show episodes
 
Artwork

1
Books and Brews Podcast

Michael Agnew and Laura Vosika

Unsubscribe
Unsubscribe
Bulanan
 
The Books & Brews Podcast is the place where literature and beer meet. Each month we welcome a new guest author to read and discuss their work. Author Laura Vosika leads in-depth interviews to delve into the motivations, inspirations and preoccupations of each guest. Certified Cicerone® Michael Agnew pours beers specifically selected to pair with the writer’s work. It’s an hour of entertaining erudition that hits your mind and your mouth.
  continue reading
 
Artwork

1
The Dead Pair Podcast

Jason Rambo and Sean Alley- Sporting Clays

Unsubscribe
Unsubscribe
Bulanan+
 
What every sporting clay shooter wants to hear! The Dead Pair project is a family oriented, informative and entertaining podcast aimed at providing valuable “real-world” information for both recreational and competitive clay shooters. Our content will benefit all skill levels, featuring discussions from some of the sport’s best shooters and coaches, as well as product and service specialists. Sporting clays, Trap, Skeet, FITASC, AFS, COMPAC, Ball Trap, shotgun sports, Clay target, Clay shoot ...
  continue reading
 
In need of a good read? Or just want to keep up with the books everyone's talking about? NPR's Book of the Day gives you today's very best writing in a snackable, skimmable, pocket-sized podcast. Whether you're looking to engage with the big questions of our times – or temporarily escape from them – we've got an author who will speak to you, all genres, mood and writing styles included. Catch today's great books in 15 minutes or less.
  continue reading
 
Artwork

1
What About...

The What About Podcast

Unsubscribe
Unsubscribe
Mingguan+
 
Born out of the deeply serious—and deeply silly—conversations that Danny and Jason would have about navigating life, each episode of the What About… podcast features a topic that interests the inquisitive pair and a special guest who can lend their own unique insight. From attraction to insomnia—parenting to urban legends—no subject is off the table and no seat at the table will be left empty.
  continue reading
 
Poetry has been defined as “words that want to break into song.” Musicians who make music seek to “say something”. Parlando will put spoken words (often, but not always, poetry) and music (different kinds, limited only by the abilities of the performing participants) together. The resulting performances will be short, 2 to 10 minutes in length. The podcast will present them un-adorned. How much variety can we find in this combination? Listen to a few episodes and see. At least at first, the ...
  continue reading
 
Artwork

1
Intersect

EnterTalk

Unsubscribe
Unsubscribe
Bulanan
 
INTERSECT is a radio interview program that showcases interviews with musicians who were once/or still are prominent Christian music artist, discussing how their encounter with Christ not only influenced the direction and intent of their music, but also the direction and intent of their individual lives. The shows will be interesting, entertaining and inspirational as we learn how these musicians started, their experiences along the way and where they are now as artist and people. Aaron “The ...
  continue reading
 
The premise of this podcast is simple: Each week John Leary is joined by a different pair of celebrity guests. He asks them the 10 questions from the quiz in The Saturday Paper and they do their best to answer them correctly. It ain't rocket science -- but the questions might be! Follow John on Twitter @johnnyjohnleary Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/the-saturday-quiz. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
  continue reading
 
Artwork

1
Sens Nation - Your Ottawa Senators Podcast

With Steve Warne and Gregg Kennedy

Unsubscribe
Unsubscribe
Mingguan+
 
Former TSN Radio hosts (and hockey coaches) Steve Warne and Gregg Kennedy. Twice per week, they're all over the latest Senators' news with interesting, knowledgeable, and sometimes brutally honest analysis. Listen for interviews and features about the club's past, present and future. Check out the show's website at sensnationhockey.com
  continue reading
 
Pop culture, juicy romance and hilarious conversations come together in One True Pairing. Join Erica Martirano and Marissa Sangiacomo as they revisit their favorite couples from across TV, movies, books, and pop culture. From Prince Harry and Meghan Markle to Ross and Rachel, this roller coaster of bad boys, break-ups, and HEAs (Happily Ever Afters) combines love, feminism, sex, and relationships with the gossip you love.
  continue reading
 
Artwork

1
DayLuna Human Design Podcast

Shayna Cornelius and Dana Stiles

Unsubscribe
Unsubscribe
Bulanan+
 
Dana Stiles and Shayna Cornelius are the Human Design experts and spiritual teachers behind DayLuna™, and hosts of the top charted DayLuna™ Human Design Podcast which has received over 1M downloads in 70+ countries around the world! Join us as we discuss everything Human Design! If you are just joining us we recommend starting with your Type episode or starting from Episode 1! Human Design is the spiritual science of how we are all different and how we operate and increase our magnetism in u ...
  continue reading
 
Artwork
 
A weekly podcast hosted by Marshall Kosloff and produced by Hudson Institute that believes that the “Arsenal of Democracy” is not merely a state of military, industrial, and societal readiness, but a conception of America’s role as the world reckons with a shifting geopolitical order, revanchist Great Power rivals, and global debates about the prospects for liberal democracy.
  continue reading
 
Artwork

1
The Knee Jerks

The Knee Jerks

Unsubscribe
Unsubscribe
Bulanan
 
The Knee Jerks began as a popular weekly chat feature between a pair of long running Detroit sports blogs, The Wayne Fontes Experience and GregEno.com. The web chat morphed into an every Monday night podcast. Your hosts are layabout blogger Big Al Beaton of TWFE, aka Mr. Blogger, and prolific freelance writer Greg Eno, aka Mr. Journalist. We cover the gamut of the sports landscape, but with a definite Detroit slant and always with a Detroit attitude.
  continue reading
 
It’s more than just a sporting contest. It’s the pride of two nations, where victory couldn’t be sweeter, but defeat is the bitterest taste of all. It’s a rivalry that transcends sport and creates true heroes and villains. This is Legends of the Ashes, hosted by lifelong cricket fan and current Marylebone Cricket Club President, Stephen Fry. This podcast series will delve deep into the stories that make the England versus Australia rivalry one of the greatest there is. Relive incredible matc ...
  continue reading
 
The Dannie De Novo Podcast is an open and honest look into the beautiful twists and turns that accompany the processes of growth and success. Come along for the journey as we learn to redefine ourselves one failure at a time.
  continue reading
 
Artwork

1
Know Stroke Podcast

Mike Garrow | David Dansereau

Unsubscribe
Unsubscribe
Bulanan+
 
Welcome to the Know Stroke Podcast with your co-hosts Mike Garrow (stroke caregiver) & David Dansereau (stroke survivor). Listen back to Episode 1 of the podcast to hear our personal stories of how stroke impacted our lives and sparked a mission to amplify the voices, contributions, and achievements of change makers in stroke care. Show music by Jake Dansereau (JAKEEZo on Soundcloud @user-257386777) Be sure to give the show a like and share, & follow and connect with us on social or contact ...
  continue reading
 
Artwork

1
Seeking the Military Suicide Solution

Duane France, MA, MBA, LPC and Shauna Springer, PhD

Unsubscribe
Unsubscribe
Bulanan
 
The statistics about suicide in the military affiliated population are alarming, and many are aware of them. Awareness is no longer enough, however. Communities must pair that awareness with meaningful action in order to make a difference. Brought to you by Military Times, join combat veteran and clinical mental health counselor Duane France and nationally recognized suicide prevention expert Dr. Shauna Springer every week as they bring the knowledge of experts on suicide in the military aff ...
  continue reading
 
“Some think it, we say it.” That’s the straight-talk ethos of “Getcha Popcorn Ready with T.O. & Hatch,” the new podcast from former NFL wide receivers and longtime friends Terrell Owens and Matthew Hatchette. Each episode, the outspoken pair talk about — and hilariously bust balls about — everything from football and other sports, to entertainment and fashion, often joined by celebrity guests. With an undeniable chemistry and a commitment to real talk and actual differences of opinion, they ...
  continue reading
 
Loading …
show series
 
Send us a text The 2024 National Sporting Clays Championship at the National Shooting Complex is quickly approaching! There have been a lot of new changes to the shooting complex, as well as some of the events that have been relocated. Not to mention, there is some news about the Pro Squad, and even 2 main event entries into the National Championsh…
  continue reading
 
With new technology and weapons systems being developed for 2030 and beyond, how do we reconcile readiness with a new cold war with the Chinese Communist Party that is here now? Founder of SolidIntel, Dr. Megan Reiss, joins the show to emphasize that American leadership has to communicate clear-eyed strategies about who are adversaries are, what's …
  continue reading
 
Over 25 years ago, author Leslie Rasmussen connected with a stranger over challenges with their fertility. That friendship inspired her 2023 novel, The Stories We Cannot Tell, which follows two very different women who contend with excruciating decisions around their pregnancies. In today's episode, Rasmussen talks with NPR's Leila Fadel about her …
  continue reading
 
Join us as we discuss one of our favorite topics that has helped us find healing and resolution with our family of origin. Tune in to hear the 4 primary reasons you might have karmically chosen your parents to explore your life path from a new lens. Key Takeaways: How we choose our parents in the process of reincarnation. How exploring our karmic r…
  continue reading
 
Edwidge Danticat is known for her novels and short stories. But her new book, We're Alone, is a collection of eight wide-ranging essays. These essays touch on intimate and historical topics: Danticat's past and present, the history of Haiti, parenting, migration and the author's connection to her literary heroes. In today's episode, Danticat speaks…
  continue reading
 
Carole Hopson wanted to be a pilot since childhood, but it wasn't until her mid-30s that she learned about Bessie Coleman, the first Black woman to earn her pilot's license in 1921. Coleman's story not only encouraged Hopson to pursue her own career as a commercial pilot, but it also inspired A Pair of Wings, Hopson's first novel. In today's episod…
  continue reading
 
Late 19th century American poet Richard Hovey translated many French Symbolist poems; but this sonnet, published in a posthumous collection, is apparently Hovey's own work in French under the title "Au Seuil." Hovey's poem considers dying and the possibility of a judgement and afterlife. I translated Hovey's French into English for this musical per…
  continue reading
 
Joining John to answer the questions on this episode of The Saturday Quiz is the director Bert LaBonté and one of the actors Ras-Samuel from the Pulitzer Prize winning play Topdog/Underdog, which is playing right now in the Lawler at Melbourne Theatre Company’s Southbank Theatre. The Suzan-Lori Parks play tells the story of Lincoln and Booth, two d…
  continue reading
 
Anything's Pastable and My Life in Recipes, new cookbooks from Dan Pashman and Joan Nathan, get personal in very different ways. Pashman, the James Beard Award-winning podcaster, sets out to revolutionize our relationship with pasta, while Nathan's 12th cookbook blends recipes and memoir to trace her family history through Jewish cuisine. In today'…
  continue reading
 
Send us a text Hailing from the state of Michigan, Amber Brown has made a name for herself amongst the top ladies shooters in the country. Amber travels the circuit and competes all across the country in an effort to be at the top. But don't think she wants to be just a top ladies shooter, she has much bigger aspirations than that! She has now dedi…
  continue reading
 
Jurassic Park creator Michael Crichton spent years working on a manuscript about a volcano on the verge of a disastrous eruption in Hawaii. After he died in 2008, his wife Sherri found his boxes and boxes of research and decided the novel needed to be finished – so she hit up James Patterson. In today's episode, she and Patterson speak with NPR's A…
  continue reading
 
Here's a short love poem by written for the 1894 Songs From Vagabondia by Richard Hovey. This book found favor with young men in its day for eschewing moral uplift and earnest toil to write instead of wine, women, and joyful travels. The Parlando Project combines various words (usually literary poetry) with original music in differing styles. We've…
  continue reading
 
Matthew Kroenig and Dan Negrea, authors of We Win, They Lose: Republican Foreign Policy and the New Cold War, do not wonder whether a new cold war against the Chinese Communist Party is afoot. Instead, they join the show to explain that when it arrives, America will need a fusion of Ronald Reagan and Donald Trump foreign policies to ensure complete…
  continue reading
 
Supreme Court Associate Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson remembers her first brush with the national spotlight as "white hot." When President Biden nominated her in 2022 to replace retiring Justice Stephen Breyer, it kicked off an intense confirmation process for Jackson, the first Black woman ever appointed to the Supreme Court. In her new book, Love…
  continue reading
 
Harriet Constable learned a lot about the real life of Anna Maria della Pietà — that she grew up in an orphanage, that she was a star violinist and a favored student of Antonio Vivaldi. But in her new novel, The Instrumentalist, Constable also merges fact with fiction to tell the story of Anna Maria's synesthesia and musical talents. In today's epi…
  continue reading
 
Food is a source of nourishment, joy and autonomy for a lot of people – but in her new book, Ruin their Crops on the Ground, Andrea Freeman also tracks how the U.S. government has used food policy as a form of control and oppression. In today's episode, Freeman speaks with NPR's Ayesha Rascoe about how the book's title can be traced back to an orde…
  continue reading
 
Labor Day weekend in America is often the occasion for end of Summer activities. In this poem from the 1894 Songs from Vagabondia, poet Richard Hovey rows down a river in Maine connecting a lake and ponds. What does he find? The sense that Summer feels like a dream. The Parlando Project combines various words (usually literary poetry) with original…
  continue reading
 
Alexei Tolioppoulos and Lauren Bonner have both recently joined a real-life pub trivia team. But that doesn't mean they get all the questions correct on this episode. Alexei learns that no matter how good you are at your expert category, if the questions don't tend that way, you're in for a world of pain. Support this show http://supporter.acast.co…
  continue reading
 
Today's episode features two books that advocate for new approaches to big problems: urban planning, poverty, and dog rescue. First, Here & Now's Scott Tong speaks with Carlos Moreno about The 15-Minute City, his proposal for interconnected communities where schools, grocery stores and offices are all a short walk or bike ride away from each other.…
  continue reading
 
A great chat with former Sens defenceman Mark Borowiecki. We catch up with what's new in Boroland. We discuss some of the moves the Sens made this summer. We get into the underrated value of the shutdown defenceman in the game. We talk about coaching and development and the importance of a positive culture. Boro also gives a thoughtful perspective …
  continue reading
 
Natwest, 23, is about to finally leave for university. But a package he's waiting for has gone missing and – fearing humiliation if its contents are found out – he spends 24 hours looking for it all over town. That's the premise of Nathan Newman's comic novel, How to Leave the House. In today's episode, Newman speaks with NPR's David Folkenflik abo…
  continue reading
 
We catch up with Jon Abbott who just joined Sportsnet as the TV play-by-play voice of the Calgary Flames. We look back at the only time the Senators used the offer sheet strategy and it paid off big. We discuss our optimism level about Linus Ullmark re-signing after he reportedly buys a house.
  continue reading
 
Co-founder and CEO of Roadrunner Venture Studios, Adam Hammer, joins host Marshall Kosloff to explain what "deep tech" is, why the Arsenal of Democracy is often fought and won by people in white lab coats, and how the spoils of defense innovation are shared commercially.Oleh Hudson Institute
  continue reading
 
What do hedge fund managers, poker players and the scientist behind the mRNA vaccine have in common? In his new book, On the Edge: The Art of Risking Everything, Nate Silver argues that they all exist in what he calls "the River" – a community of like-minded power brokers taking quantitative risks. In today's episode, Silver speaks with Here & Now'…
  continue reading
 
Pioneering Canadian poet Bliss Carman included this fantastic prose poem in his breakthrough 1894 collection "Songs from Vagabondia." Is it the slightly intoxicated wonder-talk of two tipsy young men, or the account of two angels playing with the universe? That Carman seems to have designed that blurring makes for an interesting 19th century SciFi …
  continue reading
 
In this fascinating episode, personal growth coach, author, and creator of Flowdreaming, Summer McStravick, joins us to dive into the energetics of manifestation. Are you ready to release your blocks and hangups and expand through a state of flow? Tune in to this must-listen episode to find out how! Key Takeaways: Why control is often misused in th…
  continue reading
 
Elvira K. Gonzalez says there was a lot of beauty to growing up in the culturally rich border town of Laredo, Texas. But there were some challenges, too. Her new memoir, Hurdles in the Dark, chronicles some of the more difficult aspects of her adolescence — her mom was kidnapped, Gonzalez was sent to juvenile detention, and she was preyed upon by h…
  continue reading
 
From 1911 to 1912, Albert Einstein and Franz Kafka both lived in Prague. A new graphic novel by Ken Krimstein uses both history and artistic imagination to explore how the physicist and writer ran in the same social circles and how their work might have influenced each other. In today's episode, Krimstein speaks with NPR's Scott Simon about Einstei…
  continue reading
 
Pioneering Canadian poet Bliss Carman's break-through collection was called Songs of Vagabondia, a popular 1894 book which extoled the adventurous and sensuous life. In this selection he jauntingly compares Robert Burns and Robert Browning. The Parlando Project combines various words (usually literary poetry) with original music in different styles…
  continue reading
 
If you're a reader or listener of any of the Schwartz Media publications, you're sure to have encountered Erik Jensen and Michael Williams. Erik is the Editor in Chief at Schwartz and Michael is the Editor of The Monthly magazine, as well as hosting the podcast Read This. They're both intimidatingly intelligent, so it's no surprise that they do ver…
  continue reading
 
Warning: this episode contains mention of suicide and mental illness. If you or someone you know may be considering suicide or is in crisis, call or text 988 to reach the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline. Today's episode is about two books that focus on mental health challenges. First, Here & Now's Robin Young speaks with Rachel Zimmerman about Us, Afte…
  continue reading
 
In this episode, Jake and Michael discuss (inadvertently) bathing keyboards, pairing with remote colleagues and friends, using rational numbers to deal with rounding errors (sort of), and running code style fixers in CI or as a pre-commit hook. Show links Tuple Laramates Around brick/math brick/money Pint Running Pint on GitHub Actions Husky Whisky…
  continue reading
 
Send us a text The history of Trap, Skeet, and Sporting Clays is not something that has been very well documented until recently. Sure, we all have stories from friends and fellow competitors, but actual real history and memorabilia are something that we have needed. Enter Steve Ellinger and Phil Murray! Steve and Phil and have retired from their c…
  continue reading
 
Bram Stoker Award-winning author, Gabino Iglesias, knows what it's like for grief and anger to turn deadly. That's what he explores in his new novel, House of Bone and Rain, which follows six close friends who vow to avenge the murder of one of their own mothers as a hurricane approaches. In today's episode, Iglesias, who's a frequent book critic f…
  continue reading
 
Courtroom sketch artist Jane Rosenberg has worked on some of the biggest trials of the last 40 years, drawing the likes of Martha Stewart, Jeffrey Epstein, and most recently, Donald Trump. Her new memoir, Drawn Testimony, examines her unique role in the news cycle, where art and criminal justice collide. In today's episode, Rosenberg speaks with NP…
  continue reading
 
Former Senators are all over the news. Edmonton trades Cody Ceci, possibly as part of the solution to their offer sheet crisis. Two years into retirement, Sens great Jason Spezza is now a GM, taking over Pittsburgh's AHL team. Should Spezza be on the Ring of Honour or have his retired number? Tyler Ennis talks about the moment last season when he k…
  continue reading
 
In this episode we deep dive into the more specific layers of your Human Design that can be found in your PHS (Primary Health System) chart. Is your brain passive and needing more variety and less calories? Or is your brain active, needing consistency and more calories throughout your day? Tune in to this episode to find out! Key Takeaways: Locatin…
  continue reading
 
The fictional Olympics at the heart of Rufaro Faith Mazarura's novel, Let the Games Begin, kick off in Athens. And in the middle of one of the most important athletic competitions in the world, star runner Zeke and Olympic organizing committee intern Olivia are thrown together against all odds in what becomes a whirlwind romance. In today's episode…
  continue reading
 
Kathy Murray is a certified personal trainer with over thirty years’ experience in the fitness industry. She is a graduate of The Ohio State University where she was a member of the 1983 National Cheerleading Championship Team. After college she competed in and won the United States Aerobic Championship in 1986 and spent the year traveling the worl…
  continue reading
 
After she worked on a book about refugee resettlement in the U.S., writer Jessica Goudeau says she realized she knew very little about how her own family arrived in Texas. Her new book, We Were Illegal, looks at multiple generations of her family and how their lives reflected a history of racism, slavery and violence in her home state. In today's e…
  continue reading
 
Drake Batherson joins us from his home on the east coast to talk about his summer and everything going on with the Senators.0:25 Drake's summer report0:57 Chabot and Sokolov weddings2:26 Golf trips3:06 New gym in his house3:55 Celebright5:02 All-star skate out east5:41 Returning to Ottawa6:25 Shane Pinto7:28 Teammate injury updates8:48 New coaching…
  continue reading
 
Runt is a brand new family movie in cinemas around the country from September 19, but if you’re in Melbourne, you can see it at MIFF on the 25th of August. Written by Craig Silvey, based on his book of the same name and directed by John Sheedy, Runt tells the story of Annie Shearer and her best friend, a stray dog called Runt. When her family's far…
  continue reading
 
Ancient Greek poet Sappho's poetry survives in fragments and spaces, but in 1904 a Canadian poet imagined Sappho's poems as if they were complete. The audacity of that project undertaken by Bliss Carman must be conceded, but the results can be judged on their own merits. The Greeks said that Sappho's poems were sung with lyre music, and the Parland…
  continue reading
 
Today's episode highlights two books that revisit the cultural contributions of some pretty big names. First, Here & Now's Deepa Fernandes speaks with Deborah Paredez about American Diva, which reclaims the word 'diva' to celebrate the singularity of women like Serena Williams and Celia Cruz. Then, NPR's Michel Martin speaks with Larry Tye about Th…
  continue reading
 
Send us a text This is the audio from our SCOOPS live broadcast. (The echo could not be removed from the first few minutes) We decided to throw this out as a podcast as there is a lot of good information here. If you want to watch the show, simply go to our YouTube channel and look under the LIVE category. With guests Braxton Oliver, David Radulovi…
  continue reading
 
Loading …

Panduan Referensi Cepat