POPULARITY
On this special episode, Little Kids, Big Hearts host Todd Loyd chats with award-winning composer, lyricist & performer Lance Horne
Oi, bellend, if you liked the pod give us a rating, a review, send us some love. We are back for episode 9, and are about to send a strongly worded email to England Athletics and the Beachy Head Marathon organisers (dictated but not read) before Lew goes against protocol and questions the Fact Hunt facts, marathons are back on the shelves and November Rain is declared a tune by Mr Kennedy.We rattle the charity tin with Mike EU Marathons Harley and empty chair John for the way home from a debauched weekend racing.Also, John Kennedy from the Posh Universe pops in for the drinking game, we coat a few of the bad uns in the community and Baz breathes in a worldie's flatulence.Enjoy. If at all possible.
By Davy Crockett Sue Ellen Trapp was one of the elite women pioneer ultrarunners who burst into the sport in the 1970s. She was the fourth person to be inducted into The American Ultrarunning Hall of Fame. She quickly achieved world and American records and showed how fast and how far women could run. With a busy life including her dental practice and family, she rose to the top of the sport twice, after an eight-year ultrarunning retirement, setting world and American records in her 40s and 50s. Learn about the rich and long history of ultrarunning. There are now eleven books available in the Ultrarunning History series on Amazon, compiling podcast content and much more. Learn More. If you would like to order multiple books with a 30% discount, send me a message here. Sue Ellen (Hamilton) Trapp (1946-), of Fort Myers, Florida was born and raised in Chicago, Illinois. Her parents were Robert Roy Hamilton (1908-1971), a tool and die maker, and Marie Blanche (Festner) Hamilton (1910-1999). She had a brother, Ross Hamilton (1942-2014) of Chicago. Her ancestors were from Pennsylvania, Germany, Austria, and Denmark. Sue Ellen and Kristina In the late 1960s, Sue Ellen went to dental school and married Ronald Edward Trapp (1943-), of Minnesota, who was also a dentist and entered the navy in 1969. He had been a cross-country runner in college. In 1971, Ron was stationed in San Francisco, California, as Sue Ellen was finishing dental school at the University of Illinois Dental School in Chicago. She gave birth to her daughter Kristina Trapp (1971-) in April while in California, and then graduated from dental school in June. Ron and Sue Ellen training in 1975 Trapp said that she thought the baby weight would melt off, but it never did, so she took up competitive tennis and swimming, with some running to help her get into shape. Her first road race came in 1971, San Francisco's 12 km Bay to Breakers. She said, “I thought I'd just try it, and it was awful.” Later that year, the family moved to Lehigh Acres, Florida, a suburb of Fort Myers. She and Ron set up a dental practice together and Ron took up running and tennis, too. Results of her tennis tournaments would appear in the paper and starting in 1975, she was doing well in running races, too. In 1975, Sue Ellen ran her first marathon at Gainesville, Florida, with 4:04, but gained speed quickly. She placed second in the 1976 AAU Marathon Championships in Crowley, Louisiana, with 3:10:32. The two of them won husband/wife division of that championship. That marathon finish qualified her to run the Boston Marathon by 20 minutes. Trapp won the 1975 and 1976 Melbourne Marathon, in a course record with 3:40:18 and 3:09:46. In 1976, the Trapps started the Rotary 5-miler for Lehigh Acres runners before there was even the Fort Myers Track Club. That race became a 5K and lasted for more than 40 years. Trapp was one of the very early women to run the Boston Marathon. She finished in 1977 with 3:52:33. She would run that prestigious marathon for several years and brought her time down to 3:00:42 in 1979. First Ultra Florida Space Coast 50 km After stacking up many wins during 1978 of distances from 5 miles to the half marathon, it was time for Trapp to try an ultramarathon. Her first ultra, held on December 30, 1978, was an unusual one. She ran with a field of 54 runners in the Florida Space Coast 50 km, thought to be the world's longest beach run. At age 32, she was the first woman finisher and the tenth overall, with a time of 4:09:42. That impressive time on such a rough surface, ranked her 5th in the world for the 50 km distance. 1979-1981 – World and American Records Lydi Pallares running the 100K In February 1979, Trapp went to run a road 100K in Miami, Florida, with a massive field of 88 runners. It was also the Road Runners Club of America (RRCA) National Championship. They ran a 3.3-mile loop in a park 19 times.
The legendary Von Trapp Brewing Co. in Stowe, Vermont, is doing a "rebrand" of its craft beer packaging from 6-packs to tap handles. The amazing beers will stay just as amazing but the look will "POP". It's exciting. Here we have two people from von Trapp (or simply "Trapps" if you're extremely cool) - Emily Provost, Marketing Manager and Mike Whitty, our Director of Sales and Marketing, who were in on the project. And they both are extremely cool.
I veckans avsnitt pratar Filip och Keven om Tysklands bedrövliga insatser mot Turkiet och Österrike, Nagelsmanns huvudvärk, Tysklands sorg, Trapps skådis aktion plus mycket mer. God lyssning! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Comedienne, chanteuse, star, co-writer, and executive producer of HBO's Somebody Somewhere, and our favorite Manhattan, Kansas native, Bridget Everett shares the beloved classic, The Sound of Music. From watching the story of the von Trapps as the youngest of six kids, to how she sees it through the lens of her life and work today, Bridget dives deep into the timeless resonance of the movie and its music. We learn of her admiration for the naturalistic musicality of the film, and why Dame Julie Andrews is one of her favorite voices of all time.Plus, her love of Barry Manilow, why co-host John Cooper marched down Santa Monica Boulevard in heels, and what Reverend Mother and Ad-Rock have in common. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Diese Folge wird unterstützt von "Im Segment - die Dart-, Fussball- und Partykneipe in Fulda" Schaut gerne auf deren Social Media Profilen vorbei: https://www.facebook.com/ImSegment/ https://www.instagram.com/imsegmentfulda/ Kann Leverkusen wirklich Meister werden? Knackt Guirassy den Lewandowski-Rekord? Warum kann der FC Bayern einfach nicht begeistern? Wer ist der älteste Spieler, der je in der Bundesliga getroffen hat? Und vor allem: In welchem Bundesliga-Stadion ist die Bratwurst am teuersten? Neben den harten Fakten zum Bundesliga-Spieltag sprechen Thomas Schafranek und Tobias Röder auch über Skurriles abseits des Rasens und beantworten die Frage: Warum verliert Tobias Röder eigentlich fast jede Tippspiel-Runde? Gespannt? Dann hört rein! Email für Fanfragen, Anregungen und Kritik: 609km@torgranate.de Timestamps: 0:21 Aufwärmphase 1:19 Manche können tippen, manche nicht 2:51 Thomas und die Digitalisierung 4:04 Bayer 04 Leverkusen - 1. FC Köln 7:22 VfB Stuttgart - VfL Wolfsburg 9:21 Bayern München - SC Freiburg 12:35 Boateng - Was sind die wahren Gründe? 15:23 Kurzer Ausflug in die Regionalliga 16:23 RB Leipzig gegen Manuel Riemann 19:09 BVB - Union Berlin, alte Spieler und VAR-Ausfall 26:02 Werbung: Im Segment - die Dart-, Fussball- und Partykneipe in Fulda 28:22 Eintracht Frankfurt - 1. FC Heidenheim und Trapps rote Karte 31:10 Bratwurst und Bier - Der teuerste Verein der Liga 33:58 Hamburg regiert die 2te Liga 36:40 Maxi Beier gibt Gas 37:49 Schrödernek der Woche 38:36 Abflug der Nationalmannschaft 39:38 Was ist ne „Holding Six“? Positionen kurz erklärt 41:39 Nagelsmanns Aufstellung 46:33 Fanfrage und was damit passiert 47:36 Auslaufen Email für Fanfragen, Anregungen und Kritik: 609km@torgranate.de
Oral Arguments for the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
United States v. Alecia Trapps
Tom Carter is joined by Darren Trapps (Main Commentator and founder of the station) to kick off Series 2 of the podcast as they give their predictions for the upcoming 2022/2023 season. (s2e1) What time does your club feature? Holbeach, 1:56. Deeping, 8:24. Pinchbeck, 12:56. Skegness, 18:34. Sleaford, 23:06. Boston, 30:58. Bourne, 43:44. Harrowby, 47:48. Blackstones, 52:40. Wyberton: 55:17. Spalding United, 1:01:57.
There are seemingly countless ways to help agile teams become more effective. At the end of the day though, when it comes to truly unlocking the full potential of an agile team and reaping all the benefits Professional Scrum has to offer, people, teams, and organizations have to embrace new ways of thinking. And if you're a Scrum Master, Agile Coach, or another type of change agent in an organization, it can be challenging to encourage people on their journey to embrace new ways of thinking and working.Fortunately, we can lean on coaching to aid us in this work. Coaching is a non-directive way of meeting a person where they are on their journey, helping them connect with their existing talent and wisdom, and leading them to find within themselves what it takes to try new things. Additionally, coaching is critical for enabling change and transformation that sticks.In this episode of Ask a PST moderated by Leslie Morse, Steve Trapps and Stephanie Ockerman join to discuss the coaching stance and answer questions from the audience about coaching.
Tom Carter is joint by Darren Trapps (Main Commentator and founder of the station) for a Boxing Day Special as they review each of the ten team's season so far. Also, Darren takes on the Football Pub Quiz. (s1e8)
Get the Mad Mondays newsletter: https://www.subscribepage.com/l0w0j0Find out more about the Sons of Solomon: https://sonsofsolomon.net/Support Rev Fisk: https://www.patreon.com/revfiskBuy books at https://amzn.to/2ZjGscRFind everything else at https://revfisk.com/
Episode 06 of the Long Covid Podcast is a conversation with Nick Sculthorpe, Professor of Clinical Exercise Physiology at the University of the West of Scotland. We talk about the two Long Covid studies they have been given funding for - Tracking Persistent Symptoms in Scotland (TraPSS for short) & the NIHR Pacing Study. We talk first about the TraPPS study - skip to 22 minutes to hear about Pacing Study only. Pacing study information (now recruiting): https://drive.google.com/file/d/1ZZmitbIbKaocYTBAL6yksfTCqzsqvLG9/view?usp=sharing TraPSS - https://www.cso.scot.nhs.uk/outputs/cso-funded-research/long-covid-call/NIHR - https://www.nihr.ac.uk/news/196-million-awarded-to-new-research-studies-to-help-diagnose-and-treat-long-covid/28205Scotsman article on the NIHR pacing study: https://www.scotsman.com/health/long-covid-study-launched-to-reduce-symptoms-of-extreme-fatigue-3314155Follow Nick on Twitter - @UWSNick @UWSlongCOVID ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~The Long Covid Podcast is self-produced & self funded. If you enjoy what you hear and are able to, please Buy me a coffee or purchase a mug to help cover costs.Share the podcast, website & blog: www.LongCovidPodcast.comFacebook @LongCovidPodcastInstagram & Twitter @LongCovidPodFacebook Support GroupSubscribe to mailing listPlease get in touch with feedback and suggestions - I'd love to hear from you! You can get in touch via the social media link or at LongCovidPodcast@gmail.com Support the show
Rufus Trapp stellt Richard seine neuesten Produkte vor. Leider werden die Beiden von einem mysteriösen Gast unterbrochen.
This Week's Episode:We are planning on a more active summer and fall--God willing--so we are refreshing our family mission statement to make sure we stay aligned amidst the busyness.This can be a fun and relatively easy way to provide our family with direction, see and name our kids' strengths, and celebrate both the communal (our family) and the individual (each child). A mission statement helps our kids feel like they are part of something, and it communicates that "this is what it means to be part of this family."A few things to keep in mind: You don't have to be perfect (like the von Trapps).Keep it simple. Don't follow our example; we tend to overcomplicate things like this.Make it fun. (We added a campfire and S'mores.)Involve the kids.Ask them to name the good and the bad--there are no bad answers.Don't be offended when they do talk about the bad. What an awesome opportunity to hear them and love them.Plus, a few funny stories about David's awkward interaction with a stick and how dogs mark their territory (unfortunately, in our rugs sometimes).The Stat of the Week is about the pandemic's Baby Bust.Thank you so much for listening! We'd love it if you took a moment to subscribe and rate/review the podcast in whichever app you choose to listen. And, as always if you have a friend who may be encouraged by this conversation, don't hesitate to share the podcast with them.Also, you can follow us on:Instagram: growingupwithkidspodcastFacebook: @growingupwithkidspodcastTwitter: @DavidGrowUp and @RachaelGrowUp
Jordan Bankston Noble, commonly known as the Drummer Boy of New Orleans was easily one of the Reconstruction era's most prominent Black men, known internationally for his military and musical career. From childhood, Jordan was enslaved and ordered to enlist in the Battle of New Orleans, Seminole, Mexican American, and Civil Wars. He was sold at least 6 times, raised a family, and spent at least 60 years of his life as a Free Man of Color. Despite all of this, his story is still not well known by the public and what has been written about him has largely been falsified. In this episode, meet Jordan Noble's 5X great grandson Alex Trapps-Chabala to give clarity to his life and his legacy. Alex Trapps-Chabala is a Bay Area-based historian and genealogist on a mission to help all BIPOC people learn about their family histories in a safe, informative, and engaging way. He is a 4th generation Bay Area native, deeply connected to his roots on the Gulf Coast. Alex is a Black Queer activist with a knack for disrupting harmful norms, deconstructing anti-Black ideas about our pasts, and facilitating healing via our ancestors' experiences.
Doc Baker finally makes a love connection with Harriett Olesons neice of all people. But the age gap may prove too great. Plus Meg's attempt to have a fun sing along with the kids dissolves into a shootout and a fistfight.
Fireside folks invite a couple of guests to talk politics, genealogy, and flower. Get at your fireside hosts on IG @the_galacticnomad @riscaiy.co @bachv_ Featured guests Galactics mom: @ladonnaraeh Alex Trapps Chabala: @alexwiththefacts, @kinconnector Thank you to our producers and investors @moremodish and @koaleh_llc --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/fire-jamz/message
Our thanks to the third member of the Spinchoon Three, Brian, for joining us for this episode. Before getting to this classic good-bad movie, we take some deep dives into the finales (and season wrap ups) for D̶e̶v̶s̶ Deus and Better Call Saul, plus quicker notes on the new season of What We Do in the Shadows, Animal Crossing (and our proposed expansions: Pillage the Village and Cannibal Island), Mandalorian Season 2 trailer, and much more. Also, a delightful rumination on beer, including an Al's Ales update. We hope you're patience isn't in… short… supply.
Think the von Trapps meet 21st century Anglicanism. This is how one family (the Flanigans) pray Morning Prayer from the Book of Common Prayer (1979). This prayer guide/mini-concert features songs from their music project Liturgical Folk, including Psalm 100, Song of the Three Young Men (Canticle 13), the Apostles' Creed, and The Lord's Prayer. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/living-church/support
Mental Traps - Daily mental Traps and how just one small shift can change
On this episode Mira shares how she is able to see through daily “Trapps” by remaining present! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
This episode is pretty much filler because I was a dumbass and forgot to press record when I did my first interview with my boy, Andy Salo!! Lol.
Zum 100er schreiben wir Geschichte, denn wir haben etwas getan, was vor uns noch kein Österreicher jemals getan hat: Wir haben „The Sound of Music“ gesehen. Eine historische Episode verdient nämlich einen historischen Film. Oder drei. Alle Infos zu Episode findest du hier https://bruttofilmlandsprodukt.net/100-its-a-trapp/
This week on The Weekly Tea, Lauren and Delaney discuss dating apps and more with special guest Tyler Norwood. Thank you for listening! Be sure to let us know what you think of this episode in the comments!
Weihnachten bei das Ei muss ins Eckige: Podcast Nr. 3 als Geschenk hier für Euch. Wie feiern die Sportstars Weihnachten, was war in Baden Baden bei der Sportlerehrung des Jahres los und warum sich Jose Mourinho zu Recht gleich zwei Eier abholt, das und vieles mehr gibts in unserem Podcast #3. Viel Spaß und Frohe Weihnachten.
NBA Skills trainer and Founder of Trappz Hoops, Ron Trapps joins the podcast to discuss his journey in basketball as well as his faith.
NBA Skills trainer and Founder of Trappz Hoops, Ron Trapps joins the podcast to discuss his journey in basketball as well as his faith.
Here is one of the several family burying grounds established by the people of the Trapps Mountain Hamlet as an alternative to public cemeteries. The oldest headstone to be recognized here dates from 1866. One of the old stones is that of Ben Fowler, landowner and the proprietor of the nearby lodging house and tavern. A number of the burials here were of the infant children of George and Rachel Coddington, another of the Trapps families. Rachel was a daughter of Ben Fowler.
Here is one of the few remaining homes of the nearly vanished Trapps Mountain Hamlet. Its small size and simple, unadorned lines were typical of the Hamlet. The cabin is a plank house built in 1889 or 1890 by William Hagen and bought by Eli Van Leuven in 1898. Eli’s family occupied the house into the 1920s when the Mohonk Mountain House bought the property.What was family life in the Trapps like during the late 1800s? A typical family was large, with many children all living in a house as small as the one you see here. Trapps men worked at a variety of jobs, including stone-cutting, charcoal-burning, cutting cord wood, and shaping hoops for barrels; they worked, too, as day laborers for the Minnewaska and Mohonk Mountain Houses. Trapps women also worked at a variety of occupations, both at home and at the local mountain hotels. At home, they made butter and cheese, raised chickens, and cultivated kitchen gardens with the help of the children. Some women had hand looms on which they wove a variety of fabrics. Summertime blueberry- and huckleberry-picking was an activity for the entire family, with the sale of berries being another source of cash.Like most Trapps houses, the Van Leuven Cabin lacked plumbing of any kind. There was no electricity, so candles and kerosene lamps were used when required. Electric and telephone lines did not reach parts of the Trapps Mountain Hamlet until the 1950s or later! In the photo, we can see how the Van Leuvens made use of the large boulder located next to their home. Using millstone-cutting methods, a large, crude shelf was fashioned, thereby producing a useful, outdoor, working surface for washing and cooking.
In 1874, George Coddington acquired land from a member of another old-time Trapps family, the Burgers, and built a house here. The depression in the ground is all that remains of the cellar of the house. As with most structures in the Trapps Mountain Hamlet, the upper, wooden portion of the house has long disappeared. Just beyond this house site lies U.S. Route 44/55, which was completed in 1930. Keep in mind that for most of the existence of the Trapps Mountain Hamlet, this highway was not here! The building of this road provided work for years for a number of Trapps men, but, ironically, its route destroyed many of the homesteads in the Trapps Mountain Hamlet.
Here you will see a large, rounded piece of Shawangunk Conglomerate (sometimes called Shawangunk Grit) that a millstone cutter abandoned long ago. In some parts of the Shawangunks, ready access to more suitable exposures of the conglomerate bedrock made it possible to produce excellent, readily-saleable gristmill stones, an important source of income for Trapps families in the 19th century.
Here is one of the few remaining homes of the nearly vanished Trapps Mountain Hamlet. Its small size and simple, unadorned lines were typical of the Hamlet. The cabin is a plank house built in 1889 or 1890 by William Hagen and bought by Eli Van Leuven in 1898. Eli’s family occupied the house into the 1920s when the Mohonk Mountain House bought the property.What was family life in the Trapps like during the late 1800s? A typical family was large, with many children all living in a house as small as the one you see here. Trapps men worked at a variety of jobs, including stone-cutting, charcoal-burning, cutting cord wood, and shaping hoops for barrels; they worked, too, as day laborers for the Minnewaska and Mohonk Mountain Houses. Trapps women also worked at a variety of occupations, both at home and at the local mountain hotels. At home, they made butter and cheese, raised chickens, and cultivated kitchen gardens with the help of the children. Some women had hand looms on which they wove a variety of fabrics. Summertime blueberry- and huckleberry-picking was an activity for the entire family, with the sale of berries being another source of cash.Like most Trapps houses, the Van Leuven Cabin lacked plumbing of any kind. There was no electricity, so candles and kerosene lamps were used when required. Electric and telephone lines did not reach parts of the Trapps Mountain Hamlet until the 1950s or later! In the photo, we can see how the Van Leuvens made use of the large boulder located next to their home. Using millstone-cutting methods, a large, crude shelf was fashioned, thereby producing a useful, outdoor, working surface for washing and cooking.
In 1874, George Coddington acquired land from a member of another old-time Trapps family, the Burgers, and built a house here. The depression in the ground is all that remains of the cellar of the house. As with most structures in the Trapps Mountain Hamlet, the upper, wooden portion of the house has long disappeared. Just beyond this house site lies U.S. Route 44/55, which was completed in 1930. Keep in mind that for most of the existence of the Trapps Mountain Hamlet, this highway was not here! The building of this road provided work for years for a number of Trapps men, but, ironically, its route destroyed many of the homesteads in the Trapps Mountain Hamlet.
Here is one of the several family burying grounds established by the people of the Trapps Mountain Hamlet as an alternative to public cemeteries. The oldest headstone to be recognized here dates from 1866. One of the old stones is that of Ben Fowler, landowner and the proprietor of the nearby lodging house and tavern. A number of the burials here were of the infant children of George and Rachel Coddington, another of the Trapps families. Rachel was a daughter of Ben Fowler.
Here you will see a large, rounded piece of Shawangunk Conglomerate (sometimes called Shawangunk Grit) that a millstone cutter abandoned long ago. In some parts of the Shawangunks, ready access to more suitable exposures of the conglomerate bedrock made it possible to produce excellent, readily-saleable gristmill stones, an important source of income for Trapps families in the 19th century.
Shelly calls in to stand up for her Von Trapp heritage; Read your Stick; Juice Gate continues with food delivery; Ryan is sad to no longer be a brother husband
If you or someone you know has Type 2 diabetes, this is a great episode for you. Dr. Caroline Trapp is the director of diabetes education and care with the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine. Dr. Trapp was in town and slated to speak to a group at Rochester Lifestyle Medicine as part of their Lifestyle as Medicine series of speakers and before her talk, we sat down for an interview. We speak about the etiology of diabetes, what PCRM is doing to educate practitioners and lay people about the root causes of diabetes. We also speak about Dr. Trapp's adventures around the globe educating health councils and health commissioners of entire countries on how they can help their people learn more about Type 2 Diabetes and how to reverse it. In conjunction with Dr. Ted Barnett and Rochester Lifestyle Medicine, This interview was also recorded on video if you're like to watch or listen to it that way. I will post that link in the show notes. And I also wrote a blog article about Dr. Trapps visit and her talk which I will also post in the show notes. This Episode of the Ian Cramer Podcast is sponsored by Health IQ, an insurance company that helps health conscious people get lower rates on their life insurance. you exercise and/or eat healthy food as a lifestyle, and take precautions to do as much as you can to prevent chronic diseases, Health IQ wants to help save you money on your Life Insurance. To see if you qualify, get your free quote today at healthiq.com/IAN. FYI: There is bonus content available for this episode where Dr. Trapp and I discuss specific diabetes questions from patrons of the podcast. You can find this bonus content at Patreon.com/IanCramerPodcast I hope this episode makes you healthier and gives you applicable, practical information on preventing and reversing type 2 diabetes. Please enjoy Episode #38 with Dr. Caroline Trapp. March was a good month for the podcast, netting 4 new patrons. And I'd like to thank the 3 I haven't given shout outs to, Colleen Harrison, Nigel Davies and Linzi Wilkinson. Thank you very much for your support, I have my sights set on a pre-amp and new microphone and we're inching our way to the next donation goal.
En kort Tysklands-uppdatering inför kvällens längre silly-avsnitt, med Bundesliga-experten Keven Bader om de heta ryktena kring tyska spelare. Är Leon Goretzka verkligen klar för Bayern München? Kan Emre Can stanna och förlänga med Liverpool? Är Kevin Trapp på väg till Liverpool för att komma med i Tysklands VM-trupp? Är Max Meier eller Philipp Max på väg till Premier League? See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Pulitzer Prize-winning political cartoonist Jack Ohman talks about the most amazing moment of his career, poet Kevin Young reads from his latest collection, Minnesota Public Radio music host Andrea Swensson reminisces about the time Prince asked her to dance, and The von Trapps musically bid us adieu.
How do you solve a problem like Sound of Music myths? When did The Captain and Maria get married? How anti-Nazi was he? How many dozens of kids did they have? How did the von Trapps escape the Nazis? Movie myths are always fund, Buzzkillers! Read more at http://professorbuzzkill.libsyn.com/#xoGQekcUwp2M307l.99
How do you solve a problem like Sound of Music myths? When did The Captain and Maria get married? How anti-Nazi was he? How many dozens of kids did they have? How did the von Trapps escape the Nazis? Movie myths are always fund, Buzzkillers!
Scene & Heard with Stuart Derdeyn chats with Sofie von Trapp of – you guessed it – The Von Trapps on the new generation of the venerable singing group. Also preview coming performances from Broncho and Kaki King as well as this week’s releases from the Sonics, Sun Belt, Prong, Death Cab for Cutie and more.
PINK MARTINI AND THE VON TRAPPS have released a new collaborative album titled 'Dream A Little Dream'. Pink Martini is the multicultural pop ensemble from Portland, Oregon that has released seven studio albums which collectively has sold over 2.5 million copies worldwide. The album is the first major international release by Sofia, Melanie, Amanda and August von Trapp� the actual great-grandchildren of Captain and Maria von Trapp, made famous by "The Sound of Music". In addition to renditions of several beloved classic songs (“Dream a Little Dream,� “Fernando,� “Lonely Goatherd,� “Edelweiss,� etc.), the album features three original compositions from August von Trapp and songs from Sweden, Rwanda, China, Japan and Bavaria.
Pink Martini featuring The von Trapps in a special hour long performance, along with The Parkington Sisters, Paul Cebar Tomorrow Sound, and jazz guitar duo Frank Vignola & Vinny Raniolo.
Richard Coles and Aasmah Mir with actor Tyger Drew-Honey, the world's leading maze designer Adrian Fisher, dad and daughter cheerleading team Darren and Amy Peacock, Ann Hunt and Elizabeth Hamel who are the world's longest separated twins, and Sofi, Melanie, Amanda and August von Trapp, great-grandchildren of the Captain in The Sound Of Music. To mark its 20th birthday there's a Crowdscape from the Channel Tunnel, and Coleen Nolan shares her Inheritance Tracks. JP Devlin has tales of embarrassing parents, and we have more thank yous for the kindness of strangers.Tyger Drew-Honey's documentary Tyger Takes On Porn is broadcast on Thursday 15th May at 9pm on BBC Three, Tyger Takes On The Perfect Body follows on May 22nd and Tyger Takes On Love on May 29th.Darren and Amy Peacock are cheerleaders with Hunters Cheerleading in Bolton.Adrian Fisher is recognised as the world's leading maze designer; he's created more than 600 mazes across six continents and 30 countries.Twins Reunited Ann Hunt and Elizabeth Hamel are the world's longest separated twins. Parted when they were 5 months old, they were finally reunited, aged 78, on May 1st this year.Coleen Nolan's memoire No Regrets is out now.The von Trapps new album, Dream A Little Dream, recorded with Pink Martini, has just been released. They're currently on tour in the UK, appearing at The Barbican in London on May 10th and Manchester's Royal Northern College of Music on May 11th.Producer: Dixi Stewart.
Ray talks to Thomas Lauderdale, founder of Pink Martini: Two months ago, I had heard of the Pink Panty Pulldown, though admittedly not at all since my college days, but I had not heard of Pink Martini. Pink Martini is a band. A damn good one, too. I wish I could tell you what kind […]
Monks are known for three things: prayer, beer, and kung fu. Two of those fall outside the purview of this podcast, but what remains makes fine fodder for a festive podcast. This month's show is all about ale produced by Catholic monks in Belgium. Our guide through the many pitfalls and Trapps that lie in wait for the unwary is Vince Schaeffer, vice president of sales and marketing for Horizon Beers, import company extraordinary. Listen in to learn all about dubbels, tripels, and quadrupels, and also the Other Michael Jackson and the benefits of altruistic monastic arson.
(Re-run: This program originally aired on July 8, 2011) Music history and culture is full of famous singing families, from the von Trapps to The Jackson Five. Join singing siblings Jennifer and Laurie Hall of the band Ruby Howl and VoiceBox host Chloe Veltman for a discussion about the power of sharing the mike with the people you grew up with. (playlist)