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    chrisbuck

    Explore "chrisbuck" with insightful episodes like "148: Healing From Trauma & Grief With Shelley Buck & Kathy Curtis", "148: Healing From Trauma & Grief With Shelley Buck & Kathy Curtis", "Episode 76 | Leave Your Light On | Guests: Shelley Buck & Kathy Curtis", "005: Conversation with Chris Buck" and "#282: But I Believe Elsa Can Save the World" from podcasts like ""Inner Light Project®‬ : New Age Spirituality", "Inner Light Project®‬ : New Age Spirituality", "Authentic Talks 2.0 with Shanta", "Brooklyn Photo Works ISO320 Podcast" and "Adaptation Podcast"" and more!

    Episodes (6)

    Episode 76 | Leave Your Light On | Guests: Shelley Buck & Kathy Curtis

    Episode 76 | Leave Your Light On | Guests: Shelley Buck & Kathy Curtis
    This episode I spoke with Shelley Buck and Kathy Curtis, Co-authors of "Leave Your Light On".

    An incredible journey of love, courage and spirit is chronicled in “Leave Your Light On,” a new book by Shelley Buck about the life and death of her son Ryder, who co-authored the book posthumously through his writings.

    Ryder Buck is the son of Disney director Chris Buck (“Frozen,” “Frozen 2”) and artist Shelley Buck. Ryder, a singer-songwriter, was diagnosed with cancer in 2012 at the age of 22. After undergoing surgery and extensive treatments he was cancer-free within eight months of his diagnosis. Six months after defeating cancer, at the age of 23, Ryder tragically died after getting hit by a car on a freeway after his car broke down.

    Chris Buck dedicated his 2014 Academy Award for Best Animated Feature for “Frozen” to Ryder’s memory. Ryder was an inspiration for the song “The Next Right Thing” from “Frozen 2” and the film’s character, Ryder Nattura, was named after him. The Disney+ series “Into the Unknown: The Making of Frozen 2” features a segment about Ryder.

    “Shelley has done an extraordinary job capturing the impact Ryder had on us and the world during his short life,” said Chris Buck. “Ryder was the type of person who inspired others to be and do their best and he was such a gift to us in so many ways.”

    “Leave Your Light On” is the story of how Ryder adapted to life after learning he had cancer and how that inspired him and changed his relationship with his parents and the world around him. Told through first person accounts, recollections from friends and family and Ryder’s own words from his journals and social media posts, the book shows a parent-child relationship challenged by an unrelenting illness and a young man’s determination to live life on his own terms. The book was co-written with writer Kathy Curtis, with the title coming from a song written by Ryder about maintaining a positive attitude.

    “His legacy lives on through this story, which I hope will inspire many people who are faced with the difficulty of hearing and processing bad news,” said Shelley Buck. “We can’t always change what happens to us, but we can choose how we respond to it.”
    Ryder was a young man with an unstoppable dream to lift people up through his music. While cancer should have beaten him, Ryder rose above it all to live from a place of passion. In this uplifting and powerful story, readers will meet an unforgettable person determined to accept his own quirks and flaws with humor and see a parent-child relationship tested by an unrelenting disease followed by the grief of an entire family.

    Copy of book available on Amazon: https://read.amazon.com/kp/embed?asin=B087QQ32Y3&preview=newtab&linkCode=kpe&ref_=cm_sw_r_kb_dp_KEdAFbP2W24FV
    Or
    by contacting press@honigllc.com
    Title: Leave Your Light On: The Musical Mantra Left Behind by an Illuminating Spirit
    Publisher: Eagle’s Quest Publishing

    https://www.kathycurtisink.com/

    005: Conversation with Chris Buck

    005:  Conversation with Chris Buck

    USE CODE ADAM at http://squarespace.com/adam to get 10% OFF.

    In the fourth episode of ISO320 Daniel Silbert, Marc Holstein and I are joined by Chris Buck, one of my personal favorite pop culture portrait photographers.

    This episode is a master class in portrait photography with Chris Buck sharing his mentality and technique when working with a huge range of subjects from US presidents, to rock stars, to movie stars and more. He's cool and collected and always puts his spin on whatever he shoots. He shares in detail his amazing and incredibly interesting process for working with clients. This is an amazing episode and you'll want to hear everything Chris says!

    ISO320 is a work in progress, so please share your comments with us as we develop the podcast.

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    #282: But I Believe Elsa Can Save the World

    #282: But I Believe Elsa Can Save the World

    It might not technically be an adaptation, but the hosts couldn't resist talking about Frozen II (2019): the emotional new songs, cute new sidekicks, and Kristoff's Best Boyfriend award.

    Question of the Week: What origins could the other (non-water) spirits have in Scandinavian folklore?

     

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    Episode 80 - Frozen

    Episode 80 - Frozen

    Disney's Oscar-winning 2013 cultural sensation "Frozen," that created ear-worm songs for annoyed parents everywhere, is already considered a classic piece of Disney animation, rivaling the likes of "Beauty and the Beast" and "The Lion King," and has critics and moviegoers spewing nonsense about how its message is progressive and fresh when it's actually regressive and spoiled.

    The flimsy, sloppy, incoherent plot is as follow: When their kingdom becomes trapped in perpetual winter, Princess Anna (voiced by Kristen Bell) joins forces with ice salesman Kristoff (voiced by Jonathan Groff) and his reindeer sidekick to find Anna's sister, Snow Queen Elsa (voiced by Adele Dazeem, er, Idina Menzel), to try and break her icy spell that she accidentally cast on everyone. Although their journey leads them to encounters with kidnapping trolls, an undead snowman (creepily voiced Josh Gad), harsh conditions, and magic at every turn, Anna and Kristoff push onward in a race to save their kingdom from winter's cold grip.

    Um, yeah. We also get a fair share of Nordic stereotypes, skitzo characters, catchy songs that make no sense contextually to the plot, and unearned villainous turns.

    Join us as Keating talks about how Olaf haunts his dreams, we realize Jim’s amazing ability to point out when characters look like Ron Jeremy, and as we discuss Brad Pitt’s former plans to create the 9/11 Memorial.

    Tell us what you think by chatting with us (@filmsnuff) on TwitterFacebook and Instagram, or by shooting us an email over at mailbag@filmsnuff.com.

    This episode is sponsored by Edibles Arrangement.

    Visit our website at https://www.filmsnuff.com.

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