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Nick Danger Third Eye ~ Firesign Theatre

Firesign Theater

Nick Danger is a fictional character created by the comedy group The Firesign Theatre, portrayed by Phil Austin. Danger is a parody of the hard-boiled detective, and is often announced as “Nick Danger, Third Eye”, a parody of the term private eye. Danger stories involve stereotypical film noir situations, including mistaken identity, betrayal, and femmes fatales. Danger originally appears on the 1969 album How Can You Be in Two Places at Once When You’re Not Anywhere at All.

Press Quotes

“The Beatles of comedy.” ⁠—⁠Library of Congress

“The Firesign Theatre is a comedy group that uses the recording studio at least as brilliantly as any rock group …” ⁠—⁠Robert Christgau

“… [Firesign is] the funniest team in America today, combining elements of W C Fields, James Joyce, Lord Buckley, contemporary television and Thirties radio, scrambling it all up in a collective consciousness that defies description, and then spewing it out in a free-form half-hour epic presentation of sheer insanity … Their timing is dynamite, their dialog kaleidoscopic, and their satire is, so to speak, acidic. WAITING FOR THE ELECTRICIAN … a masterpiece of paranoia.” ⁠—⁠Ed Ward, Rolling Stone

Video/Recording

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Life’s third act | Jane Fonda

Jane Fonda

“There have been many revolutions over the last century,  but perhaps none as significant as the longevity revolution. We are living on average today 34 years longer than our great-grandparents did — think about that. That’s an entire second adult lifetime that’s been added to our lifespan. And yet, for the most part, our culture has not come to terms with what this means. We’re still living with the old paradigm of age as an arch. That’s the metaphor, the old metaphor. You’re born, you peak at midlife and decline into decrepitude”.

But many people today — philosophers, artists, doctors, scientists — are taking a new look at what I call “the third act” — the last three decades of life. They realize that this is actually a developmental stage of life with its own significance, as different from midlife as adolescence is from childhood. And they are asking — we should all be asking: How do we use this time? How do we live it successfully? What is the appropriate new metaphor for aging?

I’ve spent the last year researching and writing about this subject. And I have come to find that a more appropriate metaphor for aging is a staircase — the upward ascension of the human spirit, bringing us into wisdom, wholeness, and authenticity. Age not at all as pathology. Age as potential. And guess what? This potential is not for the lucky few. It turns out, most people over 50 feel better, are less stressed, less hostile, less anxious. We tend to see commonalities more than differences. Some of the studies even say we’re happier.

Video

Video transcribed at https://www.ted.com/talks/jane_fonda_life_s_third_act/transcript?subtitle=en

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Dr Adam Fraser explains The Third Space

How to improve work life balance and be more agile in your behaviour by leveraging the transitional space in your day.

We spend our day rapidly moving between different environments and interactions. All too often we take the mood and mindset of the previous interaction into the next one. We might have a frustrating meeting and it affects how we behave in the next one, or we go through a crisis, and it derails our day, or we take a bad day home with us. Clearly, this has a negative impact on our performance.

Dr Adam will explore a three-step process to effectively transition between the different interactions, tasks and contexts that make up our lives, in a way where we leave the previous interaction behind and bring the right mindset to what we are transitioning into, so we can perform at our best.

We will also talk about how we transition from work to home in a way where we can disconnect from the day and be at our best for our home life.

Research Outcomes

In a number of organisations the content presented for this topic has led to:

  • 43% improvement in the mood in the home, practicing The Third Space® on the commute between work and home
  • 91% increase in Boundary strength (the ability to not let the previous interaction have a negative impact on the next interaction)

Video

Read more at https://dradamfraser.com/speaking-content/the-third-space