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Sara Bernard
Shows
Self Discovery Wisdom Podcast
IG25-27. Adele Bernard & Transition Clarity
You are here for a reason—your soul chose this moment to share its unique gifts. In a world of constant change, life flows effortlessly when you are grounded, present, and aligned with divine energy. This talk explores your soul’s blueprint through alignment with your business, understanding the structures, intuitive messages, and the evolving human consciousness.https://selfdiscoverywisdom.com/?p=131604
2025-07-07
1h 23
Self Discovery Wisdom Podcast
IG25-27. Adele Bernard & Transition Clarity
You are here for a reason—your soul chose this moment to share its unique gifts. In a world of constant change, life flows effortlessly when you are grounded, present, and aligned with divine energy. This talk explores your soul’s blueprint through alignment with your business, understanding the structures, intuitive messages, and the evolving human consciousness.https://selfdiscoverywisdom.com/?p=131604
2025-07-07
1h 23
Connecting with Coincidence 2.0 with Bernard Beitman, MD
Beings Beyond the Veil of Ordinary Consciousness | David Brown and Sarah Huntley, EP 408
What if the veil separating our world from the unseen was thinner than we think? In this episode, Dr. Bernard Beitman explores the mysteries of non-ordinary consciousness with David Brown and Sarah Huntley—two researchers delving into encounters with beings that defy conventional reality. Who are the beings that appear at the edge of sleep, death, or deep meditation? Are they parts of ourselves, messengers, or something else entirely? Tune in to rethink the boundaries of consciousness.David Jay Brown is the author of The Illustrated Field Guide to DMT Entities, Dreaming Wide Awake: Lucid Dreaming, Shamanic Healing and Ps...
2025-07-06
1h 13
Symptômes
BONUS - 3 questions supplémetaires à Erik Bernard, médecin généraliste
Quels sont les grands défis de la santé publique aujourd'hui ? Y a-t-il des examens ou des dépistages que les Français négligent trop ? Comment les patients peuvent-ils mieux se préparer avant de venir pour un rendez-vous ? Dans ce nouveau bonus de "Symptômes", le médecin généraliste Erik Bernard répond à ces questions ! Vous pouvez retrouver ici le lien de son compte Instagram @docteurerik : https://www.instagram.com/docteurerik/ Retrouvez chaque mois, un nouvel épisode inédit de "Symptômes", ainsi qu'un bonus la semaine suivante.Distribué par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomea...
2025-07-04
07 min
Mind Your Manners
How to Become the Star of Your Own Life with Hollywood's #1 Acting Coach
What if the key to success isn’t pretending to be someone else—but finally showing up as you? Sara Jane sits down with Hollywood’s #1 acting and transformation coach, Bernard Hiller, whose clients include Oscar winners and A-list stars. But this conversation goes far beyond the stage. Bernard’s method is about emotional truth, personal transformation, and how to stop performing the wrong life—and start living the right one.
2025-06-24
1h 05
Les Grosses Têtes
INÉDIT - Bernard Mabille fait le bilan de la saison !
Meilleurs moments, nouvelles rencontres, objectifs pour la saison prochaine... Dans ce nouveau podcast inédit, les "Grosses Têtes" font le bilan de cette saison au micro de Sara Kemacha ! Distribué par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
2025-06-24
03 min
Northwest Reports
The Elephant in the Room: Where WA's GOP Goes From Here
In the final episode of the series, three Washington Republicans react to Donald Trump’s reelection and ponder the future of the state’s GOP. Donald Trump’s reelection to the country’s highest office elicited a range of reactions ... even among Republicans in Washington state. Some on the right have distanced themselves from Trump, which listeners heard in the first episode of “The Elephant in the Room” — a three-part series from Northwest Reports that dives deeper into the state and future of Washington’s GOP. Other Washington Republicans stand by the President-elect, including those whom the Northwes...
2024-12-18
29 min
PS:GROW What's On Your Mind?
290 Bernard Moerman Over Zijn Boek Breek Uit De Gouden Kooi | What's On Your Mind? (Dutch/Nederlands)
#bernardmoerman #goudenkooi290 Bernard Moerman Over Zijn Boek Breek Uit De Gouden Kooi | What's On Your Mind? (Dutch/Nederlands)Hi ik ben Peter en elke week geef ik jullie een podcast over personal development, mindset & verkoop. What's On Your Mind ? is een 1 uur conversatie. Iedereen heeft een verhaal. En ik wil dit verhaal van mijn gast naar boven brengen.Jij hebt een leidinggevende functie met een ronkende titel, je bekleedt een benijdenswaardige positie met een aantrekkelijk salaris. Toch knaagt er iets vanbinnen. Je voelt hoe je wegdrijft van je ware droom en...
2024-12-16
1h 22
Northwest Reports
The Elephant in the Room: Moderate Republicans on Trump
A Northwest Reports limited series examines the present and future of Washington’s GOP. In this episode, moderate Republicans talk internal divisions. Republicans won big in this year’s election. Republicans in Washington state, however ... That's a different story. In November, the country voted to reelect Donald Trump to the nation’s highest office; Republicans gained control of Congress; and most states experienced significant swings to the right. Washington also saw a slight rightward shift, but it wasn’t by much, and Democrats won all the statewide races. “The Elephant in the Room” is a three-part se...
2024-12-04
33 min
Chicks Who Give a Hoot
Raising Anti-Racist Kids with Tabitha St. Bernard-Jacobs
In this episode, we chat about: Tabitha St. Bernard-Jacobs’ background, including her work in fashion, disability services, the Women's March, and anti-racist parenting. The definition and exploration of anti-racist parenting and the Six Core Tenets Anti-Racist Parenting (Continuous Learning, Consistent Conversations, Community Action, Intentional Environments, Reflective Media, and Parent and Caregiver Modeling) The importance of parents learning and unlearning. Handling big conversations with children and making space for those discussions. The role of community and being intentional about the environments children are in. Being critical of the me...
2024-06-19
43 min
Özel masallah podcast
The Origins of the Imazighen (Berbers), natives of North Africa
(RESOURCES BELOW) In this episode, I take you along with me as we explore the origin story of the Imazighen, the indigenous inhabitants of North Africa, also known as the Berbers. We examine a variety of historical perspectives and takes, spanning the evolution of what different historians believed to be the origin story of the Imazighen, until today. We trace their history from ancient times to the present, discussing the myths that have been diffused, the most recent archaeological findings, and scholarly debates that have contributed to our understanding of the Imazighen. RESOURCES : “Histoire du Maroc” by Michel Abitbol “Historical dictio...
2024-06-15
29 min
Cucù
15. Grop joegn de Penìa e Ciampedel con Cristopher Verra e Sara Bernard
Grop joegn de Penìa e Ciampedel con i animatores del grop joegn de la Val de sora, Cristopher Verra e Sara Bernard. Jon a descorir l'ativitèdes che i endreza, ocajions e oportunità per se cognoscer, per descorer e pissèr sora a argomenc de atualità o ence più lejieres, desche l abort o l'amicizia.#15 Cucù — Na trasmiscion de Radio Studio Record a cura de Nicoletta Riz, portèda dant dal vif en jebia ai 6 de jugn e sostegnuda dal Comun general de Fascia
2024-06-10
40 min
Northwest Reports
Behind the Scenes of the Mossback Podcast
Producer Sara Bernard offers a peek into how the moss is made and teases what lies in wait for listeners in the podcast’s fifth season. Mossback’s back! The beloved video series has returned, and host Knute Berger continues to explore Pacific Northwest history. The fifth season of the companion podcast that Knute co-hosts with Stephen Hegg is back, too. A couple of episodes are already out – about deadly avalanches and the effort to cover up a Boeing plant during WWII. There’s a Northwest Reports connection, too: Host Sara Bernard has been produci...
2024-04-24
19 min
Northwest Reports
Palestinian, Israeli Women on Friendship, Hope
The two, who met years ago through a peace organization, spoke about their lives before and after Oct. 7 at a Town Hall Seattle event on Friday. All eyes have been on Gaza since October 7, when Hamas launched a surprise attack on Israel that killed around 1,200 people. Since then, Israel has killed upward of 30,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry. The war between Israel and Hamas has sparked global outrage, triggered widespread calls for a cease-fire and led some Americans to vote “uncommitted” in the presidential primary – an attempt to get President Joe Biden to take a ha...
2024-03-13
46 min
Northwest Reports
Meet Our New Co-Host + Mossback Preview
You probably noticed a new voice in the past few episodes of Crosscut Reports. That’s Maleeha Syed, the show’s new co-host. She’ll be working alongside Sara Bernard to bring you weekly updates on the stories coming out of Crosscut’s newsroom. This episode of Crosscut Reports starts with a casual conversation between the two co-hosts. Syed, previously Crosscut’s communities reporter, talks about what it’s like to switch from written to audio storytelling and shares a few podcasts she has had in rotation lately. Bernard then gives listeners a sneak peek in...
2023-10-04
21 min
FuffaWeb Italia
"Non si smette di giocare perché si invecchia - George Bernard Shaw
La Gioia di Giocare: Il Segreto dell'Invecchiamento con GraziaInvecchiare con grazia e vitalitàAbbracciare il gioco in ogni fase della vitaDomande Frequenti (FAQ)FAQ 1: Come posso incorporare il gioco nella mia vita quotidiana?FAQ 2: Quali sono i vantaggi del gioco per la salute mentale?FAQ 3: Posso giocare con i miei cari di diverse età?FAQ 4: Ci sono giochi specifici consigliati per gli anziani?FAQ 5: Quali sono i prossimi passi per iniziare a giocare di più?Introduzione: La Saggezza del GiocoNell'articolo "MORDICCHIO & GRAFFIO," George Bernard Shaw ci insegna che...
2023-09-26
03 min
Northwest Reports
Free Speech vs. Civil Rights
Reporter Mai Hoang explains how the court decision to exempt a Colorado web designer from LGBTQ+ antidiscrimination laws could have a ripple effect. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in June that a Christian website designer in Colorado can refuse to provide wedding websites to same-sex couples, because doing so falls within her First Amendment right to free speech. As Crosscut reporter Mai Hoang found, the ruling in Colorado was the first to address whether prohibiting discrimination against a protected class can be set aside for someone’s free-speech rights. This decision signals a...
2023-08-23
20 min
Patients at Risk
Physician discusses why she will no longer train or supervise NPPs
Sara O'Heron, MD discusses changes in the education and training of NPs and PAs over her 35-year career.Learn more at PatientsAtRisk.comGet the new book, Imposter Doctors, available in paperback, eBook and Audible: https://www.amazon.com/Imposter-Doctors-Patients-at-Risk-ebook/dp/B0C4J3P3Z1/PhysiciansForPatientProtection.org
2023-08-21
35 min
Northwest Reports
The Fight Over Public Libraries
Calls for censorship of LGBTQ+ young adult books in Columbia County mirror a national political debate. Meg Butterworth shares her reporting. A fight has been raging nationwide over book-banning in schools and libraries. According to the American Library Association, calls for censorship of specific titles nearly doubled between 2021 and 2022, and the vast majority targeted books by and about the LGBTQ+ community and people of color. But as reporter Meg Butterworth found, in one rural county in Washington the battle has gone beyond the books themselves. It could end up eliminating an entire library system. ...
2023-08-09
22 min
Northwest Reports
The Hidden World of WA Surveillance
Federal relief funds are financing new surveillance technology across the state. Reporter Brandon Block discusses why privacy advocates are concerned. If you walk around downtown Seattle and look closely, you may notice that you’re being watched. From traffic cameras to automated license-plate readers, surveillance technology is all around us. And thanks to new funding from the American Rescue Plan, many cities across Washington and the country are buying even more technologies that can collect personal data. As Crosscut reporter Brandon Block discovered, the laws that govern this kind of technology are limited, and vary fro...
2023-07-26
21 min
Young Family Podcast
Austin and Sarah Bernard - Part 2
Today's episode concludes our time with Austin and Sara Bernard. We talk through the pregnancy timeline, how husbands can help their wives during pregnancy, infertility treatments and much more.
2023-07-16
48 min
Northwest Reports
Biking Every Single Street in Seattle
Reporter Conor Courtney explains how cyclist Danny Roberts began the passion project — and what the journey meant to both of them. In late 2021, freelance writer and photographer Conor Courtney noticed some strange patterns on the fitness app Strava. An acquaintance, Danny Roberts, was posting about riding his bike all over Seattle—but not on typical bike-friendly routes. He would consistently zig-zag back and forth on every street in a given neighborhood. Turns out Roberts was doing this for a specific purpose. He’d decided to bike every single street in the city of Seattle. In the en...
2023-07-12
21 min
Northwest Reports
Fixing a Fundraising Gap in WA Schools
PTSAs can reduce resource gaps, but also exacerbate inequities among schools. Reporter Venice Buhain shares local efforts working to change that. Seattle public schools, like most public schools, don’t all have the same resources to offer students. And they tend to rely on parent-led fundraising to fill in the gaps. But that can exacerbate the inequities that already exist, as wealthy families can often afford to donate the money and time that low-income families can’t. Crosscut associate news editor Venice Buhain recently dug into this issue in Seattle, exploring why these fundraising efforts, run...
2023-06-28
20 min
Northwest Reports
How Washington Cities Shape State Law
Politics reporter Joseph O’Sullivan details the Association of Washington Cities' sway over the Legislature. One of the most powerful lobbying forces in Olympia is the Association of Washington Cities, a nonprofit that represents the state’s 281 cities and towns. It has influenced lawmakers, defeated bills, and even written its own legislation — and often gets its way. Crosscut state politics reporter Joseph O’Sullivan has explored the many ways the Association has recently wielded its power. In collaboration with McClatchy reporter Shauna Sowersby, O’Sullivan looked at the influence of the Association through major legislation that came...
2023-06-21
21 min
Northwest Reports
Fighting Chronic Homelessness in One Small City
Reporter Mai Hoang discusses the growing issue in Central Washington and the efforts to build permanent supportive housing. Big cities like Seattle and Spokane get most of the attention when it comes to homelessness in Washington state. But housing instability is not limited to the borders of major metropolitan areas. For this episode of the Crosscut Reports podcast, we look at a smaller Washington city that has gotten less attention when we discuss homelessness or possible solutions: Yakima. Like larger urban areas, the Yakima region has recently seen significant growth in the number of people e...
2023-06-14
21 min
Northwest Reports
Learning from the Legacies of Black Artists
Writer Jas Keimig discusses their work profiling current creators and researching the lives of those that shouldn't be forgotten. Seattle has been home to Black artists of great renown, from Jimi Hendrix and Ernestine Anderson to Jacob Lawrence and August Wilson. But those big names are by no means the only ones from our city deserving of recognition. For this episode of the Crosscut Reports podcast, we’re peeling back the curtain on a massive multimedia project that seeks to shed light on artists past and present who have helped shape this city and region.
2023-06-07
30 min
The Kākā by Bernard Hickey
The Hoon: On the China Tightrope; Cycleways vs drivers
TLDR: The week’s news in Aotearoa’s political economy I covered via The Kākā for subscribers included:* The Labour Government’s announcement it would share the costs with councils and insurers of buying back about 700 now-uninhabitable homes (~$1 billion) and protecting another 10,000 at-risk homes (un-estimated) from extreme climate events after Cyclones Hale and Gabrielle, but couldn’t say how much it would or could pay, and how much it expected or would force councils and insurers to pay; Friday’s email* Data this week from CoreLogic, Realestate.co.nz and Barfoot and Thompson showed a bottoming...
2023-06-03
59 min
The Hoon
The Hoon: On the China Tightrope; Cycleways vs drivers
TLDR: The week’s news in Aotearoa’s political economy I covered via The Kākā for subscribers included:* The Labour Government’s announcement it would share the costs with councils and insurers of buying back about 700 now-uninhabitable homes (~$1 billion) and protecting another 10,000 at-risk homes (un-estimated) from extreme climate events after Cyclones Hale and Gabrielle, but couldn’t say how much it would or could pay, and how much it expected or would force councils and insurers to pay; Friday’s email* Data this week from CoreLogic, Realestate.co.nz and Barfoot and Thompson showed a bottoming...
2023-06-03
59 min
Northwest Reports
Supporting Girls’ Education in Afghanistan
As the Taliban tightens restrictions, Marnie Gustavson's nonprofit finds workarounds. Reporter Hal Bernton shares the WA native's history of advocacy. Journalist Hal Bernton took his first trip to Afghanistan back in 2009, to cover the war for The Seattle Times. There he met a Washington woman, Marnie Gustavson, and learned about PARSA, the Kabul-based nonprofit aid organization she has now led for 16 years. Through PARSA, Gustavson, who spent part of her childhood in Kabul, has helped run schools, improve orphanages and train teachers and social workers. Bernton returned to Afghanistan in 2012 and continued to cover both...
2023-05-31
21 min
Northwest Reports
What’s at Stake in the Seattle City Council Races
With 45 candidates vying for a district seat, a lot could shift this fall. Crosscut reporter Josh Cohen talks it through. Today, at the launch of Seattle’s 2023 campaign season, we examine some of the biggest issues our city faces. Crosscut city reporter Josh Cohen recently spoke with campaign consultants, pollsters, pundits, and representatives of big business and labor to get a sense of what’s at stake in this election and what voters might want. Complicating these issues, and the search for solutions, is that the Seattle City Council could face a seismic shift: Four incu...
2023-05-24
23 min
Northwest Reports
How Bikes Became Instruments of Police Enforcement
Seattle was an early adopter of the use of bicycles in law enforcement — especially as a form of crowd control. The SPD first put cops on bikes in 1987, but the “Battle of Seattle” WTO protests in 1999 began an era of more aggressive tactics. In recent years, bike cops have routinely anchored crowd-control efforts at events or demonstrations. Now, the use of bikes, and the crowd-control methods Seattle cops developed, have spread across the country. This kind of bike policing seems to be here to stay, but there are questions about its use. Freelance investigative reporters James...
2023-05-17
21 min
The Kākā by Bernard Hickey
Dawn Chorus: Luxon painting himself into an unpopular and power-less corner
TL;DR: Christopher Luxon’s decision to rule out National governing with Te Pāti Māori and to sound a Don Brash-like ‘one person, one vote’ alarm appears to be painting his party’s and his own support into a more extremist and less popular corner with fewer pathways to governing after the October 14 election. The latest Newshub-Reid Research poll out last night shows support for both National and Labour falling, with Green and ACT support virtually unchanged and the two blocs virtually tied, while Te Pāti Māori rose to 1.7 points to 3.5% and TOP rose 0.5% to...
2023-05-14
14 min
Northwest Reports
The Assault Weapons Ban and More From the WA Legislative Session
Crosscut politics reporter Joseph O’Sullivan and Axios reporter Melissa Santos break down the biggest developments from the 2023 legislative session. It was a busy legislative session in Olympia. By the time lawmakers adjourned on April 23, a slate of new bills affecting gun ownership, abortion, gender-affirming care and housing were on their way to Governor Inslee’s desk to become law. Host Sara Bernard examines it all in this special episode of Crosscut Reports, recorded live during the virtual portion of the Crosscut Ideas Festival on May 4, 2023. Crosscut state politics reporter Joseph O’Sullivan and Me...
2023-05-10
43 min
Northwest Reports
Why Pandemic Relief Set Off a Fraud Frenzy
Emergency actions put money in the hands of struggling small businesses — and opened the door for some scammers. Three years after the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, the relief efforts enacted by the U.S. government to shore up small businesses are still headline news. But the stories aren’t about recovery; they’re about fraud. Crosscut investigative reporter Brandon Block recently examined how the crime spree that has hit every corner of America played out in our state, revealing how easy it was for individuals and businesses to scam federal pandemic relief programs out of thou...
2023-05-03
21 min
Northwest Reports
How UW Does Diversity Without Affirmative Action
Reporter Andrew Engelson discusses WA's 1998 ban of the practice, and what UW has done since to increase racial equity on campus. The U.S. Supreme Court seems poised to strike down affirmative action across the nation, but if it does, little will change in Washington state. Washington has banned the practice since 1998, the year a ballot initiative altered state law to prohibit considering race as a factor in college admissions and in other public settings. After the ban was passed, enrollment of students of color at the University of Washington plunged, but numbers have crept b...
2023-04-19
20 min
Northwest Reports
Who Should Care for Street Trees?
Reporter Hannah Weinberger discusses the Seattle policy that many homeowners didn't even know existed. “Street trees” are the ones that line a city’s medians, roads and sidewalks. They beautify and provide wildlife habitat, of course, but they also help mitigate climate change. That’s part of why the health of Seattle’s street trees is so vital to the city’s goal of increasing its diminishing tree canopy. But while they’re technically on public land, maintaining street trees is not the city’s responsibility; their upkeep is the financial responsibility of the adjacent homeowner. ...
2023-04-12
22 min
Northwest Reports
The Effort to End a Tribal Housing Crisis
The Suquamish Tribe is using federal dollars to create more affordable housing. Crosscut reporter Luna Reyna discusses the roots of the problem and the solution. For many years the Suquamish Tribe and its citizens owned less than half of the land on their reservation in Washington, and many of those citizens have long struggled to afford housing there. This reality is based in large part on the forced federal assimilation policies of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. It’s also because of what the 21st-century U.S. government has called “Broken Promises.” But...
2023-04-05
22 min
Northwest Reports
The Future of Downtown Seattle
Reporter Josh Cohen discusses the city's plans — and readers' moonshot dreams — to improve the central business core. Just as technology was making working-from-home more convenient, the pandemic, and the social-distancing requirements that came with it, accelerated the process. Remote work is probably here to stay, so it’s unlikely offices in Downtown Seattle will ever be filled to capacity again – and the decreased daily worker traffic will impact, perhaps permanently, the businesses that depended on their presence. Crosscut city reporter Josh Cohen has been speaking with city leaders, urban planners, real estate professionals, business owners, workers...
2023-03-29
20 min
Wake Up and Dream!
Episode 54: Don’t find yourself, Create Yourself, An Interview with Christie Deiter
“Life is not about finding yourself; Life is about creating yourself.” George Bernard Shaw Today we had the privilege of talking with Mom Mentor and Wellness Coach, Christie Deiter. Christie is a mom of 3 with a passion to help moms thrive. Her own journey with pregnancy and postpartum fuels her desire to provide women with a simple and do-able method created to help women in every stage of life to thrive. So often we hear how important it is to think positive thoughts and control our thought life, and yes this is true; but Christie discovered that the miss...
2023-03-27
30 min
Northwest Reports
Providing Afghans With Refuge After War
Director Thanh Tan explains how her experience as a child of refugees led her to help those displaced after the fall of Kabul and make a Crosscut docu-series about their plight. When Thanh Tan learned that the United States military had withdrawn from Afghanistan and left the capital, Kabul, in the hands of the Taliban, she felt she needed to do something. She saw striking similarities between the plight of Afghans fleeing their country in the wake of the withdrawal and the plight of her parents and others who had fled Vietnam after the fal...
2023-03-22
20 min
Northwest Reports
The Painful Legacy of the Wah Mee Club Killings
Reporter Maleeha Syed talks about revisiting Washington's worst mass shooting without reopening wounds. It has been 40 years since the Wah Mee massacre, the deadliest mass shooting in Washington history and one that had a devastating impact on many of the residents of Seattle’s Chinatown International District. For some, it wasn’t just the shooting that caused the pain, but the media’s coverage of the tragedy, which employed xenophobic tropes that painted the neighborhood as a dangerous place. In fact, some survivors have asked journalists not to cover these anniversaries anymore. For this epi...
2023-03-15
21 min
Northwest Reports
The Rise of the Unionized Barista
Reporter Lizz Giordano discusses the recent labor organizing push in Washington and the struggles between Starbucks and its workers. When employees at a Starbucks coffee shop in Buffalo, New York, voted to unionize in December 2021, it was big news. The result was a first for the Seattle-based corporation. Since then, workers at hundreds of locations across the country have followed suit. But in the year since, almost nothing has happened at the bargaining table. And union members allege that Starbucks has retaliated in a number of ways, from closing unionized stores to creating new benefits f...
2023-03-01
20 min
Northwest Reports
The Burden of Rent in the Rest of Washington
Places like Walla Walla, Yakima and Spokane are not the affordable alternatives they once were, but solutions could be coming. It's no secret that the cost of living in the Seattle area is very high. Lesser known is the impact that rising housing costs have had on people throughout the state of Washington. While the overall numbers are highest in Seattle, rent increases have created an even greater burden for people living in the state’s smaller towns and cities. The state has taken notice, with both the governor and some lawmakers pressing for...
2023-02-22
19 min
Northwest Reports
Fixing Prison Culture the Scandinavian Way
Reporter Joseph O’Sullivan visited one of Washington state's penitentiaries that is trying to change the relationship between guards and prisoners. A new effort being piloted in Washington state prisons seeks to improve culture behind bars. The program, called AMEND, is modeled on the prison system in Norway, where a stated goal of incarceration is to create better neighbors. The Washington State Department of Corrections hopes AMEND can help improve interactions among corrections officers and inmates and create better outcomes when the incarcerated are released. For this episode of the Crosscut Reports podcast, hos...
2023-02-15
22 min
Northwest Reports
Revolution in the Dance Department
Western and European forms have long dominated dance education in the United States. Journalist Marcie Sillman tells us how the University of Washington is changing that, and what questions that shift poses to higher education. The University of Washington dance department has placed itself in the vanguard of a movement to open, or maybe knock down, academia's ivory towers. Starting this past fall, the small department has remade itself in an attempt to decenter European perspectives in its course offerings, like many other departments on campus. At the same time, it has made another change t...
2023-02-08
19 min
Northwest Reports
Fighting Back the Floodwaters on the WA Coast
Reporter Hannah Weinberger tells us how a monumental levee project could ease economic turbulence in two Grays Harbor County towns. For coastal communities like those in Washington’s Grays Harbor County, flooding has long been a part of life. But as floods have become more frequent and severe, this aspect of life at (or below) sea level has become an existential threaten to the livelihoods of those who live in these economically distressed areas. People living and working in the towns of Hoquiam and Aberdeen, for instance, are beset by the prohibitive costs of flood ins...
2023-02-01
17 min
Northwest Reports
The State of Abortion in Washington State
Without federal protection for abortion, the state has become a refuge for those seeking care and a target for political opposition. The past year has been a seismic one for reproductive rights in the United States. And the aftershocks appear far from over. When the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, the stage was set for abortion bans or restrictions in many states, as well as for a political groundswell from Americans who believe in a right to abortion and for uncertainty for those seeking abortions, those providing them and states, like Washington, that allow t...
2023-01-25
19 min
Northwest Reports
The Battle Over Graffiti in Seattle
What reporter Margo Vansynghel learned from talking to the mayor, the artists and the people who cover up spray paint over and over and over again. Graffiti is a part of everyday life in Seattle, from the smallest tag on a street sign to the giant letters greeting commuters along the interstate. But it is a part of city life that Mayor Bruce Harrell believes should be brought under control. That is why he recently launched a new effort to address what he has called a dramatic increase in illegal graffiti across Seattle in the p...
2023-01-18
15 min
Northwest Reports
What WA Democrats Want
The party has used its legislative majorities year after year to check off a lot of its wish list. What now? When the Washington state legislative session started on Monday, January 9, Democrats were in the driver’s seat. The party currently controls both houses and the governorship, making it one of 16 states where Democrats have achieved a so-called state government trifecta. It’s a familiar position for the party, which has held the trifecta since 2018. In that time, Democrats have crossed a number of items off their legislative wish list, including most recently the passage of a...
2023-01-11
14 min
Mossback
Frank Waldron and the Jackson Street Jazz Scene
Before there was Ernestine Anderson, Ray Charles and Quincy Jones, there was Frank Waldron. The unfortunate irony of Seattle’s storied jazz scene of the early 20th century is that there are many stories but not much jazz to account for it. While recording technology existed at the time, it wasn’t being used to capture much of the music being created in those early years of the Jackson Street music scene. The music has instead spread its influence through compositions and the living tradition of musicians passing the music down through generations. On both coun...
2022-11-18
25 min
Mossback
Emily Carr’s Mysterious and Majestic Forests
The Canadian artist created landscapes unlike her contemporaries’, intuiting the web of life beneath the canopy and putting it on canvas. As a painter in early 20th-century British Columbia, Emily Carr approached her subject matter through a colonial lens and expressed what she saw with a modernist style developed in the studios of London and Paris. She earned renown for her early depictions of Indigenous cultures, work that would later be criticized as appropriative. It was later in her career, though, that she focused more intently on the forests themselves, intuiting a web of life ben...
2022-11-11
24 min
Mossback
Chief Joseph’s Seattle Sojourn
He was invited to the city to talk about his storied past, but the Nez Perce chief had his eye on the future of his people. When Chief Joseph arrived in Seattle in 1903, he had a message to deliver and a public interested in hearing it. He had become a kind of celebrity, though the nature of his renown was complicated. A leader of the Wallowa band of the Nez Perce Tribe, Joseph had joined his people as they were pushed out of their ancestral home in northeast Oregon by the U.S. Army. And...
2022-11-04
24 min
Mossback
The Pig War That Almost Was
A border conflict between the U.S. and Britain, combined with the ambitions of a future Confederate general, almost turned the Salish Sea into a war zone. The so-called Pig War of 1859 may have been initiated by the killing of a boar, but other forces were at play that nearly elevated a neighborly conflict into an international conflagration. The conflict took place on San Juan Island, a disputed territory that was home to both American and British colonists. And on the American side was a future Confederate general eager for conflict. Crosscut's resident h...
2022-10-28
24 min
Mossback
When Wyatt Earp Came to Seattle
There was money to be had during the Klondike Gold Rush of the late 1890s. And the infamous lawman knew how to get it. Wyatt Earp was a man often on the move. In the two decades after his and Doc Holliday’s storied shootout at the OK Corral in Tombstone, Arizona, he spent time in San Francisco, Utah and Alaska, shading his reputation with turns as a sportsman, gambler and entrepreneur. The gold rushes of the late 19th century charted the course for Earp and his common-law wife, Josephine, as they moved from boomtown to...
2022-10-21
27 min
Mossback
The Singing Protest of Paul Robeson
The accomplished actor, athlete and singer was an outspoken leftist, which made him a target in mid-1900s America. The reasons Paul Robeson was a beloved figure in the middle of the 20th century are many. He was a professional athlete, an accomplished actor and a sought-after singer. Yet for some in American government, his role as an outspoken activist defined him. Robeson's criticism of his country's race relations and foreign policy made him a pariah to those who viewed him as an ideological enemy of the U.S. in the emerging Cold War. Eventually hi...
2022-10-14
29 min
Mossback
Exploring the Life of Roald Amundsen
The famed Arctic explorer thrived when times were tough, and they were often tough. In the years that followed he would become the first person to successfully reach the South Pole and, later, would travel to the North Pole. Before that latter trip, Amundsen returned to Seattle and set up camp for six months, updating his gear and shoring up his finances. Crosscut's resident historian Knute Berger told the story of Amundsen's time in Seattle in a recent episode of his Mossback's Northwest video series, but there is much more to explore. For t...
2022-10-07
25 min
Stew on This!
Mango Lassi & Grant Green Jr.
On this fresh episode of "Stew on This!", Rob and Karl make Mango Lassi and chat with jazz guitarist, Grant Green Jr. The guys talk about his new album, "Thank You Mr. Bacharach", what he learned from George Benson, the most challenging thing for him when he started playing, what it was like growing up next door to Stevie Wonder's parents and jamming with Stevie when they were kids, Col. Bruce Hampton, Bernard Purdie, Japanese and Italian food, his favorite place in the world and more. Find the hosts online: Rob Turner: https://twitter.com/Rs...
2022-10-06
1h 27
Mossback
The Portal at the Panama Hotel
The Seattle landmark is best known for its connection to the incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II — but it has more stories to tell. The Panama Hotel in Seattle’s Chinatown-International District is best known for the role it played during the expulsion and incarceration of Japanese Americans after President Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066. That order resulted in more than 120,000 men, women and children on the West Coast being forcibly removed from their homes, taking with them only what they could carry. The Panama agreed to keep safe what many who were removed from...
2022-09-30
29 min
77 Flavors of Chicago: History & Culture
Austin 2 - Bernard Turner
Ayye! Another quick turnaround back to Austin! This time we are joined by Chicago historian, Bernard Turner! He has a ton of experience in and out of Chicago. We sat in the beautiful, and very real, Columbus Park while eating at a local favorite, Terry's Place! The food is fantastic! Tune in and learn some more!Visit our website and check out our new interactive map to visit all the restaurants and cool sites we've featured on the podcast! BPositiveProd.com/77FlavorsChiThank you to our partner, Choose Chicago! #chicaGOandKnow...
2022-08-24
42 min
Mossback
The Real Story of the Mercer Girls
In pop culture, the relocation of 'marriageable' women to places like Seattle was played as a humorous, feel-good story. It wasn’t. In the midst of the Civil War, a man named Asa Mercer headed East to seek out women to move to the small frontier town of Seattle. It’s a familiar story, one that served as inspiration for a television show called Here Come the Brides and the musical Seven Brides for Seven Brothers. Those shows played the scheme for good-hearted laughs, but the reality was no laughing matter. Settling the frontier was a lar...
2022-03-29
28 min
Old Time Radio Listener
The Adventures 0f Ozzie and Harriet -Retreat From Civilization
Ever since Ozzie Nelson was a little boy his parents taught him courage, determination and a sense of honor. These are the virtues it takes to keep a promise. The Ozzie Nelson of today has the same grim determination to keep his promise to take his kids on a woodland hike even though he’d rather go to the game. David and Ricky too don’t want to let their father down even though they also would rather go to the game. Harriet has a plan so that they can all go to the game without anyone breaking their prom...
2022-03-27
29 min
This Changes Everything
Ep. 6 - Learning About Learning (Season 3)
For some families, the shutdowns provided an opportunity to understand how to become better advocates for their kids. Of all the educational challenges created by the pandemic, none is likely as great as the requirement that public schools continue to provide “free and appropriate” education for students with special needs. For many students and families involved in special education, the shutdowns were a nightmare. So many crucial learning accommodations seemed to vanish overnight. Local and national media decried the many failures, lawsuits were filed, and state investigations into districts, including Seattle Public Schools, found violations of th...
2022-03-23
34 min
This Changes Everything
Ep. 5 - The Roots of Hope (Season 3)
In the midst of the pandemic and in the wake of 2020 protests against racism, one group of students in Washington state pressed for real change … and achieved it. When the protests spurred by the murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis police spilled into the streets of American cities, the initial focus was on policing. But in the weeks and months that followed, a reckoning with racist practices took hold in almost all aspects of American culture. Education was on the list. In Washington state, a number of teachers had already been committing a portion of the...
2022-03-23
43 min
This Changes Everything
Ep. 4 - ’I Wasn’t Safe Before’ (Season 3)
For some students and educators, the school shutdowns offered a break from the racism they typically experienced at school. When the pandemic hit and schools shut down, a broad spectrum of emotions followed. There was uncertainty and dread, along with a kind of naive giddiness that accompanies the potential of an unplanned, extended spring break. And then, according to a number of the students of color interviewed for this season of This Changes Everything, there was a sense of relief. The relief, they said, came with the realization that they wouldn’t be subject to the...
2022-03-23
38 min
This Changes Everything
Ep. 3 - Online Learning is Here to Stay (Season 3)
Having remote classes in the early part of the pandemic was difficult. But for some teachers, it has been a revelation. Consensus in education is difficult to come by, and the pandemic certainly has not changed that. But one thing that most everyone seems to agree on is this: Online learning was terrible. As schools moved to remote education, most everything was thrown online as quickly as possible. It was a crisis and, given the public health restrictions, there weren’t any other options. And, as later research showed, there were costs. There have been so...
2022-03-23
41 min
This Changes Everything
Ep. 1 - Grace (Season 3)
Early in the pandemic, many educators gave student well-being priority over academic performance. Some never stopped. When schools shut down early in the COVID-19 pandemic, it was unprecedented. The vast majority of teachers had never done school outside the school building before. The vast majority of students hadn’t, either. And no one knew from day to day how long the shutdown would last. Cases were on the rise and lots of parents were losing their jobs. It was a collective trauma that affected students and teachers alike. And because schools were in survival mode, an...
2022-03-23
38 min
Mossback
The Rise and Ruin of the Cayton-Revels Family
Horace Cayton Sr. headed west in the late 19th century and found success and opportunity in Seattle. Then an ugly new era changed the city and his family's fortunes. When Cayton moved out of the Jim Crow South in the late 19th century, it appeared that the young man had found a new kind of freedom and opportunity in Seattle. A member of the city's then-small African American population, Cayton started a widely read publication, The Seattle Republican, and with his wife, Suzie Sumner Revels, found considerable success. Then, in the early 20th c...
2022-03-22
32 min
Mossback
Famous Dogs of the PNW
From Lewis and Clark’s trusted companion to a lifesaving sled dog, these canines have been honored with statues, taxidermy and legend. It is a well-documented fact that, in Seattle at least, dogs outnumber children. And while that ratio may even out as you look further afield, its hard to deny that dogs have a major influence over life in the Pacific Northwest. That has long been the case and the roles that those dogs have played in the story of the region have been varied and include the woolly dogs bred by the Coast Sal...
2022-03-15
28 min
Mossback
The Photographer Who Defined the PNW
Brother to Edward, Asahel Curtis had his own approach to capturing the culture of the region. The way we see the modern history of the Pacific Northwest would have been very different if a certain family of homesteaders hadn't settled in Kitsap County in the late nineteenth century. Out of that family of farmers would come, not one, but two prolific photographers whose work would help define the region for generations to come. Edward Curtis is the more famous of the two brothers, his stylized portraits of Native Americans securing himself a place in...
2022-03-08
31 min
Mossback
How Crab Louis Became King
No one really knows who made the first of these delicacies, but some sleuthing reveals an origin spurred by the gold rush and railroads. Crab has been a part of the culture of what we now call the Pacific Northwest for a very long time. But how the people of this region eat that crab has changed over the years and those changes can tell a lot. Take Crab Louis, for instance. As a dish it is fairly simple: some crab, some vegetables, some red sauce. Yet the story of Crab Louis is one of w...
2022-02-15
27 min
Mossback
Who Was Paul Bunyan For?
The legendary lumberjack has been central to American identity. But who does he really represent? Over the course of the past two centuries, tall tales of Paul Bunyan have stretched across North America, from the frigid woods of the East Coast all the way to the Pacific. With his ax and his ox Babe, the legendary lumberjack is said to have single-handedly shaped the continent. That was all fiction, of course. Much of the landscape that Bunyan is credited with creating was here long before any white man with an ax showed up. And the f...
2022-02-08
31 min
Mossback
Where Did All the Sea Monsters Go?
Headlines about sea creatures were once a regular occurrence around the Salish Sea. We take a deep dive into local lore. When it comes to cryptids, there is one creature that puts the Pacific Northwest on the map: Sasquatch. But Bigfoot hasn’t always had a monopoly on mysterious sightings in the area. Sea monsters long inspired horror and fascination around the Salish Sea and on the Pacific Coast. Large creatures in the waters of the Northwest are depicted in Indigenous artworks from precolonial times, and frontier newspapers regularly carried tales of frightening sea creatures. The...
2022-02-01
31 min
Mossback
Why D.B. Cooper Won’t Disappear
A closer examination — with more theories — of the case of the world’s most famous mile-high bandit. On the afternoon of Nov. 24, 1971, a man calling himself Dan Cooper boarded a Seattle-bound 727 in Portland, with plans to pull off what would become a historic heist. Later that night, the man leapt from the plane with $200,000 in hand and, presumably, a parachute on his back. He was never heard from again. Yet the story of that high-flying crime has been told innumerable times, turning the man who became known as D.B. Cooper into a kind of folk he...
2022-01-25
31 min
This Changes Everything
Introducing the Mossback podcast!
This week we have a special preview of Mossback, a companion podcast to the popular Mossback’s Northwest video series that airs on KCTS 9. The Mossback podcast digs deeper into the topics that fans want to know more about from the current season of Mossback’s Northwest. Hosted by Sara Bernard, each episode of this series will feature an interview with Mossback, Knute Berger, about one episode of the video series. The podcasts will provide stories and factoids that were left on the cutting room floor, along with critical analysis from Berger and a greater context that will s...
2022-01-12
06 min
Crosscut Escapes
Introducing the Mossback podcast!
This week we have a special preview of Mossback, a companion podcast to the popular Mossback’s Northwest video series that airs on KCTS 9. The Mossback podcast digs deeper into the topics that fans want to know more about from the current season of Mossback’s Northwest. Hosted by Sara Bernard, each episode of this series will feature an interview with Mossback, Knute Berger, about one episode of the video series. The podcasts will provide stories and factoids that were left on the cutting room floor, along with critical analysis from Berger and a greater context that will...
2022-01-12
06 min
Mossback
Introducing the Mossback podcast!
Mossback is the companion podcast to the popular Mossback’s Northwest video series that airs on KCTS 9. The Mossback podcast digs deeper into the topics that fans want to know more about from the current season of Mossback’s Northwest. Hosted by Sara Bernard, each episode of this series will feature an interview with Mossback, Knute Berger, about one episode of the video series. The podcasts will provide stories and factoids that were left on the cutting room floor, along with critical analysis from Berger and a greater context that will stitch each topic into the long, stor...
2022-01-11
05 min
Talk Classic To Me
Vertigo (1958)
Do you like the color green? Do you have an unhealthy obsession with Kim Novak? Do you have complicated feelings about bell towers? Then Vertigo is the film for you! Check out this gorgeously detailed masterpiece directed by Alfred Hitchcock, featuring James Stewart, Kim Novak, Barbara Bel Geddes, and an exceptionally haunting score by Bernard Herrmann. Host, Sara Greenfield and her guests Ashley Blanchet and Allen Rueckert chat about all this and more on this week's episode of Talk Classic To Me.
2021-11-17
1h 31
Novel Pairings
Palpable tension and shocking twists in Passing by Nella Larsen
When we first released our episode on Passing by Nella Larsen in June of 2020, we were already professing our excitement for the new movie starring Tessa Thompson and Ruth Nega. This month, the film is finally releasing on Netflix. We can’t wait to watch and see how the palpable tension and twisty tone translate to the screen. This episode contains spoilers, but we give you ample warning so feel free to listen before or after watching. Our discussion includes: Gatsby connections galore, and an argument for replacing Gatsby with Passing [16:35] Intersectionality and Irene’s strug...
2021-11-09
1h 02
Connecting with Coincidence 2.0 with Bernard Beitman, MD
EP205, Harley Rotbart: Using Coincidences to Live without Regret
A renown Pediatrician offers coincidence awareness as a key to No Regrets Living. Some astounding medical coincidences illustrate this idea. In this episode, Harley Rotbart discusses phenomenal medical coincidences and relates them to the question of fate. He also addresses the problems with the Law of Very Large Numbers: the favorite explanation for coincidences by statisticians. This “law,” which cannot be proven, asserts that the strange events will inevitably occur in our busy world with its infinite opportunities for overlapping events. Connecting with Coincidence with Bernard Beitman, MD (CCBB) is now offered as both an audi...
2021-07-19
47 min
The Covenant Path (formerly The Busy Latter-day Saint)
Doing the Impossible and Faith
Serge Mayer, husband and father shares how the Lord and faith have guided him and his wife as he attended university and worked full-time while managing a growing family that includes a special needs son. Currently, serving as a Bishop, he shares how he draws spiritual strength from the scriptures and how, with his wife Sara, they turn to the Lord for counsel. Please subscribe to this podcast and share your comments. When you subscribe and share comments, it increases the show's rating and makes it easier for people to find. Leaving a comment is easy just...
2021-05-03
30 min
This Changes Everything
Ep. 6 - When Defunding the Police Meets Political Reality (Season 2)
More than 6 months after first pledging to rethink public safety, city leaders face opposition. What’s next? As anti-racism protesters filled city streets this past summer with calls for a radical rethinking of public safety, a majority of Seattle City Council members responded by committing to cut the city's police budget by 50%. But making good on that promise has been difficult. In this, the final episode of This Changes Everything’s focus on efforts to defund the police, Sara Bernard and David Kroman discuss the political pain and potential ramifications that have come since the coun...
2021-01-28
37 min
This Changes Everything
Ep. 5 - Defund, Then What? Activist Ideas for Police Dollars (Season 2)
Many activists leading the call to defund the police say the answer to disproportionate policing is to take money from the cops and give it to communities. But change is never as easy as writing new lines in a city budget. In this episode of This Changes Everything’s look at efforts to defund the police, Sara Bernard and David Kroman examine emerging community programs that are seeking to take the place of police as a way to dismantle the systemic racism that has long been part of the American criminal justice system. These Seattle pr...
2021-01-28
34 min
This Changes Everything
Ep. 4 - A Ride Along With a Police Alternative (Season 2)
As cities have searched for non-police options for crisis response, many have arrived in an unlikely place: Eugene, Oregon. In this episode of This Changes Everything’s focus on efforts to defunding the police, host Sara Bernard heads to Eugene for a virtual ride along with CAHOOTS (Crisis Assistance Helping Out on the Streets), an inventive and unique effort to respond to crisis calls with social workers instead of police. In the calls to defund police and invest in alternatives, CAHOOTS has become the model. We get the real story about how it works and wha...
2021-01-28
33 min
This Changes Everything
Ep. 3 - Who’s to Blame When Crisis Calls Go Wrong (Season 2)
Seattle police have undergone additional training to better respond to people in crisis, but still things go wrong and people die. Why? Seattle police, more than many police departments, have extensive training to improve their response to people in crisis — but people are still dying. In this episode of This Changes Everything’s focus on defunding the police, we look at what happens when things go wrong. Reporter David Kroman revisits the case of Charleena Lyles, a young Black mother who was killed by Seattle police in one of the department's most controversial incidents. There is li...
2021-01-28
33 min
This Changes Everything
Ep. 2 - Cops, Crisis Calls and Conflict Over Who Should Help (Season 2)
The debate over public safety is filled with disagreements, but almost everyone agrees on one thing: We need another option for people in crisis. In this episode of This Changes Everything’s focus on defunding the police, reporter David Kroman rides along with Sandlin Grayson, a member of the Seattle Police Department Crisis Response Team, to observe how the police approach crisis calls. Kroman then speaks to the team at the Downtown Emergency Service Center, one of Seattle’s largest nonprofits serving the homeless. Although they have some appreciation for cops like Grayson, they argue that...
2021-01-28
34 min
This Changes Everything
Ep. 1 - How Reform Gave Way to ‘Defund the Police’ in Seattle (Season 2)
The city spent a decade working to reform its police department. Then, the turmoil of 2020 started a new movement. In the midst of the anti-racism protests that followed the killing of George Floyd by Minneapolis police last spring, a new cry went out: "Defund the police!" And in the weeks that followed, Seattle city leaders appeared to be listening. Members of the Seattle City Council, responding to strong advocacy from inside and outside government, pledged to cut the police force by 50%. Cuts did come, but in the end they were less than revolutionary and the...
2021-01-28
28 min
The Covenant Path (formerly The Busy Latter-day Saint)
Creating Scripture Stories
Sara Mayer, wife and mother of five children with one severely disabled, shares how she finds the time to study the scriptures and bring the scriptures into her children's lives. Please subscribe to this podcast and share your comments. When you subscribe and share comments, it increases the show's rating and makes it easier for people to find. Do not know how to leave a rating or comments? The links below will quickly show you how. You can also share your comments, request to be a guest, or recommend someone you feel who would make a great guest by contacting...
2020-11-10
48 min
The Covenant Path (formerly The Busy Latter-day Saint)
Creating Scripture Stories
Sara Mayer, wife and mother of five children with one severely disabled, shares how she finds the time to study the scriptures and bring the scriptures into her children's lives. Please subscribe to this podcast and share your comments. When you subscribe and share comments, it increases the show's rating and makes it easier for people to find. Do not know how to leave a rating or comments? The links below will quickly show you how. You can also share your comments, request to be a guest, or recommend someone you feel who would make a great guest by contacting...
2020-11-09
00 min
Old Time Radio Listener
Mercury Theater - Search for Henry Le Ferre
There is no summary for this play: so we are getting some background history of the Mercury Theater. Mercury Theatre. The Mercury Theatre was an independent repertory theatre company founded in New York City in 1937 by Orson Welles and producer John Houseman. The company produced theatrical presentations, radio programs and motion pictures. The Mercury Theatre began with a groundbreaking, critically acclaimed adaption of The Tragedy of Julius Caesar that evoked comparison to contemporary Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany. The Mercury Theatre on the Air was an hour-long program. Houseman wrote the early scripts...
2020-09-15
24 min
D’Amato & Szabo: Wine Thieves
Episode 2 A - Bourgogne for a Changing World: The Grand Auxerrois
John and Sara continue their exploration of Burgundy's (sorry "Bourgogne"'s) lesser known gems as they wax poetic about heatless sunshine, variations in limestone and the nearly extinct grape variety of César. In this episode they welcome Magali Bernard of Domaine Clos du Roi from Coulange-la-Vineuse.
2020-07-24
32 min
Novel Pairings
Passing by Nella Larsen and books about complicated sisterhood
Today Chelsey and Sara are chatting about Passing by Nella Larsen. Published in 1929, Passing is a book about two women: Clare and Irene, who grew up in the same middle class Black community in Chicago and come back into each other's lives as adults. Irene is living in Harlem with her husband, a successful doctor, while Clare has left the family and friends of her youth behind to marry a white man and pass as white. Clare and Irene’s bond is built on a shared past and a deep mutual affection, but also curiosity and jealousy over the li...
2020-06-23
1h 01
Access Essential Full Audiobooks in Mystery, Thriller & Horror, Suspense
The Dead Can't Speak: DI Sara Ramsey Book 3 by M.A. Comley
Please visithttps://thebookvoice.com/podcasts/1/audiobook/428598to listen full audiobooks. Title: The Dead Can't Speak: DI Sara Ramsey Book 3 Series: #3 of DI Sarah Ramsey Author: M.A. Comley Narrator: Louise Amos Format: Unabridged Audiobook Length: 5 hours 33 minutes Release date: April 16, 2020 Genres: Suspense Publisher's Summary: From the NY Times bestelling author of the Justice series with over two and a half million copies sold to date. Ideal thriller for fans of Angie Marsons, Robert Bryndza, and Leslie Wolfe. Some people have secrets... And there are those who have deadly secrets... The murder of an unidentified woman in a hotel room proves t...
2020-04-16
5h 33
Tillåt kakor
32. Biskvier & Sara Bernard
Biskvier & Sara Bernard - vad är egentligen skillnaden? Hur stor får en biskvi vara? Hur bakar man dem utan mandel och hur lyckas man egentligen med att täcka dem snyggt med choklad. Svar på detta och mycket mer får ni i avsnittet som är tillägnat vår älskade chokladbiskvi.
2020-01-31
00 min
Tillåt kakor
32. Biskvier & Sara Bernard
Biskvier & Sara Bernard - vad är egentligen skillnaden? Hur stor får en biskvi vara? Hur bakar man dem utan mandel och hur lyckas man egentligen med att täcka dem snyggt med choklad. Svar på detta och mycket mer får ni i avsnittet som är tillägnat vår älskade chokladbiskvi. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
2020-01-31
1h 02
Crosscut
WHEN FREE SPEECH BECOMES HATE SPEECH
Last August, the nation was stunned by the sight of white nationalists and Nazi sympathizers marching in the streets of Charlottesville, Virginia. What began as a protest against the removal of a Confederate statue ended in bloodshed, as a white nationalist drove his car into a crowd of counterprotesters. Charlottesville shone a spotlight on a rising tide of hate and hate speech on college campuses, including here in the Pacific Northwest. Seattle reporter Sara Bernard leads a conversation about the line between free speech and hate speech on campus, and what different schools are doing to police it. Panelists: Sara...
2018-02-09
44 min
barganews
sara moscardini - bernard moscardini
http://www.barganews.com/2017/01/21/bernard-moscardini-la-vacanza/ Bernard Moscardini – La Vacanza Presentation today of the Italian version of Bernard Moscardini’s book La Vacanza. The book was first published in English in December 2009 – article here but has now been translated by Sara Moscardini and published by the Cento Lumi group here in Barga This is the true story of a young boy’s holiday. In May 1940 nine-year-old Bernard Moscardini and his mother set off from Bedlington, Northumberland for a summer holiday in the tiny mountain village of Sommocolonia in Northern Tuscany. Soon after their arrival Benito Mussolini declares war on Britain and France...
2017-01-02
13 min
The Purrrcast
027 - Alyssa Onofreo - The Protective Paw
Do you love cats? Do you love talking about cats? The Purrrcast is a brand new Los Angeles-based podcast from Sara Iyer and Steven Ray Morris where they chat with their friends and other feline fans about the furry little creatures they love. Not sure how the cats feel about it though, but I’m sure they love it too. On episode twenty-seven of The Purrrcast we welcome YouTube vlogger and comedian Alyssa Onofreo to talk about all the things! We all share our opinions on bats, the waterbed lifestyle, Alyssa talks about her cats Caboose and Sheila back home, Ne...
2016-03-23
56 min
Download Best Full Audiobooks in Mysteries & Thrillers, Suspense
Sharpe's Trafalgar: The Battle of Trafalgar, 21 October 1805 (The Sharpe Series, Book 4) Audiobook by Bernard Cornwell
Listen to this audiobook in full for free onhttp://hotaudiobook.comTitle: Sharpe's Trafalgar: The Battle of Trafalgar, 21 October 1805 (The Sharpe Series, Book 4) Author: Bernard Cornwell Narrator: Rupert Farley Format: Unabridged Length: 13 hrs and 12 mins Language: English Release date: 06-26-14 Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers Limited Ratings: 5 of 5 out of 30 votes Genres: Mysteries & Thrillers, Suspense Publisher's Summary: Richard Sharpe, travelling home aboard the 'Revenant', meets Admiral Nelson and his fleet, on what was a calm October day off Cape Trafalgar. Soldier, hero, rogue - Sharpe is the man you always want on your side. Born in poverty, he joined the army to...
2014-06-26
1h 12
How To Download FREE Audiobook of any Book of Fiction & Literature, Historical Fiction
Love Among the Artists Full Audiobook by George Bernard Shaw
Please visithttp://hotaudiobook.comto listen to 400,000+ audiobooks of all genres in full for free Title: Love Among the Artists Author: George Bernard Shaw Narrator: Expatriate Length: 11 hrs 26 mins Language: English Release date: 1/1/2011 Publisher: LibriVox Genres: Fiction & Literature, Literary Fiction Publisher's Summary: Love Among the Artists was published in the United States in 1900 and in England in 1914, but it was written in 1881. In the ambience of chit-chat and frivolity among members of Victorian polite society a youthful Shaw describes his views on the arts, romantic love and the practicalities of matrimony. Dilettantes, he thinks, can love and settle down to marriage...
2011-01-01
6h 46
Get Top 100 Audiobooks in Sci-Fi & Fantasy, Sci-Fi: Classic
Paradis sur mesure Livre Audio par Bernard Werber
Écoutez ce livre audio dans son intégralité gratuitement surhttp://hotaudiobook.com/freeTitre: Paradis sur mesure Auteur: Bernard Werber Narrateur: Pierre-Marie Escourrou Format: Abridged Durée: 5 hrs and 23 mins Langue: Français Date de publication: 01-28-09 Éditeur: Audiolib Evaluation: 3 sur 5 sur 2 votes Genres: Sci-Fi & Fantasy, Sci-Fi: Classic Résumé de l'éditeur: Imaginez un monde uniquement peuplé de femmes, où les hommes ne sont plus qu'une légende... Imaginez un monde où il est interdit de se souvenir du passé, où les gens n'ont qu'un seul intérêt: le cinéma... Futurs possibles, passés probables... Histoires sous forme de contes, lé...
2009-01-28
5h 23