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peron
Explore "peron" with insightful episodes like "Grand Hotel Coronda - Sergio Ferrari", "**HABLEMOSLO** con el Doctor Jorge Rachid", "Ellen Holland, High Times Editor-in-Chief and Author of Weed", "Peronizando al soberano: el cumpleaños de Perón" and "HABLEMOSLO -SEMANA DEL 17 DE OCTUBRE-" from podcasts like ""Audiodocumentari di Olmo Cerri", "De Utopías y Sueños's podcast", "Different Leaf: the Podcast", "Doctrina de Tribuna" and "De Utopías y Sueños's podcast"" and more!
Episodes (23)
**HABLEMOSLO** con el Doctor Jorge Rachid
Militante Peronista del Campo Nacional y Popular
Médico Sanitarista
Profesor Universitario
TEMAS: SALUD MENTAL-ENFERMEDAD MENTAL
PANDEMIA Y POSPANDEMIA- ACTUALIDAD GEOPOLÃTICA EN LA REGIÃN
Ellen Holland, High Times Editor-in-Chief and Author of Weed
Brit and Ellen talk about her research for the book, which covers everything from cannabis lineages and aromas, to indoor and outdoor growing, to how pot pairs with different foods. Ellen also discusses her experience working with California marijuana legalization leaders like Dennis Peron and Ed Rosenthal, and where she sees the conversation around cannabis going in the future.
Follow us on social media @DifferentLeaf and @Different_Leaf and find host Brit Smith @BritTheBritish. Buy any issue of Different Leaf the magazine at DifferentLeaf.com and at select bookstores and dispensaries across the U.S. and Canada. Find your nearest in-person location that sells our quarterly magazine at DifferentLeaf.com
Peronizando al soberano: el cumpleaños de Perón
HABLEMOSLO -SEMANA DEL 17 DE OCTUBRE-
Deuda Soberana o SoberanÃa PolÃtica
Evita Peron
Erase una vez en Peronia T1 - P15 Programa Especial
Cricket's growth in remarkable places: the man who knows
James Coyne, Assistant Editor of The Cricketer magazine, has prepared each year since 2012 the section in Wisden Cricketers Almanack on Cricket Around The World. He is also the co-author of a book Evita Burned Down Our Pavilion (to be published next April) a record of an epic cricketing odyssey in Latin America. As the latest guest of Peter Oborne and Richard Heller in their cricket-themed podcast, he shares his knowledge of all the astonishing places in the world which now play cricket.
He outlines the cricketing crime instigated by Evita Peron, and explains its background in sporting politics. Cricket and two forms of football were all introduced by the British through their commercial influence in Argentina, but whereas association and later rugby football acquired a general following, cricket remained a game for the Anglophile élite, and therefore a prime target for the Perons’ populist nationalism. Egyptian cricket had a similar trajectory (its most famous product was the future actor Omar Sharif).
He tells the story of the MCC tour of Argentina in the 1920s, managed by Plum Warner with Gubby Allen and a future Prime Minister, Alec Douglas-Home leading the attack. He tells the remarkable story of another amateur on the tour who was picked by Warner to lead the following year’s Test tour of South Africa – and the non-cricketing reason why Warner chose him.
The Round the World feature in the Almanack has covered around 150 countries or territories – many more than the 104 current members of the ICC. James explains that it tends to focus on countries in the news, countries where cricket is contributing to recovery after conflict, cricket among refugee populations – and those with a great new cricket story to be told. The feature has tracked many countries’ rise through the ranks of cricket, notably Afghanistan and latterly Thailand. He suggests reasons for the rapid progress of Thai women’s cricket, a model for the rest of the world.
In contrast are the sad decline of cricket in Morocco (where Richard was the only visiting captain to lose an international series) and the apparent disappearance of the cricket league named after “Sir Peter Oborne” in the West African state of Chad. It may have been a victim of equipment shortages, which have affected cricket in its neighbour Mali.
James analyses the problems, especially amateurish governance and factionalism, which have persistently held back cricket in the United States despite its rich history and huge potential for participation, spectatorship and financing. He describes the present ambitious plans for American cricket which try to replicate the successful business models of other American sports – and names two of America’s top business leaders who are ardent cricket supporters. He cites the hugely exciting proposal to include cricket in the 2028 Los Angeles Olympic Games, and the obstacles it faces.
He tells fascinating stories of cricket in St Helena (population around 4500 but ahead of China in the current ICC rankings), in the Falkland Islands (often interrupted by wind or Argentina, and lost kit in Tierra del Fuego), and Antarctica (a match at the South Pole in 1959, regular fixtures at the Australian base).
He shares the moving story of cricket in desperate conditions in the Shatila refugee camp in the Lebanon, and its British pioneers led by Richard Verity and supported by a local headmaster, David Gray. It has shown the potential for cricket to offer its healing power to Syria’s huge refugee population as it has done previously to Afghans and others.
Responsabilidad afectiva [CapÃtulo 2]
PD:viva Perón.
DNBBCast006 by Peron - Episode 06- 2019
01. Viewer, Peron - Changes
02. Bungle - Don't Look Back
03. Fishy & Seibel - Distant Explorer
04. Fishy & Seibel - Untaken
05. Facing Jinx, Philth - Fly Away
06. Spectrasoul - In Porfile
07. Jetfunk - Like Bliss
08. Peron - Warm Tension
09. Fishy - Equanimity
10. Fishy - Acnciente Trhuth (Wilsh Loose Jungle remix)
11. Buzz - Send Me Angel
12. Smoki Jay - Blueberry
13. Random Movement - Used Illusions
14. Koil - Hold Me
15. MSDOS - Steets Of Harlem
16. SEB - You Need More Of Less
17. Telmo A - Still
18. Rainforest - Silent Horizon
19. Virtue & Soulculture - Whatcha Gonna Do
20. Phase - Do Not Look Back
21. Zero T feat. Riya - Truth Hurts
DistopyOnBistory Magda Goebbels
47: The Traveling Corpse
Pals of the show Nick and Rebecca join us for a deeply indulgent week in Buenos Aires. We talk tango, jam boys, Recoleta Cemetery and renewed culture shock. Adam does some light trespassing. Maggie finds an unusual venue for embracing her Jewish heritage. We introduce the Cognitive Biases That Rebecca and Nick are Arguably Unqualified to Explain but Are Going to Explain Anyway Corner.
Show Notes
- Support our future projects: Let's Not Panic on Patreon
- Map of this leg of the journey
- Thinking Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman on Amazon
- Ava Peron on Wikipedia
- Nick on Instagram
- Let's Not Panic on Let's Not Panic on Instagram
- Adam on Twitter, Maggie on Twitter
We Didn't Start the Fire 1953-1954: Joseph Stalin through Rock Around the Clock (TSB054)
If you’re hearing this episode around the time it comes out, it means I’m taking some time off after the birth of my son. I’ve recorded these ahead of time and most likely will not be available on social media for the next few weeks, but you’ll still get The Story Behind twice a week if you’re subscribed to the podcast.
Consider this series to be like a substitute teacher. We won’t go as in-depth as in previous episodes, but we’ll briefly touch of a number of different topics in each episode. This series focuses on Billy Joel’s song “We Didn’t Start the Fire” and the headline-making events and people he mentions. Some content may not be suitable for all listeners.
I’m your host, Emily Prokop, and this is The Story Behind We Didn’t Start The Fire: 1953-1954.
In this episode:
- Joseph Stalin
- Malenkov
- Nasser
- (and) Prokofiev
- Rockefeller
- Campanella
- Communist Bloc
- Roy Cohn
- Juan Peron
- Toscanini
- Dacron
Dien Bien Phu falls - "Rock Around the Clock"
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