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A Treasury Department engraver is being held captive by a counterfeiting gang that wants him to make counterfeit plates for them. A lawman is sent to rescue him.
Phantom Ranger
Chefs take inspiration from paintings to re-create them on plates
Eating Art (Hatch Farm Studios)
The camera takes the audience from under the icebergs to the boiling waters of the Geysir. The movie has been shot in the deep land rifts that form when the tectonic plates move, and in the strong underwater currents of the Atlantic, all of which make the sealife in Iceland exceptionally rich and vivid.
Underwater Iceland
A Treasury Department engraver is being held captive by a counterfeiting gang that wants him to make counterfeit plates for them. A lawman is sent to rescue him.
Phantom Ranger
Mondays at 1:00PM EST
Let's Eat In is the weekly radio dispatch from Cathy Erway, founder of the blog Not Eating Out in New York. By fielding your phone calls, Cathy is an invaluable ally in your quest to woo that special someone with a delicious, memorable (and affordable) meal. Dating experts, sexologists, food personalities, advocates, cooks, artists, entertainers, and anyone who has felt their heart soar or break beside two plates and some silverware will join Cathy in her quest to help you be loved and stuffed.
Cathy Erway writes the blog, Not Eating Out in New York, based on a two-year mission to forgo restaurant food that prompted many people to ask, "how do you go on dates when you can't eat out?" She writes for Saveur.com, Edible Brooklyn, The Huffington Post, and her memoir, The Art of Eating In: How I Learned to Stop Spending and Love the Stove was published by Gotham/Penguin in February 2010.
Heritage Radio Network. All Rights Reserved.
Recent Episodes
Let's Eat In - Episode 73 - I 8 NY
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Let's Eat In - Episode 72 - The City Chicken Project.
Let's Eat In - Episode 71 - Mama O's Kimchee
Previous episodes
Let's Eat In
Even though I had heard his name for years, I never gave Hershell much thought until I was searching for one of his books, Worlds Greatest Direct Mail Sales Letters Of All Time. This book is not to be confused with a similar book by Richard Hodgson titled The Worlds Greatest Direct Mail Sales Letters Of All Time. An interesting fact I learned about Hershell is that within the Collectors Plate industry he is known as the King of Direct Mail. You may have seen collectors plates advertised in the Sunday newspaper and other widely-circulated publications. I used to wonder why so many people invested in these plates until I talked with Hershell personally. Hershell Gordon Lewis is a well-connected expert who has been involved in the direct mail industry for many years. He is the author of more than twenty books on advertising and marketing, and is the former chairman of BJKE Direct. He now heads Lewis Enterprises, a creative source. This is an exclusive interview from Michael Senoff's www.hardtofindseminars.com.
Michael Senoff Interviews Herschell Gordon Lewis
Songs of Innocence and of Experience: Shewing the Two Contrary States of the Human Soul are two books of poetry by the English poet and painter, William Blake. Although Songs of Innocence was first published by itself in 1789, it is believed that Songs of Experience has always been published in conjunction with Innocence since its completion in 1794.
Songs of Innocence mainly consists of poems describing the innocence and joy of the natural world, advocating free love and a closer relationship with God, and most famously including Blake's poem The Lamb. Its poems have a generally light, upbeat and pastoral feel and are typically written from the perspective of children or written about them.
Directly contrasting this, Songs of Experience instead deals with the loss of innocence after exposure to the material world and all of its mortal sin during adult life, including works such as The Tyger. Poems here are darker, concentrating on more political and serious themes. Throughout both books, many poems fall into pairs, so that a similar situation or theme can be seen in both Innocence and Experience. Many of the poems appearing in Songs of Innocence have a counterpart in Songs of Experience with opposing perspectives of the world. The disastrous end of the French Revolution caused Blake to lose faith in the goodness of mankind, explaining much of the volume's sense of despair. Blake also believed that children lost their innocence through exploitation and from a religious community which put dogma before mercy. He did not, however, believe that children should be kept from becoming experienced entirely. In truth, he believed that children should indeed become experienced but through their own discoveries, which is reflected in a number of these poems. Blake believed that innocence and experience were "the two contrary states of the human soul", and that true innocence was impossible without experience.
The Book of Thel is a poem by William Blake, dated 1789 and probably worked on in the period 1788 to 1790. It is illustrated by his own plates, and is relatively short and easy to understand, compared to his later prophetic books. The metre is a fourteen-syllable line. It was preceded by Tiriel, which Blake left in manuscript. A few lines from Tiriel were incorporated into The Book of Thel. This book consists of eight plates executed in illuminated printing. 15 copies of original print of 1789-1793 are known. Two copies have watermark of 1815, which are more elaborately colored than the others. (Summary from Wikipedia)
(Summary by Wikipedia)
Librivox: Poems of William Blake by Blake, William
Organized by the Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston, this is the first major museum survey of Tara Donovan’s work. The artist’s sculptural installations are based on the physical properties and capabilities of a single accumulated material. Donovan uses prosaic items including electrical cable, adding machine paper, straight pins, paper plates, and toothpicks. These materials are arranged in a manner that sometimes mimics the organization of geological or biological forms. Through this subtle and remarkably affecting presentation, drinking straws may suggest clouds and plastic cups may call to mind a brittle winter landscape. Part of the intrigue of Donovan’s practice lies in the way she is able to present a mass of unaltered, simple objects that do not disguise what they are while simultaneously suggesting a range of richly poetic associations.
MCASD: Tara Donovan
Cheap Date is the weekly radio dispatch from Cathy Erway, founder of the blog Not Eating Out in New York. By fielding your phone calls, Catchy is an invaluable ally in your quest to woo that special someone with a delicious, memorable (and affordable) meal. Dating experts, sexologists, food personalities, advocates, cooks, artists, entertainers, and anyone who has felt their heart soar or break beside two plates and some silverware will join Cathy in her quest to help you be loved and stuffed.
Cathy Erway writes the blog, Not Eating Out in New York, based on a two-year mission to forgo restaurant food that prompted many people to ask, "how do you go on dates when you can't eat out?" She writes for Saveur.com, Edible Brooklyn, The Huffington Post, and her memoir, The Art of Eating In: How I Learned to Stop Spending and Love the Stove will be published by Gotham/Penguin in February 2010.
Cheap Date - mp3 - Heritage Radio Network
Scott and Elaine make their carpool commute worthwhile, and cover consumer and workplace aggravations that drive you crazy and how to DEAL WITH them :) We also read out license plates and descriptions of stupid inappropriate drivers, so listen in! Scott Consumer007@gmail.com Elaine Safire716@aol.com
Consumer Road Rage Report Podcast
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J.C. Hutchins is an award-winning fiction and nonfiction storyteller, with 15 years of professional writing experience. His two novels – 7th Son: Descent and Personal Effects: Dark Art — were published in 2009 by St. Martin’s Press.
J.C. Hutchins
CBC/Radio-Canada is Canada's national public broadcaster and one of this country's largest cultural institutions. Through the delivery of a comprehensive range of radio, television, Internet, and satellite-based services, CBC-Radio/Canada is available how, where, and when Canadians want it
CBC Radio
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