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Pier Vittorio Tondelli war in Italien der 80er Jahre Kult. Seine Bücher standen in jeder WG, erinnert sich Maike Albath. Jetzt gibt es Gelegenheit, ihn wiederzuentdecken.
In this episode of Back to Port, your host Papanikolis is joined by special guest Blaymeister, one of the most recognizable Community Contributors in the WoWS Legends scene. Together, we dive into the current state of the game, share insights from the CC perspective, and deliver the kind of salty, unfiltered commentary you've come to expect.With Rogue PLG back on the roster and preparing new chaos for upcoming episodes, this conversation sets the stage for what's next: a CC gathering, a nostalgia throwback with a WG member, and plenty of sharp takes to keep you anchored.
Theresa F. (27) ist ein “Botscherl” (Erklärung dieses Dialekt-Klassikers folgt in der Folge) und ist wahnsinnig eifersüchtig auf ihre Mutter. Dpch warum? Nachdem sie sich aus ihrer toxischen Beziehung von ihrem langjährigen, gewalttätigen Boyfriend befreit hat, kommt und ohne Job dasteht, kommt sie erstmal bei ihren Eltern unter, die sie liebevoll aufnehmen und unterstützen und beginnt sich langsam wieder das Leben von Neuem aufzubauen.Kai, der absolute Lieblings-Klavierschüler von Theresas Mutter, die selbst eine leidenschaftliche Musikerin ist, ihre Tochter aber nie so recht davon begeistern konnte, ist ein ruhiger, zurückhaltender, aber sehr begabter Typ. Theresa und Kai lernen sich bei einem Theaterabend kennen und werden schon rasch ein Herz und eine Seele. Er arbeitet nebenbei in einem kleinen Hotel, wo er zu besonderen Anlässen Klavier spielt und auch Theresa beginnt dort zu arbeiten. Als ihr Kai vorschlägt, zusammen in eine WG zu ziehen, stimmt sie zu und bald folgt schon der erste Kuss.Eines Tages entdeckt sie aber einen Bündel Briefe in Kais Kleiderschrank, adressiert an…Gabriele: Theresas Mutter!Diese hatte Kai wohl heimlich an ihre Mutter geschrieben - für Theresa bricht eine Welt zusammen. Wie konnten sie die beiden nur so hintergehen? Doch ist ihre Eifersucht wirklich berechtigt…?---Wenn ihr Ina live erleben wollt, schaut euch die aktuellen Tourdaten und Tickets an. Alle Infos zu kommenden Konzerten gibt es hier: https://www.inaregen.at/konzerte/Wer nicht so lange warten möchte: Demnächst ist Ina in Wien zu sehen am 13.09.25 am berühmten MA48 Mistfest und am 19.09.25 im Theater Akzent.Fündig werdet ihr aber sicherlich auf Ina Regens offizieller Website: Schaut mal vorbei auf www.inaregen.atWer ihr auf Instagram folgen will, um Einblicke in ihre kreativen Prozesse und ihr Leben als Musikerin zu bekommen: @inaregenUnd hört auf jeden Fall rein in ihre neue Single “Du bist da”!--Euch hat diese Geschichte gefallen, aufgeregt oder ihr habt euch darin sogar wiedererkannt? Das interessiert uns brennend!Schreibt uns in Kommentaren über Facebook und Instagram unter @dramacarbonara. Dort werdet ihr auch die in den Geschichten besprochenen Fotos finden und endlich sehen können, was wir sehen ... Falls ihr noch mehr fantastische Geschichten mit uns lesen wollt, können wir euch schon jetzt versprechen: das Repertoire ist unerschöpflich, wir staunen jedes Mal aufs Neue, was möglich ist. Abonnieren per RSS-Feed, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Deezer oder Google Podcasts ist der Schlüssel zur regelmäßigen Versorgung. Über Rezensionen freuen wir uns natürlich extrem und feiern diese gern auch prominent in unserem Social Media Feed.Jede zweite Folge kommt übrigens ein/e GastleserIn zu uns ins kuschelige Wiener Hauptquartier und unterstützt uns mit Theorien zu Charakteren und Handlungssträngen. Wenn ihr einen Wunschgast habt oder gern selbst mal vorbeischauen wollt, sagt Bescheid. Wir können nichts versprechen, aber wir freuen uns immer über Vorschläge.Wenn ihr Lust auf Extra-Content und Community-Aktivitäten habt, unterstützt uns mit einem Abonnement auf Steady und kommt in den Genuss des kompletten "Drama Carbonara"-Universums: https://steadyhq.com/de/drama-carbonara/aboutFalls ihr daran interessiert sind, Werbung in unserem Podcast zu schalten, setzt euch bitte mit Stefan Lassnig von Missing Link in Verbindung. Verbindlichsten Dank! NEUER PODCAST!Wer in den neuesten Podcast, den Tatjana und Asta für HAPPY HOUSE MEDIA Wien produziert haben mit dem vielversprechenden Namen "Wo die Geister wohnen" reinhören mag - schaut mal hier & hier findet ihr den Geister Instagram Account! Es wird schrecklich schön!!--Link zur Podcast Hörer:innen UMFRAGE!Danke für die Mitarbeit und euer wertvolles Feedback :) & hier zur legendären Spotify Drama Carbonara Soundtrack Playlist - folgen folgen folgen!! liebe Freund:innen des unberechenbaren Musik-Algorithmus!
Our guest this time is Kay Thompson. As Kay says in her bio, she is a minister, TV show host, author, Realtor® and business owner. If that isn't enough, she has raised a son and a daughter. Kay grew up, as she says, a military brat. She has lived in a number of places around the world. Like others we have had the pleasure to have as guests, her travels and living in various places and countries has made her curious and given her a broad perspective of life. After high school she went to college. This life was a bit of a struggle for her, but the day came when she realized that college would be a positive thing for her. She will tell us the story. After college she and her second husband, her first one died, moved to Atlanta where she has now resided for over 30 years. Kay always has had a strong faith. However, the time came when, as she explains, she actually heard God calling her to go into the ministry. And so, she did. Kay tells us about how she also has undertaken other endeavors including writing, selling real estate and working as a successful Television host. It goes without saying that Kay Thompson performs daily a number of tasks and has several jobs she accomplishes. I hope you will be inspired by Kays's work. Should you wish to contact Kay, visit her website www.kaythompson.org. About the Guest: Kay Thompson is a minister, TV show host, author, Realtor® and business owner. She is the founder of Kay Thompson Ministries International, a kingdom resource for healing, hope and spiritual development. Kay is also the founder of Legacy Venture Group, a consulting and media firm which has helped countless businesses, organizations and individuals to strategically maximize potential. Kay holds a BA in Art History from Rutgers University in Camden, NJ, and an MA in Christian Ministry from Mercer University in Atlanta, GA. She is the former program director of WGUN 1010 in Atlanta and hosted the Kay Thompson TV Show, which aired on WATC-TV 57 in Atlanta. She currently hosts for the Atlanta Live broadcast on TV- 57. Kay is a member of the staff for the Studio Community Fellowship at Trillith Studios in Fayetteville, and is a host for their weekly service. She also serves as a member of the Board of Advisors for the A.D. King Foundation and works with several other non profit organizations in the Metro Atlanta area. Kay has lived in Georgia for over thirty years and is a resident of Stockbridge. She has two wonderful children: Anthony (Jasmine) and Chanel; and one grandchild, AJ. Kay enjoys reading, bowling and spending time with her family. Ways to connect with Kay: Facebook (Kay Thompson Ministries) https://www.facebook.com/kaythompsonministries Instagram (@kayrthompson) https://www.instagram.com/kayrthompson/ About the Host: Michael Hingson is a New York Times best-selling author, international lecturer, and Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe. Michael, blind since birth, survived the 9/11 attacks with the help of his guide dog Roselle. This story is the subject of his best-selling book, Thunder Dog. Michael gives over 100 presentations around the world each year speaking to influential groups such as Exxon Mobile, AT&T, Federal Express, Scripps College, Rutgers University, Children's Hospital, and the American Red Cross just to name a few. He is Ambassador for the National Braille Literacy Campaign for the National Federation of the Blind and also serves as Ambassador for the American Humane Association's 2012 Hero Dog Awards. https://michaelhingson.com https://www.facebook.com/michael.hingson.author.speaker/ https://twitter.com/mhingson https://www.youtube.com/user/mhingson https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelhingson/ accessiBe Links https://accessibe.com/ https://www.youtube.com/c/accessiBe https://www.linkedin.com/company/accessibe/mycompany/ https://www.facebook.com/accessibe/ Thanks for listening! Thanks so much for listening to our podcast! If you enjoyed this episode and think that others could benefit from listening, please share it using the social media buttons on this page. Do you have some feedback or questions about this episode? Leave a comment in the section below! Subscribe to the podcast If you would like to get automatic updates of new podcast episodes, you can subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts or Stitcher. You can subscribe in your favorite podcast app. You can also support our podcast through our tip jar https://tips.pinecast.com/jar/unstoppable-mindset . Leave us an Apple Podcasts review Ratings and reviews from our listeners are extremely valuable to us and greatly appreciated. They help our podcast rank higher on Apple Podcasts, which exposes our show to more awesome listeners like you. If you have a minute, please leave an honest review on Apple Podcasts. Transcription Notes: Michael Hingson ** 00:00 Access Cast and accessiBe Initiative presents Unstoppable Mindset. The podcast where inclusion, diversity and the unexpected meet. Hi, I'm Michael Hingson, Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe and the author of the number one New York Times bestselling book, Thunder dog, the story of a blind man, his guide dog and the triumph of trust. Thanks for joining me on my podcast as we explore our own blinding fears of inclusion unacceptance and our resistance to change. We will discover the idea that no matter the situation, or the people we encounter, our own fears, and prejudices often are our strongest barriers to moving forward. The unstoppable mindset podcast is sponsored by accessiBe, that's a c c e s s i capital B e. Visit www.accessibe.com to learn how you can make your website accessible for persons with disabilities. And to help make the internet fully inclusive by the year 2025. Glad you dropped by we're happy to meet you and to have you here with us. Michael Hingson ** 01:17 Hi, everyone. I would like to say greetings wherever you happen to be today, we have a wonderful guest today. This is a woman, I would say, of many, many talents. I've been looking forward to this for a while. Kay Thompson is a minister, a TV host. She's an author, she's a realtor, and she's a business owner. My gosh, all of those. I want to find out how she does all those. But anyway, Kay, I want to welcome you to unstoppable mindset. We're really glad that you're here. Kay Thompson ** 01:54 Well, thank you so much for having me. I appreciate being here, and thank you for contacting me excited. Michael Hingson ** 02:01 Well, how do you do all those things all at once? Kay Thompson ** 02:05 Well, you know, definitely can't do them all at once. Oh, okay, well, so have to kind of parse them out each day. And as I get assignments, that's how it goes. And got to prioritize one over the other. You Michael Hingson ** 02:22 know? Well, we will, we will get to all of those, I am sure, in the course of the next hour or so. But I'm really glad that you're here, and as yet, I've been looking forward to this for a while, and and I'm sure we're going to have a lot of fun. Why don't we start? Maybe you could go back and tell us kind of about the early K growing up. What about you? So people can get to know you? Kay Thompson ** 02:44 Oh, yeah. So growing up with the daughter of a military father, military officer. As a matter of fact, he rose to the rank of Lieutenant Colonel. So that was interesting. So it was kind of a privileged military life in that sense that, you know, he just was always, he was a very important figure in his time. So that was interesting, walking on the base with him. And, you know, people would stop and salute him, you know, it was, it was, and I was just a little caught, you know, just running alongside him and just real proud, real proud Michael Hingson ** 03:28 of my father. Did you have any Did you have any siblings? Kay Thompson ** 03:31 I do? I have two brothers. Yeah, they both lived in Arizona. I was in the middle, so smashed right in the middle between two very muscular, very had a very demanding, commanding, excuse me, commanding presences. So in between the two brothers there, yeah, and then my mother, she was an English teacher, and very, you know, did excellent in her own right. She did a lot of drama, just a lot of teaching. She ended up in her 60s getting her doctorate degree, and, you know, just really excelled in education. And so she was the one that was really big on education. You know, go to school, go to school. Go to school. I don't want to go to school. Well, you need to go to school anyway. So I went to school anyway. That's how I can say my life was. Now, where did you grow up? All over, Michael Hingson ** 04:32 okay, you did. I was going to ask if you did a lot of travel, since your dad was in the military. Kay Thompson ** 04:38 Yeah, we certainly did. I was born in Tacoma, Washington. Oh, I don't remember any portion of it, because we were the only there, basically, so I could be born. I feel like, I know that's not the reason. But we went to Washington so I could be born, and then we lived there about a year, and then we moved to New York City. Then. We moved to. Now, by this my brother was already born, because all of us are three years apart. So my brother was born in Verdun, France, okay, and then they moved to, I can't remember where they were before that. I don't know if they went straight to from there to Washington State, and then we moved to New York, and then we went to Aberdeen, Maryland, and that's where my younger brother was born. And then from there, we went to Germany. We stayed there for about three years. From Germany, we went, I can't believe I remember all this. And from Germany, we went to Ohio. We stayed there for a couple of years. And actually we were there when they had that tornado. Was like in the 70s, there was a tornado Zenith Ohio. Well, we weren't far from zenith at the time. So we were there. Then we moved from there to Virginia, and it was there for three years, then to New Jersey, and then that's where my father retired. So we were all over the place. Michael Hingson ** 06:10 You were, my gosh, well, did you, did you learn any of the foreign languages when you were in Germany and France, or, yeah, Kay Thompson ** 06:23 in Germany, we could only, I only remember vaguely, you know, hello, thank you to know what it is now off beat is saying goodbye, Danka and bitter, thank you. You're welcome and good, yeah. But tight. But, no, no, we didn't do that at all Michael Hingson ** 06:47 so, but you, you certainly did a lot and you had a lot of adventures. How do you think that all of that travel affected you as you grew older? What? What did it do that helped shape you? Kay Thompson ** 07:03 Well, I know that, you know, of course, traveling. You know, you hear the story about kids all the time they travel, and because if they're if they're moving a lot, it's hard to create lasting, long term friendships, because you're just constantly moving. And you know, never mind moving to another city, but when you go to another state, even from another country. Now, I did happen to have a friendship with a young lady. Her name was Audrey, and I met her in Germany, and I was between the age of about three to five. I met her in Germany, and we stayed friends till I was in Virginia. So you're talking from Germany, wow, to Maryland, to Virginia. We were friends until Virginia, but then once I left Virginia and went to New Jersey, and I was there for my part of my middle school and then the rest of my high school, we fell out of touch. So that was one of the things I would say is difficult, you know, just having lifelong friends, yeah, that was, that was probably one of the more difficult things. But one thing on the other side is it made great being that person that was a world traveler. It was great when you're in school and they, you know, they ask you in your classroom, hey, you know, tell us something unique about you. Oh, well, I've been to Germany because my parents, when we were in Germany, they wasted no time traveling. They were always traveling. We were on the road all the time. I mean literally, and you know, they, they were just great world travelers. We went we went to Italy, we went to Spain, we went to France, we went to Switzerland. We went everywhere in Europe that they could get in that Volvo that they had. We had a nice little Volvo, and we would pitch out at, you know, campsites, you know, just any way they could to get where they needed to get, because they wanted to see these sites, and especially because my mother was an English teacher, she did a lot of plays, she directed a lot of plays, a lot of Shakespeare. And so a lot of these places were in these books, in this literature that she taught, and I'm sure that's probably one of the major reasons they did all this traveling, all these places that she had studied about, and, you know, taught about, she actually got to go see now, I must say, the only place I didn't go to that I wanted to go to that for some reason, she took my older brother. She didn't take any, noone else went, but my mother and my older brother. And I can't understand that trip to this day they those two went to. Greece. We didn't know. No one else in the family went to Greece. And I meant to ask, I'm going to, you know, when I finish this interview, I'm going to call my brother and ask him, What, what? What did you and mom go to Greece? You know, because nobody else got to go. But I would have loved to go there as well, but, but at the time, you know, new kid, it was okay. Mom and mom and Chuck are going away. Okay. But now that I think back and look back, maybe it was, I never, I never asked about that, but I'm going to ask, Did Michael Hingson ** 10:34 it help you, though, develop a sense of adventure and and not create any kind of fear of of traveling around. Did it make you a more curious person? Because you got to go to so many places? Oh, I asked that in the on the basis of as you grew older and thought about it. Kay Thompson ** 10:52 Oh, yeah, I'm a very curious person, curious person, and at times that can be a little nosy, right? And so, yeah, so that, to me, was, I think, one of the ways that built expanded my mind in terms of wanting to know about people and about things, because I've worked in public relations for many years, and so just being able to understand the perspective of other people from different cultures and different mindsets, being open to people from different cultures, different races, different religions, wanting to hear their point of view, interested in you know how they feel about things, because you can have a subject, or You can have something come up, and you have so many different perspectives from people. And you can see the very same thing, they can be shown the very same thing, but one person sees it from their lens, you know, from where you know, yeah, whether it's how they grew up or their external influences, and then someone could see the very same thing, and it interpret it totally different. Yeah. So Michael Hingson ** 12:08 one of the one of the things that I've noticed in talking to a number of people who came from military families and and others as well, who did do a fair amount of travel to various countries and so on. They do tend to be more curious, and I think that's a very positive thing. They they have a broader outlook on so many things, and they tend to be more curious and want to learn more and wish that more people could have the same experiences that they had. Kay Thompson ** 12:40 Yeah. I mean, not afraid to try new things too, for things that other people would would not like. I remember in Germany being very young, being fed octopus and snail. You know, these delicacies over there in Germany, I remember that at this my where my father was stationed, in Germany. The street, it was in like a court area. It felt like a court area, big apartments set up in a U shape, and then right across in a U shape in the in the middle of a field, like an open space, not a field, but an open space. And then right outside of that open space, we could jump out of that open space right into a busy street called Roma Strasse, and right on the other side of that busy street was Old Town, Germany, literally stepping there were no fences and no bars and no gates. We're stepping straight from our backyard into Germany, because the base was more Americanized. So you really felt Americanized on the base. But once you stepped into Germany, the houses were these. You know, cobble it was cobblestone streets. And I remember me and my brothers used to walk out of our backyard, that big open area, and go across the street into Germany and get the authentic gummy bears. That was our weekly trip. And these gummy bears, I'm telling you now, for gummy bear enthusiasts out there, the gummy bears in Germany looked nothing like these gummy bears that we see here. They were huge. They were the cutest little bears. I almost felt guilty eating them, but we just had a great time. I remember great memories from our exploits, our visits, the life was different. You know, toilet paper was harder. I just remember now that was years ago. I don't know what it's like now, but Michael Hingson ** 14:49 yeah, but does the gummy bears taste better? Kay Thompson ** 14:53 Well, now I can't remember, because then, when you're a kid, any candy, you know, if you say candy, I say, yeah. Much, you know. So when I was that young, I couldn't tell, but they probably did, you know. But then again, for those people that like because I don't drink, but the beer there is much darker, too. So some people don't like that. So better to them. You know, could be, you know, we don't like it to us. So Michael Hingson ** 15:25 I've never been to China, but I've been to Japan twice, and there's a food in China called dim sum. Are you familiar with dim sum? Okay, I'll tell you dim sum in Japan is I and I think better. It's different and tastes better than dim sum in the United States. Now I have to go to China one of these days and try it. Yeah. Kay Thompson ** 15:48 Well, if you ever go to the buffets, have you ever gone to the Yeah? Yeah. Okay, so if you notice the people that work there, they do not eat the food that the buffet. Yeah, they so one day I'm going to do this too. I'm like, hey, you know, can I have some of which Michael Hingson ** 16:09 you guys eat? Yeah, yeah, yeah, well, yeah, but it is, it is interesting. It's fun to to investigate and explore. And I haven't traveled around the world much. I have as a speaker, had some opportunities to travel, but I think my curiosity came from being a blind person who was encouraged by my parents to explore, and the result was that I did a lot of exploring, just even in our house around our neighborhood. And of course, when the internet came along, and I still believe this is true, it is a treasure trove of just wonderful places to go visit. And yeah, I know there's the dark web and all that, but I ignore that. Besides that, probably the dark web is inaccessible, and maybe someday somebody will sue all the people who have sites on the dark web because they're not accessible. But nevertheless, the internet is just a treasure trove of interesting places to visit in so many ways. Yeah, Kay Thompson ** 17:17 and then a virtual reality. So one of the places that I wanted to go to was, I've always wanted to go to Egypt. I haven't had an opportunity yet, and personally, right now, don't know how you know how good an idea that is right now. Yeah, but I went to a recent VR exploration of the pyramids in Egypt. And I'm telling you, if that was how it seemed, it's definitely was a way to help me to, you know, live it out, so to speak. Because there's, like, for instance, there's a place in Florida called the Holy Land, the Holy Land, you know, the whole just like a theme park. And they say it looks, you know, there are areas where it looks just like Israel, parts of Israel. So, you know, in that respect, I've been able to realize some portion of the dream. But yeah, I have been love to get there. Michael Hingson ** 18:16 I have been to Israel, and I enjoy happy. I was in Israel two years ago. Oh, well, so what did you do after high school? Kay Thompson ** 18:30 Oh, after high school, interesting. So remember when I was telling you about the school thing? So I was in and out of school. I went to I started college in New Jersey. Where did you I went to Rutgers University. Rutgers, yeah, well, first I started in New Brunswick. Then I came back because we lived closer to Camden. We lived we lived in New Jersey, closer to Philadelphia. Philadelphia was about 20 minutes away. Michael Hingson ** 18:57 Mm, okay, I lived in, I lived in Westfield, New Jersey. So we were out route 22 from New York, about 15 miles. So we were in the north central part of the state, okay, South North part, or whatever, of the state. Kay Thompson ** 19:11 Okay, okay, yeah. Well, yeah. First it was in New Brunswick. I was there. And then after I did that, I went for about a semester, and then I transferred over to Hampton University, because both my parents went to Hampton, so I said Hampton didn't stay there, and then I ended up coming back and going to Rutgers in Camden, and there I completed my degree. Took me eight years to complete it. What Michael Hingson ** 19:42 did you get your degree in? Kay Thompson ** 19:43 I got my degree in art history and sculpture. So, okay, yeah, and I love what I did. I you know, I had a museum work. Loved working in a museum, and could tell you about all the i. You know, the art, the sculpture, just loved it. But it took me a minute to get that then. And then, after that, I went to, I moved to Atlanta in 92 the end of 92 so after high school, you know, just a lot of challenges, just trying to figure out who I was and what did you do. You know, how I wished I would have, now, looking back on it, I wish I would have, maybe when I got out of high school, just taking some time off first. And because in my heart, I knew I, I knew I, I knew I didn't want to go to school, but I knew I needed to go. I knew there was something in me that said, you you need to go to school. But mentally, I don't think I was mentally prepared for it, for for the you know, because when you get out of high school, and you go into college, it's a unless you take AP courses in high school, you're not prepared for the amount of work you're going to get inundated with. And it was just overwhelming to me. It took all my time. I felt like I was that person. I had to keep reading things over and over again just to get it, I used to have to, not only did I take, you know, what friend of mine calls copious notes, but then I also had to put it over in index cards. And you know, it just took me a long time because my heart wasn't in it at the time. So I ended up meeting a gentleman, my first husband. We were married, we had a son, and then, but he passed away, I think, when my son was about three, and then that's when, okay, okay. Now, you know you now, now, now. I wanted to go. Now I wanted to finish. So it was Michael Hingson ** 22:00 your it was your husband that passed away. Yes, yeah, okay, yeah, all right, so then you decided you really needed to to do school. Kay Thompson ** 22:12 Yeah, I needed to complete it. So that's what pushed me to complete it, leaving Michael Hingson ** 22:17 the major aside of sculpture and art and his art history and so on. If you were to summarize it, what did college teach you? Kay Thompson ** 22:30 Oh, that's a great question. What did college teach me? Well, you know, it taught me that, you know, I think we just need to, well, you need to know how to focus. It's really was a disciplining moment in my life. I was an Army brat. You know this bottom line, I was an Army brat even though I felt like I didn't get a whole lot of things that I wanted. In reality, I had a, like a kind of a spoiled mentality. And when I got to college, I realized that this stuff is not going to be handed to me, you know, you're not going to be handed an a you know, I'm not going to do your studying for you, you know. And so helping me to kind of detach from things I had just depended on for so long. But in that transition, it became very lonely. College was very lonely. I mean, even when I left, because I got out of when I first went to Rutgers and cam in New Brunswick, right out of high school. I had, I was at the dorm, and I wasn't ready for a dorm. I wasn't ready for that life because, you know, I left almost before the semester was over and I had to go and make up the classes. And, you know, thankfully, they allowed me to make up some of my you know, majority well. As a matter of fact, they let me make them all up, but I still had to put in the work. And that was my thing, putting in the work, putting in the work and doing things that I didn't necessarily like. Because even though I liked art and I like sculpture and all that. There were other classes that I had to take, like humanities and algebra, you know, and history, you know, not not art history, but you know, American history, European history, and all these different other subjects, these other prerequisites or curriculum that you have to take. And I didn't always enjoy those and other I don't want to do that, but no, you actually have to do it. So I'm going to say that college really helped me learn about disciplining myself to do things that I don't necessarily like, but they are required of me, Michael Hingson ** 24:58 and I. But I would tell you, if you asked me the same question, that would be my answer. It really taught me a lot about discipline. It taught me also to realize that I really did like inappropriately so adventure and exploration and being curious and so on. I also found that my best college courses were the ones, no matter what the subject was or whether I really enjoyed it or not, were the ones where I had good teachers who really could teach and who were concerned about students and interacting with students, rather than just giving you assignments, because they then wanted to go off and do their thing. But I liked good teachers, and I went to the University of California at Irvine, and had, very fortunately, a lot of good teachers who encouraged discipline and being able to function in unexpected ways and and they also pointed out how to recognize like if you're doing something right, like in physics, when my Masters is in physics, one of the First things that one of my professors said is, if you've got to get the right answer, but the right answer isn't just getting the right numbers, like if you are trying to compute acceleration, which we know is 16 feet per second squared, or 9.8 meters per second squared. That's not right. Anyway, 3232 feet per second, or 9.8 meters per second, it isn't enough to get the 32 feet or or the 9.8 meters. You've got to get meters per second squared. Because that never mind why it is, but that is, that is the physics term for acceleration, so it isn't enough to get the numbers, which is another way of saying that they taught me to really pay attention to the details. Yeah, which was cool. And I'm hearing from you sort of the same thing, which is great, but, but then you went to college, and you majored in what you did, and so did you work in the museum part of the time while you were in college? Kay Thompson ** 27:31 Well, what happened is, I had an art history teacher who just took a, I guess, a liking to me, because I was very enthusiastic about what I did, because I love what I did. And I had a writing background, because I had a mother who was an English teacher. So all my life, I was constantly being edited. So I came in with pretty good grammar and pretty good way to I had a writing I had a talent for writing in a way that the academic were looking for, that art history kind of so I knew how to write that way, and she hired me to help her. She was a professor that did, you know, lectures, and she hired me, paid me out of her own salary, kind of like a work study. And so I worked for her about 20 hours a week, just filing slides and, you know, helping her with whatever she needed, because she was the chair of the department. So that was a great opportunity. I was able to work with her and and maybe feel good to know if somebody thought, you know enough of you know what I did to to hire me, and feel like I I could contribute, and that I was trusted to be able to handle some of these things. I mean, you know, and I don't know how difficult it is to file slides, but you know, when it teacher wants to do a lecture, and back then they were these little, small, little, you know, square slides. Square slides drop into the projector, right? And she's looking for, you know, the temple of Nike. You know, she wants to find it in order. You know, you pull that slide and you put it in your projector, right, carousel, right, yes, yes. So that's what I did, and it was great. I loved it. I learned college. I loved I loved the college atmosphere. I loved being in that vein, and I think I really found my niche when I was when I went to Rutgers in Camden. Michael Hingson ** 29:48 Well, there's a history lesson sports fans, because now, of course, it's all PowerPoint. But back then, as Kay is describing it, when you wanted to project things you had. Slides. So they were pictures, they were films, and they were all these little squares, maybe two inches square, and you put them in a carousel, and you put them in the projector, and every time you push the button, it would go to the next slide, or you could go back the other way. So PowerPoint is only making it a little bit more electronic, but the same concept is still there. So there, there I dealt with slides. So after college, you, you did time at the university, at the museum, I gather, Kay Thompson ** 30:31 okay. So what happened with the museum after I graduated from college, immediately I moved to New Jersey, yeah, you know, right? I'm gonna say probably about six months, six months to a year before college, is when my first husband died, and then after I graduated, um, I moved to New Jersey first. Where did you graduate from? Again, Rutgers University in Camden. Okay, so Michael Hingson ** 30:59 that's New Jersey so you, but after college, you moved, Kay Thompson ** 31:03 I moved to Georgia, Georgia that Michael Hingson ** 31:06 that makes more sense. Okay, okay, Kay Thompson ** 31:08 okay, sorry, yeah, so I moved to Georgia, and immediately, when we came to Georgia, you know my I came with a gentleman who I married shortly after, I moved to Georgia and we opened a art gallery. We were entrepreneurs. We came because, you know, there was, we felt like there was more opportunity in Georgia for small business owners, or would be potential small business owners, or people who wanted to realize their dream. And we know that in Georgia now, I don't know if you know this, but Georgia is a great place for entrepreneurs, so definitely better than where I was at the time. So we packed the U haul and just threw everything in there and came to Atlanta. Now my the gentleman who would be my husband. So I just say my husband now, then he, he had a sister here, so we visited first with her, and that's how we got to really see the scene, check out the scene, and then we came back and moved and found our own place and everything like that. So but when we came, I opened it, I had an art gallery for about a year or so, little bit longer and but that didn't work out. Didn't, you know, just, you know, some things you tried. Just yeah, just didn't work. But then my husband and now just FYI for you, this person, the second person, I married, the second man. He passed away too, but that was in 2008 but so he's my late husband too. So I have two, two husbands that passed away. One was the first one was much younger, and my second husband. We were married for 16 years. This is early on in our relationship. We he he opened a brass outlet, a just all kinds of beautiful black brass vases and animals and just anything brass you wanted. But also, after I shut down the museum I had or the gallery, it was an art gallery, I moved my pieces into his brass outlet, and there I was able to kind of display them and sell them. We had pieces that range from, you know, $25 to $500 so we I found a little space there that I could do my work. So it was a nice little coupling. Michael Hingson ** 33:43 Yeah, I'm with you. Uh huh. So so you, you have obviously moved on from from doing a lot of that, because now you have other endeavors, as we mentioned at the beginning, being a minister, an entrepreneur, an author and so on. So how did you transition from just doing art to doing some of the things that you do today? Kay Thompson ** 34:18 Okay, so what happened is when I came to and I guess this is the really, deeply more personal aspect of it all, when, when I came to Atlanta again, my my first husband had passed away. He committed suicide. Yeah, so when I came to Atlanta, my second husband and I were not yet married, and all I knew is that I wanted the relationship not to be the way the first one was, in a sense of. I I didn't want to go through that specific kind of trauma again and and not that the the two gentlemen were similar. They were very different people. My second husband was a very confident, very strong willed, you know, type of a person, but the trauma and my first husband, he had his own strength in, you know, but there's something that happens when you decide, you know, to end your life. Yeah, I wanted to make sure that I had some sort of support, divine support, because the going through something like that, and when I say something like that, not only am I talking about the suicide, but the fact that he was On we were on the phone together when this happened, so and then just dealing with everything that happened around it, you can imagine someone feeling a little bit insecure, unsure. So I really began to seek God for that relationship that I know would sustain me. I had grown up, you know, my parents grew up, they brought us to church. You know, I wouldn't say my parents were they weren't ministers, but they were active in whatever church they went to, and they made sure that we went to church every Sunday, even the Vacation Bible School. I can remember that in New Jersey, I remember, you know, them just being a very, very involved. My my parents. My mother was a singer, so she sang a lot in the choir, lot of solos. My father was a deacon. They both became elders, and elders, meaning they were just senior members of ministry. Because elder in the I'm in a non denominational ministry now, but elder is another way of saying a ordained male Minister their particular denomination, an elder was, you know, almost you might want to say like a trustee, so, but they were root, they they were they were integral to their church, And they were really foundational members. And so I just remember that impact on my life, and so I needed to make sure I had that grounding, and I knew I didn't have it because I was doing any and everything I wanted to do. You know, one of the reasons my my second husband, said, You know, he, I was the one for him, is because we had a drinking competition and I beat him, you know, we were taking shots, and I beat him. And so, you know that that was something that, you know, he said, Oh, you're, you know, girl, you're the one for me. And so that was our life, running, you know, we did a lot of. We entertained. We, you know, we did a lot of partying, as you say, a lot of having a great time. We were living our best life, right? So I knew I wasn't living a life that I could tell, Hey, God, see my life, Aren't you proud? It wasn't that life I was living. I wasn't, you know, doing biblical things. I wasn't living life, right? So I needed to make sure when I came to New Jersey, I mean, when I came to Atlanta from New Jersey with this gentleman that I had not yet married, I said, Lord, you know, help me make the right decision. And I'd say we could be moved to to Georgia in it's something like January, February. Okay, we got married about two months later, and then a month after that, I was pregnant with my daughter. So things being that, it happened very fast. But one thing about it is, of course, when you're pregnant, as a woman, you know, you can't do this. I couldn't do the things that I was doing before, right? The partying, smoking, the drinking, all of that, you know, for the sake of the child. You know, you just can't do it. So I went through a terrible withdrawal. Yeah, it was, it was pretty bad and and the only refuge I had was the church. So that's how I really got into the church. And once I got into the church, I had, I had been in the church before I had made a decision. Decision when I was about, I'm going to say about five, five or six years prior to that, I had given my life to the Lord. I had, you know, come into a relationship with the Lord, but life happened, and I got out of it. You know, I quickly kind of got out of it. And so for many years, I was just doing my own thing. So again, when, when, when we came to Georgia, I got pregnant, got married, going through with the withdrawals. I just, you know, I just went back into the church, uh, rekindled that relationship. Or, or the Bible says that he, he, he's with loving kindness. Has he drawn you? So he really drew me back based on my need. And so I came back to the church and got really, really involved in ministry. And as I got involved, I just kind of threw myself into it, because I could not do the previous things I did. And then even after I had my my second child, it's a daughter, so I have a son and a daughter, I had to live a life that was good for Michael Hingson ** 41:05 them. And what did your husband think of all that? Kay Thompson ** 41:09 Oh, yeah. Well, first he thought I had joined a cult. Okay, yeah, that's so that was his first impression. So he came to the church because he wanted to see who these cult members were that were drawing away his wife. And when he came, he got kind of hooked to the church, yeah? But our our faith was never at the same level. You know? He came because of me. I came because of of God, right? And I don't know if he ever really, I don't think he ever really got to that level that I did, where I was just gung ho. Everything was, you know, I was a Jesus girl. I was a holy roller, you know. And he did it for us. He did it for, you know, task sake, because he was a task oriented person. But he came, he came to be a very like my parents. He came to be very important part of the church. He was a deacon. He was faithful. He loved our leaders. He served with faith and integrity. But when it came to that, you know, deep seated personal relationship with God, where you know God, I just give you everything you know that that was mine. That was what I did. So we differed in that respect, yeah, Michael Hingson ** 42:35 well, well, hopefully though, in in the long run, you said he's passed. I assume it was not a suicide. Kay Thompson ** 42:45 No, no, Michael Hingson ** 42:46 Ben that he is. He is moving on in that faith. So that's a hopeful Kay Thompson ** 42:53 thing. Yeah, I believe he is. He had congestive heart failure and he passed away. And, yeah, I believe he he's now at rest, enjoying his rest. Yes, there Michael Hingson ** 43:06 you go. So when did he pass in 2008 Okay, so that was 17 years ago. Okay, yep, well, so you were very involved in the church. And I suppose in some senses, it's probably a question that is reasonably obvious, but then I'll still ask, how did you get into the ministry from being very heavily involved in church, and when did that happen? Kay Thompson ** 43:38 Okay, so one day our church. You know, the churches we have depending on, I guess, your faith or leaders do in the beginning of each year, we have a 21 day consecration, which we do in January, throughout the month of January. You know they might say, okay, 21 for 21 days. Read these scriptures, and we're going to fast from, you know, sweets, meats, or, you know, whatever the directive is. And so we was in a 21 day fast, and that was at my home one day. It was in the middle of the night, and I distinctly heard a call to preach. And that's really how the it all began. I mean, I knew, you know, the Bible says that, you know, even with Jeremiah and Jeremiah one, he says, Before the foundation, you know, before your mother and your father, you know, were together, I have already called you. I already ordained you. So I heard this call to preach, very distinct call, and at that point, I told my pastor, and from that point, I was kind of groomed, and as time went on, I was given more responsibility. Uh, you know, praying, or every now and then, preaching, doing Bible study. The next thing I know, I took my licensing exam, I was licensed, and then after that, I went through ordination, and I was ordained, and that's how it really began. And it was something I really took to heart, because I didn't want to disappoint God again. I didn't want to backslide again. Because, you know, I strongly believed in the faith, and I believe in the faith, and I believe in the power of Jesus, and I didn't want to be that person that Okay. Today I'm going to be faithful to the God and to His Word. But then, you know, then on the next day, you know, you're finding me, you know, yeah, in the liquor store, or, you know, this, doing this, or, you know, in the club. I didn't want to be that person. Yeah, I was, I was sincere, and I was very gung ho, and I wanted to live out this life. I wanted to see what the calling was going to be in my life. And I loved ministry. I loved the word, because I was already an art historian. So I loved history. And so the Bible is all you know, it's something history. It's history. Yeah, it's relevant. History to me, it's alive and active, sure. So it was perfect. It was a perfect pairing for me, and that that's really been my pursuit many these years. Michael Hingson ** 46:37 So when did you become a minister? Kay Thompson ** 46:41 Actually, when I, when I was telling you about that fast and when I heard the word preach, essentially when I heard that word preach between me and God, that was when I became a minister. Time wise. When was that time wise? Okay, that was probably 94 Okay. I Yeah, all right. Michael Hingson ** 47:00 So you were, you were clearly a preacher during a lot of the time with your your second husband, and so on, and, and I am so glad that he at least did explore and and and learn so much. So that's a that's a cool thing. But you've also done some other things. You deal with real estate, you're a TV show host, you're an author and well, business owner, yeah, but I want to, I want to learn more about some of those. But what kind of challenges have you faced in the ministry? Kay Thompson ** 47:42 Yeah. I would say some of the challenges are, you know, when you're in ministry, you have to preach or get yourself prepared for going before the people. It can be a very lonely lifestyle, yeah, yeah, even, even if you're married, even if you have children, it could still be a lonely and and demanding in its own right, because there is a mandate over your life to live and not according to what you see trending now. And, you know, when I, when I first got started in ministry there, the Internet was not the way it is now. No, no, definitely. Because, I mean, it was in 2000 that I got ordained. And I'm going to say the ministry had been, you know, it was just really starting to, I don't know you guess, she said, make waves. That's when all of the big evangelists were coming out, like, you know, the TD Jakes, the Paula white and the Benny Hinn and the Juanita Biden. That is around that time when those generation of preachers were really at the forefront, correct, low dollar and, you know, Bishop, Carlton, Pearson and Rod Parsley and all these, these names. That's when it really began to really pick up steam. And so that was the error that I started off in. And you wanted to be a person. You wanted to be relevant, but at the same token, you just trying to find that balance between family and ministry and and regular life. You know, can sometimes be really challenging, and I had to learn a lot about the order of things. You know, first it's God, then it's family, and then it's ministry. That's the order. But a lot of times we mix up God and ministry. So what we think is, you know, and. Aspect of things that we think that are God, that are actually ministry, and they supersede your family. That's where you know you can really run into some trouble. So that balance between those different aspects of my life, it was difficult, and then as a person who had a a more a prophetic, a revelatory call. On top of that, God is showing you things about people, about, you know, situations that you don't necessarily ask to know about, you know. And the Bible says, you know, with much knowledge can often come sorrow, you know. And that's when you begin to see God really unveiling and revealing things about people and about yourself. Because you have to be able to, you have to be able to look at yourself and not get too self righteous, right? If God is showing you these things. But in the same token, you don't want to, you know, you say, Okay, God, you're showing me this. What do you want me to do with this? And you know, somebody else might say, Okay, you need to go tell that person what God showed you. You know, I saw you doing this. You better stop, you know, doing this. And then, you know, so busy pointing the finger. Yeah, but you have to remember, you know, and it's, it may be cliches, but you've got three pointing back at you. And so there is, you know, you you've gotta be able to stay humble and yet still balance your family and still, you know, uh, not think yourself to be more than what you are, and yet realize that God has called you to do more in ministry than the average person. So yeah, it can be challenging, but I wouldn't change it for anything. Michael Hingson ** 51:55 It can be a challenge, but at the same time, you clearly were called to do it, and you work at keeping perspective, and I think that's the important thing, which goes back to college, which helped you learn a lot of discipline, and you get to use that discipline in a different way, perhaps, than you right, you figured out in college. But discipline is discipline, yeah. Well, how did you then get into something like the media and start being a TV show host and those kinds of things? Kay Thompson ** 52:26 Yeah, so I have a wonderful, wonderful pastor who really takes time to work with their their members and find out what your gifts are, what your talents are, and use them. And so I So, let's just say so I was an artist. Okay, bottom line, I was a sculptor, painter, award winning painter, by the way. Let me just tell you now, you know the first or second painting I did, I entered it into a contest at the college, and I won an award, so I had a gift for this design, but in my time we were transitioning to graphic design, graphic design became the big thing, and I never had if I had the aptitude to do computer science, which, bless his soul, my beautiful son is a computer scientist, right, you know, but that gene, this, that gene, skip right on over me. I was not the math person, and when you said physicist, I said, Hmm, that that, you know, that gene just, just totally went around me, Michael Hingson ** 53:41 yeah, so you don't know anything about 32 feet per second squared anyway, no, Kay Thompson ** 53:45 I'm about to say, I trust you, whatever you say, you know, and it's the funny thing is, my father was a mathematician, my older brother was a chemical engineer, and Me, you know that I struggle just to pass geometry. Okay, so no, I was the artsy person. Michael Hingson ** 54:07 Um, that's fine, but I was, yeah. How'd that get you to the media? Kay Thompson ** 54:12 Yeah, so I was going to say, so, the combination what happened is my pastor knew a pastor who was looking for a part time job, looking for someone to have a part time job, because he had a he had his own publishing company in his house. He at the time he was he published a book that we talked about church growth. And this was at the time when the Purpose Driven Life, The Purpose Driven Life was a purpose driven church came out. It was a huge success. And he the same thing happened with him here in Atlanta, but no publishing company wanted to take. Make his story, because that's the, you know, the whole the society was inundated with this purpose driven church, you know, it was already written about. It was already done. They didn't want his story. So he decided to create his own publishing company, and it was in the basement of his mansion, and he was looking for someone to be the secretary. So I came in that I was, it was a friend of a friend of friend. They hired me, and I started working for him as a as a secretary. And then they would bring these books over, and he would, you know, send them out to be edited, and then bring them back. And then I would have to mail it out to the to the printer and one of the books one day, and I saw it, and I noticed there were still typos in it. I said, Sir, there's still typos in your book. Oh, really, yeah. And he had already paid this person $1,000 so I went back through it, found all these typos, and that's how I got into publishing, publishing my own books and and everything like that. But then one day, my pastor said, Hey, Kay, why don't you do a radio show? I was like, okay, sure, right, because I had met so many people in ministry from doing their books. So I called the radio station, the local am station, and I said, Hey, how much does it cost to do a show, blah, blah, blah, blah. And I was sponsored by my pastor and some other people, and I started a 30 minute show every week. It was called personalities, profiles and perspectives, the three teams, and I would interview people, gospel artists, pastors, you know, just politicians, you know, just people. I would reach out to them. Next thing I know, I got hired by a station in another station in Atlanta. It was called wg, I don't know if you remember, well, you, you probably don't, because you're not from Atlanta, right? But it was W G, U N, 10:10am, in Atlanta, the biggest am station aside from WSB radio, which is WSB 750 the major news network, right? WGN, 1010. Was a huge station, and I got hired by them. I was a DJ. It was a gospel station, and I ended up being the program director, and did a lot of, you know, voiceovers. I did shows, I did production. That's how I got into radio. And I loved it. I loved radio. I loved anything to do with media. It was just I knew it. I got bit with the bug when they opened up that hot mic. That was it. I was in my element. So that's how I got into radio. And then you went to TV. And then I went to TV, yeah, went to TV. Well, what happened is, I was writing books, and there is a station here in Atlanta, W ATC TV 57 and they interview people all over, actually, all over the country. You can come from wherever we know, we've had big names, you know, all kinds of people and local people. And that's one thing about it, is that local people in ministry could go there. They could sing, if they were music artists, they could, you know, talk about their books, talk about their ministry. And so I went on and talked about my book, and next thing I know, I got called in to be a host, and so I've been hosting now for about five years. Wow. You know, on and off. You know, the the show has different hosts each, and I do a couple of times a month. Okay, I'll actually be on there shortly, again in a few days. So Michael Hingson ** 58:57 tell us about your books. You've mentioned books several times. Did you publish your own books? Okay, so tell us about your books. Kay Thompson ** 59:06 So yeah, the first four books, well, I've done I've had four books which were on prophecy. The the main title is prophecy in the 21st Century. And then I did four different volumes. The first one was the role of prophecy in the new millennium. And basically that one was written in, I'm going to say around 2012 somewhere about 2012 and it talks about the relevance of prophecy with regard to the millennial generation, and how this you can help steer direct and go alongside millennial mindset, millennial and many millennial aspects of this generation. And then the second book was also the set under the same volume, the same name. Prophecy in the 21st Century, the role of and the second the first one is the role of prophecy in the new millennium. The second one was prophetic healing. And prophetic healing talks about prophecy and healing in the Bible and how prophetic people who operate in the prophetic can help bring forth, healing, societal, healing, relational, healing, physical, healing, financial. And then the third one was about prophetic women. And these are women in the Bible that had a prophetic calling, not necessarily called a prophetess, but display those characteristics of women that operate in Revelation and that sort of gift. And then the fourth one was called the leadership mandate, and it talks about leader and how leaders navigate in the prophetic arena and the characteristics that people ought to have, and leaders in the Bible that also operated in that revelation or that. And then the last book I wrote was called the 30 names, or not the but 30 Names of God, because there are so many more names that God is known by. But I chose 30 names that really stood out to me as what God has called. You know Jehovah Gabor. You know the warrior one fights for us. You know Jehovah Jireh, of course, we know that's our provider. Mm, hmm, Jehovah Rapha, our healer. So I found 30 names that really stood out to me, and I spoke about those in that book. So those are the books that I have, and then I've got another book that will be coming out within the next year, and and it is about healing. So those are my books, and I've published those books. And not only do I, I didn't start off publishing my own books. I started off publishing for other people, right? Because the more I worked in that field, the more I found that I could do better financially if I did it myself. Yeah, so and I, and I, one thing about it is that as a result of being an artist, that the graphic design, computer graphics, came really easy to me, I'll bet. So, yeah, so someone could hand me a manuscript. I had the editing skills right for my mother. So I could edit your book. I could create the design. I could format it. I You. Hand me your manuscript, I hand you back your finished product. So for me, you know, the cheapest person that you know, I pay the least amount because so I can publish as many books as I could write, probably, you know, but that's how I really got started doing that, and then I began to do it for other people, other leaders, other pastors, friends, you know, just people that want that service. I provide that service. And so that's how that really got started. Michael Hingson ** 1:03:12 Now we don't have a lot of time, but I just curious. You also do something in real estate. Kay Thompson ** 1:03:19 I do, yeah, I I got my license in 2005 and maybe one year, maybe one year, and then I got out of it right away. Life happened, and then I came back in 2022, and began to did it full time. And so I love it. I love real estate. Right now I'm in residential, but I do some commercial, and the ultimate goal is to do mostly commercial and to have a space. The goal for commercial is to really help others entrepreneurs who are interested in having businesses offline, giving them an opportunity to have a space that is little to nothing, and that's one of the ways that I really want to give back, is to be able to offer that opportunity for people out there to help others to achieve that same goal. And so I believe in entrepreneur. I've been an entrepreneur for 17 years now. So, yeah, have a heart for that. So I want to see other people get through that challenge and be successful. So, and I know it takes money, Michael Hingson ** 1:04:37 but in real estate helps. Kay Thompson ** 1:04:39 It definitely helps. Yeah? Well, real estate is constantly going up, you know, even if the market is down and even if finances are down, real estate is something that is immovable, Michael Hingson ** 1:04:52 so go back up. Speaker 1 ** 1:04:54 Yeah, yeah, for sure, and Michael Hingson ** 1:04:57 you clearly enjoy everything that you're. Doing, which is the important thing, yes, I have that is that is really cool, and I am so glad that we had a chance to talk about all this, needless to say, and I want to thank you for being on unstoppable mindset. Clearly, you have an unstoppable mindset, and you exhibited in so many ways. So I really want to thank you, but I also want to thank all of you for listening out there, wherever you happen to be, if you'd like to reach out to KK, how can people find you? Kay Thompson ** 1:05:31 They can go to my website. It is my name, K Thompson, dot, O, R, G, all my books are there? Contact information, some of my podcasts. You can watch some of Atlanta live the videos of the shows. It's all on my website, Michael Hingson ** 1:05:49 all right, and that's in in the notes and so on. So, k, a, y, T, H, O, M, P, S O, n.org, correct. So hope that you'll all go there and and check Kay out and and communicate with her. I'm sure that she would love, and I would love to know what you think and get your thoughts about today. So please feel free to email me at Michael, H, I m, I C, H, A, E, L, H i at accessibe, A, C, C, E, S, S, I B, e.com, wherever you're observing our podcast today, please give us a five star rating. We value very highly your reviews, and we, of course, love them most when you give us a five star review. So please do that. And Kay, for you and for everyone who is out there today, if you know anyone else who ought to be on unstoppable mindset, I would really appreciate it if you'd introduce us and we will bring them on the podcast, because we're always looking for people who have stories to tell about their lives and being unstoppable. So please don't hesitate to let us know. You can also go to our podcast page, which is Michael hingson, M, I, C, H, A, E, L, H, I N, G, s o n.com/podcast, so we'd love you to do that as well. But again, really appreciate all you being out there and listening to us and and I'm sure you you like, like, I have gotten some wonderful things out of talking with case. Okay, once again, I want to thank you for being here. This has been absolutely wonderful. Kay Thompson ** 1:07:22 Well, thank you. I really enjoyed it. I appreciate you asking me to be here and just so glad to be able to share with you today your audience. Really appreciate it. Michael Hingson ** 1:07:37 You have been listening to the Unstoppable Mindset podcast. Thanks for dropping by. I hope that you'll join us again next week, and in future weeks for upcoming episodes. To subscribe to our podcast and to learn about upcoming episodes, please visit www dot Michael hingson.com slash podcast. Michael Hingson is spelled m i c h a e l h i n g s o n. While you're on the site., please use the form there to recommend people who we ought to interview in upcoming editions of the show. And also, we ask you and urge you to invite your friends to join us in the future. If you know of any one or any organization needing a speaker for an event, please email me at speaker at Michael hingson.com. I appreciate it very much. To learn more about the concept of blinded by fear, please visit www dot Michael hingson.com forward slash blinded by fear and while you're there, feel free to pick up a copy of my free eBook entitled blinded by fear. The unstoppable mindset podcast is provided by access cast an initiative of accessiBe and is sponsored by accessiBe. Please visit www.accessibe.com . AccessiBe is spelled a c c e s s i b e. There you can learn all about how you can make your website inclusive for all persons with disabilities and how you can help make the internet fully inclusive by 2025. Thanks again for Listening. Please come back and visit us again next week.
Zu Gast im Studio: Elias Zechmeister & Paul Arzberger Nachdem die beiden jungen Männer bereits im Februar über ihre ersten Eindrücke zu ihrem freiwilligen Umweltjahr im Nationalparkradio berichtet haben, machen wir jetzt einen gesamten Jahresrückblick. Was war alles zu tun? Wie war die Unterbringung – aus dem einsamen Haus im Winter wurde eine quirlige WG im Sommer und was sind die Pläne für die Zukunft. Als Bindeglied zwischen den Arbeitsstellen und den Freiwilligen fungiert die Jugend-Umwelt-Plattform JUMP. https://jugendumwelt.at/ Für 2026 wurden schon Freiwillige gefunden, Interessierte Personen für 2027 werden aber noch gesucht. Gestaltung und Moderation: Andi Hollinger
250828PC Kinderbuchautor arbeitet seine Lebensgeschichte aufMensch Mahler am 28.08.2025Das SAMS kennt jeder. Die rüsselnasige und blaugepunktete Figur hat Generationen von Kindern in seinen Bann gezogen. Der Autor von Sams, Paul Maar, ist inzwischen 87. Und im Alter hat er sich einem anderen Thema zugewandt als lustigen Kinderbüchern: Vor 5 Jahren hat er Buch über seine Kindheit veröffentlicht, das vom frühen Tod der Mutter und einem ignoranten, brutalen Vater handelt. „Wie alles kam – Roman meiner Kindheit“ hieß das Werk.Und jetzt kam eine Novelle heraus, die von Lorna handelt.Lorna lehnt sich an das Leben von Maars Schwester Barbara an. Die fiktive Lorna leidet wie Barbara an einer biopolaren Störung. Der Autor nimmt beängstigende Veränderungen an Lorna wahr. Sie beginnt ein Verhältnis mit einem wildfremden Mann, der sie ausnutzt. Lorna wird aggressiv und beleidigend. „Mir schien es, als hätte sie ihr Gehirn umgestülpt und damit einer anderen Persönlichkeit Zutritt zu ihrem Körper verschafft“ schreibt Maar.Nachdem Lorna in ihrer WG einen Brand gelegt hat, wird sie in die Psychiatrie eingewiesen. Dort wird sie mit Tabletten ruhiggestellt und gleicht immer mehr einem Zombie.Mich hat das Buch so aufgerüttelt und verstört, weil ich in meiner eigenen Familie eine bipolare Störung erlebt und durchlitten habe. Mit keinem guten Ausgang. Paul Maar verarbeitet in der Novelle nicht nur seine eigenen traumatischen Erfahrungen mit seiner Schwester, vielmehr kann man „Lorna“ auch als bittere Kritik an dem damaligen Psychiatriesystem lesen. Und aus bitterer Erfahrung ergänze ich: auch am heutigen.Für alle Betroffenen und für alle am Thema Interessierten sehrt zu empfehlen: „Lorna“ von Paul Maar, erschienen im S. Fischer Verlag, 112 Seiten kosten 22 Euro. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Poseł Ireneusz Raś ocenia, że prezydent Karol Nawrocki poprzez weta chce pokazać, kto rządzi w Polsce. Wg parlamentarzysty takie działanie jest mało dojrzałe, pozbawione podstaw merytorycznych.
In ihrer Jugend waren die aus dem oberbayerischen Wasserburg stammenden Zwillinge Elisabeth und Johanna Seitz ambitionierte Basketballspielerinnen. Nach dem Abitur wollten sie nur übergangsweise Musik studieren, doch sie blieben dabei und zählen heute zu den führenden Interpretinnen auf Salterio und Barockharfe. Sie leben in einer WG und haben sich auch in schwierigen Zeiten immer bestärkt.
A #FriendOf5E comes through for his WG debut! Associate Professor of History at Trinity Washington University Dr. Joshua K. Wright comes through off the back of his appearance on "Diggin' In The Digits" in November '22 to plug his new book "The NBA's Global Empire: How the League Became an International Powerhouse".We get into his beginnings, his journey in Academia; his love of Basketball, the challenges of making a Sports book that's not a Biography and, of course, his Top 5.Thank you for listening! If you want to contribute to the show, whether it be sending me questions or voicing your opinion in any way, peep the contact links below and I'll respond accordingly. Let me know "What's Good?"Rate & ReviewE-Mail: the5thelelmentpub@gmail.comTwitter & IG: @The5thElementUKWebsite: https://the5thelement.co.ukPhotography: https://www.crt.photographyIntro Music - "Baxter" By Brock BerriganInterlude - "If I Tried" By BirocraticChillHop MusicOther Podcasts Under The 5EPN:Diggin' In The Digits5EPN RadioBlack Women Watch...In Search of SauceThe Beauty Of Independence
Die erste Niederlage der Saison ist da – und die Jungs sind mal wieder bedient. Aber nicht, weil die Mannschaft komplett versagt hätte. Nein, es sind die Nebenschauplätze, die ihnen die Laune verhageln: ein VAR und Schiedsrichterentscheidungen zum Stirne runzeln, ein Thorsten Lieberknecht als Dauerstörer, der nervt wie eine kaputte Vuvuzela, und Fußball zum Abgewöhnen. Natürlich gibt's auch persönliche Einblicke: Der eine verfolgt das Drama in der Kneipe – inklusive Schweiß, Bier und Flüchen – während der andere in der WG verzweifelt versucht, sein Sofa nicht anzuschreien. Gemeinsam verarbeiten und analysieren sie das Spiel und hoffen dass es im Pokal am nächsten Sonntag dann wieder besser wird.Also viel Spaß beim Zuhören und Glück Auf!!!https://www.instagram.com/schalkedienordkurveundich/Newsmusik: https://www.musicfox.com/info/kostenlose-gemafreie-musik.php Intromusik by Ronald Kah - Amanda Intro
「そこあに」900回目は、「新機動戦記ガンダムW」特集です。 サンライズによる「機動武闘伝Gガンダム」に次ぐガンダム「オルタナティブシリーズ」、監督 池田成・高松信司、シリーズ構成 隅沢克之、キャラクターデザイン 村瀬修 […]
„Nein, zurück nach Hause ziehen, möchte ich nicht!“, sagt die 21-jährige Maja entschieden. Seit kurzem wohnt sie in der inklusiven WG „Super 8“ – und fühlt sich dort pudelwohl. Auch für ihre Mutter Katja Sengelmann ist das ein großer Schritt. Denn der Weg zur eigenen WG war lang. Acht Jahre lang arbeitete sie mit fünf anderen Eltern daran, diesen Wohntraum für ihre Tochter mit geistiger Behinderung Wirklichkeit werden zu lassen. Denn eines war früh klar: Ein Leben lang bei den Eltern wohnen, das kam weder für sie noch für Maja infrage. Unterstützung kam vom Verein WOHN:SINN, der inklusive Wohnprojekte im deutschsprachigen Raum begleitet. Gemeinsam mit Katja berichtet Vereinsgründer Tobias Polsfuß, was es alles zu beachten gibt – von rechtlichen Fragen über Assistenzen bis hin zur Finanzierung. Ehrliche Einblicke und wertvolle Impulse für alle, die sich ein selbstbestimmtes Leben für ihr Kind in den eigenen vier Wänden wünschen.
In dieser besonderen Live-Ausgabe von Music Made in Germany begrüßt Miriam Audrey Hannah den Singer-Songwriter Michael Schulte zu einem unvergesslichen Abend in Trier. Persönlich, charmant und mit jeder Menge Humor spricht Michael über sein Leben als Musiker und Vater, seine Zeit mit Max Giesinger in der WG, den ESC-Durchbruch – und warum Kinder ihn konsequent mit vollem Namen ansprechen. Mit viel Herzlichkeit führt Miriam durch Publikumsfragen, spontane Überraschungen (inklusive Geburtstagsständchen!) und intime Geschichten, die zeigen, warum Michael Schulte nicht nur musikalisch, sondern auch menschlich begeistert. Ob Haarpflege, Tour-Erlebnisse mit seinen Kindern oder Gedanken zum Ruhm – dieser Abend ist ein echtes Highlight für alle Fans von ehrlicher Musik made in Germany.
Diese Folge ist ein Flashback in meine Studienzeit an der FH Münster. Erfahre, wie ich zwischen WG, Nebenjob und Selbstzweifeln meinen Weg als Unternehmerin gefunden habe. Jetzt Podcastfolge anhören.
Wie passiert Veränderung in Kirche und was hat Verlernendamit zu tun? In dieser Sonderfolge beschäftigen sich Katharina Haubold und Daniel Wegner mit dem Thema „Verlernen, um zu lernen“. Die Podcast-Folge ist im Rahmen des EKM-Gemeindekongresses in Erfurt entstanden und diskutiert daher auch, Erfahrungen aus den Erprobungsräumen in Kirche. Sie ist für alle interessant, die Gemeinde in Zeiten großer Veränderungen prägen und begleiten wollen. Katharina Haubold (*1986) arbeitet als Referentin fürFresh X an der CVJM Hochschule und als Gemeindepädagogin im Kirchenkreis Köln-Rechtsrheinisch. Sie wohnt in Köln und ist gerne weite Strecken mit dem Rad unterwegs. Daniel Wegner (*1987) lebt in einer WG in Marburg undvertritt die Professur für Soziale Arbeit und diakonischen Handeln an der CVJM-Hochschule in Kassel. In seiner Freizeit hört er Deutschrap und spielt Beachvolleyball. Shownotes:Bateson, G. (Hrsg.). (1981a). Ökologie des Geistes. Anthropologische, psychologische, biologische und epistemologische Perspektiven. Suhrkamp.Betz, G. (2006). Lernkontexte. Die Lerntheorie von GregoryBateson. Gedanken und Anwendungsversuche. Ruhr-Universität Bochum. https://homepage.ruhr-uni-bochum.de/gregor.betz/bateson/bateson-lerntheorie.pdfhttps://www.haltung-entscheidet.deHattie, John. Visible Learning for Teachers: MaximizingImpact on Learning. Routledge, 2012.Kühl, S. (2011). Organisationen: Eine sehr kurze Einführung.Springer VS.Schwer, Christina & Solzbacher, Claudia (Hg.)Professionelle pädagogische Haltung. Historische, theoretische und empirische Zugänge zu einem viel strapazierten Begriff: Bad Heilbrunn: Julius Klinkhardt,2014. 224 Seiten, kartoniert; EUR 18,90, ISBN 978-3-7815-1967-1Trabandt, S., & Wagner, H.-J. (2023). PädagogischesGrundwissen für das Studium der Sozialen Arbeit: Ein Kompendium (2. überarbeitete Auflage). UTB.Wegner, D. (2023). Kooperationen zwischen Diakonie undKirche. Theologische Aspekte und Praxisanalysen zur Gemeinwesendiakonie (Bd. 68). Evangelische Verlagsanstalt.
Die DJ WG; Toby Romeo, Felice und Manni, der Hausmeister der WG behandeln ehrlich, herzlich und 100% identifiziert die Themen Festivals, elektronische Musik, Genres und das WG Leben! Dieser Podcast wird produziert von BuzzButter.
Korespondent Tomasz Grzywaczewski komentuje najnowszą odsłonę polityki Donalda Trumpa względem Władimira Putina. Wg jednego z senatorów próba zwodzenia Trumpa to wielki błąd prezydenta Rosji.
Heute stellen euch Sabine und Manfred zwei Romane vor. Im ersten Teil hört ihr die Vorstellung des Buches : “Von hier aus weiter“ von Susann Pásztor. Die Autorin, die ehrenamtlich als Sterbebegleiterin tätig ist,schafft es, ohne jegliche Sentimentalität aber mit berührender Leichtigkeit über den Tod zu schreiben. Sie versteht es, einfühlsam und lebensnah Marlenes Gefühle zwischen Trauer, Wut und Hoffnung zu verdeutlichen, um uns deren Handeln verständlich zu machen. Letztlich ist es aber die gelungene Balance zwischen Ernsthaftigkeit, Warmherzigkeit sowie dem lockerem Witz, der in Dialogen und einzelnen Szenen auszumachen ist, die dieses lebensbejahende Buch so lesenswert macht. Mit ihrem Humor nimmt uns die Autorin die Schwere des Themas, über das jederzeit nachzudenken zweifellos wichtig ist. Danach hört ihr eine Besprechung über das Buch von Isabel Bogdan : „Wohnverwandschaften“ Um was geht es in diesem Buch? Hier der Klappentext : Eine Wohngemeinschaft, in der vier Menschen unterschiedlichen Alters aus unterschiedlichen Motiven zusammenleben . Constanze zieht nach der Trennung von ihrem Lebensgefährten in die Wohngemeinschaft von Jörg, Anke und Murat. Was zunächst als Übergangslösung gedacht war, entpuppt sich als zunehmend stabil. Da ist Jörg, dem die Wohnung gehört und der eine große Reise plant; Anke, die als mittelalte Schauspielerin kaum noch gebucht wird und plötzlich nicht mehr die einzige Frau in der WG ist; und Murat, der sich einfach keine Sorgen machen will und dessen Lebenslust auf die anderen mitreißend und manchmal auch strapazierend wirkt. Constanze sorgt als Neuankömmling dafür, dass sich die bisherige Tektonik gehörig verschiebt. Alle vier haben ihre eigenen Träume und Sehnsüchte und müssen sich irgendwann der Frage stellen, ob sie eine reine Zweck-WG sind oder doch die Wahlfamilie.
Was passiert, wenn man plötzlich im Finale von Germany's Next Topmodel steht – und zu Beginn der Model-Karriere noch mit Heidi Klum in einer WG in Mailand gewohnt hat? In dieser Folge von „Mensch, Meike!“ erzählt Model Nicole Reitbauer, Finalistin bei GNTM 2023, ihre ganz persönliche Model-Story: Von den ersten Schritten auf dem Laufsteg bis zum Leben als Best-Age-Model. Mit Meike spricht Model Nicole Reitbauer auch offen über den Alltag hinter den Kulissen von GNTM und verrät, wie das Best Ager Model das berühmte und legendäre Nackt-Shooting bei Germany's Next Topmodel erlebt hat. Mehr über das aufregende Model-Leben von Ü50 Model Nicole Reitbauer, ihre Erfahrungen auf dem Laufsteg und bei Fotoshootings hört ihr in dieser Folge von „Mensch, Meike!“. Viel Spaß beim Zuhören!
Dies ist der zweite Teil des Gesprächs. Wenn ihr den ersten Teil noch nicht gehört habt, fangt am besten dort an! Diesmal zu Gast: Die Musikerin und Künstlerin Anja Huwe aus Hamburg. Anja war Sängerin der 1980 gegründeten Band Xmal Deutschland. Xmal Deutschland veröffentlichten in den Jahren 1983-1989 vier Alben. Jan spricht mit Anja über das Hamburg der 70er Jahre, über Übungsräume, den Rip-Off-Plattenladen, eine ganz besondere WG auf St. Pauli und natürlich über die Entstehung der Band Xmal Deutschland und ihren Weg nach England zum exquisiten Label 4AD. Anja berichtet Jan, warum sich Xmal Deutschland im Jahr 1990 auflösten und von ihrer Zeit beim Fernsehsender VIVA, wo sie für progressive Formate zuständig war. Außerdem kommt in dem Gespräch eine lebensbedrohliche Situation zur Sprache, die Anja erleben musste und überwinden konnte. Schließlich spricht Jan mit Anja über ihre Tätigkeit als bildende Künstlerin und ihren musikalischen Neuanfang als Solokünstlerin. Viel Spaß beim Hören!
In dieser Folge nehmen euch Jacob und Gabriel mit auf eine unterhaltsame Reise durch die österreichische Kultur: Warum gibt es so viele Feiertage? Was hat es mit Fenstertagen auf sich? Warum eröffnen Tiroler:innen eigene WGs in Wien – und was wird da wirklich versteckt? Außerdem gibt's ein Sommer-Tanktop-Drama, einen echten Polizeieinsatz beim Essen und Jacobs große Liste der Dinge, die er in Österreich einfach nicht versteht.Highlights der Folge:
Diesmal zu Gast: Die Musikerin und Künstlerin Anja Huwe aus Hamburg. Anja war Sängerin der 1980 gegründeten Band Xmal Deutschland. Xmal Deutschland veröffentlichten in den Jahren 1983-1989 vier Alben. Jan spricht mit Anja über das Hamburg der 70er Jahre, über Übungsräume, den Rip-Off-Plattenladen, eine ganz besondere WG auf St. Pauli und natürlich über die Entstehung der Band Xmal Deutschland und ihren Weg nach England zum exquisiten Label 4AD. Anja berichtet Jan, warum sich Xmal Deutschland im Jahr 1990 auflösten und von ihrer Zeit beim Fernsehsender VIVA, wo sie für progressive Formate zuständig war. Außerdem kommt in dem Gespräch eine lebensbedrohliche Situation zur Sprache, die Anja erleben musste und überwinden konnte. Schließlich spricht Jan mit Anja über ihre Tätigkeit als bildende Künstlerin und ihren musikalischen Neuanfang als Solokünstlerin. Viel Spaß beim Hören!
Berlin: Traumstadt für alle, die das Party-Herz am rechten Fleck haben. Daniela will deshalb seit Jahren von ihrem minikleinen Dorf in die große Hauptstadt ziehen. Und diesen Traum setzt sie dann auch gemeinsam mit ihrer besten Freundin in die Tat um, als die Glocken zum Studienbeginn läuten. Sie ziehen in eine WG - aber getreu Peter Fox' Song "Alles glänzt so schön neu" ist das nicht das einzige, was Daniela in ihrem Leben umkrempeln will: Sie fühlt die Beziehung mit ihrem Freund in der Heimat nämlich nicht mehr so richtig... Und der Typ, den sie immer wieder in ihrem Lieblingscafé sieht, ist wirklich sehr, sehr cute. Spillt euren JUICE! Entweder per Mail an juice@kugelundniere.com oder slidet uns in die DMs bei Instagram und TikTok. Die ganze Folge könnt ihr als Video bei Spotify oder auf YouTube anschauen - viel Fun dabei! Du möchtest Werbung im Podcast buchen oder mehr über unsere Werbepartner erfahren? Hier findest du alle Infos & Rabatte JUICE ist eine Produktion von Kugel und Niere. Mit Lea Dakowski und Lina Kempenich. Zum Team gehören außerdem Şahika Tetik und Pauline Claßen Audioproduktion: Joé Fleischhauer Executive Producer: Anna Bühler Intromusik: Robert Sladeczek Cover: Philipp Wortmann Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Mit «Il Ritorno in Patria» schuf W. G. Sebald ein Stück Weltliteratur. Die autobiografisch anmutende Erzählung handelt vor allem von der Sehnsucht nach Heimat – und von der unerbittlichen Gegenwart der Erinnerung. Mit Originaltönen von W. G. Sebald. Wer das Hörspiel am Radio hören will: Samstag, 31.05.2025, 20.00 Uhr, Radio SRF 2 Kultur Ein Ausgewanderter kehrt nach dreissig Jahren in seine Heimat zurück, ins kleine Allgäuer Dorf Wertach. Er will überprüfen, «ob das, was in meiner Fantasie von diesem Ort noch existiert, tatsächlich auffindbar ist». Einzig seiner Schulfreundin Anna gibt er sich zu erkennen, sie lebt noch immer im gleichen Haus wie damals. Gemeinsam beschwören die beiden die Welt der Kindheit. Den Erzähler begleitet während der ganzen Reise ein gespenstischer Schatten, ein Doppelgänger, der sich mit düsteren Vorhersagen zu Wort meldet. Am Ende stirbt ein Jäger, ein krankes Kind kommt gerade noch mit dem Leben davon – und eine unerwartete Einsicht treibt den Ausgewanderten zum zweiten Mal zur Flucht aus der Heimat. ____________________ Mit: August Zirner (Erzähler), Crescentia Dünsser (Anna Ambroser), Paul Bartdorff (Max), Catalina Bartdorff (Anna, jung), Monica Anna Cammerlander (Bedienerin), Christian Heller (Holzknecht), Jürg Kienberger (Dr. Piazolo), Händl Klaus (Tiroler Polizist), Karl Knaup (Bauer Erd), Martin Ostermeier (Zollbeamter), Mona Petri (Fräulein Rauch), Seraphina Schweiger (Romana), Gabi Striegl (Rezeptionistin) sowie W. G. Sebald (Wanderer) ____________________ Musik: Cico Beck – Tontechnik: Basil Kneubühler – Dramaturgie: Wolfram Höll – Hörspielfassung und Regie: Ralf Bücheler und Johannes Mayr ____________________ Produktion: SRF/ORF 2021 ____________________ Dauer: 50'
BRUCKNER – das sind die beiden Brüder Jakob und Matti Bruckner. Aufgewachsen in einer großen musikalischen Familie am Chiemsee mit viel Sport, Natur und idyllischer Dorfjugend, zieht es sie nicht nur als Brüder gemeinsam auf die Bühne, sondern auch in eine große WG unweit von München. Ihr Debüt-Album „Hier“ erschien 2020, das zweite Album „Zerrissen“ 2023. Ihr Musikstil wird als Indie-Pop 2.0 beschrieben. Neue Mucke steht für 2025 in den Startlöchern.Wir sprechen mit Jakob und Matti über ihr WG-Leben, was es bedeutet als Brüder gemeinsam Musik zu machen, wie sie zu BRUCKNER wurden, die Überforderung und Zerrissenheit ihrer Generation, den Fluch und Segen von Social Media, ihre Arbeitsaufteilung im kreativen Prozess und wer von Beiden eigentlich der „Träumer“ und wer das „Arbeitstier“ ist.Es geht um guilty pleasures, GenZ, Leben in Gemeinschaft, das Aufbrechen musikalischer Genres und gute Sommergetränke.Wenn Matti und Jakob sich nicht gerade damit beschäftigen, was ein „sinnvolles Leben“ ausmacht und ob es das überhaupt gibt, machen sie zum Ausgleich gerne Sport (Jakob) oder töpfern ne Runde (Matti).Bühne frei für BRUCKNER: They are HERE TO GET HEARD!Dies ist eine Produktion von SENTAHOOD in Zusammenarbeit mit THOMANN supported by SHURE.LINKS:Hier findet ihr uns auf YouTube:https://www.youtube.com/@heretogetheard BRUCKNER:https://shop.bruckner-musik.de/merchhttps://www.instagram.com/bruckner/?hl=deTHOMANN:https://www.thomann.de/de/index.htmlhttps://www.tiktok.com/@thomann.musichttps://www.instagram.com/thomann.musichttps://www.youtube.com/@ThomannMusicBLOG:https://www.thomann.de/blog/de/here-to-get-heard-buehne-frei-fuer-staffel-4-des-musikpodcasts/SHURE:https://www.thomann.de/de/social_shure-podcast-creator-gear.htmlSENTA-SOFIA DELLIPONTI:https://sentamusic.de/SENTAHOOD:https://www.sentahood.de/ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In dieser Update-Folge sprechen wir mit Moritz Schmoranzer, der nach seinem ersten Jahr bei den Pitt Panthers den Schritt ins Transfer Portal gewagt hat – und nun bei Appalachian State neu angreift. Schmo teilt offen, was in Pittsburgh nicht gepasst hat, wie der Wechsel ablief, warum er sich für App State entschieden hat – und wie es ist, künftig gemeinsam mit Felix Doege auf dem Feld zu stehen. Wir sprechen über: seinen emotionalen Abschied von Pittsburgh das Leben im Scout-Team & der Umgang mit Rückschlägen das Transfer Portal als Speed-Dating der besonderen Art seinen Neustart bei App State inkl. Rolle, Position & Erwartungen die neue deutsche WG im „Bavarian Village“ und welche Rolle Merch-Artikel im Familienkontext gespielt haben
Klingt bekannt? Du sitzt gerade im Büro, willst eigentlich nur ungestört arbeiten – und zack: Die Führungskommunikation läuft so richtig quer. Oder kennst Du diese Meetings, in denen einfach niemand so richtig zuhört und am Ende jeder nur denkt: „Was war das denn jetzt?“ Willkommen in Teil 2 unserer Mini-Serie zur achtsamen Führung! In der heutigen Folge geht es um Verbindung statt Kontrolle. Führung ist keine Visitenkarte, sondern Beziehungsarbeit – ja, selbst an der Supermarktkasse! Ich zeige Dir, warum Führungskommunikation viel öfter an zu wenig Klarheit oder ausufernder Harmonie scheitert, als Du denkst. Und wie Du mit der richtigen Balance aus Empathie und Klarheit nicht nur cooler durchs Arbeitsleben gehst, sondern auch das Vertrauen Deines Teams stärkst. Freu Dich auf: Zwei mega-einfache Tools, mit denen Du ab morgen souveräner agierst; Warum Klarheit & Empathie nicht wie Öl und Wasser sein müssen, sondern die perfekte Führungs-WG bilden; Wie Du Fehlkommunikation entlarvst und echten Dialog in Deinen Arbeitsalltag bringst; Und natürlich zwei knackige Reflexionsfragen, die Dich direkt ins Handeln bringen. Lust auf noch mehr? Ich hab sogar eine richtig gute Buchempfehlung für Deine Leadership-Bibliothek parat! Also: Nix wie reinhören, reflektieren und dann: SEI die Veränderung, die Du sehen willst! Dein Justus SUCHST DU UNTERSTÜTZUNG? Wenn Du Justus Ludwig als Coach und Begleiter für Deinen Weg der bewussten Veränderung und Transformation mit Achtsamkeit haben möchtest, dann komm in den Mind-Up Circle – Deiner regelmäßigen Verabredung mit Achtsamkeit – Du lernst und übst Achtsamkeit im Alltag und wirst live von Justus gecoacht – jede Woche – in einer Gruppe – melde Dich dazu an unter: mind-up@mehrwert-achtsamkeit.de DU FRAGST - ICH ANTWORTE: Stelle mir gerne Deine konkrete Frage oder berichte von Deiner konkreten Herausforderung. In regelmäßigen Abständen wähle ich Fragen aus und beantworte sie ganz individuell in einer Podcast-Episode.
"Das brennende Gewissen" - Uwe Kullnick spricht mit Christof Weigold - Hörbahn on Stage(Hördauer Lesung ca. 36 min, Hördauer Gespräch ca. 70 min)Zum ersten Mal seit dem plötzlichen Tod seiner Freundin vor zwei Jahren hat der Münchener Fallanalytiker Felix Petry sich zu einem Blind Date durchgerungen. Doch das romantische Abendessen im Shalom, dem jüdischen Restaurant seines Stiefvaters, wird von einem Anruf aus der Mordkommission gestört: Die fünfundsiebzigjährige Buchhändlerin Erica Mrosko ist in ihrer Schwabinger Altbauwohnung erstochen worden, am Tatort wurde ein an Petry adressierter leerer Briefumschlag gefunden. Dieser kannte die Frau nicht – was hatte sie ihm mitzuteilen? Petry wird gezwungen, sich mit der Vergangenheit zu beschäftigen – auch seiner eigenen in einer Kommune. Er ermittelt mit seiner Methode der Operativen Fallanalyse, bei der er den Tathergang Schritt für Schritt rekonstruiert und intuitiv ein Täterprofil entwickelt. Dabei gerät er ständig mit der ehrgeizigen jungen Hauptkommissarin Alina Schmidt aneinander, die die Ermittlungen leitet. Aber bald schon haben die beiden zwei heiße Spuren. Eine führt in eine Alt-68er- WG, eine andere zu einem hochbrisanten und ungeklärten Fall aus dem Jahr 1970: dem Brandanschlag auf das jüdische Seniorenheim in der Reichenbachstraße, bei dem sieben Bewohnerinnen und Bewohner ermordet worden sind. ...Christof Weigold, 1966 in Mannheim geboren, schrieb Theaterstücke, war fester Autor der Harald-Schmidt-Show und arbeitet heute als freier Drehbuchautor für Film und Fernsehen. 2018 erschien der erste Band der Reihe um den deutschen Privatermittler Hardy Engel, Der Mann, der nicht mitspielt. Weigold gewann damit den Preis des Mordsharz-Festivals für das beste deutschsprachige Debüt und war für den Glauser-Preis nominiert. Es folgten drei weitere Teile: Der blutrote Teppich, Die letzte Geliebte und Der böse Vater. In Das brennende Gewissen ermittelt zum ersten Mal der Fallanalytiker Felix Petry, der wie Christof Weigold in München lebt.Wenn Ihnen dieser Beitrag gefallen hat, hören Sie doch auch einmal hier hineinoder vielleicht in diese SendungKommen Sie doch auch einfach mal zu unseren Live-Aufzeichnungen nach SchwabingRedaktion und Realisation Uwe Kullnick
Lesung. Eine bemerkenswerte WG in den USA: Zwei Menschen, beide traumatisiert und abhängig, halten einander - so gut sie es können - am Leben. Ocean Vuong über einen Roman, der mit dem amerikanischen Traum bricht.
In dieser Podcast-Folge dreht sich alles um die entscheidenden Kennzahlen bei der WG-Vermietung. Wer erfolgreich in WG-geeignete Immobilien investieren möchte, muss die Zahlen kennen – und verstehen, was wirklich zählt. Ich zeige dir, worauf du achten solltest, um deine Rendite zu maximieren und typische Fehler zu vermeiden.Du erfährst:✅ welche Kennzahlen bei der WG-Vermietung wirklich relevant sind✅ wie du deine Kalkulation richtig aufbaust✅ wie du das Potenzial deiner Immobilie optimal ausschöpfstDiese Folge ist perfekt für alle, die überlegen, in WG-Vermietung einzusteigen oder bereits dabei sind und ihre Strategie optimieren wollen.
Während einige seiner Mannschaftskollegen in dieser Woche etwas abschalten können, ist unser heutiger Gast zum zweiten Mal in Folge Teil der DHB-Auswahl. Miro Schluroff spricht an seinem freien Tag vor der Reise zur Nationalmannschaft mit Moderatorin Anett Sattler unter anderem über die Entscheidung für das DHB-Team, trotz einer Anfrage aus Österreich. Im Laufe seiner Karriere lebte Schluroff bei zwei Stationen in einer WG mit damaligen Teamkollegen. Besonders lustig wurde es dabei für die Nachbarschaft in Minden. Außerdem berichtet Schluroff von seiner etwas anderen Ausbildung in Berlin, warum er als „Diener“ von Bob Hanning bezeichnet wurde und welchen Einfluss Christian Zeitz beim Krafttraining sowie beim Wichteln auf ihn hatte. Viel Spaß mit Folge #129 von „Hand aufs Harz“ mit Miro Schluroff.
In dieser Folge erfahrt ihr ob wir den 17h Flug mit Baby überlebt haben und mit welchem Cheat wir dabei sogar den Jetlag überlisten konnten. Außerdem gibt es ein kleines Update von den ersten Tage hier auf Bali und wir verraten euch die ersten Infos zum Film, den wir hier vor Ort drehen werden. Natürlich wie immer im Gepäck ein paar aktuelle Short News und wir klären warum David jetzt mit Manuel Neuer in einer WG wohnt. All das und vieles mehr in dieser Ausgabe von Short Night. Instagram: @lenameckel / @davidhelmutBewerbung für Film-Komparsen an: michele@anyagency.de
Czy innowacje technologiczne mogą przenikać ze świata sportu do zarządzania miastem? "Mogą i powinny" - twierdzi Narek Parsamyan, doktorant z Politechniki Gdańskiej i ekspert od inteligentnych miast. Wg niego niektóre rozwiązania ze stadionów mogą być wykorzystywane przy projektowaniu miast. Chodzi m.in. o rozwiązania, jak monitorowanie tłumu, rozpoznawanie twarzy i zarządzanie ruchem kibiców mogą być wykorzystane na ulicach miast. Są już nawet pierwsze, dość nieśmiałe podejścia do ich stosowania. Dlaczego miasta nie stawiają sportu w centrum rozwoju? Dlaczego powinny? I jakie technologie można do tego zastosować? Właśnie takie tematy poruszamy w dzisiejszym odcinku. Na podcast zaprasza Joanna Sosnowska. Podcast jest częścią akcji Zaprojektowane po ludzku. Szczęśliwe sąsiedztwa. Więcej informacji: Wyborcza.pl/zaprojektowanepoludzku
Markus Freitag gründete 1993 gemeinsam mit seinem Bruder Daniel das Unternehmen FREITAG, das heute weltweit für seine ikonischen Taschen aus LKW-Planen bekannt ist.Aus ihrer kleinen WG in Zürich heraus bauten die beiden Brüder eine globale Marke auf, die heute über 250 Mitarbeitende beschäftigt, mehr als 30 FREITAG Stores von Shanghai bis Zürich betreibt und ihre Produkte in über 25 Ländern verkauft.Weil Markus im Herzen ein Tüftler und Designer geblieben ist, hat er sich nicht auf seinen Lorbeeren ausgeruht. Vor einigen Jahren widmete er sich einem neuen Projekt und rief die Cargo-Velo-Marke FLINC Cycles ins Leben.----KAPITEL(00:00) Intro: Markus Freitag(00:59) Gebrüder Freitag: Tüftlergeister seit der Kindheit(10:29) Idee für FREITAG Taschen(21:32) Entstehungsgeschichte von FREITAG(28:51) Medienaufmerksamkeit und erste Verkäufe(36:12) Erster FREITAG Store (Container Turm)(42:14) Erste Standorte im Ausland(47:25) FREITAG Manifesto Teil 1(51:10) Kreislaufwirtschaft(01:00:34) Business vs. Kreativität(01:04:58) Flinc Cycles(01:12:58) FREITAG Manifesto Teil 2(01:20:27) Auf was bist du stolz?(01:23:47) Organisation und persönliche Arbeitsweise(01:29:05) FREITAG Community-----LINKS UND RESSOURCEN- FREITAG Webseite -https://freitag.ch - FREITAG Manifesto -https://freitag.ch/de_CH/mission/about-freitag/manifesto - FREITAG Geschichte -https://freitag.ch/de_CH/media/about/freitag-history - FREITAG bei MOMA -https://www.moma.org/collection/works/88035 - FLINC Cycles -https://flinccycles.com/de --------
Aloha! Neue Folge mit einem sehr interessanten und wichtigen Thema! Wenn Du das nicht hörst, verpasst Du echt was ! Heute habe ich Stephan Radeck von TRISURANCE zu Gast. Stephan ist Triathlet und Versicherungsinsider, und wir reden gemeinsam u.a. darüber wann und wie es bei ihm mit dem Triathlon losging, bei welcher WM er sogar gestartet ist, mit welchem bekannten Profi er bereits während des Studiums in einer WG gewohnt hat, welche Absicherung/ Versicherung für uns TriathletInnen wirklich Sinn machen (anhand von praktischen Beispielen erklärt) und 'ne Menge mehr ;) Ich finde, es ist eine wichtige Folge die Du unbedingt bis zum Ende anhören solltest - natürlich überall wo es Podcasts gibt! Und wenn Du danach noch Fragen zum Thema Versicherung/ Absicherung hast, dann nimm Kontakt mit Stephan auf. Alle Links findest Du in den Shownotes der heutigen Folge! Shownotes: Website von TRISURANCE => https://www.trisurance.de/ Stephan Radeck in Instagram => https://www.instagram.com/stephan.trisurance/ In eigener Sache: Dir hat die heutige Folge mit Stephan Radeck von TRISURANCE gefallen und hilfreiche Tipps gegeben? Klasse, dann teile Sie gerne mit jemandem, für den die Folge ebenfalls hilfreich sein könnte - denn sharing is caring ! Weiter freue ich mich, wenn Du Triathlon Podcast abonnierst. Das geht zum Beispiel bei Spotify, Apple Podcast und überall wo es Podcasts gibt. Vielen Dank bereits an dieser Stelle ;) Bis zur nächsten Podcastfolge , bleib sportlich und gesund ! Dein Marco Folge direkt herunterladen
Unfreiwillig zurück zu Mama ziehen müssen, ist für viele inzwischen leider Realität - das besagt eine neue Untersuchung des Portals "Immowelt". Die Gründe: Hohe Mieten und unsichere Jobs. Claudia Kamieth wollte von euch wissen: Wie lange musstet ihr nach einer WG oder Wohnung suchen? Wie viel Miete zahlt ihr? Und musstet ihr schon mal wieder bei euren Eltern einziehen? Unser Podcast-Tipp: OKF - Ortskontrollfahrt https://www.ardaudiothek.de/sendung/okf-ortskontrollfahrt/13548087/
Großzügige WG in bester Citylage in gute Hände abzugeben. Küchen- und Ministerübernahme erwünscht. Von Tobias Brodowy.
Als Boris seine Frau Sarah B. (39) nach 15 Jahren Ehe und drei gemeinsamen Söhnen für die junge Mia sitzen lässt, ist Sarah völlig aus der Bahn geworfen. Über Nacht steht sie allein da – mit ihren Kindern, einem Haus und jeder Menge existenzieller Sorgen. Wie soll sie das Leben jetzt alleine meistern? Die finanziellen Ängste, die Ungewissheit über die Zukunft, all das raubt ihr verständlicherweise den Schlaf.Doch dann kommt ihr beim Fernsehen ein Gedanke, der sie wieder auf die Beine bringt. Zu Gast in einer Talkshow ist die Inhaberin einer Treuetest-Agentur, die Sarahs Racheplan entfacht, um Ex-Mann Boris leiden zu sehen.Wichtig zu wissen: Sarah und Boris teilen ein Geheimnis, denn Boris hat nicht nur eine Schwäche für junge Frauen, sondern auch für Männer. Auch Sarahs androgyne Erscheinung war es, die Boris damals so angezogen hatte. Dieses Wissen nutzt die 39Jährige nun geschickt aus. Die Lady von der Agentur findet den perfekten Lockvogel, den attraktiven Sandro.Sarah investiert ihr gesamtes Sparschwein, denn Rache ist süß und sie will es ihrem Ex heimzahlen. Sie selbst würde ihren Ex zum Ort des Geschehens, eine Bar, locken, in der Boris und Sandro rein zufällig aufeinander treffen sollen.Kleiner Spoiler: Der Plan geht tatsächlich auf und Boris fällt auf den Köder herein. Doch die größte Überraschung kommt zum Schluss, als sich die Ereignisse überschlagen. Soviel sei verraten: Zwei werden ein Paar und ziehen zusammen, eine andere WG wird gegründet und ein Baby kommt.--Euch hat diese Geschichte gefallen, aufgeregt oder ihr habt euch darin sogar wiedererkannt? Das interessiert uns brennend!Schreibt uns in Kommentaren über Facebook und Instagram unter @dramacarbonara. Dort werdet ihr auch die in den Geschichten besprochenen Fotos finden und endlich sehen können, was wir sehen ... Falls ihr noch mehr fantastische Geschichten mit uns lesen wollt, können wir euch schon jetzt versprechen: das Repertoire ist unerschöpflich, wir staunen jedes Mal aufs Neue, was möglich ist. Abonnieren per RSS-Feed, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Deezer oder Google Podcasts ist der Schlüssel zur regelmäßigen Versorgung. Über Rezensionen freuen wir uns natürlich extrem und feiern diese gern auch prominent in unserem Social Media Feed.Jede zweite Folge kommt übrigens ein/e GastleserIn zu uns ins kuschelige Wiener Hauptquartier und unterstützt uns mit Theorien zu Charakteren und Handlungssträngen. Wenn ihr einen Wunschgast habt oder gern selbst mal vorbeischauen wollt, sagt Bescheid. Wir können nichts versprechen, aber wir freuen uns immer über Vorschläge.Wenn ihr Lust auf Extra-Content und Community-Aktivitäten habt, unterstützt uns mit einem Abonnement auf Steady und kommt in den Genuss des kompletten "Drama Carbonara"-Universums: https://steadyhq.com/de/drama-carbonara/aboutFalls ihr daran interessiert sind, Werbung in unserem Podcast zu schalten, setzt euch bitte mit Stefan Lassnig von Missing Link in Verbindung. Verbindlichsten Dank! Ö3 PODCAST AWARD!Bis zum 28.2. ist wieder Nominierungszeit für den Ö3-Podcast-Award und wir freuen uns über eure Stimme!-> ABSTIMMUNG NEUER PODCAST!Wer in den neuesten Podcast, den Tatjana und Asta für HAPPY HOUSE MEDIA Wien produziert haben mit dem vielversprechenden Namen "Wo die Geister wohnen" reinhören mag - schaut mal hier & hier findet ihr den Geister Instagram Account! Es wird schrecklich schön!!--Link zur Podcast Hörer:innen UMFRAGE!Danke für die Mitarbeit und euer wertvolles Feedback :) & hier zur legendären Spotify Drama Carbonara Soundtrack Playlist - folgen folgen folgen!! liebe Freund:innen des unberechenbaren Musik-Algorithmus!
Als Constanze, die nicht Conni genannt werden will, sich von Ihrem Lebensgefährten trennt, weil er ihr einen Heiratsantrag macht, da zieht sie übergangsweise mitsamt weißem Klavier in die WG von Jörg, Anke und Murat. Von Mike Altwicker.
Die zweifelhafte Trophäe geht an einen wässrigen Orangensaft. Und wer in der WG hat den größten Saftladen? Von Uli Winters.
Während seines Wirtschaftsstudiums in Zürich wurde der 27-jährige Loris Moser selbst mit der Wohnungsnot konfrontiert: Als er für seine WG eine neue Mitbewohnerin oder einen neuen Mitbewohner suchte, meldeten sich über 50 Leute.Daraus entstand die Idee für seine Firma Next Gen Properties: Er mietet Wohnungen an, richtet sie ein und vermietet einzelne Zimmer dann teurer weiter. Möbel und Mitbewohnende – alles ist schon bereit. «Co-Living-Provider», nennen sich diese Firmen.Was hat es mit diesen Unternehmen auf sich? Sind kommerzielle WG-Zimmer eine sinnvolle Lösung für die Wohnungsnot? Oder sind sie ein Problem und schrauben die Mietpreise weiter in die Höhe?In einer neuen Folge des täglichen Podcasts «Apropos» ordnet Tim Wirth, Redaktor im Zürich-Ressort des Tages-Anzeigers, die Entwicklung auf dem Wohnungsmarkt ein.Host: Philipp LoserGast: Tim WirthProduktion: Sara SpreiterMehr zum Thema:Wie Jungunternehmer das Vermieten von WG-Zimmern zum Business machenAnalyse zum Business mit WG-Zimmern: Wenn die Wohn-Utopie zum Albtraum wird Unser Tagi-Spezialangebot für Podcast-Hörer:innen: tagiabo.chHabt ihr Feedback, Ideen oder Kritik zu «Apropos»? Schreibt uns an podcasts@tamedia.ch
Wie enthaltsam ist die WG? Der große Lauti Check! Von Uli Winters.
In this episode we make our SNME predictions, recap NXT Deadline, New Day getting boo'd out of the building, CM Punk interview about Seth Rollins, WWE Transfer Portal, NETFLIX going all out for debut, With all the injuries that happened in WG should WWE consider going back to traditional Survivor Series elimination matches and save WG for specific feuds & finish w/ subscriber questions
Mysteriöse Streiche in der WG - wer steckt dahinter?. Von Tobias Brodowy.
Jan und Leonie kennen sich seit ihrer Kindheit und sind eng befreundet. Leonie will unbedingt zuhause ausziehen und am liebsten mit Jan in einer WG zusammen wohnen.
GB 18030—2022 两年三次征求意见后,于 9 月 30 日公布了《第 1 号修改单》。本期节目,我们将结合公开资料解读修改单的相关内容,管窥标准化工作幕后的曲折。 参考链接 “The Monotype Collection”,英国科学博物馆在线上展出馆藏 FontCreator 于今年 9 月首次推出 macOS 版 字谈字畅 184:十七年等一回 GB 18030—2022《信息技术 中文编码字符集》 《中华人民共和国国家标准公告 2024 年第 23 号》公告了 GB 18030—2022《第 1 号修改单》 「中文信息技术标准化」微信公众号发布 GB 18030—2022《第 1 号修改单》的内容解读 国际标准 ISO/IEC 10646:2020 《信息技术 通用编码字符集(UCS)》也于 2023 年发布了《第一号修改单》 表意文字研究组(IRG) (ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 2/WG 2/IRG) Unicode 平面(plane) CJK 统一汉字扩充 I;Unicode 16.0 内附有该区段的字符集合及码位表 2022年《国家市场监督管理总局令第 59 号》公布了《国家标准管理办法》 Windows 11 Insider Preview Build 22635.4300 新增了 Simsun-ExtG 字体,可支持位于 Unicode 扩充 G、H、I 的 9753 个汉字 主播 Eric:字体排印研究者,译者,The Type 执行编辑 蒸鱼:设计师,The Type 编辑 欢迎与我们交流或反馈,来信请致 podcast@thetype.com。如果你喜爱本期节目,也欢迎用支付宝向我们捐赠:hello@thetype.com。
For a bonus episode, an interview for you to step to! Charlie talks to UK DJ/Production duo The Allergies, talking their beginnings, how they gained/cultivated their taste; their new album "Freak The Speaker" and their Top 5. If you haven't spun a WG interview, here's a good gateway for you!Thanks for listening. Below are the Social accounts for all parties involved.Music - "Hold Please" & "Pizza And Video Games" by Bonus Points (Thanks to Chillhop Music for the right to use)HHBTN (Twitter & IG) - @HipHopNumbers5E (Twitter & IG) - @The5thElementUKChillHop (Twitter) - @ChillhopdotcomBonus Points (Twitter) - @BonusPoints92Other Podcasts Under The 5EPN:"What's Good?" W/ Charlie TaylorIn Search of SauceBlack Women Watch...5EPN RadioThe Beauty Of Independence
Heute sind Moritz und Franz Wagner in da house bei “Einfach mal Luppen”. Zum Abschluss ihrer Off-Season, kurz nach der Berliner Premiere ihrer ZDF-Doku und am Abend vor ihrer Heimkehr nach Orlando schauen die Basketballbrüder noch mal für eine kleine Aufnahme bei Studio Bummens rein. Sie sprechen mit Toni über die Wunden von Olympia, über ihre kleine Männer WG in Orlando, über Dennis Schröder und Gordon Herbert, den krassen Trading-Zirkus der NBA und das Gefühl, dass man morgen an einen anderen Club verhökert werden könnte, über Elefanten im Raum, die Hurricane-Season und brüderliche Zweisamkeit. Apropos… Wo zum Henker ist eigentlich Felix?!? Du möchtest mehr über unsere Werbepartner erfahren? [**Hier findest du alle Infos & Rabatte!**](https://linktr.ee/luppentv) [**Hier geht's zur CampfireFM Warteliste!**](https://joincampfire.fm/)
Moin Leude, herzlich willkommen zu ALMOST DAILY! Heute packen die BENS Budi, Eddy, Nils & Simon über ein paar wilde Momente ihrer großen Partyzeit aus. In welcher WG wurden damals die besten Parties gefeiert und auf welche geilen Veranstaltungen wurden die Jungs schon alles eingeladen? Und warum war Eddy eigentlich so selben dabei? Oder wurde er gar nicht eingeladen? Das verraten die vier euch selber. Und ein bisschen wird auch noch über gemeinsame Zocksessions gequatscht und was sie sich vielleicht vorstellen könnten nochmal zusammen zu spielen. Seit also gespannt und lauschet (und sehet) aufmerksam, Party People!
In this Episode, Will is joined by Rightmad (Ben) for a jam-packed show! The guys start by talking in-depth about Ben's run at NashCon with Winter Guard. Ben talks about why he chose certain models and some strategies to employ when you take WG for a spin. Then the crew breaks down the handsomest make in MCP (but not the thirstiest) Angel. Following that, the gang takes a look at what happens when Archangel arrives! They give you some tips and tricks to get the most out of these models in your games of Marvel Crisis Protocol. Enjoy! Baron of Dice - HouseParty for 5% off! Patreon and Merch and more! Krydrufi Hobby Station Thing USE CODE: KRYDRUFI-HPP Connect with us on Facebook @housepartyprotocol HPP on Youtube Discord - HPP_Will Email us - housepartyprotocolpod@gmail.com BattleKiwi - PARTYKIWI The Gamer's Guild Blacksitestudio.com - HOUSEPARTY15