Chapter 1: What is the main topic of the podcast episode?
When you're high, you feel different. You think different, you talk different, you draw different, you listen to music different, but you probably knew that. Problem is, you also drive different, and not in a good way. That's why driving high is illegal everywhere. So if you're high, just don't drive. Make a plan to get a sober ride. Because if you feel different, you drive different.
Brought to you by NHTSA and the Ad Council.
And she said, Johnny, the kids didn't come home last night.
Along the central Texas plains, teens are dying. Suicides that don't make sense. Strange accidents and brutal murders. In what seems to be a plot ripped straight out of Breaking Bad.
Drugs, alcohol, trafficking of people. There are people out there that absolutely know what happened.
Listen to Paper Ghosts, The Texas Teen Murders on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
You know the shade is always shady. It's right here. Season six of the podcast Reasonably Shady with Giselle Bryan and Robin Dixon is here, dropping every Monday. As two of the founding members of the Real Housewives of Potomac, we're giving you all the laughs, drama, and reality news you can handle. And you know we don't hold back. So come be reasonable or shady with us each and every Monday.
Listen to Reasonably Shady from the Black Effect Podcast Network on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Welcome to Decoding Women's Health. I'm Dr. Elizabeth Poynter, Chair of Women's Health and Gynecology at the Adria Health Institute in New York City. I'll be talking to top researchers and clinicians and bringing vital information about midlife women's health directly to you.
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Chapter 2: What unique segments are featured during Halloween week?
Jose, they say it's not a traditional Scottish breakfast unless you order a plate of lawn sausage for your group. Mixed up some grass fed beef with some fresh cut chives or parsley for that just mowed flavor. Add some smoked sea salt and voila is lawn sausage and eat it or delete it. So wait, hold on. So you can taste the grass, like, because that's part of it.
Where?
You have a grass-fed cow. Yeah, Brooke, I cow on you. I just think that the key here where I think it's not real is the beef. They don't eat a lot of beef there. It's like lamb. It's... Like a lot of mutton, a lot of chicken, a lot of pork. Cows just take up so much space. Yeah.
I don't know.
And there's no way to get beef into Scotland unless it starts there. But if it's like a traditional dish, you usually use the traditional beef. Grass is traditional Scotland. You know, I think it's too much for my palate. I'm going to say this is deleted. Jose says lawn sausages are deleted. Jeffrey, we're talking strange foods for National Food Day, and we're finally over to you.
I need a number. Finally. Let's go to number 19. All right. They say in medieval times, after a big meal, knights ate something called pigeon pie. Along with cloves, nutmeg, and a dash of cinnamon, these street birds were carefully, and I'm sure humanely, placed inside a pastry shell and baked until crisp. Is pigeon pie an eat it or delete it? Dude, pigeon is like a delicacy in a lot of places.
It's called squab. Squab. Pigeons are a government conspiracy. They're not real birds, by the way. They are fake birds used to spy on the American public. That's how I know for a fact that this is deleted. Jeffrey says delete it. Guys, the Knights loved it. Maybe they were spying on the Knights back then, too. That is an eat it, and that means Jose has won today's edition of Plenty of 20.
All right, well, Jose, you get to choose who gets shocked. They're going to be singing Espresso by Sabrina Carpenter. Who are you going to call? Brooke's raising her hand. No, I'm not raising my hand. I feel like I'm going to go with you, Jeff. Oh, okay. I was raising something else. Just because he has a satin nightie that he loves to wear every night in bed. It's the closest thing to pigeon pie.
Now he's thinking about me every night. Oh, isn't that sweet? I guess so. Say you can't sleep, baby, I know. That's that me espresso. That's a great song. That's your shock collar question of the day. We got your phone taps coming up in just a few minutes. When I smoke weed, I get lost in the music.
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Chapter 3: How does the game 'Eat It or Delete It' work?
Listen to Decoding Women's Health with Dr. Elizabeth Poynter on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
If you're looking for another heavy podcast about trauma, this ain't it. This is for the ones who had to survive and still show up as brilliant, loud, soft, and whole. The Unwanted Sorority is where Black women, femmes, and gender-expansive survivors of sexual violence rewrite the rules on healing, support, and what happens after.
And I'm your host and co-president of this organization, Dr. Leitra Tate. Listen to The Unwanted Sorority, new episodes every Thursday on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.