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#TNC Podcasts
And that's a wrap! Join Reeah and Jem for our last episode of Podcast Nine and Three Quarters. We discuss highlights and what we have learned, say goodbye and thank our listeners, and reveal an exciting surprise...
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namimikan · 3 months
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ROMULAN COMMANDER TOMALAK IS BABYLON 5 G'KAR?????
well. that certainly explains the appeal!!!
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So I help run a little thing called Super-Blog Team-Up and our bombastic blogging brigade released a full blog / podcast event and am super proud of the teams product!! Here is the latest event in it’s entirety. Each link unlocks a new chapter in our latest event “Super-Blog Team-Up Goes To Hell! “ Find your new favorite blog or podcast today!
Between The Pages Blog - Hostess Comic Book Ads Were Hot Stuff
https://www.betweenthepagesblog.com/2022/10/hostess-comic-book-ads-were-hot-stuff.html
Magazines and Monsters Presents- Super Blog Team Up Special! The Son of Satan (Marvel Spotlight 12 and 13, 1973) with Charlton Hero!
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/magazines-and-monsters-presents-super-blog-team-up/id1459643898?i=1000583919620
The Telltale Mind - Patsy Walker - To Hell and Back (and Back and Back...)
https://thetelltalemind.com/2022/10/26/patsy-walker-to-hell-and-back-and-back-and-back
Source Material Comics Podcast - Batman/Punisher “Lake of Fire” - Evan Bevins and Jesse Starcher -
https://www.spreaker.com/user/5870686/sm-batman-punisher-lake-of-fire
Mark Radulich : Alternative Commentary on Hell Comes to Frogtown
https://www.spreaker.com/episode/51571432
News Print Commando - Rex Zombie Killer
https://www.comicbooknoise.com/tnc/2022/10/26/rex-zombie-killer/
Dave’s Comics Blog: Superman: The Blaze/ Satanus War
https://davescomicheroes.blogspot.com/2022/10/superman-goes-to-hell-blaze-satanus-war.html
In My Not So Humble Opinion - Savage Dragon Goes To Hell
https://benjaminherman.wordpress.com/2022/10/26/super-blog-team-up-savage-dragon-goes-to-hell/
Asterisk 51 Blog - Sunday school with… Hellboy?!?!?
https://asterisk51.blogspot.com/2022/10/sunday-school-with-hellboy.html
Comics Comics Comics Blog - The Son of Satan and the preacher's kids - Will looks at Son of Satan and the Defenders.
https://comicscomicscomics.blog/?p=1913
Superhero Satellite: Spider-Ham in the world of Licensing Hell! https://charltonhero.wordpress.com/2022/10/26/super-blog-team-up-goes-to-hell-spider-ham-in-the-world-of-licensing-hell/
Relatively Geeky Presents #43: Afterlife with Archie Issues 1 - 6.
https://relativelygeekypodcast.blogspot.com/2022/10/rgp-043-super-blog-team-up-2022.html?m=1
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orderjackalope · 1 year
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Joseph Raber was "too lazy to live and too lazy to work" -- the perfect victim for conspirators who insured him to the gills and murdered him. Join us this week for 1879's Crime of the Century, the incredible tale of "the Blue-Eyed Six!"
https://order-of-the-jackalope.com/make-insurance-double-sure/
Key sources for this episode include Gary Ludwig's The Blue-Eyed Six: A Historical Narrative; G. Thomas Gates's A History of Hangings for Homicide in Lebanon County; and contemporary newspaper reports. Thanks also to #2 and #23, who helped me understand some of the more confusing legal issues surrounding the case.
Part of the That's Not Canon Productions podcast network.
This week we're co-promoting with fellow TNC podcast Pop DNA! Join hosts Erin and Rhonda as they dissect the building blocks of our favorite pop culture works, sometimes with bad jokes.
Discord: https://discord.gg/Mbap3UQyCB Twitter: https://twitter.com/orderjackalope Tumblr: https://orderjackalope.tumblr.com
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baronneutron · 19 days
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Captains of the USS TNC
My favorite podcast is "Star Trek: The Next Conversation", so I thought it would be fun to see the hosts, Andrew Secunda and Matt Mira, as TNG-era Captains. Art by nightwing1975
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ok ok i have a story to tell
the other day i was browsing the jam mechanics tag, having not had the chance to listen to it yet. cane across some posts of yours. and saw you were like jam mechanics is my new hyperfixation or whatever.
and at first my first thought was like. it CANT be that good. like ive been a huuuge fan of bug hunter forever, and tnc is more recent, like 4 or 5 month now, but definitely still a huge fan, but like still, its song theyve written in sround 3 hours. they csnt be that good.
well ive just finished episode 2 and the brain worms are so real snd i cant stop them. this podcast is probably my new hyperfixation too..you were right i was wrong oh my GOSH i cant stop . thinking. about these songs
I'm so good at replying to things in a timely fashion
Anyways I'm glad my insane posting has gotten someone else into this wonderful podcast !!
Bug Hunter and TNC are both special interests for me so when I saw they made a podcast I needed to go insane over it 😋
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sestrahulk · 2 years
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You don’t have to avoid us, you know.
Pardon?
You don’t have to stay away. They—we—don’t hate you. We’re a family. We’re supposed to be together.
Rachel smiled as though she’d heard an inside joke. She took a sip of her coffee and set it down.
Turn around and tell me what it says under that chalk portrait of Tolstoy.
Charlotte twisted in her seat. She squinted to read the chalked-in calligraphy.
Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.
Do you know why they put those words on that wall? It’s because this place is full of people who have had to find their own families. Because not all families are meant to be together.
Rachel and Charlotte in Orphan Black: The Next Chapter 2x03
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marksollinger · 2 years
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[image description] a black and grey banner featuring The Mistholme Museum of Mystery, Morbidity, and Mortality double-M and moon symbol, accompanied by text which reads: some questions in life are better off being answered in our hears, rather than in our heads [end of image description]
Hello and welcome to The Mistholme Museum of Mystery, Morbidity, and Mortality. This audio drama appreciation post aspires to be your constant companion in your journey through the unknown and surreal.
Greetings! I just wanted to say that I adore The Mistholme Museum of Mystery, Morbidity, and Mortality and I have loved it since first listen. One year ago, on this day, I established the Mistholme Museum fan Discord server, shortly after making the Wiki and, since then, I’ve been so pleased to see people begin listening to, engaging with, and enjoying this podcast.
If you’re looking for a place to chat with other Mistholme Museum fans about the show, share fanart or fanfics, react to episodes as you listen, and (of course) dote on the Audio Tour Guide, our beloved, consider joining our Discord server! We would be so happy to have you.
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Shmason Shmoorshmees
FRIDAY 13TH!! Something that doesn't happen often, the second creepiest time of the year. The first being when you leave out cookies and milk as an offering for some guy called Santa Claus who breaks into your house and gives you presents if the offering is satisfactory. Braydon and Belinda took this creeptastic day as an opportunity to tell you stories they found on Reddit. Gather round the campfire and listen.
The classic campfire stories you'd tell to scare your friends in the dark. The stories you would wait until your friends went to sleep and start the scraping sounds as if a hook was scratching against the tent. Belinda tells a couple classics like The Hook and The Lick. If you have a dog, the lick will surely make you think twice. Braydon reads of a ghostly smiling man that lures children to their death. While Belinda throws back to last weeks haunted carnival theme with a meaty surprise at a country food fair.
If you wanted to follow us on social media, we can be found on: Facebook, and on Instagram You, Me, and a Poltergeist, Braydon, Belinda
CHECK OUT ALL THE OTHER PODCAST ON TNC: THATSNOTCANON.COM
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Sounds like YOU’RE the snowflake Hunter
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Our new episode is here! Jem argues that Hogwarts isn't unique because all the schools in Harry Potter (including the muggle schools) are fucked up. Reeah learns too much about the international magical schools and it makes both of us mad.
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namimikan · 5 months
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dropped greatest generation podcast, bc in the end, it was just. i think having two tng recap podcasts is too much to listen to, and i actually do vastly prefer the other one tbh (star trek the next conversation), i think i was slowly getting a bit disheartened that greatest generation would always begin with 'we're ashamed/embarrassed doing a star trek podcast', so why are you doing a tng podcast then????
yeah i know s1 isn't good, but it's still... it's still star trek!
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transhumanitynet · 6 years
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Future Grind - Ep. 28 - The State of Transhumanist Politics with Gennady Stolyarov II
Future Grind – Ep. 28 – The State of Transhumanist Politics with Gennady Stolyarov II
In this installment of the Future Grind podcast host Ryan O’Shea sits down with Gennady Stolyarov II, Chairman of the US Transhumanist Party. Gennady took the reins of the Transhumanist Party when the organization’s founder, Zoltan Istvan, stepped down after his campaign for President in 2016. In addition to his work work with the Party, Gennady is a published author and composer, and he has…
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orderjackalope · 1 year
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This one has it all: sibling rivalry, country club politics, adultery, duels, the Civil War, Spanish colonial policy, and three giant piles of bird poop, all conected by the greatest American painter of the 19th Century: James McNeill Whistler.
Transcript, sources, links and more at https://order-of-the-jackalope.com/crepuscule-in-blood-and-guts/
Key sources for this episode include Daniel E Sutherland's Whistler: A Life for Art's Sake; Nikolaus Pevsner's "Whistler's Valparaiso Harbour at the Tate Gallery"; William Columbus Davis's The Last Conquistadores: The Spanish Intervention in Peru and Chile, 1863-1866; and the personal correspondence of James McNeill Whistler.
Part of the That's Not Canon Productions podcast network.
This week we're co-promoting with fellow TNC podcast Art Slice. Join artists Stephanie Dueñas and Russell Shoemaker as they approach art history from an artist's perspective, without all the technical gibberish getting in the way.
Discord: https://discord.gg/Mbap3UQyCB Twitter: https://twitter.com/orderjackalope Tumblr: https://orderjackalope.tumblr.com Email: [email protected]
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claudiaeberger · 7 years
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September 18th - Podcast Night
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warrioreowynofrohan · 4 years
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Okay, this is probably going to offend people, but I need to get it off my chest because I feel like my brain is going in circles.
I’ve seen a lot of posts and statements and articles saying “It’s not the job of black people to educate white people about racism; educate yourself.”
And when it comes to people who are basically saying, “Prove to me that racism exists,” I get why that is a problem. In the interview transcribed in my previous post, my pastor talked about something absolutely horrific that happened to him. And he talks about it fairly frequently, and calmly and collectedly, in public fora, because it can take that kind of testimony to convince some non-black Canadians that racism is a serious problem in Canada. And that’s a terrible burden that he shouldn’t have to bear.
But I do not get the “educate yourself” narrative when if comes to discussions about how to confront and deconstruct systemic and structural racism. When you’e discussing policy - and when you’re discussing the even more complicated issues of forms of racism that can’t be addressed by government action and need to be dealt with in private sector, interpersonal, psychological, and other terms (i.e., it’s not like we can ban microaggressions) - I don’t see how we can get there without white people being allowed to ask black people questions and rely on their expertise and lived experience. There is only so far that articles, and books, and podcasts can take you, because pretty early on - after you’ve consumed a few of them - you are goung to come to issues where 1) there isn’t consensus and 2) there aren’t easy answers.
Ta-Nehisi Coates has talked about the problems of media and white people wanting “black spokespeople” to relay the views of the “black community”, when the black community contains as many viewpoints as it has people. (The media, ironically and I’m sure very frustratingly for TNC, responded to this by trying to treat him as a “black spokesperson”.)
But the only way to do this is to engage with multiple different black people with different viewpoints and, crucially, this means forming your own opinions. We cannot simply echo a generalized black consensus on social/policy solutions if that consensus does not exist and the assumption of such a consensus is, in itself, racist. And that means white people who want to get involved cannot simply listen, absorb, and accept - it means we ultimately need to make choices, I agree more with the perspective and policies of this person than that person, even if I first come across a few of the different perspectives by reading, podcasts, etc.
And that means that we need to be able to get in discussions, online and in person, with black activists and black friends, and we need to be able to ask questions and ask for elaboration and even disagree and debate in order to form thoughtful, meaningful opinions about how to go forward. Because anyone can spam their representatives with form emails, but if we really want to try to convince other people - friends, family, business leaders, politicians - we need to know what we’re talking about, have a strong understanding of our views and the arguments behind them. Trying to convince people by parroting standard talking points does nor work, and leaves them with less respect for your opinion. I know - I’ve tried. (On First Nations issues. The fact that there are several hundred First Nations groups, all with their own differing views and priorities, makes it very hard to say “We should do X because the First Nations want it” without looking like a moron.)
And I feel like I’m being told that if I try to have these conversations with black friends - and make them real, two-way conversations - I am making things worse. But without those conversations I am completely incapable of making things better.
One of the articles I read (thanks, @tolkienillustrations!) compared white people asking black people to explain racism to interrupting a professional baseball game to ask a player the difference between a ball and a strike. Fair enough. But to continue the metaphor, the goal isn’t for white people to watch the ‘baseball game’, it’s for us to participate. I see three options: 1) white people are supposed to learn everything for themselves, comparable to someone who has never played baseball trying to learn it solo from books and videos; 2) white people can learn from other white people, comparable to a whole team of people who have never played baseball trying to learn it by practising together; or 3) white people can learn from conversations with black people, conversations that are two-way and involve some give and take, even though white people will sometimes be clueless and inadvertently offensive; this is analagous to people who don’t know how to play baseball practicing with people who do know how to play baseball.
Option 3 is the only one that gets you a functioning baseball team. And I feel like everything I’m reading is telling me Don’t even bother showing up to the baseball game until you’re a good baseball player and that frustrates me deeply because I can’t do that without practice and I’m also being told that I’m a bad person if I’m not in the baseball game.
I don’t know how to do this without being able to ask questions. I don’t know how to do this without having the opportunity to ask, to try, and to form my own opinions, not solely echoing someone else’s. don’t know how to do this without black people being willing to tell me if I’m being clueless about something without regarding me as the enemy (or for that matter, overenthusiastic white people treating me as the enemy). I need to be able to disagree, challenge and raise counterarguments, because if I am going to try to convince other white people of policy solutions, I need to feel solidly convinced of the effectiveness of those policies and be able to answer the counterarguments other people will make. I can’t do any of this in isolation. I can’t learn all of this from books.
So no, I can’t do this - none of us can do this - without black people being willing to educate us.
(Did I say something clueless in this post? Or this one? I don’t know! I can’t know if nobody tells me!)
(Also, the crying thing bugs me and feels like it’s repurposing old sexist tropes about women deliberately crying to be manipulative. I can’t tell you how many instances of serious criticism from a teacher, supervisor, or other authority figure I’ve got through without crying, but it’s definitely less than 50%. Telling someone they’re a shitty person for having emotions will not, amazingly, cause them to stop feeling those emotions. And yes, I do recognize that people do that all the time to black people who get angry.)
I feel like being sincere and honest is more productive than sticking to talking points and is the only way to really move forward in a meaningful way, so I’m putting this out there even if it is offensive.
(Wow, it feels good to get that out. I feel like I’ve repeated the gist of this post at least 10 times in my head, except all of those contained a lot more CAPSLOCK. I’m like 90% calmer for just having organized this and written it down.)
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