- published: 31 Dec 2015
- views: 26445
George Ralph Noory (born June 4, 1950) is a radio talk show host. In January 2003, following Art Bell's retirement, Noory took over as weekday host of the late-night radio talk show Coast to Coast AM, having previously been a guest host for the show.
Noory grew up in Detroit with two younger sisters. He graduated from the University of Detroit in 1972 with a bachelor's degree in Communications. In 1996 he hosted a late-night program called Nighthawk.
Noory was president of Norcom Entertainment, Inc., a St. Louis-based company that developed and marketed video training films by television to law enforcement and security agencies nationwide.
Noory and his partners in Norcom Restaurants opened a restaurant, Cafe Marrakesh and Oasis Bar, in Brentwood, Mo. in 1987. The restaurant's theme revolved around a fictional Englishman named Col. William Berry, who opened a restaurant following an exciting secret mission to Marrakesh.
In an article about Noory published in the respected news magazine The Atlantic, Timothy Lavin wrote that "Noory can be an uneven broadcaster, sometimes seems to not pay full attention to his guests, offers strangely obvious commentary, and often lets clearly delusional or pseudoscientific assertions slide by without challenge." According to Media Life Magazine, "Noory says it doesn’t matter whether he believes what his callers and guests say. Ultimately, it's about entertainment, creating a show that people will be drawn to." Author and frequent Coast to Coast AM guest Whitley Strieber has commented on Noory's style, asserting "It's not that he's credulous or easily led. He's willing to take these intellectual journeys. He'll have guests on that you think are completely off the wall -- nothing they're saying is real -- but by the end of the program you will have made a discovery that there is a kernel of a question worth exploring."
Bruce Harold Lipton (born October 21, 1944) is an American developmental biologist, who is best known for promoting the idea that genes and DNA can be manipulated by a person's beliefs. He teaches at the New Zealand College of Chiropractic.
Lipton was born in Mt. Kisco, an affluent town in New York. In 1966 he received a B.A. in Biology from C.W. Post Campus of Long Island University and then his PhD in developmental biology from the University of Virginia in 1971.
In 1973 he taught anatomy as an Assistant Professor at the University of Wisconsin School Of Medicine before coming to St. George's University School of Medicine, where he became a Professor of Anatomy for 3 years. From 1987 to 1992 he was involved in research at Penn State and Stanford University Medical Center. Since 1993 he has been teaching in non-tenure positions at different universities. His publications consist mainly of research on the development of muscle cells.
Lipton has appeared on several radio shows as well as The Elaine Smitha Show and The Joe Rogan Experience podcast episode 165.
Nick Pope (born 19 September 1965) worked for 21 years at the British Government's Ministry of Defence from 1985 to 2006. He is best known for a job that he did from 1991 to 1994, where his duties included investigating reports of UFO sightings, to see if they had any defence significance. He now works as a freelance journalist and media commentator.
Pope joined the Ministry of Defence in 1985. After serving in a number of different posts, he was assigned in 1991 to a section of Secretariat (Air Staff) known as Sec (AS) 2a, where his duties included investigating reports of UFO sightings, to see if they had any defence significance.
At the time, while the Ministry of Defence stated that it "remains totally open-minded" about the existence or otherwise of extraterrestrial lifeforms”, it also stated that there was no evidence to suggest that any UFO sightings posed any threat to the UK or that they were extraterrestrial in origin. It is clear from material that Pope wrote whilst still at the MoD that he did not share the MoD's view that conventional explanations could be found for all UFO sightings.
Si yo te sigo amando como te amo
Voy a acabar usando una camisa de fuerza
Voy a dejar sin rosas el planeta
Si yo te sigo amando de la forma en que te amo, amor.
Ay ay, na na na na, no no no...
Si yo te sigo amando como te amo,
Voy a acabar cruzando cuatro mares y una luna,
Ay, es que tu eres mi fortuna,
Tu eres mi vida, Tu eres mi quebranto.
Si yo te sigo amando de esta forma asi tan loca
¡Voy a ser un esclavo del rojo de tu boca!
¡Ay Carmelina, Carmelina!
No me hagas sufrir ay Carmelina de mi vida, ¡Ay Dios!
¡Ay Carmelina, Carmelina!
Ya no me hagas sufrir, ¡No! ¡Ya no! Ya no me hagas llorar.
Ay Carmelina, Ay Carmelina de mi vida...
Si yo te sigo amando como te amo
Voy a acabar cruzando cuatro mares y una luna,
Ay, es que tu eres mi fortuna, ay ay ay ay,
Tu eres mi vida, Tu eres mi quebranto.
Si yo te sigo amando de esta forma asi tan loca,
¡Voy a ser un esclavo del rojo de tu boca!
¡Ay Carmelina, Carmelina!
No me hagas sufrir ay Carmelina de mi vida, ¡Ay Dios!
¡Ay Carmelina, Carmelina!
Ya no me hagas sufrir, ¡No! ¡Ya no! Ya no me hagas llorar.
¡Ay Carmelina, Carmelina!
No me hagas sufrir ay Carmelina de mi vida, ¡Ay Dios!
¡Ay Carmelina, Carmelina!
Ya no me hagas sufrir más ¡Ya no! ¡Ay Carmelina! yea yea yea yea.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Nah Nah Nah, Oe Oe ¡Oh Ay Carmelina! Oe Oe
¡Ay Carmelina, Carmelina! Oe Oe
¡Carmelina, Carmelina!
¡Ay Carmelina, Carmelina! Oe Oe
¡Ay Carme-Carme-Carmelina! Oe Oe
¡Ay Carme-Carme-Carmelina! Ay yea mama Nah
¡Ay Carmelina, Carmelina! Oe Oe
¡Ay Carmelina, Carmelina! Oe Oe
¡Ay Carmelina, Carmelina! Oe Oe