overlap with the Elvis movie universe. That's right; because three-and-a-half hours wasn't enough, we're talking about Three Coins in the Fountain once again. We're back to talk about this obscure pilot, and also as a mark of respect to Ultima Generazione (Last Generation), the climate activists who turned the Trevi water black just weeks ago. During our record, we fire up the Trevi Fountain webcam once again and witness street sweepers, selfie-takers and a very special surprise that you'll love. Also, stay tuned after the closing theme for a bonus 45-minute discussion with Rabia & Justin about the future of AI in music, recorded spontaneously at 8am due to a timezone mix-up. Watch Three Coins in the Fountain ("Caesar's Ghost") on the SUDDENLY YouTube channel here. Tune into the Trevi Fountain webcam live as you listen here. Justin is the co-host of the highly recommended show, TCBCast: An Unofficial Elvis Presley Podcast. You can also join his Patreon to watch the "Blue Suede Reviews", and check out his appearance on the YouTube show EAP Society here. Also, check out our new official website! suddenlypod.gay CONTACT: SUDDENLYPOD AT GMAIL DOT COM WEBSITE: suddenlypod.gay @SUDDENLYPOD on TWITTER / INSTAGRAM / YOUTUBE / MYSPACE Donate to the show @ ko-fi.com/suddenlypod
Love books! Do you love to #read? Join Denise Turney and author Kimberly Sullivan on Off The Shelf #Books Saturday, June 24, 2023 at 11am/EST! Kimberly and Denise, host of Off The Shelf Books, will dive into the makings of Kimberly's books, including Dark Blue Waves, Drink Wine and Be Beautiful, Three Coins and In The Shadow of the Apennines. Find out why Kimberly chose the books' settings, how the characters were developed and what drives the stories. It's your chance to get the inside scoop on what makes these stories tick. As customary, Denise and her guest will also share book marketing tips. Come get a healthy dose of entertainment, inspiration and loads of fun! See you there! Saturday, June 24, 2023 at 11am/EST (New York City time) Listener dial-in number: (347) 994-3490 MORE ABOUT KIMBERLY SULLIVAN: Kimberly worked in journalism and government in the US, Czech Republic and Austria. Today she makes her home in Rome, where she works in international development, and writes fiction. Kimberly is a member of the Women's Fiction Writers Association and The Historical Novel Society. She has written short stories and novels. Novels she has written include “Dark Blue Waves”, “Drink Wine and Be Beautiful” (slated to be released May 2023), “Three Coins” and “In The Shadow of the Apennines”. See you there! Saturday, June 24, 2023 at 11am/EST (New York City time) Listener dial-in number: (347) 994-3490
The battle for the Academy award for Best Original Song became a little more intense in 1954, as the film composer competed with the professional songwriter for control over who writes songs for the movies. Dimitri Tiomkin began the war after winning the Oscar for "The Ballad of High Noon" in 1952, with Sammy Cahn serving as his rival. Will it be Tiomkin's soaring title song from The High and the Mighty that wins in 1954, or Cahn's lush title song from Three Coins in the Fountain? Host Jeff Commings will tell you the stories behind these and the other nominees, and reveal the winner at the end of this episode of The Best Song Podcast.
Our Dorothy McGuire movies this week occupy two ends of the mid-50s Hollywood spectrum: a low-budget black-and-white noirish crime thriller for Republic, Make Haste to Live (1954), and a vibrantly colorful Cinemascope travelogue romance for Fox, Three Coins in the Fountain (1954). We find plenty to recommend in both, from Make Haste to Live's stylish cinematography (by John L. Russell of Moonrise and Psycho fame) and palpable nastiness to McGuire's odd comedic chemistry with Clifton Webb in Three Coins. As McGuire seriously settles into the "mother and spinster roles" part of her career, we consider what kind of scope individual roles of this kind gave her, and so far they're looking as eccentric as any "love interest" roles she had in the past, which is good news. Time Codes: 0h 00m 45s: MAKE HASTE TO LIVE (1954) [dir. William A. Seiter] 0h 35m 50s: THREE COINS IN THE FOUNTAIN (1954) [dir. Jean Negulesco] +++ * Listen to our guest episode on The Criterion Project – a discussion of Late Spring * Marvel at our meticulously ridiculous Complete Viewing Schedule for the 2020s * Intro Song: “Sunday” by Jean Goldkette Orchestra with the Keller Sisters (courtesy of The Internet Archive) * Read Elise's piece on Gangs of New York – “Making America Strange Again” * Check out Dave's Robert Benchley blog – an attempt to annotate and reflect upon as many of the master humorist's 2000+ pieces as he can locate – Benchley Data: A Wayward Annotation Project! Follow us on Twitter at @therebuggy Write to us at therebuggy@gmail.com We now have a Discord server - just drop us a line if you'd like to join!
Sam I Am is joined by his wife to discuss improper ways to protest and then they take a look at another crazy patent. https://www.startribune.com/obituary-stockbroker-david-leslie-s-love-of-nature-led-him-to-invent-hummer-helmet/193175831/?refresh=true --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nogreeneggsandham/support
In 2007, Italian artist Graziano Cecchini poured red dye into the Trevi Fountain to protest the Rome Film Festival. "You wanted just a red carpet", he said. "We want a city entirely in vermilion. We who are vulnerable, old, ill, students, workers, we come with vermilion to colour your grayness." Escapism, tourism, power, vanity, royalty, memory, sex, romance - and water running blood-red. This week, a deep dive into the extended universe of Rome's iconic Trevi Fountain, spinning off from THREE COINS IN THE FOUNTAIN (1954) and Sinatra's hit title song. A three-and-a-half-hour odyssey recorded while simultanously live-commentating the coronation of King Charles III and monitoring a live webcam of the Trevi Fountain, spanning 10 films released over 56 years and centuries of history... it could only be an episode of SUDDENLY. Watch the live webcam of the Trevi Fountain here. Discussed in this episode: * Roman Holiday (1953) * Three Coins in the Fountain (1954) * La Dolce Vita (1960) * The Pleasure Seekers (1964) * Three Coins in the Fountain (1970) (TV pilot filmed 1966, aired once in 1970 and now lost media. Watch the surviving 76-second clip here. We may be able to obtain this in full in the near future. Stay tuned for a follow-up episode!) * Coins in the Fountain (1990) (Out of print TV movie. Watch the mysterious extremely low-quality YouTube upload here.) * Sabrina Goes to Rome (1998) * When in Rome (2002) Olsen Twins * The Lizzie McGuire Movie (2003) * 3oh3 ft. Katy Perry "Starstrukk" music video (2009) * When in Rome (2010) Kristen Bell * Pamela Krist - Memory and the Trevi Fountain: Flows of Political Power in Media Performance (2019) CONTACT: SUDDENLYPOD AT GMAIL DOT COM @SUDDENLYPOD on TWITTER / INSTAGRAM / MYSPACE Donate to the show @ ko-fi.com/suddenlypod
In this episode, Rich has a conversation with Kimberly Sullivan.Meet Kimberly, a wanderlust-stricken writer who calls the Harlem neighborhood of New York City home. Her journey started in Boston and Saratoga Springs, New York, and took her across the globe to work in journalism and government in the US, Czech Republic, and Austria before settling in Rome. Kimberly studied political science and history at Cornell University and earned her MBA in Milan, specializing in strategy and marketing. She is a member of the Women's Fiction Writers Association and The Historical Novel Society and has published several short stories and three novels. Her first short story collection, Drink Wine and Be Beautiful, will be released in May 2023. Kimberly's love for Italy shines through her stories, as she is fluent in speaking with her hands and enjoys setting her tales in her beautiful adoptive country.Thank you to Kimberly Sullivan for the conversation. Here are some links for Kimberly:Website:Kimberly Sullivan (kimberlysullivanauthor.com)Social Media:Kimberly Sullivan (@KimberlyinRome) / TwitterKimberly Sullivan (@kimberlyinrome) • Instagram photos and videosBooks:
Phantom Electric Ghost Interviews Author Kimberly Noel Sullivan: Building A community To Support Your Author Career Biography Kimberly grew up in the suburbs of Boston and in Saratoga Springs, New York, although she now calls the Harlem neighborhood of New York City home when she's back in the US. She studied political science and history at Cornell University and earned her MBA, with a concentration in strategy and marketing, from Bocconi University in Milan. Afflicted with a severe case of Wanderlust, she worked in journalism and government in the US, Czech Republic and Austria, before settling down in Rome, where she works in international development, and writes fiction any chance she gets. She is a member of the Women's Fiction Writers Association and The Historical Novel Society and has published several short stories and three novels: Three Coins, Dark Blue Waves, and In The Shadow of The Apennines. Her first short story collection, Drink Wine and Be Beautiful, will be released in May 2023. After years spent living in Italy with her Italian husband and sons, she's fluent in speaking with her hands, and she loves setting her stories in her beautiful, adoptive country. Link: https://kimberlysullivanauthor.com/ Bringing attention to my author profile and my novels and short stories Support PEG by checking out our Sponsors: Download and use Newsly for free now from www.newsly or from the link in the description, and use promo code “GHOST” and receive a 1-month free premium subscription. The best tool for finding guest for your podcast: https://podmatch.com/signup/phantomelectricghost Subcribe to our YouTube to watch our latest podcasts and musical endeavours. https://youtube.com/@phantomelectricghost Subscribe to our Instagram to get exclusive content: https://www.instagram.com/expansive_sound_experiments/ --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/phantom-electric/message
We would pay not one, not two, but three powerful coins to listen to this episode over and over again! Bree and Claire recap one of their favorite episodes of season one of Grimm, Three Coins in A Fuchsbau. A very special fan (who you all know and love) calls in to ask Bree and Claire some pressing questions about the series. And don't miss the very fun guest appearance from the one and only Sasha Roiz. To leave Claire, Bitsie, and Bree a message for them to answer on the show, please go to https://bit.ly/TheGrimmCastHosts: Claire Coffee, Bitsie Tulloch, Bree TurnerExecutive Producers: Rebecca Eisenberg & Todd MillinerCoordinator & Researcher: Riley VilliersResearcher: Emily BentonProduction & Editing by: Rabbit Grin ProductionsOriginal Music by: Richard MarvinOriginally developed and produced by: Claire Coffee and Erica Tuchman
American Romance Abroad Month (is this what we should call this?) rolls on with a swing through the eternal city. Prepare for typing, answering phones, severed brake lines, and a charming Venitian kidnapping - it's 1954's Three Coins in the Fountain! Featuring Shrishma Naik, Carolyn Naoroz, Katherine Sherlock, and Justin Zeppa. Three Coins in the Fountain was directed by Jean Negulesco and stars Clifton Webb and Dorothy McGuire. Join us on Patreon at the Boom Room for exclusive, ad-free bonus content in the form of super-deluxe length episodes: patreon.com/oldmovietimemachine We appreciate your support, so please subscribe, rate, review, and follow the show: Instagram: @timemachinepodcasts Facebook: facebook.com/oldmovietimemachine Email: partyline@oldmovietimemachine.com Buy our luxurious merchandise: www.teepublic.com/user/old-movie-time-machine ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
A 20 year old chicken, a horse stuck in a lake, and what happens to your coins you throw in Rome's famous fountain. Have a great day!This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/5747537/advertisement
My guest in this episode is Geoff Sutton. The stereotype of a Microsoft employee is a Computer Sciences nerd in a check shirt and chinos. Whilst they do exist Geoff is a great example of the diversity of background and experience that existed in the company as was my previous guest Neil Jordan (7 years as a Choirister at Windsor Castle) and indeed myself with my English Lit Degree (specialist subjects - Anglo-Saxon Poetry and Medieval Mystery Plays) Geoff joined Microsoft in 1996 to set up MSN News after 16 years as a journalist, including spells at the Daily Mail, Today, Sunday Express and Daily Mirror. It's no surprise then that he has a raft of stories and in this episode, we hear hilarious and fascinating stories about his time on Mail Showbiz including: · Running with Madonna · Being a waiter at Bill Wyman's Wedding · A one-off appearance as Elvis on the West End Stage· Motivating Boy George to kick his heroin addiction · Princess Di and Fergie pretending to be WPCs at Annabel's He then moved over to News and had the challenging experience of covering three major tragedies in the UK in 87/88 namely the King's Cross Fire, the explosion and sinking of the Piper Alpha Oil Platform and Lockerbie Terrorist Attack. Born in Hackney but today Geoff lives in Bermondsey with his wife Asli and he has two grown-up children Helen and Daniel. He is a lifelong Arsenal fan, and he describes his early teens as being all about “Football and Music'. His passion for both continues to shine through and that includes learning to play the Saxophone in lock down (but more on that in Part 2!) . His song choices in this episode are: 60's – Three Coins in The Fountain Frank Sinatra70's – No Action Elvis Costello80's – Club Tropicana Wham Enjoy
In dieser Folge erklären wir, woher die aktuelle Inflation kommt und welche Auswirkungen sie auf unser Erspartes hat. Wie kann man sich und sein Vermögen gegen die Inflation wappnen, was soll man konkret mit seinem Geld tun: Ausgeben? Anlegen? Einen Notgroschen zur Seite legen? Gast ist Goran Maric, er ist Experte für Finanzbildung bei Three Coins.
In dieser Folge erklären wir, woher die aktuelle Inflation kommt und welche Auswirkungen sie auf unser Erspartes hat. Wie kann man sich und sein Vermögen gegen die Inflation wappnen, was soll man konkret mit seinem Geld tun: Ausgeben? Anlegen? Einen Notgroschen zur Seite legen? Gast ist Goran Maric, er ist Experte für Finanzbildung bei Three Coins.
In this episode, Zā Cooley joins Brett and Christian to discuss the five films that were nominated for Best Picture for the year 1954, which were celebrated at the 27th Academy Awards. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and Letterboxd for more content! The theme music provided for this podcast was composed by Joshua Arnoldy. Beginning – Overview of the 27th Academy Awards 5:05 - The Caine Mutiny 20:15 - The Country Girl 35:28 - Seven Brides for Seven Brothers 46:55 - Three Coins in the Fountain 1:03:30 - On the Waterfront 1:24:55 – Which Picture Was Best?: Ranking the Nominees
This episode features a couple firsts. Not only is it part one of a two part episode (the conversation lasted about 2 hours, so we'll split it up), but this features our first guest on the podcast. Chris joins Bob (you might know him as @4thClassOfficer on the Twitter Dot Com) to discuss the best films of 1954. Perhaps a bit of disagreement? Certainly an in-depth conversation, given the duration. Bob was fighting a cold, which makes his voice deteriorate over the course of the podcast, and there are a couple places with small audio difficulties (very slight echo), but on the whole it's an episode we think you'll enjoy.SPOILERS ABOUND! But of course.00:10 Intro of podcast and guest host (the slight echo largely goes away after about 7 minutes)06:11 On the Waterfront synopsis06:45 Where does it take place?08:21 The Score and other Brando films08:55 Bob is not impressed; because it was over-hyped before he saw it?09:32 Brando the method actor11:15 Terry Malloy's lack of intelligence11:35 Final spoiler warning for the podcast; beyond this point be spoilers for all kinds of things12:21 I coulda been a contender16:13 Pops and a lack of moral courage17:28 Stock characters surround the leads18:45 8 Oscars20:09 Split vote for Best Supporting Actor?21:18 Bernstein's score (where Bob fails in the moment to recognize the REM reference)22:17 The High and the Mighty ruined by Airplane!22:34 Boxing and boxers in On the Waterfront23:18 Tony Galento23:58 Abe Simon25:05 Appropriate appearance for supporting cast26:25 Personal allegory for Elia Kazan27:22 The High and the Mighty (Airplane!)27:56 Airplane! a parody (but of Zero Hour, not Terminal Countdown)28:25 Crazylegs played football, not basketball29:10 Parallels between the films...29:55 AMC and mocking Mark's youth30:50 The uselessness (from the audience perspective) of the Coast Guard33:31 Further oddities (Pedro Gonzalez Gonzalez)34:43 Ploy synopsis36:25 Not a best picture36:45 What did each of us watch for this episode?37:30 Rear Window37:46 Hitchcock and confined spaces38:25 Rear Window synopsis39:33 Chris' first Hitchcock film *ever*41:12 Does the cop believe the photographer or no?43:20 Jimmy Stewart and Hitchcock45:09 Hitchcock and his well-realized bit-part supporting actors46:39 The 39 Steps48:10 The finale of Rear Window50:58 Bob compares Rear Window to On the Waterfront54:03 Three Coins in the Fountain (which Chris hated)54:49 Chris recommends Mark visiting Trevi Fountain if he visits Rome55:25 The low population of Rome relative to today56:01 Three Coins synopsis56:33 The length of the film and what that means for the movie58:20 Clifton Webb's character's compressed timeline59:24 Can't be Two Coins in the Fountain1:00:14 Poor widescreen transfer to DVDNote: Oscar® and Academy Awards® are the trademarks and service marks of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. This podcast is neither endorsed by nor affiliated with the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.Music:Intro and Outro music excerpted without alteration other than length and volume from AcidJazz by Kevin McLeod under a Creative Commons (CC BY 3.0) license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/legalcode
Richard Kirkham of Kirkham: A Movie A Day and the host of the LAMBCAST is back with Rob as they both try and sing catchy TV tunes to help combat Neal's version of Three Coins in a Fountain that has seemed to annoy the whole busload of passengers.
A picture postcard movie of Rome and Venice, Three Coins in the Fountain answers a question our hosts didn't even know they had: can a movie devoid of stakes be good?
This episode is also available as a blog post: https://wp.me/pEZs7-AOX Thanks for listening! Do ask us a question. Sassy Brit Alternative-Read.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/alternative-readcom/message
Calum and Chris discuss the 1954 nominees for Best Special Effects,which were 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, Hell and High Water, and Them! Hell and High Water: 02:21 – 18:16 Them!: 18:16 – 32:37 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea: 32:37 – 47:34 Conclusions/Ranking: 47:34 – 58:20 Intro Music: Original Score of Them! Exit music: Dinah Shore,”Three Coins in the Fountain” from Three Coins in the Fountain (Best Original Song winner of 1954)
Story Story Podcast: Stories and fairy tales for families, parents, kids and beautiful nerds.
One story, one teller for this clever episode! Join Isabelle Hauser as she brings you Barbara Schutzgruber telling "Three Coins".Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/storystorypodcast)
Once one of the most popular genres of video games, adventure games have become much more niche in recent years. But thankfully, it's a niche with some absolutely fantastic music!From the mid-80s to the early 2000s, adventure games were at the forefront of narratives in interactive entertainment. In a time before RPGs embraced cinematic CGI cutscenes and voice acting, LucasArts, Sierra, and other adventure game developers were pioneering multimedia in video games, presenting audiences with expansive stories, fully-voiced casts of characters, full-motion video, and some truly memorable “moon logic puzzles.” They also created some incredible music! Join Adam, Hilary, and Jono as they move through adventure game history, highlighting some of their favorite music tracks from classics of the genre (and there might be some talk of musical theater thrown in there for good measure)!Featuring: Hilary Andreff, Jonathan Logan, Adam Luhrs; Edited by Jonathan LoganLinks for this episodeYouTube - How Octopath Traveler Hypes its Boss Battles - Game Score FanfareTracklist0:15:48 - The Magic Meadow (Mark Seibert) - Sierra Soundtrack Collection0:19:43 - Deep in the Caribbean… (Michael Land) - The Secret of Monkey Island0:34:16 - Atrus' Study (Jack Wall) - Myst III: Exile Soundtrack0:37:03 - Grim Fandango (Peter McConnell) - Grim Fandango Remastered Original Soundtrack0:59:36 - Gyakuten Saiban 1~3 Courtroom Suite (Masakazu Sugimori, Noriyuki Iwadare) - Gyakuten Saiban 15th Anniversary Orchestra Concert1:08:26 - Crusin' (Jared Emerson-Johnson) - Sam & Max Save the World Soundtrack1:48:34 - Adam's Bonus Track!Bonus Background Tracks0:00:39 - Courtroom Lounge ~ Opening Prelude (English Turnabout Mix)(Masakazu Sugimori) - Professor Layton VS Gyakuten Saiban Magical Mystery Music0:02:13 - You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown (Clark Gesner, Andrew Lippa) - You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown (1999 Broadway Cast)0:02:31 - Game of Life (Michael Kooman, Christopher Dimond) - Dani Girl (Demo)0:03:14 - Overture (Andrew Lloyd Webber, Tim Rice) - Jesus Christ Superstar (1970 Concept Cast)0:03:37 - The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee (William Finn) - The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee (2005 Original Cast)0:03:57 - Three Coins in the Fountain (Jule Styne, Sammy Cahn) - Forever Plaid (1990 Off-Off-Broadway Cast)0:04:26 - Hot Stuff (Pete Bellotte, Harold Faltermeyer and Keith Forsey) - Disaster (2016 Original Broadway Cast)0:05:13 - Overture (Work Song) (Claude-Michel Schönberg, Alain Boublil, Jean-Marc Natel) - Les Misérables (1987 Original Broadway Cast)0:05:33 - Prologue (We Might Play All Night) (Heidi Rodewald, Stew) - Passing Strange (2008 Original Broadway Cast)0:06:31 - Karnak's Dream of Life (Brooke Maxwell, Jacob Richmond) - Ride the Cyclone (2021 Studio Cast)1:39:35 - Title Theme - Star Trek: 25th AnniversaryAlbum LinksSierra Soundtrack CollectionVGMdbMyst III: Exile The Soundtrack Our Review VGMdb Grim Fandango Remastered Original Soundtrack Our Review (Original Soundtrack) VGMdb Amazon iTunes Store / Apple Music Spotify Gyakuten Saiban 15th Anniversary Orchestra Concert VGMdb CDJapan Spotify Sam & Max Save the World Soundtrack VGMdb Steam Bandcamp Professor Layton VS Gyakuten Saiban Magical Mystery Music Our Review VGMdb CDJapan Get in Touch:RPGFan.comEmail us: music@rpgfan.comTwitter: @rpgfancomInstagram: @rpgfancomFacebook: rpgfancomTwitch: rpgfancom
After the weekly news rant @donwoods tells @vincetracy about his invitation to meet #thepope and memories of his visit to #Rome with #MontyLister from #BBC #RadioMerseyside .......This week's "there and back in a day" feature from my days on Radio Merseyside with Monty Lister takes us to Rome...6.30 in the morning we took off from Speke Airport in Liverpool arrive in Rome around 9.30....to say Rome is stunning is an understatement....everywhere you look is famous....we were taken on a guided tour of the city with Monty doing his commentary and me recording him....first we saw the Trevi Fountain (made famous by Sinatra's Three Coins)....it is a lot smaller than you expect but magnificent....then past the Spanish Steps with rows of tourists sitting on them enjoying the sunshine...then off to the Pantheon which is spectacular....and you have to wonder how the dome was built with the equipment they had back then....apparently when Michael Angelo walked in and looked up he said it had to have been built by aliens.....we then went to the Vatican which is unbelievable...
I talk about Cardano, Ethereum, and Tezos potentially reaching millions of dollars! follow me on Facebook: Santino Peralta Instagram: sonny232323 Snapchat: peralta2323 Twitter: @santinoperalta1 TikTok: @cryptokid23 https://www.facebook.com/cryptokidpodcast/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/cryptokid/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/cryptokid/support
Does image-based media make us think less about our principles and ideals, and more about pursuing mere appearances? Daniel J. Boorstin thought so. In his book, The Image: A Guide to Pseudo-Events in America, Boorstin breaks down why “The Graphic Revolution,” has built a world where our fantasies are more real than our reality. In this book summary, I'll explain why Boorstin says, “By sharpening our images we have blurred all our experience.” Pseudo-events The thirtieth anniversary of a hotel is coming up. They reach out to leaders in the community to form a committee: A banker, a society matron, a lawyer, a preacher. The committee plans a banquet to celebrate the thirty years of service the hotel has given the community. They invite journalists to the banquet to take photos and report it in the newspapers. This hotel's anniversary banquet is what Boorstin calls a “pseudo-event.” Pseudo-events have these four qualities: Pseudo-events are planned, not spontaneous. Pseudo-events are created so they can be reported. Pseudo-events are only ambiguously related to reality. Pseudo-events are self-fulfilling. The event is evidence of the thing the event was planned to illustrate. The thirtieth anniversary banquet didn't happen spontaneously: The hotel created a committee for it. The main reason to have the banquet was to generate press. If the hotel was so valuable, would they have to task members of the community with planning the banquet? It was hardly real. But since this contrived banquet happened, it served as evidence that the hotel was, in fact, valuable to the community. The Graphic Revolution Boorstin blames the proliferation of pseudo-events on what he calls “The Graphic Revolution,” or our rapidly-growing ability create and disseminate imagery. The Graphic Revolution was cited, by the way – as a trigger to our departure from long-form text – in Neil Postman's Amusing Ourselves to Death, which I summarized on episode 252. The foundation of The Graphic Revolution was built when the telegraph was first applied to news reporting in the 1830s and 40s. The first American newspaper was monthly, but when information could suddenly be transferred around the world in seconds, news became a product to be manufactured. The Associated Press was founded in 1848, making news a salable commodity. As printing technology became more sophisticated – such as the New York Tribune's press, which in the 1870s could print 18,000 papers per hour – the capital required to run a newspaper meant it made good business sense to find more and more news to report. The American Civil and Spanish-American Wars, while newsworthy events, made the news machine bigger and more hungry, leaving more space to fill with pseudo-events once the real events subsided. As the term “Graphic Revolution” implies, graphics were a part of the proliferation of news. The first photograph that appeared in a newspaper was published in 1880. But also, audio is a part of the Graphic Revolution. The phonograph was invented in 1877, followed by radio broadcasts in 1900. The birth of Readers' Digest In 1922, De Witt and Lila Acheson Wallace used scissors and paste to put together the first issue of their magazine, in a one-room basement office in Greenwich Village. They carried the magazine copies to the post office and mailed them. It was an instant success. The Wallaces were able to start Reader's Digest with almost no money, because they didn't need editors or writers. De Witt simply went to the New York Public Library, and wrote summaries of articles in the magazines there. Reader's Digest became more popular than the magazines it was summarizing. In fact, it was nearly twice as popular as America's second-most popular magazine. Reader's Digest became so popular, that – according to the company's official historian – they had to help the magazines they were summarizing stay in business. To do this, they would write a short summary of an article. They would then write the article and place it in another magazine. At one point, more than half of summaries published in Reader's Digest were of articles they had placed in other magazines. The copy is more real than the original As Boorstin says, ”The image, more interesting than its original, has itself become the original.” The runaway success of Reader's Digest was a symptom that reading had become not about reading – it had instead become about creating the perception of being “well-informed.” People wanted to browse the summaries to feel that they were aware of what information was out there, not to learn anything from the information itself. As the Graphic Revolution and our ability to reproduce images has strengthened, copies have become more real to us than originals. We go to an art exhibit to see the original of the painting we've seen copies of – visitors to a Gauguin exhibit once complained that colors in the original paintings were less-brilliant than the reproductions they were used to. Movies became important in about 1910, often reproducing stories found in novels – by 1917, Publishers' Weekly was writing about “cinema novels.” In the 1880s, you could only enjoy music if you or someone near you was playing an instrument. By the 1930s, Muzak was mashing together 24-hour mixes of sound to be played in businesses as “background music.” At one point, streaming their “muzak” made them the largest user of telephone networks. And yes, bloggers like myself gain traffic by attracting readers to summaries of books, such as The Image, by Daniel J. Boorstin. Images beget images The proliferation of imagery creates demand for that imagery, which drives demand for pseudo-events. This shapes our culture, driving us away from our principles. Pseudo-events are in higher demand than actual spontaneous events for several reasons: Pseudo-events can be planned to be more dramatic. Pseudo-events are easier to spread (you can have the news release ready to go before the pseudo-event happens – Boorstin points out it should be called a news “holdback”). Pseudo-events are easily repeated. Pseudo-events cost money to produce, so there's more incentive to spread them (the publicist wants to show results, the client wants those results, the journalists need something to write about). Pseudo-events make more sense (they are planned, after all). Pseudo-events are more memetic. They have elements people want to spread. Pseudo-events are social currency. Knowing about pseudo-events happening in the world becomes a test of being “informed” – something that's encouraged on the societal level. Pseudo-events spawn other pseudo-events. The effects of pseudo-events As pseudo-events spread in our image-based media, they change what we value in our culture. Pseudo-events affect who we look up to in society, how we travel, and what art we value. Pseudo-events and heroes Pseudo-events shape whom we choose as heroes. We used to choose heroes based upon their accomplishments, and how those accomplishments represented our ideals. Now we choose our heroes based upon how they appear in media – are they in the news a lot, and do they project an image in which we see ourselves? I shared in my Amusing Ourselves to Death summary that early U.S. Presidents wouldn't have been recognized on the street. We didn't know them by their images – we knew them by the words they wrote or said. Demagogues such as Mussolini, Stalin, or Hitler show what we get when we seek someone who fits our image of a “Great Leader.” Today, our heroes are our celebrities. We don't make them famous because they are great – we think they are great because they are famous. Celebrities know that to be celebrities they need to get in the news and stay there. They create pseudo-events of themselves, including intensifying their images by publicizing relationships between one another. Meanwhile, dead people who deserve to be heroes fall into the background – they won't hire a publicist, and journalists get nothing out of writing about them. Pseudo-events and travel Pseudo-events have shaped the way we travel. The word “travel” used to mean the same as “travail.” In other words, travel meant trouble, work, and torment. We love that we can easily get directly to our destination, and bypass any places that might be along the way. We calculate distance not in miles, but in hours. We don't move through space, we move through time. We expect the faraway to be familiar, and we expect the nearby to be exotic. But travel used to be travailing. It meant spending time with strangers and strange cultures. It meant getting lost and being disoriented. But the capital required to build railroads and then highways meant we needed more people traveling. And to get more people to travel, we had to make travel less travailing. Travel has become a tautology. At the time Boorstin wrote The Image, in 1962, that meant traveling to Mount Sinai to see where they filmed the movie The Ten Commandments – or traveling to Rome to see if the Trevi Fountain really looks like it did in the movie Three Coins in the Fountain. Today, we go to see the places we've seen on Instagram, then take a selfie to…post to Instagram. Pseudo-events and movies I already mentioned how novels were made into movies, which then spawned novels written to become movies. The mass-distribution of actors in movies spawned the star system. Movie-goers wanted to see stars with a distinctive look, such as Mary Pickford's golden curls or Charlie Chaplin's bowed legs and cane. By being put on film, actors no longer get direct feedback from their audiences. Actors aren't tested by how well they interpret the story – the story is tested by how well it displays the actor. The “bestselling” book is a pseudo-event The publishing industry became driven by what Boorstin calls best-sellerism. The Bookman was a literary journal that turned the idea of the best-seller into an institution, around the turn of the century. Printing books costs money, so publishers started planning “reprints” before they even released the originals. A paperback publisher wouldn't plan their paperback until they had a contract to print the hardback. The hardback publishers wouldn't print a hardback until they had a contract to print the paperback. Either contract served as evidence the book was popular, which would drive sales. Booksellers only wanted to order new books they were sure would be bestsellers. Yet the public became so obsessed with purchasing bestsellers, bookstores couldn't carry the really big bestsellers. Retail stores like Macy's would sell them below cost to attract customers, thus making bookstores unable to compete. We want to be deceived Pseudo-events are so ubiquitous in every part of our life, we've come to expect them. We actually want to be deceived. We expect the advertising we encounter to be hyperbolic and non-sensical. Maybe we want to see the originals of the photoshopped model not to change our unrealistic expectations, but rather to marvel at the work that goes into deceiving us? Consider that Schlitz advertised their beer bottles were steam-sterilized, which boosted their sales, or that Lucky Strike advertised the tobacco in their cigarettes was toasted. Nevermind that all beer bottles were already steam sterilized, and all cigarettes toasted. The claim by Ivory soap that their soap is 99.4% pure is just a little modest, so as to be believable nonsense. Are we pursuing images, or are we living life? Boorstin may sound like he wants people to get off his lawn – and he does write with a shrill tone much of the time. But much like Marshall McLuhan would say two years later in Understanding Media, which I summarized on episode 248, Boorstin is mostly trying to make us aware of our own illusions. Boorstin's concern is mostly that, “We fill our lives not with experience, but with the images of experience.” Neil Postman later built on Boorstin's ideas to warn in Amusing Ourselves to Death, that image-based media was devolving our discourse into nonsense. A final quote from Boorstin: Chewing gum is the television of the mouth. There is no danger so long as we do not think that by chewing gum we are getting nourishment. But the Graphic Revolution has offered us the means of making all experience a form of mental chewing gum. There's your The Image: A Guide to Pseudo-events in America summary I hope you enjoyed this summary of The Image: A Guide to Pseudo-events in America, and lest your reading experience consist only of summaries, check out the full book. I personally found it to be a great history of media and publishing. It's one of the major classics of media theory – a must-read for anyone who creates media. The Mind Management, Not Time Management audiobook is here! Listen to the Mind Management, Not Time Management audiobook free with an Audible trial, or search for the audiobook on your favorite platform. About Your Host, David Kadavy David Kadavy is author of Mind Management, Not Time Management, The Heart to Start and Design for Hackers. Through the Love Your Work podcast, his Love Mondays newsletter, and self-publishing coaching David helps you make it as a creative. Follow David on: Twitter Instagram Facebook YouTube Subscribe to Love Your Work Apple Podcasts Overcast Spotify Stitcher YouTube RSS Email Support the show on Patreon Put your money where your mind is. Patreon lets you support independent creators like me. Support now on Patreon » Show notes: http://kadavy.net/blog/posts/the-image-a-guide-to-pseudo-events-in-america-daniel-j-boorstin/
With so much focus on cars and planes, it seems like trains have quietly faded into the background. But they're not gone by any means; in fact, people are putting new spins on this tried-and-true technology that may be taking us into the future. Special guests include Russel Low (Author of "Three Coins", descendant of Chinese immigrant railroad workers) and Patrick Goddard (President of Brightline high-speed rail).
This is the story of Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow! #BehindTheChristmasHits is Presented by Pizza Pizza Lyricist Sammy Cahn and composer Jule Styne were meeting with their publisher on one of the hottest days of the year at Hollywood & Vine in July 1945. A time before most people had air conditioning. It was reportedly Cahn who said to the other two men that it was too hot to work and they should really head to the beach, to which Styne replied: “why don’t we stay here and write a winter song?” The two songwriters were very different. Styne has been described as a workaholic where Cahn was much more carefree. Opposites attract and not just in love. As a song-writing team, they received 7 different Academy Award nominations for Best Original Song including one win for a song sung by Frank Sinatra in the 1954 movie Three Coins in a Fountain. On this particular day in July of ’45, Styne won the argument and the two stayed at the restaurant to write a song about snow. While they were in California at this time, they had both lived in New York and began exchanging stories of being snowed in. Why repeat the sentiment “let it snow” three times? Why not just once? Or even five times? Cahn once said “because three times is “lyric”. It is a pretty simple song though and some have speculated over the years that if a less accomplished song writing team had written it, it may have gone unnoticed…but as mentioned earlier, Styne and Cahn had cred. Vaughn Monroe was the first to sing the song. Monroe was a bandleader born in Akron, Ohio, but what was unusual about him, was that he was also his orchestra’s lead singer. Benny Goodman didn’t sing. Glenn Miller didn’t sing. Vaughn Monroe did. He was a good looking guy who had the nickname of “the baritone with muscles.” Vaughn Monroe and his orchestra recorded the song on Halloween Day, 1945. Timing was perfect. World War II had ended in September – soldiers were home and romance was in the air. While there’s no actual mention of Christmas in the lyrics, the song was an instant success, reaching #1 on the Billboard chart and staying there through February 1946. The song was so popular, three other versions of the song also made the Top 20 before that same winter was over. Imagine. Four different versions of Watermelon Sugar on the chart at exact same time. That’s how popular Let It Snow was that winter. And it’s never not been popular. Some songs, like Santa Baby, have cycled out of favour for a time. Not Let It Snow. Frank Sinatra in 1950. Ella Fitzgerald in 1960. Michael Buble in 2003. It’s a Christmas hit that might not have a true “definitive” version, but the song itself has always been a favourite. Quick note about the original recording artist, Vaughn Monroe – the baritone with muscles. He would have another chance to record a Christmas classic a couple of years later, but he TURNED DOWN the opportunity to be the first to sing Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer. That went to Gene Autry. Thanks so much for joining us – there are lots more stories and videos ahead, so don’t forget to subscribe! Behind The Christmas Hits is Presented by Pizza Pizza!
We have a Patreon! Extra content for our patrons; if you like what we do and you're able, throw in a shekel. Whatever comes a week before Palm Sunday, Palm Sunday, Easter - these are the three Sundays referenced in this Mad Men, classic. Dan and Roberta go over Father Gil's passive aggressive move with Peggy, Roger's fondness for old menus with new prices and Peggy's ability to reach things without a step-ladder. From this week's episode: Three Coins in a Fountain was both a film and a song. Roberta refers to her blog post about Vicki the prostitute with whom Roger is fascinated. Hosts - Roberta Lipp & Dan Jasper Sound & Graphics Consultant - Albert Stern (stickrust arts) Music - Adam Michael Tilford Editing - Roberta Lipp Questions/Comments/Dirty Jokes: Questions@TCIMadMenPod.com Social Media Instagram Twitter Facebook
WHO IS MY GUEST? Eva Gruber is a passionate Impact Coach. She is an entrepreneur, team player, certified KonMari Consultant, and certified Tiny Habits Coach®. Her curiosity to act upon this pressing issue enabled her to work in renewable energy production and climate protection. It led her to co-build the impact venture Three Coins – an innovation-lab to improve personal money behavior. She became a consultant for striving impact entrepreneurs to foster innovations for nature and society. Whenever possible, Eva dedicates her expertise to sustainable consumerism, zero waste solutions, and simple living. She does so by creating... ⇝ physical space - using the magic of tidying and decluttering ⇝ conscious ways of consumerism - enabling smart money use and fostering sustainable lifestyles ⇝ and by creating healthy (tiny) habits - enabling lasting behavior change. ••• 3 BIGGEST GOLDEN NUGGETS (1) Find your intuition and connection to the body first and the mind will follow. (2) Motivation and willpower are unreliable sources for sustainable change. (3) Emotions create habits and you change by feeling good, not by feeling bad. ••• SHOW NOTES 03:37 ▽ "My bullshit story became my pattern." 08:12 ▽ Empowerment Tip: how bodywork helped her to step into her power 15:32 ▽ Corporate life, social entrepreneurship & corporate social sustainability 20:00 ▽ Become part of a community, get started with something little and co-create 25:40 ▽ 3 ways how we change behavior 28:40 ▽ Design flaw vs personal flaw 32:10 ▽ Tiny habits: the secret sauce of motivation, ability and a prompt 31:40 ▽ The importance of celebration in changing your habits 44:20 ▽ Death Reflections: If you die next week, what would you regret not sharing with your brothers and sisters across the globe? ••• CONNECT WITH EVA Website: https://evagruber.org/ LinkedIn: https://bit.ly/linkedinevagruber Facebook: http://bit.ly/fbevagruber ••• Love, Alisa #IAMENOUGHPODCAST #FEMALELEADERS Questions? Wishes? Wanna connect? Write me at: info@alisaeresina.com or @AlisaEresina SUBSCRIBE
On the Waterfront The Caine Mutiny The Country Girl Seven Brides for Seven Brothers Three Coins in the Fountain Twitter: www.twitter.com/AcademyRewind @AcademyRewind www.twitter.com/TimothyPG13 @TimothyPG13 Thought Bubble Audio www.thoughtbubbleaudio.com www.patreon.com/thoughtbubbleaudio
International Service with Special Guest Speaker Mark TemplerFebruary 23, 2020Luke 12:6-7, 21:1-4, 15:8-10
Les, Kurt, and Jason get the low-down on Les' Duran Duran-belting (now former) neighbor and a gushing Blac Chyna, before Jason realizes that Kurt is being tricked into advertising for products including body butter and Patti LaBelle's Sweet Potato Pie. As Kurt FINALLY starts to warm to the idea of watching Hallmark movies, he embraced it even more as he completed a Hallmark Puzzle (giving an angel his wings). On this episode, Hallmark favorite Lacey Chabert is back in Christmas in Rome, a movie which was shot on location in Italy. Lacey plays a character that gets ROPED (that's definitely the word Jason wrote in his notes) into helping a fellow American make his way though the city armed with Vespas, business plans as foreplay, and all of the Connies. Facebook : alifetimeofhallmark Instagram : lifetimeofhallmarkpodcast Theme song generously donated by purple-planet.com
Beyond Our Ken 60-11-10 (404) Three Coins in a Fountain Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
Beyond Our Ken 60-11-10 (404) Three Coins in a Fountain
Goran Maric hilft Menschen dabei besser mit Geld umzugehen. In "Start Me Up" sprechen wir mit ihm über "Three Coins" und den gscheiden Umgang mit Geld. Das erste Taschengeld, der erste Sommerjob, die erste große Investitionsrunde als Startup. In "Start Me Up" sprechen wir übers Geld. Wie schaffe ich es als Person, Startup oder Republik ordentlich zu haushalten? Und was hindert mich dabei? Mit Goran Maric, CEO von "Three Coins" sprechen wir über Dinge, die uns glücklich machen und Geld ohne Stress.
St Patrick's Day starts early with three hours of Celtic music from the award-winning Irish & Celtic Music Podcast. http://bestcelticmusic.net/ The Gothard Sisters, Banna De Dha, Beyond the Pale, The Duplets, Lochlainn, Clan Celtica, Irish Whispa, Keith Hinchliffe, Kyle Carey, Ceol Gan Achar, Vicki Swan & Jonny Dyer, Bedlam Bards, The Merry Wives of Windsor, Rose Rock, Ella Roberts, Bangers and Mash, Screaming Orphans, Ceann, Ed Miller, Kennedy's Kitchen, Dark Patrick, Paddy's Pig, We Banjo 3, Talisk, Lothlorien, Madd Paddy, Marc Gunn, Kinfolk, Gaelic Storm, Fergus, Albannach, Calasaig, Derek Byrne and Paddygrass, The Hallions, The Fighting Jamesons, Hexperos, Dervish, SeaStar, The McCabes, Old Blind Dogs, The Kreelers, Conor Caldwell, Runa, Seamus Kennedy, Brobdingnagian Bards, Johnson's Motorcar, The Canny Brothers Band, The Poxy Boggards, Celtic Soul, Ockham's Razor I hope you enjoyed this week's show. If you did, please share the show with ONE friend. The Irish & Celtic Music Podcast is dedicated to growing our community and helping the incredible artists who so generously share their music. If you find music you love, buy their albums, shirts, and songbooks, follow them on Spotify, see their shows, and drop them an email to let them know you heard them on the Irish and Celtic Music Podcast. Remember also to Subscribe to the Celtic Music Magazine. Every week, I'll send you a few cool bits of Celtic music news. It's a quick and easy way to plug yourself into more great Celtic culture. Plus, you'll get 34 Celtic MP3s for Free, just for signing up today. Thank you again for being a Celt of Kindness. VOTE IN THE CELTIC TOP 20 With the new year comes a new votes in the Celtic Top 20. This is our way of finding the best songs and artists each year. Just list the show number, and the name of as many bands in the episode as you like. Your vote helps me create next year's Best Celtic music of 2019 episode. THIS WEEK IN CELTIC MUSIC 0:05 "The Three Coins" by The Gothard Sisters from Story Girl 3:34 "Comb Your Hair & Curl It / The White Petticoat / The Black Rogue" by Banna De Dha from Band of Two 8:29 "Catalpa Rescue" by Beyond the Pale from Wantin' Something More 12:02 "Garry Porch's" by The Duplets from Leverage 15:07 "Green Window" by Lochlainn from Fisher Street 19:07 "Triantan" by Clan Celtica from Tribal Thunder 22:34 CELTIC FEEDBACK 23:08 "Rising of the Moon" by Irish Whispa from Irish Whispa 25:54 "A Wee Dram or Henry the Horse's Hornpipe" from Keith Hinchliffe from A Wee Dram 27:48 "Cairistiona" by Kyle Carey from North Star 30:40 "Hedigans Fancy Hawson" by Ceol Gan Achar from Ceol Gan Achar 34:59 "Grandpa Joe" by Vicki Swan & Jonny Dyer from Twelve Months & A Day 39:48 PATRONS OF THE PODCAST 41:11 "Whiskey in the Jar" by Bedlam Bards from Furious Fancies 44:22 "Jenny's Story" by The Merry Wives of Windsor from Tales from Windsor's Tavern 46:35 "Down by the Sally Garden" by Rose Rock from Aire Loom 49:22 "North Wind" by Ella Roberts from North Wind 53:18 "Paddy's Day NYC" by Bangers and Mash from Whisper Valley and Other Stories 56:49 "Dr. Gilberts Sel" by Screaming Orphans from Taproom 59:49 CELTIC INVASION VACATIONS 1:00:26 "Almost Irish" by Ceann from Almost Irish 1:05:38 "London Town" by Ed Miller from Follow the Music 1:09:48 "Christy Barry's Jig/The Rolling Waves/The Old Favorite/The West Clare Reel" by Kennedy's Kitchen from The Birds Upon the Tree 1:14:27 "Eamonn An Chnoic" by Dark Patrick from Fainne Gael an Lae 1:17:21 "Henry My Son" by Paddy's Pig from Maple & Wire 1:20:47 "Two Sisters" by We Banjo 3 from String Theory 1:25:29 "Rations" by Talisk from Beyond 1:32:33 CELTIC FEEDBACK 1:33:00 "Paddy's Green Shamrock Shore" by Lothlorien from Single 1:37:27 "The Leprechaun" by Madd Paddy from Arrived 1:39:52 "Henry Martin" by Marc Gunn from Not Every Day Is St Patrick's Day 1:42:19 "Paddy's Stout" by Kinfolk from This Land 1:44:53 "Kiss Me I'm Irish" by Gaelic Storm from Bring Yer Wellies 1:49:37 "P Stands for Paddy" by Fergus from Green St. 1:52:49 CELTIC PODCAST NEWS 1:53:51 "Auld Nick's A Piper" by Albannach from Eye of the Storm 1:56:21 "Lazy Bairn / Instrumental: Doug McPhee's Welcome" by Calasaig from Merchant's City 2:00:03 "My Only" by Derek Byrne and Paddygrass from Half and Half 2:02:52 "Devil's Kiss" by The Hallions from EP 2:06:53 "A Song for Letting Go" by The Fightling Jamesons from Every Day Above Ground 2:11:26 "Giant's Causeway" by Hexperos from Lost in The Great Sea 2:15:45 "Red Haired Mary" by Dervish from Midsummer's Night 2:18:47 CELTIC FEEDBACK 2:19:21 "Galway Bay" by SeaStar from Never Go Back 2:23:21 "An American in Paris" by The McCabes from Songs for Breakfast 2:27:34 "Died and Gone" by Old Blind Dogs from Room With A View 2:33:28 "Johnny Don't Go" by The Kreelers from Saints & Sinners 2:36:42 "An Art Revealed" by Conor Caldwell from To Belfast... 2:39:10 "Big Fellah" by Black 47 from Rise Up 2:44:49 "The Ruthless Wife" by Runa from Current Affairs 2:50:39 CELTIC FEEDBACK 2:51:25 "Wild Rover" by Seamus Kennedy from By Popular Demand 2:56:34 "Old Dun Cow" by Brobdingnagian Bards from Brobdingnagian Fairy Tales 3:00:26 "Redcrow/Tamlins/Gravelwalk" by Johnsons Motorcar from Funky Disco Hardcore 3:05:05 "Spancil Hill" by The Canny Brothers Band from One Drop of Whiskey 3:08:12 "The Drinker's Praise" by The Poxy Boggards from Bawdy Parts 3:10:10 "Tempest in a Teacup" by Celtic Soul from Way 3:20:00 "Lanigan's Ball" by Ockham's Razor from Ten Thousand Miles to Bedlam The Irish & Celtic Music Podcast was produced by Marc Gunn, The Celtfather. To subscribe, go to Apple Podcasts or to our website where you can become a Patron of the Podcast for as little as $1 per episode. Promote Celtic culture through music at http://celticmusicpodcast.com/. CELTIC PODCAST NEWS * Helping you celebrate Celtic culture through music. My name is Marc Gunn. I am a Celtic musician and podcaster. This show is dedicated to the indie Celtic musicians. I want to ask you to support these artists. Share the show with your friends. And find more episodes at celticmusicpodcast.com. You can also support this podcast on Patreon. Get our free app. Go to the iTunes or Amazon store to download the app for free. You'll be able to listen to every episode of the Irish & Celtic Music Podcast, not just the latest 300. That's all that Apple Podcasts will allow. The app will give you access to every show. You can join my band Kilted Kings at The Hangout in Gulf Shores, Alabama on Sunday, March 17th for St. Patrick's Day. Go to KiltedKings.com for details. Subscribe to my Pub Songs Podcast. I'm sharing 11 St Patrick's Day facts in a couple weeks. But you can listen right now and hear some great Celtic Heroes & Musical Legends from the past show. If you don't have an Irish & Celtic Music Podcast t-shirt, what are you waiting for? Get one in our store. Have you seen our new bumper sticker? It was beautifully designed by Miranda Nelson Designs. You can buy it in our store. But from now until March 21, you will get a free bumper sticker to go along with your per episode pledge of the Irish & Celtic Music Podcast. Just sign up as a patron. TRAVEL WITH CELTIC INVASION VACATIONS Every year, I take a small group of Celtic music fans on the relaxing adventure of a lifetime. We don't see everything. Instead, we stay in one area. We get to know the region through it's culture, history, and legends. You can join us with an auditory and visual adventure through podcasts and videos. 2019 is the Celtic Invasion of Dingle. 2020 is the Origins of Celtic Invasions. You can find out more about these two exciting trips. Join the invasion at http://celticinvasion.com/ THANK YOU PATRONS OF THE PODCAST! Big corporations want to force feed you Music. Even though Celtic music is a niche market, There are big labels who want to tell you what music is good. With this podcast, you decide. Not a corporation. Not a billionaire. You! The Irish & Celtic Music Podcast is listener-supported. I make this show free and let you, the listener, support the podcast through your kind patronage on Patreon. You can make a per episode pledge and cap how much you want to spend each month supporting this podcast. Your generosity funds the creation, promotion and production of the show. Best of all, you get episodes before regular listeners, discounts on merch, and when we hit a milestone, you get extra special episodes. I want to thank our Celtic Legends: Shawn Cali, Bryan Brake, Annie Lorkowski, Kevin Long, Hank Woodward, Rian P Kegerreis, robert michael kane, Theresa Sullivan, Hunter Melville, Scott Benson, Carol Baril, Lynda MacNeil, Nancie Barnett, Tiffany Knight, Marianne Ludwig. These amazing people pledge at least $25 per month to support the podcast. You can become a generous Patron of the Podcast at http://patreon.com/celticpodcast I WANT YOUR FEEDBACK What are you doing today while listening to the podcast? You can send a written comment along with a picture of what you're doing while listening. Email a voicemail message to celticpodcast@gmail.com Bill Hayes emailed: "Hi Mark, I just became a patron and I just wanted to drop you a line and say thank you for alll the great music you play. I wanted you to know how much this podcast means to me, I’ve always wanted to explore my Celtic heritage and I always loved the music of my ancestors. Thanks for sharing all the independent artists that make this music!" Brian McReynolds emailed: "I have been listening to your podcast since late 2005. I love the variety of music and love listening to the podcasts. For Christmas I got some Bluetooth headphones and have been listening to the podcast while watching college football bowl games. It has been rather fun watching the action on the field with such great music on instead of listening to the commentary." John Helminski emailed: "Hi Marc, Thanks for your great podcast. Is there one specific show dedicated to Celtic harp music?" Catherine Koehler emailed a reply to my reply: "How providential that you responded tonight...the very night that i was writing YOU, lol. I was at the best pub in Louisiana this weekend, Enoch's Irish Pub and Grill of Monroe, LA, and made sure the podcast was well represented. I'm sending along a few pics of the podcast sticker that was ceremoniosly placed by Enoch's wonderful daughter Molly . In her words " we're placing it down low so everyone can see it!" Fyi...it is in front of everyone who stands in line for the rest room!! No billboard ever had a better placement!"
Musical zombies rise from the dead to sing an evening of ‘50’s pop standards. Let me try that again. On February 4, 1964, The Plaids, an eastern Pennsylvania-based vocal quartet, were headed for a major gig at the Fusel-Lounge at the Harrisburg Airport Hilton when their cherry red Mercury was broadsided by a bus full of Catholic schoolgirls. The girls, who escaped unscathed, were on their way to see the Beatles on The Ed Sullivan Show. The Plaids went on to that Great Performance Hall in the Sky… or at least the green room of the Great Performance Hall in the Sky. Rather than spend an eternity waiting to “go on”, they make their way back to earth to give the concert that never was. That is the plot upon which Stuart Ross and James Raitt hang twenty-four musical standards in their very popular jukebox musical Forever Plaid, running through March 3 at the Lucky Penny Community Arts Center in Napa. Frankie (F. James Raasch), Sparky (Scottie Woodard), Jinx (Michael Scott Wells), and Smudge (David Murphy) were high school friends who dreamed of musical glory. Following the path created by ‘50’s versions of what we now refer to as “boy bands” (The Four Lads, The Four Aces, The Crew-Cuts, etc.), they formed The Plaids and specialized in four-part harmonies. And that’s what you’ll hear over the Michael Ross-directed show’s one hour and 45-minute running time. “Three Coins in the Fountain”, “Sixteen Tons”, “Chain Gang”, and “Love is a Many Splendored Thing” are just some of the 20-plus songs performed by the crisply costumed gents (courtesy Barbara McFadden) with matching choreography by Woodard. Music is nicely performed by a trio consisting of music director Craig Burdette (keyboards), Quentin Cohen (drums), and Alan Parks (bass). The guys are good with each one getting a solo shot to go along with the group work. Their stock characters (the shy one, the funny, etc.) banter with each other between numbers and amusingly engage with the audience. The comedic numbers are particularly well done with the show’s highlight being a three-minute recreation of The Ed Sullivan Show, though it helps to have some familiarity with that show. The same can be said for the music. Yes, it’s a trip down memory lane, but if toe-tapping, hand-squeezing and perpetual grinning are any indications, Forever Plaid hits all the right notes with an audience willing to make the trip. ’Forever Plaid' plays through March 3rd at the Lucky Penny Community Arts Center in Napa. Thursday evening performances are at 7pm; Fridays and Saturdays are at 8pm. There’s a Sunday matinee at 2pm. For more information, go to luckypennynapa.com
In Folge 26 ist Alexandra Wolk von Three Coins, einem Social Business, das eine Entwickungsschmiede für innovative Bildungsformate im Bereich Finanzkompetenz ist, zu Gast. Wir widmen uns folgenden Büchern: Schulden. Die ersten 5.000 Jahre von David Graeber. Die besprochenen Highlights aus dem Buch: Schulden sind nichts Unauslöschbares und die Wirtschaftswissenschaftliche Theorie von Adam Smith über den Ursprung des Tauschhandels ist eigentlich ein Mythos. Außerdem erfahrt ihr, für wie viel Geld Susanne einen Regenwurm essen oder sich eine Glatze rasieren würde. Superforecasting: Die Kunst der richtigen Prognose von Philip E. Tetlock & Dan Gardner. Die besprochenen Highlights aus dem Buch: Wie deprimierend oder erleichternd ist es, dass alles nur ein Zufall ist und kein Schicksal und wie können Manager von unterschiedlichen Meinungen in ihrem Team profitieren?
Someone threw a coin into the podcast fountain and wished for another special guest, and so this week we welcome on Adam from Work to talk about 1954's "Three Coins in the Fountain." This Best Picture nominee is such a mess that the creators didn't even realize that only two coins get thrown into the fountain! Matt is back from his Iceland trip and he is here to tell us all about the movies he watched on the plane ride home. Bob and Adam tell us more about their 48-hour film shoot and retell their disastrous "Incredibles 2" screening experience that involved a dumpling and an unexpected viewing of "Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom." Adam explains why he is struggling through "Westworld," why he prefers movies to television, and what other movies from 1954 that he would have rather been watching instead of this one. All that and more!
Happy Independence Day! In this special episode Larry details all the nuanaces of a river cruise. Travel the Legendary Danube with AmaWaterways. In cruise news; Celebrity Edge reveals the Eden, Three Coins in Jet Engine!, How about an Arctic Circle cruise? All this plus Larry's cruise deals of the week.
Wren consults a fortune-telling sinkhole about her future, only to make some surprising discoveries about her mystery guy instead. Music Credits: Nick Jaina, “Expense Reports.” Primary Perception Instrumentals. Needle Drop Co., 2015. Creative Commons License. Chris Zabriskie,”Cylinder 4.” 2014. Creative Commons License. David Szesztay, “Surreal”. Atmospheric Electric Guitar. Needle Drop Co., 2016. Creative Commons License. Nick Jaina, “Man Without a Head.” Primary Perception Instrumentals. Needle Drop Co., 2015. Creative Commons License.
We have two hours of awesome Celtic fiddle music for this week's Irish & Celtic Music Podcast thanks to the generosity of our Patrons of the Podcast. You'll hear awesome indie Celtic music from Three Mile Stone, The Gothard Sisters, Clandestine, Cady Finlayson, Hair of the Dog, Samantha Gillogly/Tim Maurice, Marc Gunn & The Dubliners' Tabby Cats, FiddleSticks, Fiddlinda: Linda Relph, Jamie Laval/Ashley Broder, The Elders, Eilis Crean, Heidi Jane, The Selkie Girls, Atlantic Wave, Burning Bridget Cleary, The Tea Merchants, Black Market Haggis, Dust Rhinos, Flashpoint, Maidens IV, Bedlam Bards, Bonnie Rideout, Scythian, Gerry O'Beirne & Rosie Shipley, Banna De Dha, Tullamore, Sean Orr, Bow Triplets, Nathan Gourley and Laura Feddersen. celticmusicpodcast.com/229 If you enjoy this show, then subscribe to our Celtic Music Magazine. This is our free newsletter and your guide to the latest Celtic music and podcast news. Subscribe today to download 34 Celtic MP3s for free. Remember to support the artists who support this podcast: buy their CDs, download their MP3s, see their shows, and drop them an email to let them know you heard them on the Irish and Celtic Music Podcast. Today's show is brought to you by Celtic Invasion Vacations If you are listening to this podcast then you probably dream of traveling to one of the Celtic nations. So I have one piece of advice. Do it! I’m not saying you should join me on one of my Celtic Invasion Vacations. I’m not saying you should join another tour group. But travel. Go. Right now. Mark Twain wrote: “Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness, and many of our people need it sorely on these accounts. Broad, wholesome, charitable views of men and things cannot be acquired by vegetating in one little corner of the earth all one’s lifetime.” Traveling will change your life for the better forever. Stop waiting for the “right moment”. Start planning now. If you enjoy my music, then join me on a Celtic Invasion of another Celtic country. In 2016, we’re going to Cornwall in search of Celtic culture, King Arthur and the Holy Grail. Will you join us? Subscribe to the mailing list and join the invasion at CelticInvasion.com Notes: Thanks to the Patrons of the Podcast. Your kind and generous support keeps this show running every week. Become a Patrons at http://celticmusicpodcast.com/patron/. Special thanks to our newest patrons Mike-A-Bike and Diana. You can now Vote in the Celtic Top 20 I WANT YOUR FEEDBACK: Email a written or audio comment to music@celticmusicpodcast.com or call 678-CELT-POD to leave a voicemail message. That's 678-235-8763. Or visit celticmusicpodcast.com to post a comment in the shownotes. What are you doing today while listening to the podcast? Send me pictures of what you're doing or picture of one of your travels to Ireland or Scotland Remember too, when you buy through our affiliates at Amazon or iTunes, you support the artists AND the podcast. This Week in Celtic Music 0:57"Brian Montague's/The Noisey Curlew/The Drake's Neck/Free and Easy" by Three Mile Stonefrom Three Mile Stone 6:16"The Three Coins" by The Gothard Sistersfrom Story Girl 8:45"Saucy Girl" by Clandestinefrom The Ale Is Dear 13:22"Open Roads Ahead" by Cady Finlaysonfrom Irish Coffee 15:21"Mountain Dew" by Hair of the Dogfrom Release the Hounds 17:25"My Lagan Love" by Samantha Gillogly/Tim Mauricefrom Celtic Chamber Music 22:35"Kitty's Rambles/Dowd's 9 Lives/Jenny's Chicken" by Marc Gunn & The Dubliners' Tabby Catsfrom Whiskers in the Jar 26:42"Johnny Has Gone For a Soldier" by FiddleSticksfrom Ampersand 30:30"Take Down" by Fiddlinda: Linda Relphfrom There & Then - Here & Now 35:14"Levantine's 'Spinning' Barrel" by Jamie Laval/Ashley Broderfrom Zephyr in the Confetti Factory 39:26"Building A Boat" by The Eldersfrom Wanderin' Life & Times 44:32"Lafferty's Set" by Eilis Creanfrom The Lonesome Fiddler 48:50"Whiskey Before Breakfast" by Heidi Janefrom A Thousand Reason Why 50:51"Red Haired Mary" by The Selkie Girlsfrom Long Time Traveling 55:05"Johnny Cunningham's" by Atlantic Wavefrom Craic'd! 58:10"Oh My Little Darling/Fire on the Mountain" by Burning Bridget Clearyfrom Pressed For Time 1:02:26"Frogg Polkas" by The Tea Merchantsfrom Gaslight Snaps 1:06:57"The Moontown Jig/The Moontown Reel" by Black Market Haggisfrom Demo 1:08:30"Drinking Like a Fiddler" by Dust Rhinosfrom The Day After the Night Before 1:11:32"Joe's Lost E Jig/Marcel Martin" by Flashpointfrom A Timely Misadventure 1:18:52"Fiddler's Magic" by Maidens IVfrom Four Aflame 1:24:37"MacPherson's Farewell" by Bedlam Bardsfrom Furious Fancies 1:29:23"Happy Frank/Alick Young/The Cairngorm/The Hurricane" by Bonnie Rideoutfrom Scottish Inheritance 1:35:14"Stop the Show" by Scythianfrom Immigrant Road Show 1:37:32"Labasheeda" by Gerry O'Beirne & Rosie Shipleyfrom Yesterday I Saw the Earth Beautiful 1:41:33"Comb Your Hair & Curl It/The White Petticoat/The Black Rogue" by Banna De Dhafrom Band of Two 1:46:29"Work of the Weavers" by Tullamorefrom Wild and Wicked Youth 1:52:20"Maclaine of Loch Buie" by Sean Orrfrom Celtic Texas 1:55:01"Calum Sgaire" by Bow Tripletsfrom Secret Signs 1:59:12"The Old Wooden Bridge / Delia Crowley's / The Heather Breeze" by Nathan Gourley and Laura Feddersenfrom Life Is All Checkered The Irish & Celtic Music Podcast was produced by Marc Gunn, The Celtfather. To subscribe, go to iTunes or to our website where you can become a Patron of the Podcast for as little as $1 per episode. You can post feedback in the shownotes at celticmusicpodcast.com or email me music@celticmusicpodcast.com. Here's some pictures sent in by our listeners this week. Travis Senzaki a the Glasgow WhiskyBar River Godbee working on Math Off Kilter Kilts Store panorama Kenneth Pfarr's location listening to the show
Kriya returns to Rome on the promise of romance and reunion, over a decade in the making. Kriya Kaping has enjoyed a career specializing in performance, media production and public speaking. She comes from a long line of storytellers, with the family motto of “if it doesn’t kill you, it makes for a great story!” She appreciates the continued opportunity to share her love of personal narrative and perform stories from the heart with Portland Story Theater. KISS AND TELL, February 14, 2015 Kriya Kaping at the Alberta Abbey for live storytelling with Portland Story Theater Hosted by Lynne Duddy and Lawrence Howard www.portlandstorytheater.com
Three Coins in a Fountain: And now, the conclusion...