Podcasts about wwii japanese

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Best podcasts about wwii japanese

Latest podcast episodes about wwii japanese

Frightmare on B Street
One Cut of the Dead

Frightmare on B Street

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2025 33:55


A zombie movie? Yes please! A zombie movie within a zombie movie...wait what? Would Jeni go visit a WWII Japanese facility for the fun? Does Rose enjoy people eating other people? Listen to this episode to hear what they think!

JIJI English News-時事通信英語ニュース-
U.S. Briefly Deletes Website on WWII Japanese-American Soldiers

JIJI English News-時事通信英語ニュース-

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2025 0:15


A U.S. Army website about Japanese-American troops during World War II was temporarily taken down, as U.S. President Donald Trump's administration works to eliminate signs of diversity, equity and inclusion, or DEI, from public institutions.

Morbid
Episode 655: The Sinking of the USS Indianapolis

Morbid

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2025 87:49


A little past midnight on July 30, 1945, the USS Indianapolis, a US Navy cruiser, had just delivered the uranium that would be used in the first nuclear bomb dropped on Japan, and was returning to the Philippines when it was struck by a Japanese torpedo. The ship was badly damaged in the attack and within ten minutes it rolled onto its side, dumping 890 crewmen into the pitch-black ocean and dragging the remaining 300 down with the ship.Those who survived the torpedo strike did what they could to grab supplies before abandoning ship, but there were very few life boats or life jackets, so many of the sailors had to float in the water or cling to the few rafts they did manage to take before jumping from the boat. To make matters worse, their mission had been highly confidential and no one in the Navy knew where the Indianapolis was, much less that it had sank. The surviving crew thought things were about as bad as they could get, then the sharks began showing up.Thank you to the Incredible Dave White of Bring Me the Axe Podcast for research and Writing support!ReferencesAssociated Press. 1945. "Indianapolis sunk with 883 killed." Los Angeles Times, August 15: 1.Austin, Daryl. 2021. "How a WWII Japanese sub commander helped exonerate a U.S. Navy captain." Washington Post, June 6.Buckley, Chris. 2017. "Wreckage of the U.S.S. Indianapolis, lost for 72 years, is found in Pacific." New York Times, August 21.Charles B. McVay, III, interview by US Naval History and Heritage Command. 2003. Recollections of Captain Charles B. McVay, III, USN, Commanding Officer of USS Indianapolis (CA-35) which was sunk by Japanese submarine I-58 on 30 July 1945 near the Philippines (April 20).Newcomb, Richard F. 1958. "Court's verdict surprises, irks public." Indianapolis Star, November 30: 22.—. 1958. "Rescue operation put in motion." Indianapolis Star, November 24: 1.—. 1958. "Survivors begin ordeal in sea." Indianapolis Star, November 22: 1.Paridon, Seth. n.d. "Surviving the sinking of the USS Indianapolis." National World War II Museum. Phillips, Kristine. 2017. "USS Indianapolis survivor recalls four days in shark-filled sea." Washington Post, August 20.1975. Jaws. Directed by Steven Spielberg. Performed by Robert Shaw.US Navy Court of Inquiry. 1945. Summary findings regarding all circumstances connected with the sinking of the USS Indianapolis (CA-35), and the delay in reporting the loss of that ship August 13, 1945. Summary, Washington, DC: United States Government.Vincent, Lynn, and Sara Vladic. 2018. Indianapolis: The True Story of the Worst Sea Disaster in U.S. Naval History and the Fifty-Year Fight to Exonerate an Innocent Man. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Heroes Behind Headlines
WWII Japanese Spy In The Heart Of Hollywood

Heroes Behind Headlines

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2024 52:05


Frederick Rutland was nothing short of a navy hero in the UK following WWI, but his own charisma, quirks, and opportunism led him to Hollywood to spy for Japan in the years leading to Pearl Harbor, playing a key role in the Japanese attack. Though British officials knew what he was doing, they quietly sidelined him to avoid the public embarrassment of revealing one of their own as a traitor. Author Ron Drabkin shares the outrageous story of Rutland, including his friendships with Hollywood stars such as Charlie Chaplin and Boris Karloff, from his book "Beverly Hills Spy." Heroes Behind HeadlinesExecutive Producer Ralph PezzulloProduced & Engineered by Mike DawsonMusic provided by ExtremeMusic.com

The View Masters
Episode 360: One Cut of the Dead

The View Masters

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2024 51:07


Recorded May 14, 2024 Things go badly for a hack director and film crew shooting a low budget zombie movie in an abandoned WWII Japanese facility, when they are attacked by real zombies. – From IMDB Email Eric or Joe. Time – 51:07 min. / File Size – 49mb Subscribe via RSS Subscribe via iTunes

Ikigai with Jennifer Shinkai
Finding Yoyu & Cultivating Abundance in Your Life, with Marci Kobayashi

Ikigai with Jennifer Shinkai

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2024 57:09


Welcome to another episode of the Ikigai with Jennifer Shinkai podcast. This week we are talking about yoyu, a Japanese concept conveying one's capacity to handle or afford something. Author Marci Kobayashi joins us to discuss the concept of yoyu and her upcoming book, "Finding Yoyu: The Japanese Compass for Navigating Overwhelm and Cultivating Abundance in 7 Key Areas of Life." Listen to the episode to hear more about yoyu and how it links to ikigai!If you enjoyed this episode and it inspired you in some way, we'd love to hear about it and know your biggest takeaway. In this episode you'll hear:What Yoyu is and how Marci came to learn about itHow Marci applied the concept of Yoyu to a challenging time in her lifeAbout the importance of proactively taking time for yourselfAbout ‘tiny altars' and how they make claiming space more manageableHow you can figure out what makes you feel a sense of yoyuAbout Marci:Marci Kobayashi is a writer, teacher, and business owner in Tokyo. Raised in the U.S., she arrived in Japan as a college student in the early '90s and has lived there ever since. In 2002, she started a company to provide English-conversation programs and study-abroad advising, which evolved into assisting international organizations and entrepreneurs in improving their global reach online through web design and coaching.Marci also has a dedicated spiritual practice, enjoys studying alternative-healing modalities, cooking a whole-foods flexitarian diet, and exploring Japan. She is the author of the upcoming book, "Finding Yoyu: The Japanese Compass for Navigating Overwhelm and Cultivating Abundance in 7 Key Areas of Life." She's also working on a memoir chronicling the five years she was the primary caregiver for her father-in-law, a WWII Japanese war veteran, as he navigated Alzheimer's.Connect with Marci:Website: https://marcikobayashi.com/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MarciSKobayashiInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/marcikobayashi/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/marci-kobayashi/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/marcikobayashiConnect with Jennifer:Linked In: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jennifershinkai/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/jennifershinkaicoach Website: https://jennifershinkai.com/ Instagram Coaching and Podcast: https://www.instagram.com/ikigaiwithjennifershinkai/Instagram Artist: https://www.instagram.com/jennifershinkai/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/ikigaiwithjennifershinkai/

KQED’s Forum
Musician, Songwriter Kishi Bashi in Studio

KQED’s Forum

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2023 55:48


Kishi Bashi is a multi-instrumentalist, songwriter, filmmaker and Japanese-American. That identity and the liminal space between being Japanese and being American animates his documentary “Omoiyari” in which he traveled to WWII Japanese internment camps and Japan itself to better understand his own identity. Bashi improvises music on site in the film, and his taut melodic phrases, inflected with a bit of Laurel Canyon pop, build and expand to tell a story in a way you have not yet heard. His new double LP – “A Songfilm” – is a companion piece to the documentary and comes out on November 17. Bashi joins us in studio. Guests: Kishi Bashi, singer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist - Bashi's latest LP "Music from the Song Film: Omoiyari" is a companion to his documentary film that explores his identity and the WWII experience of Japanese incarceration. The album comes out on November 17. Bashi is based in Santa Cruz

KEXP's Sound & Vision
No-No Boy's Music Is a Lesson in Asian American History

KEXP's Sound & Vision

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2023 33:53


No-No Boy released his album, 'Empire Electric,' on September 29th. His previous work was part of his PhD dissertation, with albums that looked at WWII Japanese incarceration camps, his mother's Vietnamese family history, and his own racial identity. This latest album also explores Asian American history, family, and identity, but was not part of his degree. Julian Saporiti of No-No Boy talks with Emily Fox about the stories and histories he's sharing in this new record, such as how Asian sailors arrived in Oregon two centuries before Lewis and Clark. They also discuss how the album was largely inspired by a trip Saporiti took to a Buddhist monastery after feeling narrow-minded through his experience in academia.Support the show: https://www.kexp.org/sound/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Woman's Hour
Women's World Cup final, Surviving a WWII Japanese prison camp, Care leavers, 'Older-age orphans', Nasa astronaut Christina Koch

Woman's Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2023 57:19


Former Lioness and England's top female goal scorer, Ellen White, on England reaching the Fifa Women's World Cup final. VJ day was on Tuesday, marking the anniversary of Japan's surrender, and the end of World War Two. Olga Henderson was 13 in 1945, starving in a camp in Singapore alongside other young internees. Now 91, Olga talks about her time in the camps recalled in her new – and first - book, In the Shadow of the Rising Sun. A survey of 10,000 university students found that only 14% of pupils who had been in the care system progressed to higher education by age 19, compared to 47% of all other pupils. Kim Emenike, who was in care as a child, and Katharine Sacks-Jones, Chief Executive of the charity Become, which supports young care leavers, discuss the challenges they face. Many baby boomers are experiencing the death of their parents much later than previous generations. The journalist Helen Bullough and clinical psychologist Dr Linda Blair discuss the impact of being parentless in older age. Imagine being the first woman to travel to the Moon. The Nasa astronaut Christina Koch has been chosen as one of the four crew members who will orbit the Moon in the spacecraft Orion, as part of Nasa's Artemis II mission in November next year. TV presenter Sarah Greene, most well-known for her work on Blue Peter and Going Live is back on our screens with a brand-new BBC 1 quiz show, The Finish Line. She reflects on her career and tells us all about her new role. Presenter: Anita Rani Producer: Dianne McGregor

Woman's Hour
Youngest Afghan mayor, Romanticising your life, surviving WWII Japanese prison camp, Big tech & sexuality

Woman's Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2023 57:41


Today marks two years since the re-taking of Afghanistan by the Taliban. We speak to Afghanistan's youngest female mayor, Zarifa Ghafari, who was elected mayor of the conservative central city of Maidan Shahr in 2018, aged 23, and survived three assassination attempts while still living in the country. During one of these attempts, her father was killed. Following the Taliban's return to power in August 2021, she fled Afghanistan along with her husband, mother and siblings. But she still receives daily death threats from the Taliban despite fleeing to Germany two years ago. Across social media, everyday activities such as making dinner for yourself, going for a walk or buying yourself flowers have been transformed into acts of feminist empowerment. The hashtag for the trend - ‘Romanticise your life' - has over 1.5 billion views. Should we all be romanticising our lives more? Journalists Ellie Muir and Chanté Joseph look at the pros and cons of the trend. Women with poor mental health have an almost 50% higher risk of having a pre-term birth, that's according to a study of 2 million pregnancies in England. The research found that one in 10 women who had used mental health services before their pregnancy had a pre-term birth, compared with one in 15 who did not. We hear from one of the reports authors, Louise Howard, who is professor emerita in women's mental health at King's College London. Today is VJ day which marks the surrender of Japan and therefore the end of World War Two. Olga Henderson was 13 in 1945, starving in a camp in Singapore alongside other young internees. Now 91, Olga will join us in the studio to talk about her time in the camps recalled in her new – and first - book, In the Shadow of the Rising Sun. Journalist Ellie House is bisexual. But before she had even realised that, it felt like Big Tech had already worked it out, with some sites regularly recommending her LGBTQ content. Ellie joins Nuala to speak about her quest to understand how recommendations systems really work, and the risks and rewards of being queer online. She'll also tell us about speaking to people for whom these kind of recommendations could become potentially life-threatening. Presenter: Nuala McGovern Producer: Kirsty Starkey 00:00 Opener 02:00 Afghanistan 11:38 Romanticise Your Life 21:04 Pregnancy 30:54 Olga Henderson 45:47 Big Tech

MPR News with Kerri Miller
'Of White Ashes' brings the WWII Japanese-American experience to life

MPR News with Kerri Miller

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2023 51:46


When Ruby Ishimaru and her family are sent away from Hawaii to a mainland internment camp in 1942, Ruby packs her treasures — photographs, seashells and the books of Laura Ingalls Wilder. She finds comfort in Laura's adventures even as she and her family are thrust into the frightening unknown. On the other side of the world, the unknown is also baring down on Japan, where young Koji Matsuo watches the country rally for war from his home in Hiroshima. When Ruby and Koji eventually meet in California, their love story begins. But can their traumas be overcome? It's a question familiar to author Kent Matsumoto, who together with his wife, Constance, mined his own family history to tell the stories of Ruby and Koji. Their new novel, “Of White Ashes,” tells a fictionalized version of his parents experiences in World War II. Destined to become a classic in the classroom, it artfully depicts the frustration of American citizens being incarcerated by their own country and the horrors of the atomic bomb. MPR News host Kerri Miller was joined by the Matsumotos on this week's Big Books and Bold Ideas, to talk about how they did their research, their realizations and their hopes for “Of White Ashes.” Guests:Constance and Kent Matsumoto's novel is “Of White Ashes.” Use the audio player above to listen to the podcast version of the conversation.Subscribe to the MPR News with Kerri Miller podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts or RSS.Subscribe to the Thread newsletter for the latest book and author news and must-read recommendations.

Forgotten Darkness
112 - The Death of Sadanori Shimoyama

Forgotten Darkness

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2023 14:40


The president of the post-WWII Japanese railway system dies under mysterious circumstances, and in the following weeks, two incidents of railway sabotage occur. Twitter: https://twitter.com/PodcastDarkness Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/agable_fd/ Forgotten Darkness Google Map: https://www.google.com/maps/d/u/0/edit?mid=1NsgqAha9Z3bMhBxg8FuM2tRLqwjH5-_F&usp=sharing Part of the Straight Up Strange Network: https://www.straightupstrange.com/ Opening music from https://filmmusic.io. "Dark Child" by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com). License: CC BY (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) Closing music by Soma. SOURCES “Added Violence Marks Japan Labor Crisis.” Baltimore Evening Sun, July 7, 1949. Occupation of Japan - Wikipedia Japan's Red Purge: Lessons from a Saga of Suppression of Free Speech and Thought | The Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus (apjjf.org) Red Purge - Wikipedia FOCUS: Mysterious 1949 disaster draws attention again. - Free Online Library (thefreelibrary.com) Shimoyama National Railways Governor's Memorial Monument (fc2.com) 70 yrs on, struggle for exoneration in Mitaka case continues (kyodonews.net) Hosei University Ohara Institute of Crime Case [Japan Labor Yearbook Vol. 24 674] (archive.org)

Cryptique
Cruel WWII Japanese Torture Methods (Adult Content)

Cryptique

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2023 19:00


Tonight on Cryptique After Hours Ryan and J discuss the merciless torture and experiments the Japanese inflicted on prisoners.  Share, like, subscribe, and send us case suggestions at cryptiquepodcast@gmail.com TikTok @cryptique_podcast  YouTube @cryptiquepodcast  Merch cryptiquepodcaststore.com Parabox link https://para-box.cratejoy.com?afmc=2s

The LA Report
Newsom's Gun Amendment Proposal, WWII Japanese-Americans Honored, and L.A. Pride Details – The A.M. Edition

The LA Report

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2023 8:08


Governor Newsom proposes a US constitutional amendment on guns; Japanese-Americans are honored at an O.C. ceremony for their contributions during WWII; Details on the LA Pride Festival and Parade that starts today. Support The L.A. Report by donating now at LAist.com/joinSupport the show: https://laist.com

Drinking Age Movies
Thurosawa: The Most Beautiful

Drinking Age Movies

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2023 26:00


Have you ever wondered what WWII Japanese propaganda looked like? The Grouches have you covered with this week's episode on "The Most Beautiful." Akira Kurosawa looks at the lives of Japanese factory workers making lenses for the war machine, and the guys discuss the film's place in cinema.

The Chris Smith Show: Highlights
The WWII Japanese ship SS Montevideo Maru discovered off the coast of the Philippines

The Chris Smith Show: Highlights

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2023 8:35


See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Bret & Tony with Ash & Abe
One Cut of the Dead (2017)

Bret & Tony with Ash & Abe

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2022 50:41


B Movies are the Best Movies   This week we get together to talk about the 2017 Japanese horror flick One Cut of the Dead   Things go badly for a hack director and film crew shooting a low budget zombie movie in an abandoned WWII Japanese facility, when they are attacked by real zombies.   Like, Follow, Subscribe   and visit www.thepfpn.com to have your mind blown with countless hours of epic podcasts

The Conversation
The Conversation: Red Hill order of consent signed; Oral history project highlights WWII incarceration

The Conversation

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2022 52:58


Red Hill deficiencies at fuel facility spur EPA's order of consent with Navy; Oral history project highlights WWII Japanese incarceration; Did a shark attack a Kīhei deer?; Grim future ahead for Hawaiʻi's endemic birds; New seaweed survey focuses on Kahoʻolawe limu

Shadows in the Limelight
#44 - David Leaf (Award-winning writer, director, and producer)

Shadows in the Limelight

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2022 42:51


David Leaf is the guest on the podcast today. David stops by the show to talk about his new book, God only knows: The Story of Brian Wilson, The Beach Boys, and the California Myth. Check out the link to buy the book below!David Leaf is a Peabody and WGAW award-winning writer, director and producer, the creative visionary behind such critically acclaimed films and festival favorites as Focal Award winner The Night James Brown Saved Boston, The U.S. vs. John Lennon (winner of the Exhibitors' Award at The Venice Film Festival), the Grammy-nominated Beautiful Dreamer: Brian Wilson and the Story of SMiLE, and The Bee Gees: This Is Where I Came In.Most recently, he directed the feature documentary on the Rock & Roll Hall of Famer, Dion (Dion: Born To Cry, in post-production), wrote, produced and directed To Tell The Truth, (a film about the WWII Japanese internment camps) and was a consultant for the White Horse Pictures production of Frank Marshall's HBO feature documentary, The Bee Gees: How Can You Mend A Broken Heart?Leaf's television credits include being one of the writers on the Emmy-winning landmark 9/11, all-network telethon America: A Tribute To Heroes. That same year, Leaf wrote and produced TNT's acclaimed An-All Star Tribute To Brian Wilson and was a producer of the Emmy-nominated Billy Joel: In His Own Words (A&E). As an author, Leaf is best known for his books for the Grammy-nominated The Pet Sounds Sessions, his groundbreaking Brian Wilson biography, The Beach Boys & The California Myth, writing The Bee Gees, the group's authorized autobiography, and the Beatles and Beach Boys chapters for Capitol Records' 50th Anniversary book. Since 2010, David Leaf has been teaching undergraduate courses at The UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music in Los Angeles including courses on rock documentary, songwriting and the Beatles. Buy the Book!https://amzn.to/3zNkbbp Beautiful Dreamer: Brian Wilson & The Story of SMiLEhttps://youtu.be/uxk1-P6S_xU An All Star Tribute To Brian Wilsonhttps://youtu.be/Vn-vOVI3NQw Bee Gees documentaryhttps://youtu.be/qd1V5s0KW3M The Night James Brown Saved Bostonhttps://youtu.be/JfSayXyqw64Small Business PROrganic, powerful, and unconventional strategies for BIPOC + WOC owned small businesses.Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify

NPR's Book of the Day
Werner Herzog's 'The Twilight World' is inspired by a WWII Japanese holdout officer

NPR's Book of the Day

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2022 8:51


Hiroo Onoda was a Japanese intelligence officer during World War II, stationed on a small island in the Philippines. When the Japanese army evacuated, Onoda stayed and fought for 29 more years, living in the jungle and resisting all attempts to convince him the war was over. Renowned filmmaker Werner Herzog tells a fictionalized account of this story in his first novel, The Twilight World. In an interview on All Things Considered, Herzog told Ari Shapiro that he's always been a writer and that this book is finally putting into words a story he had in him for two decades.

Victor E History
Chasing Normalcy: Relationship Dynamics in WWII Japanese-American Internment Camps

Victor E History

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2022 23:46


Listen to Chelsea Kiefer, a Sophomore in the History department at Fort Hays State University talk about her original research on the deplorable conditions that Japanese-Americans were subjected to at the American internment camps during World War II and how that experience changed relationship dynamics.For more information and a selected bibliography, see www.victorehistory.com. #FHSU #historypodcast #WWII

The Times of Israel Daily Briefing
Tech sector succeeds, including beer-delivery drones

The Times of Israel Daily Briefing

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2021 25:22


Welcome to The Times of Israel's Daily Briefing, your 15-minute audio update on what's happening in Israel, the Middle East, and the Jewish world, from Sunday through Thursday. Today's guests are founding ToI editor David Horovitz and Startup Israel editor Ricky Ben-David with Jessica Steinberg hosting. Horovitz discusses the recent ceremony he attended honoring WWII Japanese diplomat Chiune Sugihara, attended by his son Nobuki Sugihara, and their conversation about the father's bravery during his posting in Hungary, when he saved lives and future lives by churning out transit visas. Ben-David follows with a look at why Israel's tech sector is breaking capital-funding records in 2021, pointing to the more mature Silicon Wadi, second- and third-time entrepreneurs who have also spent time at tech giants, forging their own connections and contacts and technologies that require larger capital. Horovitz also talks about the recent ransomware attack on Hillel Yaffe hospital in Hadera, an institution that was following cybersecurity protocol and is now dealing with the ramifications of the attack. Ben-David discusses her interview with an Israeli expert regarding Facebook and the recent whistleblower testimony that will presumably change the trajectory of the social media company. She also offers a birds'-eye view of a drone-food delivery to reporters on the Tel Aviv beach. Discussed articles include: 81 years later, Chiune Sugihara's humanity continues to enable new lives Israeli tech firms raised staggering $17.8b this year, almost double 2020 total Israel on heightened alert after hospital hit with ransomware attack Israeli hospital hit with ransomware attack Regulation takes time but it's coming for Facebook, says Israeli law expert Drones deliver sushi, beer in Tel Aviv as Israel tests commercial UAVs Subscribe to The Times of Israel Daily Briefing on iTunes, Spotify, PlayerFM, Google Play, or wherever you get your podcasts. IMAGE: The third out of eight phases of the National Drone Initiative's pilot project to create a national drone network, where amongst others the drones would be able to deliver food and medicine through an application, in Tel Aviv, on October 11, 2021 (Photo by FLASH90) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Object Obscura
UPDATE to Object Obscura Season 2

Object Obscura

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2021 0:55


Hey guys - just wanted to let you know there is no episode this week. Due to the nature of this show - where I'm researching these episodes simultaneously, not all of the stories are complete. So I hope to release a new episode every Friday starting next week on October 15. If there are more developments then I'll let you know in a future update episode. I also wanted to share some news with you. It's just over a year since I released my very first episode about a WWII Japanese phrasebook. Since then, we have surpassed 1,000 total plays on all podcast streaming platforms. Thank you guys for continuing to listen and give feedback. I want this show to be a conversation- even if I do find most of the answers that arise in each episode. But if you haven't listened to some of the newer episodes then go ahead and do so - you have this next week to catch up. I also have created new business cards for my DBA, The Obscurity Podcast Network. Thank you everyone - happy hunting and stay obscure. *Listen to all episodes on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts and our website object-obscura.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thatcher2/message

Screen Riot
One Cut of the Dead (2017): Commissioned Review

Screen Riot

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2021 60:20


Shin'ichiro Ueda's One Cut of the Dead is about a low-budget Japanese film crew making a zombie horror movie. For authenticity, they are filming in a factory where legend has it that government experiments have resulted in the dead rising from their graves. Suffice to say, the crew are interrupted by real zombies and the struggle for life begins. A viewer would not be slighted one bit for shutting off the TV within 15-minutes of the 2017 zombie-comedy. The movie features terrible camerawork and atrocious acting. Then it all changes. To discuss more about this film would ruin the great plot twist to come. Stick it out past the first 37-minutes and you'll be pleasantly surprised. Release Year: 2017Genre: Comedy, HorrorStarring: Takayuki Hamatsu, Yuzuki Akiyama, and Harami Shuhama.TrailerSummary: Things go badly for a hack director and film crew shooting a low budget zombie movie in an abandoned WWII Japanese facility, when they are attacked by real zombies.Commissioned By: Arthur P. Commission Your Own Movie Review Would you like to have us review one of your favorite films? Or do you just want to make Eddy suffer through some cinema trash? Go ahead and commission your very own personalized movie review from the hosts: www.screenriot.net/support#commission Join Our Community Sign Up for Email Updates | Patreon | Facebook | Twitter | Reddit Visit our online shop! https://shop.screenriot.net

Instant Trivia
Episode 139 - Animals In Paradise - World History - Cemeteries - Canadian Songbirds - Celebrity Dog Breeds

Instant Trivia

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2021 7:10


Welcome to the Instant Trivia podcast episode 139, where we ask the best trivia on the Internet. Round 1. Category: Animals In Paradise 1: The largest animal in paradise is this biblical one that swallowed a person whole. (Jonah's) whale. 2: A bird called the Hoopoe of Bilquis is on the list, Bilqis being a name for the biblical queen of this place. Sheba. 3: Solomon talked to this industrious insect that was later allowed into paradise. ant. 4: The ram he sacrificed instead of his son is in the fold. Abraham. 5: His mount Al-Buraq was allowed into heaven. Muhammad. Round 2. Category: World History 1: This Irish castle famous for its "stone" was built by Cormac MacCarthy about 1446. the Blarney. 2: Born in 12 A.D., this cruel and unbalanced Roman emperor was a great-grandson of Mark Antony. Caligula. 3: On Feb. 10, 1840 Albert of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha married her. Victoria. 4: This battleship on which the WWII Japanese surrender terms were signed saw combat during the Gulf War. U.S.S. Missouri. 5: In 1513 this Spaniard made the first recorded European exploration of what is now the U.S. mainland. Ponce de Leon. Round 3. Category: Cemeteries 1: Although Emile Zola's gravestone still rests at this city's Cimetiere de Montmartre, his body was moved to the Pantheon. Paris. 2: With more than 1 million burials, Rookwood Necropolis in this largest Aussie city is one of the world's largest. Sydney. 3: About 250 people were buried in this Tombstone, Arizona Cemetery from 1878 to 1884, including Billy Clanton. Boot Hill. 4: The world's largest historical mosaic, "The Birth Of Liberty", can be found at this Southern Calif. cemetery. Forest Lawn. 5: 368 American servicemen from WWI are buried in this "field", a U.S. Military cemetery near Waregem, Belgium. Flanders Field. Round 4. Category: Canadian Songbirds 1: In December 2007 this chanteuse gave her last performance of the Vegas spectacular "A New Day". Celine Dion. 2: This singer from Halifax, Nova Scotia had hits with "Adia" and "Sweet Surrender". Sarah McLachlan. 3: She must be a Keith Jackson fan, as she titled one of her albums "Whoa, Nelly!". Nelly Furtado. 4: She put her initials on duets of "Crying" with Roy Orbison and "What A Wonderful World" with Tony Bennett. k.d. lang. 5: Leslie is the first name of this "1234" singer who was a dancer at the 1988 Calgary Olympics. Feist. Round 5. Category: Celebrity Dog Breeds 1: Snoopy. a Beagle. 2: Beethoven. a Saint Bernard. 3: Perdita and Pongo. Dalmatian. 4: Eddie on "Frasier". a Jack Russell Terrier. 5: Buddy of "Air Bud" fame. a Golden Retriever. Thanks for listening! Come back tomorrow for more exciting trivia!

Listen, Learn & Love Hosted by Richard Ostler
Episode 421: Daryl Austin, Latter-Day Saint, Noted Writer

Listen, Learn & Love Hosted by Richard Ostler

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2021 68:41


My friend Daryl Austin is a journalist based in Utah. His work has appeared in National Geographic, The Atlantic, The Wall Street Journal, Psychology Today and The New York Times. On the podcast, Daryl talks about several of his articles to help us better understand social issues, reduce divisiveness and the reasons to celebrate our differences. Here are links to the articles discussed: Deseret News: Disney's ‘wokeness' beats wickedness The Washington Post: How a WWII Japanese sub commander helped exonerate a U.S. Navy captain NBC News: George Floyd's death has to be a tipping point. White people like me must fight racism The Atlantic: What You're Saying When You Give Someone the Silent Treatment You can connect with Daryl on Twitter at @darylaustinUT Thank you Daryl for being on the podcast and your national voice to brings stories forward to help us be better. You are doing important and needed work!

JeffCo This Week
Dangerous World War II relic unearthed in Barnhart backyard

JeffCo This Week

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2021 6:00


Barnhart woman finds WWII Japanese mortar shell while gardening / Possible pipe bombs found in Hillsboro man's car / COVID levels teetering to YELLOW / Kids can now get vaccinated at Mercy Hospital Jefferson / Black bears spotted in Jefferson County / Hungry thief stole car, drove to Taco Bell

Murder Moose Podcast
Murder Moose Podcast - Episode 33: One Cut of the Dead (2017) | Review/Discussion

Murder Moose Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2021 75:05


The Murder Moose Podcast is here! Rod and Josh are here to talk about horror, focusing on independent and foreign horror! In episode 33 the boys dive into a zombie film that is a love letter to independent film making, the Japanese film One Cut of the Dead (2017)! Things go badly for a hack director and film crew shooting a low budget zombie movie in an abandoned WWII Japanese facility, when they are attacked by real zombies.  https://www.imdb.com/title/tt7914416/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1  http://murdermoose.com/ Rod can be found on twitter at https://twitter.com/rod_johnston Josh can be found at https://joshwrb.com Show's Discord discord.me/murdermoose The show's twitter is at https://twitter.com/MooseMurderPod and the show's email is murdermoosepodcast@gmail.com

VOICES FROM THE VERNACULAR MUSIC CENTER
“Ain't No Swan Lake: Butoh” w/ Guest Dr. Tanya Calamoneri

VOICES FROM THE VERNACULAR MUSIC CENTER

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2021 59:21


Intro - 0:00Tune called Planxty Sir Festus Burke | Randal Bays/fiddle, Chris Smith/tenor banjo, Roger Landes/bouzouki | composition by Turlough O'Carolan, from the album “Coyote Banjo” by Chris SmithPart I, Path through Dance/Theater - 01:31Relating to Tanya Calamoneri's experience in theater and dance that led her to Butoh dance theater, elaborating on what Butoh is and how it helped her develop her art and research.Dimitris Papaioannou  - BAMShige Moriya and Ximena Garnica, CAVEArts and now Leimay EnsemblePart II, Creating Art - 50:02Relating to Tanya Calamoneri's experience with her own work.“This Ain't No Swan Lake”Outro - 58:17Planxty Sir Festus Burke Dr. Tanya Calamoneri is a dancer, choreographer, and dance cultural studies scholar. Her primary area of research is butoh dance, a post-WWII Japanese performance form that uses imagery as its impetus and methodology for creating environment, state and movement. She also writes about issues concerning the migration of forms across cultural boundaries in a globalized world. Her writing has been published in Routledge's Theatre, Dance and Performance Training Journal, Dance Chronicle, Journal of Dance Education, and Movement Research Journal, as well as a chapter on butoh pedagogy in the Routledge Butoh Companion and a chapter in Routledge's Intercultural Actor and Performer Training. Her New York-based company, Company SoGoNo, received grants from the New York State Council on the Arts, New York Arts Foundation, American Music Center's Live Music for Dance and Puffin Foundation, and awards from the New York Innovative Theatre Awards.Previously in San Francisco, she was a member of Shinichi Koga's butoh-based inkBoat, co-directed violent dwarf performance collaborative, co-founded the Experimental Performance Institute at New College of California, and danced with Kim Epifano and Jess Curtis. To support her dance habit, she worked as an arts administrator, serving as the Executive Director of Dancers' Group in San Francisco, and in New York as Co-Executive Director of The Field and Project Manager of the State Department's cultural diplomacy program, DanceMotion USA, administrated by the Brooklyn Academy of Music.She is currently working on a book project about the history of butoh dance in the Americas, focusing on the United States and Mexico from 1970 to present. She was an invited scholar and performer at the 2019 Cuerpos en Revuelta butoh festival in Mexico City, and will present with one of her Mexican colleagues at the Butoh Next Symposium in New York City in November 2019.Calamoneri also collaborates on a telematic dance project with Drs. Pauline Brooks of the John Moores University in Liverpool, UK and Luke Kahlich (a TTU Alumn!) of Nova University in South Florida. Dancers in each location share the screen as one company in a live internet performance. The next performance will be during the Spring 2020 Semester.Degrees Held:  PhD in Dance, Temple University | MA in Dance, New York University | BA in International Studies, American University Full Playlist for EP 10VVMC: Friends & Voices, a Collaborative PlaylistVoices from the Vernacular Music Center

The Blood Buddies: Horror Podcast
One Cut of the Dead (2017) [GUEST: Alyx McLaughlin]

The Blood Buddies: Horror Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2021 52:59


Long takes, meta plot lines, zombies, diarrhea. This movie has it all! We brought our friend Alyx along for the ride on this jaunt! One Cut of the Dead (dir. Shin'ichirô Ueda). "Things go badly for a hack director and film crew shooting a low budget zombie movie in an abandoned WWII Japanese facility, when they are attacked by real zombies." (Source: IMDB)

Wars of The World
3 Most Feared & Deadliest WWII Japanese Soldiers...

Wars of The World

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2021 21:59


In this episode of Wars of the World Deadliest Combatants we take a look at some of the most proficient and feared warriors of the Empire of Japan. These are the Deadliest Japanese of World War II. 

The Spooky Screen
One Cut Of The Dead (2017) - Just Keep Watching

The Spooky Screen

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2021 68:22


The Spooky Screen argue over "One Cut of the Dead" (2017), the Japanese horror/comedy that you should definitely watch right now. Synopsis: Things go badly for a hack director and film crew shooting a low budget zombie film in an abandoned WWII Japanese facility when they are attacked by real zombies.

The Dark Side of Seoul Podcast
8 Weird and Surprising Seoul Landmarks

The Dark Side of Seoul Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2021 75:47


Poop sculptures, the Berlin Wall, Incheon Airport's phallic sculpture, a secret WWII Japanese air raid bunker, and more. We top it off with the dark violent story behind Ahyeon-dong's Wedding Street.Photos are here: https://darksideofseoul.com/8-weird-and-surprising-seoul-landmarks/Map is here: https://www.google.com/maps/d/edit?mid=1NfG556hk-kH_gT8ckKsL3vDZsIf5a3Y3&usp=sharingJoin our Patreon to get more stuffhttps://patreon.com/darksideofseoulBook a tour of The Dark Side of Seoul Ghost Walk at https://darksideofseoul.comListener Mail! Send us a message (Instagram, Facebook, email) and we might read it on air.Music by SoraksanTop tier PatronsAngel EarlJoel BonominiJamie StaleyShaaron CullenDevon HiphnerSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=22510065)

Vital Interests Podcast
Webinar Rebroadcast: Echoes from the Past: Do the post WWII Japanese War Crimes Tribunals have lessons for Guantanamo? with Michel Paradis and Carol Rosenberg 

Vital Interests Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2020 66:03


Host Karen J. Greenberg welcomed journalist Carol Rosenberg and attorney Michel Paradis at CNS on October 1st for a conversation based on Paradis’ new book Last Mission to Tokyo: The Extraordinary Story of the Doolittle Raiders and Their Final Fight for Justice. The full webinar can be watched on our website at CenterOnNationalSecurity.org/events. Vital Interests Podcast with Karen Greenberg is brought to you by the Center on National Security at Fordham Law.

Gruntled
Gruntled 37: Hiroo Onoda

Gruntled

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2020 32:45


The incredible story of a WWII Japanese soldier.

Ray Taylor Show
One Cut of the Dead || Ray Taylor Show

Ray Taylor Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2020 12:08


One Cut of the Dead || Ray Taylor ShowSubscribe: InspiredDisorder.com/rtsBinge Ad Free: InspiredDisorder.com/PatreonShow topic: Things go badly for a hack director and film crew shooting a low budget zombie movie in an abandoned WWII Japanese facility, when they are attacked by real zombies.Director: Shin'ichirô UedaWriters: Shin'ichirô UedaSponsored By:StationHouseCoffee.com and @StationHouseCoffee on Instagram for premium small batch, single source coffee.InspiredDisorder.com/Prime 30 FREE Trial of Amazon Prime! * Instantly watch thousands of movies and TV episodes* Borrow Kindle books* Get unlimited FREE two-day shipping (no minimum order size)Follow me:Twitter.com/RayTaylorInstagram.com/RayTaylorShow

ASMR Aaron
Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood

ASMR Aaron

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2020 14:39


Once upon a time, a Japanese anime television series was created, adapted from the Full metal Alchemist manga by Hiromu Arakawa. Produced by Bones, the series is directed by Yasuhiro Irie and written by Hiroshi Ōnogi. Nobody ever imagined that one day it would become the popular series known only as Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood. But how did as Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood become such a popular animated television series? Why did it become a television series? Is it true that Arakawa actually bought military prop guns for drawing references? Did he really interview WWII Japanese veterans for the Ishval war arc? Is it true that the military officers are named after military vehicles? Is there really no official photo of Arakawa? Is it true that most Japanese readers didn't know that Hiromu is actually a female? It's time for me to answer all these questions and more since this is ASMR Aaron back at it again with another daily video to help you relax. So, lay back and enjoy the ride. I hope this video gets you through your day or even better I hope this read helps you gently fall asleep. I can't wait to get started. This is the tale of as Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood. This Story is Available in Amazon and Itunes Also. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/asmraaron/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/asmraaron/support

Holmberg's Morning Sickness
08-19-20 - BR - WED - 5 Star Citadel Hotel In Ukraine Was Once Concentration Camp In WWII - Japanese Restaurant In San Fran Built Domes For Diners - Brady's Love Of Teppanyaki

Holmberg's Morning Sickness

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2020 29:38


Drink Drunk Dead
Episode 26 - Ghosts of Okinawa

Drink Drunk Dead

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2020 57:39


In this week's episode, Joel takes us overseas to an island off the coast of Japan, known as Okinawa. This ancient island has history spanning the ages from Samurai to soldiers. Until its demolition in 2009 ,the American Air Base located on the island was home to what was considered the most actively haunted home in the entire US military system. A father murdered his entire family and took his own life, then the next family to occupy the home, repeated the same terrible story. The phantom children around the home were known to ask the children at the neighboring daycare center for toys, and a female spirit and the shade of an ancient Samurai warrior would make their presences known within the home.Elsewhere on the island, a cave near the location of a WWII Japanese field hospital is said to be haunted by the spirits of young women who took their lives inside, out of fear of the impending American occupation. An old man watches over the those who venture near a local suicide cliff. Locals fear the sight of him, because after each reported encounter bodies of deceased will wash up on the shore just a few days later. Is he an angel of death? Is he warning visitors of the danger? Or is he seeking help for those who have jumped into the water below?SpotlightDon't forget to check out this week's spotlight, Transwomen Inc. To learn more about the struggles and dangers facing American transwomen of color and how you can help, visit their website at https://blacktranswomen.org/ and remember that every voice matters.Also check out #thriveover35 on Instagram and Twitter to hear stories from those affected by the biases and phobias directed at transwomen, especially those of color. Social MediaThis is week two of our giveaway! Be sure to follow us on social media for your chance to answer this episode's trivia question and enter for a chance to win! You can find us @drinkdrunkdead on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter. The winner will be announced at the start of September.Have you had a personal encounter with the paranormal that you're just dying to tell someone? We'd love to hear it! Send us your stories and we'll read them on our new once-a-month listener episodes, dedicated entirely to our listeners and their experiences! You can email us at drinkdrunkdeadpodcast@gmail.comFeatured TrailersHappy Hour Gets Weird https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/happy-hour-gets-weird/id1487887962and Curly Conspiracies https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/curly-conspiracies/id1504343797Buzzsprout - Let's get your podcast launched! Start for FREEMerch Use our special TeePublic link to purchase merch & help support our show at the same time!Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/drinkdrunkdead)

Trick or Treat Radio
TorTR #389 - The Impossible Wampa

Trick or Treat Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2020 145:03


Things go badly for a hack producer and podcast crew recording a low budget episode in an abandoned WWII Japanese facility, when they are attacked by real zombies. On Episode 389 of Trick or Treat Radio we discuss a film that ended up on a lot of 2019 best of lists and we thought we needed to check out the horror comedy, One Cut of the Dead from director Shinichiro Ueda! We also talk about crazy sports mascots, whether zombie films are played out, and single take continuous shots. So grab your handheld digital camera, ask Dennis Farina to solve your mystery, and strap on for the world's most dangerous podcast!Stuff we talk about: Driveway shaming, footwear to wear in the snow, cold fucking sucks, the Baltimore Ravenshadows, Tom Brady, Philadelphia mascots, San Diego Chicken, The Baseball Bunch, Tommy Lasorda, Tony Gwynn, Will Smith or Chris Pratt, gift from Slaygoth, Once Upon A Time in Hollywood, Quentin Tarantino, Star Wars, slow your roll, Bollywood, MZ’s thoughts on mafia films, foot fetishes, Shaquille O’Neal, Thanagarian Snare Beast, Kill Bill, doing coke with QT, Gungan potty humor, Pappy Palpatine, Force Insensitive Podcast’s seven hour Rise of Skywalker spoiler filled discussion, how many sips does it take Ares to polish off his whiskey?, One Cut of the Dead, Shinichiro Ueda, are zombie films played out?, single take continuous shots, rice and boobs, The Silent House, Running Time, taun taun sleeping bags, Italian stereotypes, IAmADB, The Sonata, The Perfection, carjacking, mini-van or bus?, Bill Moseley, Boar, I Trapped the Devil, Birdemic, Frankenstein Created Bikers, Dear God No!, Unsolved Mysteries, Dennis Farina, Robert Stack, I’m Into Pianists, and Light A Candle Under Zombie Ass.Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/trickortreatradioSend Email/Voicemail: mailto:podcast@trickortreatradio.comVisit our website: http://trickortreatradio.comStart your own podcast: https://www.buzzsprout.com/?referrer_id=386Use our Amazon link: http://amzn.to/2CTdZzKFB Group: http://www.facebook.com/groups/trickortreatradioTwitter: http://twitter.com/TrickTreatRadioFacebook: http://facebook.com/TrickOrTreatRadioYouTube: http://youtube.com/TheDeaditesTVInstagram: http://instagram.com/TrickorTreatRadioSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/trickortreatradio)

2 Guys 5 Movies
056: Top Five Films of 1989

2 Guys 5 Movies

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2019 85:08


2 Guys 5 Movies travels back thirty years this week to the year 1989 and discuss Frank’s best films. Those movies include Spike Lee's Do the Right Thing, starring the recently-departed Danny Aiello, the cult dark comedy, Heathers, the post-WWII Japanese drama, Black Rain, John Woo's The Killer, and the Nicole Kidman/Billy Zane thriller, Dead Calm. If you are a fan of the podcast, there are other two important ways you can help us. First, you can please subscribe, rate, and leave a review on your podcast client. That not only would be useful to us for the feedback, but also help us receive more attention. Second, if you like your Facebook page, 2 Guys 5 Movies, it would be helpful to like or share our posts so others can learn about 2 Guys 5 Movies and decide if it is for them. Finally, if you have your own ideas for the podcast, you can also email us with list suggestions at 2guys5movies@gmail.com, and thank you all for listening and your support.

That Strange Show
That Strange Show - Episode 128 - "We Keep Rolling!"

That Strange Show

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2019 90:00


On this episode things go bad for a hack director and film crew shooting a low budget zombie movie in an abandoned WWII Japanese facility, when they are attacked by real zombies. We also talk Banana Splits, funny money, little shops lady gags, windings and the effects of top ten lists and a bunch of over-dubbed goodness! We are also joined by our good friend Christopher Gendron AKA Art Muffin! Hit play and don’t shit yourself… Follow on https://www.facebook.com/artmuffinstudio/ | Follow on Instagram - @artmuffin_studio | Find Christophers work at http://artmuffin.storenvy.com/ We are available on all major streaming platforms and The Dorkening Podcast Network | Find us entertaining? Hit the Subscribe button. Leave a review. | Find us on - Instagram/Twitter/Facebook: @thatstrangeshow and thatstrangeshow.com | Email us at: thatstrangeshow@gmail.comThis and every other episode is brought to you by Deadly Grounds Coffee and Braindead Customs!https://deadlygroundscoffee.com/ | https://shopbraindeadcustoms.bigcartel.com/

Adoption Advocacy Podcast
Kimi Kawabori: Finding Healing through connecting with your ancestors

Adoption Advocacy Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2019 35:39


Kimi Kawabori comes on the podcast to discuss her adoptee journey and how she has found healing through clairvoyance and connecting with her ancestors. Kimi grew up in a conservative household, she was raised by parents who had been imprisoned in the WWII Japanese internment camps. Growing up, Kimi found it best to suppress her intuition and clairvoyant thoughts. As Kimi grew up and faced hardships, she rejected the mental illness diagnosis she was once given, and began a journey to make sense of her "problems". It was then she found a community that would help her develop her gifts. Kimi and I discuss her life growing up as an adoptee, her tough journey through her late teens/ early twenties, and how connecting to who she truly was and with her ancestors has brought her peace. We wrap up with Kimi explaining how we have all been sent here and chosen by our ancestors to fulfill our life journey, and how abandoning hopelessness can truly help us navigate a more full, healthful life.  Connect with Kimi: Website For more information on Adoption Advocacy Podcast, and to participate in this episodes discussion board, please visit: http://www.adoptionadvocacypodcast.com   Find the podcast on social media: facebook twitter instagram

Muse Stories: The Unusual History of Every Thing
S3E11: In the Field: Conservation of a WWII Japanese Flag

Muse Stories: The Unusual History of Every Thing

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2019 46:01


Welcome to another In the Field episode! Today Karen is interviewing one of our private clients. He came to us with his grandfather's Japanese flag from World War II. The flag needed some tender loving care, and while working on it, we discovered its unusual history.

Bedroom Studios Podcast
Sleepover with Clint Spain of Kamikaze Zombie

Bedroom Studios Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2019 19:45


Despite the name, we arent talking about reanimated WWII Japanese fighter pilots, wecre talking about thrash, hard, loud, and fast!

Henshin History
Episode 51 - Don't Let It Set In

Henshin History

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 25, 2018 112:19


Podcast: Download Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | Google Play | RSS THIS WEEK: Sven and Van bring you a wonderful Christmas special about a classic Japanese horror flick and its commentary on post-WWII Japanese society! Hooray! Sven's facial blindness eclipses Van's; we chat about the strong points of visual storytelling; we have a lengthy sidebar on nuclear radiation in Japanese and Western fiction; we realize one of our favorite video games has to be referencing the very movie we're covering; Van curses Sven with forbidden biology; and, for the love of Christmas, don't let it set in! Remember to check out Kaijucast!

Ancestral Findings (Genealogy Gold Podcast)
AF-162: WWII Japanese American Internment and Relocation Records in the National Archives

Ancestral Findings (Genealogy Gold Podcast)

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2018 10:00


Do you have Japanese American ancestry? If so, join me today as I talk about about Japanese internment during WWII, and records concerning the real people involved.  http://www.GenealogyGold.com - Show Notes: http://bit.ly/2hcLlmY - iTunes: http://www.ancestralfindings.com/itunes - Giveaways: http://www.ancestralfindings.com/drawing - Free eBooks: http://www.ancestralfindings.com/ebooks - Hard To Find Surnames: http://www.ancestralfindings.com/surnames - Newsletter: http://www.ancestralfindings.com/newsletter

History Unplugged Podcast
Telling Japan’s Story in The Last Samurai, Letters From Iwo Jima, and Medal of Honor—Dan King

History Unplugged Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2017 106:56


The Japanese military of World War Two has a nasty reputation—kamikaze pilots, baby killers, and brain-washed, honor-obsessed soldiers who threw away their lives for a lost cause. Parts of this reputation is earned but much of the stereotype has come out of World War Two films. Depicting WWII Japan fairly in film and television while humanizing its people isn't easy, but Dan King is up to the job. King is a WWII Pacific war historian who reads, writes and speaks Japanese. After returning to the US he worked on several dozen movies and historical documentaries as a technical advisor, historical & language consultant and re-enactment coordinator. He was the assistant military advisor for Tom Cruise's The Last Samurai (he had a cameo as a German officer), a researcher for Clint Eastwood's Letters From Iwo Jima/Flags Of Our Fathers, and technical consultant for Nicolas Cage's Windtalkers. His passion for the subject of the war in the Pacific has also led him to seek out over 250 Japanese WWII veterans and personally interview 97 of them, in their own language. He has also been interviewed on several radio programs and has spoken to hundreds of people about Japanese aviation. Dan King was also employed by EA GAMES as the WWII Japanese technical consultant for the worldwide best selling "Medal of Honor" video game series. His basic task was to provide information to the game creators in order to make the game as accurate as possible. This included providing examples of Japanese WWII uniforms and gear; infantry weapons; tanks, large guns, ships and aircraft; Japanese language supervision during VO recording; and battle tactics and hand signals.   RESOURCES MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE Dan's Site Historical Consulting A Tomb Called Iwo Jima The Last Zero Fighter: Firsthand Accounts from WWII Japanese Naval Pilots TO HELP OUT THE SHOW Leave an honest review on iTunes. Your ratings and reviews really help and I read each one. Subscribe on iTunes or Stitcher

Radio CALS
August 23, 2017

Radio CALS

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 23, 2017 31:24


Arkansas State University History Professor Sarah Wilkerson Freeman sits with Matt DeCample to talk about The Art of Injustice, a show she is curating at the Butler Center for Arkansas Studies through the end of the year. Injustice focuses on the WWII Japanese internment camps in Southeast Arkansas and the art that shared the experiences of those who lived there.

art injustice wwii japanese southeast arkansas butler center matt decample
Primary Sources
Sarah Wilkerson Freeman

Primary Sources

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2017 48:33


Arkansas State University History Professor Sarah Wilkerson Freeman sits with Matt DeCample to talk about The Art of Injustice, a show she is curating at the Butler Center for Arkansas Studies through the end of the year. Injustice focuses on the WWII Japanese internment camps in Southeast Arkansas and the art that shared the experiences of those who lived there.

art injustice freeman wilkerson wwii japanese southeast arkansas butler center matt decample
On the Ground w Esther Iverem
‘ON THE GROUND’ SHOW FOR MAY 20, 2016–LESSONS FOR TODAY FROM WWII JAPANESE INCARCERATION

On the Ground w Esther Iverem

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2016


https://onthegroundshow.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/OTG-MAY20-2016.mp3 A National Youth Summit, sponsored by the Smithsonian Museum of American History, focused on the incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II. At that time, the United States government forcibly removed more than 120,000 Japanese Americans from the Pacific Coast. These individuals, two-thirds of them U.S. citizens, were sent to ten camps built throughout the western interior of the United States. Many would spend the next three years living under armed guard, behind barbed wire. The summit discussed the relevance of this crime in history to today, when Muslims, immigrants and African Americans continue to be targeted by the state, politicians, new laws and policies. Guests and voices: the Rev.Lennox Yearwood, Rep.Eleanor Holmes Norton, Gerald Horne, Karen Korematsu, David Ono, Lorraine Bannai, Hussam Ayloush, Mariko Fujimoto Rooks, George Takei. Headlines: -As part of an historic, global protest to keep fossil fuels in the ground, hundreds of protesters gathered outside the White House on May 15 to demand an end to offshore drilling in U.S. waters. -Republicans on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee passed a bill to block the District of Columbia from enacting a measure to allow the district to spend its own tax dollars without first getting approval from Congress. -Verizon workers continued their strike this week with a march to the White House, a unity rally outside a Verizon Store in downtown DC, and a benefit fundraiser. The workers are also planning a national kids and families day of action. -4. Updates on the Movement for Black Lives: Symone Marshall, Wakeisha Wilson, the "Grim Sleeper" cases, San Francisco Police Chief Greg Suhr steps down, one of the 276 girls kidnapped by Boko Haram two years ago has been rescued. Amina Ali Nkeki and her baby were reunited with her family. -Gerald Horne interview on Russia, China and Latin America. Links: -The National Museum of American History, National Youth Summit - Japanese American Incarceration in World War II -Break Free From Fossil Fuels

Popular Cruising Video Podcast ~ Cruise Reviews & More About Cruises
Silversea Expeditions Discovers Abandoned Aleutian Islands ~ Silver Discoverer

Popular Cruising Video Podcast ~ Cruise Reviews & More About Cruises

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2014 3:36


In this exciting video, we explore the many abandoned sites of the Aleutian Islands off Silversea Expeditions’ Silver Discoverer including Kiska Island’s WWII Japanese shipwrecks, tanks, an electric submarine, alien-like fish remains, mysterious parts from a float plane, and Adak Island’s vacated American military base, vehicles, town, schools, and even a McDonald’s.

A History of the Navy in 100 Objects
WWII Japanese Radio Headset

A History of the Navy in 100 Objects

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2014 12:47


Video 46 in the series "A History of the Navy in 100 Objects" presented by the United States Naval Academy. This is about a WWII Japanese Radio Headset.

A Pirate's Life for Me!
Dr. James Delgado '85 & Dr. Hans Van Tilburg '95

A Pirate's Life for Me!

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2014


Dr. James Delgado '85 and Dr. Hans Van Tilburg '95, NOAA maritime researchers who assisted in the discovery of a WWII Japanese submarine off the coast of Hawaii. Originally aired January 24, 2014.

TBTL: Too Beautiful To Live
February 25, 2009 – Part 2

TBTL: Too Beautiful To Live

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2009 38:01


Welcome to the show: WWII Japanese hot air balloons were real.

TBTL: Too Beautiful To Live
February 25, 2009 – Part 1

TBTL: Too Beautiful To Live

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2009 40:17


Welcome to the show: WWII Japanese hot air balloons were real.