2008 American computer-animated romantic science fiction film directed by Andrew Stanton
POPULARITY
Categories
Put on your pod-day clothes, there's lots of world out there! We're joined by David Ehrlich to discuss WALL-E this week - a film many consider to be Stanton's (and Pixar's) crowning achievement, and a film David Ehrlich's son has watched upwards of a million times. Join us for a long-ranging conversation that includes context around Disney's 2006 acquisition of Pixar, discussion about the film's depiction of humans, and speculation about the mental health of robots. Read: Frankie Muniz Hasn't Spoken to Hilary Duff in 22 Years, Says Her Mom Interfered in ‘Agent Cody Banks' Casting and ‘It Pissed Me Off': ‘I Regret Not Staying Friends With Her' Check out Erlich's Review of Lee Cornin's The Mummy Listen to Griffin on Podcast Like It's Talking About Monsters Inc. Read Ehrlich's Interview with Stanton Read Ehrlich's piece on Alamo Drafthouse Listen to Ben discuss his good friend Johnny5 on The Flop House Cool Dad Raising Daughter On Media That Will Put Her Entirely Out Of Touch With Her Generation Sign up for Check Book, the Blank Check newsletter featuring even more “real nerdy shit” to feed your pop culture obsession. Dossier excerpts, film biz AND burger reports, and even more exclusive content you won't want to miss out on. Join our Patreon for franchise commentaries and bonus episodes. Follow us @blankcheckpod on Twitter, Instagram, Threads and Facebook! Buy some real nerdy merch Connect with other Blankies on our Reddit or Discord For anything else, check out BlankCheckPod.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
THIS IS A PREVIEW PODCAST. NOT THE FULL REVIEW. Please check out the full podcast review on our Patreon Page by subscribing over at - https://www.patreon.com/NextBestPicture With Pride Month coming to an end, we figured there was no better time in our 2008 retrospective to revisit Gus Van Sant's "Milk," starring Sean Penn, Emile Hirsch, Josh Brolin, Diego Luna, and James Franco. Written by Dustin Lance Black and heavily influenced by the Oscar-winning 1984 documentary "The Times of Harvey Milk," the film, which was released after the passage of Proposition 8 in California, was met with a strong sense of urgency and deep passion at the time for its political relevance as well as its filmmaking. It went on to win Best Original Screenplay at the Oscars and a second Best Actor win for Sean Penn, who garnered some of the best reviews of his career. Nearly 20 years later, how does the film hold up? Please tune in as Sara Clements, Josh Parham, Dan Bayer, Aaron Isenstein, and I talk about the film's screenplay, Gus Van Sant's direction, the performances, the editing, the film's awards season run, and more in our SPOILER-FILLED review. Please check out our past reviews for "Frost/Nixon," "Doubt," "Changeling," "Revolutionary Road," and "WALL-E." We appreciate your support and hope you enjoy our review! Check out more on NextBestPicture.com Please subscribe on... Apple Podcasts - https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/negs-best-film-podcast/id1087678387?mt=2 Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/7IMIzpYehTqeUa1d9EC4jT YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCWA7KiotcWmHiYYy6wJqwOw And be sure to help support us on Patreon for as little as $1 a month at https://www.patreon.com/NextBestPicture and listen to this podcast ad-free Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Disney Springs transportation changes have the Disney community split, and Lauren and Eric dig into why this resort bus and water taxi policy is about more than just closing a parking hack. They look at how resort amenities, beignets, pools, and fireworks viewing have all become part of the broader “who gets access?” debate. Then they shift to Pixar, Toy Story 5, online movie rankings, and the surprisingly passionate arguments over WALL-E, Monsters Inc., Onward, Lightyear, and Cars 2. HIGHLIGHTS Disney Springs transportation restrictions begin June 28, limiting resort buses and water taxis to Disney Resort Hotel guests and guests with qualifying reservations. Lauren and Eric discuss why some fans see the change as a reasonable fix, while others see it as limiting access to the wider Walt Disney World bubble. The conversation expands to resort hopping, Port Orleans beignets, pool access, and how influencer-shared “hacks” can change guest behavior. Eric and Lauren consider whether these changes will actually reduce crowding or simply create new workarounds for determined guests. Toy Story 5 sparks a bigger conversation about Pixar rankings and which films fans defend the hardest. Lauren and Eric compare internet favorites like WALL-E, Ratatouille, Coco, The Incredibles, and Toy Story 2 with their own family's picks. Monsters Inc., Onward, Toy Story 4, Lightyear, Cars 2, and The Good Dinosaur all get pulled into the debate over Pixar's best and worst. For this episode's full show notes, click here. HOSTS Eric Hersey – X: @erichersey | Instagram: @erichersey Lauren Hersey – X: @laurenhersey2 | Instagram: @lauren_hersey_ FOLLOW – DIS & HERS Website: DisAndHers.com Instagram: @disandhers TikTok: @disandhers Facebook: Dis and Hers YouTube: Dis & Hers FOLLOW – JIM HILL MEDIA Facebook: JimHillMediaNews Instagram: JimHillMedia TikTok: JimHillMedia SUPPORT Support the show and access bonus episodes and additional content at Patreon.com/JimHillMedia. PRODUCTION CREDITS Edited & Produced by Eric Hersey – Strong Minded Agency If you would like to sponsor a show on the Jim Hill Media Podcast Network, reach out today. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Andrew Stanton was the second animator at Pixar, and he has been working there for 30 years. If you want to know how Pixar runs, this is your guy. He has directed movies like Finding Nemo and WALL-E, and he's the director of Toy Story 5. I had to ask him, "What have you done at Pixar to keep that quality bar so high? It's hit after hit, appealing to both kids and adults. How do you achieve this consistently?" That's what this episode is all about. About the host Hey! I'm David Perell and I'm a writer, teacher, and podcaster. I believe writing online is one of the biggest opportunities in the world today. For the first time in human history, everybody can freely share their ideas with a global audience. I seek to help as many people publish their writing online as possible. Follow me Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/how-i-write/id1700171470 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@DavidPerellChannel Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/2DjMSboniFAeGA8v9NpoPv X: https://x.com/david_perell Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
What does it actually mean to worship? Brian From makes the case from Romans 11 and 12 that worship is far bigger than singing or a Sunday gathering — it's offering your entire body and life as a living sacrifice, every day, in every decision. From there, a genuinely fun detour into Relevant Magazine's piece on the "gospel according to Pixar," tracing surprisingly biblical themes through Toy Story, The Incredibles, WALL-E, and Inside Out — including the case that real leadership looks less like a throne and more like a foot washing. Then Randy Alcorn tackles one of the hardest questions in the Christian life: why does God permit evil and suffering, and why do so many churches fail to prepare people for it before it hits? A viral story about a lawn-mowing YouTuber whose followers raised $685,000 for a grieving widow becomes a picture of internet generosity done right. A frustrating New York Times piece on rising "gray divorce" rates among couples married 25+ years gets a pointed response: marriages don't have to drift into apathy, but it takes ongoing work at every stage. Christian ministries are using the World Cup's massive audience as an unprecedented evangelism opportunity, prompting the question of what opportunities exist in your own life. And a closing reflection on play as a spiritual discipline — and why a Christian's inability to play might reveal a view of God that's too small.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
One root of our existence is the resilience of our ancestors. How do we use resilience today for our next generations? (On Thursday, June 18 at 6 pm in Channing Social Hall, we will screen Wall-E*, whose vision of humanity raises questions about endurance, responsibility, and renewal.)
David Senra: Read the notes at at podcastnotes.org. Don't forget to subscribe for free to our newsletter, the top 10 ideas of the week, every Monday --------- Ed Catmull is the co-founder of Pixar and the former president of Disney Animation. He grew up in 1950s Utah wanting to animate for Disney. Convinced he couldn't draw well enough, he studied physics and computer science at the University of Utah instead, landing in one of the great talent incubators in computing history. In 1972, he animated his own left hand—one of the first 3D computer renderings ever made. Since childhood he had carried a single ambition: to make the first feature film animated entirely by computer. Reaching it took more than 20 years. George Lucas hired Catmull in 1979 to build a computer division at Lucasfilm. When Lucas needed cash, Steve Jobs bought that division in 1986 for $5 million and spun it out as Pixar. For years it sold imaging computers and lost money while Catmull and John Lasseter made short films to keep the dream alive. Jobs sank roughly $50 million of his own money into it. In 1995, Pixar released Toy Story, the first feature animated entirely by computer, and went public days later. Finding Nemo, The Incredibles, WALL-E, and Up followed. Disney bought Pixar in 2006 for $7.4 billion and put Catmull in charge of both studios; he revived a faltering Disney Animation with films like Frozen. Catmull cared about the conditions that let creative work survive its own fragility. Every original idea, he argues, starts out ugly and broken, and management exists to protect it long enough to get good. At Pixar that meant the Braintrust: a room where directors got blunt feedback with no authority attached and the conversation stayed on the problem, never on who was right. He laid it all out in Creativity, Inc. Show notes: https://www.davidsenra.com/episode/ed-catmull Made possible by Ramp: https://ramp.com AppLovin: https://axon.ai/senra Deel: https://deel.com/senra Chapters (00:00:00) Most Companies Are Full Of Shit (00:04:28) The Brain Trust Mechanism (00:10:13) Why Steve Jobs Was Banned From The Braintrust (00:17:48) Your Job Is To Manage The Dynamics (00:23:27) Betting The Company On Toy Story (00:24:35) Engineering Eisner's Worst Nightmare (00:36:51) Bob Iger's Crappy Hand (00:38:44) Why Disney Never Asked What Pixar Was Doing (00:43:48) Take The Hard Problem (00:44:38) The Director Can't Lose The Team (00:48:48) Quality Is The Best Business Plan (00:52:32) What Walt Disney Taught Him (00:59:25) George Lucas And The Motion Blur Problem (01:08:48) Now What's The Point Of My Life (01:13:31) How Much Of This Was Me (01:16:10) George Lucas Wanted The Whole Industry Healthy (01:25:11) Refusing To Let Anyone Feel Second Class (01:32:38) The Truck In The Building Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
David Senra Intro Check out the episode pageRead the full notes @ podcastnotes.orgEd Catmull is the co-founder of Pixar and the former president of Disney Animation. He grew up in 1950s Utah wanting to animate for Disney. Convinced he couldn't draw well enough, he studied physics and computer science at the University of Utah instead, landing in one of the great talent incubators in computing history. In 1972, he animated his own left hand—one of the first 3D computer renderings ever made. Since childhood he had carried a single ambition: to make the first feature film animated entirely by computer. Reaching it took more than 20 years. George Lucas hired Catmull in 1979 to build a computer division at Lucasfilm. When Lucas needed cash, Steve Jobs bought that division in 1986 for $5 million and spun it out as Pixar. For years it sold imaging computers and lost money while Catmull and John Lasseter made short films to keep the dream alive. Jobs sank roughly $50 million of his own money into it. In 1995, Pixar released Toy Story, the first feature animated entirely by computer, and went public days later. Finding Nemo, The Incredibles, WALL-E, and Up followed. Disney bought Pixar in 2006 for $7.4 billion and put Catmull in charge of both studios; he revived a faltering Disney Animation with films like Frozen. Catmull cared about the conditions that let creative work survive its own fragility. Every original idea, he argues, starts out ugly and broken, and management exists to protect it long enough to get good. At Pixar that meant the Braintrust: a room where directors got blunt feedback with no authority attached and the conversation stayed on the problem, never on who was right. He laid it all out in Creativity, Inc. Show notes: https://www.davidsenra.com/episode/ed-catmull Made possible by Ramp: https://ramp.com AppLovin: https://axon.ai/senra Deel: https://deel.com/senra Chapters (00:00:00) Most Companies Are Full Of Shit (00:04:28) The Brain Trust Mechanism (00:10:13) Why Steve Jobs Was Banned From The Braintrust (00:17:48) Your Job Is To Manage The Dynamics (00:23:27) Betting The Company On Toy Story (00:24:35) Engineering Eisner's Worst Nightmare (00:36:51) Bob Iger's Crappy Hand (00:38:44) Why Disney Never Asked What Pixar Was Doing (00:43:48) Take The Hard Problem (00:44:38) The Director Can't Lose The Team (00:48:48) Quality Is The Best Business Plan (00:52:32) What Walt Disney Taught Him (00:59:25) George Lucas And The Motion Blur Problem (01:08:48) Now What's The Point Of My Life (01:13:31) How Much Of This Was Me (01:16:10) George Lucas Wanted The Whole Industry Healthy (01:25:11) Refusing To Let Anyone Feel Second Class (01:32:38) The Truck In The Building Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
¿Nos mintió Pixar con el final de Toy Story 4?
Toy Story 5: Buzz vs Tech, New Buzz Army & Pixar's Biggest Challenge Yet | Your Nerd SideCore AngleToy Story 5 is about toys facing a new challenge: kids are growing up in a world filled with screens, tablets, and technology. The big question is whether classic toys can still matter when kids have so many digital distractions.Key Talking PointsWoody, Buzz, Jessie, and the toys return.The movie introduces a tech-related storyline involving a tablet-like character named Lilypad.There is also a major storyline involving 50 Buzz Lightyear figures.Pixar is leaning into the theme of toys versus technology.Jessie appears to have a bigger leadership role.The movie is aiming to connect with both kids and adults who grew up with Toy Story.Andrew Stanton is directing, which is important because he has deep Pixar history with Finding Nemo, WALL-E, and earlier Toy Story writing.Show AngleThis is a strong YNS topic because it works for:Pixar fansparentskidsnostalgia viewerstoy collectorsDisney fansOn this episode of Your Nerd Side, we break down what we know so far about Toy Story 5, including Buzz Lightyear's big new challenge, Jessie's role, the toys facing modern technology, new characters, and why Pixar is returning to one of its most beloved franchises. No major spoilers — just fun, family-friendly nerd talk.
On this episode Matt and Jon remember Anthony Head (1954-2026), then discuss Masters of the Universe & The Vampire Lestat, while Jon watched He-Man and the Masters of the Universe (2002), Close Encounters of the Third Kind & ET while Matt saw WALL-E, Out of the Past and Scenes from a Marriage! Threads: https://www.threads.net/@jonwahizzle Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/damnthattelevision/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/damntvpod Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/mattlovestv.bsky.social https://bsky.app/profile/jonwahizzle.bsky.social Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/mattlovestv/ https://letterboxd.com/jonwahizzle/ Jon on AIPT: https://aiptcomics.com/author/jonathanw/ Matt's show The Drop: A Pop Culture Mix Tape: wscafm.org Sundays 6-8 PM: https://www.facebook.com/groups/thedropwsca/
Films for Today returns this week with a refreshed discussion about the seemingly thin line between progressivism and conservatism through an examination of Pixar's 2008 dystopian satire, WALL·E .Contact UsEmail: contact@jimmybernasconi.com
Phil and Emily are joined by writer Elias Isquith (Necessary Fictions blog) to close out the Angelina Jolie Action Films of the 2000s miniseries with the loudest, messiest entry yet: Timur Bekmambetov's Wanted (2008).James McAvoy plays a cubicle drone recruited by Angelina Jolie and Morgan Freeman into a secret fraternity of assassins that takes its orders from a magical loom. Yes, a loom. The movie was a surprise hit the summer it opened alongside WALL-E, weeks before The Dark Knight blew everything away, and none of them had seen it since theaters. Rewatching it in 2026 was a very different experience.The conversation digs into how Wanted plays like a proto-incel power fantasy, a movie that negs its audience for 110 minutes and then stares into the camera asking "what the fuck have you done lately?" They trace the line from Fight Club and The Matrix to this film's confused politics, where the message is "be free and take charge of your life" but also "obey the magic loom or die." Emily breaks down the gendered self-loathing baked into so many films aimed at young men, and Elias connects the movie's hyper-individualism to the toxic masculinity pipeline that would migrate to social media just a year later. They also talk about Angelina Jolie's decision to kill off her own character, why the film's structure feels like a video game with half-assed cutscenes, and how Zack Snyder somehow handles this same territory with more nuance.Follow the show & guests:Podcast Like It's... — https://www.instagram.com/podcastlikeitsPhil Iscove — https://www.instagram.com/pmiscoveEmily St. James — https://www.instagram.com/emilystjamsElias Isquith — NecessaryFictions.blog - https://www.instagram.com/eliasisquith
Hi We're Gab and Dylan, welcome to Podcasts!Welcome to the Movies to Watch Before You Die Podcast with Gab and Dylan!Movies To Watch Before You Die merch here - https://moviestowatchbeforeyoudie-shop.fourthwall.com/Look up the movie here - https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0493430/Find us everywhere here - https://linktr.ee/moviestowatchbeforeyoudie00:00 Welcome02:46 What's it about?11:48 Opinion Time46:26 Let's get to the facts56:30 Mail Time01:01:12 VerdictsWe're a member of the Hall of Pods, find links for our podcasting friends here - https://linktr.ee/hallofpodsWho are we: A former actress and video editor but more than anything we're movie fans like you.Why listen? Why not! We're gonna talk about movies you love, movies you hate, and movies you've never heard of. We can't wait to hear what you think of them too. If you want to tell us your opinion on whether or not a movie is one we should watch before we die, tell us we're wrong, or tell us you like the show send us an email or voice message at moviestowatchbeforeyoudie@gmail.com . We can't wait to hear from you and we can't wait to talk movies!Thanks to Scott Interrante for the music in our intro!Thanks to Brian Maneely for our artwork!Movies Dylan and Gab agree you should watch before you die: Vampire's Kiss, Die Hard, Tropic Thunder, Wag the Dog, The Legend of Billie Jean, You've Got Mail, True Lies, The Room, Game Night, The Truman Show, The Great Gatsby, Whiplash, The Lost Boys, The Fugitive, Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, My Cousin Vinny, Shutter Island, Starship Troopers, Big, Joy Ride, The Jerk, Alien/Aliens, Best in Show, Freaky Friday, Over the Garden Wall, North, Catch Me If You Can, Clue, Jerry Maguire, Groundhog Day, The Great Mouse Detective, Chicago, Wall-E, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Breakdown, Cool Runnings, Ruthless People, Mean Girls, Borat, A League of Their Own, City Slickers, Jingle All the Way, Saw, The Lion King, Little Big League, The Naked Gun, Young Frankenstein, Tootsie, The Changeling, The Birdcage, Superman, The Mitchells vs. the Machines, The Nightmare Before Christmas, Twins, Training Day, When Harry Met Sally, Jurassic Park, Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory, Clueless, Project Hail Mary, and Big Fat Liar
THIS IS A PREVIEW PODCAST. NOT THE FULL EPISODE. Please check out the full podcast episode on our Patreon Page by subscribing over at - https://www.patreon.com/NextBestPicture With the upcoming releases of "Disclosure Day" and "Toy Story 5," there's no better time in our 2008 retrospective to revisit a science fiction Disney Pixar film that is regarded as one of the most beloved films of that year: "WALL-E," starring Ben Burtt, Elissa Knight, Jeff Garlin, Fred Willard, John Ratzenberger, Kathy Najimy & Sigourney Weaver. Written and directed by Andrew Stanton and co-written by Jim Reardon, this adorable and prescient story about a lonely robot who falls in love and embarks on an adventure across the galaxy to bring humanity back to Earth 700 years after they abandoned it has endured since its premiere to become a modern classic. Please tune in as Ema Sasic, Larry Fried, Lauren LaMagna, Ben Langford, Tom O'Brien, and I talk about the film's iconic first half, why the second half is much better than people give it credit for, the visuals, Thomas Newman's score, its awards season run, and more in our SPOILER-FILLED review. Please check out our past reviews for "Frost/Nixon," "Doubt," "Changeling," and "Revolutionary Road." We appreciate your support and hope you enjoy our review! Check out more on NextBestPicture.com Please subscribe on... Apple Podcasts - https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/negs-best-film-podcast/id1087678387?mt=2 Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/7IMIzpYehTqeUa1d9EC4jT YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCWA7KiotcWmHiYYy6wJqwOw And be sure to help support us on Patreon for as little as $1 a month at https://www.patreon.com/NextBestPicture and listen to this podcast ad-free Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This episode is sponsored by Shopify - Go to http://shopify.com/SCB to sign up for your $1-per-month trial period. A single chalkboard scene in Hoppers appears to reveal the origins of some of Pixar's most important technologies, including talking dog collars, WALL-E, MO, scream canisters, and possibly even the secret behind Cars itself. Today we're breaking down every clue, every Easter egg, and every connection to discover how Hoppers fits into the Pixar Theory timeline. #pixar #Hoppers #SuperCarlinBrothers
What if airports had self-driving mobility pods that could safely navigate through crowds, just like something out of The Jetsons? Or the Pixar movie Wall-E?In this episode, John Koetsier sits down with Matthew Anderson, CEO of A&K Robotics, to explore the future of autonomous mobility. A&K Robotics is building AI-powered self-driving pods designed to help people navigate airports independently without relying on wheelchairs or staff assistance.But the real breakthrough isn't just autonomy. It's crowd navigation. Matthew explains why navigating dense, unpredictable crowds is one of the hardest problems in robotics, and how A&K's “crowd-centric AI” could become foundational technology for airports, stadiums, smart cities, conferences, and even humanoid robots in the future.They also discuss:* Why airports are the perfect proving ground for robotics* The AI and sensor stack powering autonomous mobility* Directional sound systems inspired by The Sphere in Las Vegas* Scaling robotics startups from prototype to deployment* Raising an $8M Series A round* The personal story that inspired Matthew to build the company* Why the future of robotics depends on moving safely through human environmentsGuest:Matthew Anderson — CEO, A&K RoboticsCompany: A&K RoboticsIf you enjoy conversations about AI, robotics, startups, and the future of technology, subscribe for more interviews with founders and innovators shaping what's next.Subscribe here:https://techfirst.substack.com00:00 – Intro00:30 – Meet A&K Robotics and the Vision for Autonomous Airport Mobility01:20 – Why Crowd Navigation AI Is the Hardest Problem in Robotics02:40 – Navigating Dense Airport Crowds and Passenger Flow04:05 – Directional Sound and Designing a Better Airport Experience05:50 – Building an “iPhone Experience” for Mobility Robots06:30 – Sensors, LIDAR, and Operating Without GPS07:20 – Fleet Management and Autonomous Operations in Airports08:00 – Mapping Airports and Optimizing Routes Through Crowds09:00 – Scaling the Business and Solving Systems Integration10:00 – Charging, Docking Stations, and the Future Airport Network10:45 – Raising an $8 Million Series A Round11:20 – Customers: Vancouver International Airport and Aena12:10 – Building a Polished Robotics Platform on Seed Funding12:50 – Matthew Anderson's Background in Robotics and Drones14:00 – The Bigger Vision: Crowd Navigation for All Robots14:40 – The Personal Story Behind the Company Mission15:40 – Licensing Opportunities and the $5 Billion Airport Mobility Market16:45 – Hiring, Scaling the Team, and Expanding Production18:00 – Growing Up Hacking Robots and the AC/DC Story19:10 – Why Building Robots Is Fun — and Why Accounting Wasn't20:40 – Final Thoughts and the Future of Autonomous Mobility
What happens when a touring jazz bassist, electronic music pioneer, film composer consultant, and music educator decides to reinvent music education using AI?John von Seggern joins Jason Tonioli for a fascinating conversation about adapting to constant change in the music industry, building a long-term creative career, and why musicians who refuse to evolve often get left behind.John shares stories from launching his jazz career in Tokyo, touring the world with massive Hong Kong pop stars, working with Disney and Thomas Newman's team on WALL-E, and eventually moving into online music education long before it became mainstream.The conversation also dives deep into the future of AI in music. Rather than replacing musicians, John explains how AI can become a powerful creative assistant that helps artists learn faster, market themselves better, and remove technical roadblocks without sacrificing creativity.If you've ever wondered where music education, production, and the music industry itself are heading next, this episode is packed with insight.To read the complete transcript and watch the podcast video, visit the episode blog.What You'll Learn- Why musicians must evolve as technology changes- How John built an international music career in Asia- The realities of touring professionally for major pop artists- Why passion matters more than chasing trends- How AI can help musicians without replacing creativity- The future of personalized music education- Why information overload is hurting modern learners- How AI can accelerate music production workflows- The difference between making “mid” music and meaningful art- Why musicians should still learn instruments in the AI era- How online music education has evolved since 2010- The importance of adapting your career over time- How AI can help musicians with marketing and business- Why many successful musicians eventually pivot creatively- How technology is reshaping the future of learningTopics Covered in This Episode- Studying jazz at the New School in New York- Launching a jazz career in Tokyo- Touring internationally with Hong Kong pop stars- Playing venues like Wembley Arena and Madison Square Garden- Becoming one of Asia's first computer DJs- Transitioning into electronic music production- Studying ethnomusicology and internet music culture- Working with Native Instruments- Consulting for film composers in Los Angeles- Working on WALL-E with Disney collaborators- The evolution of online music education- Zoom and the transformation of remote learning- Building Future Proof Music School- Developing AI-powered music coaching tools- Using AI inside Ableton Live- AI-assisted coding and plugin creation- Music marketing with AI- The dangers of losing passion in your music careerWho This Episode Is For- Music producers- Electronic musicians- Touring musicians- Jazz musicians- Independent artists- Music educators- Ableton users- Film composers- Songwriters- Artists interested in AI tools- Musicians exploring online education- Creators building long-term careers- Producers overwhelmed by information overload- Artists trying to adapt to industry changesConnect with John von Seggern WebsiteLinkedInInstagramFacebookYouTubeInstagram (Future Proof Music School)TikTokConnect with Jason TonioliWebsite FacebookYouTube InstagramSpotifyPandoraAmazon MusicApple Music
FILM – Wellicht is vanwege Wereldmilieudag Wall-E de tv-tip in aflevering 107. On demand vinden we een pikante romantische komedie met Jennifer Lopez (Office Romance) en een psychisch drama, die ook nog in één filmhuis…Continue Reading "Wereldmilieudag met Wall-E op TV"
It's 1990. A young staff economist walks into a director's office at the World Bank and says the number he's about to publish is "crazy". The director tells him not to worry about it. The number was the dollar-a-day poverty line. Lant Pritchett, now of LSE, was that economist. More than three decades later, he's still worrying about it. In this week's episode he argues that the dollar-a-day line warped how the world thinks about poverty, by setting the bar so low that we can count billions of deprived people as not poor.In a new paper, co-authored with Martina Viarengo (Graduate Institute, Geneva), their fix isn't to scrap the low line. It's to add a high one as well. They propose a global upper-bound poverty line of $21.50 a day, ten times the extreme-poverty standard, derived from four separate measures of material wellbeing.Above it, you're no longer poor by any reasonable global standard. Below it, you're poor in a sense worth measuring. By that standard, 99% of Pakistan is poor, and almost no one in Denmark is. Should that affect how we think about anti-poverty policy? The research behind this episode:Pritchett, Lant, and Martina Viarengo. Forthcoming. "Raising the Bar: An Inclusive Global Poverty Line." Journal of Development Economics. Available now as a working paper.To cite this episode:Phillips, Tim, and Lant Pritchett. 2026. "What the $1-a-day global poverty line gets wrong." VoxDev Talks (podcast). Assign this as extra listening. The citation above is formatted and ready for a reading list or VLE.About the guestLant Pritchett is a development economist and Visiting Professor at the School of Public Policy at the London School of Economics. He worked at the World Bank from 1988 to 2007 and taught at the Harvard Kennedy School for nearly two decades. His work spans economic growth, state capability, education systems, and labour mobility.The paper is co-authored with Martina Viarengo, Professor of International Economics at the Geneva Graduate Institute. Her research spans public policy, labour markets, comparative education, and international migration.Research cited in this episodeThe dollar-a-day poverty line. Created for the World Bank's 1990 World Development Report on poverty and based on the observation that national poverty lines in the poorest countries clustered at a low floor (Ravallion, Datt and van de Walle 1991). Updated for inflation, it now sits at P$2.15 a day in 2017 purchasing power parity. It was only ever meant to mark the lowest a global poverty line could plausibly be, not the line.The focus axiom. A standard property of poverty measures, originating with Amartya Sen (1976), under which changes in the income of anyone above the poverty line do not register in the measure. Pritchett's objection is that this assigns mathematically zero weight to the near-poor; a household just above the line counts the same as a Danish millionaire, namely zero. He calls it an economic bug that became a political feature, because it takes global redistribution off the table.Gresham's law applied to poverty. Pritchett's framing for how the simple headcount displaced richer, distribution-sensitive approaches; bad economics drove out better economics because it was easier to understand. He notes the World Bank of the 1970s was preoccupied with distribution, citing Hollis Chenery and Montek Ahluwalia's Redistribution with Growth (1974), so the idea that economists ignored distribution until poverty measurement arrived is a myth.The two criteria for an upper bound. The proposed line rests on two ideas drawn from the tension between the focus axiom and standard welfare economics. One, material wellbeing achievement; the line sits where a household reaches a standard of living a rich-country citizen would recognise as adequate. Two, near enough satiation; the line sits where the extra wellbeing from another dollar has fallen so low that treating further gains as zero does little violence to reality. At twenty-one and a half dollars the marginal utility of income is roughly three percent of its value at the dollar-a-day line; at the World Bank's current high line of P$6.85 it is still around thirty percent.Four measures of wellbeing. The number is triangulated across an iso-elastic utility function, food shares in consumption (Engel's Law), a household index of six basic conditions drawn from Demographic and Health Survey data, and a cross-national index of basics. The estimates cluster between twenty and forty dollars a day; twenty-one and a half was chosen because it is exactly ten times the dollar-a-day line, a focal point in the same way one dollar was.The six minimal conditions of prosperity. Electricity, improved sanitation, safe water, primary schooling completed by older children, no child dying under five, and no young child malnourished. The test Pritchett applies is whether it would be absurd to call a household prosperous while it lacks one of them.The rich of the poor and the poor of the rich. The tenth percentile in Denmark has higher consumption than the ninetieth percentile in Pakistan or Indonesia. This is why any global line that produces meaningful poverty in rich countries implies poverty rates near one hundred percent across most of the developing world; a point Dani Rodrik (2007) showed is widely misunderstood.The prosperity gap. A distribution-sensitive welfare measure adopted by the World Bank (Kraay et al. 2025) that weights the whole income distribution rather than counting everyone above a threshold as zero. Pritchett offers it, alongside poverty-gap and squared-poverty-gap measures at a higher line, as the practical route to acting on a global upper bound without reducing everything to a single headcount.More VoxDev Talks episodesRethinking evidence and refocusing on growth in development economics, Lant Pritchett on what the problem might be if we rely exclusively on rigorous evidence in development economics as a guide for policy.Rethinking how we measure extreme poverty, Charles Kenny asks: is it time for a new measure of extreme poverty?
Halo sobat kreatif!
On today's episode, we discuss how fast emerging tech is reshaping everyday life, from glitchy home solar systems to self‑driving cars, sex robots, and AI‑driven coding tools. Glenn opens with a candid update on his Tesla‑based solar setup—celebrating a newly functional generator‑battery handoff while venting about failed inverters and long calls with Tesla support—before the group pivots into how well the latest Full Self‑Driving software now handles stop signs, parking, and even spotting deer at night using cameras and possibly infrared. From there, they debate LiDAR versus camera‑only systems, the future of EVs and hybrids, and how self‑driving will eventually trickle down into everything from lawnmowers to Roombas as autonomy gets baked into cheap firmware chips rather than constantly updated software. The conversation then gets speculative and playful: humanoid robots doing warehouse work and construction, direct brain interfaces by 2035, AI‑mediated sex and “Tesla Ranch” brothels, and a looming choice between a Wall‑E future of passive comfort or a Star Trek future of exploration and fitness. In the final stretch, they return to Elon Musk's growing power—Starlink as a de facto “second internet,” Grok Build and vibe‑coding tools that let non‑programmers wire systems together—and close with a non‑advice discussion of Bitcoin and crypto, arguing that upcoming U.S. regulation and broader access through mainstream financial firms could unleash a major new wave of demand. Don't miss it!
This podcast is now less than 6 degrees separated from Kevin BaconWelcome to the Movies to Watch Before You Die Podcast with Gab and Dylan!Movies To Watch Before You Die merch here - https://moviestowatchbeforeyoudie-shop.fourthwall.com/Look up the movie here - https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1570728/Find us everywhere here - https://linktr.ee/moviestowatchbeforeyoudie00:00 Welcome03:15 What's it about?15:23 Opinion Time46:49 Let's get to the facts58:02 Mail Time01:06:42 VerdictsWe're a member of the Hall of Pods, find links for our podcasting friends here - https://linktr.ee/hallofpodsWho are we: A former actress and video editor but more than anything we're movie fans like you.Why listen? Why not! We're gonna talk about movies you love, movies you hate, and movies you've never heard of. We can't wait to hear what you think of them too. If you want to tell us your opinion on whether or not a movie is one we should watch before we die, tell us we're wrong, or tell us you like the show send us an email or voice message at moviestowatchbeforeyoudie@gmail.com . We can't wait to hear from you and we can't wait to talk movies!Thanks to Scott Interrante for the music in our intro!Thanks to Brian Maneely for our artwork!Movies Dylan and Gab agree you should watch before you die: Vampire's Kiss, Die Hard, Tropic Thunder, Wag the Dog, The Legend of Billie Jean, You've Got Mail, True Lies, The Room, Game Night, The Truman Show, The Great Gatsby, Whiplash, The Lost Boys, The Fugitive, Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, My Cousin Vinny, Shutter Island, Starship Troopers, Big, Joy Ride, The Jerk, Alien/Aliens, Best in Show, Freaky Friday, Over the Garden Wall, North, Catch Me If You Can, Clue, Jerry Maguire, Groundhog Day, The Great Mouse Detective, Chicago, Wall-E, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Breakdown, Cool Runnings, Ruthless People, Mean Girls, Borat, A League of Their Own, City Slickers, Jingle All the Way, Saw, The Lion King, Little Big League, The Naked Gun, Young Frankenstein, Tootsie, The Changeling, The Birdcage, Superman, The Mitchells vs. the Machines, The Nightmare Before Christmas, Twins, Training Day, When Harry Met Sally, Jurassic Park, Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory, Clueless, Project Hail Mary, and Big Fat Liar
Who is the hottest Disney prince? Was Jasmine secretly into Jafar? What's the WORST Toy Story movie? Are Mary Poppins and Peter Pan related? Who is the gay member of Simba's family? What Pixar character has the best body tea? AND What Disney character inspired Miranda Priestly? Cody, Andrew & Ren break down their all-time fav Disney movies including Aladdin, The Lion King, The Incredibles, Wall-E, Ratatouille AND MORE!Check out our spring sponsors!!LMNT: Get a free LMNT Sample Pack with any order at DrinkLMNT.com/tactful - And remember to try Lemonade Iced Tea now through August 31st!Quince: Refresh your everyday with luxury! Head to Quince.com/pettiness for free shipping on your order and 365-day returns!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Refuge | ALF At The Movies - WALL-E | Titus Merrick | 5.13.26
The best movie ever made featuring people dyed blue and Frankie MunizWelcome to the Movies to Watch Before You Die Podcast with Gab and Dylan!Movies To Watch Before You Die merch here - https://moviestowatchbeforeyoudie-shop.fourthwall.com/Look up the movie here - https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0265298/Find us everywhere here - https://linktr.ee/moviestowatchbeforeyoudie00:00 Welcome00:37 What's it about?04:07 Opinion Time40:36 Let's get to the facts01:03:38 Mail Time01:11:34 VerdictsWe're a member of the Hall of Pods, find links for our podcasting friends here - https://linktr.ee/hallofpodsWho are we: A former actress and video editor but more than anything we're movie fans like you.Why listen? Why not! We're gonna talk about movies you love, movies you hate, and movies you've never heard of. We can't wait to hear what you think of them too. If you want to tell us your opinion on whether or not a movie is one we should watch before we die, tell us we're wrong, or tell us you like the show send us an email or voice message at moviestowatchbeforeyoudie@gmail.com . We can't wait to hear from you and we can't wait to talk movies!Thanks to Scott Interrante for the music in our intro!Thanks to Brian Maneely for our artwork!Movies Dylan and Gab agree you should watch before you die: Vampire's Kiss, Die Hard, Tropic Thunder, Wag the Dog, The Legend of Billie Jean, You've Got Mail, True Lies, The Room, Game Night, The Truman Show, The Great Gatsby, Whiplash, The Lost Boys, The Fugitive, Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, My Cousin Vinny, Shutter Island, Starship Troopers, Big, Joy Ride, The Jerk, Alien/Aliens, Best in Show, Freaky Friday, Over the Garden Wall, North, Catch Me If You Can, Clue, Jerry Maguire, Groundhog Day, The Great Mouse Detective, Chicago, Wall-E, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Breakdown, Cool Runnings, Ruthless People, Mean Girls, Borat, A League of Their Own, City Slickers, Jingle All the Way, Saw, The Lion King, Little Big League, The Naked Gun, Young Frankenstein, Tootsie, The Changeling, The Birdcage, Superman, The Mitchells vs. the Machines, The Nightmare Before Christmas, Twins, Training Day, When Harry Met Sally, Jurassic Park, Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory, Clueless, and Project Hail Mary
Every week, Sue and Kendra have the privilege of spotlighting people whose creativity, heart, and drive help make our city stronger—and today they talked with Rockport, MA native -- Academy Award winning Director Andrew Stanton whose creative force brought us the Toy Story franchise, Finding Nemo, Finding Dory, Monsters Inc and WALL-E. Sue and her husband Tom are lifelong friends with Andrew and his wife Julie; they will be on the red carpet for the LA Premiere of Toy Story 5 (opening in theatres June 19). They needed to prepare him for Sue... and have fun with a little game called "Name the Toy from its Story."
Show Notes We're headed to the final frontier with the embodiment of a PC in search of his Mac lady love in WALL-E. Turns out you can make a largely silent film about a non-organic character and kids will love it! Let's talk about loneliness, the need, or lack thereof, of robot romance, and what makes a being sentient. Recommendations: Monarch (Apple+); Agent Carter (Disney+) Next up: Up (2009) Email us at latecomers@gmail.com Our Facebook group is here for those who consent: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1754020081574479/
Podketeers - A Disney-inspired podcast about art, music, food, tech, and more!
This week, the Anaheim Ducks are in the playoffs, Roger Rabbit can't spin, Wall-E dances with a broom, a new set of Bluey, California has a chance to get a Disneyland themed license plate, plus, we look at some of the new ornaments Hallmark is getting ready to launch. Listen now at: https://www.podketeers.com/620 or watch this episode at: YouTube.com/Podketeers Our most frequently requested links can be found at: https://www.podketeers.com/links/ Help us make a difference! Teamboat Willie is the official charity team of the Podketeers Podcast. For more information on the charity that we're currently supporting, head to: http://www.teamboatwillie.com Check out our series of Armchair Imagineering episodes here: https://www.podketeers.com/armchair-imagineering/ --- Join the FGP Squad Family! Support for Podkeeters is provided by listeners and viewers like you! We like to call our supporters our Fairy Godparents (they call themselves the FGP Squad). You can find more info on how to become part of the FGP Squad family by going to: https://www.podketeers.com/fgp --- We're on Discord! Join other members of our community and us on our Discord server! Use the invite link below to join us: https://discord.gg/gG8kJ2a ---
[School of Movies 2026] Our month of movies about A.I. continues, this time with something everybody loves. And WALL-E is in fact pulling double duty on this one, because we get a heartwarming story about robots who fall in love despite their differing classes and stations, and having to defy their employees in order to not only be happy but bring Earth back to life again... AND we get an unexpected sledgehammer of a glimpse into the future from 2008. It was as though Andrew Stanton and Pixar saw how easily Social Media would take hold of us as a species, and cater to our every dopamine whim in order to keep our attention, as we sacrificed everything about ourselves for the sake of convenience, including but not limited to complacency over ecological disaster. This movie is a masterpiece, and has become chillingly, shockingly more relevent with every year. This Week's After School Club: Weird Science Next Week's Main Event: Ex-Machina & HER
The Daily Quiz - Entertainment, Society and Culture Today's Questions: Question 1: Which of these quotes is from the film 'Crash'? Question 2: Which film won the Academy Award for Best Picture in 1999? Question 3: Which director directed Blade Runner? Question 4: What is the English title of the Christmas carol written by the Austrian Josef Mohr, originally called 'Stille Nacht'? Question 5: What is the plot of the movie Barry Lyndon? Question 6: The language 'Thai' belongs to which language family? Question 7: What is the plot of the movie WALL·E? Question 8: Which toy is a multi-colored block you have to reorganize? Question 9: Which actor played the role of Charles Foster Kane in Citizen Kane? This podcast is produced by Klassic Studios Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Show Notes The Truman Show meets Homeward Bound this week with Bolt from 2008. Back to Disney Animation this week with an adventure about a couple of tortured animals trying to get to people who will hopefully not torture them anymore. We discuss why Hollywood would allow such a crazy expensive show to exist and how bad ass a fat hamster can really be. Also why people do terrible things to animals. It's definitely and upbeat episode though. Recommendations: Last Samurai Standing (Netflix), Project Hail Mary Next up: WALL-E (2008) Email us at latecomers@gmail.com Our Facebook group is here for those who consent: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1754020081574479/
On poursuit notre bal des interviews réalisées au salon FACTS, édition 2026. En plus de Gary Frank et David Petersen, nous avons aussi pu aller à la rencontre de Martin Simmonds, excellent dessinateur de la série The Department of Truth avec James Tynion IV, et artiste qui excelle de façon plus générale dans l'horreur et le bizarre. Une interview qui vient complémenter parfaitement celle que nous avions fait justement avec Tinyon IV autour de leur série !Martin Simmonds au micro de First Print !Remerciements à Stefan van de Walle, Peter Vermaele et Rémi Lach.Dans cette entrevue réalisée sur le salon FACTS, nous avons donc le plaisir de revenir sur la carrière de Martin Simmonds, ses débuts dans la bande dessinée, et surtout l'étape fatidique où l'artiste a abandonné son trait classique pour trouver le style expérimental qui caractérise ses oeuvres actuelles. De quoi plonger dans les méandres de son esprit et sa façon de vouloir mettre les lecteurs mal à l'aise de la plus belle des façons !Vous pouvez découvrir The Department of Truth à ce lien !Mais aussi le Dracula de Martin Simmonds par ici !Si vous appréciez notre travail ne manquez pas de le faire savoir ! Vous pouvez partager cet épisode, en parler autour de vous, à toutes les personnes qui aiment la bande dessinée, rejoindre notre Discord, voir nous soutenir via Tipeee !Soutenez First Print - Votre podcast comics (& BD) préféré sur TipeeeHébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
On termine notre tour des interviews réalisées à FACTS 2026 avec un autre invité de marque, l'immense Gabriel Rodriguez ! Le co-créateur de Locke & Key s'est rendu disponible pour une interview, certes un poil courte par rapport à la carrière de l'artiste, mais qui nous permet dans ce temps imparti d'aborder pas mal de sujets.Gabriel Rodriguez au micro de First Print !Remerciements à Stefan van de Walle, Peter Vermaele et Rémi Lach.Nous avons donc eu le plaisir de retracer dans les grandes lignes le parcours de Gabriel Rodriguez, pour parler de ses débuts, de ses différents travaux en creator owned, bien entendu de Locke & Key, de sa création récente en franco-belge avec Le Gouffre de la Résurrection mais aussi son arrivée sur l'univers Mouse Guard de David Petersen ! Tout ça et bien plus, c'est dans notre podcast !Vous pouvez découvrir Locke & Key par ici !Ou encore Mouse Guard : Dawn of the Black Axe par là !Si vous appréciez notre travail ne manquez pas de le faire savoir ! Vous pouvez partager cet épisode, en parler autour de vous, à toutes les personnes qui aiment la bande dessinée, rejoindre notre Discord, voir nous soutenir via Tipeee !Soutenez First Print - Votre podcast comics (& BD) préféré sur TipeeeHébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Au cours du salon FACTS se déroulant dans la ville de Gand, nous sommes allés à la rencontre du grand David Petersen. Le créateur de la série de fantasy animalière Mouse Guard, publiée en France sous le titre des Légendes de la Garde, nous a donné de son temps pour répondre à nos questions. On revient donc sur ses débuts dans les comics, la publication (et la pause momentanée) de sa série, et surtout répondre à une question importante : pourquoi n'y a-t-il pas de chats dans une série avec des souris ?David Petersen est sur First Print !Remerciements à Stefan van de Walle, Peter Vermaele et Rémi Lach.David Petersen est revenu récemment aux affaires avec une mini-série Mouse Guard en compagnie de Gabriel Rodriguez (que vous retrouverez aussi en interview tout bientôt sur le podcast) et nous avons eu bien du plaisir à discuter avec un auteur complet, aussi sympathique que talentueux.Vous pouvez découvrir Mouse Guard à ce lien !Si vous appréciez notre travail, ne manquez pas de le faire savoir en partageant nos podcasts. Pour faire découvrir nos émissions mais aussi mettre en avant le travail de nos invités et faire découvrir des comics à un maximum de monde possible. Parlez du podcast à vos proches amateurs de BD, à votre libraire, à qui vous voulez, poursuivez les échanges sur notre Discord et soutenez-nous aussi sur Tipeee ! Merci à toutes et tous de votre écoute et à bientôt pour la prochaine émission.Soutenez First Print - Votre podcast comics (& BD) préféré sur TipeeeHébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Josh and Drusilla discuss anime cult fave, Angel's Egg (1985). From wiki: “Angel's Egg (Japanese: 天使のたまご, Hepburn: Tenshi no Tamago) is a Japanese animated experimental post-apocalyptic science fantasy OVA film written and directed by Mamoru Oshii.[2] Released by Tokuma Shoten on 15 December 1985,[3] the film was a collaboration between artist Yoshitaka Amano and Oshii. The film stars two nameless characters, a young girl who protects an egg, who bonds with a boy who has a dream about a bird.[4] It was the first original project by Oshii and carries themes found in his other works.[5]”Also discussed: Hokum, Widow's Bay, Kiyoshi Kurosawa's Chime, LA Plays Itself, Annihilation, The Dark Crystal, Ralph Bakshi, Fantastic Planet, Wall-E, Lupin, and more. NEXT WEEK: Donnie Darko (2001) Bloodhaus: https://www.bloodhauspod.com/https://www.instagram.com/bloodhauspod/https://letterboxd.com/bloodhaus/Drusilla Adeline:https://www.sisterhydedesign.com/https://letterboxd.com/sisterhyde/https://www.instagram.com/sister__hyde/Joshua Conkelhttps://www.joshuaconkel.com/https://www.instagram.com/joshua_conkel/https://letterboxd.com/JoshuaConkel/
Rogério Montanare, Thiago Siqueira e Central Pandora (Matheus e Sora) conversam sobre um gênero que lança todos os anos grandes filmes: ficção-científica. Dessa vez decidimos conversar sobre os melhores filmes lançados dos anos 2000 pra cá! Listinha? LISTONA! Vamos bater papo sobre os 30 melhores filmes de sci-fi do século 21!!! Quem é o rei do gênero: Christopher Nolan ou Denis Villeneuve? Quem escreve melhor que Alex Garland?Falamos sobre "Ela" (2013), "Distrito 9" (2009), "Planeta dos Macacos: O Confronto" (2014), "Wall-E" (2008), "Interestelar" (2014), "Brilho Eterno de uma Mente Sem Lembranças" (2004), "Mad Max: Estrada da Fúria" (2015), "Expresso do Amanhã" (2013), "Um Lugar Silencioso" (2018), "Filhos da Esperança" (2006) e muito mais!!|| ASSINE O SALA VIP DO RAPADURACAST- Escute um podcast EXCLUSIVO do RapaduraCast toda semana! http://patreon.com/rapaduracast
Mike Myers does a Scottish accent in this movie so there's something you've never seen or heard beforeWelcome to the Movies to Watch Before You Die Podcast with Gab and Dylan!Movies To Watch Before You Die merch here - https://moviestowatchbeforeyoudie-shop.fourthwall.com/Look up the movie here - https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0108174/Find us everywhere here - https://linktr.ee/moviestowatchbeforeyoudie00:00 Welcome02:22 What's it about?04:37 Opinion Time35:11 Let's get to the facts44:58 Mail Time59:37 VerdictsWe're a member of the Hall of Pods, find links for our podcasting friends here - https://linktr.ee/hallofpodsWho are we: A former actress and video editor but more than anything we're movie fans like you.Why listen? Why not! We're gonna talk about movies you love, movies you hate, and movies you've never heard of. We can't wait to hear what you think of them too. If you want to tell us your opinion on whether or not a movie is one we should watch before we die, tell us we're wrong, or tell us you like the show send us an email or voice message at moviestowatchbeforeyoudie@gmail.com . We can't wait to hear from you and we can't wait to talk movies!Thanks to Scott Interrante for the music in our intro!Thanks to Brian Maneely for our artwork!Movies Dylan and Gab agree you should watch before you die: Vampire's Kiss, Die Hard, Tropic Thunder, Wag the Dog, The Legend of Billie Jean, You've Got Mail, True Lies, The Room, Game Night, The Truman Show, The Great Gatsby, Whiplash, The Lost Boys, The Fugitive, Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, My Cousin Vinny, Shutter Island, Starship Troopers, Big, Joy Ride, The Jerk, Alien/Aliens, Best in Show, Freaky Friday, Over the Garden Wall, North, Catch Me If You Can, Clue, Jerry Maguire, Groundhog Day, The Great Mouse Detective, Chicago, Wall-E, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Breakdown, Cool Runnings, Ruthless People, Mean Girls, Borat, A League of Their Own, City Slickers, Jingle All the Way, Saw, The Lion King, Little Big League, The Naked Gun, Young Frankenstein, Tootsie, The Changeling, The Birdcage, Superman, The Mitchells vs. the Machines, The Nightmare Before Christmas, Twins, Training Day, When Harry Met Sally, Jurassic Park, Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory, Clueless, and Project Hail Mary
Big tech is making a blunt trade: fewer people, more AI. We dig into Meta's plan to cut more than 10% of its workforce while pouring an eye-watering budget into AI, then zoom out to the uncomfortable pattern across the industry where payroll turns into infrastructure spend. Along the way we hit a surprisingly human twist: one of the biggest uses of AI isn't coding or design, it's companionship and therapy, which says a lot about where our culture is headed.From there, we step into the billionaire arena with Elon Musk versus Sam Altman. We walk through the origins story, the lawsuit stakes, and why governance fights in court can shape the future of artificial intelligence more than public mission statements ever will. If the case slows OpenAI or forces structural changes, it could ripple through the entire AI race, and we're all along for the ride whether we asked for it or not.Then we get practical and a little weird: robots and drones delivering dinner for “one dollar,” TechNeck and the anxiety economy, Cornell's microbubble cleaning breakthrough, and a humanoid robot half marathon that jumps from novelty to serious capability in a single year. We also pressure-test “AI safety” messaging with Meta's new AI Insights for parents, and we hand out a Technology Fail of the Week to an AI tractor that promised the future but couldn't handle real farms.We cap it all off with a Green River Kentucky Straight Bourbon tasting and a debate about whether the next decade feels more like Terminator or WALL-E. Subscribe for weekly tech news with zero politics, share the episode with a friend who needs a “hmm” moment, and leave a review with your take: are we automating toward freedom or dependence?Support the show
What is this restaurant, Wall E? Support the show for full episode @ patreon.com/quorators
Glen Scrivener comments on the profound experiences of the Artemis II astronauts with the help of C. S. Lewis, Carl Sagan, Alien, WALL-E and Isaiah.Send us your mini-revelations, stories, disagreements, questions and hot takes: podcast@speaklife.org.uk_____________________________Enjoy seeing life through the lens of Jesus? Here's where to find more Speak Life content: 321course.com // YouTube // Instagram // Website // DiscordSupport the show
LISTEN and SUBSCRIBE on:Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/watchdog-on-wall-street-with-chris-markowski/id570687608 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/2PtgPvJvqc2gkpGIkNMR5i WATCH and SUBSCRIBE on:https://www.youtube.com/@WatchdogOnWallstreet/featured Elon Musk warns AI could require a universal high income—but is that a path to prosperity or a slow-motion dystopia? Drawing on WALL-E, The Matrix, and even Bruce Almighty, this breakdown explores why a life without work may sound appealing—but could strip away purpose, dignity, and real happiness.From the pride of earned success to the simple joy of a hard day's work, this is a deeper look at human nature—and why “free money” might come at a much higher cost than expected.
THIS ISN'T JUST A KIDS MOVIE… THIS ONE HITS DIFFERENT. Full Length Watch Alongs & Early Access: / thereelrejects Limited Time Offer – Get Huel today with my exclusive offer of 15% OFF online with my code REJECTS at https://www.huel.com/REJECTS. New Customers Only. Thank you to Huel for partnering and supporting our show! Gift Someone (Or Yourself) An RR Tee! https://shorturl.at/hekk2 John Humphrey & Aaron Alexander experience one of Pixar's most powerful and emotional films, bringing you their WALL-E reaction, recap, commentary, breakdown, analysis, and full spoiler review!! John Humphrey & Aaron Alexander react to and break down WALL-E (2008), the Academy Award-winning Pixar film directed by Andrew Stanton (Finding Nemo, Finding Dory), featuring Ben Burtt (Star Wars) as the voice of WALL-E and Elissa Knight (Cars, Pixar legacy performer) as EVE, alongside Fred Willard (Best in Show, Modern Family) as the live-action CEO of Buy n Large. Follow Aaron On Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/therealaaronalexander/?hl=en Intense Suspense by Audionautix is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/... Support The Channel By Getting Some REEL REJECTS Apparel! https://www.rejectnationshop.com/ Follow Us On Socials: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/reelrejects/ Tik-Tok: https://www.tiktok.com/@reelrejects?lang=en Twitter: https://x.com/reelrejects Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheReelRejects/ Music Used In Ad: Hat the Jazz by Twin Musicom is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Happy Alley by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/... POWERED BY @GFUEL Visit https://gfuel.ly/3wD5Ygo and use code REJECTNATION for 20% off select tubs!! Head Editor: https://www.instagram.com/praperhq/?hl=en Co-Editor: Greg Alba Co-Editor: John Humphrey Music In Video: Airport Lounge - Disco Ultralounge by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Ask Us A QUESTION On CAMEO: https://www.cameo.com/thereelrejects Follow TheReelRejects On FACEBOOK, TWITTER, & INSTAGRAM: FB: https://www.facebook.com/TheReelRejects/ INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/reelrejects/ TWITTER: https://twitter.com/thereelrejects Follow GREG ON INSTAGRAM & TWITTER: INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/thegregalba/ TWITTER: https://twitter.com/thegregalba Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Are seed oils really that bad? Are people getting enough protein? Neil deGrasse Tyson, Paul Mecurio, & Gary O'Reilly cut through the noise on health myths, food misinformation, and the forces making it harder than ever to eat well with nutrition scientist, Jessica Knurick, PhD. NOTE: StarTalk+ Patrons can listen to this entire episode commercial-free here: https://startalkmedia.com/show/busting-nutrition-myths-with-jessica-knurick/ Thanks to our Patrons Rand Richards, Robert van de Walle, C jones, Abbie Dorable, Dave Guhlke, Kyle Ditzig, Ryan Mulcahy, Emil Brandin, David Neris, Michael v. D., Davy Molhoek, Barry Ginsburg, ÆfelRound and find out, Chris Straley, Sumit, Aaroncavelero, Shaunte Martinez, meanbeanmachine, Jeremy Bolduc, Carly Schwartz, Andrew G. Williams, Sharptooths, Areich Richardson, Daniel Weber, Jerry Agrinzoni, Bryan Woodruff, Martynas Jonaitis, Chris sides, John Carmel, Larry Welch, Ryan Morton, Hayden, AstroAigle, Karl Meier, Ryan, Yair, Patrick Hagerty, Chiara, Jess, April Walsh, Pat, sailing dreamweaver, JohnH, Jason Sterling, Donna Friedman, immi white, Marieke Folbert, Shadow, BL, Austin Cobb, Jacob Nicola, Tom Hardgrove, Alexandre Codina, Ian Stafford, vincent oldershaw, Psyonik, BoothBees, Adrian Strehlou, Juan Fernandez, trustabe Cat, G J, Alex, Daniel Ramirez, Sergei Mnatsakanov, Dan R, Destiny Morris, Jraché, Tom Malcolm, KenG, Devin Ulin, Ken San, Ken, ft, Tim Potkay, Matt Anderson, Dejan Fortuna, Jordan Dziedzic, Damein Alexander, Jeb Enoch, Catherine, Cleric Rufio, Aleem Salami, Gfjsyughj, Jesse Hanrahan, Poob, Jayanta Banik, LawfulnessLast, Paul Eibe, kruz, Lucas, Sally Young, Jeff Valle, Eli Blezard-Revill, Connor Simonton, Renée, James Fitzgerald, Guillaume "gee-YOHM", Parent-Teacher of the Abyss, Eric Varela, Shelby Jenkins, and Josh Duncan for supporting us this week. Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ to listen to new episodes of StarTalk Radio ad-free and a whole week early.Start a free trial now on Apple Podcasts or by visiting siriusxm.com/podcastsplus. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
The gals are back after a brief hiatus to talk about a genuine classic of the early 2000s: Wall-E (2008). If you've ever wondered about the future of humanity, this is a truly sobering version of how we're all going to turn into giant babies.Love the show? Please subscribe, rate, and review us here. Also, check out our website: www.seeyounextweekinspace.com and follow us on Instagram @seeyounextweekinspaceHosts: Amy and Sarah WalshEditor: Amy WalshProducers: Amy and Sarah WalshArt: Riley Brown
Podketeers - A Disney-inspired podcast about art, music, food, tech, and more!
This week, a quick review of the Super Mario Galaxy Movie, we talk about whether or not we were able to get D23 tickets, Dan Povenmire draws blindfolder, Wall-E and Eve take a stroll, plus, history was made when the Integrity (Orion) spacecraft safely landed back on earth completing the Artemis II Mission! Listen now at: https://www.podketeers.com/616 or watch this episode at: YouTube.com/Podketeers Our most frequently requested links can be found at: https://www.podketeers.com/links/ Help us make a difference! Teamboat Willie is the official charity team of the Podketeers Podcast. For more information on the charity that we're currently supporting, head to: http://www.teamboatwillie.com Check out our series of Armchair Imagineering episodes here: https://www.podketeers.com/armchair-imagineering/ --- Join the FGP Squad Family! Support for Podkeeters is provided by listeners and viewers like you! We like to call our supporters our Fairy Godparents (they call themselves the FGP Squad). You can find more info on how to become part of the FGP Squad family by going to: https://www.podketeers.com/fgp --- We're on Discord! Join other members of our community and us on our Discord server! Use the invite link below to join us: https://discord.gg/gG8kJ2a ---
This week, the Dads head into the Australian Outback to review Nicolas Roeg's mesmerizing and dreamlike 1971 survival drama, Walkabout.Dan kicks things off by admitting he completely confused this movie with A Far Off Place, spending the first hour waiting for a dog that was never going to appear. Once the confusion settles, Sidey, Dan, Reegs, and Cris dive deep into this visual masterpiece starring Jenny Agutter, Luc Roeg, and the legendary David Gulpilil.In this episode:- Dan's Kalahari Desert mix-up- The culture clash: modern society vs. indigenous life- Have humans evolved too fast for the modern world? (Cris predicts our WALL-E slug future)- The indestructible nature of 1970s school uniform tights- Why you shouldn't go hiking in formal leather school shoes- The brilliant, almost entirely improvised performances from the young cast- Comparisons to last week's film (Sovereign) on the topic of rejecting modern societyVerdict: Strong recommend across the board. A weird, beautiful, and thought-provoking classic.Films/shows mentioned: Walkabout (1971), Sovereign (2025), A Far Off Place (1993), Don't Look Now (1973), The Man Who Fell to Earth (1976), WALL-E (2008), Crocodile Dundee (1986).You can now text us anonymously to leave feedback, suggest future content or simply hurl abuse at us. We'll read out any texts we receive on the show. Click here to try it out!We love to hear from our listeners! By which I mean we tolerate it. If it hasn't been completely destroyed yet you can usually find us on twitter @dads_film, on Facebook Bad Dads Film Review, on email at baddadsjsy@gmail.com or on our website baddadsfilm.com. Until next time, we remain... Bad Dads
Damien Perriman, Chief Commercial Officer of eXoZymes and the commercial lead behind the NCTx spinout, breaks down why cell-free biomanufacturing changes the rules for scaling nature's rare molecules. Damien explains why the team spun NCTX out as a separate commercial vehicle, what it means to successfully transfer a process to a partner manufacturer (including a milestone Cayman validation), and why NCT (n-trans-caffeoyl tyramine), a trace compound found in peppercorns and hemp seed husks, has drawn so much attention as the only known agonist of HNF4A, a metabolic “switch” tied to mitochondrial function. The conversation also covers the logic behind launching first in supplements, how to build credibility in a crowded category through safety and product consistency, how regulatory timelines shape strategy, and why industrial biotech needs to move from platform-first stories to molecule-led business cases that match real market demand.Grow Everything brings the bioeconomy to life. Hosts Karl Schmieder and Erum Azeez Khan share stories and interview the leaders and influencers changing the world by growing everything. Biology is the oldest technology. And it can be engineered. What are we growing?Learn more at www.messaginglab.com/groweverythingChapters:(00:00:00) Welcome, introductions, and why tech transfer matters(00:02:10) Why eXoZymes spun out NCTX to commercialize faster(00:03:30) Cayman scale-up milestone: 99% conversion and 99.6% purity(00:05:20) What the Cayman validation proves for product delivery and partners(00:08:10) Why launch NCT in supplements first, and what GRAS enables(00:10:00) Building credibility in supplements: safety, purity, and consistency(00:12:05) What HNF4A is, and why NCT is the only known agonist(00:14:30) What's next: more human use studies, dose regimens, and GLP-1 adjacencies(00:16:00) NCT vs GLP-1s: “metabolic restoration” and where it might fit(00:18:10) “Natural” vs safe and effective: what really matters(00:21:00) Examples of trace natural molecules scaled for human use(00:22:30) GRAS + FDA timelines: how they're navigating regulatory reality(00:26:00) The Molecule Manifesto: why industrial biotech needs molecule-led business cases(00:31:00) How eXoZymes chooses what to work on (idea management system)(00:33:00) Vision: what success looks like in 5–10 years(00:35:00) Quickfire: NCT in ice cream, NCT as “WALL-E,” and other rapid takes(00:38:10) What people misunderstand about cell-free biomanufacturing(00:40:00) Wrap-up + post-episode reflectionLinks and Resources:eXoZymesInterview: Cayman Chemical validates eXoZymes' technology and scalabilityeXoZymes' Cell-Free Biomanufacturing Platform Gets Positive Feedback from Cayman ChemicaleXoZymes on LinkedInDamien Perriman - new CCO129. No Cells? No Problem! eXoZymes' Michael Heltzen on the Future of Microbe-Free Biotech29. Gut Check with Stephanie Culler: Persephone's Quest for Microbiome Breakthroughs170. There's a Bug for That: Sophia Xu on CarbonBridge's Notebook Bioreactors166. The Great Reformulation: Joshua Lachter Rethinks How We Make Everything at ScaleTopics Covered:cell-free biomanufacturing, industrial biotech, NCTx, HNF4A, metabolic switch, tech transfer, CDMO, supplements vs pharma, GRAS, purity and consistencyHave a question or comment? Message us here:Text or Call (804) 505-5553Instagram / Twitter / LinkedIn / Youtube / Grow EverythingMusic by: Nihilore Production by: Amplafy Media
Book a free consultation call with Robert Sikes on breaking through your Keto or low carb plateau here: https://www.ketobodybuilding.com/callYour health is not ONLY about wellness; it is a financial tool that directly impacts your success in business. Top entrepreneurs understand that their physical well being is their greatest asset for earning potential and avoiding costly burnout. In episode 870 of the Savage Perspective Podcast, host Robert Sikes sits down with marketing and health expert Mark Young to explore this powerful link. They reveal how to use AI as a collaborator to increase your productivity and how ancient wisdom, like fasting, can provide the mental clarity you need to succeed in today's demanding world.Follow Mark on IG: https://www.instagram.com/themarkyoung/Get Keto Brick: https://www.ketobrick.com/Subscribe to the podcast: https://open.spotify.com/show/42cjJssghqD01bdWBxRYEg?si=1XYKmPXmR4eKw2O9gGCEuQChapters0:00 - Why Health is the Ultimate Currency for Entrepreneurs1:26 - From Marketing Expert to Functional Medicine PhD2:33 - The #1 Reason Entrepreneurs Prioritize Their Health4:25 - How to Manage Multiple Businesses Without Burning Out5:30 - Is AI Just a Tool? A New Paradigm for Productivity8:07 - Why We Gave Our AI Bots Human Names10:57 - Will AI Make Your Job Irrelevant in 5 Years?14:43 - The Paradox of Progress: Are We Devolving as We Advance?15:55 - Unlocking Ancient Wisdom: What Science Is Just Now Discovering17:36 - The Surprising Science Behind Why Fasting Creates Mental Clarity19:14 - Should You Avoid Mixing Fabrics? An Ancient Law Explained20:00 - Why Ancient Religions Forbid Eating Pork (The Science)22:09 - Is Technology Dehumanizing Our Society?24:45 - The Unexpected Silver Lining of the Pandemic27:02 - A Resource For Optimizing Your Ketogenic Lifestyle29:22 - Why Live Concerts & Theater Will Thrive in the Age of AI31:07 - The Future of Wealth: Why Health is the New Class Divide32:23 - The COVID Lesson: Why Your Health is 100% Your Responsibility35:01 - How to Use AI to Challenge Your Doctor's Advice39:36 - The "WALL-E" Effect: Will AI Make Humanity Lazy?43:12 - The Best Way to Learn About AI (It's Not What You Think)45:08 - How to "Date" an AI For Better Business Results49:25 - A Tech CEO's Parenting Strategy for the Digital Age51:06 - How to Reinvent Your Business with an AI Infrastructure53:51 - A New Hope for Cancer Patients: The Metabolic Approach55:06 - Where to Find Mark Young Online