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New Year's Resolutions 2026

Reading by Tim Foley.

An episode of the JOHNSTONE podcast, hosted by Caitlin Johnstone and Tim Foley, titled "New Year's Resolutions 2026" was published on December 31, 2025 and runs 2 minutes.

December 31, 2025 ·2m · JOHNSTONE

0:00 / 0:00

Reading by Tim Foley.

Reading by Tim Foley.
Wayward Bodies Elle Bower Johnston Wayward Bodies is a show exploring our bodies and the messy places they meet the world.Join your host Elle Bower Johnston as she discuss embodiment, body liberation, creativity, healing, and how we show up as our whole selves.You can expect a mix of solo musings and conversations with excellent humans, with a lens of queerness, anti-oppression, body liberation and lots of space for the nuance of being a human. Explicit Jam Mechanics Jam Mechanics Two bands who span the Atlantic, having a chat across the planet. Drafting jams from random challenges, fantastic banter while we're at it. So just relax and watch our antics; it's the pan-Atlantic Jam MechanicsJam Mechanics is a podcast hosted by Matt Johnston from The Narcissist Cookbook and Bug from Bug Hunter. Each week we'll take on songwriting challenges and present our finished "demo" after a few hour break. Explicit Apostle R. Johnson Ministries Apostle Rose Johnson PEACHING THE GOSPEL OF JESUS CHRIST TO A DYING WORLD Explicit Afterlives: Marsha P. Johnson iHeartPodcasts Marsha P. Johnson is THE icon of the LGBTQ+ movement and one of the mothers of the fight for trans rights. Today, you can buy T-shirts emblazoned with her face or walk through a park named in her honor. This season on Afterlives, we hear from Marsha in her own words.Afterlives is a documentary podcast series about trans lives we’ve lost and the ways their stories have reshaped our world. Host Raquel Willis brings Marsha’s story to life through rare archival interviews and intimate conversations with queer elders, friends, and historians.  Legend says she threw the first brick at the Stonewall riots, setting off the modern movement for queer rights. Immortalized by Warhol and known as “The Saint of Christopher Street,” Marsha was also unhoused, surviving through sex work, navigating violence, and resisting with joy.More than 30 years after her still-unsolved death in the Hudson River, Marsha’s voice resounds louder than ever. As trans rights face renewed threats, Afterlives celebrates Explicit
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