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DREAMZ Oct 2018 Egg & Mudslide, India & Looks like Selena, Shadow, Aruba & Susan, Young D & Boulders, Naked Guy & Ring, Vacuum & Sewing, Hang & Unknown City, Grey Vehicle, Bubble Wrap, White Sheets & Fishing or Phishing Nov 2018 Bakery, Artsy & Tim W*****, Mechanics & Ditto, Ghost or Disappear, Orphanage & Rush, Packet & Traveling, Frivolous Dreams, Extra in Play, Twin Beds & Cool Pad, Viewpoint from Girl, Teenage Girl & Short Dreaams --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/ruby-warner/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/ruby-warner/support
Dec 2014 DREAMS BOA Constrictor, Pellet Candy, Pricing, Shuttle, Two Bikini's, Horse Shoe Shape, To Please, Beautiful Scenery, Images, Childhood Residence, 79, Pets, Split Pea Soup, Tape Worm, Woodsy, Oregon, Two Cities, $100 Bucks & Cheddar. Jan 2015 DREAMS Campus, Empty Bedroom, They Lied, They Lied, They Lied!, Volunteer, A Physical, Monorail, White Sheets, Rocks, Snow & Body of Water, Canadian Money, Table & Crate Door, Walking on Water, Victoria or Vancouver, Las Vegas OR Reno & Light Blue Water. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/ruby-warner/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/ruby-warner/support
Our latest podcast departs from our usual interview format. It's a recording of a reading held in the Scottish Poetry Library in March. The poets featured are Nina Bogin, Eoghan Walls and Beverley Bie Brahic. Nina Bogin (pictured) was born in New York City and received a B.A. degree from New York University. She has lived in France since 1976. She taught English and literature at the University of Technology of Belfort-Montbéliard in France, until her retirement in 2017. Graywolf Press published her first book of poems, In the North, in 1989. Two books of poems followed, The Winter Orchards in 2001 and The Lost Hare in 2012, both published by Anvil Press. Her latest collection, Thousandfold, is published by Carcanet. Eoghan Walls was born in Derry in Northern Ireland. He attended Atlantic College on the coast of South Wales and has lived and taught in Germany, Rwanda, Scotland and presently, northern England. He won an Eric Gregory Award in 2006. His first collection of poems, The Salt Harvest, was published by Seren in 2011 and was shortlisted for the Strong Award for Best First Collection. He teaches creative writing at Lancaster University. His latest collection is Pigeon Songs, which is published by Seren. Beverley Bie Brahic is a poet and translator. A Canadian, she lives in Paris and the San Francisco Bay Area. Her second poetry collection, White Sheets, was a finalist for the 2012 Forward Prize. Brahic's translations include Guillaume Apollinaire's The Little Auto, winner of the 2013 Scott Moncrieff Prize; and books by Jacques Derrida and Julia Kristeva. Her latest collection is The Hotel Eden, which is published by Carcanet.
Beverley Bie Brahic is a Canadian poet and translator who lives in Paris, France and the San Francisco Bay Area. Her poetry collection, White Sheets, was a finalist for the Forward Prize and a Poetry Book Society Recommendation. Her translations include Guillaume Apollinaire, Francis Ponge and Yves Bonnefoy. Suzannah V. Evans spoke with her at StAnza 2020, where she discussed how translating poetry inspires her own work, owning a secret shelf of erotic literature, and being a ‘selfish translator'.
Logic Amen provides and sample of a new song along with commentary on the historical relationship in the beginning between white unions and Black workers. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
In this episode, we pick up where we left off last week. Greg is 1,000 miles from the coast to complete his journey across the continent of Africa. His last ride ends up being perhaps the worst one yet and he enters a Zen-like state to get through it. He reaches Cameroon and spies something on a train so familiar yet so foreign at the same time. Greg finally knocks on the door of a French mission only to have to talk his way in using extremely limited French. Finally, he takes a six-hour plane ride back to Nairobi and reflects on his seven-month journey. Like this podcast? Leave us a five-star review on Apple Podcasts! We really appreciate it.Learn more about Metamo: https://metamo.travel/subscribe/Or, enquire about your next trip: https://metamo.travel/enquire/
Content Warning: This episode contains discussions of racism, violence, and sexual abuse that some listeners may find disturbing. We explore the origins of the Ku Klux Klan's tradition of masquerading as ghosts. We discuss the work of pioneering Black folklorist Gladys-Marie Fry, who documented this system of supernatural psychological control in her 1975 book Night Riders in Black Folk History. Bonus Content: Labial LincolnTheme Music by Ian LeeSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/shitgetsweird)
Logic Amen offers a sample of one his songs and provides commentary on how the US government okays both sides in the attack on terrorism and neutralization of Black liberation. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
In each episode of “Good Faith Stories,” we bring you a collection of different stories tied to a theme -- unique, true and short stories as told by the people who lived them.Episode Two -- themed “Gifts” and hosted by author and minister Starlette Thomas -- features four stories:-- “Okemah’s Hands,” by Mitch Randall, CEO of Good Faith Media-- “White Sheets,” by Joy Jordan-Lake, author of the No. 1 bestselling “A Tangled Mercy” and the award-winning novel “Blue Hole Back Home.” Just out: “Under a Gilded Moon,” a work of historical fiction set at Biltmore House-- “Louisville Apocalypse,” by Erica Whitaker, senior pastor of Buechel Park Baptist Church in Louisville, Kentucky-- “The Corporate Jet,” by Ben Fanning, president of an international training company, No. 1 bestselling author, an Inc. Magazine columnist, and host of “The CEO Sessions” podcast“Good Faith Stories” is a production of Good Faith Media. Host: Starlette Thomas. Producer: Cliff Vaughn. Music: Pond5.comInterested in telling a story for the podcast? Producer Cliff Vaughn would love to hear from you. E-mail him at cliff@goodfaithmedia.org.
Beverley Bie Brahic is a Canadian poet and translator who lives in Paris, France and the San Francisco Bay Area. Her poetry collection, White Sheets, was a finalist for the Forward Prize and a Poetry Book Society Recommendation. Her translations include Guillaume Apollinaire, Francis Ponge and Yves Bonnefoy. Suzannah V. Evans spoke with her at StAnza 2020, where she discussed how translating poetry inspires her own work, owning a secret shelf of erotic literature, and being a 'selfish translator'.
3943 SM120819 ChristMass- Priests Of Baal Wore Tall White Pointed Hats And White Sheets And Carried A Flaming Cross Like The KKK- Israel Celebrates Christmas Under Another Name – Baal (Sun) And Grove (Tree) Worship- Israel Scattered For 2600 Years Till May 14, 1948 And Six-Day War Of 1967
3943 SM120819 ChristMass- Priests Of Baal Wore Tall White Pointed Hats And White Sheets And Carried A Flaming Cross Like The KKK- Israel Celebrates Christmas Under Another Name – Baal (Sun) And Grove (Tree) Worship- Israel Scattered For 2600 Years Till May 14, 1948 And Six-Day War Of 1967
R&B singer Tank is speaking my language, plus my ghetto ass dating life #Tinder #Hinge #Grindr --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Spoken word for the ear who needs to hear and wake
Our latest podcast departs from our usual interview format. It's a recording of a reading held in the Scottish Poetry Library in March. The poets featured are Nina Bogin, Eoghan Walls and Beverley Bie Brahic. Nina Bogin (pictured) was born in New York City and grew up on the north shore of Long Island. She attended Kirkland College and received a B.A. degree from New York University. She has lived in France since 1976. She taught English and literature at the University of Technology of Belfort-Montbéliard inFrance, until her retirement in 2017. She was a recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts Grant in 1989 and Graywolf Press published her first book of poems, In the North, that same year. Two books of poems followed, The Winter Orchards in 2001 and The Lost Hare in 2012, both published by Anvil Press. Her latest collection, Thousandfold, is published by Carcanet. Eoghan Walls was born in Derry in Northern Ireland. He attended Atlantic College on the coast of South Wales and has lived and taught in Germany, Rwanda, Scotland and presently, northern England. He won an Eric Gregory Award in 2006, an Irish Art's Council Bursary in 2009, and his work has been published widely in journals and anthologies throughout the UK and Ireland. His first collection of poems, The Salt Harvest, was published by Seren in 2011 and was shortlisted for the Strong Award for Best First Collection. He teaches creative writing at Lancaster University. His latest collection is Pigeon Songs, which is published by Seren. Beverley Bie Brahic is a poet and translator. A Canadian, she lives in Paris and the San Francisco Bay Area. Her second poetry collection, White Sheets, was a finalist for the 2012 Forward Prize. Brahic’s translations include Guillaume Apollinaire's The Little Auto, winner of the 2013 Scott Moncrieff Prize; and books by Jacques Derrida and Julia Kristeva.
Blackwell's were delighted to be joined by Carcanet poets on the 7th of February for a wonderful evening of poetry and discussion with three of Carcanet's most prominent poets, Beverley Bie Brahic, Alison Brackenbury and Nina Bogin. Beverley Bie Brahic is a poet, translator and occasional critic. Her collection White Sheets was a finalist for the 2012 Forward Prize; Hunting the Boar (2016) was a Poetry Book Society Recommendation, and her translation, Guillaume Apollinaire, The Little Auto, won the 2013 Scott Moncrieff Prize. Other translations include Francis Ponge, Unfinished Ode to Mud, a 2009 Popescu Prize finalist, and books by Hélène Cixous, Yves Bonnefoy, Jacques Derrida and Julia Kristeva. Brahic was born in Saskatoon, Canada, grew up in Vancouver, and now lives in Paris and the San Francisco Bay Area. Alison Brackenbury was born in Lincolnshire in 1953 and studied at Oxford. She now lives in Gloucestershire, where she works, as a director and manual worker, in the family metal finishing business. Her Carcanet collections include Dreams of Power (1981), Breaking Ground (1984), Christmas Roses (1988), Selected Poems (1991), 1829 (1995), After Beethoven (2000) and Bricks and Ballads (2004). Her poems have been included on BBC Radio 3 and 4, and 1829 was produced by Julian May for Radio 3. Her work recently won a Cholmondeley Award. Nina Bogin, poet and translator, was born in New York City and has lived in France since 1976. Her previous collections are In the North, The Winter Orchards and The Lost Hare. In addition to numerous translations in the domain of art history, her translation of The Illiterate by Agota Kristof was published in 2013. The evening will be chaired by Bernard O’Donoghue, Emeritus Fellow of Wadham College, where he taught Medieval English and Modern Irish Poetry. He has published six collections of poetry, including Gunpowder, winner of the 1995 Whitbread Prize for Poetry, and Farmers Cross (2011) which was shortlisted for the T. S. Eliot prize as well as a verse translation of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (2006). Music: Borrtex - Children's Joy.
Two Chicks One Mic discuss dying on a NYC platform, Luke Perry, Candace Owen's and Black Republicans, and cars!
Two Chicks One Mic discuss dying on a NYC platform, Luke Perry, Candace Owen's and Black Republicans, and cars!
The team returns to round out their conversation on movies that snuck past the box office in 2017. The films featured in this episode include, indie thrill ride, Always Shine, cyber horror, Friend Request, hovering linen meditation, A Ghost Story and Scandi-set fuckstorm, The Ritual.
Hit the [↻ Repost] button if you like it! #167 of our podcast row by @jonas-woehl with his Live-Cut from his own Event "Modulations" which took place on 27th January 2018 at "Club Paula Dresden". ➡ https://www.facebook.com/jonaswoehl.live Melodic and driving, driven and melancholic - put into a nutshell its this dualistic groove that defines Jonas Woehl’s sound. Packed with impressions and directions, grounded by a firm but never overladen bass, its about finding a balance without taking sides. Not deciding between light and darkness, but rather dancing in the shadows and enjoying both. It’s in this concept that the young Dresdners sound design has put itself to the test, beginning with high-carat remixes for top-players such as Jay Haze and Fritz Kalkbrenner, he has developed and mastered stepping over the border of conventionalism and going towards his own interpretation of emotional dance music. EPs on german top- notch labels such as Get Physical and Solee’s Parquet Recordings have ultimately been a game changer for Woehl and his debute album on the young Berlin-based label Lenient Tales follows this path. Bringing out „White Sheets“ - a 10-track journey on the back of this nutshell - he follows the perception that there’s neither black nor white, but rather a hazy blend.
Bill Press is out so Igor Volsky (CAP Action Fund) is filling in. He welcomes Nina Turner, Josh Lederman and Sarah McBride to discuss Donald Trump's flame-throwing campaign rally in Arizona, the danger of covert racism in the 21st century, a dissection of Trump's Afghanistan 'strategy' and where the Trump administration stands on LGBT rights - the full Wednesday edition of the Bill Press Show!
Two books. Two dads. One is sweet. One is spicy. Today Becky reviews “White Sheets and Rosy Cheeks” and “DILF: A Secret Baby Bad Boy Romance” in honor of Father’s Day. “White Sheets and Rosy Cheeks” by Katie Mettner on Amazon: http://amzn.to/2stjfI7 DILF by Alexis Angel on Amazon: http://amzn.to/2sfCjYf
Cover by ©FRANZ ZÜNKLER [franz@afterhoursounds.com] Jonas Woehl presents Afterhour Sounds Podcast Nr.54 Liebe Freunde der elektronischen Musik, es gibt gute Künstler, richtig geniale Künstler und dann gibt es solche Ausnahmeakteure wie Jonas Woehl einer ist. Bekannt wurde er im Frühjahr 2013 durch seinen Remix von FRITZ KALKBRENNERs Hit "Little By Little". Darauf folgten noch einige sehr erfolgreiche Releases auf so namhaften Labels wie Get Physical Music, Parquet Recordings oder Poesie Musik. Im vergangenen Jahr erschien sein Debüt-Album "White Sheets", ein 10 Tracks umfassendes Konzeptalbum mit dem der gebürtige Dresdner sein wahrlich außergewöhnliches Talent einmal mehr eindrucksvoll unter Beweis gestellt hat. Ein Grund für seinen Erfolg ist die Tatsache das er etwas hat was viele seiner Kollegen nicht haben, nämlich seinen eigenen unverkennbaren Stil! Vielen lieben Dank Jonas das du unsere Reihe bereichert hast. Und nun wünschen wir maximalste Unterhaltung mit unserer #54
"Even a demo tape showcases the talents of Britain's Hot Vamp Club, balancing tight play and melody infused guitars against a durable vocal hook." Chris MacDonald, IndieFeed(Hot Vamp Club on IndieFeed Alternative and Modern Rock)