The Rob Simone Talk Show

Rob Simone hosts the “Rob Simone Talk Show”

Host Rob Simone travels the world to find the most interesting people on the planet. Topics include science, news, consciousness, personalities and more. Rob produces this two-hour talk show from Los Angeles. It can be heard on 104.4 FM and online world-wide.


Rob is also the guest host of “Coast to Coast AM” simulcast on 532 radio stations nation-wide & SIRIUS XM.

To be considered for an interview, submit to our contact page on: www.RobSimone.com

Filmmakers International at Sundance Film Festival – Hosted by Rob Simone

Every new year brings us another Sundance Film Festival and with a few more days left until Sundance 2010 kicks off, Sundance has officially announced the first half of this year’s complete line-up. Featured in four different competition categories are 58 individual films that will be showing at world’s greatest film festival in January. The remaining half of the line-up, which will includes the premieres and midnight films, will be announced tomorrow (so check back then). The line-up looks fantastic so far this year, with a lot of films I haven’t even heard of yet. Resonance FM and TIMEOUT will cover the events from top to bottom with live reports and coverage from all the events. We have a lot of special surprises for this years event

U.S. Documentary Competition:

This year’s 16 films were selected from 862 submissions. Each film is a world premiere.

Bhutto (Directors: Jessica Hernandez and Johnny O’Hara; Screenwriter: Johnny O’Hara) — A riveting journey through the life and work of recently assassinated Benazir Bhutto, former Pakistani prime minister and a polarizing figure in the Muslim world.

Casino Jack & The United States of Money (Director: Alex Gibney) — A probing investigation into the lies, greed and corruption surrounding D.C. super-lobbyist Jack Abramoff and his cronies.

Family Affair (Director: Chico Colvard) — An uncompromising documentary that examines resilience, survival and the capacity to accommodate a parent’s past crimes in order to satisfy the longing for family.

Freedom Riders (Director: Stanley Nelson) — The story behind a courageous band of civil rights activists called the Freedom Riders who in 1961 creatively challenged segregation in the American South.

GasLand (Director: Josh Fox) — A cross-country odyssey uncovers toxic streams, dying livestock, flammable sinks and weakening health among rural citizens on the front lines of the natural gas drilling craze.

The Dry Land (Director and Screenwriter: Ryan Piers Williams) — A U.S. soldier returning home from war struggles to reconcile his experiences abroad with the life and family he left in Texas. Cast: America Ferrera, Wilmer Valderrama, Ethan Suplee, June Diane Raphael, Melissa Leo.

HappyThankYouMorePlease (Director and Screenwriter: Josh Radnor) — Six New Yorkers negotiate love, friendship, and gratitude at a time when they’re too old to be precocious and not ready to be adults. Cast: Malin Akerman, Josh Radnor, Kate Mara, Zoe Kazan, Tony Hale, Pablo Schreiber, Michael Algieri.

Hesher (Director: Spencer Susser; Screenwriters: Spencer Susser and David Michod; Story by Brian Charles Frank) — A mysterious, anarchical trickster descends on the lives of a family struggling to deal with a painful loss. Cast: Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Natalie Portman, Rainn Wilson, Devin Brochu, Piper Laurie, John Carroll Lynch.

Holy Rollers (Director: Kevin Tyler Asch; Screenwriter: Antonio Macia) — A young Hasidic man, seduced by money, power and opportunity, becomes an international Ecstasy smuggler. Cast: Jesse Eisenberg, Justin Bartha, Danny A. Abeckaser, Ari Graynor, Jason Fuchs.

Howl (Directors and Screenwriters: Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman) — A nonfiction drama about the young Allen Ginsberg finding his voice, the creation of his groundbreaking poem HOWL, and the landmark obscenity trial that followed. Cast: James Franco, David Strathairn, Jon Hamm, Mary-Louise Parker, Jeff Daniels.

The Imperialists are Still Alive! (Director and Screenwriter: Zeina Durra) — Juggling the sudden abduction of her childhood sweetheart as well as a blooming love affair, a French Manhattanite makes her way as an artist in an indifferent, sometimes hostile world. Cast: Élodie Bouchez, José María de Tavira, Karim Saleh Karolina Muller, Marianna Kulukundis, Rita Ackerman.

Lovers of Hate (Director and Screenwriter: Bryan Poyser) — The shaky reunion of estranged brothers takes a turn for the worse when the woman they both love chooses one over the other. Cast: Chris Doubek, Heather Kafka, Alex Karpovsky, Zach Green.

Night Catches Us (Director and Screenwriter: Tanya Hamilton) — In 1978, complex political and emotional forces are set in motion when a young man returns to the race-torn Philadelphia neighborhood where he came of age during the Black Power movement. Cast: Anthony Mackie, Kerry Washington, Jamie Hector, Wendell Pierce, Jamara Griffin

Yogi Cameron Alborzian: You think you are what you think?

Once upon a time a man leaned against a wall and fell right through it.

Given the tendency for walls to be made of solid matter, and given a similar tendency for a human being’s composition to be of a comparably solid quality, it is highly unlikely that any real-life stories have ever included a person falling through a wall. In 1687, Sir Isaac Newton published his three laws of motion and the third of these laws stated how for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. When the man leaned against the wall in the above sentence, the wall exerted an equal and opposite force keeping both it and the man in place. This concept forms much of our understanding of the physical relationship between objects.
What is not as understood by our culture, however, is that a similar relationship of equal forces can be assigned to our positive and negative thoughts.

What, exactly, does a statement like that mean? What do positive or negative thoughts have to do with leaning against a wall? Over the course of many thousands of years, generations of yoga practitioners have developed a science revolving around how our thoughts are the starting point for every aspect of our lives. Our thoughts create energy, much like a flame might create energy. If we have positive thoughts, we create positive energy. If we have negative thoughts, we create negative energy. However, also like the energy in a flame that heats or burns whatever it comes into contact with, the energy created by our thoughts will create a distinct but complimentary reaction in the world within or around us. In other words, for every thought we offer to the world, there is an equal amount of energy created by the world in response. Sometimes this energy manifests in ourselves, and sometimes it manifests among others. Regardless of where and how it presents itself, it plays a significant role in all of our lives.

The Power of the Mind

The mind is the engine that coordinates the eleven systems of the body into one organism that sustains and propagates life. Each system, including the cardiovascular, respiratory, and digestive systems, depends on the next to perform its job with balance and harmony. Without this balance, the whole body suffers in its attempt to compensate for a failing system. For the body to be healthy, the mind needs to be balanced and peaceful at all times. When looked at another way, the body cannot function on its own without the mind but the mind can keep functioning even if one loses the use of the body–such as when a person becomes paralyzed.
How might a person’s thoughts impact one of the body’s systems? Many of us are familiar with how constant worry and fretting over situations out of our control can lead to peptic ulcers of the gastrointestinal tract. We might be stressed out because of a lack of money, a job that we hate, or problems with our spouse or family members and experience this stress over a lengthy period of time. Eventually, we wind up suffering from an ulceration of the small intestine or some other part of the gastrointestinal tract. A peptic ulcer is a very real, very physical malady that is in part a product of these stress-based, negative thoughts. Ultimately, the negative thoughts we are having about our job or family are creating negative energy in the system, which in turn leads to toxic buildup. This toxicity not only affects our own physiology and well-being, but it affects others as well.

Our Connection to Others through Thought

There is a common misconception throughout the world that we are only connected to each other by physical forces. It suggests that our connection to another person begins and ends with physical touch, and our awareness of another person is limited to whether or not we can see and hear them. According to yogic tradition, however, we are not just connected to others through touch, sight, and sound, but by energy. If we were to go on a date with someone, we could sit across from them at the table, we could have a conversation with them, and we could tell them that we “had a really great time” at the end of the night. However, any person that has been on a date before can tell you whether or not they experienced comfort with the other person, and whether or not they felt what is known in the dating world as chemistry. This desired but often elusive force of chemistry isn’t based on whether or not one of the people felt physically touched, heard, or seen by the other person, but whether or not they felt a positive and comfortable exchange of energy.

Yoga teaches us that every person’s thoughts and actions, no matter how large or small, influence and affect every other person and living thing–including the earth itself–through this exchange of energy. Our thoughts lead to actions, and our actions offer a specific type of energy into the world. If we have hateful thoughts about others and abuse the planet, then we’ll continue to be plagued by a comparable amount of negative energy born from around the world. Even if we are not consciously aware of it, every negative, hateful thought we have against another will come back to us as powerfully as the feeling that we didn’t enjoy an ounce of chemistry with our latest date.

It is therefore up to each of us to take up a lifestyle that bears positive energy and creates community over disparity. If a person practices control over the type of thoughts they create, then they will create greater control over the type of energy they put out into the world. Yogic science dictates that a disease as pervasive and seemingly physical as cancer can be reversed if a person practices control of their mind. Through the regulation of the breath, the control of the senses, and more advanced forms of yogic practices, a person can live in balance and create greater balance in the world around them.

An Exercise in Sense Control

It is commonly stated that we are what we eat. This is an idea that is supported by yogic concepts, as our taste for foods that are rich, indulgent, and unhealthy stems from an ego-based fear that we will lose control if we don’t indulge our senses.
To begin experimenting with creating more positive energy and greater balance, create a list of five different foods you eat each week that you know you are not good for you but you eat all the same. For one week, only eat four of those five foods. For the second week, only eat three of those foods, and so on. After five weeks, you will have gradually eliminated all five foods from your eating routine, and in doing so you’ll have assumed control over your sense of taste. In creating this control, you’ve overcome the fear stemming from your ego. In overcoming this fear, you’ve eliminated negative thoughts from your emotional lexicon and with fewer negative thoughts, you have the opportunity to create more positive energy and make a difference in your life and the lives of others.

It is said that we are what we eat, and while there is certainly validity to this statement, the greater, more relevant notion is that, at the end of the day, we actually are what we think.
And this is true whether we fall through the wall or not.

Yogi Cameron

Read more: Yoga, Food, Mind.Body.Soul, Health, Spirituality, Ayurveda, Life, Living News

Maritime Autowash: Baltimore’s Eco-Friendly Car Wash (VIDEO)

You might think getting soaked up with soapsuds in your driveway is the most environmentally friendly way to wash your car, but that may not be the case depending on the car wash in your neighborhood.

In this video from CNN, David Podrog, owner of Maritime Autowash in Baltimore, says his facility recovers 95 percent of the wash water it uses. He also claims that his car wash utilizes better cleaning solutions, as older, cheaper chemicals are far more detrimental to the environment.

“We end up paying more for safer chemicals than we would for more dangerous ones,” Podrog tells CNN.

According to the International Car Wash Association, an average individual washing their car at home uses more water than a commercial car wash, and the runoff from their driveway can pollute groundwater, CNN reports.

WATCH:

Read more: Video, Maritime Autowash, Green Technology, Environmental Car Wash, Car Wash Green, Eco-Friendly Car Wash, Green Living, Eco Car Wash, Green Car Wash, Green News

George Michael sentenced to jail

Singer George Michael is jailed for eight weeks for crashing his car while under the influence of cannabis.

Peter Steinberg: Oprah’s Book Club: Her 8 Most ‘Flashlight Worthy’ Recommendations (PHOTOS)

Here at Flashlight Worthy Book Recommendations — a website of hundreds of lists of the very best books — we’re going to miss Oprah. Over the last 14 years she’s not not only encouraged people to read — but to read good books. Great books, even.

But there’s great… and there’s flashlight worthy. You know, flashlight worthy — those books that keep you up well after you should’ve turned out the light… reading just one more chapter… just one more page… just one more paragraph.

To save you the trouble of reading all 66 of Oprah’s selections, we’ve narrowed down her choices to what is, in our opinion, the 8 most flashlight worthy page-turners. You can’t really go wrong with any of them. (Ok, well, maybe one of them isn’t for everyone.)

When you’re done with these, drop Oprah a line and ask her for more recommendations. If, by some chance, you don’t hear back from her, head on over to Flashlight Worthy. Our Book Club Recommendations and Fiction categories should fill the void left by Ms. Winfrey’s departure.

Read more: Bestsellers, Lists, Flwbooks, Flashlight Worthy Books, Oprah Winfrey, Oprah, Books, Oprah's Book Club, Book Clubs, Flashlight Worthy, Slidepollajax, Books News

Pasadena plain Jane turns positively Medieval

With its six towers and a large metal door, this Pasadena house looks like it could belong to royalty. In fact, the neighbors affectionately refer to it as the Urban Castle.

SIRIUS Stratus 6 Dock-and-Play Radio with Car Kit

PowerConnect FM Transmitter works through your vehicle’s radio with easy do-it-yourself installation
View artist name, song title and channel information on an easy-to-read display
One-Touch Jump to traffic and weather of the 20 most congested cities
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Save and enjoy fast access to up to 10 of your favorite channels

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Annie Leibovitz Portrait Of John Lennon and Yoko Ono Up For Auction

NEW YORK — A photo that Annie Leibovitz took of John Lennon shortly before he was killed is going up for auction in New York City.

The photo was taken in December 1980 for Rolling Stone magazine. It shows Ono and her husband embracing while reclining.

Read more: Rolling Stone, John Lennon, Rolling Stone Magazine, Yoko Ono, Annie Leibovitz, The Beatles, NY Culture, New York News

Steven C. Hayes, Ph.D.: Watching Porn: The Problem That Must Not Be Named

It’s ironic, but it is hard to have an adult conversation about sex. In some areas, topics are so taboo that you risk your reputation even to raise them.

I’ll give you one. There are lots of folks whose lives are disrupted by the manner or amount of time they spend watching porn.

Hey. Quick. Before you close your ears, hear me out.

I’m not saying that I think porn watching of X amount (or even XXX amount) is too much. I have no numeric scale of that kind to provide and if you watch porn and feel comfortable about it, that is fine with me. Really. I’m not trying to mix my role as a psychologist with that of the morality police. I’m just saying that in some people’s lives, viewing pornography can occur in a way or in an amount that has serious costs — according to them. People may spend so much time viewing porn that other important things are put to the side. They may be obsessed with disturbing images and alternate between viewing and self-loathing. They may allow their viewing patterns to become a barrier between themselves and their partners or may risk their financial security by viewing pornography while on the job.

It is not as though we are unaware of this inconvenient truth, despite its political incorrectness in the mainstream culture. Recent research suggests that about 17 percent of individuals who view porn on the Internet meet criteria for sexual compulsivity. That translates to a lot of people, given that about 12 percent of all the Internet traffic is porn and nearly 90 percent of the young male population (about 30 percent of the young female population) view pornography at least occasionally. Unfortunately, this issue is so tricky politically that clinical researchers almost run the other way rather than address it.

Through August 2010 not a single controlled treatment study had ever been published on the “problem that must not be named.” The federal government is no better: they have never funded even one treatment study focused on this problem and have told researchers not even to try to get the funds for such research through normal scientific funding channels. That pattern of avoidance protects psychologists or bureaucrats fearful of getting their fingers caught in this cultural wringer all right, but it leaves people struggling with the issue without methods that are tested and known to be helpful.

Part of the problem may also be that the area is so counterintuitive that psychologists simply do not know what to do. Utah State University psychologist Michael Twohig (open disclosure: a former student of mine) and his students have recently discovered that there is an ironic process in problematic viewing. Struggling with urges to view leads to more viewing and more psychological problems. In other words, the normal ways we know to reduce things in our lives (avoid or deliberately change what you do not want) has the exact opposite effect than what was intended.

We have seen that pattern before in areas such as obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD). Here is the recipe. Take an urge or an odd thought; mix thoroughly with negative emotions, sensations or images; then fold in a heaping helping of suppression and avoidance (pushing out of mind, engaging in ritualistic undoing). Voila. Obsessive stew.

Every time you check to see if your suppression worked — well, it didn’t. You just thought of it. Again. More negative emotions. More attempts to control. More checking to see if it went away. More struggling.

Obsessive stew.

Treatment researchers have recently found ways to break the self-amplifying pattern of urge suppression and urge indulgence in OCD, and in OCD spectrum disorders such as hair pulling or skin picking, by using Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (“ACT” is said as a word, not initials). Several controlled studies (mostly by Twohig or by University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee psychologist Doug Woods and their students) have found positive effects for ACT by teaching people to walk in the exact opposite direction than that suggested by the problem-solving organ between our ears. Instead of controlling urges, ACT teaches acceptance and mindful awareness of them. Instead of self-loathing and criticism, ACT teaches self-compassion. Instead of avoidance, ACT instigates approaching ones’ values.

This is counterintuitive. Suppressive avoidance is what the mind knows how to do. A highly religious young man struggling with pornography viewing is likely to criticize himself horribly, and then try to eliminate the urge and suppress all thoughts about it. It almost looks as though that is the moral thing to do, but instead this research suggests that it is a route toward more struggle, more suffering and ironically, toward more obsessive viewing.

It has to be said: it is also bad theology. Even Christ was tempted, after all. Simply having a thought or feeling a temptation is not yet sinful in the world’s major religious philosophies. Sins require an act of the will. A normal problem-solving mode of mind can’t quite get that distinction.

The first controlled study ever done on how to address problematic Internet pornography viewing was published in the September 2010 issue of the well-respected clinical research journal, Behavior Therapy. Twohig and co-author Jess Crosby applied eight sessions of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy to problematic viewing. As participants learned to accept the urge, to watch it rise and fall mindfully, to embrace themselves in a kinder and less judgmental way, and to pivot toward valued actions, something remarkable happened. Viewing became far less frequent, but what was remarkable was how that happened. People softened. Religious obsessions went down but positive commitments went up. Obsessive thinking was relieved and with it worry that unbidden thoughts alone cause harm. People became more accepting of their emotions and less entangled with their thoughts. And they were more able to act in accord with their values as a positive goal, carrying difficult thoughts and feelings with them in a more compassionate way.

It seems that both sides of the culture debate have a little piece of that success. Maybe it is time to have an adult conversation about the problem that must not be named.

(PS. There are a number of popular books that can help teach these ACT skills, such as Russ Harris’s “Happiness Trap” or my own “Get Out of Your Mind and Into Your Life.”)

Read more: Sex, Pornography, Pornography Problem, Porn Addiction, Pornography Addiction, Porn, Living News