Imprisonment of women
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Former state corrections official, and co-founder of the Women’s Justice Institute Deanne Benos joins Erik Runge (filling-in for Steve Bertrand) on Chicago’s Afternoon News to discuss the organizations report on incarcerated women in Illinois, and how that report could better serve them. Follow Your Favorite Chicago’s Afternoon News Personalities on Twitter:Follow @SteveBertrand Follow @kpowell720 Follow […]
Auckland Women's Prison faces a major overhaul of the way it handles inmates after revelations by RNZ about the degrading and inhumane treatment of Mihi Bassett and other women at the prison. Corrections has also issued a rare apology to Bassett over her treatment which included being pepper sprayed in her cell multiple times having to lie on the ground to be fed and being held unlawfully in the prison pound for months. After Bassett's court case finished in Manukau today, Corrections Minister Kelvin Davis has told his department its treatment of women is unacceptable and he is demanding changes to the culture and practices at Auckland Women's Prison. RNZ In Depth investigative journalist Guyon Espiner broke the story last year, and was in court today when Corrections was again strongly rebuked by Manukau District judge David McNaughton.
A serial killer of vague demonic origins returns from hell with an army of undead criminals to take over a women's prison. Can Paul and Corey stop this unusual and somewhat confusing threat? Find out now! Our website: bmoviebros.com Twitter: twitter.com/BmovieBros Minds: www.minds.com/Bmoviebros facebook: www.facebook.com/bmoviebros/?ref=…t_homepage_panel Help support the show: www.paypal.com/donate/?token=dp0…Z-VgOA80IUN-Bjx9W www.patreon.com/BMovieBros
Acomi and Turk182 declare this the worst Let's Watch! they've recorded, outside of the unaired The Island of Dr. Moreau (1977) episode. Where Island was boring and didn't lend itself to any jokes, Women's Prison Massacre is abysmal. The characters are stupid, the plot has so many discrepancies and and holes that it's incomprehensible, and the acting is exaggerated to a degree greater than Muppets. This movie is completely unwatchable, and Acomi and Turk are sorry that they're even posting it. They've already wasted their time. Don't waste yours, and skip this movie. Acomi and Turk182, along the occasional special guest, provide running commentary of awfulsome movie and TV shows. The hosts select movies that either one, or both, have never seen. All jokes and comments are improvised. NO PREPARED JOKES OR COMMENTS! During recording, the movies are watched at a low volume and with the subtitles on. Viewers may want to turn subtitles on as well to enhance the viewing experience. So, cue up the audio, ready the movie, and hit play when we say so. Note: This video is the commentary recorded by Acomi and Turk182, and selected screenshots. It is NOT a viewable copy of the film. The commentary can be enjoyed on its own, but if you want to experience the Let's Watch in all its glory, you'll need your own copy of the movie. Most of the movies viewed can be streamed online for free. #OMTWF #KorovaEntertainment #LetsWatch #LW #Acomi #Turk182 #awfulsome #schlock #Italianexploitation #alltimelow #dontwatch Follow Acomi on Twitter at @AcomiDraws and on Instagram at AcomiDraws. Follow Turk182 on Twitter at @Turk182_KE and on Instagram at Turk182_KE.
Will Dana's neighbor ever clean up the poo? How many former-adult film stars is too many? We gave this film a 1/10. Join us as we review Sharkansas Women's Prison Massacre!
The Corrections Minister has asked Corrections for its side of the story, after a judge ruled inmates at Auckland Women's Prison were treated in a degrading and inhumane way. Manukau District Court Judge David McNaughton made the stinging ruling when assessing whether inmate Mihi Bassett should have her sentence extended for arson at the prison in 2019. He says she, and fellow inmate Karma Cripps, who were gassed in their cells and forced to perform a humiliating ritual in order to be fed, were subject to a "concerted effort to break their spirit". Amnesty International says serious questions need to be raised about whether their treatment amounted to torture. Political reporter Yvette McCullough has more.
Auckland Women's Prison treated inmates in a "degrading", "cruel" and "inhumane" manner in a "concerted effort to break their spirit", according to a stinging ruling from a district court judge.Corrections broke its own rules and regulations multiple times in its treatment of Mihi Bassett and Karma Cripps, who were gassed in their cells and forced to perform a humiliating ritual to be fed, Manukau District Court Judge David McNaughton says.His ruling also confirms the women had to remove their underwear in front of male guards in order to get clean pairs and were, at times, denied toiletries and sanitary products.Bassett, diagnosed with PTSD after being raped by a gang member at 17, attempted suicide in the prison and the judge said her deteriorating mental health "would have been obvious to any interested observer".After Bassett was moved to the prison's Intensive Support Unit, her partner, Cripps, was put in the cell Bassett had attempted suicide in - even though there were other cells available - an action the judge described as cruel.The judge's findings stand in stark contrast to assurances Corrections Minister Kelvin Davis gave when RNZ broke the story of Cripps and Bassett's treatment last year.Davis said then that his department had assured him the treatment of the women was lawful. "Regarding claims that women were made to undress in front of male staff, I have received assurance that this practice is not in place."But the judge said Cripps and Bassett's evidence was "powerful and compelling" and entirely consistent. "I have no reason to doubt their evidence," he said.Details of their treatment were revealed after Bassett and other inmates set fire to property at Auckland Women's Prison in 2019 and they were taken to court on arson charges.But the judge became concerned when hearing about the women's treatment.After lighting the fire in protest at having bin-liners removed - the prison removed them to stop women using them to cover their faces when pepper sprayed in their cells - Bassett was sent to D wing, a segregation unit known as the pound.But Justice McNaughton found Corrections broke its own rules in sending Bassett to the pound and kept her there without proper authorisation.Bassett, now 27, spent four months in the pound in conditions the judge described as "particularly harsh, including an inability to interact with other prisoners or Corrections staff".Corrections must follow a process when sending inmates to the pound, but failed to do so and the judge ruled "the legal basis for her segregation remains unclear on the evidence".A prison can only keep an inmate in the pound for two weeks unless the chief executive of Corrections extends the order. The detention then has to be reviewed monthly and the order expires after three months unless a visiting justice extends it."Ms Bassett was denied the opportunity to attend any disciplinary hearing before a Visiting Justice," Judge McNaughton found."Her continued confinement in D Wing cannot therefore be said to have been as a result of a lawful penalty of cell confinement which in any event could only have been for a maximum duration of 15 days."The judge found Corrections acted unlawfully by holding Bassett in the pound for four months. "There is no evidence that a segregation order was in force in respect of Ms Bassett. If such an order was in force it was clearly in breach of the act."Bassett was aware of her rights "but even when she sought to exercise them she was denied them", the judge said.The ruling shows that the harsh conditions combined with having their complaints ignored prompted the women to set off their cell sprinklers in protest.The prison would respond by using the Cell Buster pepper spray to force them out of their cells - which had flooded and become a safety risk.The Cell Buster, which is sprayed under the cell door, was used on Bassett four times but in doing so Corrections broke its own regulations, which restri...
Paul and Corey break into a women's prison in order to take down the mob or something like that. Will they succeed? Find out now! Our website: bmoviebros.com Twitter: twitter.com/BmovieBros Minds: www.minds.com/Bmoviebros facebook: www.facebook.com/bmoviebros/?ref=…t_homepage_panel Help support the show: www.paypal.com/donate/?token=dp0…Z-VgOA80IUN-Bjx9W www.patreon.com/BMovieBros
Episode 17 of Movies About Girls. This episode was originally released on May 24, 2009. Compañeros Radio Network proudly presents episode 17 of Movies About Girls. This episode was originally released on May 24, 2009. Please support the Compañeros Radio Network Patreon, if you can! Check out the other Compañeros Radio Network shows: Movie Melt Songs on Trial Get Soft with Dr Snuggles Heavy Leather Horror Show Ballbusters In Search of the Perfect Podcast
Paul and Corey help a group of prisoners escape from a women's prison run by a saddistic dominatrix. Will they make it out unscathed? Find out now! Our website: bmoviebros.com Twitter: twitter.com/BmovieBros Minds: www.minds.com/Bmoviebros facebook: www.facebook.com/bmoviebros/?ref=…t_homepage_panel Help support the show: www.paypal.com/donate/?token=dp0…Z-VgOA80IUN-Bjx9W www.patreon.com/BMovieBros
Paul and Corey must save a women's prison from even more dangerous criminals. Will they make it out of this one unscathed? Find out now! Our website: bmoviebros.com Twitter: twitter.com/BmovieBros Minds: www.minds.com/Bmoviebros facebook: www.facebook.com/bmoviebros/?ref=…t_homepage_panel Help support the show: www.paypal.com/donate/?token=dp0…Z-VgOA80IUN-Bjx9W www.patreon.com/BMovieBros
The state of Vermont hired the attorneys at Downs Rachlin Martin in December of 2019 to investigate allegations of abuse at the Chittenden Regional Correctional Facility. The report found a “disturbing” number of allegations of sexual misconduct by officers at the facility, targeting both inmates and fellow staff members. Today we hear from one of the main lawmakers who aims to see the recommendations from the report through, as well as a women's prison rights advocate.
Ryan Clarke - Report Inside Women's Prison
A human rights lawyer says Corrections appears to have broken the law by keeping two women in a segregation unit at Auckland Women's Prison for four months in conditions likened to those of caged animals. Prisoners usually stay two weeks in the unit, known as the pound, and the law sets out rules that need to be followed to keep them in longer - rules that the second in command at the prison has admitted she did not even know existed. On Tuesday morning RNZ revealed that women were gassed with pepper spray in their cells, made to lie face down on the ground before they were fed and had to plead for basic hygiene products. Human Rights Lawyer Douglas Ewen says the conditions could meet the definition of torture and New Zealand may have an international obligation to report them. Guyon Espiner broke this story and filed this report.
At least four inmates at Auckland Women's Prison were gassed with multiple canisters of pepper spray while inside their cells in an approved tactic their lawyer says is risking lives. Two of the prisoners spent four months in a segregation unit where they had to lie face down on the ground, often with their heads beside the toilet, if they wanted to be fed. They sometimes went days without food if they refused to comply with what they saw as a humiliating ritual. One of the inmates became severely depressed and attempted suicide but was resuscitated and returned to the segregation unit the next day, in conditions likened to being kept like caged animals. The treatment has come to light after three inmates were charged with burning prison property and the court case over the arson revealed the conditions the women faced at New Zealand's largest women's prison. Investigative Journalist Guyon Espiner reports.
On this inaugural episode of the Warm Tins Film Club, Matt (@NoComradeChunk) Tom (@TomAaargh) and Callum (@AntiAntiMarxism) take a bite out of Jim Wynorski's SyFy original movie Sharkansas Women's Prison Massacre. Expect eyebrow-raising costume and shot choices, terrifying special effects and some extremely questionable looking food. With a title this great, how could we resist? Follow us on twitter: https://twitter.com/WarmTinsPod
Māori-led journal and reading club Kei te pai press is asking for book donations for the library at the Christchurch Women's Prison. Jesse speaks to Morgan Godfery who is part of the initiative.
Today’s Patreon-fueled shout-out is for Abundant Life Ministries, “working hard to create a better future for the Charlottesville community.”* A mass testing event at the Fluvanna Women’s Correctional Facility has resulted in the biggest one-day rise of COVID-19 cases in that county. That’s according to a spokeswoman for the Thomas Jefferson Health District, which reports 41 cases in Fluvanna this morning. “The uptick in Fluvanna County cases is due to point prevalence testing done at the Fluvanna Women’s Correctional Facility,” said Kathryn Goodman, spokeswoman for the TJHD. Overall, the district reported 60 cases today, with 12 from Charlottesville and five from Albemarle. Statewide, there are another 845 cases of COVID-19 in the Commonwealth as reported by the Virginia Department of Health this morning. The statewide seven-day average for positive tests has dropped to 6.9 percent today. UVA reported another four cases yesterday, and their COVID-19 tracker now states that eleven percent of quarantine rooms are in use, up from eight percent the day before. *Governor Ralph Northam pointed to declining positive testing rates statewide as a sign of good news in the pandemic, but urged continued caution yesterday. Last week, Northam ended restrictions in the Hampton Roads such as early closings for restaurants after two and a half weeks of declining positive test rates. “We however continue to keep an eye on some other regions in Virginia,” Northam said. “For example, Southwest Virginia is seeing more new cases per day per on average, 229, than any other region in our state, even Northern Virginia.” Northam said southwest Virginia has fewer hospitals and medical capabilities so the Department of Health is monitoring the situation closely, even with declining positive test rates there. He said the rate was 8.1 percent on Tuesday. The governor urged people to continue following physical and social distancing guidelines, and to wear masks indoors. He also announced that more than half a million people have downloaded the COVIDWISE tracking app. “We estimate that’s around 12 percent of Virginians between ages 18 and 65,” Northam said. The State Corporation Commission has agreed to extend a moratorium on utility cut-offs through October 5. The moratorium had been set to expire at midnight, six months after it was first issued. In a release the SCC indicated there would be no further extension. “The mounting costs of unpaid bills must eventually be paid, either by the customers in arrears or by other customers who themselves may be struggling to pay their bills,” reads the statement. “Unless the General Assembly explicitly directs that a utility's own shareholders must bear the cost of unpaid bills, those costs will almost certainly be shifted to other paying customers.”“The budget I sent to the legislature includes a moratorium on utility disconnections, a repayment plan structure, and a debt forgiveness program,” Northam said. Yesterday the Virginia Department of Health reported 96 deaths, the result of a data entry backlog. Health Commissioner Norm Oliver commented on this at the press conference.“Occasionally there will be a spike as we have in this number, and that just represents catching up with death certificates which come in much later than what we get from the hospitals,” Oliver said. “If you look at a different graph which is the deaths recorded by the date of death, you’ll get a much better picture of the course of the disease and you’ll see that we had a peak earlier in the year and it has been leveled off and we have been in the low teens for many weeks now.” More from the Governor’s Press Conference will be in the next installment of the Charlottesville Quarantine Report. *Early voting season begins this Friday, and Governor Northam said yesterday that the Department of Elections has received 790,000 requests for absentee ballots by mail. Jim Nix is a member of the Charlottesville Electoral Board. “People have been getting the word on voting early either in-person or by mail,” Nix said on the September 15, 2020 edition of C’Ville 360. “We already had as of yesterday morning about 6,500 requests for ballots by mail which is astounding.”Normally in a presidential year we would have fewer than 2,000 through the whole cycle according to Nix. Melissa Morton is Charlottesville’s registrar.“Currently my team is processing and preparing the absentee mail ballots to go out this Friday on September the 18th,” Morton said. “We have approximately 9,000 mail ballots that will go out.” Morton said a dropbox for absentee or early ballots will be installed this week and social distancing measures are being placed inside her office for anyone who decides to vote in-person. You can watch the rest of the program here. *In meetings today, the Charlottesville Housing Advisory Committee meets at noon and the Albemarle Board of Supervisors meets at 1 p.m. The latter group has a long day ranging from a discussion of a special exception to the county’s home stay ordinance for a property at 2405 Northfield Road, and an update on long range planning in Albemarle. There are several public hearings in the evening, including a developer’s request to reduce the scope of an intersection onto Route 20 south of Piedmont Virginia Community College. There’s also a renewal of the COVID-19 ordinance passed in late July, and a hearing on a county-initiated amendment of the zoning ordinance to place more restrictions on the use of fill dirt in the rural area.* Before we go today, one small correction from yesterday. All of the PTO’s for Charlottesville city schools have come together to raise funds for supplies for virtual learning, and a press release yesterday announcing a matching opportunity gave the incorrect total raised so far. The actual amount was $56,500 but hopefully by now that figure has increased already! If you want to learn more, click through to the link. This is a public episode. Get access to private episodes at communityengagement.substack.com/subscribe
New Zealand's largest women's prison has a punitive culture where staff are too quick to resort to using force and women are not getting proper health care, according to an internal Corrections review. Auckland Region Women's Correctional Facility in Wiri has also breached the law multiple times by denying women at least an hour out of their cells each day - a minimum entitlement under the Corrections Act. The review, released to RNZ under the Official Information Act, highlights poor conditions and dysfunctional management at the jail, which houses more than 400 of the country's 630 female prisoners. Investigative Journalist Guyon Espiner reports.
Okay, quit trying to act like you're some kind of big shot who is "above" watching a movie called Sharkansas Women's Prison Massacre. You're intrigued by the title and you know it. Scotch and Bob Harris know that this is the type of movie that's right up their alley and they're not even ashamed to admit it. Traci Lords, Dominique Swain and Christine Nguyen star in the 2015 Jim Wynorski movie about a group of escaped female convicts who are menaced in the swamps by a prehistoric shark. Sounds promising, eh? Find out what Scotch and Bob thought and then watch it for yourself. Have a listen! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
On this episode of The Grapevine, Dr Jessie Moritz, Lecturer in Middle East Studies, at ANU talks to Dylan and Kulja about her article in The Conversation that called for the Australia to do more to aid her friend and colleague Kylie Moore-Gilbert, whose condition is rapidly deteriorating. The Australian academic was arrested by the Iranian government and sentenced to 10 years imprisonment in September 2018 for allegations of spying and has since suffered intolerable conditions without appeal.Then, award winning Australian author Christos Tsiolkas makes his debut on The Grapevine to discuss some of his essays that have recently appeared in the Griffith Review and The Guardian and how COVID has focused his creativity inwards to explore themes of family, identity, class and prejudice.
Sharkansas Women's Prison Massacre (2015)
Today I continue on with Tricycle week with two great articles. One talks about the meaning of the word Sangha, and the other is a brief interview with three women Buddhists in an Ohio Women's prison.
33ème épisode de notre podcast où nous allons aborder des films mêlant les requins à des genres populaires dans le cinéma d'exploitation à petit budget. "Sharkansas Women's Prison Massacre" de Jim Wynorski en 2015 tente l'hybridation du requin avec le créneau toujours racoleur du film de prison de femmes mais déçoit l'amateur en étant diablement prudent en sang et nudité. Sorti la même année,"Shark Exorcist" de Donald Farmer frise quant à lui l'escroquerie tant il s'avère cheap et mal foutu malgré un concept prometteur de requin possédé par Satan. Recommandations:La liste Shark Parade Sens Critique de QuentinLa liste Letterboxd Shark Parade de FabienLes podcasts musicaux de Faskil
This week was Cory's pick. We know how much you guys love shark films. We know how much you guys love women in prison films. What happens when you combine the two?! We explore that very question this week. "Sharkansas Women's Prison Massacre" is an entertaining and fun romp through the woods...with sharks. You can check this one out right now on Tubi if you want to watch along with us. Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/SpookyDudes Check out our sponsor! Go to Fright-rags.com and use code SPOOKYDUDES10 at check-out for 10% of your order! We're on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, Google Play, Spotify or our website - http://spookydudes.org Do you agree with our opinions? You'll have to listen to find out. Thanks for sticking with us this year! Check it out - let us know what you think! Keep up with us on social media! We'd love to hear what you think about the show! Twitter: @SpookyDudesPod Instagram: SpookyDudesPodcast Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SpookyDudes Contact us: SpookyDudesPodcast@gmail.com Call us and leave a voicemail! - 423-521-5117 . . . #sharkansaswomensprisonmassacre #sharkansas #jimwynorski #dominiqueswain #tracilords #syfy #sharknado #womeninprison #sharks #driveinmutants #driveintheater #indiehorror #indiefilm #horror #horroraddict #horrorfan #horrorfanatic #horrorflick #horrorflicks #horrorjunkie #horrormovie #horrorpodcast #exploitation #podcast #scarymovies #gore #frightrags #spookydudes #spookydudespodcast #stayspookymydudes
This time we are joined by Ed Cohen and Mike Friedberg, both musicheads and the founders of SmartStartMN (the primary sponsor of this show, fyi). We are then joined by the almost impossibly witty Colleen Kruse. Plus, we play some truly killer songs. Cheers!
For the past two years, women inside the Darwin correctional centre have been writing, recording and co-producing a podcast called ‘ Bird’s Eye View’ where they tell their stories in their words. In this episode of Full Story, we’re going inside sector four of the prison to hear from two of those women about why they went in and what it’s like now that they’re back outside
Shark month probably wasn't the best idea we've ever had. Maybe we picked the wrong shark movies? I don't know. Don't watch these shark movies. Next week is Shark Exorcist.... and it sucks. Awesome. horrorsoup@yahoo.com IG/FB/YT: horrorsouppodcast patreon.com/horrorsoup
It's a double bill on The Profile this week. Megan Cornwell meets Mim Skinner, the author of Jailbirds: a book about women's prisons, while in part two, Sam Hailes talks Steve Maltz, a Christian author best known for his teaching on the Hebraic roots of Christianity. The Profile is brought to you in association with Premier Christianity magazine. Request a free copy at premierchristianity.com
This week was Cory's pick and he went with the 1982 women-in-prison exploitation flick "Violence in a Women's Prison." It's absolutely crazy! It's gritty, it's dirty...it's a women in prison flick! We discussed the Severin Films blu-ray - it's gorgeous - check out Severin now! Horror News: The creator of "Faces of Death" passes away. Event Horizon is bound for a new TV show. Check out our sponsor! fright-rags.com and use code SPOOKYDUDES10 at check-out for 10% of your order! We're on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, Google Play, Spotify or our website - http://spookydudespod.com/ Do you agree with our opinions? You'll have to listen to find out. Thanks for sticking with us this year! Check it out - let us know what you think! Keep up with us on social media! We'd love to hear what you think about the show! Twitter: @SpookyDudesPod Instagram: SpookyDudesPodcast Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SpookyDudes Contact us: SpookyDudesPodcast@gmail.com #violenceinawomensprison #womeninprison #cultfilm #cultfilms #cultmovies #driveinmutants #driveintheater #gore #halloween #horror #horroraddict #horrorfan #horrorfanatic #horrorflick #horrorflicks #horrorjunkie #horrormovie #horrorpodcast #exploitation #exploitationfilms #podcast #scarymovies #exploitationflicks #severin #spooky #spookydudes #spookydudespodcast #stayspookymydudes #frightrags #severinfilms
The Alderson Federal Prison Camp has a history filled with powerful women. Some pushed for the prison to be built. Others served time there.
Conditions at Vermont's only women's prison have been a concern since inmates were first moved there. But a new wave of complaints has lawmakers and advocates debating how to move beyond the aging facility. Guests: Amanda Sorrell (former Chittenden Regional Correctional Facility inmate), Liz Swavola (Vera Institute for Justice), Kit Norton (VTDigger)
On January 2019, more than two thousand women confined at Michigan’s only women’s prison were put in quarantine. The quarantine comes in the wake of a possible scabies outbreak at the facility -- which has a long history of abuse and multiple cases of medical neglect. While many of the women held captive there displayed no symptoms, and pointed out other health hazards, such as black mold and infested showers, all of those who refused the state’s systemic administration of medical treatment were put in solitary confinement. In this episode, we speak with Sara and Tracy -- two poets that were locked up at Huron Valley during the quarantine. We also speak with Victoria Law, abolitionist writer and activist, and author of Resistance Behind Bars: The Struggles of Incarcerated Women.
Anna Müller discusses her new monograph, If the Walls Could Speak, an intimate account of the lives of female political prisoners in Stalinist Poland. Müller portrays the individuality, the humanity, and ultimately the resistance of a dedicated group of women who were incarcerated for their attempts to save Poland. Using archival documents and extensive interviews she opens up the world of grueling interrogation, torture, show trials, and the boredom of everyday existence as political prisoners tried to breath new meaning into their lives. In Müller’s account, prison was both the centerpiece of Stalinist Poland and the central experience in the biographies of the women she represents, many of whom never fully recovered from their incarceration. This is an untold story that evokes the particularities of the Stalinist past and the gruesome toll it took on some of Poland’s most committed patriots. Anna Müller opens up this period with all of its dedication and fear, desperation and paranoia, while also returning dignity to a category of women who paid the ultimate price for patriotic devotion.
In the first Gardeners' Corner of Winter, David Maxwell visits a new community garden on the site of Hydebank Wood College and Women's Prison. He meets the Deputy Governor Tom Ferguson who says the garden helps rehabilitate those reaching the end of their sentence. David also heads to Belvoir Forest to talk to the RSPB about feeding garden birds and he speaks to Maeve Bell from the Irish Garden Plant Society about Mahonias which were born and bred in Northern Ireland. Also in the programme, David goes for a walk at Mount Stewart with Head Gardener Neil Porteous who tells him about the work under way to completely replant the Mairi garden.
Tammy and Aimee discuss the backlash against the whole Trans community after a Trans inmate in a Women's Prison committed several sexual assaults on other inmates.
The sixth season of the American comedy-drama television series Orange Is the New Black premiered on Netflix on July 27, 2018, at 12:00 am PDT in multiple countries. It consists of thirteen episodes, each between 50–84 minutes. The series is based on Piper Kerman's memoir, Orange Is the New Black: My Year in a Women's Prison (2010), about her experiences at FCI Danbury, a minimum-security federal prison. The series is created and adapted for television by Jenji Kohan. This season takes place in a maximum security prison, after the inmates incite a riot at Litchfield Penitentiary during the previous season, and the season deals with the fallout from the riot. The main story arc of the season involves a gang-like war between two cell blocks which is sparked by the feud between two sisters. Meanwhile, the guards play a fantasy sport game called "fantasy inmate". Several supporting characters who appeared throughout the first five seasons are absent in this season due to change in setting, but this season introduces several new characters featured in maximum security.
For the final installment of our 4 part 'Shark Month' special, we have 'The Sharkansas Women's Prison Massacre'! With a title like that...its...its gonna be pretty bad. Listen along as we close out our month long shark celebration!
Claudia Cragg () speaks here for with ) who founded the Higher Education Program at the Indiana Women’s Prison in 2012 and directed the program until 2017. She is also Director Emeritus of started as part of her Public Policy class at the prison. Kelsey’s interest in prisons and related topics of race and violence began as a teenager with three experiences: marching with Martin Luther King, Jr. in Montgomery, AL, working with an all-male inmate crew assigned to the Maryland Statehouse where she was working, and living with a tribe of active headhunters in the Philippines. After graduating from Yale in 1971 as a member of the university’s first class of women, Kelsey became a correctional officer at the Connecticut State Prison for Women in Niantic. She later went to graduate school at Harvard where she wrote her dissertation on the devastating effect that working in prisons has on officers. Her book, Prison Officers and Their World (Harvard U. Press, 1988), remains one of the few in-depth studies of men and women who work in prison. In the years since, she has continued to research and write about prisons, including being an advocate for the return of prison nurseries in the 1990s, and investigating problems of white supremacy among prison employees in the 2000s. Kelsey is now a full-time grandmother living in Oakland, CA
To check out Josh’s new album "The Nightmare Inside You" click here: https://dancingwithghosts2.bandcamp.com/album/the-nightmare-inside-you Consider supporting us on Patreon: www.patreon.com/UncoveringUnexplainedMysteries --------------------------------------- - Women's Prison Killing can be seen on season 5 of Amazon Prime. --------------------------------------- The first case we focus on is an 8th grader who was cut down in the prime of his life. Was it a hit and run or something more devious? Next we discuss the case of Jesslyn Rich and the women's prison killings at Frontera Prison. You wanna talk about prison corruption? You can't get more corrupt than this... Finally we finish on an article that can be found on Decider.com titled "‘Unsolved Mysteries’: 15 UFO Episodes That Are Out of This World ".. ya this list kind of sucks. --------------------------------------- For more Josh & Mike, but separate, check them out on YouTube: Josh: www.youtube.com/DancingWithGhosts Mike: www.youtube.com/OCPCommunications
Al and Brantley make fun of movies based on nothing but their weird descriptions! This week's movies are Sharkansas Women's Prison Massacre and Raiders of the Lost Shark.
This week we're chumming the waters, baiting our hooks and fishing up a super shitty shark movie, in honor of shark week. We watched "Sharkansas Women's Prison Massacre". This movie has it all scantily clad prison babes, prehistoric mutant sharks, an abundance of fake toy guns, useless detectives and two aging porn stars. Don't miss out on this episode, this movie had us laughing so hard we were in tears and stitches.
In the second episode of Sounds From The Slammer, Angus Mordant interviews inmates at the Montana Women's Prison who participate in the facility's music program,Tutti Behind Walls. The program, a partnership with the Billings Symphony and Chorale, teaches inmates how to play the guitar. Sounds From The Slammer is produced by journalists Adam Schrader and Angus Mordant. Visit soundsfromtheslammer.com for more information and additional content.
Orange Is the New Black é uma série de televisão americana desenvolvida por Jenji Kohan, Sara Hess e Tara Herrmann para a Netflix, estrelada por Taylor Schilling (Wikipedia). É baseada em Orange Is the New Black: My Year in a Women's Prison (2010), memória criada por Piper Kerman, sobre suas experiências na FCI Danbury, uma prisão federal de segurança mínima (Wikipedia).
What is it really like to be a woman in prison? We've all heard about Orange Is The New Black, but what's the reality for women in Australia? Plus, is Miss Piggy a feminist icon? And what does it say about us that a muppet is our female idol? And Rebecca Huntley argues the case for the 6 hour day. And the 4 day week. #dreams. Show notes Contact the show via podcast@mamamia.com.au, or via twitter, @mamamiapodcasts
This week's podcast reflects on a week of 2 Common Weal meetings in Aberdeen and Leith and 2 Women for Independence meetings in Dalkeith and Edinburgh. The topic of the new women's prison in Inverclyde was raised and Lesley wrote about it in the Sunday Post. The petition started by the Edinburgh Women for Independence Group is here. Finally we talked briefly about the changes to the BBC Radio Scotland schedule. There are some interesting local and international opportunities .
Before the hit Netflix series made “Orange” the color to watch, there was the book that started it all. In "Orange is the New Black: My Year in a Women's Prison," best-selling author Piper Kerman tells the true story of the crime and punishment that changed her life. Brenda Madden talks with Kerman about the day her past came back to haunt her and what she’s doing now to help women and children affected by incarceration.
Camille Sanzone talks with Linda Pischke, author of THE WOMEN OF BLOCK 12: Voices from a Jail Ministry. It is a raw yet inspiring journey into the world of incarcerated women; most of whom owned up to their crimes, while telling stories of abuse, rape, prostitution, and homelessness, but with a spirit of hope for a better life.This show is broadcast live on W4WN Radio – The Women 4 Women Network (www.w4wn.com) part of Talk 4 Radio (http://www.talk4radio.com/) on the Talk 4 Media Network (http://www.talk4media.com/)
SPOILER-FREE REVIEW! ("Orange is the New Black" Season 2 Cast)"ORANGE IS THE NEW BLACK" Season 2 - 2014 Created by: Jenji KohanBased on "Orange is the New Black: My Year in a Women's Prison" by Piper Kerman.Starring: Taylor Schilling, Laura Prepon, Taryn Manning, Laverne Cox, Uzo Aduba, Kate Mulgrew, Yael Stone, and more fabulous people!Synopsis: We were left with an AMAZING cliffhanger from Season 1 last year, and I think it's about time we explore how good was Season 2 in comparison. Follow us @MoviesalaQueerSarita M. Ramirez@SaritaMRamirezMALQ Facebook
("Orange is the New Black" Season 2 Cast)"ORANGE IS THE NEW BLACK" Season 2 - 2014 Created by: Jenji KohanBased on "Orange is the New Black: My Year in a Women's Prison" by Piper Kerman.Starring: Taylor Schilling, Laura Prepon, Taryn Manning, Laverne Cox, Uzo Aduba, Kate Mulgrew, Yael Stone, and more fabulous people!Synopsis: We were left with an AMAZING cliffhanger from Season 1 last year, and I think it's about time we explore how good was Season 2 in comparison. Follow us @MoviesalaQueerSarita M. Ramirez@SaritaMRamirezMALQ Facebook
Summary: Note: Quiz contains 2 audio clips and each audio clip contains 3 questions. With a career, a boyfriend, and a loving family, Piper Kerman barely resembles the reckless young woman who delivered a suitcase of drug money 10 years ago. But that past has caught up with her. Convicted and sentenced to 15 months at the infamous federal correctional facility in Danbury, Connecticut, the well-heeled Smith College alumna is now inmate #11187-424 - one of the millions of women who disappear "down the rabbit hole" of the American penal system
Perry Mason-Perry At Womens Prison 2/1/46 oldtimeradiodvd.com
Perry Mason.#2146. John Larkin, Erle Stanley Gardner (creator) oldtimeradiodvd.com
Perry Mason.#2146. John Larkin, Erle Stanley Gardner (creator) oldtimeradiodvd.com