• The Twist Podcast

    The Twist Podcast #248: Listeners Christmas Gift Ideas, Billy Bob Beer Belly Joins the Show, and an Interview with Robert Kesten of the Stonewall National Museum

    Join co-hosts Mark McNease and Rick Rose as we hear gift ideas from Twist listeners, welcome new semi-regular contributor Billy Bob Beer Belly, and listen to an interview with Robert Kesten, Executive Director for the Stonewall Museum, Archives and Library.

    About our Sponsors

    The Twist Podcast is brought to you by Queer We Are where you’ll find a podcast, newsletter, merch and more in the Queer We Are shop.

    Enjoy The Twist on Libsyn, iTunes, Stitcher, Spotify, iHeart Radio, Amazon Music, and TheTwistPodcast.com.

    Copyright 2023 MadeMark Publishing


  • Mark McNease Mysteries Podcast

    Mark McNease Mysteries Podcast #72: A House in the Woods 2 (Chapters 7 – 9, Podcast Edition)

    Enjoy another three chapters of my newest book as a Mark McNease Mysteries podcast exclusive! This week it’s chapters seven, eight and nine of  ‘A House in the Woods 2: The Devil’s Due.’ I’ll be offering three chapters every week, narrated by my very own Wondervox. No audiobook narrators were harmed in the production of this podcast! Fasten your headphones for weekly commentary, updates, and serialized fiction from yours truly. Comments and encouragement are welcome! You can leave a voice message for me here. I’m listening!

    About ‘A House in the Woods 2: The Devil’s Due’

    A House in the Woods 2: The Devil’s Due picks up where A House in the Woods left off. Laurel Calloway is still in the mysterious town of Strickland, New Jersey, where nothing is as it appears to be. Two years have gone by, and they’ve been good to the Calloways. Laurel and her husband Jeremy have a new house, and a new family with baby Isabel about to celebrate her first birthday. Everything seems perfect, until Laurel begins to have dreams. Bad dreams. Something tells her these dreams could really be memories. But of what? Of whom, and of when?

    Did she really run over a woman in the road at night? Had they once had a dog? Why are these things trying so hard to surface, swimming slowly up from her subconscious? The more she begins to tell the people around her about these dreams, the more convinced she is that they’re part of it, and that these nightmares aren’t really dreams at all. Page after page, the pace escalates as Laurel begins to learn the truth and plot her escape. But will she succeed? The Devil is in the details.

    Mark McNease Mysteries Podcast Copyright MadeMark Publishing


  • LGBTSR

    Savvy Senior: Tips on Caring for an Aging Parent

    Narration provided by Wondervox.

    By Jim Miller

    Dear Savvy Senior,

    Where can I turn to for caregiving help? I help take care of my 80-year-old father and work too, and it’s wearing me out.

    Worn Out Wendy

    Dear Wendy,

    Taking care of an aging parent over a period of time – especially when juggling work and other family obligations – can be exhausting. But help and resources are available. Here’s what you should know.

    Identify Your Needs

    To help you determine and prioritize the kinds of help you need, a good first step is to make a detailed list of everything you do as your dad’s caregiver and the amount of time each task takes. Identify the times when you need help the most and which tasks others might be able to do for you.

  • LGBTSR

    Cat Talk Radio with Molly DeVoss and Dewey Vaughn: The Importance of Early Intervention

    CLICK HERE TO LISTEN

    So many cat owners put up with behavior problems that could have been prevented with the right knowledge and early intervention. It takes a lot longer to break a bad habit than it does to form one. And once a behavior happens for a prolonged period of time, the habit is activated in memory and considered automatic – neural circuits perform the habit without conscious thought. In other words, your cat may not be choosing to avoid the litter box any more – eliminating outside the box is an automatic action.

    About Cat Talk Radio

    Cat Talk Radio is all about cats, what makes them do what they do, why they occasionally misbehave and what cat guardians can do to fix it. We educate you on how to modify unwanted cat behavior by providing the proper environment and stimulation, enabling cats to express their natural behaviors in ways that are preferable for both the humans and cats. You will learn how to have fun with your cat, fascinating cat facts and be inspired to try new things, which will lead to a happier relationship and closer bond with your cat. We’ll also call attention to the plight of cats in our country, feel compassion for their challenges and share the message.


  • LGBTSR

    Caring for Your Older Cats

    Narration provided by Wondervox.

    By Mark McNease

    I can’t imagine our home without animal companions, and like a lot of people I find them preferable in many ways to the company of humans. They’re loyal, affectionate, playful, sometimes annoying, and always dependent on us to take care of them with loving attention.

    We adopted two older cats several years ago when we lost our others (we’ve had a number of cats, and I had quite a few on my own over the years). Wilma was 3 at the time we got her, and she came from a ‘hoarder home.’ We had no idea what that meant, except that she had trust issues and had spent the first three years of her life uncertain and anxious. Our girl Peanut came from a pet store, via a local animal rescue organization. She was 5, and gorgeous. I saw her in the store window for three months, and I was baffled why someone hadn’t taken her home already. But she was older, and she wasn’t the type of cat to play with everyone who came up to the carrier. We got lucky, and she came home with us.

    They’re now approximately 8 and 10+. Peanut has lost weight, and she recently started defecating outside the litter box. I was mystified, and stressed about her health. Then I realized she was constipated, and that constipation is a leading cause of cats doing this. I thought back over the previous week, and realized I had changed her diet to a senior wet food that was very different in its ingredients from the Fancy Feast she’d been eating for years (I give them almost exclusively wet food, except when we go away; then I have a cat person who comes twice a day to feed and care, and we leave dry food down). I got her to a (new) vet and was reassured after a thorough exam that she’s healthy and, once she got past the constipation, happy. All is well again. They make our house a home.

  • Kapok

    Kapok Aging and Caregiver Resources: The Silent Crisis of Benzodiazepines, Antipsychotics and Dementia Care

    Narration provided by Wondervox.

     

    Reprinted with permission from Kapok Aging and Caregiver Resources

    By

    Even with my decades of experience in elder care and gerontology, navigating dementia care for my father was nothing short of overwhelming for my family. Nevertheless, despite all the challenges, my dad spent all but one month of his 18 years with Alzheimer’s, cared for by my mother at home.

    Sadly, his last month was spent in a memory care facility (and on hospice care) until he died in the hospital after a bad fall and severe head injury in the facility. He was on lorazepam (Ativan®), in the category of benzodiazepines, despite his risk of falling and a body of scientific evidence describing this medication to be contraindicated for individuals with dementia.

    Like many of you caring for someone with Alzheimer’s or dementia, we second-guessed our every move and trusted others.

    Since his passing, our family has grappled with a lot of ‘should’ve,’ ‘would’ve’ moments and regrets as we look back and think about what we could’ve done to better advocate for his wellbeing.

  • LGBTSR

    Mark McNease On Topic (Substack)

    Subscribe to Mark McNease On Topic HERE

    Tis the season for stockings full of crap

    Who doesn’t want to end the year with a Trump-ordered impeachment of President Biden, the man who kicked his ass once and will kick it again?

    Who doesn’t want to see Ukraine abandoned in the manger while Jesus, Mary, and the Republican House head off for selfies and sleigh bells?

    Who doesn’t look forward to a continuation of all-Trump-all-the-time media coverage of the only man whose obituary I long every day to read?

    Who takes comfort in knowing even monsters die?

    Me! Me! Me!

    Can we stop calling them ‘Supreme’?

    Unsurprising, to say the least. The Republican justices (for that’s what they are, not “conservative”) are political hacks through and through. They lie and deceive and live lavish, kingly lives bought and paid for. We can’t do anything about their unaccountable power at this point, but we can stop pretending they deserve the least bit of respect, no matter how they decide. America is so broken, in so many ways. It all appears to have been a very long-lasting fiction that is now threadbare and exposed as the corrupt-from-to-to-bottom smoke and mirrors it always was.

    From Dahlia Lithwick in Slate:

    “With each new peek behind the curtain, this fantasy becomes more difficult to buy into, even for those desperate to believe. It turns out that the justices—at least five of them on the right—are functionally indistinguishable from cynical partisan lawmakers making deals in the Senate cloakroom. It turns out that abortion rights vanished in America because five conservatives barely tried to hide the fact that they could do that, simply because they could do that. And it turns out that they’re increasingly bad at covering their tracks.”

  • Savvy Senior

    Savvy Senior: What Is the Retirement Saver’s Credit and How Does It Work?

    Narration provided by Wondervox.

    By Jim Miller

    Dear Savvy Senior,

    Can you explain to me how the retirement saver’s tax credit works? My wife and I are in our fifties and are looking for creative ways to boost our retirement savings beyond our 401(k). Is this something we may be eligible for?

    Struggling to Save

    Dear Struggling,

    If your income is low to moderate and you participate in your employer-sponsored retirement plan or an IRA, the Retirement Savings Contribution Credit (aka “Saver’s Credit”) is a frequently overlooked tool that can help boost your retirement savings even more. Here’s how it works.

  • The Twist Podcast

    The Twist Podcast #247: Eggnog and Impeachment, Listeners’ Favorite Things about Christmas, and an Interview with Equality Florida’s Carlos Guillermo Smith

    Join co-hosts Mark McNease and Rick Rose as we add Congress to the naughty list, hear listeners’ favorite things about Christmas, and enjoy an interview excerpt with Carlos Guillermo Smith, Senior Policy Advisor with Equality Florida.

    About our Sponsors

    The Twist Podcast is brought to you by Queer We Are where you’ll find a podcast, newsletter, merch and more in the Queer We Are shop.

    Enjoy The Twist on Libsyn, iTunes, Stitcher, Spotify, iHeart Radio, Amazon Music, and TheTwistPodcast.com.

    Copyright 2023 MadeMark Publishing


  • One Thing or Another Podcast

    One Thing or Another Podcast #67: A Conversation with Professor and Author Lucas Hilderbrand on his New Book, ‘The Bars Are Ours’

    Fasten your headphones for a conversation with Professor Lucas Hilderbrand, whose latest book, The Bars Are Ours, offers a meticulously researched, scholarly and always engaging look at the history of gay bars and their place in queer culture over the decades. We talk about his life, his career, and his dedication to a subject that is as significant as ever.

    About Lucas Hilderbrand 

    Lucas Hilderbrand is Professor of Film and Media Studies at the University of California, Irvine, and author of Inherent Vice: Bootleg Histories of Videotape and Copyright, also published by Duke University Press, and Paris Is Burning: A Queer Film Classic.

    Hilderbrand lives in Los Angeles and teaches film and media, visual, and queer studies at the University of California, Irvine. He has written on the pleasures and politics of video bootlegging, the mediations of queer memory, and the ambiguities of experimental documentary.

  • Mark McNease Mysteries

    Mark McNease Mysteries Podcast #71: A House in the Woods 2 (Chapters 4-6, Podcast Edition)

    Enjoy another three chapters of my newest book as a Mark McNease Mysteries podcast exclusive! This week it’s chapters four, five and six of  ‘A House in the Woods 2: The Devil’s Due.’ I’ll be offering three chapters every week, narrated by my very own Wondervox. No audiobook narrators were harmed in the production of this podcast! Fasten your headphones for weekly commentary, updates, and serialized fiction from yours truly. Comments and encouragement are welcome! You can leave a voice message for me here. I’m listening!

    About ‘A House in the Woods 2: The Devil’s Due’

    A House in the Woods 2: The Devil’s Due picks up where A House in the Woods left off. Laurel Calloway is still in the mysterious town of Strickland, New Jersey, where nothing is as it appears to be. Two years have gone by, and they’ve been good to the Calloways. Laurel and her husband Jeremy have a new house, and a new family with baby Isabel about to celebrate her first birthday. Everything seems perfect, until Laurel begins to have dreams. Bad dreams. Something tells her these dreams could really be memories. But of what? Of whom, and of when?

    Did she really run over a woman in the road at night? Had they once had a dog? Why are these things trying so hard to surface, swimming slowly up from her subconscious? The more she begins to tell the people around her about these dreams, the more convinced she is that they’re part of it, and that these nightmares aren’t really dreams at all. Page after page, the pace escalates as Laurel begins to learn the truth and plot her escape. But will she succeed? The Devil is in the details.

    Mark McNease Mysteries Podcast Copyright MadeMark Publishing


  • One Thing or Another Podcast

    One Thing or Another Podcast #66: A Conversation with Robert Kesten, Executive Director of the Stonewall National Museum, Archives, and Library

    Listen in as I chat with Robert Kesten, Executive Director of the Stonewall National Museum, Archives, and Library in Ft. Lauderdale, FL. We talk about the need to preserve our history, the mission of the Stonewall Museum, and how we can sustain an awareness of our past and present in a way that informs our future.

    About Robert Kesten

    Robert Kesten (he/him/his) has worked globally promoting the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and furthering democracy. This work has taken many forms including writing and producing an award winning documentary on learning about the Holocaust at the Concentration Camps in Poland, Working on the Ghanaian Constitution, coordinating and producing events leading to Ukrainian independence, producing events for the first AIDS day treatment center in the nation, pushing for the decriminalization of homosexuality in Ukraine (the first Soviet Republic to do so).

    Kesten comes to Stonewall National Museum and Archives with national and international experience, taking ideas and bringing them to life. This position brings full circle his active engagement in the LGBTQ+ community and his commitment to using history as a tool to make sense and fashion a response to today and tomorrow.