Podcasts about Zoot

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Best podcasts about Zoot

Latest podcast episodes about Zoot

Coco Mocoe Tarot
The Brilliant Branding of the Met Gala: The Power of Secrecy

Coco Mocoe Tarot

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2025 28:19


This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit cocomocoe.substack.comThe 2025 Met Gala is more than fashion's biggest night—it's a blueprint for branding through exclusivity, mystique, and cultural impact. In this episode of Ahead of the Curve, I unpack what makes the Met Gala such a powerful case study in marketing—and why this year's theme is one of the most important in recent history.TIME STAMPS + TOPICS:* Introduction + the History of the Met Gala - 0:00* Anna Wintour's Takeover - 5:42* Princess Diana's Influence on the Met Gala - 8:05* The Rise of Themes at the Met - 10:04* The Met Gala in the 2000's - 12:14* The Met Gala in the 2010's Digital Age - 16:25* How does one get invited to the Met Gala - 19:31* First time attendees of 2024 — 22:07* Specific Rules of the Met Gala — 25:35PAID PORTION AT COCOMOCOE.SUBSTACK.COM/PODCAST* The Art of Exclusivity in Branding — 28:19** What New Faces Will We See in 2025 — 40:55* A-List Celebs Who Have Not Attended the Met Gala — 53:03

Notícias Agrícolas - Podcasts
Raça tem se destacado no Nordeste pela rusticidade, bons resultados zootécnicos e qualidade da carne

Notícias Agrícolas - Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2025 10:45


Presidente da Associação lembra a história da raça e como ela rapidamente se difundiu pelos estados pecuários do Brasil

Goon Pod
Monty Python & the Holy Grail (1975) - 50th Anniversary

Goon Pod

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2025 82:13


Can you believe that for half a century student bars the length and breadth of the land have resounded to the excruciating cries of "Nii!"? Yes, the film the Spanish call 'The Knights of the Square Table and Their Crazy Followers' turns 50 and to mark the occasion here's a bonus episode with Tyler and writer, podcaster & performer Tom Salinsky in which they talk at length about the film. Tom thinks that Life of Brian has more to say but Monty Python and the Holy Grail is the most consistently funny of their films, with barely a moment left gagless, from the inspired opening titles to the demonic camp of Tim the Enchanter. They discuss highlights such as the cartoonish violence of the King Arthur vs Black Knight sequence; Brave Sir Robin and his minstrel Neil Innes; Gilliam the gatekeeper of the Bridge of Death (later rented out to William Friedkin for Sorcerer?); Dennis the mud-ridden firebrand decrying systems of government; Carole Cleveland as Zoot, Mistress of Castle Anthrax; the weakly insipid Prince Herbert and his overbearing dad; the witch trial; Brother Maynard and the Holy Hand Grenade of Antioch and, of course, Frank the TV historian who suffers a violent slaying.Tom also talks of his love for the LP and compares the film to the script book – whither Brian the Wild from the final cut? – and reveals that parts of the original script were later repurposed for the fourth series of Monty Python. He also touches on Spamalot and springing from that there's an interesting overview of the recent Dr Strangelove production starring Steve Coogan.Also: the coconuts for horses gag – A Show Called Fred got there first! So that ticks the box marked 'Goon Content'!Tom is co-host of Best Pick podcast: https://bestpickpod.com/

Lipps Service with Scott Lipps
Rick Springfield

Lipps Service with Scott Lipps

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2025 65:23


On this episode of Lipps Service, Scott sits down with an ‘80s music legend known for his discography filled with classic, catchy hits, his various TV appearances including ‘General Hospital,' and everyone knows his timeless hit “Jesse's Girl” … It's the one and only – Rick Springfield! The two get into Rick's life in Malibu and growing up in Australia. Rick then details his upbringing, including his early days, his experience battling depression, and his failed suic*** attempt. Later on, Rick discusses his earliest experiences in music, including his first few bands, traveling to Vietnam to perform, his pop-rock group Zoot, and what it was like being a teen idol. They, of course, get into “Jesse's Girl” and ‘General Hospital,' and he even reminisces on his life in the ‘80s. To close, Rick shares insight into his latest biggest hits record, the story behind “I've Done Everything For You,” and his take on the Foo Fighters. Tune into an exciting and insightful chat with the man – Rick Springfield! CREDITS (Instagram handles)Host @scottlippsEdited by @toastycakesMusic by @robby_hoffProduced by @whitakermarisaRecorded at Melrose Podcasts LA Sonos makes it so easy to fill your home with incredible sound! Check out the new Sonos Ace headphones, which are Bluetooth-enabled and have three buttons. The content key allows you to play, pause, accept calls, and control the volume. Plus, they feature noise cancellation and voice assist!These headphones are exceptionally well done and sound incredible, whether listening to your favorite playlist, chatting on a call, watching a movie, or even recording a podcast like this one. They sound particularly fantastic when listening to Lipps Service!Sonos has great gifts for everyone on your list. Visit sonos.com/Lipps to save 20% on select products. 0:00:00 - Start0:01:40 - Malibu0:05:33 - Aging 0:06:24 - Growing up 0:15:59 - Battling depression 0:17:39 - Failed suic*** attempt 0:19:45 - First bands 0:21:30 - Going to Vietnam with his band 0:26:00 - Zoot 0:29:31 - Meeting Elvis 0:33:00 - Solo album 0:35:00 - Being a teen idol 0:36:00 - Acting 0:37:45 - General hospital 0:40:11 - “Jesse's Girl” 0:43:55 - What were the 80s like for you? 0:48:00 - “I've Done Everything For You” 0:51:21 - Foo Fighters 0:54:14 - New record 0:01:04 - Accent 

Gott Snack med Fredrik Söderholm
1027. Del 1: "Jag lever i förnekelse"

Gott Snack med Fredrik Söderholm

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2025 30:50


I studion: Fredrik Söderholm, Jonas Dahlquist, Sebastian Mattsson, August Bohlin och VILLE från trisslotten i Nyhetsmorgon!I patreon-timmen!Vi får besök av Sveriges nya älskling! Ville som skrapade triss i nyhetsmorgon och GOLVADE en hel nation med sin otroliga röst och personlighet! Dessutom: Mattssons kompis slutade dejtade en renhållningsarbetare! I gratis timmen! Farbror Dahlquist fabulerar: HUR ska han hantera sin dotters kommande PARTNERS (Inser att vi var lite funkofobiska här och bara utgick från heteronormen förlåt för det) I Eftersnacket! Dessutom: Vi ringer ZOOT i Polen för att få en uppdatring om bög-elefanten Nino som var i blåsväder för ett antal år sen!Vi släpper allt på youtube idag så ni förstår hur MYSIGT det ÄR att vara med i rummet när vi har såhär mysigt! Support till showen http://supporter.acast.com/gott-snack-med-fredrik-soderholm. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Gott Snack med Fredrik Söderholm
1027. Del 2: Jonas blev dissad för en myrslok

Gott Snack med Fredrik Söderholm

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2025 31:52


I studion: Fredrik Söderholm, Jonas Dahlquist och August BohlinI Eftersnacket! Dessutom: Vi ringer ZOOT i Polen för att få en uppdatring om bög-elefanten Nino som var i blåsväder för ett antal år sen!Vi släpper allt på youtube idag så ni förstår hur MYSIGT det ÄR att vara med i rummet när vi har såhär mysigt!Support till showen http://supporter.acast.com/gott-snack-med-fredrik-soderholm. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Your Money, Your Wealth
Haven't Yet Saved a Million. Can We Still Retire Early? - 520

Your Money, Your Wealth

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2025 49:38


Martin and Caterina in Green Bay are in their 40s and haven't yet saved a million bucks. Are they on track to retire at age 58? Can Piggie and Kermit in California retire today at ages 50 and 57 and still build wealth for their children? Can Galahad and Zoot in Chicago retire early in their 50s, or do they need to keep working? Do Bo and Daisy have enough saved to retire now at 61 and 56? Plus, Chuck in South Carolina asks, if you can retire early, why wouldn't you? Spitballing early retirement, today on Your Money, Your Wealth® podcast 520 with Joe Anderson, CFP® and Big Al Clopine, CPA. Free financial resources & episode transcript: https://bit.ly/ymyw-520 WATCH this episode on YouTube WATCH Don't Make These 10 Will and Trust Mistakes on YMYW TV DOWNLOAD the Estate Planning Organizer CALCULATE your Financial Blueprint ASK Joe & Big Al for your Retirement Spitball Analysis SCHEDULE your Free Financial Assessment SUBSCRIBE to YMYW on YouTube DOWNLOAD more free guides READ financial blogs WATCH educational videos SUBSCRIBE to the YMYW Newsletter Timestamps: 00:00 - Intro: This Week on the YMYW Podcast 00:48 - In Our 40s and Haven't Hit a Million Yet. Are We On Track for Retirement? (Martin & Caterina, Green Bay - voice) 10:29 - We Have Over $5M. Can We Retire Today at 50 and 57 and Still Build Wealth for Our Kids? (Piggy & Kermit, CA) 18:24 - Watch 10 Will and Trust Mistakes to Avoid on YMYW TV and Download the Estate Planning Organizer 19:08 - We're 56 and 52 With $500K. Can I Retire Early at 62? (Galahad and Zoot, Chicago) 25:36 - We're 61 and 56 With $600K. Have We Saved Enough for Retirement? (Bo & Daisy, upstate NY) 33:49 - Calculate Your Financial Blueprint 34:12 - We're 61 and 58 With $1.5M. How Much Can We Spend in Retirement, When Should We Claim Social Security? (Hefwannabe and Jane, OK) 42:19 - If You Can Retire Early, Why Wouldn't You? (Chuck, SC) 48:11 - YMYW Podcast Outro

Mick and the PhatMan Talking Music

Send us a message, so we know what you're thinking!In case you hadn't noticed, we love a good cover version! This episode, we're looking at covers - staples, covers from strange sources, and some songs that have had a LOT of covers, including a bunch of covers of Bowie's “Heroes”. Our Album You Must Hear before You Die is “Is This It?” by The Strokes. This punk/Britpop-influenced album got rave reviews on release in 2001 from Rolling Stone, The Village Voice, and New Musical Express.  We're not convinced.  In Knockin' on Heaven's Door, we mourn the loss of Wayne Osmond (of the Osmond Brothers), Chad Morgan, the Aussie country great, and Peter Yarrow, of Peter, Paul and Mary.  We hope they get to sing a rousing chorus of “Puff the Magic Dragon together.  As usual, there's heaps of fun.  Enjoy!! Playlist (all the songs and artists referenced in the episode) Playlist – “Heroes” covers  References:  Heroes, REM, Leonard Cohen, “Suzanne”, “Hallelujah", Bob Dylan, “All along the Watchtower”, "If Not for You”, Olivia Newton-John, Johnny Cash, American Recordings, “All the Young Dudes”, Mott the Hoople, Ian Hunter, XTC, White Music, “This is Pop”, Devo, “(I can't get no) Satisfaction”, Zoot, “Eleanor Rigby”, Rick Springfield, Howard Gable, Alison Durbin, 801, “Tomorrow Never Knows”, ” 801 Live, "You Really Got Me”, Ministry, “Lay Lady Lay”, Al Jourgenson, “Heartbreak Hotel”, Elvis Presley, John Cale, June 1, 1974, Slow Dazzle, Fragments of a Rainy Season, Nirvana, "The Man Who Sold The World", “Unplugged”, Mick Ronson, Linda Ronstadt, “Different Drum”, Stone Ponies, Mike Nesmith, “You're No Good”, “Poor Poor Pitiful Me”, Cowboy Junkies, “Sweet Jane”, Fine Young Cannibals, “Suspicious Minds”, Talking Heads, “Take Me to The River”, Elvis Costello, “(What's So Funny ‘Bout) Peace, Love, And Understanding”, George Benson, “On Broadway”, Mia Dyson, “The Passenger”, Siouxsie & The Banshees, Sara Blasko, “Flame Trees”, “Goodbye Yellow Brick Road”, Reg Livermore, “Celluloid Heroes”, The Kinks, Peter Gabriel, Scratch My Back, I'll Scratch Yours, Motorhead, David Hasselhoff, Blondie, Oasis, Nico, Moby (with Mindy Jones), Phillip Glass, “Superman”, Lifes Rich Pageant, “There She Goes Again”, “Pale Blue Eyes”, “First we take Manhattan”,  

Miss Heard Song Lyrics
Season 6 Episode 284: Potty All Night

Miss Heard Song Lyrics

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2025 15:57


Miss Heard celebrates Season 6, Episode 284 with Paula Abdul's hit “Opposites Attract” and the iconic music video with cartoon MC Skat Kat. Thanks to that fateful Los Angeles Lakers game that had the Jacksons there which helped them discover Paula Abdul with her choreography talents. This discovery led to high profile choreography projects with the Jacksons, Janet Jackson, and films, then her solo singing career years later.   You can listen to all our episodes at our website at: https://pod.co/miss-heard-song-lyrics Or iTunes, Stitcher, Spotify and many more platforms under Podcast name “Miss Heard Song Lyrics” Don't forget to subscribe/rate/review to help our Podcast in the ratings. Please consider supporting our little podcast via Patreon at https://www.patreon.com/MissHeardSongLyrics or via PayPal at https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/MissHeardSongLyrics #missheardsonglyrics #missheardsongs #missheardlyrics #misheardsonglyrics #podcastinavan #vanpodcast #PaulaAbdul #OppositesAttract #MCSkatKat #Jacksons #JanetJackson https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xweiQukBM_k https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opposites_Attract https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paula_Abdul https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zoot_suit

Word Balloon Comics Podcast
Gil Thorpe Zoot Murders and Green Hornet With Henry Barajas and Rachel Merrill

Word Balloon Comics Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2024 69:44


Triathlon-Podcast
Marcus Voss - General Manager Tailwind Brands GmbH - Zoot Europe

Triathlon-Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2024 38:34


Aloha! Heute habe ich Marcus Voß zu Gast im Triathlon Podcast. Marcus ist General Manager der Tailwind Brands GmbH die u.a. die erfolgreiche Triathlonmarke Zoot in Europa vertreibt. Wir sprechen u.a. über die Entstehungsgeschichte der Marke Zoot, über das Team Zoot Europe, wer sich wann und wie für das Team Zoot Europe bewerben kann, ob Marcus noch selbst Zeit hat zum Sport machen, und über vieles mehr. Mega interessanter Talk in dem Du alles über die Marke Zoot und zum Schluss noch eine freshe News erfährst! Überall wo es Podcasts gibt! Podcast enthält Werbung! Shownotes: Website von Zoot Europe => https://www.zootsports.eu/ Website von Team Zoot Europe => https://www.zootsports.eu/pages/teamzoot Zoot Sports Europe in Instagram In eigener Sache: Dir hat die heutige Folge mit Marcus Voß gefallen? Dann teile die Folge gerne mit deinen Freunden und Followern - sharing is caring ! On top freue ich mich, wenn Du Triathlon Podcast abonnierst und bewertest. Das geht überall wo es Podcasts gibt, zum Beispiel bei Spotify, Apple Podcast und überall wo es Podcasts gibt. Vielen Dank an dieser Stelle ;) Bis zur nächsten Podcastfolge , bleib sportlich und gesund ! Dein Marco Folge direkt herunterladen

Morronrock Daily
8 november 2024 - Värsta zoot

Morronrock Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2024 50:34


I dagens avsnitt pratar vi om allt ifrån kängurus till koltrastar, dessutom har en speciell serie som har primär av sin femte säsong, Vi pratar om matpriser som tjuter i höjden. Lyssnare fortsätter att dela med sig av historier som gör att vi aldrig kommer att glömma dom.

The Metacast
Social Sweeps, the $6B Gaming Category Hiding in Plain Sight

The Metacast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2024 67:27


In this episode, host Niko Vuori and guest Sean Ryan delve into the emerging category of social sweepstakes, a gaming model that barely existed as recently as 2017 but has rapidly evolved into a multi-billion dollar industry. In 2023, social sweeps generated almost $6 billion in revenue, and this number is expected to double to nearly $12 billion by next year, 2025. What are social sweeps? When a gaming product offers users real-world prizes without the element of consideration. Removal of consideration takes place via the existence of an alternate method of entry, such as sending in a postcard, so that users can potentially receive real prizes without making a purchase.Niko and Sean explore the mechanics of social sweeps, the regulatory challenges that come with it, and the role of VGW as a pioneer in the space. The conversation also touches on the target audience, user journey, and the future potential of social sweeps in the broader gaming market. Check out Sean's company, Zoot, on the web.We'd also like to thank TikTok for making this episode possible. In a dynamic gaming market where a majority of games fail within three years, TikTok has become a critical partner in helping games achieve long-term player retention and substantial revenue growth. Learn more: https://bit.ly/LiveOpsProgramNAVPodcast If you like the episode, please help others find us by leaving a 5-star rating or review! And if you have any comments, requests, or feedback shoot us a note at podcast@naavik.co. Watch the episode: YouTube ChannelFor more episodes and details: Podcast WebsiteFree newsletter: Naavik DigestFollow us: Twitter | LinkedIn | WebsiteSound design by Gavin Mc Cabe.

Venture Games
Venture Games Episode 49: Sean Ryan, Zoot

Venture Games

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2024 58:16


In Episode 49 of Venture Games, my guest Sean Ryan, CEO at Zoot, discusses his 25+ year career in gaming, tech, and entrepreneurship; founding the early metaverse company Meez, and the evolution of the metaverse; his 10+ years working in gaming and platform partnerships at Facebook; and his latest venture Zoot, a next generation social gaming platform with sweepstakes prizing options.

Top Track
Frank Zappa - Zoot Allures (1976)

Top Track

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2024 83:17


Andrew and Matt have reached letter Z when no one said it could be done. Literally no one. They explore 1/129th of Frank Zappa's catalog, with 1976's Zoot Allures. Will they do right by the Zappa Family Trust, or will they wind up working in a gas station?Guest Commentator: Tom CrowellListen, Like and follow!IG: @toptrackpodEmail: toptrackpodcast@gmail.com

frank zappa zoot allures zappa family trust
Bandana Blues, founded by Beardo, hosted by Spinner
Bandana Blues #1069 - New Music & Money's Gone

Bandana Blues, founded by Beardo, hosted by Spinner

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2024 93:44


Show #1069 New Music & Money's Gone Spinner plays mostly new music and pays tribute to Zoot Money who passed away on September 8. 01. Doctor Velvet - City Jungle (4:39) (New Breed, Wap Shoo Wap Records, 2024) 02. J.P. Reali - Blues In A Minefield (3:31) (Blues Since Birth, Reali Records, 2024) 03. Dick Earl's Electric Witness - Get Up Off The Ground (3:53) (Get Up Off The Ground, ABP Music Distro, 2024) 04. Guy Verlinde - Tears Over Gaza (3:09) (Single, R&S Music, 2024) 05. Little Georgie & the Shuffling Hungarians - Wrong Set Of Horses (4:55) (The Compendium Of Unruly Caterwauling, Queen Bee Brand, 2024) 06. JD Wilkes & The Dirt Daubers - Apples And Oranges (4:01) (Wild Moon, Plowboy Records, 2013) 07. Ian Siegal meets Johnny Mastro - Wineheaded (3:33) (Easy Tiger, Continental Blue Heaven, 2024) 08. Starlite Campbell Band - Still Got Time To Be My Baby (7:10) (Live! 2, Supertone Records, 2022) 09. She Brought Me Gasoline - The Last Rocket (3:35) (Single, self-release, 2024) 10. Ronnie Baker Brooks - Stuck On Stupid (8:12) (Blues In My DNA, Alligator Records, 2024) 11. miXendorp - Tronica (3:55) (Bluestronica Nr 7, Black And Tan Records, 2024) 12. Southern Avenue - Found A Friend In You (2:40) (Single, Alligator Records, 2024) 13. Marcus Trummer - Hard Time (3:44) (From The Start, Gypsy Soul Records, 2024) 14. The Reverend Shawn Amos - Joliet Bound (3:50) (Vivir En España, Immediate Family Records, 2024) 15. King Bee & The Stingers - Ain't That Kinda Woman (5:06) (Live From The Slippery Noodle, self-release, 2024) 16. Zoot Money's Big Roll Band - Back Door Blues (6:21) (It Should Have Been Me, Columbia Records, 1965) 17. Ruby Turner - Let Me Show You (My Mistakes) (4:48) (Call Me By My Name, Indigo Records, 1998) 18. Zoot Money's Big Roll Band - Chauffeur (6:05) (Zoot!, Columbia Records, 1966) 19. Zoot Money's Big Roll Band - Zoot's Sermon (3:54) (45 RPM Single, Columbia Records, 1966) Bandana Blues is and will always be a labor of love. Please help Spinner deal with the costs of hosting & bandwidth. Visit www.bandanablues.com and hit the tipjar. Any amount is much appreciated, no matter how small. Thank you.

El sótano
El sótano - En Directo; Zoot Money's Big Roll Band - 19/09/24

El sótano

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2024 58:54


George Bruno Money, conocido como Zoot Money, fue un cantante y teclista de los años dorados del Rhythm n’ Soul británic. Nacido en 1942 y fallecido el 8 de septiembre de 2024, a los 82 años. Rescatamos en este episodio su álbum “Zoot!”, grabado en directo el 31 de mayo de 1966 en el Klooks Kleek Club, pequeña sala de jazz y R&B ubicado en el Railway Hotel, en West Hampstead, junto a los estudio de la Decca. Aquel álbum, que se convirtió en su mayor éxito en listas, consiguió plasmar el tremendo poderío de esta explosiva banda en su momento de máximo esplendor.Playlist (todas las canciones del álbum “Zoot! Excepto donde indicado);ZOOT MONEY’S BIG ROLL BAND “Chauffeur”ZOOT MONEY’S BIG ROLL BAND “The one and only man”ZOOT MONEY’S BIG ROLL BAND “I’ve been tryin’”ZOOT MONEY’S BIG ROLL BAND “Florence of Arabia”ZOOT MONEY’S BIG ROLL BAND “Let the good times roll”ZOOT MONEY’S BIG ROLL BAND “James Borwn medley”ZOOT MONEY’S BIG ROLL BAND “Mashed potato U.S.A.”ZOOT MONEY’S BIG ROLL BAND “Nothing can change this love”ZOOT MONEY’S BIG ROLL BAND “Barefootin’”ZOOT MONEY’S BIG ROLL BAND “Train train” (Live at the Flamingo 1966)ZOOT MONEY’S BIG ROLL BAND “Big time operator” (Live at the Flamingo 1966)Escuchar audio

95bFM
Guest Interview w/ Nathan Haines: September 10, 2024

95bFM

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2024


Jonny chats to Nathan Haines (and son Zoot) following the announce of 95bFM Presents Nathan Haines at the Powerstation! It's been 10 years since the last Nathan Haines album, and Jonny and Nathan catch up on everything that has happened between then and the release of the new album Notes. Check it out, and all the fantastic collabs with NZ artists, here. Head along to the Powerstation on Saturday 2 November to catch Nathan Haines live.

Movin' Right Along: A Muppet Movie Podcast
Pirates Are Respectable, Actually

Movin' Right Along: A Muppet Movie Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2024 33:18


We're talking about Minutes 57-58 of Muppet Treasure Island, in which the Electric Mayhem jams and Tim Curry sings "Professional Pirate." With special guest Richard Michael Gomez! PLUS: Water-skiing rats! Floyd and Zoot speak! Appreciating Jerry Nelson (again)! Do pirates like Sondheim? We have problems with the Les Miserables movie! And a bunch of other references to musicals! Hosted by Anthony Strand & Ryan Roe Guest Richard Michael Gomez Produced & Edited by Ryan Roe Logo by Morgan Davy Movin' Right Along: A Muppet Movie Podcast is available at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ToughPigs.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ or on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Podcast Addict, Podbean, or wherever you get podcasts!

Taking Control: The ADHD Podcast
Tackling your Digital Clutter

Taking Control: The ADHD Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2024 37:25


Grab your virtual feather duster and join us as we embark on a quest to vanquish digital disorder in the season premiere of Taking Control: The ADHD Podcast. That's right… we're tackling the ever-growing challenge of managing the countless files, documents, and browser tabs that threaten to overwhelm our devices and our minds.Digital clutter can be a sneaky foe. Consider the statistic from Microsoft: 57% of US office workers struggle to quickly locate files and documents. And while we're at it, let's ponder the perplexing difference between how we organize physical papers versus digital files. But fear not, dear listener! We are here to save the day with a treasure trove of practical tips and strategies for taming digital disorder. We'll guide you through the art of creating logical folder hierarchies, establishing consistent file naming conventions, and using browser features like pinned tabs and tab groups.The episode concludes with a tantalizing tease about a mystery tool we believe could be a digital game-changer for many listeners. Curious? You'll have to tune in to find out more!Links & NotesUse Pinned Tabs in ChromeOne TabDig into the podcast Shownotes Database (00:00) - Welcome to Taking Control: The ADHD Podcast (03:15) - Support the Show: Become a Member! (04:42) - Ari Tuckman's Productivity Mastery Course (05:48) - Digital Clutter (18:36) - Tabs (20:44) - Tab Management Built In to your Browser (23:20) - OneTab -> This is that one thing... (28:19) - Strategies for Clean-up (29:37) - DevonTHINK & Zoot (30:53) - Hazel & File Juggler ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

MladýPodnikatel.cz
TOP Line #1: V Malině mi nabízeli ochranku, Temu a další jsou nový standard, status quo v byznysu neexistuje | Lukáš Uhl

MladýPodnikatel.cz

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2024 121:38


Moje rozhovory měly doposud jedno společné - skoro vždy se věnovaly nadčasovým tématům o tom, jak řídit firmu, budovat byznys a uspět v podnikání. To se mění s novým pořadem, který jsem nazval TOP Line a ve kterém budeme s hosty komentovat aktuální události českého byznysu. Chci tím reagovat na dotazy, které mi posíláte. A chci vám přinést i spoustu praktického obsahu o tom, co se zrovna mezi firmami děje a co nejspíš řešíte i vy. Jako prvního hosta jsem si vybral Lukáše Uhla, který pomáhá firmám v problémech. Řídil foodoru (tehdy ještě DámeJídlo), Zoot, rozprodával zásoby po Pietro Filipi a naposledy zamířil do energetického holdingu Malina. Rozebrali jsme třeba tato témata: - Jak se podniká v energetice a proč Malina skončila v insolvenci? - Jak pokračuje příběh Pietro Filipi a co značku nejspíš čeká? - Jak reagovat na Temu a příchod další zahraniční konkurence? - Co si Lukáš myslí o vývoji Pilulky na burze a jak podobné příběhy vnímat? - Co říká na výsledek eurovoleb a co Čechům chybí? - Co ho naučil příběh Zootu a jak na něj vzpomíná? - Jak v podnikání pracovat se strachem? - A mnoho dalšího. TOP Line bude vycházet nepravidelně. Už teď ale mohu prozradit, že brzy vyjde další s Jitkou Dvořákovou. Tato epizoda je součástí podcastu rostecky.cz a moderuje ji Jiří Rostecký. Poslechněte si také prémiové rozhovory, ve kterých jdeme ještě více do hloubky a zveme si ty nejzajímavější hosty: https://bit.ly/MPpremium Veškerá doporučení, informace, data, služby, reklamy nebo jakékoliv jiné sdělení zveřejněné na našich stránkách je pouze nezávazného charakteru a nejedná se o odborné rady nebo doporučení z naší strany. Podrobnosti na odkazu https://mladypodnikatel.cz/upozorneni.

MladýPodnikatel.cz
TOP Line #1: V Malině mi nabízeli ochranku, Temu a další jsou nový standard, status quo v byznysu neexistuje | Lukáš Uhl

MladýPodnikatel.cz

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2024 121:38


Moje rozhovory měly doposud jedno společné - skoro vždy se věnovaly nadčasovým tématům o tom, jak řídit firmu, budovat byznys a uspět v podnikání. To se mění s novým pořadem, který jsem nazval TOP Line a ve kterém budeme s hosty komentovat aktuální události českého byznysu. Chci tím reagovat na dotazy, které mi posíláte. A chci vám přinést i spoustu praktického obsahu o tom, co se zrovna mezi firmami děje a co nejspíš řešíte i vy. Jako prvního hosta jsem si vybral Lukáše Uhla, který pomáhá firmám v problémech. Řídil foodoru (tehdy ještě DámeJídlo), Zoot, rozprodával zásoby po Pietro Filipi a naposledy zamířil do energetického holdingu Malina. Rozebrali jsme třeba tato témata: - Jak se podniká v energetice a proč Malina skončila v insolvenci? - Jak pokračuje příběh Pietro Filipi a co značku nejspíš čeká? - Jak reagovat na Temu a příchod další zahraniční konkurence? - Co si Lukáš myslí o vývoji Pilulky na burze a jak podobné příběhy vnímat? - Co říká na výsledek eurovoleb a co Čechům chybí? - Co ho naučil příběh Zootu a jak na něj vzpomíná? - Jak v podnikání pracovat se strachem? - A mnoho dalšího. TOP Line bude vycházet nepravidelně. Už teď ale mohu prozradit, že brzy vyjde další s Jitkou Dvořákovou. Tato epizoda je součástí podcastu www.mladypodnikatel.cz a moderuje ji Jiří Rostecký. Poslechněte si také prémiové rozhovory, ve kterých jdeme ještě více do hloubky a zveme si ty nejzajímavější hosty: https://bit.ly/MPpremium Veškerá doporučení, informace, data, služby, reklamy nebo jakékoliv jiné sdělení zveřejněné na našich stránkách je pouze nezávazného charakteru a nejedná se o odborné rady nebo doporučení z naší strany. Podrobnosti na odkazu https://mladypodnikatel.cz/upozorneni.

The Cruz Show Podcast
EP: 653- B.o.B. Interview (uncensored)

The Cruz Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2024 31:57 Transcription Available


B.o.B came through the Cruz and talked about his new song Zoot (and the history of the zoot suit) + his tattoos, his writing process, how he can't get Kendrick's "Not like us" out of his head. He also talked about youTube rabbit holes & his new album (which drops 8/16)

The TriDot Podcast
Eating for Energy: How to Get Enough Protein, Fruit, and Veggies

The TriDot Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2024 0:27


Have you ever wondered how those sleek and stylish triathlon kits are made? In this episode, host Andrew Harley sits down with Mark Goddard from Zoot and Soj Jibowu from Varlo to find out! Mark and Soj explain the intricate process of creating a triathlon kit from the initial design and material selection to the final product. They also discuss the key features that make a tri suit stand out, such as moisture-wicking fabric, compression technology, and aerodynamic design. From comfort and breathability to body mapping and chamois padding, you'll learn about the important factors to consider when selecting the perfect triathlon kit for your specific race needs. But it's not just about choosing the right tri suit, it's also about taking care of it. Hear the best methods for cleaning and preserving your triathlon clothing to ensure its longevity and performance. Whether you're a seasoned triathlete or just starting out, this episode will leave you with a better understanding of triathlon kits and how to select the best one for your race day. Big thanks to Precision Fuel & Hydration for partnering with us on this episode! Head over to https://visit.pfandh.com/tridot and check out the Fuel Planner to get your free personalized fuel and hydration strategy. Huge thanks to deltaG for also partnering with us on this episode. To learn more about the performance boosting benefits of deltaG Ketones head to deltaGketones.com and use code TRIDOT20 for 20% off your order. On their site you can: 1. Learn more about fueling with deltaG ketone products. 2. Make a standalone purchase, or subscribe for ongoing deltaG ketone deliveries. 3. Book a FREE 15 minute video consultation with Brian, an expert on exogenous ketones, and deltaG in particular, to discuss your individual goals and best choice of deltaG drink to exceed those goals.

The Night Shift
Artist Feature: Zakk Zoot

The Night Shift

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2024 19:39


It's Monday night live music with the incredible talent of Zakk Zoot.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The TriDot Podcast
The Art & Anatomy of the Modern Triathlon Race Kit

The TriDot Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2024 61:56


Have you ever wondered how those sleek and stylish triathlon kits are made? In this episode, host Andrew Harley sits down with Mark Goddard from Zoot and Soj Jibowu from Varlo to find out! Mark and Soj explain the intricate process of creating a triathlon kit from the initial design and material selection to the final product. They also discuss the key features that make a tri suit stand out, such as moisture-wicking fabric, compression technology, and aerodynamic design. From comfort and breathability to body mapping and chamois padding, you'll learn about the important factors to consider when selecting the perfect triathlon kit for your specific race needs. Whether you're a seasoned triathlete or just starting out, this episode will leave you with a better understanding of triathlon kits and how to select the best one for your race day. Big thanks to Zoot for a special discount for TriDot Podcast Listeners. Use code TRIDOT for 30% a Zoot Sports purchase. TriDot and Dimond Bikes are a dynamite race day 1 – 2 punch. Dimond provides you with the Ferrari of bikes, and TriDot Training develops your engine. We are excited to partner with Dimond on some really cool offers. If you are new to TriDot, we're offering six months of the Mark Allen Edition of TriDot with the purchase of a Dimond. If you are already a TriDot athlete, we are offering either an upgrade credit or TriDot store credit with your new bike. Head to DimondBikes.com for all the info, and to dream up your very own bike.

Single Season Record
The Muppets Mayhem - Track 7 - "Eight Days A Week" (with Hilary Woodward)

Single Season Record

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2024 58:55


Mac N Cheese Movies
Swingers and Eggs in the Age of Enlightenment

Mac N Cheese Movies

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2024 72:03


You're so money and you don't even know it. Scotty, Joel and James talk about the indie darlings of the 90s and "Swingers." Not the ultimate pickup movie but the ultimate dealing with a breakup movie, Vince Vaughn, Jon Favreau. Zoot suits.

Mac N Cheese Movies
Swingers and Eggs in the Age of Enlightenment

Mac N Cheese Movies

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2024 72:03


You're so money and you don't even know it. Scotty, Joel and James talk about the indie darlings of the 90s and "Swingers." Not the ultimate pickup movie but the ultimate dealing with a breakup movie, Vince Vaughn, Jon Favreau. Zoot suits.

Chris Baran's Headcases

My guest this week is the author of 15 books, he holds multiple Guinness Book of World Records including the most haircuts in 1 hour, the most haircuts in 24 hours and the fastest haircut. He is the CEO of Zootcuts, has a successful YouTube channel, he is a coach, trainer and mentor, and I can't wait to sit down and hear Ivan Zoot's story.  Before he was even a haircutter, Ivan realized that the haircutting business was really a sales business.  Ivan says “You are in the business of building and maintaining, cultivating and nourishing relationships with humans” Listen to Ivan rate himself on hairdressing skills vs soft skills  Ivan describes the “Right Pricing” and respecting the client's perception of value (the price value proposition).  Right now, stylists are seeing their clients “down market test”. Listen to find out what Ivan says about this issue. ⭐️⭐️⭐️ Check out more episodes and the videos at https://chrisbaran.com/podcast ⭐️ Join our FREE Facebook community for Salon Team Trainers today. https://facebook.com/groups/salonteamtraining ✅ Exclusive content on how to implement and scale your salon training the easy way ✅ Save time and learn what works from people just like you ✅ Get back to your mission of building the salon business and creating more jobs Learn more here - https://bit.ly/trainersplaybook Join our FB group - https://facebook.com/groups/salonteamtraining Follow us on IG - https://instagram.com/coachchrisbaran

Single Season Record
The Muppets Mayhem - Track 3 - "Exile On Main Street" (with Matt Kawczynski)

Single Season Record

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2024 50:41


Single Season Record
The Muppets Mayhem - Episode 2 - "True Colors" (with Harry Nelson)

Single Season Record

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2024 45:03


Harry Nelson doesn't know these Muppets but he's with us anyway, mostly for super producer Zedd who is a real person playing himself and not an invention of this show we swear!

Mastering Beauty from Beauty Cast Network
29. "It's not about the haircut!" with Ivan Zoot

Mastering Beauty from Beauty Cast Network

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2024 35:42


Iconic barber, educator, and mentor Ivan Zoot shares his take on the power of "service" in building long, sustainable careers. Studies have long shown that clients care as much (if not more) about how a professional makes them feel versus their take on the quality of technical work received. Ivan shares his experiences supporting this big idea - as well as his best advice on building a long and satisfying career.

Strong Songs
Some Bonus Beatles Covers

Strong Songs

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2024 27:49 Very Popular


On this bonus episode from May 2022, Kirk goes through a handful of other covers of the three Beatles songs he recently discussed on the show."Gotta Get You Into My Life" by Paul McCartney/Lennon-McCartney as covered by Cliff Bennett and the Rebel Rousers (1966) and Blood, Sweat & Tears (1975)"Eleanor Rigby" by Paul McCartney/Lennon-McCartney as covered by Aretha Franklin (1968), Cody Fry (2021), Joshua Bell and Frankie Moreno (2009) and Zoot (1970)"Blackbird" by Paul McCartney/Lennon-McCartney as covered by Crosby, Stills & Nash (1982) and the Brad Mehldau Trio (1996)Also Featured/Discussed:"Reelin' In The Years" by Steely Dan from Can't Buy a Thrill, 1972The score video of Cody Fry's arrangement of "Eleanor Rigby"Bicycle Race by Queen from Jazz, 1972----LINKS-----SUPPORT STRONG SONGS!Paypal | Patreon.com/StrongsongsMERCH STOREstore.strongsongspodcast.comSOCIAL MEDIAIG: @Kirk_Hamilton | Threads: @Kirk_HamiltonNEWSLETTERhttps://kirkhamilton.substack.com/subscribeJOIN THE DISCORDhttps://discord.gg/GCvKqAM8SmOUTRO SOLO PLAY-A-LONG:https://soundcloud.com/kirkhamilton/strong-songs-outro-music-no-soloSTRONG SONGS PLAYLISTSSpotify | Apple Music | YouTube Music 

Uncle Bob's Magic Cabinet
UBMC 175: CAN'T HARDLY WAIT & MY FAVORITE MARTIAN

Uncle Bob's Magic Cabinet

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2024 93:31


HAPPY 31st BIRTHDAY TO LEIGH! In this celebratory special, Leigh talks shufflemancy through the 1998 comedy/romance movie Can't Hardly Wait, while Lori uncovers the hidden mysteries of the red planet through her new least favorite movie, 1999's comedy/sci-fi film My Favorite Martian. Fact Check: Lor was correct! Wayne Knight voiced Zoot.

Age Grouper For Life Podcast
AGFL Triathlon Episode 102: The Jedi Master, Zoot Team Captain, and IMAZ 55-59 AG Champ, Bryan Dunn

Age Grouper For Life Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2024 75:32


In this episode, Bryan Dunn, Colin, Elliot and Becca discuss the changes triathlon has seen in the last 15 years, as well as the mental fortitude and consistency triathlon requires for long term success. Bryan shares his insights to training year over year, adapting to family dynamics, race adversity, how his role with ZOOT motivates him, and how varying his competition goals and target race distances continue to motivate him after many years in the sport. Enjoy the latest podcast as we share many laughs and insights throughout the hour. Thanks for joining us Bryan!

The ProgCast With Gregg Bendian
Art Tripp & Zoot Horn Rollo - The ProgCast with Gregg Bendian

The ProgCast With Gregg Bendian

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 29, 2023 145:54


EPISODE 100 !!! Art Tripp & Zoot Horn Rollo

Interviews with The Tribe cast
Conversations On Eagle Mountain (The Tribe Podcast) S3 E22

Interviews with The Tribe cast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2023 57:37


LUKE is frustrated by the rebels' victory, while THE GUARDIAN attempts to divine its deeper meaning from ZOOT. SALENE searches for a friend, while ALICE tries to get through to NED, and TAI SAN gets more than she bargained for.

Tri Beginner‘s Luck
Team Zoot: Racing As One!

Tri Beginner‘s Luck

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2023 79:25


Teamwork is at the heart of success.  The camaraderie and community create magic and inspire us to keep pushing our limits. Over the next few weeks, we will talk with various teams and clubs to showcase the incredible power of community across different contexts.   Today we dive into the dynamic world of Team Zoot, the largest apparel-branded triathlon community in the nation. Boasting over three thousand members and spanning across 13 regions, Team Zoot is not just a team—it's a family. From beginners taking their first strokes to seasoned Kona qualifiers pushing their limits, Team Zoot offers a welcoming space for every triathlete.   Join us as we sit down with the incredible Jessica Palatka, Maryland State Representative, Melissa Hopkins, South Carolina State Representative, and Ashley Anderson, Mid-Atlantic Regional Captain. Together, they unveil the magic of being a Zooter and delve into the power of a community united by the love of the sport. Team Zoot goes beyond the thrill of speed, emphasizing meaningful connections, mutual support, and the joy found both on and off the course. Get ready to be inspired as we explore how Team Zoot creates a positive, uplifting environment where athletes of all levels feel welcomed, motivated, and part of something truly extraordinary.   So, lace up your running shoes, grab your headsets and tune in to this episode that celebrates the spirit of Team Zoot. Ready, set, listen! Don't forget to leave a review, share it with your friends, and follow Tri Beginner's luck on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook.  And send any questions or feedback you have to  tblpodbiz@tribeginnersluck.com.  

KPFA - APEX Express
APEX Express – 11.2.23- No More Moments of Silence: Filipinx Identity & Critical Resistance

KPFA - APEX Express

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2023 33:05


A weekly magazine-style radio show featuring the voices and stories of Asians and Pacific Islanders from all corners of our community. The show is produced by a collective of media makers, deejays, and activists. Host Miko Lee is joined by Guest Host Aisa Villarosa for another episode focused on Filipinx American History Month. This episode is focused on artist, activist, I Hotel survivor and rebel rouser Jeanette Lazam. We also hear a poem from Emily Lawsin and music from Bay Area's Power Struggle. Learn more about and support collective resistance to militarization and genocide in Palestine: https://www.instagram.com/ucethnicstudiescouncil/  https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSe7SomsNyhrKIuR-FzwTKjPC5bM1lCi3i6GsXJLRXJvKK7JrA/viewform Jeanette Lazams life and artwork: https://convergencemag.com/articles/coming-home-jeanette-lazam-returns-to-the-i-hotel/ https://www.instagram.com/lazamjg/ Emily Lawsin Power Struggle https://www.powerstrugglemusic.com/ https://beatrockmusic.com/collections/power–struggle. No More Moments of Silence Show Transcript 11.2.23 [00:00:00] Aisa Villarosa: In this episode, we're providing a content warning. Our guest, Jeanette Lazum, discusses personal instances of racist threats, police violence, and utilizes a racial epithet. [00:00:47] Miko Lee: Good evening and welcome to Apex Express. This is Miko Lee and I am so thrilled to have a guest co host this night, the amazing and talented Aisa Villarosa. Aisa can you please introduce yourselves to our audience? Say who you are, where you come from, and a little bit about yourself. [00:01:09] Aisa Villarosa: Thank you so much, Miko, and it's a joy to be with you and the Apex Express family. My name is Aisa, my pronouns are she, her, and I'm a Michigan born gay Filipino artist, activist, attorney with roots in ethnic studies organizing and teaching Filipino studies, in the wonderful Pa'aralang Pilipino of Southfield, Michigan. If you ever find yourself at the intersection of Eight Mile and Greenfield near Detroit, stop on by. And the genesis of our talk today started with a conversation around Filipino American History Month, right? [00:01:54] Miko Lee: That's right. And that's what we're going to be talking about tonight. so Tonight Aisa and I are going to be talking about Filipino American History Month. We know that it's the month of October, so Filipino history, that's something that's deep and should be all year round, just like all of our histories should be something that we study. Tell us a little bit about who we're going to be speaking to tonight. [00:02:17] Aisa Villarosa: We have the honor of speaking with Jeanette Lazam, who is a many decades long living legacy, an artist, an activist. Jeanette has worked in spaces like the capital of California, but has also faced down state violence. Both at the hands of the U. S. government through the very violent eviction of elders, primarily Filipino and Chinese elders, at the International Hotel or the iHotel in San Francisco, what was then Manila Town and Jeanette also is a survivor of political violence at the hands of the Ferdinand Marcos regime in the Philippines and is a champion of Nonviolent people power and that is only just the tip of the iceberg. Jeanette is also a prolific artist . She is the only surviving Filipino Manang to return to the iHotel After being a young person who stood and locked arms with the seniors to fight the eviction decades and decades ago, and she'll be sharing some of her story with us. [00:03:34] Miko Lee: I love this. We get to hear firsthand from experiences of people who were engaged in a fight for equality and still continue to do so. I love elders just taking the reins and keeping on fighting out there. Because we're talking about issues that are deep and complicated, including Marcos' dictatorship in the Philippines, and what went down at the iHotel in San Francisco, we'll have some links in the show notes so that folks can delve deeper and find out more. But Aisa can you back us up a little bit? And for folks that might not know, give us a little quickie about the iHotel. I know we talk about it in the interview, but for folks that don't know, give a little bit of background about the importance of the iHotel within Asian American movement spaces. Why do people need to know about this? [00:04:23] Aisa Villarosa: Such a great question and a grounding question Miko. The iHotel is both a physical site, it is in San Francisco, and it is also in many ways A symbol of the struggle for collective liberation, for housing rights, for justice in the city of San Francisco and beyond. And that is why often in many ethnic studies courses, in many Asian American and Pacific Islander courses, students learn about the iHotel. But as Jeanette will share with us, there is really no text that can describe the violence of an eviction, 3 a. m. in the morning on August 4th, 1977, when Armed police officers on horses essentially rounded up the peacefully protesting tenants and supporters of the International Hotel. And This was part of a larger movement, a violent movement across the country that was under the guise of urban renewal, but was really about the continued criminalization of Black and brown and Indigenous and AAPI people. And Jeanette was a survivor of that. It is a story that is painful and yet one that we must not forget and that our generations must learn from in order to continue the fight for social justice. [00:05:55] Miko Lee: Thanks, Aisa, for the little Asian American history lesson. We appreciate it. Folks should find out more if this is the first you're hearing about this. It is a seminal moment. I also think one of the things we didn't actually talk to Jeanette about is how Intersectional, the folks that were protesting at the iHotel were. That there were Black Panthers there, that there are folks from the disability movement. , that's one of those things that really gets hidden under the rug is the different people that were engaged in that fight. [00:06:23] Aisa Villarosa: Absolutely, Miko. The fight for the survival of the International Hotel was intersectional. It really is a demonstration of what healthy movement building can be. It is never easy. It's often complicated. And yet, They answered the urgency of the moment and they did so together. [00:06:46] Miko Lee: There were thousands of people that were involved in that movement. There were hundreds that were there. And tonight you get to hear from one person's story, a little bit about the iHotel, and mostly just from an amazing activist, artist, and social justice champion. So we get to listen to the brilliant interview with Jeanette. [00:07:08] Aisa Villarosa: It's so meaningful to hear from Jeanette and as someone who is living currently in San Francisco's Chinatown is someone who is revered enough to be on murals in Chinatown and yet popular culture and history often forget that Manila Town and Chinatown Coexist, that these are two powerhouse cultures, identities, people who, in some ways, as Jeanette shared, were forced together due to redlining, due to discriminatory housing practices, and yet the activists in Chinatown today are trying to preserve the stories of elders like Jeanette and also telling new stories through art and through activism and protest. [00:08:00] Miko Lee: Aisa, please introduce me to your mentor, the amazing Jeanette. [00:08:05] Aisa Villarosa: Thanks, Miko. We are so honored to have with us today Jeanette Gandianko Lazam. Jeanette, hi, how are you doing today? [00:08:14] Jeanette Lazam: I think I'm doing okay, yeah. I like the warmth, so I'm glad we have sunny days here in San Francisco that are not windy nor cold. [00:08:26] Aisa Villarosa: Are you cuddled up with Samantha? And for the audience Samantha is Jeanette's adorable cat. [00:08:33] Jeanette Lazam: Samantha is cuddled up by herself. Oh, [00:08:37] Aisa Villarosa: that's all right. She can support us from afar. [00:08:39] Jeanette Lazam: Yes, she most definitely will. [00:08:43] Aisa Villarosa: And you know, in these, heavy times, sometimes okay is okay. So we are, we're so happy to have you with us. I'm happy to be here. Thank you. Um, Miko, do you want to kick us off? [00:08:57] Miko Lee: So we are here talking about Filipino History Month and the significance of that. Can you tell us what the significance of the History Month is to you, Jeanette? [00:09:08] Jeanette Lazam: I think it's a time where, you know, for many Filipino and Filipino American organizations, they come to the fore. And what I mean by that is they come and expose the culture, the languages, not just one language, but the languages and the food, the this, the that. And it really comes to the surface. And you can see how much pride people have, I was talking with somebody the other day about the colonization of the Philippines. And when you look at the history of the Philippines, you have to take it for what it is. You can't take something out just because you don't like it. So many people have decided that the colonization of the Philippines shouldn't be… demonstrated during Filipino American History Month. I disagree. And so do a lot of other people. You have to tell that history because that's over 300 years of history right there in terms of the Filipino community. In a nutshell, culture, language, food, dance, They all come to the fore during this particular month, Filipino American History Month, and I'm really happy about that. That's what it means to me. [00:10:46] Aisa Villarosa: Thank you so much, Jeannette. What you're naming is so important that to be Filipino American is to take stock of the good, the bad, the joyful, the challenging. And you mentioned colonization. So much of what colonization forced upon us was almost an incomplete. identity, right? That we had to ignore the pain, pretend it's not there. Or there's the concept of hiyap, right? Which is shame. And, And you know, this really more than me and Miko, but for the listeners, can you share In terms of Filipino history, and because we are currently seeing a second Marcos regime, you've lived through some of the toughest attacks on civil rights, both here in the United States and in the Philippines. Can you just share a couple stories for the listeners about that time? [00:11:53] Jeanette Lazam: We're talking, Bongbong Marcos, who is now the president of the Philippines, his father, Ferdinand Marcos was the president of the Philippines for 20 some odd years. He declared martial law in 1971 and it stayed for 20 years in the Philippines. I don't think I've ever experienced direct fascism, up in your face and very personal. Civil liberties that people had. We're totally stripped the press in the Philippines was shut down and only one press was allowed to function which was the mouthpiece for Marcos. You could not congregate on corners of more than three people, you would get arrested. Many got arrested because they were journalists, because they were activists, because they were civil libertarians. Thank Anyone and anything that posed a threat to the Marcos regime was either arrested, deported, or killed. And I was there during the imposition of martial law and it was really scary. I have never experienced that kind of fear in my lifetime. In the United States, I was traveling with a group of friends. When I was about, I don't know, maybe nine, 10 years old, we stopped in Macon County, Georgia, and it was the 1960s, late 50s, 1960s, and we were very thirsty, so we all jumped out of the car, and I did not notice there were two water fountains, and I went to the first one, and it turned out to be a white people's water fountain. And um, about a few seconds later, as I was leaning down and drinking from it, I felt a very cold piece of steel against my neck. And I thought, it's not a knife, so it's got to be a gun. And sure enough, it was. And I'm nine or ten years old, and this sheriff is standing over me with this gun pressed against my neck and said to me, you're not allowed to drink at a white person's water fountain. And he said, if I could kill you right now. There'd be one less, and this is exactly what he said to me, one less nigga. And no one would mind. That point on, from that point on, I knew where the color line was. I'm not black, but I'm not white. And I wasn't allowed to drink at a white person's water fountain. scared the living daylights out of me. And I backed up from that water fountain. All of us backed up and we got into the car and we left that example of the incredible racism in the United States. just steered into my brain. I was just like, totally taken. I was so scared. I'm a kid. I'm nine years old, 10 years old. I'm a kid. And to have a gun pointed straight directly onto your, neck ain't no laughing matter. [00:15:50] Miko Lee: That sounds so scary. I'm sorry that you had to go through that. I'm wondering there's such a vivid memory that you have from being a child. I'm wondering at what point was a turning point for you in becoming an activist. [00:16:04] Jeanette Lazam: Oh, was that right then and there I was a kid from New York, so I knew that there were stratas and class levels and where people of color fell in, but it never came that home to me. I was finally able to take the whole question of low income or working class people of color, and racism. It all intersected on that one day. And I thought to myself, no we can't go on this way. And it was that moment I decided I have to do something about the situation. Because I am not going to allow people to do this without a fight. Yeah, it was that day. And it continued all the way when I lived in the Philippines. And martial law was declared. I fought it there and I fought it when I came back to the United States. [00:17:09] Miko Lee: Is there a difference in being an activist in the Philippines versus being an activist in the United States? [00:17:15] Jeanette Lazam: Yes. First of all, in the Philippines, you're dealing with an island nation. And so with an island nation, there are all these islands that you have to You know, deal with dialect, with culture, with this, with that , it's a very difficult process undertaking to do to bring out democratic notions when people have been so oppressed and repressed for over 300 years because the Americans come in after, the Spaniards. So we. We never as a nation never really experienced our own homegrown democracy, and it's very hard to deal with that over here in the United States. It's much different. You're not dealing with an island you're dealing with, yes, many states, but they're all contiguous and there has been a history of revolutionary. Fervor and revolutionary sentiment throughout the history of the United States, and it exposes itself in the labor movement, the gay and lesbian, bisexual, transgender, queer movement, women's movement. It gets manifested in those movements. In the Philippines, very difficult to do. So the concentration for revolutionary organizations happens within the larger cities in the Philippines. And the, New People's Army is more in the rural areas outside of the major cities. you can't compare it. It's like apples and oranges. You can't do it. You have to look at the concrete conditions where people at and work from there. You can't go into a situation and wish that it could be this way. It takes hard work and long days, [00:19:41] Aisa Villarosa: so many long days and Jeanette always appreciate your nuance and the ethos of humility that you are challenging organizers and activists to have right that we in whatever space we're in cannot come in with assumptions. And yet. At the same time as you were sharing, one could see similarities between the oppression in the Philippines. In the States, and that oppression is around, how is your home stolen? How is your home and your sense of safety ripped from you? And you just talked to us about your experience as a nine year old, not being safe enough to go to the drinking fountain you wanted, right? And I know that at this moment, you're talking to us from the Senior Center, the iHotel can you share? about what the iHotel means to you, knowing that you've had possibly more history with the iHotel than maybe anyone alive at this moment. [00:20:55] Jeanette Lazam: The iHotel has to be situated Within the context of a Manila town. Generally, anytime you get a Chinatown, there's some sort of other town that kind of is adjacent to it. And you have it in Stockton, you have it in Sacramento, you have it in Seattle, you have it in Portland, you have it here, you have it in Los Angeles. Manila Towns are very is the hub or was the hub of the Filipino community starting from the 1920s on up. And so the International Hotel, as part of Manila Town, plays a very significant role in how Manila Towns functioned, what they offered. What they did and why they were established. It's not just because of the proximity to Chinatown, the Chinatowns and Manila towns of the United States get set up mainly because of racism. We are not allowed to move or to buy outside of those established boundaries. And who established those boundaries, the local governments, the state governments. Which were predominantly white people. It's like the history of Oregon. Oregon was a state that was supposed to be set up for white people only. And many people don't know that. But the iHotel is a very significant place. Historically significant, it welcomes in the first Manong generation. Now these are the people who came before me. The Manong generation, mainly elderly men. Some of them are married and their wives and their children are in the Philippines and some of them are single. And they come to the International Hotel and stay, and then they go away. Merchant Marines it's the first generation, the Manong generation, that started this all. It's the Larry Itliongs and the Philip Veracruz and Joe Dionysus, that all started the activism of the Manong generation. And it's important for people to understand who and what. And where this Manong generation stood for and where they went in terms of labor and how they stood up, how they stood up against the brutal, the incredibly brutal oppression of the contractors and the large agribusiness of California, Oregon, and Washington, and then the Alaskan canneries. To understand that history is so important because that's where we begin in many ways. We begin with that history of understanding the plight. Of the Manong generation who lived in Manila town and who lived and sometimes died at the International Hotel. My father was one of those guys. And when I found that out, I was even more curious, more thirsty to want to know what did they go through and how in the world they withstood the onslaught. Of worker oppression and racism and still kept on going I look at myself and, that's my inspiration. That's what's kept me going for the last 60 somewhat odd years is looking at that initial generation, the Manong generation, and what they brought to our community. [00:25:34] Aisa Villarosa: And Jeanette, I love you because you keep it real, and I know we've talked about the Manongs both as what you're describing as revolutionary in so many ways, right? These are labor activists and fathers, and yet they were also human. And flawed. And so I've appreciated the stories you've talked about where Manila Town, at that time, as you describe it, before the violence and the eviction surrounding the iHotel, it was bustling. It was loud. It sounded noisy. When you talk about it, I picture people like my dad who were walking around and Zoot suits, because Filipino men at the time, I've read, were trying to go to tailors and were outfitting themselves in the best suits they could just to really stand up to some of the hostility and the racism they were encountering. [00:26:38] Jeanette Lazam: That is so very true. it put everybody else to shame. They were so sharp with their double breasted, sometimes zoot suits, polished shoes. Fedora hats. They were genuine and incredibly good looking. And I've seen, I have pictures of my father he's standing on this little bridge in Central Park with his friends, with his army buddies, and they were all dressed up. And you'd think they were going to a fancy dancy, whatever place. No, they had swag. That's the only thing I could say. [00:27:19] Miko Lee: I love that, and I could picture it perfectly, and I like the way that you describe all these people strutting around, and the way you describe it is so visual, and I was saying to you when we first got on how honored I am that I have a piece of your art that's hanging in my house, from the amazing Aisa and Lauren, and I'm just wondering if you could talk to us a little bit about it about your artistic practice. What inspires you and how do you combine your work as an activist with your work as an artist? [00:27:51] Jeanette Lazam: I had always wanted to draw, but I never really did because my sister, my oldest sister she was a graphic designer. And so I was always like in her shadow. Years passed, so I'm sitting there doodling, and and in twenty, sixteen or seventeen, I moved to Taos, New Mexico. And my bedroom window faces Taos Mountain. Taos Mountain is a vortex, and you can feel the incredible energy. That vibrates from that mountain and I would get this every morning and it was telling me draw. This is your time to draw So I did. So I started drawing the Pueblo. And I started drawing scenes in and around Taos. And Taos is a very artistic community to begin with. So that also provided a lot of inspiration. And as the years went by, I started to draw more and more outside of Taos. When I finally moved I started doing owls. I suddenly realized that there's a whole level of animals and insects and so forth that are on the endangered list. So I started drawing bees and bumblebees and all sorts of bees. Then I started doing the American bison or the buffalo, how all of these creatures Were on the endangered list or practically at that point where they didn't exist anymore. And I knew that I had to do something about that in terms of my art. And so I stayed with that for several years. And then I turned myself to culture. I started looking at the Inca, the Maya and the Aztec and how rich and often bloody, but rich. history they had in building civilizations that somehow disappear from the face of this earth. And I started looking at their colors, their color schemes were incredible. So I did that for a while and I wanted people to get exposed to that. However, In between that, I found myself getting wrapped around Philippine mythology, and when I went to look at our gods, our deities so forth and so on, our supernatural forces, I found very little. There weren't pictures so if there was something written, there were no pictures. And so I finally found a book that gave me some sense of what they looked like. And I have to say, fi Philippine mythology, whomever interacted with it, had an incredible creative mind. We had the most blood thirsty, , mythological creatures that I could think of. Anywhere from the Aswang, which everyone knows about, to this creature called the Pugot, P U G O T, which is mainly from the Ilocos region. And it's a huge mouth with a body from the mouth that walks on its legs and hands and feeds on children. And when I found, I was like, Oh yeah. I was absolutely mortified. But you know, that's what Philippine mythology is. We do have the supreme bakala, who is the supreme god, and all the other deities, his daughters and his sons. But there are also these horrendous and wicked mythological creatures. And the reason why I was trying to bring it out was, I firmly believe, and I found this out, In my research and drawing that you cannot. Cannot understand the history of the Filipino people unless you take into account their mythology and their religions, whether you disagree with it or not. That's part of the history of our people. And that part is incredibly rich. So I learned a lot from it. [00:33:02] Aisa Villarosa: It is rich, and it is a mythology that has been threatened by colonization, when you mentioned that it was difficult to find writings that is all by design due to colonial oppression and the myth that Filipinos We're always Catholic or always followed Spanish culture and religion is completely false, right? So I always appreciated your deep diving, not only into Filipino mythology and culture, but connecting those dots, especially to other indigenous cultures. Jeanette, for our listeners, can you briefly share for folks who aren't familiar with the Aswang, and because even for me, I remember watching the Filipino channels as a kid, and they're usually depicted as cheesy vampires, but we'd love to hear your [00:34:10] Jeanette Lazam: your take on them. They are. They are. They are vampires. They are usually women. They have the body up to the stomach of a woman and the rest is a fish tail and then they have bat wings and they fly around at night and your parents tell you about them because they want you to go to sleep and it's scary enough. They are very, very scary. [00:34:46] Aisa Villarosa: Yeah, that's effective. It also reminds me of, there's a wonderful older book by Dr. Clarissa Estes called Women Who Run With the Wolves, and it unpacks mythology and also often, it was a culture's way of depicting women's power and I have to say, as someone who identifies as gay, so much of your art has spoken to me, particularly because there is real homophobia in Filipino culture. Part of that's due to colonization and religion, but your art really centers deities who go beyond a sexual binary. I suppose somewhat similar to two spirit indigenous depictions, and that's really special. [00:35:39] Jeanette Lazam: I'm hoping to do more research on the movement of gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, queer Filipinos here in the United States. As well as in the Philippines, and try to be able to capture that in art. So I think that's my next real challenge. [00:36:04] Aisa Villarosa: I would love to see that. [00:36:06] Miko Lee: You are tuned into apex express, a 94.1 KPFA and 89.3 KPF. Be in Berkeley and online@kpfa.org Next up, take a listen to Live It Up. By Bay Area's Power Struggle. [00:36:21] Aisa Villarosa: You were listening to Live It Up by the artist Power Struggle. Jeanette, in terms of thinking about the future, talk to us more about that. Talk to us about your hopes and dreams. [00:40:01] Jeanette Lazam: My hope is that, in particular to the Filipino community here in the United States I hope that they will be open and above board take whatever knowledge my generation can give that generation, that they appropriate the genera that, they appropriate the knowledge and the history that my generation is releasing. It's important for several reasons. One, it makes our, history of Filipino people alive, very alive in the faces of the ones that are coming up after that generation. It also provides the continuity in our history. If there's a break in continuity, it's very hard to kind of climb back because what happens then is that people die. And if my generation dies, and it will, it's important that your generation and the generation after yours appropriates whatever we're giving, you don't have to like it. You don't have to love it. You just have to take it and then sort it out for yourself and then transfer it to the next generation. So there's a level of continuity. That's my hope and in the broader, population. I want people to understand what it took to build the United States, what it took the level of sacrifice that the working class of this country had to make in order for this country to be built. California's agribusiness. Would not be where it's at today if not for the Filipinos, if not for the Mexicans, and a few other Asians like Japanese. That's also true for Hawaii. Who built this country? Who built this country? And people have to answer that question with fervor and knowledge. [00:42:38] Aisa Villarosa: And with honesty. [00:42:39] Jeanette Lazam: Yes, total honesty. [00:42:44] Aisa Villarosa: Jeanette, you end… Each of your emails with, when I dream, I dream of freedom. And what you're saying to us is that in order for us to realize this freedom, we must do so collectively. [00:42:59] Jeanette Lazam: Yep. And that's no easy task. Because at every twist and turn of the struggle for true democracy in the United States, true social justice, You're going to be making allies and you're going to be leaving other allies behind because you no longer agree with some of the things they do, but it's not to mean that they're enemies. And you're going to be meeting new people, and you're going to get involved with their lives and their struggles. And get to know them. So it's every step of the way for the larger struggle at mind is a very intense and deep personal struggle. Do you choose to say you're gay or lesbian or bisexual, transgender or queer? Do you choose to say that openly and above board to let people know? That this is who I am that happened to me when they had the first time they had district elections in San Francisco, I was at a open forum and somebody asked so how is this going to affect at that time the Castro and everybody knew this person was talking about how is the district elections going to affect the Castro. I didn't see anybody raising their hands and I just said as a lesbian, it will affect me greatly because we finally will have some level of and form of representation on the board of supervisors. Sometimes it's a split second decision. Sometimes it's something that's well thought out. And that's also true when you're walking where you're working with people. Sometimes it has to be. A split second decision, and other times, it's longer. When I say I dream, I dream for freedom. I dream for freedom for all people. Freedom from the shackles of sexism, racism, homophobia. That's what I dream of. A true, functioning, honest democracy. Where social justice is not a movement, it is, it simply is. [00:45:46] Aisa Villarosa: It simply is. Gosh, that brings to mind the image of an ocean and that saying that the ocean is so many tiny drops. And what you're challenging us to do is, in those moments where there is a sometimes split second decision, that we choose bravery. And we choose truthfulness in those moments. Jeanette, thank you so much for talking with us today. We've pictured Filipino deities. We've jumped from the Castro to the Philippines. And I am always in awe of your imagination and your artistry and your advocacy. Thank you. [00:46:33] Miko Lee: Thank you so much for sharing with us, Jeanette. It was an honor to spend a little bit of time just learning from you, hearing about your artistry, your activism, and your vision for the world. We really appreciate you. [00:46:47] Jeanette Lazam: Oh, I appreciate people like you because it's through you that we have a voice and that's important. That's important. One of the first tasks is always going to be On some type of journalism and media, and we have to protect that we have to protect the progressive and revolutionary sources of media. [00:47:15] Miko Lee: Thank you for sharing your wisdom with us. [00:47:18] Jeanette Lazam: Thank you. [00:47:20] Miko Lee: I really loved talking with your mentor, Jeanette. Tell me what's your walk away. What did you hear her saying? [00:47:27] Aisa Villarosa: It was such a rich conversation and. One of the many things I adore about Jeanette is she is a world builder in that she encourages anyone who is in her space to exercise their imagination. And as someone who's been a bit of a veteran of the nonprofit industrial complex for, almost three decades now, it is shocking how frequently our imaginations are shunned, how we are often sent to work in siloed areas. The solution to so many of our heartaches is intersectional, is creativity. So my big takeaway is hearing Jeanette talk about the trajectory of her life and how it essentially led her to really lean into becoming an artist. She has shared that she became an artist rather later in life. It's a great example that You're never too old or too young to start anything, to lean into your true self, and so many of Jeanette's art pieces are odes to her identity as a social justice leader. How about you, Miko? What's your takeaway? [00:48:42] Miko Lee: She's just a delight. She's funny. She's smart. She has so much wisdom. I really love interviewing OGs because it's just constant pearls of wisdom. So I appreciate that. But I have another question for you, which is how did she come to be your mentor? When did you first meet? [00:49:00] Aisa Villarosa: I first interviewed Jeanette during the Earlier parts of the COVID 19 pandemic, at the time, and this is a bit of my personal story, I was struggling with coming out to my family as a gay Filipino, and Jeanette shared with me her identity as someone who is LGBTQ, and it was such a moment of connection, even if we have many decades between us. The story she shares of being an artist, of being a Filipino, a gay person, a civil rights defender. It's just a reminder that we don't have to be only one thing. We are so much more alive if we can lean into our multiple identities, and Jeanette is a living example of that. [00:49:56] Miko Lee: Oh, thanks for that. That is so right. We are all multifaceted. We are all these kaleidoscopes of change given where we are in life and the experiences we have. And it's a delight to talk with your mentor and somebody I've heard about from a long time. So thanks so much for celebrating Filipino History Month by really talking with somebody that you admire so much and I can see why. [00:50:23] Aisa Villarosa: Last week for our part one of Filipino American History Month, we talked with Pinay scholar, poet, activist, and historian, Emily Lawson, about her poem, No More Moments of Silence. It is Ate Em's chronicling of the power, complexity, heartache, and love. Behind Filipino American identity, held together by centuries of struggle against colonial oppression and white supremacy, our Makibaka heritage, one shared by Black, Indigenous, and people of color grappling with settler colonialism and government extraction. Now, to close out Filipino American History Month, I'm honored to share with you an excerpt from No More Moments of Silence, taken from a 2011 Michigan State University performance by Emily Lawson. No more moments of silence in memory of Joseph Aletto and Chongberry Zhang by Emily Lawson. With respect and apologies to Emmanuel Ortiz and Doria Roberts and thanks to Reverend Edwin Rowe who taught us to pray out loud with our eyes open at Vincent Chin's grave. This is a scream, not a shout out, at all of those right wing Christian conservatives and wannabe left wing liberals. Who start all of their speeches with a moment of silence. Crossing themselves, genuflecting, lighting boat of candles and incense for every single damn lost soul on this earth, but their own. This is not an old Simon and Garfunkel song. This is a fighting song for you flag waving, war on terrorism, 9 11 memorial addicts. Clean out your ears and your skeleton closets, because I cannot take any more moments of silence. You hear me? I cannot take any more moments of silence. For silence is what buried one million of my ancestors in a hundred American wars. Silence is what drove the stakes through the backs of my people, whipped with chains of cane fires as low paid migrant workers burned out of their bunkhouses as they slept and white collar neighbors watched in silence. See, I cannot take any more moments of silence. Silence for silence is what robbed our Filipino people of our multiple tongues as the noose of colonialism wiped out 7, 000 islands of surnames and languages. Leaving us with a bastardized Hollywood identity of John Wayne Dust Bowl movies with Panoi Indios playing Indians in silence. I cannot waste any moments of silence because they add up to decades and years like the 10 plus that kept my cousin estranged from her brothers and sisters who refused to acknowledge how they all inherited. The brunt of the beatings brought on by their father, in the bedroom of their mother, even ten years after their deaths. The wounds still lie wide open in silence. I cannot waste any more moments, for our concept of time has been warped by the violence that pervades our homes and hearts. Like the self righteous, now terminated governor, who stood at the cold stone podium, singing the heroic praises of the North Valley Jewish Community Center's staff. While signing a historic anti gun bill into law, looking down and right over the entire family of Joseph Aleto, who had also been shot nine times by a white supremacist a month earlier while he delivered mail. And the bold faced governor, in his corporate suit and tie, looked right past the family and only into the TV news cameras. As Joseph's mother, Lillian, hung her head in silence in the front row, ashamed that the governor couldn't even offer his condolences, didn't even mention her son's name, Joseph Aletto, what more, his death or existence. Her surviving children's fury helped her stand up, and that is why she is not silent. That is why they are not silent. That is why we cannot be silent anymore. For silence is what allowed the Warren cops to storm in a Hmong American family's home, barge down the steps to their Michigan basement, shoot 18 year old Chong Berizhong 41 times, killing him with 27 bullets at close range, and say the force was… Justified? Silence is what prevents our Hmong teenagers from telling their story. Afraid that they will be the next casualty of police brutality. Afraid that they will be deported for being unpatriotic. Sent to a landlocked country they have never seen. Even though they obey all laws, pay taxes, go to poor schools, and work three jobs no other Americans dare want. See, we cannot waste any more moments of silence. And this ain't about just taking back the night, I'm talking about taking back the day to day, because I am done with the silence. Our feet can no longer be bound. Our eyes cannot be taped. Yell your prayers as poems. Scream the names of the dead out loud. For I cannot take any more moments of silence because silence has already taken too much from me. Emily Lawson. September 11th, 2003. Revised September 17th, 2007. Detroit, Michigan. Amidst protest for an immediate ceasefire and end to occupation in Gaza, may all who continue to resist against colonization and militarization root in Atta Emily's call, now and always, no more moments of silence. Visit our Apex Express website to learn more. [00:57:06] Miko Lee: Thank you so much for joining us. Please check out our website, kpfa.org backslash program, backslash apex express to find out more about the show tonight and to find out how you can take direct action. We thank all of you listeners out there. Keep resisting, keep organizing, keep creating and sharing your visions with the world. Your voices are important. [00:57:30] Miko Lee: Apex express is produced by me. Miko Lee. Along with Paige Chung, Jalena Keane-Lee, Preeti Mangala Shekar, Anuj Vaida. Kiki Rivera, Swati Rayasam, Nate Tan, Hieu Nguyen and Cheryl Truong tonight's show is produced by me Miko thank you so much to the team at kpfa for their support have a great night. The post APEX Express – 11.2.23- No More Moments of Silence: Filipinx Identity & Critical Resistance appeared first on KPFA.

Dear Cosmo Babies Podcast
Dear Cosmo Babies Eps 39: Ivan Zoot

Dear Cosmo Babies Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 30, 2023 52:20


On this weeks episode we talk with Guinness World Record holder, Author, Educator and global mentor - Ivan Zoot. Ivan is an industry legend and has a ton of real-life advice just waiting to be shared. This is an episode not to miss.Make sure to follow @ivanzoot on IG and check out his website ivanzoot.comDear Cosmo Babies is proud to be sponsored by SalonMonster.comFollow us on IG: The Hair Nerds and Scissor and Moth Social

FinTech @ IU
Alex Johnson, FinTech Takes

FinTech @ IU

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2023 48:57


In this episode, we talk to Alex Johnson, creator of the FinTech Takes newsletter and one of the most widely regarded figures in the industry. He also runs his own podcast "FinTech Takes" where he talks BAAS, investment advice, innovative business models, emerging players and upcoming trends. We talk FinTech specifically in 2021 and his take on what will happen to the industry within the next decade, how AI will change FinTech and the #1 tips he has for college students who want to land FinTech roles. Timestamps: 0:00-1:00 (Intro)  1:00-4:00 (Early life and career)   4:00-5:00 (Jumping from Zoot to FICO)  5:00-7:00 (The shift from manual to automated underwriting)   7:00- 9:00 (FICO Scores and Lending)   9:00-10:00 (Misuse of FICO scores)  10:00-15:00 (Fintech boom in 2021)  15:00-16:00 (AI in Fintech)  16:00-18:00 (The obsession with AI)  18:00-22:00 (Revoluntanry = boring) 22:00-23:00 (Starting the Fintech Club) 23:00-24:00 (Having the right motivation)  24:00-27:00 (Starting the newsletter)   27:00-29:00 (Building foundations)   29:00-31:00 (Constantly learning) 31:00-34:00 (Become obsessed with something)  34:00-35:00 (Getting started in Fintech) 35:00-39:00 (Fixed Income and Securities)   39:00-43:00 (Customer point of view )  43:00-47:00 (The Next Steps in Fintech)  47:00-48:00 (Old systems and new technologies)   48:00 -49:00 (Advice to college students)    

Open jazz
Zoot Octet et la baronne Natalie Dessay

Open jazz

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 26, 2023 59:27


durée : 00:59:27 - Zoot Octet - par : Alex Dutilh - Pour son 4ème album, le Zoot Octet témoigne d'une histoire qui l'a inspiré, et qu'il rêvait de raconter en musique et par la voix de Natalie Dessay. “Pannonica” paraît chez Zoot Records/Socadisc.

Miss Heard Song Lyrics
Season 5 Episode 211: Slick Talking Mental Dude

Miss Heard Song Lyrics

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2023 21:52


Miss Heard celebrates Season 5, Episode 211 on Rick Springfield's “Don't Talk To Strangers.” You will learn about his connection to the band Little River Band, actress Linda Blair, and of course the soap “General Hospital.” You can listen to all our episodes at our website at: https://pod.co/miss-heard-song-lyrics Or iTunes, Stitcher, Spotify and many more platforms under Podcast name “Miss Heard Song Lyrics” Don't forget to subscribe/rate/review to help our Podcast in the ratings. Please consider supporting our little podcast via Patreon at https://www.patreon.com/MissHeardSongLyrics or via PayPal at https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/MissHeardSongLyrics #missheardsonglyrics #missheardsongs #missheardlyrics #misheardsonglyrics #misheardsongs        #misheardlyrics #RickSpringfield #DontTalkToStrangers #HardtoHold #LittleRiverBand #LindaBlair   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cp42V938eBA https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don%27t_Talk_to_Strangers_(Rick_Springfield_song) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rick_Springfield https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zoot_(band) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hard_to_Hold_(film)

Muppet Fan Podcasts with ToughPigs.com
The Muppets Mayhem: Backstage Pass - "We Will Rock You" with Dave Goelz (Zoot)

Muppet Fan Podcasts with ToughPigs.com

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2023 95:40


Over the past ten weeks, we've been proud to bring you an exclusive sneak peek behind the Muppets' latest series, The Muppets Mayhem. We have now arrived at the first season finale, which means this is also the season finale of The Muppets Mayhem: Backstage Pass. But shed not a tear, fellow Mayheads! Because this episode is a doozy. We are extremely excited to welcome Muppet legend and longtime performer of Zoot - Dave Goelz - as our very special guest! And joining us as always are Co-creators and Executive Producers Jeff Yorkes and Bill Barretta. Plus! Zoot's secret origin! Not filming at the Hollywood Bowl! Dave's very special soap dispenser!

Pot Moms Podcast
Season 5 Episode 17: Cannabis ABCs - UVWXYZ

Pot Moms Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2023 27:20


Season 5 of the Pot Moms Podcast has a new twist on parenting and cannabis. In this week's episode, Kait and Natalie launch the LAST (insert tears here!) of a multi-part series around Cannabis Education!  Listen in for Uplifting for U, Vaping for V, WOOK (honorable mention, WEED!) for W, a fancy word XANTHOPHYLL for X, Y R U not smoking for Y, just kidding, it's YIELD, and lastly, ZOOT and ZOINKS for Z! Education is a huge way to break down stigma and find common ground and topics to speak with cannabis consumers and non-consumers alike. Tune in each week as they provide an open and honest perspective on cannabis-use as it relates to parenting, mental health, and life in general. Connect with the Pot Moms Podcast on Instagram @PotMomsPodcast, or reach out PotMomsPodcast@gmail.com with questions. 

KQED’s Forum
Commemorating the 80th Anniversary of the Zoot Suit Riots

KQED’s Forum

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2023 57:34


“The first uniquely American suit,” is how Clarissa Esguerra, a Los Angeles County Museum of Art curator of costume and textiles, describes the Zoot suit. Known for its wide-legged pants and long coats, the Zoot suit became infamous in June 1943. That was when servicemen, police officers and white civilians attacked the young Mexican, Filipino and Black Americans who donned the suits in what became known as the Zoot Suit Riots. To commemorate the riots' 80th anniversary this month, the L.A. Times put together a multimedia project tracing the suits' legacy and status today as a symbol of Chicano pride — while noting the paper's own culpability in anti-Mexican American sentiment at the time. We'll speak with the reporters and editor who authored the project and hear your reflections. Guests: Gustavo Arellano, columnist, Los Angeles Times Steve Padilla, editor of the showcase feature Column One, The Los Angeles Times - and oversaw the LA Times' Zoot Suit Riots 80th Anniversary Package Elizabeth Escobedo, associate professor of history, University of Denver - and author, "From Coveralls to Zoot Suits: The Lives of Mexican American Women on the World War II Home Front"

Imaginary Worlds
Making The Muppets

Imaginary Worlds

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2023 35:10


When Jim Henson hired Bonnie Erickson to design Muppets in the early 1970s, Bonnie had no idea this experimental project they were working on – a prime time TV show with puppets – would evolve into the cultural phenomenon of The Muppet Show. I talked with Bonnie about how the crew tried several one-off specials where they figured out who the main characters would be, what they'd look like, and what they'd sound like. Bonnie explains how she came up with the designs for Miss Piggy, Statler and Waldorf, Zoot and others. And we talk about one of the biggest challenges in making The Muppets seem believable – where to place the pupils in their eyes. This episode is sponsored by ExpressVPN. Our ad partner is Multitude. If you're interested in advertising on Imaginary Worlds, you can contact them here or email us at sponsors@multitude.productions Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Strong Songs
Year Four, In Review

Strong Songs

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2022 49:09


Kirk takes a look back some of his many musical memories from Strong Songs, Year Four.FEATURED/DISCUSSED:"Blood and Thunder" by Mastodon from Leviathan, 2004"Gotta Get You Into My Life" by Paul McCartney/Lennon-McCartney, as covered by Earth, Wind & Fire in 1978"Eleanor Rigby" by Paul McCartney/Lennon-McCartney, as covered by Cody Fry in 2021 and Zoot in 1970"Second Story" by Andrew Synowiec from Second Story, 2020Andrew Synowiec on Instagram"Just What I Needed" by Ric Ocasek and The Cars from The Cars, 1978"You Might Think" by Ocasek/The Cars from Heartbeat City, 1984Various compositions by Koji Kondo from The Legend of Zelda series"Wichita Lineman" by Jimmy Webb performed by Glenn Campbell on Wichita Lineman, 1968"Two Princes" by Spin Doctors from Pocket Full of Kryptonite, 1991"St. Thomas" by Sonny Rollins from Saxophone Colossus, 1956The Krebs/Oliver Tango Playlist: Apple Music | Spotify"Silent All These Years" by Tori Amos from Little Earthquakes, 1992"Help Me" by Joni MItchell from Court and Spark, 1974"Jesus, Etc." by Jeff Tweedy & Jay Bennett from Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, 2001"Cold Sweat" by James Brown, 1967"Cissy Strut" by The Meters from The Meters, 1969"Me and Julio Down By The Schoolyard" by Paul Simon from Paul Simon, 1971"The Biggest Ball of Twine in Minnesota" by "Weird Al" Yankovic from UHF, 1989Various tracks from Pink Floyd's The Dark Side of the Moon, 1973OUTRO SOLOISTS: Kirk Hamilton, Mel Carrol, Oren Kaunfer, Tim Howes, Casey Atkins-----LINKS-----SUPPORT STRONG SONGSPaypal | Patreon.com/StrongsongsMERCH STOREstore.strongsongspodcast.comSOCIAL MEDIA@StrongSongs | @Kirkhamilton | IG: @Kirk_HamiltonNEWSLETTERhttps://kirkhamilton.substack.com/subscribeJOIN THE DISCORDhttps://discord.gg/GCvKqAM8SmOUTRO SOLO PLAY-A-LONG:https://soundcloud.com/kirkhamilton/strong-songs-outro-music-no-soloSTRONG SONGS PLAYLISTSSpotify | Apple Music | YouTube Music----------------NOVEMBER 2022 WHOLE-NOTE PATRONSEd RankinTimothy morsheadJay SwartzMiriam JoySEAN D WINNIERushDaniel Hannon-BarryRRElliot RosenAshley HoagMark and MichelleMelissa OsborneChristopher MillerJamie WhiteChristopher McConnellDavid MascettiJoshua JarvisJoe LaskaKen HirshJezMelanie AndrichJenness GardnerSimon CammellGuinevere BoostromNarelle HornBill RosingerErinAidan CoughlanJeanneret Manning Family FourDave SharpeSami SamhuriAccessViolationRyan TorvikElliot Jay O'NeillJim ChokeyAndre BremerMark SchechterDave FloreyNOVEMBER 2022 HALF-NOTE PATRONSjohn halpinJennifer KennerPeter HardingDavidRuthieAnthony MahramusMeghan O'LearyJeffrey PuzzoJohn BaumanDax and Dane HuddlestonMartín SalíasTim HowesSteve MartinoDr Arthur A GrayCarolinaGary PierceMatt BaxterGiantPredatoryMolluskCasey FaubionLuigi BocciaRob AlbrightE Margaret WartonDaniel MosierCharles McGeeCatherine ClauseEthan BaumanRenee DowningKenIsWearingAHatJordan BlockAaron WadeChad HivnerTravis PollardJeff UlmJamieDeebsPortland Eye CareAdam RayAnupama RaghavanDemetri DetsaridisCarrie SchneiderAlenka GrealishRichard SneddonDavid JudsonJulian RoleffJanice BerryDoreen CarlsonDavid McDarbyAbigail DuffieldWendy GilchristLisa TurnerPaul WayperDennis M EdwardsJeffrey FerrisBruno GaetaKenneth JungbenAdam StofskyZak RemerRishi SahayJason ReitmanGreg BurgessAilie FraserVonPaul McGrealKaren ArnoldNATALIE MISTILISJosh SingerPhino DeLeonAmy Lynn ThornsenAdam WKelli BrockingtonStephen RawlingsBen MachtaVictoria YuKevin RiversBrad ClarkMichael J. Cunninghammino caposselaSteve PaquinSarahDavid JoskeEmma SklarBernard KhooRobert HeuerMatthew GoldenDavid NoahGeraldine ButlerRichard CambierMadeleine MaderJason PrattStewart OakAbbie BergDoug BelewDermot CrowleyAchint SrivastavaRyan RairighMichael BermanOlivia BishopJohn GisselquistElaine MartinLinda DuffyKourothSharon TreeBelinda Mcgrath-steerLiz SegerEoin de BurcaKevin PotterM Shane BordersPete SimmSusan PleinDallas HockleyJason GerryNathan GouwensWill Dwyer Alethea LeeLauren ReayEric PrestemonCookies250Damian BradyAngela LivingstoneDavid FriedmanSarah SulanDiane HughesKenneth TiongJo SutherlandMichael CasnerJen SmallLowell MeyerEtele IllesStephen TsoneffLorenz SchwarzWenJack SjogrenGeoff GoldenRobyn FraserPascal RuegerRandy SouzaJCClare HolbertonDiane TurnerTom ColemanMark PerryDhu WikMelEric HelmJake RobertsJonathan DanielsSteven MaronMichael FlahertyCaro Fieldmichael bochnerNaomi WatsonDavid CushmanAlexanderChris KGavin DoigSam FennTanner MortonAJ SchusterJennifer BushDavid StroudAmanda FurlottiAndrew BakerMatt GaskellJules BaileyAndrew FairL.B. MorseBill ThorntonBrian AmoebasBrett DouvilleJeffrey OlsonMatt BetzelMuellerNate from KalamazooMelanie StiversRichard TollerAlexander PolsonEarl LozadaJon O'KeefeJustin McElroyArjun SharmaJames JohnsonKevin MorrellKevin PennyfeatherColin Hodo