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The new PosCast with Mike Schur!

An episode of the A Few More Words podcast, hosted by Joe Posnanski, titled "The new PosCast with Mike Schur!" was published on July 15, 2021 and runs 65 minutes.

July 15, 2021 ·65m · A Few More Words

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I told you the surprises would keep coming! Mike Schur and I are back doing the PosCast … and with a sort of, kind of new format. We’re talking fruit! We’re talking All-Star Game! We’re talking Paul Rudd vs. Jason Sudeikis with Kansas City’s awesome Jason Kander! We’re answering questions! And we’re planning to do one every week!

I’m am hoping that if you subscribe to The PosCast on any of the many podcasting platforms — Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, etc. — that this will just automatically populate with no fuss, no muss. We’ll see how that goes.

In the meantime, you can now also start listening to it here at Joe Blogs.

Plenty more surprises to come soon!



This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.joeposnanski.com/subscribe
Those Snowy Nights You Read to Me, They'll Never Be Forgotten Soren Narnia Works written and produced by Soren Narnia. The text of these stories is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike CC BY-NC-SA. Email: [email protected] -- When I was in the fourth grade, my teacher asked me to sit next to a handicapped kid named Sean and help him along a little if I could. It wasn't easy, because he was quite slow, but I tried. When Sean got especially excited about something, or if he was told he had done something well, he would smile and shout out nonsense words. One of them I remember, which he used to shout many times over the few months I sat beside him, was "Sorinarneeya!" Again and again, it was a harmless word he used when he was happy, and seeing my puzzled expression would just make him say it once more, even more pleased than the first time: "Sorinarneeya!" For some reason that word stuck with me for years, until one day as an adult I realized how neatly and curiously it cut in half. And I thought that was so perfe The Beautiful Pursuit The Beautiful Pursuit Hosted by Ant McDonald, The Beautiful Pursuit is a podcast for the passionate ones. The ones who feel a fire in their bones, and the ones who wish they did. Originally dreamt up as a worship podcast (for worship leaders and musicians), The Beautiful Pursuit is more like a falling into the deep well of worship and never climbing out. To live encouraged. Inspired. And built up in Love. For Ant, The Beautiful Pursuit has been the pursuit of Jesus in it all. Not only Jesus in church or Jesus music, but Jesus in everything. Jesus in family, in friendships, in waking and sleeping, in highs and lows, in disappointments and dreams. He's either in everything or it's religion. Ant spent years working for Christian record label Integrity Media Africa, interviewing artists from all over the world - legends like Michael W. Smith, Lenny le Blanc, Martin Smith, Jeremy Riddle, Kari Jobe - to mention a few. She would unpack and understand their processes; explore their unique personalities and listen Brane Zorman Vs BeitThron - for project 7 Composers produced by radioCona, 2008 radioCona, www.cona.si Brane Zorman, composer, intermedia artist, working as a freelance artist in Ljubljana, Slovenia. He has composed music for more than 50 theatre, dance, multimedia and newmedia sound pieces, as well as released several theatre soundtrack CDs and a few dance EPs for various labels. He composes music or film, TV and radio commercials. His most recent achievements include the first DTS surround encoded soundtrack for a theatre performance in Slovenia, the first DTS surround CD release in Slovenia, as well as an interest in special sound design, effects and sound sculptures. He works with intermedia artists such as Igor Stromajer and world renowned BALLETTIKKA INTERNETTIKKA guerilla internet projects with presentations and invitations from all over the world, as well as Irena Pivka on CONA (ZONE) (www.cona.si) projects and more recently – legal radio station radioCona as an intermedia project – radio for contemporary art, authors rights, airwaves as public space. Mademoiselle Ixe Mary Elizabeth Hawker This is a story by the English writer Mary Elizabeth Hawker (1848-1908) entitled Mademoiselle Ixe, by[pseudonym] Lanoe Falconer. The manuscript had been previously rejected by many publishers. The heroine is a governess in an English country house. The mystery is cleverly handled, and the artistic treatment showed a delicacy and refinement which were uncommon in English writers of short stories. The Saturday Review declared it to be 'one of the finest short stories in England.' Success was great and immediate. Gladstone wrote and spoke the praises of the book, of which the circulation was forbidden in Russia; it was admired by Taine. Over 40,000 copies of the English editions were sold, and there were also continental and American editions. It was translated into French, German, Dutch, and Italian. Hawker’s works, though few, were well received. She lived most of her life in the Hampshire Valley. Never married, her health was precarious, preventing her from writing more, though she wis
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