WINGS #17-23 Waitress Audio Art
Aug. 7, 2023, 5:13 p.m.
American Dining is an audio project that grew out of The Waitresses, a collaborative performance art group founded in Los Angeles in 1977 by Jerri Allyn and Anne Gauldin. In 1986, an art museum funded Allyn to perform American Dining in restaurants. Audio recordings played on faux jukeboxes, while Allyn performed waitressing along with staff. She toured this piece for 3 years. In 1989, New American Radio commissioned this version. "Drawing from her own experience as a waitress, Allyn creates song-narratives that offer fascinating insights into a world usually unnoticed by customers - the bizarre and very human world of the over-worked waitress. It's a world of men showing off their improvisational genius for sexual word play; of ambiguous relationships to the union; a world where an old and forgotten lady, who once introduced American radio audiences to broccoli is rediscovered. Combining perceptive writing with a skillful delivery, a folksy sound score by Bob Davis of Earwax Productions, and a delightful sense of down-home humor, this work will change your image of American diners and their waitresses forever." [Quoted from New American Radio - somewhere.org ]
WINGS #17-23 Waitress Audio Art
Aug. 7, 2023, 5:11 p.m.
American Dining is an audio project that grew out of The Waitresses, a collaborative performance art group founded in Los Angeles in 1977 by Jerri Allyn and Anne Gauldin. In 1986, an art museum funded Allyn to perform American Dining in restaurants. Audio recordings played on faux jukeboxes, while Allyn performed waitressing along with staff. She toured this piece for 3 years. In 1989, New American Radio commissioned this version. "Drawing from her own experience as a waitress, Allyn creates song-narratives that offer fascinating insights into a world usually unnoticed by customers - the bizarre and very human world of the over-worked waitress. It's a world of men showing off their improvisational genius for sexual word play; of ambiguous relationships to the union; a world where an old and forgotten lady, who once introduced American radio audiences to broccoli is rediscovered. Combining perceptive writing with a skillful delivery, a folksy sound score by Bob Davis of Earwax Productions, and a delightful sense of down-home humor, this work will change your image of American diners and their waitresses forever." [Quoted from New American Radio - somewhere.org ]
PROMO: Southwest American History
Aug. 7, 2023, 3:17 p.m.
This is the 30 second promo spot to go with our current episode of The Children's Hour.
There are 5 seconds at the end of this spot to add your station tag. Reach out to Katie Stone to get a tag from The Children's Hour for your station: katie@childrenshour.org
Southwest American History
Aug. 7, 2023, 3:17 p.m.
This time on The Children's Hour, we have a different kind of show. This episode is taken from our six episode educational podcast series called "A Brief History of the American Southwest - For Kids" which was produced through multiple virtual field trips to sites of significance in our high desert of New Mexico.
The story begins nearly 23,000 years ago, when people began migrating through, hunting, and living in this part of the world. Fossilized footprints tell the tale of teenagers hunting now-extinct giant sloths, and a mother who sets down her young child for awhile, only to pick her up again. David Bustos from White Sands National Park, Piro-Manso-Tiwa Tribal Preservation Officer Diego Medina relates how his community has always known about the footprints, and archaeologist Mary Weahkee from the New Mexico Center for Archeology describes what life was like back then for these original inhabitants.
After nearly 20,000 years, the Chacoan era arrives. We can see today the complexity of Chaco Canyons architecture, engineering, and governance demonstrating the sophistication of the Southwestern cultures. Chaco Culture National Park's interpretive ranger Nathan Hadfield explains what was found in Chaco, who lived there, and what mysteries remain.
Then in 1530, uninvited guests arrived in New Mexico in search of the mythical Seven Cities of Gold, confronting the A:shiwi A:wan (Zuni) community with horses, metals, guns, all of which were never before seen in this area. Curtis Quam from the A:shiwi A:wan Museum and Heritage Center describes what that period was like for the Zuni, and we see the spread of Spanish domination over the Indigenous people throughout the region, with the development of churches built atop existing Pueblos, enslavement of locals, and rule by the Spanish Crown.
On August 10, 1680, America had its first successful revolution: the Pueblo Revolt. We learn the story of Po'Pay, the religious leader and runner from Ohkay Owingeh just outside of Santa Fe, New Mexico, organized the entire Pueblo community. In spite of the great distances and different languages spoken by the Puebloan people, Po'Pay set a date for a revolt. Simultaneously, across the entire region the Pueblo people turned against their Spanish rulers, and sent them running back to Mexico.
Twenty years later, the Spanish returned with more arms, people, and might and overtook the Puebloan people. It became clear that for survival, there must be peace. We learn how the Spanish King handled doling out the lands of the Southwest to attempt to foster peace. Plus we find out how after hundreds of years, the Spanish and the Puebloan peoples were creating mixed communities, both out of force and choice. We visit a traditional hacienda of this period, Los Luceros, and learn how such a place came to be, and still survives to this day.
Finally, we come into the period of time when this area was nationalized by the United States, a fledgling country itself, after the end of the Spanish-American War, and the signing of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo. Historian Melanie LaBorwit walks us through the rapid changes in infrastructure that was imposed upon the desert southwest, and archeologist Mary Weahkee explains what cultural impact these changes had upon the Indigenous communities now ruled by a new government.
This is a radio special based on a 6 part educational curricular podcast series of the same name, and comes with a Learn-Along guide that meets and cites National educational standards.
Join us for a walk through history, this time on The Children's Hour!
This episode was produced by Executive Producer: Katie Stone, Senior Producer: Christina Stella, with historical review for accuracy from a team of historians, anthropologists, archeologists, tribal historians, and others. Funding was provided in a special grant from the New Mexico Humanities Council, and the National Endowment for the Humanities.
2023 The Children's Hour Inc.
The Motherland Influence: August 6, 2023
Aug. 7, 2023, 5:29 a.m.
African. Latin & Caribbean music
August 6, 2023: Jamaica 61
Aug. 7, 2023, 2:18 a.m.
Global A Go-Go pays tribute to the music of Jamaica, the world's smallest cultural superpower, on the occasion of its 61st Independence Day; two hours of mento, ska, rocksteady, reggae, dub, dancehall, ragga and all the sounds that have spread from the Rock around the world
Niger joins anti-colonial trend
Aug. 7, 2023, 1:42 a.m.
Niger joins the anti-colonial trend. The message is: Imperialists, get out of Africa. That goes for Canada, too.
Episode (2023.15.00) Poverty, A Glimpse; (2023.15.01) Wages, work and the Pressures from Poverty; (2023.15.02) From the Vault, Take a Deep Breath
Aug. 6, 2023, 11:09 p.m.
Class War Battlefield Podcast Episode 2023.15.00
Published August 06th, 2023
Poverty: A Glimpse to the Middle Class from Someone who has Spent 40 years Living Under its Reality
Please Donate to keep CWB Alive!
Donate to: CashApp $CWBPodcast & Paypal @CWBPodcast
12 Month Goals: 300 at $5 100 at $10 100 at $20 25 at $21+
This is a deeply personal episode segment. Drawing from my personal experience I speak about poverty as an experience that is often unmeasured by statistics or more precisely, as an experience that cannot be measured by statistics because the mirror required to acknowledge the experience is not acquired through the cold scientific artforms but from an empathetic psychology enabling one to intuit from another, in almost a telepathic manner, what the heart is experiencing and what the mind cannot or lacks the capacity to communicate. Using some personal stories, I speak on my 40 years living in poverty. Prepare yourself now because I show little sympathy for people who “got out” when they were in the late teen years or early twenties. I speak of the psychological impact of extended stress as well as what happens when people become dependent on survivalist thinking as well as many other topics.
Class War Battlefield Podcast Episode 2023.15.01
Wages, Work and the Pressures from Poverty that Cripple us Internally and Externally
What does Capitalism seek to accomplish? Your choices are limited; but the answer is very easily discernable from the actions of the Capitalists. This is how I began this episode. After taking apart a few conspiracy concepts I move onto speaking about the conspiracy to keep poverty in place in the modern age (along with a question for conservatives about why they don’t investigate that conspiracy). Which pushes me to speak more confrontationally on conspiracy theories.
Class War Battlefield Podcast Episode 2023.15.02
(From the Vault 2022)
Take a Deep Breath and See the World that was Created for You
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Donate to: CashApp $CWBPodcast & Paypal @CWBPodcast
12 Month Goals: 300 at $5 100 at $10 100 at $20 25 at $21+
I recorded many episodes in 2022, most were nowhere near as great as this one. The episode segments’ central theme surrounds the generational conflict that erupted into sociopolitical activities in the 1960s. Surrounding this theme is the idea that the police state has risen due this generational conflict. I have touched on this idea in an earlier CWB episode (in a 2012 episode); here, though, I draw out the idea more fully. Including speaking about how the institutions, both physical and cultural, enabling the public to discuss Capitalism critically, have been torn down deliberately, leaving no real structure for such criticisms to be debated, discussed, or disseminated (an interesting concept considering this is supposed a land where free speech is one of our most cherished “rights”). I make a bold prediction in this episode, one I hope will either not come true or prove to be overblown. This is truly an episode jam packed with content, I hope you appreciate it as much as I do.
Music Used in the opening, Curtis Mayfield’s Think, Brandy’s The Definition and Marvin Gaye’s Inner City Blues
If you have any questions, comments or concerns please contact me at vphiamer.adis.ogaarwa@outlook.com
Follow me on Facebook @ClassWarBattlefieldPodcast, on Twitter @VphiamerAdisOgaarwa
The Other Black Music July 6, 2023
Aug. 6, 2023, 11:01 p.m.
Broadcasting from WRIR-LP 97.3 FM and www.wrir.org in Richmond, Virginia USA. "The Other Black Music" broadcast Black music ignored by other Richmond stations. Soul, Zydeco, Funk, Afro-Pop, Blues and more. Every other Sunday 3-5pm EST
EJ 060 (with Dr. Jazz)
Aug. 6, 2023, 6:29 p.m.
Features guitarist Mike Stern.
Ej 059 (with Dr. Jazz)
Aug. 6, 2023, 6:26 p.m.
Introduces guitarist Eric Gale.
EJ 058 (with Dr. Jazz)
Aug. 6, 2023, 6:23 p.m.
Introduces guitarist Pat Metheny.
Ej 057 (with Dr. Jazz)
Aug. 6, 2023, 6:19 p.m.
Features guitarist Jeff Golub.
Ej 056 (with Dr. Jazz)
Aug. 6, 2023, 6:16 p.m.
Introduces guitarist Paul Jackson, Jr.
Ej 055 (with Dr. Jazz)
Aug. 6, 2023, 6:13 p.m.
Features guitarist Norman Brown.
Ej 054 (with Dr. Jazz)
Aug. 6, 2023, 6:10 p.m.
Introduces guitarist Paul Brown.
Ej 053 (with Dr. Jazz)
Aug. 6, 2023, 6:07 p.m.
Features guitarist Russ Freeman.
AMOC: Will Atlantic Current Stop Soon - Freezing Europe?
Aug. 6, 2023, 5:29 p.m.
Are you ready for real disaster news? If the warming currents in the North Atlantic weaken or collapse, Ireland, England, & North Europe become stormy and cold, even as the world warms. Forests and agriculture around the world suffer. A collapse of the ocean system known as AMOC has happened before. A new study suggests that destabilization could come again soon, even in this decade. Hear it straight from author Suzanne Ditlevsen, followed by analysis, including by Stefan Rahmstorf.
Episode 147 Playing the oldies you don't hear on the radio
Aug. 6, 2023, 2:17 p.m.
Big Joe Turner kicks off this week's show in rockin' style, we've also got Lonnie Johnson, Blanche Calloway, George Jones gives us one of the saddest country songs ever written - but what's it about? We've got the first Ray Charles record where he sounded like the Brother Ray we know and love, gospel from The Radio Four and new blues from Ronnie Douglas.
The Appalachian Sunday Morning with Danny Hensley
Aug. 6, 2023, 1:37 p.m.
The Appalachian Sunday Morning is a two hour all Gospel music radio program with radio station & program host Danny Hensley. The program is recorded live each Sunday morning while being broadcast on 91.7 FM Community radio and streamed world wide on www.sbbradio.org and/or www.sbbradio.net
Some of the artists featured on this week's program are The Powells, Deano Graham, John Berry, Clint Brown w/Sonya Isaacs and more.
The program is uploaded to SoundCloud, Buzzsprout, radio4all, Podbean and iTunes just to mention a few select resources for immediate access for replay to radio stations all across the globe.
The Gospel Gold Radio Hour With Danny Hensley
Aug. 5, 2023, 11:04 p.m.
The Gospel Gold Radio Hour is a weekly all Gospel music program with your Host - Danny Hensley. You can hear this program four times each week on www.sbbradio.org or www.sbbradio.net and 91.7 FM Community Radio. Wednesdays at 2 AM, Fridays at 12 AM, Saturday mornings at 8 AM and and Sundays at 11 PM - all times Eastern. Join us at 91.7 FM Community Radio and streaming at live365 and www.sbbradio.org
Indigenous in Music with Larry K - Chantil Dukart in our Spotlight Interview (Jazz, Pop) Hr 2
Aug. 5, 2023, 4:34 p.m.
Indigenous in Music with Larry K - Chantil Dukart in our Spotlight Interview (Jazz, Pop) Hr 1
Aug. 5, 2023, 4:33 p.m.
Encore: Welcome to Indigenous in Music with Larry K, this week we welcome welcome from Anchorage Alaska, Chantil Dukart is in the house. Singer, songwriter and jazz pianist. Her new album is out, entitled “Lady and the Champ," a nice new mix a jazz pop. She is currently featured in our current issue of the SAY Magazine, read all about her on our website at www.indigenousinmusicandarts.org/past-shows/chantil-dukart.
Enjoy music from Chantil Dukart, Stolen Identity, Bryden Gwiss Kiwenzie, Stoney Bear, Sober Junkie, Ghost Town Orchestra, Tom Bee, Dustin Harder, Los Amigos Invisibles, Martha Redbone, Indian City, Chantal Kreviazuk, Shylah Ray Sunshine, Aysanabee, Curt Young & Jame Medicine Crane, South Thunderbird, Janel Munoa, Dawn Karima, Night Shield, Gina Lorning, Groupo Fantasma, Johnny Ray Jones, Dan-Georges Mckenzie, Vern Cheechoo, John Paul Hodge and much more.
Visit us on our homepage at www.IndigenousinMusicandArts.org and visit the Two Buffalo Virtual Gallery and our SAY Magazine Library with all our featured guests.
Sonic Cafe #349/ High Anxiety: Stoic Strategies for Dealing with Anxiety
Aug. 4, 2023, 10:53 p.m.
Sonic café, that’s Vince Nerone with high anxiety from 2022, I’m Scott Clark and this is episode 349. So ahh feeling a little freaked out these days? Who isn’t? Seems to us that so far the 21st century is often a giant dumpster fire, and people who report feeling highly anxious is on the rise everywhere. So what can we do about it? Well this time the Sonic café turns once again to ancient stoic philosophy for strategies to deal with anxiety in our modern world. Author, speaker and modern stoic Ryan Holiday will share a number of stoic strategies to help us turn down the volume a bit and chill out. So yeah. Our music is pulled from the last 45 years. Listen for David Byrne, Phantom City, the New Radicals, Le Chic, Matt Bianco and the New Cool Collective and of course many more, including title track music performed by Mel Brooks from his classic 1977 movie High Anxiety, if you haven’t seen the movie you should check it out. So all that and more straight ahead as the Sonic Café gives you strategies to turn down the anxiety and maybe feel just a bit less freaked out. From 1990 here’s the Pet Shop Boys with Nervously, and we’re the Sonic café.
Niger Coup: Russia/China Ascendent, US Africom Rumbled & FInished In Africa
Aug. 4, 2023, 8:54 p.m.
- Film student Toni Grona and traveller Tyler Overall join Tony and Martin. Tyler has spent time in jail after kicking a police riot shield at the March 2021 Bristol Kill the Bill protest. Toni has made a documentary
- Crispin Flintoff, presenter of 'Not the Andrew Marr Show', on why he was suspended from the Labour Party. Anti Semitism and harassment claims against the Labour Party and the fact that Labour party is worse thsan the Tories
- Speakers from an event Crispin set up - Tony Greenstein, author of 'Zionism and the Holocaust', on trade unions, and David Halpin, former surgeon, on the NHS. Mark, a landlord from Newcastle, on Mike Graham's Talk TV show,
- Privatisation and looting of public assets. Marvin Rees is not selected as an MP candidate - The Voice says 'Bristol is racist'. Bristol 24/7 blog says Marvin should go to House of Lords?
- Bill Donoghue on how he was kicked out of his pub in Syston, near Leicester for being anti-lockdowns, and the Freedom Festival near Leicester next weekend
- Don DeBar, New York radio journalist, joins Tony and Martin live. His visit to China and how he didn't see any persecution of Uyghur Muslims in China's South-Western Xinjiang province.
- Don DeBar returns to his New York home from Xinjiang, China, finds no Uyghur oppression
- Africom. Al Jazeera report on coup in Niger - Russia flags being raised. Putin met with African leaders recently. Niger coup: Why some people want Russia in and France out -
- Another Trump indictment - will he get in again? Civil war in US. Hardening The Sides. Trump at his rally in Erie, Pennsylvania. Robert Kennedy JR being pilloried in US press. Trump Ruthlessly Attacks 'Biden Crime Family'
- ITV report on RAF Fairford becoming a base for drones. Various uses for drones. US Air Force applies to fly unmanned aerial drones from RAF Fairford in Gloucestershire -
- Sir Kier Starmer shredded documents relating to Assange Swedish case - Declassified. CPS has destroyed all records of Keir Starmer’s four trips to Washington
- Sir Kier Starmer secretly joined David Rockefeller's Trilateral Commission without telling Jeremy Corbyn. Tucker Carlson on YouTube after being kicked off Fox News.
- Niger coup - Wagner group involved - a Russian organised coup? Icing on the cake at the St Petersburg's Russia Africa summit- Al Jazeera report -
- EV causes massive fire on Fremantle Highway car transport ship in North Sea = mass pollution and $500m worth, 3,500 brand new German cars go up in smoke. Race to salvage sinking cargo ship carrying 3,000 vehicles
- NUM's David Douglas on how this week's carbon capture announced for gas power plants is identical to the one Richard Budge designed and put forward for coal in the 1990s. David Douglass -
- Coal, Climate Change & the Total Destruction of the British Coal Mining Industry - by David Douglass (2021) priced £15.00 - Large format (A4 size) book by David John Douglas giving a union and worker-centric position
- What is carbon capture? How the UK government plans to slash the amount of CO2 being released into the atmosphere by catching it and storing it under the North Sea Carbon capture technology
- Des Kay runs a reuse and recycle warehouse The Circulatory and The Save the World Club - he is also a poet and a kids entertainer - he reads out his Scam Plandemic poem. Save the World Club was set up 35 years ago
- NOT The BCfm Politics Show presented by Tony Gosling
https://politicsthisweek.wordpress.com/2023/08/03/not-the-bcfm-politics-show-presented-by-tony-gosling-151/
TBR 230804 - The Pros & Cons of Hitch Hiking*
Aug. 4, 2023, 8:17 p.m.
This week’s archive radio show considers the pros and cons of hitch hiking from a unique perspective. We go where you wouldn’t expect, so be prepared to be unprepared; it’s time for the Thunderbolt!
TBR 230804 - The Pros & Cons of Hitch Hiking*
Aug. 4, 2023, 8:16 p.m.
This week’s archive radio show considers the pros and cons of hitch hiking from a unique perspective. We go where you wouldn’t expect, so be prepared to be unprepared; it’s time for the Thunderbolt!
John Darnton – "Who is Charles Darwin"
Aug. 4, 2023, 1:11 a.m.
The Darwin Conspiracy
Who was Charles Darwin and what led him to describe what we now call “the theory of evolution?” These curious questions are ones that I have been following since I was about ten years old. In 1978 I had the good fortune of visiting the Galapagos Islands, 600 miles west of Ecuador in the Pacific Ocean. Charles Darwin visited the Galapagos Island in 1831 for month as part of a five-year voyage around the world. There he saw birds and animals that helped him formulate some of his ideas about evolution he published “The Origin of the Species,” 22 years later in 1853. And the world has not been the same since. Now, at a time when concepts of evolution and natural selection are attacked certain from theological and political perspectives, a novel called “The Darwin Conspiracy,” has been written by John Darnton, a writer and editor for the New York Times. “The Darwin Conspiracy,” although fiction, is said by John Darton to be 90% accurate, and covers Darwin’s life and thinking before and after the publication of “The Origin of the Species.” I spoke with John Darton from his home in New York City at the end of October 2005. He began by describing who Charles Darwin was, in his time and place.
John Darnton recommends “Snow,” by Orhan Pamuk.
Originally Broadcast: November 29, 2005
Celt In A Twist August 6 2023
Aug. 3, 2023, 11:06 p.m.
RIP Sinead O'Connor. Celt In A Twist honors her memory with a song her father taught her about the streets of her Dublin town. Still more debuts from Peatbog Faeries' great new album I See A World. For 20 years, we spin only the finest in contemporary Celtic music. Join us and get yer Celt In A Twist!
World Beat Canada Radio August 5 2023
Aug. 3, 2023, 11:01 p.m.
15 exciting spins squeezed into 60 minutes. This is concentrated global goodness with fresh tracks from The EEs, Witch No He & Sus Santos, plus surf, punk, sci-fi guitarist Scott Helland with Soylent Seafom Green. It's our people that make it so tasty! World Beat Canada Radio - get into it!