Come Muggle or Wizard!

Looking for a podcast all about the magical sport of Quidditch? Well cast no spell further! Here on QWC, host Jeff Palmaccio sits down with Harry Potter enthusiast Sarah Greiner, and returning Home Field Advantage guest Adam Duren, to discuss this controversial collegial sport with a background in magic! All aspects from player positions to real world equivalents are unfolded as listeners cozy-up to a pint of Butterbeer! Has there ever been quite a fictional sport like Quidditch to manifest itself into our society? How similar is all this snitch business to sports we play today? Quidditch World Cup looks to discuss how art reflects life & life reflecting art in an athletic interpretation! Come Muggle or Wizard all are welcome to QWC!

On the first episode of Home Field Advantage, host Jeffrey Palmaccio explores the myth of a Home Field Advantage within sports and how the pandemic has affected fans loyalty to teams and athletes alike. Home Field Advantage is a sports podcast for homesick fans whom are away from their favorite teams. In this episode, Jeffrey Palmaccio speaks with Adam Duren, a Quinnipiac University student, New-Yorker Miami Marlins fan & Elliott Roberts an Australian Chicago Bulls and Edmonton Oilers’ fan to further discus these ideas and provide commentary. Welcome to Home Field Advantage! A Homesick Sports Podcast!
In Outside, Stark places the reader in to the first person point of view, this along is jarring and making the intensity that much more palpable for the reader. There is an irony to this story of a surfer whom passes from heat stroke.
The reader is challenged to deal with this irony. Even more so to emphasize the first person point of view, the piece gives literal directions for the reader of how to avoid heatstroke.
As already suggested in the style of the piece, it can be retold as a found footage film like the Blair Witch Project…
The way crime plays and adapts in to sports and society are intertwined with one another. As the games athletes play and world they live in continue to evolve around us, the perception of crime and what shout not be done, regenerates itself, redefining in the process.
Kessler’s ESPN.com piece plays out like a mini-television series or Netflix true crime-docuseries. Instantly the figurative language made me feel for the forty-one victims over the course of fort-four years. This half a century of crime is one of the many examples of when society has misplaced its trust in those of power.
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When one is to imagine some of the most iconic locations on Long Island, they would be mistaken not to include the Nassau Veteran’s Memorial Coliseum, or NYCB Live as it was lastly referred to. Despite not being as famous or noteworthy as Madison Square Garden of Manhattan, or new and trendy like Brooklyn’s Barclays Center, the Coliseum of Hempstead, deserves recognition and appreciation.
Across generations, Long Islanders of all ages have a fondness associated with the Coliseum. …
As Heath Ledger said while playing the Joker, “if you’re good at something never do it for free” echoes as Leckart’s Epic Magazine article unfolds. This story also questions how the motivation of an athlete to excel can take a morally obtuse turn in pursuit of greatness.
Throughout Tom’s various sporting events, the reader goes through his quest to quench his adrenaline thirst. More importantly, its demonstrated how society places the importance of excelling in a sport.
This was the case for Tom trying to impress his father Jay. Cycling was a way to do that, naturally Tom became obsessed…
JRNL 241 Part 2 of Assignment 1. Soccer vs Football: A Tale of Two Cultures, Special Interview with Alexander “Spence” Spencer of Norwich, England.
JRNL 241 Assignment 1- Part 1 Soccer vs Football: A Tale of Two Cultures
JRNL 241 Assignment 1, Part 1A Bonus Video; New season, new sound. The Official Premier League Anthem. Watch this prior to part 2.

Masters of Journalism Student at Hofstra University