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Les actualités du jour, mercredi 14 juillet 2021 En prenant votre café c'est ici: [00:00] Intro [02:05] Chanson du jour [03:05] Bonne fête aux Français [04:05] Edito [07:40] When Harry met Sally [09:20] Inflation dans le tapis [11:00] Coup de chaleur chez Loto-Québec [15:50] Un cadeau spécial en Indonésie [19:30] Banana Republic ferme au centre-ville [22:15] Accidents d'autos mortels en Espagne et consommation [24:20] Une nouvelle recherche sur le cancer implique l'alcool [25:40] "Item not received" [29:00] Les américains veulent perdent du poids [29:50] 33% des acheteurs de la crypto ne le savent même pas [30:10] Conclusion
Remember when every movie was set in NYC or L.A.? Like...EVERY SINGLE MOVIE? We remember and decided to have a show about movies in those cities. We also bring in the voice of the User! Hear show vets like Lewis, Jon Bon Jersey, and Jackie's mom. PLUS a couple new comers give their input. 2 Guys, 1 Popcorn, and 2 Cities. That's 5 things. Mathematics.'sodes: Good on Paper (Netflix), American Animals (Prime), Beverly Hills Cop (Netflix), Crocodile Dundee (Netflix), When Harry met Sally (HBOMax), Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (Netflix), Boogie Nights (HBOMax), Secret Life of Walter Mitty (Vudu/Amazon), Black Dahlia (Vudu/Amazon), Under the Silver Lake (Prime).Tell us what you think by emailing us at 2guys1popcornpodcast@gmail.com or leave a voice message https://www.speakpipe.com/2guys1popcorn
They were once so close.Princes William and Harry grew up together, supported each other after their mother's untimely death and worked side by side as they began their royal duties — two brothers seemingly bonded for life by blood, tradition and tragedy.But those links are now painfully strained as William sits in London defending the royal family from allegations of racism and insensitivity made by Harry and his wife, Meghan, from their new home in Southern California.Royal watchers will be looking closely for any signs of a truce — or deepening rift — on Thursday when William and Harry unveil a statue of their mother, Princess Diana, on what would have been her 60th birthday. The event in the Sunken Garden at London's Kensington Palace will be their second public meeting since Harry and Meghan stepped away from royal duties over a year ago.People shouldn't expect a quick resolution of the conflict because the two men are fighting over core beliefs, says Robert Lacey, a historian and author of "Battle of Brothers: William, Harry and the Inside Story of a Family in Tumult.'' William is defending the monarchy, and Harry is defending his wife."It's a matter of love versus duty, with William standing for duty and the concept of the monarchy as he sees it," Lacey said. "And then from Harry's point of view, love, loyalty to his wife. He is standing by her. These are very deeply rooted differences, so it would be facile to think that there can just be a click of the fingers."But finding some sort of rapprochement between the princes is crucial to the monarchy as Britain's royal family seeks to appeal to a younger generation and a more diverse population.When Harry married Meghan just over three years ago, it seemed as if they would be central figures in that next chapter of the royal story.The Fab Four — William and his wife, Kate, together with Harry and Meghan — were seen as a cadre of youth and vigor that would take the monarchy forward after the tumultuous 1990s and early 2000s, when divorce, Princess Diana's death, and Prince Charles' controversial second marriage to Camilla, the Duchess of Cornwall, cast doubt on the future of the institution.Meghan, a biracial former TV star from Los Angeles, was expected to be an important part of that effort, with Black and Asian commentators saying that for the first time there was a member of the royal family who looked like them.But the words "Fab Four" were quickly replaced in tabloid headlines by "Royal Rift."First, their joint royal office was dissolved. Then, Harry stepped away from royal duties and moved his family to North America in search of a more peaceful life. William pressed on with royal tasks, including goodwill events like accompanying his grandmother to Scotland this week to tour a soft drink factory.The relationship was further strained in March when Harry and Meghan gave an interview to U.S. talk show host Oprah Winfrey.Harry confirmed rumors that he and his brother had been growing apart, saying "the relationship is 'space' at the moment" — though he added that "time heals all things, hopefully." Harry also told Winfrey that his father, Prince Charles, didn't accept his calls for a time.And then came the real shocker. The couple revealed that before the birth of their first child, an unidentified member of the royal family had expressed concern about how dark his skin might be. Days after the broadcast, William responded, telling reporters that his was "very much not a racist family."But whatever their disagreements, out of respect for their mother, William and Harry won't put their differences on display during the statue ceremony, said historian Ed Owens, author of "The Family Firm: Monarchy, Mass Media and the British Public 1932-1953," which examines the royal family's public relations strategy."We're not going to see any acrimony or animosity between the brothers on Thursday,'' Owens said. "I think reconciliation is a long way off, but nev...
Tread Perilously's month of Doctor Who adventures continues with the 1974 story, "The Ark in Space." When Harry hits the wrong switch on the TARDIS console, he, Sarah, and the Doctor end up on Nerva Beacon, a space station returning to Earth orbit after thousands of years. Its purpose: to repopulate the planet after it was scorched by solar flares. But the mission has been co-opted by the parasitic Wirrn, who have their own designs on the Earth. Can the Doctor convince the Nerva crew he is not a primitive? Will Harry learn his chauvinism has no place in the 20th or 50th Centuries? And will bubble wrap ever get such prominent use on Doctor Who again? Erik and Justin get lost in the bubble wrap of it all. Precarious special effects, RP accents, and solid acting make this one of the most Doctor Who episodes Justin has ever watched. He immediately takes a dislike to Harry, who is ill-served in this Robert Holmes script. Jamie McCrimmon is fondly remembered for his more liberated views on women's roles in time travel. For some reason, Erik thinks he can attempt a Tom Baker accident. The pair try to remember the term "transmat" and, for once, the corridors get high praise.
I don't know if you are born with talent, but it pours through Harry Connick Jr's veins. At age three, he performs for smiles; by age nine, Harry is recording an album and plays the Piano Concerto No. 3 Opus 37 of Beethoven with the New Orleans Symphony Orchestra, and by the end of his teens, he is in New York with his first record deal. Harry Connick Jr has sold over 16 million albums and has won over audiences with his recorded and live music, acting in moves, television and performing on Broadway. In this podcast, Harry shares his life story. The phone call from Rob Reiner, who invited Harry first to play incidental music in the movie When Harry met Sally and ended with Harry singing most of the songs and finding fame. Matthew Modine took him under his wing on a film set to show him what it takes to own the camera and how Harry had to stretch himself doing a television show like Will and Grace. You will also learn three of Harry Connick Jr's life lessons that you can apply to help you do more and to be more, to get to where you need, want and deserve to go. Harry talks about dreaming big and then animating that dream, so you never lose sight of your destination or your faith that you will be living it one day. Harry talks about the importance of dreaming and doing, the hours he invests in preparation and practice so that he can break down the door when opportunity knocks. Finally, Harry Connick Jr opens up about how he dealt with COVID and the darkness he felt when his stage lights turned off and the microphones to go quiet. That period of isolation, and the grief he felt from 14 people he knew dying from COVID, led Harry Connick Jr to a renewed faith in his religion, in himself, and performing and creating a new album, 'Alone with My Faith'. It was therapy for himself and what he hopes is a gift for all who are struggling with the realities of today. As I did, I encourage you to listen to the album with headphones on and the room dark.
In the 228th Episode of Blockbuster Mentality Ben is joined by the talented Acting Coach/Film Director Michelle Danner. We break down Rob Reiner’s When Harry met Sally. Thanks for listening! Please follow us on Twitter @Blockbustercast and email questions to BBENTERTAINMENTCAST@GMAIL.COM. Don't forget to subscribe and rate us on iTunes. Music from Bensound.com --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/blockbuster-mentality/support --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/blockbuster-mentality/support
On this episode of WeeklyTech, I am joined by my colleague Josh Wester, Chair of Research in Christian Ethics at the ERLC, and we talk about Amazon, book removals, and content moderation. A few weeks ago, Josh and I wrote a piece at the ERLC titled “Should Amazon be able to ban books?.” Today we dialogue about Ryan Anderson’s book “When Harry became Sally” and discuss its removal from Amazon as well as some of the underlying issues related to digital governance and questions surrounding Section 230. Since the original recording of this episode, Amazon has provided some clarity to their decision to remove Anderson’s book from the marketplace. Resources:Should Amazon be able to ban books? | ERLCIs content moderation stifling public discourse? | ERLCUnderstanding Twitter suspensions and the need for consistent policies | ERLCSign up for the WeeklyTech Newsletter
This week we're pivoting to pitch spinoff series, to capitalize on Disney's new slew of spinoffs and reboots. The Avengers are in a rough financial place after their only billionaire died, so some of them have to resort to some more traditional roles. But is Hawkeye leading a trail to disaster with every youtube video he uploads? Honourable Mentions: I'll have what she's having - That woman from "When Harry met Sally" is notably unfazed by an orgasmic food experience, but it's only because she's already on a globetrotting quest to find the most sensual recipes in the world. I thought I saw a killer robot from the future - The Loony-Tunes are back in action. They're alos back in time as Sylvester and Tweedy Mysteries revisit the Terminator series and Granny's hot on the trail of a mysterious boots, jacket and motorcycle thief.
Happy Valentine's Day! Please join us as we cover one of the best romantic comedies of all time! I should mention that “When Harry met Sally...” is a Kenny fav and so he really dug deep for this Pod.Kenny and Del bring their “A game” for this 1989 classic. Together, they deep dive this film with a robust conversation that covers pre-production, cast and crew, writing, direction, alternate endings, pop culture, scenes, trivia, and more.Set the table for a romantic dinner, light some candles, and have this Podcast playing in the background to round out what is sure to be your finest Valentine's Day evening. Thanks for listening and be sure to subscribe to get instant notifications of our next show!If you enjoyed our program, keep in mind that we have other shows for you to enjoy:Our Flagship Show that we drop Bi-Weekly without fail!Our News Show where we cover major movie and pop culture News.Our Request Line Show, where we review a film by request from a listener.Our Specials, that pay tribute to special occasions.And our Series, themed shows that run for several episodes; like the one on Breaking Bad (currently available!).Email us at: BrothersinArmchairsPodcast@gmail.com Get our latest news on movies and pop culture by joining our social media: Twitter at: @BroArmchairs Facebook group at: https://www.facebook.com/groups/217059166060270 Instagram at: https://www.instagram.com/brothersinarmchairspodcast/ And finally, all of our Pods are available https://BrothersinArmchairs.buzzsprout.com Theme song "Loli'ana" written and performed by award winning musician Kamuela Kahoano. Listen to more of Kamuela's music on iTunes and https://kamuelamusic.com/. Also, "Loli'ana" performed live at The Ko'olau Banquet Hall can bee see here https://youtu.be/YDJ1NNJgEiA Thanks for listening! Don't forget our next bi-weekly Pod and keep an eye out for our specials, series, request line, and news episodes! And please subscribe and review!
What if there were a single company that could connect hospital electronic health record systems to a massive genomic testing and analytics platform? It would be a little like Amazon Web Services (AWS) for healthcare—an enabling platform for anyone who wants to deploy precision medicine at scale. That's exactly what Joel Dudley says he's now helping to build at Tempus.When Harry last spoke with Dudley in January 2019, he was a tenured professor of genetics and genomics at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai Medical Center and director of the Institute for Next Generation Healthcare. But later that same year, Dudley was lured away to Tempus, founded in 2015 by Eric Lefkofsky, the billionaire co-founder of Groupon. Tempus is building an advanced genomic testing platform to document the specific gene variants present in patients with cancer (and soon other diseases) in order to match them up with the right drugs or clinical trials and help physicians make faster, better treatment decisions. In this week's show, Harry gets Dudley to say more about Tempus's business—and explain why it was an opportunity he couldn’t turn down.You can find more details about this episode, as well as the entire run of MoneyBall Medicine's 50+ episodes, at https://glorikian.com/moneyball-medicine-podcast/Please rate and review MoneyBall Medicine on Apple Podcasts! Here's how to do that from an iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch:• Launch the “Podcasts” app on your device. If you can’t find this app, swipe all the way to the left on your home screen until you’re on the Search page. Tap the search field at the top and type in “Podcasts.” Apple’s Podcasts app should show up in the search results.• Tap the Podcasts app icon, and after it opens, tap the Search field at the top, or the little magnifying glass icon in the lower right corner.• Type MoneyBall Medicine into the search field and press the Search button.• In the search results, click on the MoneyBall Medicine logo.• On the next page, scroll down until you see the Ratings & Reviews section. Below that, you’ll see five purple stars.• Tap the stars to rate the show.• Scroll down a little farther. You’ll see a purple link saying “Write a Review.”• On the next screen, you’ll see the stars again. You can tap them to leave a rating if you haven’t already.• In the Title field, type a summary for your review.• In the Review field, type your review.• When you’re finished, click Send.• That’s it, you’re done. Thanks!TRANSCRIPTHarry Glorikian: The last time I had Joel Dudley on the show in January 2019, he didn’t sound like a guy who was looking for a new job. At the time, he was a professor of genetics and genomics at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, and the director of the Institute for Next Generation Healthcare. He was publishing breakthrough papers on the use of advanced statistics to find unexpected biomarkers for diseases like Alzheimer’s. And he had a long to-do list of ways he wanted to push his fellow physicians to become more data-driven.But lo and behold, later in 2019 Dudley was lured away from Mount Sinai by Eric Lefkofsky, the billionaire co-founder of Groupon. Lefkosky had started a new company called Tempus, with the goal of creating an advanced genomic testing platform to help oncologists and other physicians make faster, better treatment decisions for their patients. Lefkofsky showed Dudley what the company was doing to document the specific gene variants present in each cancer patient, in order to match them up with the right drugs or clinical trials. And it didn’t take him long to talk Dudley into joining as chief scientific officer. In our interview, I got Joel to say more about why joining Tempus was an opportunity he couldn’t resist.One cool piece of news that came out right after we talked is that Tempus isn’t just a provider of testing and genomic analysis—it’s now a hardware company too. This year the company plans to release a portable, voice-driven gadget called Tempus One that will allow doctors to interact with Tempus’s genomic reports through natural language inquiries. It’s like Siri or Alexa, but specialized for oncology. I’ll have to get Joel to come back to tell us more about that. But for now, here’s our conversation from early January.Harry Glorikian: Joel, welcome back to the show.Joel Dudley: Thanks for having me back.Harry Glorikian: So, you know, as we were just talking before I hit the record button. It feels like when we last did this, it was almost a lifetime ago. Especially the last few years, it feels like, every day feels like a month, almost, trying to keep track of everything. But, you know, you were doing something very different the last time we talked to you. You were at Mount Sinai and and now you're, you know, at Tempus. And so let's start there. Like, why the switch and. What are you doing?Joel Dudley: Yeah, I think, like many people, I didn't expect to be at Tempus. I've been here about a little over a year and a half now at Tempus, and I was approached by Eric Lefkofsky, the founder of Tempus, when I was at Mount Sinai. And things were going great at Mount Sinai. I was fully tenured. I had tons of grant funding, cool projects, even startups spinning out of the lab. So I definitely wasn't looking for a job at all. And and I hadn't really heard of Tempus at the time. And I just knew they were kind of out there. And I somewhat heard of him and he approached me about a job. And I'm like, yeah, I'm not looking, you know, and I know Guardent. I know people at all the sort of big precision, Freenome, and precision medicine companies. I mean, I thought, well, if I was going to go, why would go to Tempus. You know, and like, I just, I know everybody else in these other companies. So he's like, just come to Chicago, you know, talk to me and see what's going on.Joel Dudley: And then I looked at the website and I'm like, how the heck is this company worth three billion dollars, you know. $8 billion valuation now. And I'm like, I was being, to be honest, a bit arrogant because I'm thinking I know everybody in this field and I don't know what these guys are doing. Which is a little arrogant, to say that. But it's like sort of like, how could a precision medicine company get to $3 billion without me knowing about it. So at that point, it was almost curiosity at that point that brought me into their headquarters, obviously back when we could fly and travel. And I went I went in there. I'm like, well, I've got some collaborators at Northwestern anyway I've got to meet with. And yeah, I'll just go I'll go see what this tech dude wants. And I was even telling my wife before I left, I'm like, all these tech guys, they, always have the worst health care ideas, like, they have the worst health care ideas. Joel Dudley: So so I'm like I'm like, you know, but that being said, I went and visited Eric at headquarters, Tempus headquarters. I was completely blown away, completely blown away. It was a company like nothing I had ever seen before. And I can get into some specifics on why Tempus was different. But at a high level, it was really the first time. So my background, I'm very much a systems guy. Right. I like to understand everything from multiple systems perspective. Right. And in the molecular world, that means I'm a systems biology guy. I want proteomics. I want genomics. I want the whole thing. So when I look at other companies that were doing targeted DNA panels, I'm like, well, what fun is that? You know? And I know there's a good reason why people do that because of reimbursement and and all that kind of stuff. But it's like, what am I going to learn from DNA? You know, nothing. So that was my bias. And Tempus was the first precision medicine company operating at scale I saw that was totally committed to a multi-scale multimodal data philosophy, which I had never seen before, and was totally committed to this concept that I think you and I get excited about, which is a diagnostics company that was first and foremost a data company, first and foremost. Now, there's a lot of diagnostic companies that paid lip service to being data companies. But when it came down to it, there were all about volumes and margins of their tests. Right. Tempus was the first one that was authentically and seriously and in a big way committed to being a data company first.Joel Dudley: So I was totally blown away and and at first, you know, said there's no way I'm leaving my great job here in Mount Sinai. And I kept thinking about it and I kept thinking about it and I thought, holy cow, these guys are successful. This is going to be massive. I mean, this is going to be bigger than anything I could do at any single academic institution. This is going to be world changing. So anyway, that was a lengthy explanation of why I joined Tempus. It just wouldn't get out of my brain.Harry Glorikian: Well, it's interesting because I remember when you told me, I was like, what? Huh? Like, I was adding up what you were adding up, like all the different things you're doing. And I'm like, he went there? I'm like, I almost was thinking, can I buy stock? If he's going there, I should buy stock. So you know, Eric, before he did, you know, Tempus, obviously, did Groupon and, you know, he's financially successful, I could probably say. But what was his motivation?Joel Dudley: Yeah, he the origin story of Tempus is that Eric's wife had gotten breast cancer and someone of great means, of course, was able to get, have her seen by all the best, literally all the top the top 10 cancer, breast cancer doctors in the country. And what he noticed, being, if you get to know him, he's a very rational, logical guy know, very data driven guy. He noticed very quickly that, you know, first of all, none of the doctors agreed. That data wasn't informing her care, you know, and got a real personal look at sort of the dysfunction, I guess, or let's say missed opportunities to use data in health care that we see we, you and I see. And he decided to do something about it. There's a lot of really admirable things about his personal involvement in Tempus that drew me there. One is he's all in. I mean, he's all in, all in. A thousand percent of his attention is focused on the company. He's got a venture capital firm. He's got Groupon still is in existence and is in, and he is in in a huge way. He's you know, I think every time I've been to that office, I think he's the first one there in the morning. You know, it's just like, in some ways he's sort of like the general that rides the first horse in the battle on this thing. And not only did he not only was in a big way financially, he put a huge amount of his own money into into the endeavor, but his personal investment is, he's fanatical about Tempus.Harry Glorikian: Well, I'm convinced that when you want to change the world, if you're not fanatical, then it's not going to happen. You have to believe it more than anybody else believes it to make it come true.Harry Glorikian: Yeah. One of my favorite stories. I'll just share a quick note and I'll switch was I remember one time we were having a discussion. I can't remember what it was about. A flow cell, after I joined. A flow cell failing or something like that on the sequencer, and Eric I think had asked for which flow cells failed and I had walked by his office attempts and the bitmap images of the flow cells were up on his computer and he was staring at them intently. I have no idea if he even knew what he was looking at. I mean, he does now for sure. But the point was, the point was it was just shocking to me because I'm like, here's the CEO, billionaire CEO of this company, and he's looking at the pixel by pixel at these flow cell images, trying to figure out why they failed. And I thought that was unbelievable. You know, no, no detail is too small.Harry Glorikian: No, you know, I think, you know, you have to be passionate, get involved and want them, you know, I mean, at some point you're at scale and you have to sort of start trusting the people around you. But in the beginning, you know, I think you have to fully be committed. And everybody has to be going with you. Yeah. So and I totally agree on the whole data driven part. I mean, I have given so many talks, especially with a good friend of mine, Jennifer Carter, who was the former CEO of N of 1, where, you know, there's a bunch of doctors where the genomic data is saying one thing and they decide to do another, which boggles my mind why you would do that, because most of the time it doesn't work. But so you guys are at the forefront of genomic data. And I'm sort of imparting words of saying, you're trying to get faster, real time patient care decisions and help physicians make better decisions. Is that, am I summarizing the business?Joel Dudley: Yeah, yeah, that's it. In at a high level, it's obviously to deploy precision medicine at scale. So one of the things we say we're doing a Tempus is building all the boring, boring plumbing that nobody wants to build to actually deliver precision medicine at scale, which includes....So we ingest clinical records for the patients, because we contextualize the reports of the clinical data that we get from the individual patient. So but we work with everything from community, rural community hospitals to sophisticated academic medical centers. So we have this, part of our machine is, we have this interface that can take everything from a direct pull from a Cerner cloud instance all the way to literally people shipping paper to Tempus. But but, you know, basically we've built we built that data abstraction API, if you will, that can take eithr paper or cloud. And it was expensive. It required a lot of people and it cleans up the data. But somebody had to do that, like someone had to build that, the boring plumbing to do that. And and we did it.Harry Glorikian: Well, Flatiron I think, you know, what I've heard is Flatiron has a bunch of people in the back end, like putting things in context right, yesterday versus tomorrow versus, you know, trying to get context, which NLP not very good at. And I got to imagine that Foundation might be doing some of the same sort of stuff. No, not as much?Joel Dudley: Not as much on the clinical data. They're very much focused on the molecular data. The difference, though, between Flatiron and Tempus, though, is that Flatiron bought the EHR which the data was being collected. And so they own that. We take everything, like I said from manila folders to Cerner, to Epic to... Like that was the challenge, that's what makes TEmpus totally different in that we didn't own that that EHR. So it was a bigger challenge. But we also have humans that check all the data because as you mentioned, NLP is imperfect. But the real business, though, if I could make a point, though, is is developing smart diagnostics. Because, the principle being, you know, we all want to bring AI, let's say, to health care. One way to do that is to bring AI into the EHR, which doesn't seem like it's going to happen anytime soon. Like we have a hard time. You know, we barely can get logistic regression to run inside Epic. I don't know. I don't think we're going to, I shouldn't pick on Epic alone. But, you know, it doesn't seem like very sophisticated AI is coming to the EHR anytime soon. Plus, there's sort of a small number of players you have to deal with, you know, to have control over that environment. So that's challenging. You could try to bring the doctors to AI, which doesn't work very well. A lot of companies have failed because they say, oh, we have this beautiful AI machine, this beautiful interface that the doctors would just leave their, you know, standard workflows and just come over to our obviously better system. That feels like 99 percent of the time, right, because doctors don't want to change, physicians don't want to change their workflows. So the idea behind Tempus was more, physicians interact with lab tests all day long. So one step at bringing AI or a Trojan Horse, if you will, is to make the lab test themselves smarter. So a real simple example is, our cancer testing is, e because we pull the clinical data on that patient and the sequencing data, here's a real simple example of something that Tempus can do with a smart test that other people can't, which is if they have a DNA mutation that suggests the patient should go on a certain drug, but we know from their actual clinical records that they tried that drug and failed it, we will dynamically change the report to not put them, not suggest that drug or gray it out or whatever, depending on the version of the report. That's like a brain dead simple example, but most companies can't do that because they're not able to rapidly pull in and structure the patient's clinical data and contextualize the molecular data or the test result with that specific patient's information. So that's the Tempus approach there.Harry Glorikian: Well, not not to not to digress, but I've always said in my talks, I believe that if anything breaks or will break health care, it's the EMR systems being completely, you know, I mean, they're just they're just not where they need to be considering how fast where we want to go to the next level of health care. Right. If we were a tech company, it would have been rewritten, you know, 15 times by now to get us to where we need to go.Joel Dudley: Totally, totally.Harry Glorikian: But you're looking at DNA, you're looking at RNA, you're looking and you're looking at a whole host of 'omics to help drive a positive outcome. I mean, are there concrete examples that you might give in how this is being used and why, you know, why Tempus is compared to everybody else where it is, I would say?Joel Dudley: Yeah, absolutely. So you know what? One of the things that we think about when we get a sample in the door is how much sort of multi-scale data can we generate on the sample without going completely, without being totally insane. Right. So it's like I mean I mean, still being sustainable, let's say. So I'll give you. So what happens today when let's say, by the way, we're expanding outside of cancer, but focusing on cancer for the meantime, when a tumor section comes in to our current lab. So not only do we get sort of the the deep targeted DNA sequencing, we also get normal blood as part of that so we can do tumor normal. A lot of companies don't even do tumor normal. But then, and this is one of the things that really caught my attention, was, we generate full transcriptome on every patient that comes in the door. I mean, that's nuts. I mean, that was nuts that they just decided to as a default on every patient. That's like that's like $800 in extra cost that's not going to be reimbursed. And and even clinicians can barely wrap their heads around RNA today. I mean, it's a super hard time with RNA. I mean, do they like DNA because like the variant's there, or it's not, and the drug gets prescribed or not. But RNA is this analog probabilistic sort of dynamic measure. It gives you all kinds of different types of interpretation that's difficult. But the fact that they committed to that from day one was nuts.Joel Dudley: So then we also have our own pathology lab. So we actually digitize the section and stain and digitize all the tumor sections. We have high quality imaging. And then we pull in the structured clinical data, of course. And then we have an organoid lab actually inside Tempus. So we try to build a patient specific organoid from every every patient we can and bank that for future screen. So we have a huge number of organoids where we have not only the organoid stored and the ability to really expand that but then the patient's actual, you know, in vivo clinical data, molecular data. And you could start to do things like, hey, where you know, if we if we see this pathway in the organoid, it means we're going to see this pathway in the real patient and all that kind of stuff.Joel Dudley: So another interesting thing about Tempus is, we have this new business unit called Algos. And this is something that sounds really obvious when you pointed out and you wonder why nobody else did it. But we go to market with the broadest possible assay. So in a traditional, like, biomarker discovery, you would say, I want to try to find a biomarker of people who respond well to radiotherapy or something like that, prostate radiotherapy or something like that. So I'm going to start with the, people would start with their full transcriptome and then maybe, let's say you find a 10 gene signature that predicts who's going to respond well to radiation therapy. Then the the typical diagnostic company would say, OK, now let's shrink, let's take this 10 signature, let's implement it at Nanostring or PCR or some kind of care platform and and then go to market with that. And Tempus says, well, screw it. Let's go to market with the full transcriptome as our default assay, because then that allows us to digitally layer signatures on top of it. And by default, everybody. So we measure transcriptome now. And maybe five years from now, we find a new signature for drug response. We don't have to remeasure everybody. We just run it digitally, you know, on top of the signature.Harry Glorikian: You know, that was one of the I remember when we were talking about this years ago, I was like, that's what you would want to do. That's why you'd want the data. Right. So you want all of this data so that as time goes on, you don't have to go back and get it again. You've got it. And you just look at it. It's almost like I think about it like topology. I mean, at some point you take the first scan and you start layering things on top to get a better idea of what what is there over time, because, hell, the technology, you know, your insight becomes better over time. Some new piece of information comes in, and you go, oh, let me go back and look at this again. So you guys do that. And then the recommendation is a targeted therapy. I mean, I haven't seen any of the reports, so I'm sort of guessing along here.Joel Dudley: Yeah, we've got we've got a great report that summarizes the patient's clinical history and all the stuff you sort of expect. And then it offers various recommendations also about, of course, clinical trials. So the other thing we have is a huge clinical trial network, which I haven't mentioned yet. A national clinical trial network where we can spin up trials and match patients to trials. That's owned and operated by Tempus. But we can, so it takes the DNA information and RNA information and synthesizes recommendations. And it's going to be up to the doctor. Of course, you know, some doctors like to look at the DNA. Some people like to see where does the DNA and the RNA corroborate each other? You know, is there a PI3 kinase mutation plus activation or deactivations of a PI3 kinase pathway or something like that, and so we present all that information and a pretty, pretty digestible way.Harry Glorikian: So, two questions. A, does the patient ever get something to look at? And B, have you done any stats on success, right, of recommendations and so forth?Joel Dudley: Yeah, we've publishd some papers. We had a paper in Nature Biotech and a couple of, a couple of others that sort of show the value of this additional information and continue to publish, you know, papers. But we've been primarily on the cancer side, primarily physician facing. And, you know, physicians can, of course, give their reports to the patient's physician facing in other disease areas like neuropsych, which we've gotten into. We do have a patient facing digital app that is being tested right now to go more directly to patients, but not yet, and COVID as well. We have a patient facing up. So but that actually will be a bigger part of all the disease areas.Harry Glorikian: You have agreements with tons of institutions coming in. I mean, you and I were at one point sort of throwing this idea of having enough data where you're at that escape velocity of, it sort of stops making sense to go someplace else because the Encyclopedia Britannica is in one place. So where are you guys on that journey?Joel Dudley: Yeah, I think we're, you know, it depends. You could argue it, but I think we're basically approaching escape velocity at this point, where if you look at the trajectory of our data and I don't have the exact numbers handy, but it's a, it's a steep it's a steep line in terms of the number of samples we sequence. I think it's close to 200,000 samples last year or something like that. But but but our RNA, for example, our RNA database alone, I mean, the Cancer Genome Atlas looks like a little baby toy dataset compared to the Tempus's internal dataset. And that's, of course, a massive, I don't know if it's a multibillion dollar, but it's a massive Internet effort among academics. It's a great effort by the way, I'm not knocking the Cancer Genome Atlas, but but by comparison Tempus is able to eclipse that, you know, like you wouldn't believe. And then also have very much richer clinical data associated with those samples and have continuous updates of that data where something like the Cancer Genome Atlas is like this frozen thing that gets updated by an academic consortia every year. So even when we look at the cancer Genome Atlas, which again, I think was a worthwhile investment, and remains a worthwhile investment. But if you just compare those, the growth trajectories and the density and quality of that data side by side, Tempus is just a rocket ship compared to that data sets like that, which used to be like, you know, even Big Pharma would rely on the Cancer Genome Atlas is their sort of discovery data set. But now you'd be kind of insane not to use Tempus, it's just so much bigger.Harry Glorikian: So so that brings me to that next question. Right. So we've got we've got these patient samples. We've got clinical data. You make a recommendation, you can actually recommend a clinical trial. But now the next step comes to me and says, well, but if I have all all those pieces of information, shouldn't I be also looking at drug discovery?Joel Dudley: Yeah. So quick on the trial site. It's worth it. I'd like to point out 'cause we're really proud of this. So we have this thing called the Time Trial Network. It's a national network of I think it's 2,000 oncologists around the country on a common rate sheet, a common IRB. And the whole idea was when we match a patient, instead of a drug company going to, say, an AMC like Dana Farber or something, which, of course is a great institution, and saying, hey, we want to run our X, Y, Z drug trial with you, and all the patients will have to either fly here or drive here every couple of months, if you don't have all the patients here locally, we created this national network. And the idea was rapid site activation of trials. So if a pharma is looking for a certain type of pancreatic cancer patient subset and we match that patient in Tulsa, Oklahoma, or nearby or something like that, just picking a random city, that instead of that person driving into the AMC, an academic medical center that has the trial, or CRO, we spent a trial as close as possible to where that patient lives at one of our partners, whether it's a community hospital or something like that. At the end of the year, don't quote me on this, I think we had, we went from like a patient match to first dose in patient and something like less than 10 days or something like that, because we rapidly activate a single patient trial site.Harry Glorikian: Wow, that's cool.Joel Dudley: It's pretty cool. So it's sort of like a whole ecosystem. Right. So it's not only are we sequencing the patient and finding who are eligible, we can we also have the trial site integrated into our platform.Harry Glorikian: So it it's interesting, you always wonder, like how much how aware our patients that some of these things are. Out there when they need it, right, as opposed to the way that you and I both know the way the system runs, which is, oh, come here so that we can make the dollars as opposed to what what's really going to be the best for the patient?Joel Dudley: Yeah, yeah, absolutely. And you had asked me a second question that I totally forgot now because I distracted.Harry Glorikian: The drug discovery side of it, making that connection at some point of...Joel Dudley: Yes, it's super valuable data for drug discovery. And that is part of the value proposition of Tempus, of course, to our pharma partners who want to develop therapeutics. So part of Tempus's business is to partner with pharmaceutical companies and assist them in their discovery or biomarker efforts through Tempus's data and platforms. And we have some backend platform technologies for investment targeting our data. We have a platform called Lens for interrogating our data that is produced. Pretty interesting. And then, you know, we have a business called Alpha, which is about spinning out joint ventures around therapeutic discovery from from Tempus's data.Harry Glorikian: Ok, so that's how you if you identify something, you're willing to sort of spin it out at that point and see it come to life.Joel Dudley: Yeah. Yeah. So it's partnering with pharma or partnering with, you know, a joint venture that we're involved in around the data, but per se we don't do the drug discovery internally on the data.Harry Glorikian: You and I love the data and love the AI and machine learning. What gets you super excited? Where do you see the biggest applications of the A.I. and machine learning? Where do you see the biggest opportunities?Joel Dudley: And in no particular order, so a lot of interesting things can be done with machine learning when you have not necessarily orthogonal but multiskale data on the same samples. Right. So I'll give you a concrete example is, we have we have a large histo genomics, we call it program that our AI data science team is working on, where, of course, if we have rich RNA sequencing and rich DNA sequencing plus digital pathology on slides and samples, we can start doing things like calling PDL1 status directly from an H&E stain via deep learning instead of actually sequencing a patient. Because sequencing is great. But but imagine if you could call it the critical markers for a trial via an H&D stain and deep learning, you know, in rural Louisiana, or something like that, where people don't want to pay for sequencing or you just want to be much more capital efficient. So once we once we start collecting all these different dimensions of data, we can start predicting, you know, across all these different dimensions. Right. So what in the rich sequencing data can we predict from images, for example, which is really interesting, because then that cost, you know, nothing practically. But the key up front, you have to collect those those cohesive, coherent data sets of multiple dimensions to train. Once you've trained, it's super valuable.Harry Glorikian: It's interesting because I was having a conversation earlier today about spatial resolution of single cell, but but actually looking at the genomics inside the cell, the expression patterns and looking at that based on geography, let's call it that, for so everybody understands it, but very cool how you could see individual cells lighting up versus, you know, the other cells around them, which would give you an indication of what's being activated, how it's influencing the cells around it, et cetera.Joel Dudley: Yeah, absolutely. And that's an area we're exploring within Tempus, of course, is related to the histo-genomics I mentioned is if we start with a single cell and spatial transcriptomics on tumor cells plus rich imaging, at some point we're going to build up a data set that will give us deep molecular insights from the images alone, once we've built up the single cell and spatial transcriptomics that accompany those those images. So that's one, it's a really useful practical application of AI. Another one that's interesting for us is just getting additional insights out of existing data, which is something I've always enjoyed. But a concrete examples is, we have a big partnership with Geisinger where we've developed a deep learning model that runs on ECG traces. ECG traces are collected for elective surgeries, for physicals. And we're not the only ones necessarily exploring this, but a lot of people are using deep learning models to see if the, because an ECG trace, you could consider an image, basically. Right. And so people are using it episodically to see, like, is there something, that subtle pattern that's not being detected in the episode of care, but we're actually trying to predict things that will happen in the future. And we published some papers on this. But so we're taking a single ECG trace and we're saying, are there hidden signals basically in this ECG trace that will predict if someone is going to get future a-fib, future stroke future, you know, coronary syndrome? And we have a very large data set with Geisinger that we've done in partnership. And we've it's just amazing, like the one year, three year future events you can predict from a single snapshot of an ECG. There you go. Myocardia.Harry Glorikian: Yeah, I like I have my little monitor here, and I, I, I tend to do it every day just just to get some longitudinal data.Joel Dudley: Yeah. Yeah. Alivecor is a great is a great device. Yeah. So a couple of really interesting applications of that. One is, you know, from a population health standpoint, just going through all of the ECGs that have been collected and you can triage people into high risk low risk groups and manage them. But it's also interesting for clinical trials, because if you can predict things in the future from an ECG trace, say, for, like an anticoagulation trial, you can enrich that trial population for events and things like that from a fairly cheap standard device. So I'm interested in, you know, the ability of ML and AI to get additional, squeeze, additional information and utility out of these sort of everyday things that are measured routinely.Harry Glorikian: Yeah, and I think that, I mean, you know, whenever I've seen it, we've always gone from a complicated measurement to figuring out easier modalities to sort of identify that information from. We just didn't have the, maybe the power per se to get it in the first place. So, okay, you guys are in oncology now, you're moving out to cardiology and I think infectious disease and do I dare say neurology, depression and things like that. So why? Like, why wouldn't you just go deep and, you know, crush the space in that one area? Why?Joel Dudley: Yeah, it's interesting. I feel like we are doing fairly well in oncology. But this goes back to why I joined Tempus, which is, I always joke that this is like four different companies. And, you know, it's like it's like Flatiron plus Foundation plus, you know, we don't like to compare ourselves these companies, but like this is early on when I was, because we're actually not like those companies, which I'll explain in a second, but I was like, on the outside, it sounds sort of crazy to say, well, we're like six companies in one. But the difference was, it was built that way from the ground up in an integrated platform, a vertically integrated platform. And that's what makes it powerful. It requires a lot of capital to do that up front. But the vision was pretty interesting. So they built this sort of vertically integrated, very powerful machine to tackle cancer in this like multi-modal, comprehensive way. But they were smart in that they built it in a fairly abstract way so that it could be repurposed for for other diseases. And from day one, that was always the intention. And to me, that was amazing because I'm thinking, well, geez, a company that just tackles cancer alone with this approach is a massive company, you know,, putting on my venture adviser hat. You know, it's like, well, jeez, this is huge because this is like this company plus that company, plus that company all wrapped into one nice, seamless package. That's huge. And then I thought, well, if they replicate this success they're having clearly going to have in cancer in just one other major disease area that is an unprecedented precision medicine company in history. You know, no company would have done what Tempus has done in cancer and a whole other disease area in terms of ushering in this like very large scale multimodal approach, with clinical tests in the market and things like that. So I was like this, I got to join this. This is nuts.Harry Glorikian: Well, it's interesting that you say that, right? I keep trying to explain to people and I guess one of the examples that I've been using lately is something like Ant Financial, right. Where how they started in one area and were able to broaden, based on some very simple capabilities. And now it's 10,000 people managing 1.2 Billion customers. Yeah, you don't do that because of a personal touch. You have to have automation to tackle that. And and I know that you guys have like your robotic systems for sequencing. And I have to believe that that thing doesn't, I always tell people it doesn't care what it ingests. Right. Analytics on the back end may need to be adjusted accordingly. But, you know, that's the power of this data approach as opposed to the way we've done it historically.Joel Dudley: Absolutely. And the way I would describe it, I'm not sure everybody loves this analogy, but I think it's a very accurate analogy, which is, what I saw, and we're doing this, so we built this very sophisticated, vertically integrated infrastructure that connects sequencers to clinical and back, plus data abstraction and clinical data structuring. And so we built that machine and sort of dogfooded it ourselves on cancer and and other things that we continue to sort of dogfood it and use it our use ourselves. But eventually the goal of Tempus is to open this platform up to other people, so the way I what I saw early on was that while Tempus has the chance to become the AWS of precision medicine, basically. We're building all this boring plumbing or connecting hospitals. We're building this, like I mentioned, this API of data abstraction that can connect everything from cloud based EHRs to paper, you know, and everything in between. So at some point we want to open, and we are actually beginning some partnerships where we're opening up Tempus's platform, because if we've invested a billion dollars in that plumbing, then the beauty is, you know, you should is a startup. You don't have to do that now, just like AWS. You know, it's like now three guys in a in a garage to get out their credit card and start Stripe or Shopify or whatever the next big company is. And that was always been the aspiration of Tempus, not only to build this for ourselves, but to build it as an enabling platform for other people who would want to deploy precision medicine at scale, which is, we're actually executing on that vision in a serious way. It was more of an aspiration, I think, when I joined. But now we're full on executing.Harry Glorikian: It's interesting. I mean, I remember you saying that to me, I want to say, last JPMorgan, when we were actually able to travel and sit down with each other. I mean, I talk to other people and I mention Tempus and some people go, who? And other people are who are very knowledgeable are like, well, I don't see what the big deal is. And so it almost seems like. Do you think people know what's there that they can take advantage of?Joel Dudley: I don't think people fully appreciate it. And of course, there's a bunch of things I can't even talk about that are even more exciting that are being cooked up. But you'll be hearing about them soon. I think we'll make a few JP Morgan announcements, but it's sort of the M.O. Actually, one of the things that attracted me to Tempus was our CEO is very much a show don't tell kind of guy, to the point where even some people get frustrated because.. Nobody gets frustrated. But it's like, hey, we're doing all these amazing things and nobody knows about them yet. But but he's 100 percent right in that people will know when we're actually doing, once we're doing the stuff, right. You know, and and that was impressive to me because we're obviously in an area that's overhyped, you know, precision medicine, AI in medicine. And there's a gazillion companies out there doing proof by press release, you know, on all their vaporware. And Tempus is doing real, real stuff that's saving patients lives. And, you know, and they're being very disciplined about it and not overhyping it and just putting in the work. And then in the long run, people will know. I think it's going to be all one of those things, like who's Temples? To, like, Oh, my God, I had no idea, where did this come from.Harry Glorikian: Yeah, and I think your biggest challenge is going to be the last mile, right? I mean, it's like Internet connectivity, right? Well, it's on the street, but how do you get it into the house? And the biggest complaint I always hear from everybody is getting this implemented at an institution is not trivial.Harry Glorikian: I would argue that's what Tempus is mainly solving is that last mile problem. In fact, you know, I don't know how many institutions are connected inti Tempus, but it's well over 100 for sure. And that's a KPI that we're tracking. How much how many institutions we have last mile connectivity into. And that's been just growing up. That was a huge KPI for us the last last year. And it continues to be. But I would argue that's the problem solving, is that last mile, because we are in clinic, in EHRs, have bidirectional data feeds and decision support and a large number of institutions, it's just people don't realize it.Harry Glorikian: Let me ask you to I don't even know if you're still doing this. You were part of the Institute for Next Generation Health Care. I don't know if you're still.Joel Dudley: No, no, no. Not anymore. Harry Glorikian: OK, well, so I'm trying to get you to put your next generation hat on here for a second. And if you're looking at everything that's going on and where this is going, like where do you see the next big leaps coming? Where do you see the next changes coming in how we're going to make a difference for patients and hopefully bring down cost? And how is the technology that you guys are working on where you see it going sort of driving that next level of outcome for patients?Joel Dudley: What I always like we always like to say at Tempus is we don't know, because it's actually it's a very Tempus-y thing, to be humble that way, because we don't know. Like. Well, we all we know is that, you know, we have to build this data set and we need to build these pipes and we need to, like because that will enable whatever the thing is that hits is the next big thing, I mean, clearly, like in cancer and other areas, we've got some clear value propositions and starting in cardio and neuropsych. But I'm convinced if Eric was on this podcast, the first thing he would say is, I don't know. We don't know. We do know that it's going to require huge amounts of data and we're going to, so we're going to collect that data and then hope we figure it out or someone we work with figures out what the next big thing is. But if I put on my my personal hat, I guess I've always been interested in prevention. It's not an area we work in at Tempus a lot, we work with a lot of late stage disease, obviously when you start in cancer, you're starting in some pretty heavy disease area, right. And life and death. But we are getting into cardiology and we're looking at endocrinology, diabetes. We have a big diabetes effort that will be announced soon. And so I think when the stuff we're doing in cancer or when the approaches we're building at Tempus can start to be applied to prevention, I think will be really interesting in terms of moving the needle. And then, you know, in post COVID, we'll see what happens with telemedicine. But right now, we primarily interface with the, and again, I'm speaking personally. I'm not divulging any any strategic roadmap or anything here. But I would imagine at some point if telemedicine continues to go the way it's going, there's no reason a purely virtual telemedicine company could plug into temper's in the same way an academic medical center does. Right. So which I think would would be enabling.Harry Glorikian: Well, I would I would hope that that would be, I mean, if you think about the CVS-Aetna deal, I know that CVS, last year, you guys announced a deal with CVS, if I remember correctly.Joel Dudley: Correct.Joel Dudley: And so I think now that telemedicine has become much more. You know the way to do things, wy would you want somebody going to the ivory tower when you could plug them in through the system and interact with them there? And I mean, there's a huge cost savings. And and from a I mean, time standpoint, it's just more efficient.Joel Dudley: Yeah, yeah, and we spoke with a institution which I don't think I can name at this point, but they had mentioned that during covid they had even spun up a tele-oncology practice, which was surprising to me because oncology is just one of the things where you think what's so complicated, you know, you can't spin up a tele-oncology service. But in fact, they had and and they did extremely well over COVD. And then when you start to think about oncology, well, it's like, OK, I mean, you've got to see your doctor. But then they're saying, well, go get your labs at Quest. Go get your infusion at the infusion clinic, you know. You know, it's not it's not like you have to stay in the doctor's office. And I started thinking about it. I'm like, OK, tele-oncology can work. So, you know, whether we'll see broad, you know, expansion of tele-oncology probably after people see the profits AMC made, or AMC but another health system. But so so yeah. So it could be even in oncology, we see totally virtual services, you know, plugging into something like Tempus.Harry Glorikian: That would be interesting. I always think, like, I'm getting older. So the faster that we move into this new world, the happier that will be. I'll have a better experience, right?Joel Dudley: Absolutely.Harry Glorikian: So knowing the two of us, we could probably talk about this for hours. Right? Especially on the data side. You know, I think I think you're right. There's an under appreciation for where, once you have the data, what the different things you can do with it over time. It's more looked at from the science as opposed to the data side of things.Joel Dudley: Yeah, yeah. And I think a lot of people who practice data science and machine learning know this, that it's just, huge amounts of data of high quality data just trump any, you know, sophisticated machine learning methods. What I mean is like choosing between like the latest greatest deep learning or whatever method, versus just having a simpler method with huge amounts of high quality, the high quality part being important, data -- I would take huge amounts of high quality data any day because that's way more enabling than whatever sexy machine learning method is. And it's usually the case that once you have vast amounts of high quality dfairly straightforward statistical modeling methods will yield just amazing insights that come as a virtue of the scale and the quality of that data. And I think that's the lesson I learned at Tempus is that data just trumps all from that perspective. Then I think it's important to point out, because there's a lot of tool-only companies in the field like, "oh, I got, trust me, this deep learning methd is better than that deep learning method. Or It's got this little extra thing. Or this topological method is better than deep learning." I's like, who cares when once you have the volume of data that we have?Harry Glorikian: Yeah. The only place where I would not differ, but say, I think when you've got multiple high quality data sets, then you need a little bit of help making sense of it all, because the human brain was not designed to look at multiple pieces of data coming together and see patterns that it might not normally be able to sort of visualize.Joel Dudley: No, that's absolutely true. And that's the and probably being oversimplifying that, because that's my career, has been multi scale data. It's like machine learning and stuff like that. So I feel like I should, yeah, that's a good point. But huge amounts of high quality data and this multimodal, you know, we always say multimodal, the multimodal aspect is really important because we want different high dimensional measures on the same sample or same individual, if you will. And obviously, longitudinal as a dimension is a very powerful dimension as well.Harry Glorikian: Yep. Yep. No, well, this is something like, you know, I, I talk to people about and Joel, not to sort of build you up, but I mean, there's not many people that have the biological and the data background in one. We haven't I don't I don't believe we've graduated enough of them yet. We're moving in that direction, but not not enough of them yet. So it was great to have you on the show. I'm hoping that we'll actually get together sooner physically rather than later. But I have a feeling we're in this for another four or five more months. Before this thing starts dying down.Joel Dudley: Yeah, probably, when we'll travel back, but it's wild. I was thinking, like I said, I maybe mentioned this last time. I've been at Tempus only like a year and a half and we've added five dollars billion of valuation in that time. But what's really cool about that is not that we're worth $8 billion in valuation because valuations are, you know, whatever, but is that there's a sense within Tempus that we are still a small, scrappy startup just getting started. So like that that's my favorite part about that number, is not that, because I think a lot of companies, if they had an $8 billion valuation they'd be like, "We made we made it. This is great." But Tempus is like, "just completely ignore that. We are just getting started." It doesn't matter to anything we do day to day.Harry Glorikian: Well, I remember when when I was at Applied Biosystems, you know, the valuation was going off the chart because we were doing the genome. Couldn't install machines fast enough. And I remember talking to some of the senior people and saying, okay, well, what are we going to do next? And I remember the gentleman who was taller, way taller than me looking down at me and said, have you seen our stock price like we are? We're killing it. We're performing admirably. And I remember going home and telling my wife, like, I think it's time to sell some stock. Because that is not the right mindset for success.Joel Dudley: Not the right mindset, no. Yeah, it's it's it's very refreshing, you know, that it's that attitude is just, you know, across the board at Tempus, everybody is like, we're just getting started. We're just getting started, heads down, keep cranking. And we really, you know, obviously comes from leadership, but we really block out any distraction that would come from from that type of valuation or whatever, you know. So it's really fantastic leadership on the part of Tempus.Harry Glorikian: Well, one of these days, I hope to to meet Eric, he sounds like an interesting character. But you know, stay stay safe, stay healthy, and, you know, obviously, you and I will constantly continue the conversation in the background, but is great to have you back on the show. And you know what, honestly, huge change from Mount Sinai, I never thought you would leave that place, considering.Joel Dudley: I never thought either. But I enjoy it. It's been, like I said, as I've been recruiting people, I said, you've got to, like I don't care how good your job is now. You've got to get out now. There's like there's this wave where, everybody's going to be riding in the next decade, when I talk to someone like me. You're so well positioned to do it. And you're going to, if you don't get out and just try, you're going to kick yourself in five to 10 years and say, I saw this coming. I saw this big thing coming and I didn't get out.Harry Glorikian: Well, I've been saying, you know, since we since we were doing the genome. I remember telling all my friends, I'm like, "Biology, man biology and where the data is going is where it's going to be." And people were like, "Well, tell me specifically where to put my money." I'm like, look, I'm not, I can't tell you right now specifically. I'm just telling you that that whole area is going to explode. And I think it's just going to, I mean, now we're at a point where it's, the curve is ridiculous. Gene editing stocks. What's happening in the space. I mean. COVID has pulled stuff forward in a way that I could never have imagined.Joel Dudley: Yeah, me either. Yeah. Yeah, it's a huge catalyst. I agree, though. It's amazing. Good good time to to be in the field for sure.Harry Glorikian: Oh, best job in the world. I always tell people.Joel Dudley: Yeah, yeah. Science fiction is a cool business.Harry Glorikian: Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. You got to have a little bit of both. Otherwise it gets boring.Joel Dudley: Yeah, exactly. Awesome man.Harry Glorikian: All right. Good to talk and we'll stay in touch.Joel Dudley: All right. Sounds good. Take care man. Good to see you.Harry Glorikian: All right.Harry Glorikian: That’s it for this week’s show. We’ve made more than 50 episodes of MoneyBall Medicine, and you can find all of them at glorikian dot com forward-slash podcast. You can follow me on Twitter at hglorikian. If you like the show, please do us a favor and leave a rating and review at Apple Podcasts. Thanks, and we’ll be back soon with our next interview.
Harry Potter Trivia Time for more Harry Potter Trivia and you won't need a time-turner to play it multiple times! We have a little something for everyone from Ravenclaw to Hufflepuff. This episode has a mix of questions based on both the movie and the book "Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban". We have mixed together a variety of difficulty so that the casual fan can play along with the super fan. For example, do you know the answer to the following questions: Who takes over the Defense of the Dark Arts class when Lupin is unable to teach? What's the name of the triple-decker bus that picks up Harry and for two extra points who was the driver? Who visits the Dursleys and for two extra points, what is the name of their favorite dog that they bring? What is the name of the newest state of the art racing broom stick that reaches 150 miles an hour in 10 seconds and incorporates an unbreakable braking charm? There are 2 Professors that are filling positions for the first time in Prisoner of Azkaban, who are they and what positions do they fill? When Harry is surrounded by Dementors in the Quidditch game, what house were they playing against and for two extra points, in the book who gets the snitch? Which two painting characters take turns guarding the entrance to the Gryffindor home? If you like this episode, check out Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone and Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets. Music Hot Swing, Fast Talkin, Bass Walker, Dances and Dames, Ambush, Wizardtorium by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ Don't forget to follow us on social media: Patreon - patreon.com/quizbang - Please consider supporting us on Patreon. Check out our fun extras for patrons and help us keep this podcast going. We appreciate any level of support! Website - quizbangpod.com Check out our website, it will have all the links for social media that you need and while you're there, why not go to the contact us page and submit a question! Facebook - @quizbangpodcast - we post episode links and silly lego pictures to go with our trivia questions. Enjoy the silly picture and give your best guess, we will respond to your answer the next day to give everyone a chance to guess. Instagram - Quiz Quiz Bang Bang (quizquizbangbang), we post silly lego pictures to go with our trivia questions. Enjoy the silly picture and give your best guess, we will respond to your answer the next day to give everyone a chance to guess. Twitter - @quizbangpod We want to start a fun community for our fellow trivia lovers. If you hear/think of a fun or challenging trivia question, post it to our twitter feed and we will repost it so everyone can take a stab it. Come for the trivia - stay for the trivia. Ko-Fi - ko-fi.com/quizbangpod - Keep that sweet caffeine running through our body with a Ko-Fi, power us through a late night of fact checking and editing!
AN INHERITANCE TRIGGERS A DEADLY BATTLE BETWEEN COUSINS Greed, lust for power, and ruthless ambition are what drive Richard Grant. All he needs is the Big G to consolidate his hold on the territory. Only his cousin Harry Grant, the legitimate heir, stands in the way. When Harry guns down the hired killers sent on Richard's orders, a crooked sheriff and a bent judge make sure Harry ends up in prison. Life is tough for the young cowboy, but he survives, only to face, on his release from prison, more assassins sent to make sure he never returns home to claim his inheritance. Harry has no choice but to go gunning for his cousin. The showdown takes place at the Hot Spur saloon. Only one of them will be left standing. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Tim trained at Mountview before embarking on his successful career within the performing arts world.His directing credits include: Into the Woods, (Cockpit Theatre), Metropolis,Wonderful Town, A Little Night Music, Into the Woods, Days of Hope, She Loves Me, Follies. (Ye Olde Rose and Crown Theatre); NewsRevue (Edinburgh 2013, Canal Café Theatre, London 2013 and 2016), Sunny Side of The Street, Bewitched Bothered and Bewildered, Classic Moments, Hidden Treasures, Coloured Lights and Jack The Ripper (Jermyn Street Theatre); Sweeney Todd and Chess (University of Cumbria, Carlisle); Rubbed, Goosed, Fanny, Jack Sissy That Stalk, Charming Dick and Prince Bendover in Boots (RVT); Beans and Cream (Canal Café Theatre); Hot Lips Cold War (London Theatre Workshop), Maurice, My Beautiful Laundrette, Dangerous, When Harry met Barry, Orton, Rise Like A Phoenix, Boyes Play, Cleveland Street, The Blink Series, three seasons of the hit Bathhouse (Above The Stag Theatre, where Tim was Associate Artistic Director from 2009 – 2015) and The Milkman's on His Way, Slippered, a new musical with Tony Hatch.His acting credits include: In Gay Company (RADA); Bathhouse and Silence of The Lambs (Above The Stag Theatre); Assassins (Pleasance Theatre); Blair on Broadway (Arts Theatre); Forever Plaid (UK Tour); South Pacific (Aberystwyth Arts Centre) Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat (Chelmsford Civic Theatre and Middlesbrough Theatre); Godspell (Millfield Arts Centre); As You Like it, Aladdin and Dick Whittington (Mercury Theatre, Colchester); Another Country (Greenfields); Twelfth Night (Broadway Theatre, Catford); You're Gonna Love Tomorrow (Greenwich Playhouse) and The Golden Key (Greenwich Theatre); Fred Astaire (London Palladium); Dame in Aladdin, Sleeping Beauty, Dick Whittington and Cinderella (Courtyard Theatre, Hereford); Snow White with Linda Robson (Beck Theatre, Hayes) Aladdin (Chelmsford Civic Theatre) Charming Dick (Cockpit Theatre) Sleeping Beauty with Honey G and Jack and The Beanstalk with Michelle Collins (White Rock Theatre, Hastings)His cabaret credits include: Tim's debut his show Mountains at Feinstein's 54 Below in (New York) and a season at The Pride Arts Centre in Chicago Tim Sings Stephen Sondheim's Divas (Ye Olde Rose and Crown Theatre, Frankenstein's and Above The Arts, Pride arts Centre – Chicago, Tada Theatre - NYC); Mountains (St James Theatre, Kenneth Moore Theatre, Ilford, Jermyn Street Theatre and Above The Arts); Tim McArthur and Chums (London Hippodrome); A New Direction (Theatre Lounge, Kuala Lumpur); New York Ding Dong (Don't Tell Mama, NYC); Over the Rainbow (Upstairs at The Gatehouse, New End Theatre and Jermyn Street Theatre). Tim has supported Helen Lederer (UK Tour); Graham Norton (Hilton); Julian Clary (Savoy Theatre) and Bobby Davro (Bridlington Spa); Elton John's Christmas Party. For the past 2 years Tim has been the host for the monthly Sondheim Society Cabaret Night (Phoenix Artist Club) and most recently was one of the headline singers in Sondheim Unplugged at London's Hippodrome. For further information about Tim, visit his website timmcarthur.com
En compagnie de Fanie Grégoire du podcast La vie secrète des Geekettes, on jase de vendre des bobettes signées par les comédiens de LORD OF THE RINGS et de la première de RETURN OF THE KING, on revient sur le plan machiavélique mais songé de Thanos dans AVENGERS - ENDGAME et on échange nos répliques préférées de KARMINA!! Comme dirait Vlad : «Bogne franket!»Et en deuxième partie, on s'en prend à CLOCKWORK ORANGE (avec une possibilité de rédemption) et Fanie prend le contrôle du podcast alors qu'on devait jaser innocemment de WHEN HARRY
Katya Bugratsevich, a teacher of ecstatic yoga, energy & free dance movement practices is a mother to 2 young children, who speaks out to us today about her controversial recent ecstatic birth and how we as women all have the innate power, ability & right to experience the same! Katya believes that "The orgasm of life is what we came here for". To quote the famous scene out of the movie "When Harry met Sally"...I want some of what she's drinking right ladies?!? Katya believes, lives & breathes the notion that sexuality reveals our creative energies, lays bare our limitless possibilities and extends our divine feminine natures. The wild woman within each & every one of us exposes our true essence. Katya explains how we can experience both physical & energetic orgasms by transforming the discomfort of childbirth into feelings of intense pleasure...the pleasure/pain veil is so very thin afterall! I know this may all sound totally Woo-woo for those of you who haven't experienced an ecstatic birth yet...I used to feel the same way. Until it happened to me ;-) --Website fo Russian midwife, Nataliya, who inspired Katja's water births: nash-aist.ru --Recommended Books to cultivate Tao sexual energies: https://images.app.goo.gl/em5s3nSMSBrP83Mq8 https://images.app.goo.gl/3g6M39qa6iGUQ8Yj7 --Follow Katja on her Instagram page: My Dance of Life & Energy
Caitlin Durante and Jamie Loftus (hosts of The Bechdel Cast) join hosts Allie and Mia as they discuss the Rom-Com classic “When Harry met Sally,” starring Meg Ryan and Billy Crystal. They discuss Sally Albright’s strong sense-of-self, Harry Burns’ negging, Reiner and Ephron’s friendship, and theorize about whether you can be a true friend to someone you’re attracted to. __ SHOW INFORMATION Instagram: @P.S.ILoveRomComsPod Twitter: @P.S.ILoveRomComsPod Email: P.S.ILoveRomComsPod@gmail.com
Crooked Table Podcast - The world of film from a fresh angle
It's that time again as we charge through Platform 9 and 3/4 for another year at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. This month, we're taking a look at the fourth entry in the Harry Potter series, 2005's Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire. As fans know, this is the entry where the stakes really kick into gear, propelling towards the inevitable conclusion. So to help us break down the pivotal installment of Harry's story, original Crooked Table Podcast co-host Freddy Yaniz joins us. We'll discuss how the film's many shocking twists, why the relationship drama matters, and when exactly viewers are supposed to suspect what's really going on at the Triwizard Tournament. So grab your Portkey, steer clear of hedge mazes, and sharpen up your Expeliarmus skills as The Boy Who Lived comes face to face with destiny in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire! SYNOPSIS The fourth Harry Potter movie sees Harry (Daniel Radcliffe) returning to Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. Along with his friends, Ron (Rupert Grint) and Hermione (Emma Watson), it's another year of magic and mystery. Hogwarts hosts a tournament between three schools, with one participant selected from each school by the Goblet of Fire. When Harry's name is drawn unexpectedly, he must compete in the dangerous contest. SHOW NOTES Listen to our Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone episode featuring Bri Azmoudeh of Geeky Girl Gab! Check out our Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets episode featuring Teri Sears! Listen to our Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban episode featuring Jackson Smith! Join the Crooked Table Crew by becoming an official patron over at Patreon.com/CrookedTable Subscribe to the Crooked Table Podcast on Apple Podcasts so that you never miss a moment! Listen to the Crooked Table Podcast on Spotify! The Crooked Table Podcast is also on Stitcher! Reach Robert Yaniz Jr. on Twitter at @crookedtable. Connect with Crooked Table on social media: Facebook | Twitter | Tumblr
In this week's episode, we review the trending Netflix reality show called Indian Matchmaker. Listen as we talk about the concept and process of arranged marriages, why dating is like in the year 2020, and what it means, looks and feels like to date with intention. Dive in as we discuss colorism, the ranking system in South Asian countries, and the implications of dating a “hot” or a “boring” person. Hurry up and write that relationship book, Tonika! Key takeaways from this episode include: 1. We are all one step away from having a “When Harry a Met Sally” love story. Well, unless you have an arranged marriage. Relationships, whether arranged or not, often start off being focused on physical attraction and what each person brings to the table. They have the potential to grow into long term love based unions when both people are invested in one another. 2. You must first be ready for marriage if you want and plan to get married. If you are not committed to partnership and marriage internally then you are not being your authentic self. Be honest with yourself about what you actually need and want. Do not waste someone else’s time. 3. To be clear: The use of the word “boring” is a friendly euphemism for “ready” (for a relationship). Chemistry makes a difference whether it’s for love or arrangement only. You must have a great personality and be genuinely interested in joining with another person. Discover which partner you want in your life and lean in. 4. Do not forget that this is a reality show and of course there were creative licenses taken to entice and to engage the audience. Indian Matchmaker is very entertaining and it is also thought-provoking about dating and long term relationships. We cannot wait for season 2! For questions and share outs and further discussion please contact us at therapistsarepeopletoo@gmail.com. Until next time, remember to live, laugh, love, and keep it real. -Frantzces, Sabeen and Tonika :) Click here to leave us a rating on iTunes. Follow us on Instagram.
When Harry finally gets his Hogwarts letter from Hagrid, it contains a list of required school supplies, but makes no mention of how he’s expected to pack it all. Nevertheless, on the 1st September, it’s all safely packed in a ‘huge, heavy trunk.’ This is fortuitous as it appears that the trunk is indeed the […] The post Thoughts about Trunks appeared first on Harry Potter Lexicon.
Best Old Time Radio Drama Podcast with Bob Bro Show for Tuesday, June 23, 2020 The Lives of Harry Lime - "Too Many Crooks" Harry is contacted by a bank president in Budapest requesting his services. When Harry arrives in Hungary, the job is not exactly legitimate. It seems there is a trio of robbers intent on robbing his bank. And each is looking out for only their own interests. Featuring: Orson Welles. Approx Air Date: May, 1951. Syndicated.
In de jaren ’80 is jazz een echt lappendeken geworden. Zowel de avantgardisten als de legendes uit de gouden jaren zijn actief. Labels als Verve en Pablo spelen in op de swing en bouwen verder op de reputatie van sterren als Count Basie en Ella Fitzgerald. Het label Concorde biedt eveneens ruimte voor mainstream jazz, waarin overduidelijk wordt gerefereerd naar oude jazz-stijlen. In het saxofoongeluid van Scott Hamilton horen we echo's van Lester Young. Wynton Marsalis groeit op in New Orleans, jazz wordt hem met de paplepel ingegoten door zijn muzikale vader. Hij maakt snel naam bij The Jazz Messengers, maar is net zo goed klassiek onderlegd. Wynton grijpt steeds meer terug naar de wortels van de jazz en keert hierbij de vernieuwers de rug toe. Zijn overtuiging staat haaks op het principe dat jazz zichzelf steeds heruitvindt. In de slipstream van Wynton Marsalis, wordt het neo-traditionalisme heel populair en duiken nieuwe namen op zoals Harry Connick Jr. die onder meer de muziek vertolkt voor de immens populaire film ‘When Harry met Sally’.
Legendary director (Men in Black, Get Shorty, Adams Family) and cinematographer (Raising Arizona, Blood Simple, When Harry met Sally, Misery, Big) Barry Sonnenfeld tells amazing stories about being involved with the Coen Brothers and clashing with Penny Marshall.
[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text] Over the past decade, Transportation Network Companies (TNCs) like Uber and Lyft have shifted the role of ridesharing from cool to necessity within the modern movement economy. However, as TNCs start to expand their services - through e-scooters, e-bikes, and even public transit connectivity - dynamics within their user base, driver pool, and overarching business models are, in turn, affected. In this episode, host Dennis Wisco speaks with ridesharing expert and entrepreneur Harry Campbell, and CoMotion MIAMI’s Jonah Bliss, to answer the ever-looming question: Has ridesharing plateaued? Entrepreneur and ex-aerospace engineer Harry Campbell is the founder of TheRideshareGuy.com, a blog, podcast, and YouTube channel dedicated to reaching rideshare drivers and enthusiasts alike to serve as a platform for drivers to connect and share their experiences. Always having been drawn to uncovering the inner-workings of our modern world, Harry studied aerospace engineering at UC San Diego and then worked for six years at Boeing. After a while, Harry realized a yearning to embark upon his own entrepreneurial endeavors and entered the gig-economy. When Harry started driving for Uber and Lyft in 2013, he quickly realized that there’s a lot more to getting people safely from Point A to Point B. Harry started blogging about his experiences and conversations, and TheRideshareGuy.com was born. In addition to his dedicated content on TheRideshareGuy.com, Harry continues to write for top tech publications, like WIRED, Forbes, Fusion & Business Insider. His first book, “The Rideshare Guide,” was published in 2018. Since then, Harry has continued to work on creating educational content and reference materials to help new drivers navigate the industry. The Rideshare Guy was founded in 2014 and has quickly grown into a thriving community for rideshare drivers across the globe. Harry and his team post monthly content on their blog, podcast, and youtube to help hundreds of thousands of drivers work smarter and not harder to capitalize on their full potential in the gig economy. TheRideShareguy.com is a well-informed source for not only Uber and Lyft drivers but also food delivery providers like Doordash and PostMates, scooter services like Bird, and more. TheRideShareGuy.com also offers advice and services beyond the basics of rideshare culture, and has resources for drivers spanning from insurance, taxes, policy information, mileage tracking, and even “Life After Ridesharing.” Tune into this episode as Dennis, Harry, and Jonah address trending topics in the rideshare economy, including regulatory policies and outcomes like California AB-5 and Congestion at the Curb white paper. Through these conversations and more, listen as they uncover the bigger picture of how TNCs have become a critical business model for the mobility of people and goods. [/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]
When Harry left in the morning I nearly screamed at the screen, “Mate, WTF you doing?”
Turn to Page 65, The Whomping Willow. Today’s lesson is called Crash Decisions The chapter begins with Harry surprised that he wants summer break to go even longer, due to his love for life at the Burrow. Summer does end eventually, and the group heads to Platform 9 ¾ to take the Hogwarts Express. When Harry and Ron try to go through the barrier, however, they meet only solid concrete. In a panic, they decide to use the flying Ford Anglia to track down the Hogwarts Express. Surprisingly, they are successful, although the invisibility charm malfunctions, and begin an extensive journey flying above the train. The car begins to give out just as they see the castle, finally stalling out and crashing into a tree: The Whomping Willow. They survive the tree’s assaults and the car ejects them and their stuff and drives off. Ron discovers his wand was nearly snapped in the chaos. In the castle, Professor Snape, then McGonagall and Dumbledore, punish Harry and Ron and try to communicate the gravity of their being seen by muggles in the flying car. They are given detention, and forced to miss the feast and eat alone. Eventually, they make it to the Gryffindor common room, where Hermione and Percy are perturbed by their adventure, but the rest greet them like heroes. Music: Happy Haunts by Aaron Kenny #MagicalTheory #HarryPotter #podcast #WizardPhD
When Harry comes down with a mysterious illness, Macy, Mel and Abigael must work together to save his life; Jordan and Maggie embark on a dangerous mission in New Orleans. Scorecard: 9.6/10 *Fedback : blackgirlcouch@gmail.comTwitter: Black Girl_CouchTumblr: slowlandrogynousmiracle *
ART CREDIT: https://unseelieaccords.tumblr.com/post/148299623863/tylerwalpole-daily-dose-of-dresden-anastasiaHello lovely people! It's time for RoShawn's introduction to Madeline Raith. As introductions go, it's pretty much unforgettable. Madeline makes the kind of entrance that puts slow-mo Hot Girl high school movie entrances to shame, and she's used to being up against defenseless vanilla mortals who crumple in the face of an onslaught like that. Even Harry is a little taken off-guard for a moment. But her recovers. And then she threatens Justine. When Harry leaves Zero, he runs into Anastasia Lucio, who has been tailing him in an effort to see whether he's a danger regarding the Council's search for Morgan. Harry is pained that he can't tell her the truth of what's going on, but he can't trust her to understand his motivations...and he's beginning to have doubts about Morgan's motivations, too. Thanks for listening, and I will see you soon with a new episode!
ART CREDIT: https://unseelieaccords.tumblr.com/post/148299623863/tylerwalpole-daily-dose-of-dresden-anastasiaHello lovely people! It's time for RoShawn's introduction to Madeline Raith. As introductions go, it's pretty much unforgettable. Madeline makes the kind of entrance that puts slow-mo Hot Girl high school movie entrances to shame, and she's used to being up against defenseless vanilla mortals who crumple in the face of an onslaught like that. Even Harry is a little taken off-guard for a moment. But her recovers. And then she threatens Justine. When Harry leaves Zero, he runs into Anastasia Lucio, who has been tailing him in an effort to see whether he's a danger regarding the Council's search for Morgan. Harry is pained that he can't tell her the truth of what's going on, but he can't trust her to understand his motivations...and he's beginning to have doubts about Morgan's motivations, too. Thanks for listening, and I will see you soon with a new episode!
The Mind Set Podcast is weekly attempt to open eyes, and try to shed some light on what's really going on in the world. All done by ripping apart the media madness that masquerades as news. All with a healthy dose of paranoia. Hosted this week by Gareth Davies and Ben Emlyn-Jones. Some of the topics discussed on this weeks show: 1. Ben's internet woes 2. When Harry met Megan 3. Is "Royalty" Real? 4. What to expect from the impeachment trial 5. Are Atheists the silent majority? 6. Alex Fate, Flat Earth and is Ben Nuts? 7. Space Force uniforms revealed 8. TTSA knows more UFO videos are out there 9. Muhammad Ali Tells Johnny Carson UFO 1973 And so much more! Music Played – “Born, Never Asked” by Laurie Anderson Until Next Week, Peace Out Humans…
The Mind Set Podcast is weekly attempt to open eyes, and try to shed some light on what’s really going on in the world. All done by ripping apart the media madness that masquerades as news. All with a healthy dose of paranoia. Hosted this week by Gareth Davies and Ben Emlyn-Jones. Some of the topics discussed on this weeks show: 1. Ben's internet woes 2. When Harry met Megan 3. Is "Royalty" Real? 4. What to expect from the impeachment trial 5. Are Atheists the silent majority? 6. Alex Fate, Flat Earth and is Ben Nuts? 7. Space Force uniforms revealed 8. TTSA knows more UFO videos are out there 9. Muhammad Ali Tells Johnny Carson UFO 1973 And so much more! Music Played – “Born, Never Asked” by Laurie Anderson Until Next Week, Peace Out Humans…
The Sussexes won’t be using their HRH titles: Minutes 0 to 5:45 (recorded Saturday) This week we have a slightly different format due to the breaking news on Saturday that the Sussexes won’t be using their HRH titles and will reimburse the Sovereign Grant for the renovations to Frogmore Cottage. We recorded an update on Saturday and open with that news. Chandra thinks this news came out on Saturday because these details needed intense negotiation behind the scenes. She says that reimbursing the palace for the renovations was probably not the Sussexes’ idea, although it’s presented that way. Intro: Minutes 5:45 to 9:15 (rest of the podcast recorded Thursday) Starting here, the rest of the podcast was recorded Thursday. We’ll be back the first week in February and the last week in February, but that’s tentative and will change if major news drops. Chandra anticipated that Harry and Meghan would lose their HRH titles, which sort-of happened as you know. I talk about the culture shock I had being married to a German guy and living in Germany, and how I can relate to Duchess Meghan. Meghan’s situation was so much worse due to the pressure from the royal family and the press. The Sandringham summit: Minutes 9:15 to 13 Harry sat down with the Queen alone first and then met with Charles and William. Chandra thinks they must have spent a lot of time working on the first statement from the Queen, which was very personable and used Harry and Meghan’s first names and the wording “my family.” The Queen is typically tone deaf, as evidenced by her response to Diana’s death. At the end of her reign people are starting to realize this about her. The Andrew debacle damaged the monarchy and changed the way that people see her. Meghan did two events in Vancouver: Minutes 13 to 14:30 When Harry was back in London, Meghan stayed in Vancouver and met with two different women’s organizations, Justice for Girls and the Downtown Eastside Women’s Center. She looked super cute in leggings and a cable knit sweater and was clearly enjoying her new casual role. Harry did his last event as a senior royal, he launched the 2021 Rugby League World Cup Mental Fitness Charter at Kensington Palace and he also announced the locale for the 2022 Invictus Games. Chandra emailed with Buzzfeed reporter about the article comparing Meghan and Kate’s headlines: Minutes 14:30 to 20:30 Before we recorded, I asked Chandra if we could talk about the Buzzfeed article comparing the headlines between Meghan and Kate. Kate has been consistency praised for minor issues like eating avocados while Meghan was nitpicked was associated and the atrocities of the avocado supply chain. It turns out that Chandra is friendly with Ellie and that she emailed her with some ideas for that article! Ellie came up with this idea for the comparison headlines back in December. It’s baffling to me the things that people use to nitpick Meghan. Oscar nominations: Minutes 20:30 to 30:45 Chandra is about halfway through Parasite, which I’ve seen too. We both love it, no spoilers! We don’t think Parasite will win best picture, but Bong Joon-ho might win best director. Chandra is worried that Joker will win best picture, but she’s ok with Joaquin Phoenix winning best actor. Quentin Tarantino might get best director because he has such a great body of work and has only won two screenplay Oscars. We both saw Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, which is a very good movie with great performances. Chandra thinks Tarantino isn’t mad about Bong Joon-ho winning best director at the Critics Choice Awards despite Tarantino’s expression. Chandra mentions a podcast called The Rewatchables, in which Tarantino talked about how Dunkirk was Christopher Nolan’s best movie. Snubs included Awkwafina, Lupita, Taron Egerton and Jennifer Lopez while Scarlett Johansson got TWO nominations! Chandra is salty about Jennifer Lopez not getting her first Oscar nomination, which she totally deserved. User feedback and questions: Minutes 30:45 to 34 Our user feedback is from Jacqueline, who said our Sussexit podcast last week was one of our best. Thank you Jackie! She also asked whether it was unique for Harry to date an independent woman like Meghan instead of an aristocrat like his previous girlfriends. Harry has a ton of money and it must have been eye-opening for him to date a woman making her way in the world. Chelsy Davy and Cressida Bonas both worked though. Cressida was a bohemian person trying to figure her life out. Chelsea got her law degree and then became a jewelry designer. Jackie’s point still stands that Meghan must have been a breath of fresh air to Harry. Comments of the week: Minutes 34 to 38:30 My comment of the week is from Arpeggi on the post about Gwyneth Paltrow’s $75 “This Smells like my Vagina” votive candle. Chandra’s comment of the week is from Lara K on Diplo’s GQ profile. Like Chandra, Lara also wants to shamef-k Diplo. Thanks for listening bitches!
CW: THE WARRIORS contains violence against women, including threats of sexual violence. Our conversation will briefly touch on these elements. When Harry saw the Wonder Wheel come OUT TO PLA-Eee-AAAY on screen at the Trylon's "Up All Night" movie marathon back in November, he hooted and hollered from the back row. The quintessential midnight movie, THE WARRIORS (1979) is a love letter to a vision of grimy, apocalyptic late '70s New York, a thrilling "single destination" action movie, and surprisingly nuanced, heartfelt, and heartbreaking portrayal of an underclass poised against a hostile world. By portraying the mythologized gangs of New York on their own terms, THE WARRIORS may just be the rare kind of movie that can make its righteous point without preaching. These are the armies of the night, and they're good… real good. Follow us at @trylovepodcast on Twitter and email us at trylovepodcast@gmail.com to get in touch! Theme: "Raindrops" by Huma-Huma/"No Smoking" PSA by John Waters.
When Harry met Meghan, legacy and tradition went down the drain. Here's a garbage hot take on why their abandonment of 'senior royal duties' mostly sucks.
We have a packed episode for you this week as Jim is joined by local-filmmaker Rowanne Swain as they chatted about Frozen 2 and Elizabeth Bank's reboot of the Charlie's Angels franchise.You'll also hear some of our Q&A which we recorded at the Strand Cinema earlier this year after a screening of When Harry met Sally when BanterFlix's very own Colette Fahy chatted with Dr Giuliana Monteverde and Louise Gallagher about the film.Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/banterflix)
The Lonely EntertainerThe chemical bath was his favorite time of day. Yes, the specially treated water burned. He did have to strip naked in front of a team of scientists. And in the few months since he’d been brought here, the chlorine in the water had bleached his once gray-brown hair a strange shade of platinum-blonde -meets-muted-green. None of that bothered Harry Ludlow very much though. Because in spite of all the discomfort and inconvenience, the few minutes in that big plastic tub were the only time he had any real company. More importantly, it was the only time he had an audience.The scientists weren’t much for conversation. There must’ve been some rules that stopped them from chatting on the job. Besides, they all wore gloves and facemasks and full plastic hazmat suits from head to toe. Probably couldn’t talk in one of those things even if you wanted to. None of that stopped Harry from trying to get a reaction. In the beginning he’d gone for the low-hanging fruit. Fake drowning. Star Wars references. One day a scientist reached down, as always, to scrub his ballsack. Harry asked if he was gonna have to give him a tip. He thought he heard one of them snort, but he couldn’t be sure. Probably the best day so far had been when they’d come into the room and found his lips puckered, his legs artfully crossed, and his eyes reading an obvious “come hither”. He hoped they’d enjoyed that one as much as he did.After the first week or so locked in the facility, he burned through the easy material. Luckily, in his life before all this, Harry had been a comedian. Not a rich one, or a famous one, or if he was being honest with himself even a particularly good one. But he was comfortable on stage, heckled an audience in a way they enjoyed, and was at least alright with impressions. The last few days he’d enjoyed barking the scientists around in his increasingly convincing President Ward impression. No reaction. But this morning there had been a man in a suit standing in the glass observation area outside the washroom. When Harry proclaimed in the President’s signature Southern drawl that his “diet of corn and Omaha beef” was what made him immune to Vicker’s disease, the man in the suit definitely laughed. Harry tried to get a read on him but then the scientists yanked his attention back to the tub with their scrubbing.After the wash, Harry was dressed and lead back to his room. The door was vacuum-sealed, and once again he was left alone with his bed, his books, and a television. He chose the TV and put on a nature documentary. A giraffe fight was exactly what he needed. He’d burned through most of the good shows and movies in his first month or two, and he hated flipping channels. Even before all this, he especially hated the news. Now it was even worse. The same thing every day. Vicker’s Disease. No one wanted to talk about anything else. And considering his particular situation, Harry had heard more than enough. Giraffes were far better than talking heads.But before he could settle into watching the documentary, a flashing red box appeared on the center of the screen while a loud buzzing sound drowned out the audio. Harry groaned. The buzzing stopped and a familiar European man appeared on screen.“It’s Doctor Konig,” the voice squawked, “Are you there Harry?”“Yeah, I’m here.”“We managed to find some video that I want to walk through with you.”“Ok,” Harry said, happy to be doing almost anything, “Let’s see it.”There was a pause and then Doctor Konig’s face disappeared from the screen. In its place there was black and white security footage of a mall. A homeless man was stumbling around before he fell to his knees and started waving for help while he grabbed at his chest. Everyone ignored him. After another thirty seconds, he fell over face first in the middle of the marble floor outside the jewelry store. People formed a little circle around the man and eventually a pair of mall cops came over. They flipped the homeless man onto his back. At that moment a cloud of what looked like dust spurted from his mouth. Harry leaned forward in his chair. This was new information.The people in the video looked shocked, and the guards dragged the man’s lifeless body somewhere off screen.“Do you know this man?” Doctor Konig said.“I don’t think so.”The video sped up. People rushed around in a blur and for a while things seemed normal. Then in half a second everything changed. People started running around like they were mad. Just off screen and to the left he knew police had sealed the mall’s main entrance. All of the entrances in fact. Because of the speed it only took a minute or two before the people on screen started to get sluggish. Then they collapsed. And after that the bodies coughed their own clouds of dust. Soon there was no movement on screen at all. But Harry knew well that at this point other video showed a man still moving, still alive, but alone, scared, and very confused. Surviving on nothing but protein bars from the Equinox gym on the second floor. The video cut out once men in hazmat suits appeared on screen. Doctor Konig’s face returned to the TV.“Did you guys really have to leave me in there for a week?” Harry said.“That was a decision made be your government. I was completely uninvolved. Although my understanding is that they weren’t expecting anyone to be left alive. Finding you in that gym was a miracle.”“Oh come on, I’m not that fat.”“Very funny Harry, you do your profession proud. But no, please. Do you know this man? The first victim. We have never had a positive identification until now. It could be vital.”“I’m sorry. I’ve never seen him before.”“You’re absolutely certain?”“Yes! I don’t have anything to tell you. I’m sorry. Besides it’s not like he was patient zero. There’s nothing special about this guy.”“Harry,” Doctor Konig said, “Within 48 hours of infection, Vicker’s Disease kills everyone. Within 48 hours, everyone in that mall was dead. Everyone except you.”“Thanks for the new information.”“Among the 3 billion cases of Vicker’s Disease reported worldwide, the rate of-”“I know. I know. You don’t think I know all this?”“You don’t act like you know! Among the 3 billion cases of Vicker’s Disease reported worldwide, the rate of infection and fatality after exposure is 100%. Except for you.”“I know. I’m very lucky.”“1 in 3 billion?”“I’m very, very lucky.”“I agree. But there has to be something more to it than that.”“Well I can’t think of anything, and neither can you or any of the rest of the geniuses they locked me in here with. By the way what’s the point of being a scientist if you still have no idea what the fuck is going on!”“Harry, calm down. I didn’t mean to get you angry. I just want answers.”“And you don’t think I want answers? I’m sorry Doc but I don’t know what you want from me. There’s no secret message. I didn’t go on any exotic vacations. I’m just a lucky fuck. The world is dying and I get to live. For no reason. There is no reason. Let’s not kid ourselves and pretend that any of this makes sense. It’s all just one big joke.”Doctor Konig removed his glasses and rubbed his forehead.“I’ll talk to you tomorrow.”The screen went black for a moment before it returned to a battle between two male giraffes. Harry fell into his bed with a defeated thud.-The next day started the same as all the rest. A chemical bath, hot and burning as ever. But yesterday’s conversation with Doctor Konig really had gotten to him. For the first timw in weeks, he sat through the scrubbing without interruption. Even through their baggy plastic suits, the doctors seemed dejected when they got to the end and realized he wasn’t even going to try and get a reaction out of them. Today, he just didn’t have it in him.While they were towelling him off he looked out through the glass surrounding the area. That man in the suit from yesterday was still there. He gave Harry a nod and a little wave. A very interesting reaction from a man who’d just spent at least half an hour watching him take a bath.Harry was dressed and lead back into his sealed off rooms. He made himself a cup of coffee and considered spending some time on that running machine everyone kept telling him to use. Then a buzzer sounded.The man in the suit was standing outside the room, behind a few panes of glass. He was small and black and looked like someone famous. Like if Denzel fucked a hobbit.“Hello,” the man’s voice came from a speaker in the wall.“Hey,” Harry said, “I’m gonna guess you’re here to see me.”“Good guess,” the man said, “how long have you been here for?”“Pretty much since the beginning. I’m not sure they know what to do with me.”“I get that sense as well. How do you like it here?”“Honestly? It’s boring. Nothing to do. No company. Well, no good company. No alcohol. And they keep trying to get me to jog.”The man in the suit smiled.“You’re a singer right?”Harry tilted his head at the question.“In the shower maybe. At church if I’m trying to make my mom feel like she did a good job raising me. Which she clearly didn’t.”“You’re not a singer?”“No, I’m not a singer. Why do you think I’m a singer?”The man was visibly embarassed.“I thought… We found advertising with you as an opener at a jazz club.”“I’m a comedian,” he said, “I open for the jazz quartet on Tuesdays. A friend of mine plays saxophone there and he’s friends with the owner. He got me the gig. It’s a good gig. Fancy music types like to drink wine. Wine gets people drunk. And drunk people like to laugh.”Harry had been posting videos of his standup online for years. And all they could find about him was the fact that he sometimes opened at a jazz club? Sounds about right.“I can sing for you if you want. No promises about the quality.”“No, sorry, I should’ve caught that. Opener at a jazz club. I’m sorry. You don’t even know who I am.”“I guess you’re right,” Harry said, “I don’t. But you’re here. That’s something. The scientists aren’t much for talking.”“You don’t have any company at all?”“I think they all have work to do. I guess what’s in my blood is more important than my mental stimulation. I’ve got behaviorists and psychologists and social workers. That sort of thing. But they’re always taking notes. Or if they don’t, I’m pretty sure they’re recording or writing it all down later.”“Does that bother you?”“That and the fact they ask too many questions.”“Fair. I’m Jerome LaSalle,” the man in the suit said, “I work for the President’s Press Department.”“I’m Harry Ludlow. Thoroughly average comedian, and apparently world-renowned jazz singer. By the way, don’t you guys have Google at the White House?”“Apparently not. Or at least, the interns don’t know about it.”“So, Mr. White House, are you here to take my picture of something? I heard they wanted to keep me secret for security reasons.”“There might be pictures,” LaSalle said, “But I was thinking of something a bit more involved.”“One of these new fangled moving pictures perhaps?”“Well, yes. You said earlier that you don’t think they know what to do with you here. I think I might have an idea.”“Ok,” Harry said, “What do you have in mind?”“Well, when I first sold the Press Secretary on the idea of taking you public, I was thinking of something like you singing the national anthem. That was back when we thought you were a jazz singer of course.”“The good old days,” Harry said, “And the idea was that you’d take a video and send it out to people?”“That was the idea.”“Does it still have to be the national anthem?”“No. Probably not. It could be anything. Just a message from you to your country, and the world. Something to give people hope.”“Hope,” Harry said, “You’re sure we can’t do the national anthem?”-----The next day some of the scientists came in wearing hazmat suits and set up a camera on a tripod. Now a bunch of them were assembled outside his room and behind the glass. No giant suits though, just normal people in normal clothes. There were a lot of them, more than he’d ever seen at once since he’d been locked in her. It was nice to see ordinary people. Faces, messy hair, smiles. It had been too long. He was curious which of them was responsible for scrubbing his naked body.He could’ve done this for the camera and an empty room, but Jerome agreed that if Harry was more comfortable with a crowd, then the scientists would work well enough as an audience. They’d found him a blazer to wear on top of the sterile, blue pants and blue t shirt outfit he’d been provided while in the facility. Now he had that familiar anxious and excited buzzing feeling in his stomach and his fingers that he always got before he went up for a gig. People called it stage fright. He called it the feeling of being alive. He missed that feeling. He took one last drink of water and gave Jerome a nod. Mr. White House was behind the glass with all the scientists. He sent something from his phone and then held his hands together in a tight ball of stress and fingers. A red light on the side of the camera flicked on. Suddenly Harry thought he might faint. In that moment he had no idea why he’d fought so hard for the video feed to go out live.“Hello America,” he spoke slowly, staring into the lens, “You don’t know me. But my name is Harry Ludlow. I don’t know what you know about me. But I’m alive. If you’re watching this, most likely you are too. The difference though, between you and me is that I’m alive, and I’ve been exposed to Vicker’s Disease.”He let the moment hand. He looked at Jerome, and Jerome nodded.“That’s the real bad one,” Harry went on, “In case you’re out of the loop. I was exposed to Vicker’s Disease, not for any particular reason, but just because I was at the mall. I used to hate malls. Everyone in that mall died from an outbreak of Vicker’s Disease. Except me. I was sealed in there with all the dead people for three days. Now I really hate malls. I survived by eating energy bars from an Equinox gym. First time I’d been to the gym in months actually.”One of the scientists chuckled and Harry pointed at him.“That guys laughing because he’s been washing my fat ass for the last six months.”A few of the scientists burst into laughter. Jerome looked shocked.“I guess I’m probably not supposed to curse but what the fuck are they gonna do? I’m the miracle man and they’ve already got me locked up in here with nothing to do but jack off and watch nature documentaries. Not at the same time by the way. My life is sad, but it’s not that sad.”Someone guffawed and Harry couldn’t help but smile. He forgot how good this felt.“The point is this,” he said, “I’m alive. You’re alive. Billions of people are dead. Can’t change that. Now I haven’t been outside in months and I don’t watch TV anymore since I think Colbert kicked the bucket, but I’m gonna guess that certain things haven’t changed. Probably Republicans tryna blame this on people in Uganda, Democrats want you to feel bad about the fact you’re not dead yet, and President Ward just wants everyone to come together in his cornfield in Iowa.”Another gasp and this time someone even clapped. Even Jerome was grinning now between clenched fists.“The point is this. We’re all alive. We’re all still here. No matter how fucked up your life is, how fat and ugly you are, you’re still here. I’m a 40-year-old idiot with no car, a shitty apartment in Indiana, a minor drinking problem, I’m still paying off student loans for an overpriced liberal arts degree, and guess what, you idiots are all listening to me talk for one reason. I’m alive.”“The point is this. I don’t know what’s going on out there, but I bet there’s still life going on out there. Still people spending too much money on coffee, walking too slow, and telling you that stand up comedy’s not a real job. I’m sure the Saudi’s still hate the Jews, we still pretend not to hate the Saudis, and everyone still hates New Jersey. Can you imagine Newark now? Newark plus all the dead people? Fuck me. I’m lucky I’m in here.”Gasping laughter again.“The point is this. I’m a nobody. You’re a nobody. We’re all nobodies. And yet, here we are. I don’t know how many of us there are, after all, I’m just the world’s most famous mediocre comedian, not an accountant, but I know we’re not all dead yet. So let’s keep going. I know I keep hammering on this point, but I really am a nobody. And yet, out of everyone in the world, I made it. I survived. I don’t know why, and none of these genius scientists seem interested in earning their salaries and giving me an explanation. Maybe there is no explanation. But, here’s the point. What I know is that as long as we’re still here, we’ve got a chance. So fuck your wife for me, and say hallelujah. Good luck, and God Bless America.”-----Jerome left the next day. Harry only heard back from him a few times in the next week, and badly missed his company. Things started to get better at the facility though. Some of the scientists came by every now and again. A fat guy from Newark named Rob set up a chair by the intercom and drank a cup of coffee there at least once a day. He was a football fan and convinced Harry to start watching games again. He’d assumed they’d stopped playing them. The Colts were terrible that season, but Rob was a Jets fan so they suffered together.There was a lady scientist named Nicole who wore glasses and always laughed at his bad jokes. She was from Colorado and he asked if she get him some pot. She told him they were pretty strict about bringing stuff in from outside, but she might be able to cook him up some meth if he was really in the mood. He said that maybe a bottle of wine would be better. She agreed and they set a time. For the first time in years, he was looking forward to something.Someone suggested doing movie nights on Fridays in the hallway in front of his room. They set up a projector and Star Wars was the runaway favorite for the first night. Rob sat by the intercom and they joked all the way through. Afterwards Nicole stayed sitting by the speaker and leaning against the wall. They talked early into the morning.The next day there was a message from Jerome on his computer. The subject line was simple.“Read this”There was a PDF attached. About a page of text with an official looking header on top and a government logo. It was the Seal of the President. He read the letter.“To the Office of the Press Secretary,There were those who were skeptical about using Mr. Harry Ludlow in a public dispatch. But as the saying goes, if you haven’t seen him run, then you don’t know the dog. My advisors have informed me that nothing has changed regarding our understanding of human immunity to Vicker’s Disease. They still believe Mr. Harry Ludlow is the winner of a genetic lottery which leaves him completely resistant. As before, ongoing research hopes to identify, isolate, and reproduce this unique adaptation. Doing so may be regarded as critical to the survival of the human species. As such, your office is to continue publicizing this research, as you have done.However, after having watched the recent dispatch, it should be noted that this office regards Mr. Harry Ludlow, by mark of his disposition and prior occupation as an entertainer and comedian, perhaps uniquely suited to his current situation. In his so far only public appearance, his levity, humor, impetuousness, and perhaps most importantly his total disregard for the gravity of the global situation have shown to have a real positive impact on morale and the outlook of the public at large. Firstly we should count ourselves lucky that this astronomically unlikely immunity has arisen. Secondly, we should also count ourselves lucky that this immunity arose in Mr. Harry Ludlow in particular. His continued appearance in televised broadcasts to the public and to this Oval Office is hereby requested.Calling for Unity from a Cornfield in Iowa,President James Ward.”He finished reading the letter and screamed in joy. For the first time in his life, Harry Ludlow was a hit.Instagram: @mcgintyliveTwitter: @mcgintyliveWebsite: mcginty.live
Bonjour! This is a bit of a short episode because it covers only one chapter: Gryffindor vs Ravenclaw. Over the course of this episode, we discuss the breakdown of Hermione’s relationship with the person whose pet gets eaten by her cat, the broomstick that damaged her relationship with her friends, a match that she may or may not have attended, a party that she left early and a book with atleast 422 pages that she had to read for a class. SUMMARYTension between Ron and Hermione reaches an all-time high, after the apparent death of Scabbers at the claws of Crookshanks. To cheer Ron up, Harry offers him a ride on the new Firebolt after Quidditch practice, the last one before the game against the Ravenclaw, and it works. The Firebolt is everything as advertised and the Gryffindor team is very excited about their chances against Ravenclaw, even Oliver Wood and Percy Weasley. They were right to be because Harry easily outflies his rival, Cho Chang, the Ravenclaw Seeker, and catches the Snitch. Harry and his friends celebrate the victory for the rest of the day and well into the night, until the party is broken up by Professor McGonagall. When Harry finally returns to his dormitory to sleep, he's not able to catch forty winks before a scream shatters the silence of the dorms. The screamer is Ron, who claims that Sirius Black had slashed open the curtain around his bed. Everybody panics, and McGonagall shows up, to find out what happened. On Ron's insistence, she asks Sir Cadogan if he let anyone into Gryffindor Tower. The knight answers yes, that the intruder had all of the passwords written on a slip of paper, which Neville Longbottom, it is soon discovered, had accidentally left in one of the corridors. And yeah, Hermione has to read 422 pages about the habits of British Muggles even though Gryffindor just won a match against Ravenclaw.NOTESWe say this a lot but we always mean it with the utmost sincerity: we’re sorry about the long gaps between episodes. Our schedules have been really packed recently and while we try to squeeze in podcast time as much as possible, clearly, it’s not as much as we were able to, last year. Every time you’re tempted to wonder whether this is going to happen or not, just know that we will let you know if we’re giving up on Mimblewimble. We’re leaving the ghosting to professionals like Moaning Myrtle and sticking to just podcasting. Prashanthini had a cold when we recorded this episode and would like to apologize for her nasal voice.Please let us know all your theories, comments, and wishes by either commenting on our website or writing to us at mimblewimblepodcast@gmail.com. We love fanart, comics and fanfiction so really, send everything our way.A nice read about Hermione Granger and the importance she places on friendship (even if it might not seem obvious right now)
Former Aussie footballer and Perth local Stan Lazaridis joins Adam Peacock and he was NOT backwards, in coming forwards, which made for great listening. They look back at Stan's time in the game - his breakout in England, his coaches, his teammates, opponents and more. 'Laza' is one helluva storyteller, too.Here are the highlights:-What Stan's up to (1:00)-'Father figure' Raul Blanko's profound influence (3:00)-How Stan got scouted way back - in Adelaide (7:00)-How Stan 'made it' in England, with West Ham and Harry Redknapp (10:00)-The reluctance to return to the NSL, in those days (17:00)-Laza gave a fan a bike. It was his career 'turning point' (21:00)-Roy Keane's 'devil eyes' and love for Rio (23:00)-Playing against the Invincibles, Arsenal, and almost joining them (25:00)-When Harry sold Stan (27:00)-'Laza' finding his 'home' at Birmingham City (28:00)-Toon manager Steve Bruce and Stan's insight on what he'll bring (31:00)-Stan's take on where football's at (38:00)-The silver bullet Socceroos and Graham Arnold should look into (40:00)-Laza's fear of flying (42:00)-Stan's time in the national team - favourite coach and players (45:00)-Stan's mysterious misunderstanding with Guus Hiddink (52:00)-Guus' mistake against Italy in the WC (53:00)-Potentially getting back involved with football (56:00)
Turn to Page 180, Quidditch. Today’s lesson is called Seek and Ye Shall Find. The chapter starts with our trio getting used to winter at Hogwarts, and Harry getting ready for his first quidditch match, against Slytherin house. Harry’s nerves are calmed slightly by “Quidditch Through the Ages,” a book recommended by Hermione, but Professor Snape confiscates it from Harry. When Harry asks for his book back, he finds Snape having his leg tended by Filch while complaining about the three-headed dog. This, along with Hermione and Ron seeing Snape mutter a spell as Harry’s broomstick malfunctions during his quidditch match, cause him to pile suspicion on Snape. The spell breaks in time for Harry to catch the snitch - in his mouth - and win the match for Gryffindor. Later, our trio visits Hagrid, who denies their claims of Snape’s nefariousness, while revealing that the three-headed dog, Fluffy, belongs to him and, more importantly, guards something connected to Professor Dumbledore and Nicolas Flamel. Music: Magical Dirt by Sir Cubworth #MagicalTheory #HarryPotter #podcast #WizardPhD ✨Like the podcast? Contribute here: https://ko-fi.com/wizardphd MAGICAL THEORY, a Harry Potter podcast on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLdvEmDn42BjX7JuYhGO7AbBzDPxML83Ry --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/magical-theory/support
When Harry met Sally, it was a romance that defined a generation. Now that she’s passed, Harry finds his life meaningless until he meets Sharon at his retirement community and can’t wait to spend the rest of his life with this vexing woman. Little does he know that Sharon is a vampire looking for an eternal companion. Joe Ketchum and John Stahl break down what they think a feature length version of Grampires: When Sharon Bit Harry might look like as they try out a new format for Loose Canons. Support the podcast with 5 star ratings and positive reviews on Apple Podcasts, donate money at www.patreon.com/wordsalad to get early access to episodes as well as bonus exclusive content, and tell your friends about us. We appreciate it! Email us: WordSaladProductions@gmail.com Check out the Word Salad Radioheads group on Facebook: www.facebook.com/groups/WordSalad Follow us on Twitter: www.twitter.com/WordSaladRadio Follow Joe on Letterboxd: www.letterboxd.com/j4sanders Follow John on Twitter: www.twitter.com/TheMagnar Follow Rob Reiner on Twitter: www.twitter.com/RobReiner Follow Mike Tyson on Twitter: www.twitter.com/MikeTyson Intro/Outro Theme: “Game On” by the Heatley Bros. Cover Art created by Joe Ketchum Episode edited by John Stahl and Joe Ketchum Other shows featured on Word Salad Radio: The Analrapists: Host and guest force each other to make weird analyses of different movies and defend their argument with evidence from the text. Blockbuster Autopsy: Highly qualified professionals diagnose the cause of death on some of the biggest budget movies and TV corpses around. Doc n Roll: An examination of documentary films. Fic/off: 2 writers are given 2 fictional characters to mashup into an original short story. Flux Capacitors: A show analyzing the time travel mechanics in various movies and TV shows. High Five: Host and guest compile top five lists that are related but don’t overlap. The List of Shame: One person tries to guess what a classic film they’ve never seen is about and then tries to convince the other person they were right after watching it for the first time. Loose Canons: Where our cohosts review movies that don’t actually exist, like Jaws 19 from Back to the Future Part II. The Mooby Awards: An annual show where co-hosts rip apart a movie they agree is overrated. P.O. Box 963: Our hosts attempt to make contact with their lord and savior: 90’s Nickelodeon advertising icon Stick Stickly Quote Unquote Guilty: All about guilty pleasure movies, tv shows, music, scientific principles, etc. © 2016-2019 Joe Ketchum
A report by King's College claims that every day an average of half a million doses of cocaine are being taken in London, double the amount of any other European capital. We speak to our health editor Ross Lydell to find out more. Who's taking it?Donald Trump has rejected the UK's calls for a fugitive diplomat's wife to be stripped of her immunity.Also, When Harry met Ed Sheeran, we take a look at what they're doing for #WorldMentalHealthDay. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
When Harry met the canvas! There’s been much said already about the incidents involving Harry Arter at the weekend but it’s fair to say that he isn’t the first and certainly won’t be the last to fall flat on his face on a Friday night in Cardiff. Jokes aside, we have a football match to review. So before you get all ‘super excited’ about the international break, join Matt ‘Frenchy’ Boisclair, Matt ‘Welshy’ Baldwin and Matt ‘Mars’ Domm for another Focus pod session. Plus, we have another of our challenging quizzes for you boys and girls. How well do you remember the league table from our promotion under Micky Adams? Who were the last ten Englishman to score for the Whites? Can you guess the player from the clues provided?! Only one way to find out...cxzxx
In this week's podcast episode of the freeCodeCamp podcast, Abbey chats with Harry Wolff, an engineering manager at MongoDB in New York City. Harry has been in the world of tech for over a decade, holding jobs in various startups before ending up at Mongo. They discuss his journey to his current managerial role, what it's like to work at Mongo, how to start a meetup, and dos and don't for migrating from legacy codebases. Harry started his tech career working for startups. He liked the excitement, he liked learning new things, and he liked showing off his skills. After working for a few startups, he stumbled upon a position at MongoDB. One short week after beginning the interview process, he was in. The decision to leave his previous job was easier than he expected, and he reflected on the reasons he made the change: "For me, it was a matter of taking what I could from my job at the time, but knowing when it was time to move on. One of the ways you know it's time to leave is when the company's getting more out of you than you're getting out of the company." Once Harry was settled in at Mongo, he got right to work. After a couple years as an engineer working on various projects, he achieved one of his major goals and became a manager. Harry and I discussed his relatively new position in detail, and while he's still figuring things out, he has some valuable insights into his transition. "One of the most difficult things about being a manager is that there's no easy way to evaluate the success of your day. There are no milestones to say you've accomplished a lot. You might have a eureka! moment where you figure something out, but you're definitely living in the grey a lot more. Because it's people - they change by the day and hour and minute." But one of the best things for Harry is how much he gets to learn - constantly, from many different people, and about many different things. In addition to reading about new programming languages, discussing what's new in the JavaScript ecosystem in his podcast, and making every effort to stay on top of new tech, Harry has learned more nuanced skills as well. "One hard skill I needed to learn was being assertive and truthful when I needed to be. Most humans prefer that uncomfortable situations just resolve themselves...but if you wait six months [to deal with something], it becomes a dealbreaker." In addition to managing his team, working on his podcast, YouTube channel, and blog, and reading programming handbooks for fun, Harry has been working to update MongoDB's tech stack and move away from their legacy codebase. In the process, he's developed some insights into such migrations. "You have to have a good reason for doing it. And part of this is scolding my former self who would say 'yeah, just do it!' But having learned more, you need to have a good reason. For us, it's more maintainable, less error-prone, and better for recruiting." "But don't rewrite everything - that's seldom the right answer. Occasionally there are exceptions, but they're exceptions." When Harry isn't working or creating content, he hangs out with his wife and new son in New York. He encourages people getting into tech to keep at it and not get discouraged. "Never give up. Just keep hustling. Take with a grain of salt the feedback you get from companies and have confidence in what you do and don't know. And stay humble. It's hard but you have to just want it and keep hustling and stay curious." Find Harry on Twitter here: https://twitter.com/hswolff Find Abbey on Twitter here: https://twitter.com/abbeyrenn
The Knife - Jo NesboHarry Hole is not in a good place. Rakel–the only woman he’s ever loved–has ended it with him, permanently. He’s been given a chance for a new start with the Oslo Police but it’s in the cold case office, when what he really wants is to be investigating cases he suspects have ties to Svein Finne, the serial rapist and murderer who Harry helped put behind bars. And now, Finne is free after a decade-plus in prison–free, and Harry is certain, unreformed and ready to take up where he left off. But things will get worse. When Harry wakes up the morning after a blackout, drunken night with blood that’s clearly not his own on his hands, it’s only the very beginning of what will be a waking nightmare the likes of which even he could never have imagined.Evie Drake Starts Over - Linda HolmesFrom the host of NPR’s Pop Culture Happy Hour podcast comes a heartfelt debut about the unlikely relationship between a young woman who’s lost her husband and a major league pitcher who’s lost his game.In a sleepy seaside town in Maine, recently widowed Eveleth “Evvie” Drake rarely leaves her large, painfully empty house nearly a year after her husband’s death in a car crash. Everyone in town, even her best friend, Andy, thinks grief keeps her locked inside, and Evvie doesn’t correct them.Meanwhile, in New York City, Dean Tenney, former Major League pitcher and Andy’s childhood best friend, is wrestling with what miserable athletes living out their worst nightmares call the “yips”: he can’t throw straight anymore, and, even worse, he can’t figure out why. As the media storm heats up, an invitation from Andy to stay in Maine seems like the perfect chance to hit the reset button on Dean’s future.When he moves into an apartment at the back of Evvie’s house, the two make a deal: Dean won’t ask about Evvie’s late husband, and Evvie won’t ask about Dean’s baseball career. Rules, though, have a funny way of being broken—and what starts as an unexpected friendship soon turns into something more. To move forward, Evvie and Dean will have to reckon with their pasts—the friendships they’ve damaged, the secrets they’ve kept—but in life, as in baseball, there’s always a chance—up until the last out.A joyful, hilarious, and hope-filled debut, Evvie Drake Starts Over will have you cheering for the two most unlikely comebacks of the year—and will leave you wanting more from Linda Holmes.LISTEN TO AUDIO ABOVE
Hermione says something very important in chapter 32 of Order of the Phoenix, something which helps define the overarching plot of the entire seven-book series. When Harry is frantically describing the vision he had of Sirius captured and tortured by Voldemort in the Department of Mysteries, Hermione tries to reason with him. ‘OK,’ she said, […] The post OP32: That “Saving People Thing” appeared first on The Harry Potter Lexicon.
Our second Harry Potter Event starts with the Goblet of Fire! We made sure this time to keep them at a decent time, unlike the first event. Listen in to hear our thoughts on this Harry Potter film. The fourth movie in the Harry Potter franchise sees Harry (Daniel Radcliffe) returning for his fourth year at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, along with his friends, Ron (Rupert Grint) and Hermione (Emma Watson). There is an upcoming tournament between the three major schools of magic, with one participant selected from each school by the Goblet of Fire. When Harry's name is drawn, even though he is not eligible and is a fourth player, he must compete in the dangerous contest. Favorite line- "Soon we must face the choice between what is right and what is easy." If you could leave us a review to let us know how we are doing that would be great! Also share the show with your friends! Twitter - https://twitter.com/katandjesstalk Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/katandjesstalk/ Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/katandjesstalkthebest250/ Email - katandjesstalkthebest250@gmail.com Website - https://katandjesstalkthebest.podbean.com/ Music- https://www.audiobinger.net/ the song for this episode is entitled "Going Home" it is just the first 30 seconds
A talk programme dedicated to films and television shows, presented by Marcus Ako, Laura Sampson and David Campbell, on Resonance 104.4FM at 7pm (UK) on Fridays. Podcast episodes available from Monday morning at 00:30 (UK) #ItsAllAboutThe3Way #ShootTheBreezeShow #WhereInTheWorldIsChrisWilliams Reach us on Twitter, on Facebook, email shootthebreezonresonance104.4@gmail.com or Instagram In the 5th-season's 12th episode, Marcus and (Producer) David welcome back actor Michael Burhan as they talk Rutger Hauer (R.I.P), Marvel Phase 4 and Eddie Murphy's Netflix Stand-up special. #Top5Favourites topic this week: Films to watch on a first date. Michael's picks: 5. Back to The Future (1985) 4. Dawn of the Dead (2004) 3. When Harry met Sally... (1989) 2. Leon: The Professional (1994) 1. There's Something About Mary (1998) David's picks: 5. Encounter of a Spooky Kind (1990) / Fright Night (1985) 4. The Princess Bride (1987) / Amelie (2001) 3. When Harry met Sally... (1989) / There's Something About Mary (1998) 2. Shortbus (2006) 1. Blade Runner (1982) Marcus' picks: 5. Magic Mike (2012) 4. When Harry met Sally... (1989) 3. Moulin Rouge! (2001) 2. Guardians of the Galaxy (2014) 1. O Brother, Where Art Thou? (2000)
Here we go with episode 2…on YouTube! *does cartwheels* Watch on YouTube NOW >> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MKid_XV-Fwk&t=1477s Expect the usual unfiltered, unapologetic social commentary but now you get to see every…little….thing! It’s crazy! This episode we tuck into some of the hottest topics on everyone’s lips. Including: • Grey sweat pants season is practically over • Puffa jackets in the heat • Summer penis • Crazy ass drug smugglers • Animals lovers and foxes vs cats • Takeaways and food hygiene • Mental health in young men • When Harry and Meghan met Bey and Jay • Black rage on Twitter • Jermaine Dupri We also discuss going commando, influencers and ginals plus rules for sliding in the DM’s As always, it’s juicy, it’s off key, it’s respectful and disrespectful all at the same time… It’s a must listen basically! ---------------------------------------------------------- For your fix of Black British humour and social commentary at its best, hit that play button and get involved. If you enjoy what you hear, please like, share and subscribe. Use the hashtag: #tandbpodcast to connect on social media. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Find Tea and Biscuits podcast on Twitter here >> www.twitter.com/tandbpodcast Or on Instagram: www.instagram.com/tandbpodcast Holla at Sherryl ( www.instagram.com/sherrylsworld/ ) and Jan ( www.instagram.com/madnewsblog/ ) while you’re at it!
Gary Pinkerton talks to retired Lieutenant Colonel Harry Stewart, former Tuskegee Airman, about his experience as an Airman. Harry recounts some of his time in the service and dealing with the issue of being black in the service during the second World War. Key Takeaways: [3:48] When Harry's love for flying began [8:24] Harry has tried to inspire a love for flying with the youth even in retirement [14:19] Harry's mission in April 1945 ended in a lynching of one of the Airmen, but eventually a memorial was erected for the Airmen [18:58] There are only 12 Airmen left alive today Website: Soaring to Glory: A Tuskegee Airman's Firsthand Account of World War II
难度:三星【句子】The boys are in rare form, and you're still finding your way. 【Desperate Housewives S1E10】【发音】[ðə] [bɔɪz] [ɑ:(r)] [ɪn] [reə(r)] [fɔ:(r)m] [ænd] [jɔ:(r)] [stɪl] ['faɪndɪŋ] [jɔ:(r)] [weɪ]【发音技巧】rare英美发音区别;【翻译】孩子们今天调皮地厉害,而你又处在摸索期。【适用场合】in rare form; in top form表现特别出色,表现极佳well prepared for a good performance; at one's best.eg: Usually, the students are not in rare form on Monday mornings. 通常星期一上午学生们的精神状态都不佳。eg: She's in rare form after working for 10 hours.连续工作十个小时之后,她还能保持良好的精神状态。虽然这个短语明显是夸奖,但是在今天的美剧片段中,有那么一点点的讽刺的意味。不是说孩子们今天表现很好,而是今天尤为调皮,不乖。in rare form 还有另外一个常用义醉酒的;喝醉的;intoxicated/drunkeg: Gary is in rare form, but he'll have time to sleep it off. Gary喝醉了,但是他还有时间睡过酒劲儿。eg: When Harry was finally in rare form, he slid beneath the table.当Harry最终喝醉的时候,他溜到了桌子下面。【尝试翻译以下句子,并留言在文章留言区】The goalie is in rare form today. That's his third great save already.
“Well, look who it is. Potty and the weasel.” When we last left off, Hermione had just bought a new pet that Ron thoroughly disapproved of. The three of them return to the Leaky Cauldron where they have dinner with the rest of the Weasleys. When Harry's looking for Scabbers' rat tonic post-dinner, he accidentally overhears a conversation between Mr. and Mrs. Weasley and finds out that Sirius Black escaped from Azkaban to find and kill him, Harry. Things make a lot more sense after Harry overhears this but he's not too fussed because surely Black can't be harder to deal with than Voldemort who's he faced down not once but twice? The next day at the station, Mr. Weasley gives him a warning and tries to get him to promise that he won't go looking for Black but Harry is unable to promise or ask further questions because he has to get on the train. Harry, Ron and Hermione find the only empty-ish compartment on the train, empty but for a sleeping new professor, to discuss these events. However, the journey takes a turn for the unexpected when the train lurches to a stop and a black-robed figure, with a hideous, dead-looking hand attempts to enter. Harry hears a woman's scream and passes out. When he comes to, he's ashamed to discover he's the only one who was affected as strongly. The shame is just compounded when McGonagall asks to see Harry and Hermione in her office so that Madam Pomfrey can examine Harry and give him a clean bill of health. She just wanted to have a word with Hermione about her class schedule. They go back to the feast - even though they missed the sorting ceremony, they make it back in time to hear that the sleeping professor is the new DADA teacher and that Hagrid would teach Care of Magical Creatures. Everything's pretty great except for the Dementors and Malfoy and Harry's glad to be back at Hogwarts. But you know what's not great? Divination. First, Harry and Ron have trouble finding said class. Then the professor predicts that someone will die, surprise surprise it's Harry. Also, Hermione seems really skeptical about the whole thing and doesn't seem to like the professor.NOTESHey! Remember us? Your friendly neighbourhood Harry Potter podcast? We’re sorry we went AWOL. It was not our intention. First life got in the way, then we recorded this episode but we were not happy with the sound. We figured we’d take the time to upgrade our mic and release a better sounding episode. Thus, the delay. But we are back now and we’re excited to continue nitpicking the fun adventures of Harry, Hermione, and Ron!Speaking of new mics, how do we sound?Potty and the weasel would have been an excellent name for our podcast. Is it too late to change?Prashanthini always knew that the third Harry Potter movie was special and she was overjoyed when she found this perfect video that she can send to her friends who don’t agree with her.Unfortunately, Aishwarya had to edit two versions of this episode and is so done with it that she will spontaneously combust if she had to listen to it again.PREPARATIONYou can prepare for this episode by reading:Chapter 4: The Leaky CauldronChapter 5: The DementorChapter 6: Talons and Tea Leavesof Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban,You can also listen to this podcast on iTunes, Spotify, Google Podcast, or any other favorite podcast app. Just search for Mimblewimble - The Harry Potter Podcast.
Episode 37: When Henry met Toole(y) – Unlike the hit late 80’s rom-com “When Harry met Sally”, this story has a much worse plot and ending. Sometimes two people should just not ever cross paths. This week we are talking about Henry Lucas and Otis Toole. These murderous slime balls went a rampage across the US. Both together and separately. We hope you enjoy this fun and informative episode. Be sure to subscribe to our Youtube channel https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCivk-vkHN7GzpSkNQz_a5SQ... Rate and review us on ITUNES visit our website for the up to date news dontlookunderthebed.net and follow us on facebook at http://www.facebook.com/dontlookunder - twitter @dlutb - Enjoy what we put in your ears? Our Patreon is now taking donations https://www.patreon.com/dlutb or you can PayPal us at dontlookunderthebedpodcast@gmail.com Got a question or topic for us to go over? email us at dontlookunderthebedpodcast@gmail.com https://allthatsinteresting.com/henry-lucas-ottis-toole https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Lee_Lucas https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ottis_Toole
A talk programme dedicated to films and television shows, presented by Marcus Ako, Laura Sampson and David Campbell, on Resonance 104.4FM at 7pm (UK) on Fridays. Podcast episodes available from Monday morning at 00:30 (UK) #ItsAllAboutThe3Way #ShootTheBreezeShow #WhereInTheWorldIsChrisWilliams Reach us on Twitter, on Facebook, email shootthebreezonresonance104.4@gmail.com or Instagram In the 4th-season's 6th episode - HAPPY VALENTINES DAY - Marcus and (Producer) David are in the studio with Ariana Ryan BAFTA 2019 Winners! #Top5Favourite topic this week: Love Stories Ariana's picks: 5. Heartburn (1986) 4. 50 First Dates (2004). 3. A funny kind of love (2014) 2. Something's got to give (2003) 1. When Harry met Sally... (1989) David's picks: 5. King Kong (1933) 4. The War of the Roses (1989) / There's something about Mary (1998) 3. The Princess Bride (1987) 2. Blade Runner (1982) 1. Annie Hall (1977) Marcus' picks: 5. French Kiss (1995) / Roxanne (1987) 4. Moulin Rouge! (2001) 3. Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004) 2. The Princess Bride (1987) 1. 10 Things I hate about you (1999)
I catch up with my friend Harry Douglas (The Swamp Cleaner) to discuss his experience with getting the Twitter ax. When Harry isn’t busy being a racist, bigot, and a generic deplorable, he creates political and current events videos and trolls lefties like a true #MAGA Boss!
When we last left off, Fawkes was leading our favorite group of teenagers minus Hermione plus Gilderoy Lockhart to Professor McGonagall’s office. When they get there, they realize that it’s not just McGonagall in her office but also the Weasleys and Professor Dumbledore. Everyone is very happy and excited to see Ginny alive and well. Harry explains everything that happened that night and over the last few months and Dumbledore helps him smoothen out the explanations and sort out some ends like Lockhart. Harry and Ron get Special Services to the school award and enough points to ensure Gryffindor wins the House Cup again. Harry and Dumbledore have a heart-to-heart and Harry finally gets to ask him some burning questions.Their conversation is interrupted by Lucius Malfoy who is very surprised to hear about the turn of the events. Harry thinks on his feet and saves Dobby from Mr. Malfoy. The whole school attends a feast in the middle of the night to celebrate. All the petrified victims wake up and even Hagrid comes back from Azkaban. All’s well at the end of the day and everything works out for Ron.PREPARATIONYou can prepare for this episode by reading:Chapter 18: Dobby’s Rewardof Harry Potter and the Chamber of SecretsYou can also listen to this podcast on iTunes, Google Podcast, or any other favorite podcast app. Just search for Mimblewimble - The Harry Potter Podcast.NOTES“Father, have you seen Dobby lately?”When Harry climbs out of the hole in the bathroom, he’s covered in muck, slime, and blood. This was such a vivid description to Prashanthini that she forever associates this dirty version of Harry with the book. It doesn’t help that Daniel Radcliffe looks very grimy in the movie posters. Aishwarya would just like to note that the poster designers must have been pretty relieved that they got to use a sword, instead of a wand on the cover.JK Rowling’s essay on Gilderoy Lockhart in Pottermore.We'll be taking a break before we start the next book so stay tuned! Our next episode will be out in 2019. In the meantime, if you want to let us know what you think or simply just write to us, it's mimblewimblepodcast@gmail.com.The editor (Aishwarya) apologises for the creaky chair but for some reason, we kept swinging around.
Welcome to what I’m calling Orgasm Week! My new online course for women - Epic Orgasms is being released next week, so to celebrate, I’m going to be sharing a whole week of shows on the female orgasm. Today I’m answering a listener’s question: Will I always know if I’ve had an orgasm? How can I tell if I’ve had an orgasm? So often, I hear that women have been told things like ‘you’ll just know when you’ve had one’ or ‘well, if you don’t know, you haven’t had one’. The truth is, that’s not always true. I share the scientific definition of an orgasm … then add some feeling to that! We often have these huge expectations on orgasm now. You know that scene from ‘When Harry met Sally’? I can tell you that my orgasms don’t always look like that - and many women’s don’t. Orgasms can be different sizes and intensities. Sometimes, they are huge, whole-body, toe-curling experiences, and sometimes, they’re small, silent, little releases. Remember, what an orgasm feels like will be different for every woman - and will be different on different days. And, if you still think you’ve never had an orgasm - or can orgasm by yourself, but not with a partner, stay tuned to the next couple of shows. I’ll be talking about how you can have your first orgasm, have reliable orgasms with a partner and orgasm more frequently. FYI, I’m sharing more tips, practical exercises and Tantric secrets to help you have epic orgasms in my latest e-book - Epic Orgasms. Be sure to head to my website and join the waitlist to download your free copy of EPIC ORGASMS: Everything you need to know about the female orgasm. It’s totally free - for a limited time only.
When Harry and Megan Tooze’s neighbours heard two gunshots coming from the couple’s farm in Llanharry, South Wales they didn’t think twice. Harry had always had trouble with rabbits and they assumed he was shooting them out of his cabbages again. That evening when Harry and Megan’s daughter attempted to get a hold of them they were nowhere to be found and soon police were all over the property, trampling across what soon be considered a crime scene. Following each episode of Katherine Kelly's brand new TV series Murdertown, Benjamin Fitton from They Walk Among Us unpicks a new case from each location. Watch Murdertown exclusively on Crime+Investigation in the UK every Monday at 9pm from 3rd September and then straight after listen to a brand new story right here with the Murdertown podcast. You can get in touch using #Murdertown on Twitter, Facebook or Instagram.Crime+Investigation's Murdertown podcast is hosted by Benjamin Fitton, written by Anna Priestland, produced by Sam Pearson and Chloe Frost, and edited by James Collopy.SOURCEShttp://www.homepage-link.to/justice/jones/index.htmhttps://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000271/19930728/014/0004https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0002240/19930803/032/0004https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0002240/19930826/050/0007https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0002240/19931209/085/0009https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/couple-shot-dead-at-remote-farm-1487607.htmlhttps://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/man-who-killed-for-inheritance-jailed-for-life-man-given-life-for-murders-at-remote-farm-life-1614522.htmlhttps://www.irishtimes.com/news/murder-conviction-quashed-1.43324https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/new-alibi-evidence-in-tooze-shooting-1618464.htmlhttps://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/i-will-not-stop-until-jonathan-is-free-1618905.htmlhttps://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0001715/19960426/392/0030https://www.independent.co.uk/news/tenacious-fiancee-triumphs-as-her-lover-is-cleared-of-farmhouse-shotgun-killing-1306788.htmlhttps://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0001874/19960905/567/0064http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/wales/2728525.stm
One Sentence Summary Anderson starts with the one sentence recap of how our trio of protagonists are studying and then come across something that surprises them. What Do the Tiny Potters Think? Addison and Anderson relate to this because both of them have been busy with studying for the standardized tests at their schools when they recorded this episode. Addison and Anderson discuss the value, or lack thereof, of homework and the importance of recess. When Harry, Hermione, and Ron visit Hagrid’s the Tiny Potters share their concerns about not only how Hagrid obtained his newest pet, a dragon, but only the perils he may face. This segues into a discussion about the fact that when one of the heroes is injured, Madam Pomfrey doesn’t use common sense, the prevailing theme of this chapter when taking care of her charges. One of the best, unexplored, ideas for a dragon is introduced by Addison. Can you say, Ice Cream Breathing DRAGON!? Malfoy tattles on the trio and Hagrid for poor Norbert, but the Tiny Potters recognize that he is doing the right thing, but for the wrong reason and explain their feelings on that. After recapping that common sense should prevail and all the main characters should use their brain, they go into MOMMY POP QUIZ, sponsored by Audible. Go to http://www.audibletrial.com/tinypotters and sign up for your FREE trial. So many great books to listen to and if you don’t like it, you can exchange it with their return policy! Questions Mommy Pop Quiz asks include: Once Hermione, Ron, and Harry find out about Hagrid’s dragon, what should they have done? How does the motivation we have behind decisions impact our actions? For an update on the personal lives of the Tiny Potters, we find out Addison has earned another Girl Scout badge and Anderson has been placed on a special team at his Karate Dojo and been given a promotion to become a Junior Leader. Thank you for listening episode 15 the Tiny Potters, as we have discussed Chapter 14 of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone. Thank you to GEICO for not sponsoring this episode but more thanks to Audible for actually sponsoring it. And of course, THANK YOU to our listeners. We’re back and we’ll be finishing up book one each week from here on out on time, with plenty of time to be ready to start book 2, Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, when the new Hogwarts year starts. Stay magical! The post Tiny Potters Discuss Chapter 14 Norbert the Norwegian Ridgeback from Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone appeared first on My podcast website.
Many of us tend to just get used to the deteriorating condition of life on our planet and the spread of every kind of atrocity we can imagine. We try to forget about what's really going on, just because it's too unpleasant to really focus on for very long at one time. But some people have a different reaction. When they realize there are bad things going on, they feel they have to do something to help find a solution and act on it. Such was the response of Englishman Harry Rhodes (Facebook) when he realized what was going on with the worldwide chemical air raid going on over his head just about every day. When Harry understood that the long lines he saw coming out the back of jet aircraft were not ice crystals ("contrails"), but instead were solid particulates of toxic metals and other chemical and biological poisons, he knew he could not just ignore the magnitude of this threat to all life on Earth. He prayed to be shown a solution to this global problem. The answer came quickly and appeared on his computer screen. What developed from there is an amazing story that most people might find impossible to believe. But the story is real. And it has implications for our future will affect every one of us, and in fact, they already are. Harry will be with us this Sunday on Lost Arts Radio, to explain what he was shown to do, how he acted on the specific answer to his request, and what this means for you. I think you will want to be there when we have this discussion. Join me, your host Richard Sacks, every week for fascinating discussions, amazing guests and useful information that you will not want to miss. If you want to support our work, please use the Donate button on our website, www.lostartsradio.com, and tell others about the show.
Big decisions, big balls, big misses, big scorelines, big questions - there was a bit of everything in the Premier League and around Europe this weekend, and on your brand new Totally Football Show, AC Jimbo welcomes Michael Cox, Jack Lang and Julien Laurens to analyse it all. Specifically: RUNNING ORDER: • PART 1a: Neymar’s birthday bash (01m 00s) • PART 1b: When Harry met Salah: analysis of amazing draw at Anfield (02m 40s) • PART 2a: A new dawn at Arsenal, a bleak horizon for Everton (12m 45s) • PART 2b: Ademola Lookman at Leipzig; Michy Batshuayi at Dortmund (21m 00s) • PART 2c: Burnley hold City (25m 00s) • PART 3a: Ligue 1 and La Liga round-ups (30m 00s) • PART 3b: The third-most competitive title race in Europe; The Big Question; Championship update (35m 20s) • PART 3c: National League news; Non-League Mystery Tours; more from Middelfart (38m 00s) • PART 4: The best nicknames in football (43m 00s) • PART 5: The rest of the PL weekend (46m 00s) • PART 6: Paddy Power’s Movers and Shakers (56m 00s) • PART 7: The Big Answer and Adios (59m 20s) LIVE NEWS: • we’re live at **Vicar Street** in Dublin on **Monday 19 March**. Jimbo will be joined by James Horncastle, Julien Laurens and **Pat Nevin** - who’ll also be doing an exclusive DJ set. [Get your tickets now!](http://www.ticketmaster.ie/artist/5242479?_ga=2.123132811.1872718434.1517842994-1603489818.1517499837) PARISH NOTICES: • join [**Paddy Power’s Rewards Club**](http://www.paddypower.com/) • get your shave on with our friends [**Cornerstone**, who are giving you £10 off your first order](https://www.cornerstone.co.uk/totally) GET IN TOUCH: • find us on **[Facebook](https://www.facebook.com/thetotallyfootballshow/)** • send us a [tweet: **@TheTotallyShow**](http://www.twitter.com/thetotallyshow)
When Harry met Sally they fell in love, when you hear Martha and Christie recreate this iconic scene you will too!
When Harry met Sally they fell in love, when you hear Martha and Christie recreate this iconic scene you will too!
G & T are back in studio to debate one of the greatest matches of all time! Can the 6 seed Uncle Buck pull an epic upset and take down 3 seed juggernaut When Harry met Sally?? Tune in to find out why John Candy and Billy Crystal are definitely leading men!
In this episode of the Bad Movie Night Podcast, the gang review the 1991 sci-fi movie Neon City! For our video show and other episodes please visit www.Bad-Movie-Night.com Film: Neon City Plot: This futuristic tale follows bounty hunter Harry Stark (Michael Ironside) as he transports a beautiful fugitive named Reno (Vanity) to prison. When Harry discovers that she is a highly sought-after criminal, he has to bring her to the big metropolis of Neon City. Unfortunately, this means traveling with the muscle-bound Bulk (Lyle Alzado) and other misfits through dangerous and uncivilized lands, a situation made more perilous by life-threatening weather and vicious marauders. Director: Monte Markham Year: 1991
Dramatic Listening... the podcast where you learn English by listening to radio plays
~ The Lives of Harry Lime: Ticket to Tangier, Part 5 Harry Lime: I’m not a connoisseur, Patsy... I don't know a thing about carpets!Patsy: Do you know about heroin?[Photo © ChiccoDodiFC/Bigstock.com] It's Against My Morals: In this episode, Harry finds out why Patsy brought him to Tangier. She has something to show him and a job for him to do. But what Patsy expects of him goes against his morals — she wants him to help her sell the drugs she smuggles in to Europe from Tangier, Morocco. Although Harry isn't the most honest of businessman, he is not and will not be involved in drug trafficking. Persuasive Tactics: Even if it is true that he hasn't sold drugs before, Patsy — now known as Mrs Magetti — is sure he could do it. After all, Harry knows how to break the law and get away with it, so what's so different about drugs? Mrs Magetti explains how she got into this predicament. (Surely, Harry would help a woman in distress!) Her husband, Rico Magetti, had recently gotten into drug trafficking, but she knew nothing of his business. She was left with the drugs when he died. Poor Rico! How did he die? When Harry finds out that it was Mrs Magetti who had killed Rico, he draws the line. He gives a firm answer, 'No!' Even though he could make a lot of money on this deal, Harry definitely does not want to be an 'accessory after the fact' to murder. Let's Try a New Tactic: Mrs Magetti won't take 'no' for an answer. She tries a new tactic and taunts Harry saying he's not living up to his name! Then, when Harry asks about the value of the heroin, she's ready to reel in her fish. DL089~DL095: Keywords & Transcript Login to download the free PDF. Not a member? Register now. Membership is free. Have fun learning the keywords with English-Chinese Flashcards and Games.DL093 Keywords on Quizlet Harry and Mrs Magetti are both very strong-willed. Harry has his morals. Although not completely honest, it's his morals (when compared to the morals of those around him) that make him so likable. So Harry has his morals, but Mrs Magetti has the opportunity to make a lot of money. Who do you think will win out in the end? Will Harry hold true to his morals, or will the almighty dollar be too hard to resist? What do you think? Which would make the better story? Please, leave your comment below.
When Harry is talked down from throwing himself off a Bridge by old school friend Milt, who luckily happens to be passing, his life takes a different direction as he finds love in this 1963 comedy from Murray Schisgal. He's the prominent New York Jewish writer responsible for Tootsie, Dustin Hoffman’s cross-dressing film comedy hit. Here Charles Dorfman talks to Judi Herman about finding LUV and playing Harry; his co-stars Nick Barber and Elsie Bennett; his collaboration with director Gary Condes; and Dorfman’s Buckland Theatre Company, resident company at Park Theatre’s studio space, Park 90.
The rom-com goes back to 300BC. Since then, four major categories have emerged with Ron Reiner's classic being one of the best. The post 184. When Harry met Sally… appeared first on Steven Benedict.
European Lab WInter forum 2015 2025 : la prochaine décennie culturelle ? 15 - 17 décembre, la Gaîté lyrique, Paris 2025 : food culture, the shape of things to come (le restaurant du futur) « Le restaurant est aux années 1980 ce que le théâtre fut aux années ‘70 » disait Meg Ryan à Billy Crystal (ou vice-versa) dans When Harry met Sally. Et aujourd’hui, que représente-t-il ? Et surtout comment l’empêcher de tourner en rond ? Comment l’affranchir de ses acquis pour l’aider à basculer définitivement dans une autre forme de modernité ? Car depuis sa naissance, il y a bientôt trois cents ans !, le restaurant a évolué en aparté, circuit fermé étanche aux soubresauts du monde extérieur qu’il était pourtant censé nourrir, traduire et faire circuler. Sous ses différentes formes et déclinaisons à travers cultures et pays, il demeure encore aujourd’hui, et cela malgré les tentatives de mise à jour et la pression des mutations sociétales, un huis-clos autocentré, régi par des logiques propres apparemment immuables. Le restaurant pourrait pourtant se révéler l’îlot de résistance et d’invention d’une concertation collective qui serait en mesure de déjouer allégrement les hiérarchies, les rigides formes de pensée. Pour accompagner une nouvelle éthique alimentaire, d’autres formes de création et de subjectivation. Peut-on légitimement rêver, pour 2025, d’un alter-restaurant polymorphe et de partage des expériences, transgenres et sans barrières (de classe, de sexe) ? Quelque chose comme une White Box, lieu d’exposition chaque fois différent qui, avec la liberté de création, désentraverait aussi la passivité dans laquelle le dîneur s’est jusqu’à présent lové en victime consentante. Un restaurant qui pourrait, pour reprendre l’échange de Meg Ryan et Billy Crystal, être à la cuisine ce que le Living Theatre fut au théâtre. Mais le Bread & Puppet Theatre, ce ne serait pas mal non plus… Intervenants Iñaki Aizpitarte • Chef cuisinier I FR Mathieu Rostaing-Tayard • Chef cuisinier I FR Magnus Nilsson • Chef cuisinier I SE Laura Lazzaroni • Uomo Vogue I USA/IT Rodolfo Gùzman • Chef cuisinier I CL Olivier Joyard • Journaliste et réalisateur I FR Lara T. Gilmore • Critique d'art I IT Modération : Andrea Petrini • Journaliste culinaire I FR/IT photo : ©Brice Robert
The PartyHarry was a white dog with black spots.He loved all his neighbors, all except one.He did not love the lady next door.The lady next door sang.She sang high and loud.When she sang, Harry’s ears hurt.She sang higher than the peanut whistle.When she sang, the peanut man put his hands over his ears.She sang louder than the siren on the fire engine.When she sang, the firemen put their hands over their ears.She sang higher and louder than the cats.When she sang, the cats ran away.Harry tried everything to make her stop.He howled under her window.His friends howled too.But it did not do any good.The lady next door went on singing.She sang higher and louder than ever.One day Harry’s family gave a party.They invited the lady next door.She came with her music.When she started to sing, Harry almost bit her leg.But he bit the leg of the piano instead.The family sent Harry out of the room.“You are a bad dog,” they said.Harry just wagged his tail.As he walked to the door some people said, “Poor Harry.”But others whispered, “The lucky dog!”When Harry pushed the door open the wind blew in.It blew the pages of music off the piano.They blew all around the room.Everyone tried to catch the music but no one could.The pages blew out the door and into the garden.They blew over the fence and up into the trees.Harry caught some of the pages but he did not bring them back.He ran away with them.
Harry – gefangen in der Zeit | Learning German | Deutsche Welle
Does Helen know more about the time warp than she's been letting on? When Harry visits her again, she still claims to know little. But she has some other shocking news for Harry.
Pastor Harry Robinson is a man who has walked a journey long enough to trust God. The truth is that God will be found when he’s needed and in dark times we must look for him more closely than ever. “For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith—and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God not by works, so that no one can boast” - Ephesians 2:8-10 Harry believes we all must remove our masks. God doesn’t deal in falsehood. Biggest Weakness - Harry is clearly aware that he struggles with walking according to the flesh. Biggest Strength - Trusting in the Lord. When he walks in the spirit of God, great things happen. He’s a constant companion. Dark Time - In his teenage years he experienced dark times, but also came to know God. Harry started smoking Marijuana and understood that this was not what God wanted him to do. There was never peace until he completely surrendered to God. After a bankruptcy and having children, he asked God “what will you have me do?” In college Harry used to pray “Lord, don’t let me stray too far” Harry believes that for what God wants from him the darker days may be ahead. He believes he will be asked for things on the next level and the struggle will help him to become the man he needs to be. When Harry and his wife had their first child, they started attending church together. The leadership role as a husband had led them away from church and so he had to lead the family back. God has placed us in roles and they have nothing to do with a hierarchy, but rather just to accomplish the things that need to be done using our God given talents. The spirit of God is gentle and wise and will always guide us to where we will best be served and where we can best serve as well. Advice - Look up because God is bigger than every circumstance and his redemption is near. There are opportunities that God puts in front of us every day and if we are aware of his calling than we will find ourselves in the place that he wants us to be. Finally, look back and see the things that God has done and remember how God has come through. Be patient and let the Lord do what he is going to do. Recommended Book “Raising A Modern Day Knight” by Robert Lewis “Dangerous Calling” by Paul David Tripp For past shows and to learn more about the God's Men of Influence community, check us out atwww.godsmenofinfluence.org Join us on Facebook for our daily devotionals and updates and please like our page www.facebook.com/GodsMenOfInfluence Help us spread the Word and please rate our show on itunes and leave comments for us. Tell us what insights you took from this episode.
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Synopsis A true life story of four generations of a family plagued with kidney disease and death. Finally through the miracle of organ transplants, Harry was the first member of the family to live and have his transplant for forty one years. When their son Joe was inflicted with the disease, his transplant should have been highly successful in this day and age. It was however turned into a nightmare by the incompetence of the Cleveland Clinic hospital. The permanent injury to Chris, the donor, and the near death of Joe, the recipient, brings this family to the depths of despair and near suicide. Through a miracle of God they were given a copy of the surgery and made the shocking discovery of how these so called "world class surgeons" performed this surgery, and then tried to cover it up. As Joe and Chris suffer and their health declines, the family desperately searches through the medical cover up to save their lives. Only their faith and perseverance help them to ultimately triumph. Excerpt When we came back from Ripley, Joe asked me if Harry had any living relatives, and the age-old question came up of what had happened to them. I told him they had died of kidney disease. He told me he was going to be really pissed off if he ever got that disease. About a month later, we realized that Joe’s blood pressure was getting higher. Again, we do nothing and are in denial until it is really high. It was then I knew why Hilda waited so long to see a doctor when Harry got sick. I called Harry at work and told him I was taking Joe to the ER. There was no sense going to the doctor and waiting for the results of a million tests. I knew the answer anyway and the waiting would kill me. Harry met me at the hospital. So here it was, again August 8, the same day I found out I had cancer and the same day Harry had the aneurysm surgery. Needless to say, I would hate that date from that day on. Harry was still hoping it was something else, but I knew better. I was a mess and Harry made me wait in the waiting room so I wouldn’t upset Joe. I just paced up and down the hall crying because I knew he was going to come out and tell me that Joe had kidney disease, my worst nightmare. I selfishly was glad he made me wait outside, because I could not stand to see Joe’s face when they told him. I had seen enough of that the night they told Harry he would probably die. They did several tests and finally realized from something that Joe said that our family had kidney disease. I myself would have told them to check that first, but I wasn’t there. Harry came out and told me they were checking his urine. I knew this was it. When Harry came back out again, he said they had told Joe his kidneys weren’t working well, and they were admitting him to the hospital. John and Carol called Joe; they both understood what we were going through. Dee Dee, my lifelong friend, and her daughter Amber came to visit that day. I had to go to work, so I went home for a while. I got home and just screamed “NO, NO, NO!” to the empty house. Even though I knew, I just could not believe that what I had always feared had finally happened. It was just too painful. The nephrologist came in the next day and we told him about the family having glomulernephritis, and he asked what kind. Well for all the years we refused to even discuss the subject, we didn’t know. How stupid could we be? Anyway, we needed to find out or they were going to do a kidney biopsy. I called Harry’s doctor i
Harry was a white dog with black spotswho liked everything,excpet...having a bath.So one day when he heard the waterrunning in the tub,he took the scrubbing brush...and buried it in the back garden.Then he ran away from home.He played where they were mending the street and got very dirty.He played by the railway and got even dirtier.He played tag with other dogs and became dirtier still.He slid down a coal chute and got the dirtiest of all.In fact, he changedfrom a white dog with black spotsto a black dog with white spots.Although there were many other things to do, Harry began to wonder if his family thought that he had really run away.He felt tired and hungry, too,so without stopping on the wayhe ran back home.When Harry got to his house,he crawled through the fenceand sat looking at the back door.One of the family looked out and said,"There's a strange dog in the back garden...by the way, has anyone seen Harry?" When Harry heard this, he tried very hardto show them he was Harry. He started to doall his old, clever tricks.He flip-flopped and he flop-flipped.He rolled over and played dead.He danced and he sang.He did these tricks over and over againbut everyone shook their heads and said,"Oh, no, it couldn't be Harry."Harry gave upand walked away towards the gate,but suddenly he stopped.He ran to a corner of the gardenand started to dig furiously.Soon he jumped away from the holebarking short, happy barks.He'd found the scrubbing brush!And carrying it in his mouth,he ran into the house.Up the stairs he dashed,with the familyfollowing close behind.He jumped into the bathtub abd sat up begging,with the scrubbing brush in his mouth,a trick he certainly had never done before."This little doggie wants a bath!"cried the little girl, and her father said,"Why don't you and your brother give him one?"Harry's bath was the soapiest one he'd ever had.It worked like magic. As soon as the childrenstarted to scrub, they began shouting,"Mummy! Daddy! Look! Look! Come quickly!""It's Harry! It's Harry!" they cried.Harry wagged his tail and was very, very happy.His family combed and brushed him lovingly, andhe became once again a white dog with black spots.It was wonderful to be home.After dinner, Harry fell asleepin his favorite place, happily dreamingof how much fun it had been getting dirty.He slept so soundly,he didn't even feel the scrubbing brushhe'd hidden under his pillow.
When Harry can't make it as host, Jon fills in along with guest Indiana's own Bodie Shallenberger and co-host Harry.
This week Lewis and Ian watch the film that inspired dozens of TV shows and films about relationships between men and women and dozens of terrible sketches that all end with the punchline “I’ll have what she’s having”; When Harry … Continue reading →