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    bandana

    Explore " bandana" with insightful episodes like "Ep 10: feat Fireboy DML", "When You Grown Up You Will Understand", "Hank Ge: Bali Brunch, Bandana und Pizza", "Outdoor Skills No 2" and "Equine Endurance Rides: FOF 19" from podcasts like ""The Kommissioners Podcast", "FRESH OFF THE BOAT PODCAST", "relevant", "Thenaturalmedic Adventures" and "Fear of Failure, a Lifelong Search for Love and Fulfillment"" and more!

    Episodes (9)

    When You Grown Up You Will Understand

    When You Grown Up You Will Understand

    ✅ Audio Drops Every Wednesday, Full Video Drops Every Thursday 

    Bandana song by Fireboy DML ft. Asake. Highly talented Nigerian singer, songwriter, and YBNL signee, Fireboy DML emerges on the music stage
    Highly talented Nigerian singer, songwriter, and YBNL signee, Fireboy DML emerges on the music stage with an astounding hit track captioned “Bandana.”
    In this single, he tipped into the capabilities of a very skilled Nigerian music artist, Asake.
    Furthermore, this wonderful song comes after “Playboy,” his previous delivery.
    Also, this is a fantastic blockbuster single that you should not overlook.
    So, if you’re listening to music, you’re almost likely familiar with the most recent oddball hits.
    #fireboydml #asake #tionwayne 

    Meet The Podders 
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    Hank Ge: Bali Brunch, Bandana und Pizza

    Hank Ge: Bali Brunch, Bandana und Pizza

    Den meisten ist Hendrik Genotte alias Hank Ge unter dem Begriff Bali Brunch bekannt. Der gebürtige Kölner, den es nach Wien verschlagen hat, ist einer der bekanntesten Influencer hierzulande und er betreibt mittlerweile einige Lokale in Wien-Neubau. Genau dort haben wir auch diese Podcast-Episode aufgenommen und sind dabei durch die belebten Straßen spaziert. Wundert euch also nicht, dass es manchmal ziemlich laut ist. Stichwort: U-Bahn-Baustelle.

    Über Relevant

    SIE WOLLEN EINEN EIGENEN PODCAST STARTEN? – WIR PLANEN UND PRODUZIEREN IHREN PODCAST!

    Equine Endurance Rides: FOF 19

    Equine Endurance Rides: FOF 19
    Today I’m sharing my experiences as a horse vet monitoring magnificently conditioned horses as they compete across breath-taking landscapes on long distance races of 25, 50 and 100 miles. Called Endurance Rides, these contests require a combination of physical stamina and mental alertness between the horse and rider over a long period of time. The horse and rider are a team, and the challenge is to complete the course with a horse that is fit to continue. One rider sums up the experience: “A good rider does not ask of the horse more than is necessary for victory. He knows what his horse is capable of. He knows the horse’s strengths, he can see and assess his opponents during races, and change his riding tactic in an instant during a critical moment.” Although the altruistic nature of a loving and experienced rider brings honesty to the ride the fact remains these riders do overstress their horses, sometimes with deadly consequences. That’s where vets come in. Horses are checked by qualified veterinarians and judges before, during, and after the ride. During each ride are set hold times, which vary in duration from a simple gate-and-go to one-hour rest holds. During these holds, the equine's physical and metabolic parameters are checked. The horse must pass the exam in order to continue on the course. Each horse must also pass a post-ride exam in order to receive credit for completing the course.

    Episode 2020-5 - Got Covid! Get you some Uncle Frankie's Root Tonic.

    Episode 2020-5 - Got Covid! Get you some Uncle Frankie's Root Tonic.

    In this episode Frankie and Jeff discuss this Covid stuff and how to cure it with some Uncle Frankie's Root tonic. it also makes your hands soft like a sheep's ass. We also talk about what we have been doing in this house arrest mandated quarantine. JOIN US IF YOU DARE!

    Recorded Fri 4-24-20

    Follow us on facebook at https://www.facebook.com/pupodcasters

    All facts have been checked.....or have they....you decide. 

    Season 1, Episode 20: Critical Care Nurse Amy Taylor, Maggie Hemphill, and Danielle S. Castillejo discuss the Coronavirus, flow of information, medical supplies, and STAYING HOME

    Season 1, Episode 20: Critical Care Nurse Amy Taylor, Maggie Hemphill, and Danielle S. Castillejo discuss the Coronavirus, flow of information, medical supplies, and STAYING HOME

    Amy Taylor is a Georgia Native and is a NICU nurse and critical care nurse. When she first heard about the coronavirus she wasn’t inclined to worry about it. As a nurse she thought, “If you’re not bleeding out you’re fine… This will pass…” But within several days it escalated quickly and it became harmful to health care workers.

    She described how at the beginning the hospital she worked at would not allow someone to bring more than one person into the hospital with them and each time someone came in to the hospital their temperature was taken. Then big tents were set up outside the hospital and people had to be screened outside. “It looked like something from a third world country where you think ‘this isn’t happening here.’”

    Shortages of Personal Protective Equipment began within a few days of Trump acknowledging the severity of the virus. Amy takes about how airborne viruses are combatted by using a negative pressure room so that the virus does not spread through the air vents. She tells the story about a nurse in her hospital having to treat a patient with Tuberculosis with no mask because they’re were none available due to the PPE shortages. And Amy says the shortages had started before it got bad where she lives. “The nurses had no masks. It was health care workers stealing them, it was people hoarding them, management started hoarding them…”

    Masks are supposed to be a one-time use but now nurses get one N95 mask and they are to wear it the whole day. There are not enough gowns, which are also not reusable, and nurses are now wearing them all day long. Gowns are, like all Personal Protective Equipment (PPE), are for the protection of both the patient and the health care provider. Health Care Providers could now carry the virus from patient to patient by not changing their PPE.

    It’s really scary because not only are these nurses trying to manage their own anxiety as a person in this crisis—making sure they and their family have enough food and supplies—but nurses are also managing the fears and anxieties of their patients, and the fear passing the virus to them now extends bringing it home to their loved ones.

    These are not the typical problems of 1st world countries. Amy said the CDC has changed the rules from requiring N95 masks on every nurse to allowing heath care providers to just use a bandana. She said, “That doesn’t actually do anything.”

    The climate among the nurses are the hospital she works at is this overall sense of deprivation and fear. “And that fear looks different for everybody… it looks like snapping at other people… it looks like lack of empathy towards others… A crass-ness…” It’s very low morale. There are people who are very angry and people who are very tearful.

    Danielle asked if we could sew masks and other protective gear for nurses. Amy said that studies show that homemade PPE is not effective so a better way to support medical staff is to donate N95 masks if you have them, and make your own masks to wear out. Nurses who have been exposed to the coronavirus are getting sicker than others so it appears that there is a cumulative affect to being exposed virus.

    The idea that the virus lingers in the air for up to three hours is terrifying because if the virus is in a place that has an HVAC system, the virus would then be pumped to every room of that building through the air vents. It’s a scary thought to enter a building let alone a hospital.

    Maggie asked how patients coming into the hospitals have been: Amy said that initially people are just wanting to know [if they have it]— ERs were flooded with people wanting to get tested because they were running a temperature and their hospital didn’t have the capacity to test people who were not critically ill. Amy admits this is difficult to hear this when you have people like Harvey Weinstein being tested but health care workers aren’t being allowed to be tested. But this is one of the big difference between our country and other countries—many other countries initially quarantined people and tested everybody, then they followed the trail of infected people.

    “If you would not normally go to the ER for an issue, then you shouldn’t go to the ER because you’re risking being exposed to more things by going there… And it’s hard because you want to know. You want to know if I am infected I want to not be passing it on to my spouse to my kids…”

    Danielle says “Its hard to know what to believe. I believe you! … And then you hear our public health officials say ‘there’s tests!”  Even the tests that have been done are prioritized. Some people have been tested and haven’t gotten their results back.

    Things vary from hospital to hospital. Amy’s friend who works in a hospital in Florida was caring for a patient for five days along with nurses that had nausea, vomiting and diarrhea but were still being required to work. After the five days, she found out the patient had the coronavirus so she got tested herself but was still required to work her THREE SHIFTS before she was could get the results back.

    The fear of hospitals is this: What are we going do to when health care workers can not work because they are sick with the virus? This is part of the reason why they don’t want to give tests to nurses and doctors.

    CDC Guidelines have been changed based on the supplies that are available: First is was that nurses need an N95 mask, but then any mask was allowed. This is unreal, unsafe, unethical. “It’s like warfare! And being sent into battle without the equipment that you need… and the soldiers on the front lines die first.”

    There is a thing called “travel nursing” where nurses get paid more to meet demands during high seasons in other locations. Amy was offered a job in Washington “Ground zero” for the US but she declined even though the pay for 13 weeks was more than she would make in a year.

    There is not enough staff: As more and more doctors and nurses get sick with the coronavirus and have to stop working, the remaining staff ends up working excessive shifts which has been proven to not be safe.

    This idea of the “6-foot rule”, practicing social distancing still getting together, but lung doctors say the reality is that we don’t know how safe it is to be even six feet from each other. “So just don’t do it. It's not worth your health.” As well there's this idea that young healthy people don’t get the virus and this is providing to not be true.

    There’s just not enough PPE or ventilators to meet the need. Ventilators are supposed to be one per person but they are being used for two people. The first time Amy heard of ventilators being used for more than one person was after a mass shooting in TX.

    Amy believes the way that we should be dealing with the virus as a country is everything should be shutting down and companies that make masks or gowns should work exclusively on making them. The worse case scenario would be that we overreacted and now are prepared for a future disaster. The response has been “oh it’s not that bad, it’s not that bad, oh it’s bad!”

    We are already running out of ventilators and we haven’t even hit our peak. If you look by the numbers, we are already surpassing Italy and we’re not even testing everyone. It’s alarming.

    What will be the last straw? Amy believes that if hospitals begin to operating out of a war mindset —assessing people based on the likelihood of the patient's survival and thus determining who will receive care and who will not. When hospitals are no longer operating with hospital beds and are working out of parking garages and tents outside… It's a war mentality treating only those who you think will survive. This places the weight of responsibility on the medical workers—It will be them carry the weight of negligence of society.

    Amy compares it to Chernobyl, where  people were sent into harm's way without enough protection. How valuable do you find medical workers to be? Many nurses and physicians in Italy are having PTSD symptoms and are having trouble coming into work. This is all very traumatizing—nurses not being able to care for their patients. For Amy that has been some of her most defeating moments as a nurse, not being able to care well and connect with her patients. There is no margin in this space, it’s survival mode. Everyone deserves dignity and care no matter what issues they have or where they are coming from.

    The long term impact of this pandemic will be global PTSD in addition to the financial problems that ensure after shutting down so much of the economy. No one is untouched.

    Seeing other panics breeds panic in yourself. Watching people run for toilet paper and other essentials when this was first starting a couple of weeks ago grew panic in other. Panic breeds deprivation and fear, and then festers.

    Danielle poses, If run into the ground our health care workers, if they are physically emotionally and spiritually spent, who is going to run our hospitals? Who will want to enter this field next? We must sacrifice to protect our health care workers, they are literally the people that are saving our lives.

    Conan O’Brien says if we run out of toilet paper we can just use CVS receipts because they are so long.

    There are companies like Home Depot and Lowes, that have sent their stock of PPE to hospitals… They are trying to help the situation.

    What can you do? You can stay home.

    People need to stay home.  Amy thinks Christians are the ones who are still gathering together and having church services, thinking that God will protect them. But we are not immune to science. Stay home!

    And it’s not about you! Amy says that in America it’s like we don’t care about community, that we don’t know how to care for our neighbors. . . Protector your neighbor by staying home.

    Ultimately law makers may move to order “shelter in place” everywhere, not just in the three or four states that have done it thus far. People need to stay home, because that is how we love and honor our neighbor.

    Amy reminds everyone that gloves are pointless if you use them all day long. Gloves can be helpful, but be aware of why you’re doing what you’re doing.

    Staying inside is the most crucial thing we can do. Our government hasn’t mandate it yet but Amy encourages us think about what we're doing. Yes it's hard to sit inside and struggle with anxiety… but this is how we can care for each other in this pandemic.

    Too Much Goin' On w/ Zain, Jerome, Hunter, and Zach

    Too Much Goin' On w/ Zain, Jerome, Hunter, and Zach
    This episode is a lot. We have the most amount of guests we've ever had (with even some guests you can't hear because they don't have a mic) and we bounce around with a ton of topics because we just had ramune and we're ready to talk! We bring on our friend Zain to talk about his new career paths, current events and the politics behind them, we talk about recent and old music hits, and much more. There's too much fun to be had in this episode! Music by KarpaBeats Mass Shooter (2), becoming police (4), distractions on social media (8), mental illness as cases (10), criticism of country (12), ASAP Rocky (14), Trump distractions (16), UK Prime Minister (18), racism in Europe (20), racism we experience (24), diversity in media (29), Gary Vee (31), Zain's spiral into depression (35), how Zain got into Team GaryVee (40), quitting jobs (44), working with the team (46), What's the worst that can happen (49), LinkedIn (52), memory and dates (54), music Freddie Gibbs, Cordae (55), Chance album (58), best new artist curse (59), Damn! and Kendrick Lamar (1:02), best ad libs in rap (1:06), TDE rap group (1:07), Asher Roth (1:10), concerts (1:11), Lupe Fiasco The Cool (1:15), dap (1:17), smiling in pictures (1:20), Kanye West (1:22), favorite albums (1:28), artist frustrations Eminem & Lupe Fiasco (1:30), The Cool part 2 (1:33), old hip-hop music Juelz Santana, Dipset (1:40), evolution of hip-hop (1:46),

    Limited Appeal - A perverted mindfuck of neckwear

    Limited Appeal - A perverted mindfuck of neckwear
    Warren challenges team LA to answer this unresolved question: when does a scarf become a blanket? Does it have anything to do with wheels or posture? You'll have to listen to John stutter through a painful (although amusing) summary of the issues, but this precis quickly becomes inadequate, as we discover the nuances of this superficially simple, but actually intricate problem. In fact, although we do suggest some of the philosophical complexities, we may need your help to achieve a satisfying solution. Email us (maskedman@limitedappeal.net) with your suggestions! Theme music courtesy of General Patton vs. The X-Ecutioners and Ipecac Recordings.
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