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Your favorite parenting podcast, Milk Drunk by Bobbie, is back for season 2 with fashion model, social media influencer and new mom Tabria Majors hosting! As an unwavering advocate for equality and women’s rights, Tabria openly shared her pregnancy and daughter’s birth with millions of her fans and she brings that same honest, informed perspective to this award-winning podcast on modern parenting.
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Slow Burn

Slate Podcasts

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In 1978, state Sen. John Briggs put a bold proposition on the California ballot. If it passed, the Briggs Initiative would ban gays and lesbians from working in public schools—and fuel a growing backlash against LGBTQ+ people in all corners of American life. In the ninth season of Slate’s Slow Burn, host Christina Cauterucci explores one of the most consequential civil rights battles in American history: the first-ever statewide vote on gay rights. With that fight looming, young gay activist ...
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THE ADAM KING SHOW

Adam King, Rock Breath

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The Adam King Show is everybody’s favorite new place for news and commentary, the most interesting guests on the planet, humor, arts and culture, spirituality, motivation, business, technology, cannabis, alternative health, ground breaking stories, and just plain old fashion fun. Every week host Adam King sits down with the most exceptional panel of guests ever assembled, some of which can only be found here on The Adam King Show, to talk about the most current and relevant news of the day. ...
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Hot Chocolate with Locals is a travel podcast where I sit down with a guest and chat about travel over a delicious cup of hot chocolate. I created this series to bring you real advice about travel from around the world. So grab a cup of your favorite hot chocolate and let’s take a trip! Theme song Travelor by Uncle Milk.
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Mom Gold

Liz Teich & Amanda Mintz, Upstarter Podcast Network

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This is not like your regular mom podcast, it’s your cool mom podcast. It’s an unfiltered look into motherhood through the lens of the working mom and mom bosses, all while figuring out the journey of how we got to where we are and how we juggle it all—even if we aren’t. Hosts, Liz Teich and Amanda Mintz, are two mompreneurs who’ve had successful careers in the fashion, beauty and design industries in NYC, while raising little ones… Tune in to for fun conversions between mamas and be inspire ...
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Supermodel, brand builder, social advocate, mentor and mother, Isrka Lawrence - shares her unique home birthing story with Tabria and gets all kinds of real about the importance of having a birthing team you can trust, the differences between doulas and midwives, the appalling financial cost of giving birth and the ever pervasive stigma of formula …
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There was only one thing more challenging than winning an Olympic gold medal for professional figure skater-turned-broadcaster and Unexpecting podcast host Tara Lipinski and that was infertility. In today’s episode, Tara takes us through the 5-year battle she triumphed over to become a mom - including miscarriages, D&Cs, failed transfers, retrieval…
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Your favorite parenting podcast, Milk Drunk by Bobbie, is back for season 2 with fashion model, social media influencer and new mom Tabria Majors hosting! As an unwavering advocate for equality and women’s rights, Tabria openly shared her pregnancy and daughter’s birth with millions of her fans and she brings that same honest, informed perspective …
  continue reading
 
Lawn ornaments are everywhere—but for something so ubiquitous, they’re also mysterious. What’s the person with the flamingo or the gargoyle in their yard trying to say—and why do they want to say it so publicly? From the garden-variety to the not so common, the adorable to the odious—lawn ornaments speak volumes, without saying a word. In this epis…
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Listen in as host Christina Cauterucci joins special guests, Eric Marcus, host of Making Gay History, DeRay Mckesson, activist and host of Pod Save the People, filmmaker Sam Feder, and Esther Fallick, comedian, singer and musical theater writer, for an exclusive live taping at the 2024 Tribeca Festival. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megap…
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For the two years leading up to May 21, 1979, gay activists followed the rules. They engaged in civil debates. They sought justice at the ballot box. They peacefully mourned the assassination of Harvey Milk. But the verdict in Dan White’s murder trial changed everything. (If you—or anyone you know—are in crisis, contact the National Suicide Prevent…
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On election night in 1978, gays and lesbians in California braced themselves for the statewide vote on Proposition 6. Less than a month after the results came in, a pair of killings shocked San Francisco and the nation. Subscribe to Slate Plus to immediately unlock all episodes of Slow Burn: Gays Against Briggs. Your subscription also gets you ad-f…
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As Election Day approached, the campaign to defeat Proposition 6 faced formidable odds. John Briggs’ fundraising juggernaut was churning out cash, and public opinion polls were solidly in his favor. To turn the tide, gay rights activists unveiled a powerful symbol and gambled on the support of an improbable ally: Ronald Reagan. (If you—or anyone yo…
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In the early days of the anti-Briggs campaign, a Richard Pryor comedy set turned into a public fiasco and laid bare longstanding divisions in the gay community. With the movement low on cash and running out of time, thousands of gay Californians decided their only option was to tell the world who they really were. (If you—or anyone you know—are in …
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After decades of wandering and job-hopping, Harvey Milk found his purpose as a gay community leader with growing political ambitions. But his historic election was just the beginning. As John Briggs’ gay teacher ban gained momentum, it was up to Supervisor Milk and his allies to figure out how to stop him. Subscribe to Slate Plus to immediately unl…
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Pfizer Whistle Blower Melissa McAtee joins me and shares buckets of information on the global Pfizer operation and shares actual confidential documentation. This smoking gun episode must be seen and downloaded, before the feds take us down. Please share this information and reach out to @TheAdamKingShow on X if you would like Melissa McAtee on your…
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In 1977, John Briggs was a small-time state senator with big dreams. But Briggs’ plan to ban gay and lesbian teachers from California schools changed the arc of his life and career. Suddenly, he was a right-wing hero, and a villain of the gay rights movement. And his message seemed to be catching on all over the country. Season 9 of Slow Burn was w…
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In the 1970s, San Francisco became a welcoming home for tens of thousands of new gay residents—and a modern-day Sodom for the American right. With a moral panic sweeping across the United States, a Florida orange juice spokeswoman inspired an ambitious California politician to launch his own campaign against lesbians and gays—one that would change …
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In 1978, state senator John Briggs put a bold proposition on the California ballot. If it passed, the Briggs Initiative would ban gays and lesbians from working in public schools—and fuel a growing backlash against LGBTQ+ people in all corners of American life. In the ninth season of Slate’s Slow Burn, host Christina Cauterucci explores one of the …
  continue reading
 
The jalapeño is the workhorse of hot peppers. They’re sold fresh, canned, pickled, in hot sauces, salsas, smoked into chipotles, and they outsell all other hot peppers in the United States. These everyday chilies are a scientific and sociological marvel, and tell a complicated story about Mexican food and American palates. In today’s episode, we me…
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Rabbi Benjamin Blech, 60 year professor at yeshiva University, joins me to discuss his personal experiences with Pope John Paul II and artifacts that were shown to him under Papal supervision, ranging from Temple Treasures to single editions of certain books and manuscripts that the Vatican has seized from Jewish communities and other nations throu…
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Pop culture is full of fictional bands singing songs purpose-made to capture a moment, a sound. This music doesn’t organically emerge from a scene or genre, hoping to find an audience. Instead it fulfills an assignment: it needs to be 1960s folk music, 1970s guitar rock, 80s hair metal, 90s gangsta rap, and on and on. In this episode, we’re going t…
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Magazines have fallen on hard times – especially the weekly news, fashion, and celebrity mags that once dominated newsstands. The revenue from magazine racks has plummeted in recent years, and many magazines have stopped appearing in print or shut down altogether. And yet, there is something growing in the checkout aisle: one-off publications, each…
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Yesterday Stew Peters debated Adam King and Byron Stinson, the man who found the Red Heifer. After a dismal and embarrassing defeat infront of 70,000 people, Peters deleted the video to limit its audience, but not before we were able to rip it. Censoring information is not our way of life, and it is important for every American to truly look at tho…
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In this episode I interview Byron Stinson, the man who found the red heifer, organized its transportation, and shall receive first its blessing! We have an enthralling discussion about Jesus, God, the Salvation of the world, and all things pertaining to The Red Heifer. Byron will most certainly be back on my show and he is open to come on others. D…
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In 1986, Andrew Wyeth was the most famous painter in America. He was a household name, on the cover of magazines and tapped to paint presidents. And then he revealed a secret cache of 240 pieces of artwork, many provocative, all featuring the same nude female model. This collection, called The Helga Pictures, had been completed over 15 years and hi…
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Like a manager or an agent or a publicist, a stylist has become a kind of must-have accessory for well-dressed, A-list celebrities. It’s just expected that they will have hired someone to select the clothes they’ll wear at public appearances. But this was not always the case. In today’s episode, Avery Trufelman, host of Articles of Interest, will g…
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Thirty years ago, a new kind of soda arrived in select stores. Instead of crowing about how spectacular it was, it offered up a liquid shrug, a fizzy irony. OK Soda was an inside joke for people who knew soda wasn’t cool. But what exactly was the punchline? In today’s episode, we’re going to ask how Coca-Cola, a company predicated on the idea that …
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The eerie similarity of coffee shops all over the world was so confounding to Kyle Chayka that it led him to write the new book Filterworld: How Algorithms Are Flattening Culture. In today’s episode, Kyle’s going to walk us through the recent history of the cafe, to help us see how digital behavior is altering a physical space hundreds of years old…
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