About the Episode
The Richard Syrett Show, May 15th, 2024
HOW NATIONS ESCAPE POVERTY
The miraculous transformation of two seemingly disparate nations —Poland and Vietnam— from socialist sinkholes of misery into vibrant, prosperous, opportunity-rich economies
https://nations-escape-poverty.com
Ranier Zitelman, German historian sociologist, multiple best-selling author whose books include: Hitler’s National Socialism, The Power of Capitalism and In Defense of Capitalism.. His latest book is How Nations Escape Poverty.
THE CULT OF CLIMATE CHANGE
Twenty-one years into Australia’s official permanent drought, drought is at an historical low.
The press says Arizona has become too hot for people to live. Meanwhile…it is still snowing on May 11 and people are still skiing.
Tony Heller, Founder of Real Climate Science dot com
We should follow New Zealand on housing and free up more land for growth
https://financialpost.com/opinion/canada-new-zealand-housing-free-up-land
Wendell Cox – Senior Fellow with the Frontier Centre for Public Policy with expertise in housing affordability and municipal Policy https://fcpp.org/
OPEN LINES
Mirrored image of King Charles’ new portrait ‘reveals face of Baphomet’
https://www.wnd.com/2024/05/creepy-mirrored-image-king-charles-new-portrait-reveals-baphomet-face/
THIS WEEK IN ROCK HISTORY
May 13th
In 1967, The Monkees’ second album, More of The Monkees, hit No.1 on the UK chart. Interestingly, there were only four albums that reached the top spot that year: The Sound of Music soundtrack, which spent 17 weeks at No.1, The Beatles’ Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band for 25 weeks, and The Monkees’ first and second albums.
May 13th
In 1967, The Supremes scored their tenth No.1 single in the US with “The Happening,” the theme song to the 1967 film of the same name. It was the final single under the name “The Supremes,” as the group changed their name to “Diana Ross & The Supremes” before their next release.
May 14th
In 1988, Led Zeppelin reunited for Atlantic Records’ 40th-anniversary party at Madison Square Garden, appearing with drummer Jason Bonham, who stood in for his late father, John Bonham. Their second reunion since splitting, the band’s performance was disorganized and tense, as Jimmy Page and Robert Plant had argued about playing “Stairway to Heaven” prior to performing. Page described the appearance as “one big disappointment” and Plant agreed, noting that “the gig was foul.” Foreigner, Genesis, Ben E. King, and Wilson Pickett were among the other acts taking the stage.
May 16th
On this day in music, May 16, 1966, The Beach Boys released their 11th studio album, Pet Sounds. Written, produced, and arranged primarily by Brian Wilson, the album was revolutionary for a variety of reasons – including its broad use of instrumentation (including a synthesizer, theremin, bike bells, and even soda cans), as well as Wilson’s ambitious production techniques, which found him turning the studio into an instrument itself. Featuring hits like “Wouldn’t It Be Nice” and “God Only Knows,” the album was transformative within the music industry and within popular culture, influencing countless producers, engineers, songwriters, and musicians. Today, it is considered to be among one of the greatest albums of all time, while it was added to the National Recording Registry in 2004.
Jeremiah Tittle, Co-Host of “The 500 with Josh Adam Myers” Podcast, CEO/Founder of Next Chapter Podcasts
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices