Podcast appearances and mentions of andrew mcnally

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Best podcasts about andrew mcnally

Latest podcast episodes about andrew mcnally

On n'est pas obligé d'être d'accord - Sophie Durocher
La mode au Québec, toujours un métier d'avenir! Achat local et défilé important

On n'est pas obligé d'être d'accord - Sophie Durocher

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2025 10:19


Le Défilé Signature 2025, un tremplin pour la relève de la mode québécoise. Mardi 13 mai au Pavillon du Grand Quai du Port de Montréal à 17h30, 19h30 et 21h30. Entrevue avec Andrew McNally, doyen mode du Collège LaSalle Regardez aussi cette discussion en vidéo via https://www.qub.ca/videos ou en vous abonnant à QUB télé : https://www.tvaplus.ca/qub ou sur la chaîne YouTube QUB https://www.youtube.com/@qub_radio Pour de l'information concernant l'utilisation de vos données personnelles - https://omnystudio.com/policies/listener/fr

On n'est pas obligé d'être d'accord - Sophie Durocher
Ép. 12/05 | Mourir plus tôt en mangeant des céréales santé

On n'est pas obligé d'être d'accord - Sophie Durocher

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2025 45:20


Médecins controversés. Fin de vie. Relève de la mode. Les céréales. Dans cet épisode intégral du 12 mai, en entrevue : Dre. Karine Toledano, médecin-anesthésiste Ariane Plaisance, chercheuse autonome spécialisée en pratiques de fin de vie Andrew McNally, doyen mode du Collège LaSalle Une production QUB Mai 2025Pour de l'information concernant l'utilisation de vos données personnelles - https://omnystudio.com/policies/listener/fr

What Were We Watching?
Episode 227: Back to the Future Part II

What Were We Watching?

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2024 121:23


We don't need a Sports Almanac or a hoverboard to unravel the complex timelines in BACK TO THE FUTURE PART II, but we do need returning guest Andrew McNally. It's the sequel, listeners - something's got to be done about the sequel!

Yasmine Abdelfadel
Les meilleurs et les pires looks des vedettes aux Grammys

Yasmine Abdelfadel

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2024 13:18


On parle des meilleurs et des pires looks du tapis rouge des Grammys! Entrevue avec Andrew McNally, chroniqueur mode au Journal de MontréalPour de l'information concernant l'utilisation de vos données personnelles - https://omnystudio.com/policies/listener/fr

On n'est pas obligé d'être d'accord - Sophie Durocher
Cannes : les bons et les mauvais coups vestimentaires

On n'est pas obligé d'être d'accord - Sophie Durocher

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2023 11:02


Festival de Cannes : le défilé sur le tapis rouge se poursuit. Quelles sont les grandes vedettes qui ont fait tourner les têtes jusqu'à présent ? Entrevue avec Andrew McNally, chroniqueur mode au Journal de Montréal.Pour de l'information concernant l'utilisation de vos données personnelles - https://omnystudio.com/policies/listener/fr

On n'est pas obligé d'être d'accord - Sophie Durocher
Épisode mardi 23 mai  | Fierté Montréal : de la discrimination à l'endroit de sa propre communauté

On n'est pas obligé d'être d'accord - Sophie Durocher

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2023 43:57


Dans cet épisode intégral du 23 mai, en entrevue :    Serge Sasseville, conseiller municipal dans le district Peter-McGill. Andrew McNally, chroniqueur mode au Journal de Montréal. Josélito Michaud, auteur et animateur de radio et de télévision.    Une production QUB Radio Mai 2023Pour de l'information concernant l'utilisation de vos données personnelles - https://omnystudio.com/policies/listener/fr

On n'est pas obligé d'être d'accord - Sophie Durocher
Met Gala : «Les hommes avaient presque des looks plus intéressants que les femmes», dit Andrew McNally

On n'est pas obligé d'être d'accord - Sophie Durocher

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2023 13:02


Lundi plusieurs vedettes ont défilé sur le tapis rouge du Met Gala. Encore une fois cette année, les tenues extravagantes étaient au rendez-vous ! On en discute avec le chroniqueur mode Andrew McNally. Entrevue avec Andrew McNally, chroniqueur mode au Journal de Montréal.Pour de l'information concernant l'utilisation de vos données personnelles - https://omnystudio.com/policies/listener/fr

On n'est pas obligé d'être d'accord - Sophie Durocher
Épisode mardi 2 mai | Kim Kardashian s'habille-t-elle au Dollarama?

On n'est pas obligé d'être d'accord - Sophie Durocher

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2023 45:42


Retour sur les accoutrements portés lors du Met Gala 2023 : Sophie n'a pas aimé la robe de Kim K ! Retour sur la journée de congé pour les autochtones. 7 mai : Paul Piché sera intronisé au Panthéon des auteurs et compositeurs canadiens.  Dans cet épisode intégral du 2 mai, en entrevue :    Andrew McNally, chroniqueur mode au Journal de Montréal. Paul Piché, auteur-compositeur-interprète.   Une production QUB Radio Mai 2023Pour de l'information concernant l'utilisation de vos données personnelles - https://omnystudio.com/policies/listener/fr

On n'est pas obligé d'être d'accord - Sophie Durocher
Tenues des Oscars : Lady Gaga a surpris tout le monde, dit Sophie

On n'est pas obligé d'être d'accord - Sophie Durocher

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2023 14:02


Retour sur les tenues des vedettes qui ont foulé le tapis rouge de la 95e cérémonie des Oscars dimanche. Entrevue avec Andrew McNally, chroniqueur mode au Journal de MontréalPour de l'information concernant l'utilisation de vos données personnelles - https://omnystudio.com/policies/listener/fr

On n'est pas obligé d'être d'accord - Sophie Durocher
Épisode lundi 13 mars | Québec solidaire bientôt Quebec solidarity?

On n'est pas obligé d'être d'accord - Sophie Durocher

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2023 45:58


La soirée des Oscars et les tenues des vedettes | Québec solidaire en anglais seulement dans Saint-Henri-Sainte-Anne | La Francofête 2023 avec Pierre-Yves Lord Dans cet épisode intégral du lundi 13 mars, en entrevue Andrew McNally, chroniqueur mode au Journal de Montréal Pierre-Yves Lord, animateur Une production QUB radioMars 2023Pour de l'information concernant l'utilisation de vos données personnelles - https://omnystudio.com/policies/listener/fr

Manufacturing Leaders
Andrew Mcnally - Senior Engineering Manager at Thomas Swan

Manufacturing Leaders

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2022 48:30


 Andrew McNally is the Senior Engineering Manager of Thomas Swan, a chemical manufacturer based in Consett  Having gained his Masters qualification in Chemical and Process Engineering, he has since worked his worked his way up rapidly in the sector, and held senior positions with companies like Vertellus, Akzo Nobel and Nissan. This is a great episode for the core manufacturing and engineering fans, we not only dig into his journey, but also talk in detail about various manufacturing challenges, and Andrew gives some excellent advice about sustainability  What we discuss ·      What does it mean to you to be a leader?·      The Early Years ·      The University route into industry·      Early management and mentoring ·      Best ever managers·      How do you deal with self doubt in management? ·      Challenges in Manufacturing – Succession planning and automation ·      Chemical to Automotive·      Thomas Swann – The Culture·      Sustainability – Tips for success ·      3 Things that make up a good leader  Please subscribe to the channel for more content! Theo James are a Manufacturing & Engineering Recruiter based in the North East, helping Manufacturing and Engineering firms grow across the UK. Please call us on 0191 5111 298

Marvel Star Wars Explorers
Newspaper 02 - The Constancia Affair (with Andrew McNally)

Marvel Star Wars Explorers

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2022 99:44


As the Star Warriors work together to return Gamine to her home planet of Constancia, Andrew McNally returns to the podcast for our big journey into the Sunday strips and the second half of Obi-Wan Kenobi! We're also talking about the artistry of Calvin and Hobbes, some of the inherent pros and cons of the newspaper format, and a whole host of Wookieepedia-sourced oddities from the old Expanded Universe.

Soulful Couture Podcast
An interview with Andrew McNally

Soulful Couture Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2021 31:10


Andrew McNally is a multi-talented Montreal stylist and art director.  He also teaches at Lasalle College and is a fashion columnist.  Moreover, he's a champion of local design, and bolsters the local fashion landscape with his passion and love of the local industry. He supports many important social causes, such as Reluxe, an annual second hand clothing sale that benefits women in need. He also generously spends his spare time helping the younger generations, encouraging them to go for their dreams.

Interplace
Boomtown Maps

Interplace

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2021 22:44


Hello Interactors,So far this spring I’ve chronicled the spread of cadastral mapping across America. It was all part of Jefferson’s gridded agrarian vision. But by the middle of the 1800s immigrants started flooding in, the industrial age was taking hold, and cities were the thing to map.As interactors, you’re special individuals self-selected to be a part of an evolutionary journey. You’re also members of an attentive community so I welcome your participation.Please leave your comments below or email me directly.Now let’s go…THE PREACH AND THE LEECH "This lake was well named; it was but a scum of liquid mud, a foot or more deep, over which our boats were slid, not floated over, men wading each side without firm footing, but often sinking deep into this filthy mire, filled with bloodsuckers, which attached themselves in quantities to their legs. Three days were consumed in passing through this sinkhole of only one or two miles in length."Those are the words of Gurdon S. Hubbard, a fur trader from Vermont. In 1816, at age 18, he begged his parents to leave his job at a local hardware store to join a buddy on a fur trading expedition to Mackinac Island, Michigan. Two years later, in 1818, he found himself on a boat being drug through leech infested mud next the aptly named, Mud Lake – a terminating branch of the Des Plaines river. He was traversing a well known shortcut to Lake Michigan. As his men pulled blood sucking predatory leeches from their legs, he likely would have also been breathing in the odors of a pungent leek that grew along those shores. The Algonquin people called them Checagou.  By the time Hubbard found this shortcut, it had already been named Chicago Portage and had been used for over one hundred years. In 1673, French Jesuit priest Jacques Marquette joined French Canadian Louis Jolliet to map the Mississippi river. As they were paddling their way upstream on their return to the Great Lakes, they encountered a Miami tribe by the shore. The Miami tipped them off to a shortcut to Canada. Instead of paddling all the way up to Lake Superior, they told them they could hang a right at the Illinois River and head north through Lake Michigan instead. The Illinois River becomes the Des Plaines River at what is now Joliet, Illinois. The river then opened to an estuary later dubbed Mud Lake near present day Lyons, Illinois – a suburb of Chicago. Thus began a days long slog tugging a boat made from birch logs; a portage to Lake Michigan and beyond.Plodding their way to the mouth of the great lake on the horizon, Jolliet got to thinking about all the fur he could trade now that he knew this shortcut. After all, this portage connected two pivotal North American transportation routes – the Great Lakes and the Mississippi River. In his journal he wrote, “We could easily sail a ship to Florida…All that needs to be done is to dig a canal through but half a league of prairie from the lower end of Lake Michigan to the River of St. Louis [today’s Illinois River].”Jolliet and Marquette spread the word and soon many others were trading through the Chicago Portage. The first to settle was Jean Baptiste Point du Sable and his wife Kitihawa in the 1780s. Jean Baptiste was of French and African descent and Kitihawa was from the local Potawatomi tribe. They were married ceremoniously among her people in the 1770s and then, having converted to Catholicism, were married in 1788 in Cahokia, Illinois in a Catholic ceremony. They, and their two children, went on to build a successful farm and trading post in a well appointed log cabin. They are considered the founders of what we now call the city of Chicago. Jean Baptiste died the year Gurdon Hubbard and his leech bitten crew showed up in 1818.GRID AS YOU GROWThat same year the Illinois General Assembly was formed, the young state’s first government. Hubbard settled in Chicago and eventually became a legislator. He lobbied tirelessly for supplemental funding from the Federal government to build a canal that would replace the pernicious Chicago Portage. It worked. They broke ground with Hubbard wielding the spade, in 1836. By this time Hubbard had also started Chicago’s first stockyard and meat packing plant. He knew, just as Jolliet did over one hundred years before, that Chicago was destined to be an attractive port town; a symbol of growth and prosperity. But neither could have imagined what happened next. It’s hard to believe today.When Hubbard broke ground on the canal, the population was around 4,000 people. Ten years later, in 1850, that number grew nearly eight-fold to 30,000 people. By 1886, around the time Hubbard was buried just north of Chicago at Graceland Cemetery, there were nearly one-million people living in Chicago. Immigrant populations were flooding the city for work, many as laborers on the canal. Land prices were skyrocketing. “In 1832, a small lot on Clark Street sold for $100. Two years later, the same property sold for $3,000. And a year after that, it sold for $15,000. A newspaper reporter wrote, “[E]very man who owned a garden patch stood on his head, [and] imagined himself a millionaire….”It didn’t take long for survey crews to start gridding Chicago into tiny parcels. All spring I’ve been chronicling the spread of large-scale cadastral mapping across the country. While Jefferson’s vision of a gridded country included plats for developing cities, his primary objective was the expansion of land for agrarian purposes. After all, he was a farmer. But urban populations were starting to mushroom in the 1830s as masses of immigrants flooded the country. Especially Chicago. Surveyors got to work dividing plats of land into skinny rectangles packed into gridded squares divided by roads and bounded by the curving shores of the Chicago River and Lake Michigan. This 1834 map shows the land surveyed in Chicago from 1830 to 1834. Enough to handle the nearly 4,000 residents and growing. By 1850 the population was nearing 30,000 and the city needed to expand. By 1855 the population had already jumped to 80,000. That’s 10,000 people a year flooding a few square miles. You can see in the 1855 map above just how much Chicago grew. When the city was founded in the 1830s it was about 2.5 miles square. By 1863 it grew west, south, and north four to six miles in each direction. Urban sprawl started in Chicago almost as soon as it was founded. BILLY AND ANDY RAND MCNALLYThe opening of the Chicago River canal in 1848 and the penetration of rail lines in the 1850s culminated in making Chicago a freight and logistics transportation hub. A system that birthed iconic companies like Montgomery Ward and Sears, Roebuck & Co. By 1850 Chicago was the biggest city in the country. The intense growth of the city coincided with increased ethnic diversity, complex urban activity, and a shifting cultural context. It called for new methods of infrastructure management, land use policy, and regulation — but also new maps. Mapping became tools not just for documenting the record, but for managing complexity, decision making, and the risk of calamity.This 1869 map shows the various insurance schemes spread throughout the city. Among other purposes, it was used to assess fire risk. A need that became abundantly clear two years later when the Great Chicago Fire destroyed nearly three and a half square miles of the city leaving 300 people dead. Advances in printing technology spawned new varieties of publications, including maps. A year after the Great Chicago Fire, a printmaker from Massachusetts, William Rand, and an Irish immigrant, Andrew McNally, printed their first map. Their newly formed business, Rand McNally & Co., started off printing train tickets and schedules for the dizzying strands of trains snaking through the city. Soon Rand McNally became synonymous with ‘map’ in the United States becoming the country’s most dominant mapping company.  ANOTHER SUPER HERO FROM IOWABy 1870 48 percent of Chicago residents were immigrants; more than any other city in the country.  All this urban activity brought prosperity to a rising privileged social elite, but it also brought poverty, destitution, and segregation to the disadvantaged. Last week I talked about the 1890 U.S. census. It was the birth of American ‘Big Data’ tabulated with newly invented punch cards. America’s ‘father of mapmaking’, Henry Gannett, was tasked with charting and mapping the data. It was an impressive feat, that included new methods of modeling and visualizing the growing ethnicities in America. But the analysis included overtones of patriarchy and racist theories. Five years later, out of the slums of Chicago, emerged a more thoughtful, altruistic, yet critical counter maps. In 1895 an all-women boarding house, called the Hull House, went about collecting, analyzing, and mapping socio-demographic data aimed at improving the lives of their immigrant neighbors. One of those women was from my home state of Iowa. Her name is Agnes Sinclair Holbrook. She was born in Marengo, Iowa in 1867 and went on to study at Wellesley College in Massachusetts. She studied math, science, and literature earning a bachelor of science degree in 1892. She then moved to Chicago to live with other women like her in the Hull House. This was a home to women with university degrees situated in a poor Chicago neighborhood. The Hull House mission, which came from one of the founders, Jane Addams, was to empower educated women through her “Three R’s”: Residence, Research, and Reform. Instead of distantly studying anonymously surveyed data she encouraged,“close cooperation with the neighborhood people, scientific study of the causes of poverty and dependence, communication of these facts to the public, and persistent pressure for [legislative and social] reform..." Young Agnes Sinclair Holbrook collected and analyzed local data from her resident immigrant community and visualized it on a map. Her intent was to inform and influence local policy but to also lift up, empower, and encourage immigrant women to seek their own opportunities. Below is an example of her work from the 1895 Hull House publication.Digitally produced urban maps like Holbrook’s are common place today. We’re practically numbed by their presence as they bob in the rivers of social media feeds. You can bet Agnes Sinclair Holbrook would have thousands of followers if she were alive today. She’d probably also be disappointed in the progress made toward social justice. Holbrook wasn’t a fan of sterile, dispassionate pronouncements. She believed simply stating the facts doesn’t get traction, if you want to make change it must come with the right action. As Holbrook writes in the 1895 publication of Hull-House Maps and Papers,“Merely to state symptoms and go no farther would be idle; but to state symptoms in order to ascertain the nature of disease, and apply, it may be, its cure, is not only scientific, but in the highest sense humanitarian.” She didn’t stop there. She had a bigger message for America’s powerful, white, male elite. It’s a message that is so relevant today, that we’d be wise to reflect and learn from the socio-political environment of the late 1800s. Here the 28 year old Holbrook states, “The politicians work on the people's feelings, incite them against the men of the other party as their most bitter enemies; and if this doesn't succeed, they go to work deliberately to buy some. Thus adding insult to injury, they go off and set up a Pharisaic cry about the ignorance and corruption of the foreign voters.As everything in the old country has its price, it is not at all surprising that the foreigners believe such to be the case in this also. But Americans are to blame for this; for the better class of citizens, the men who preach so much about corruption in political life, and advocate reforms, never come near these foreign voters. They do not take pains to become acquainted with these recruits to American citizenship; they never come to their political clubs and learn to know them personally; they simply draw their estimates from the most untrustworthy source, the newspapers, and then mercilessly condemn as hopeless.”As Holbrook and the women of Hull House worked to better improve the lives of those in the city, the ‘better class of citizens’ were leaving it. Since the 1850s streetcar suburbs were popping up everywhere to whisk affluent commuters in and out of the city; including one of America’s first planned communities, Riverside, Illinois. It was designed by famed landscape architect Frederick Law Olmstead and it provided the bucolic utopia that continues to lure Americans from dense urban cities to this day. By 1873 Chicago had 11 different privately operated streetcar lines serving over 100 communities. Streetcar lines continued to stretch further distances all the way up to the twentieth century when the automobile arrived. This 1889 map shows the extent to which these suburbs dotted the surrounding landscape of Chicago.Many believe the proliferation of roadways and automobiles created suburban sprawl in Chicago and cities like it. But it was the streetcar suburbs of the 1800s — all crafted by real estate developers looking to cash in on opportunistic land grabs. The roads of Chicago present connect the nodes of Chicago’s past. As you can see on the map, one of those suburban communities is named Lyons. Remember Lyons? That’s where Jolliet and Marquette tugged their canoe through the slough. Then came Mr. Hubbard and the leeches too. Being the parasitic predators they are, they latch on to whatever life they encounter and forcefully, selfishly drain the life from unsuspecting victims. Showing a lack of mercy, they inject an anti-clotting chemical into the victim to prevent them from forging a natural occurring defense. And for every leech you manage to dislodge and dispatch, another appears. Waves of leeches will consume a host leaving only the leeches.As waves of European colonial expansionists and empire builders leeched the lifeblood from unsuspecting Indigenous humans and dignity seeking dreamers they polluted the environment with their oozing industrial excrement. And so as to not wallow in their own toxic waste, they crawled over the masses calling for help, and hopped on a streetcar in search of a pristine, natural, patch of prairie next to a meandering river or lake bordered by the plant the locals called Checagou. Subscribe at interplace.io

FloWrestling Radio Live
FRL 639 - Cadet WTT, Mizzou Back To The Big 12, Poeta Promoted At Illinois

FloWrestling Radio Live

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2021 81:33


Run of Show 0:00 - We are big fans of the topography of the Wisconsin Dells 0:03 - Mizzou will return to the Big 12 0:06 - Mike Poeta named Illinois Head Coach 0:10 - Gas Tank Gary and Andrew McNally announce transfer destinations 0:13 - Joe Rau petitioning after controversial stoppage in match one of OTT finals 0:31 - Jordan Burroughs officially moving to 79kg 0:39 - Biggest standouts at Cadet World Team Trials 01:04 - Questions from friends

FloWrestling Radio Live
FRL 634 - Who Gets The Illinois Job, Max Dean & Austin Gomez In The Portal, Where Gas Tank Gary and Andrew McNally Are Looking At, Last Chance Olympic Qualifier Update

FloWrestling Radio Live

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2021 76:06


Run of Show 0:00 - Kozak went from the Facebook comments to full-time FloWrestling staff 0:01 - We teased it Thursday, but the Dean’s are officially gone from Cornell 0:05 - The five schools that Gas Tank Gary is considering right now 0:10 - The four schools in the Andrew McNally sweepstakes 0:12 - Jim Heffernan steps down at Illinois. Who could be the next head coach? 0:14 - Austin Gomez is unretired and has entered the transfer portal 0:17 - Update on the Asian Olympic qualifying event 0:24 - Update on the 57kg drama in Japan 0:28 - The Oliver Astone story 0:56 - Questions from friends

What Were We Watching?
Episode 170 - Team America: World Police

What Were We Watching?

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2020 73:52


Marionette might makes right in the raunchy action parody TEAM AMERICA: WORLD POLICE. Andrew McNally helps guide us through complex feelings about America, South Park, and satire in a special 4th of July blowout. Fuck yeah!

Soft But Stronger
Andrew McNally: “Zen and the Art of Jiu-Jitsu”

Soft But Stronger

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2020 100:30


In Episode 11 Andrew McNally and I dive headlong into the depths of transcendental experiences, Eastern philosophy, mysticism, and their intersection with religion, science, and rationality.

Short Time Wrestling Podcast
Short Time Shots - November 2, 2019

Short Time Wrestling Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2019 9:08


It's Short Time Shots for November 2, 2019! In Duals:•Fueled by victories from B.C. LaPrade at 157 pounds and Hunter Bolen at 184 pounds, No. 16 Virginia Tech picked up its first win in school history over Missouri, beating the No. 9 Tigers 29-10 in Blacksburg. The Hokies won the last four matches of the dual, which included a forfeit at 133 and a 26-second fall by Mitch Moore at 141 pounds to close out the win. •No. 24 Virginia went 2-0, beating Maryland 34-6 and Division III Southern Virginia 50-3. Maryland picked up the first win of the Alex Clemsen era with a win over Southern Virginia 42-6. Of note for people back home, Patrick McCormick from Poquoson, Virginia - that’s my hometown - registered a forfeit W at 125 against Southern Virginia. It’s my show, I’ll mention irrelevant forfeit wins by kids from my hometown if I want. •Rutgers opened up the season with three wins, picking up a win over newly branded Division I LIU 43-3, the top-ranked team in Division II, Pitt-Johnstown, 22-9 and Division III Centenary 38-6. •Edinboro opened up year two of the Matt Hill era with three wins, two over non-Division I foes Mercyhurst North East and Ashland and its first MAC win over new conference mate Kent State. In the 29-6 win over Kent State, the top win there was Jacob Oliver’s pin over Andrew McNally at 174 pounds. As SID Bob Shreve wrote, Edinboro eclipsed last year’s win total in one day. •While listed as an exhibition, it’s a notable that the revived wrestling program at Division II Fairmont State in West Virginia picked up a win over Garrett Community College of Maryland 30-22 on Saturday. It’s the second win in as many days for a new or reinstated program in the state. On Friday, Davis & Elkins opened with a win. •In Division III, Messiah won its Messiah Invitational with four champions - Josiah Gehr at 133, Garrett Cornell at 141, Nick Barnhardt at 149 and Stephen Maloney at 157 pounds. Messiah outdistanced second-place Ursinus 116.5 to 81. Up in Ithaca, Johnson & Wales took home top honors as three Wildcats won titles - Hayden Brown at 133, Gabriel McDaniel at 141 and Da’mani Burns at 149. Baldwin Wallace was second and picked up a pair of champions - Stanley Bleich at 157 and Zeckary Lehman at 197. Host Ithaca was third and also had three champs. Keeping it Division III, Millikin’s Big Blue beat Elmhurst 29-18•Mixing things up, we have LeRoy Gardner’s University of the Ozarks of Division III picking up a 41-10 win over NAIA Lyon College in a battle of Arkansas schools. Out West, North Idaho of the NJCAA beat NAIA’s Eastern Oregon 26-19. Keeping with the NAIA, Oklahoma City, coached by Olympian Sam Hazewinkel, blanked Oklahoma Wesleyan 55-0. In Tournaments: •Michigan State Open: Ohio State’s Sammy Sasso make his official college debut one to remember as he trounced the field in East Lansing. Sasso had three falls and two technical falls - including a tech over Michigan’s Kanen Storr in the finals. Sasso also decked Purdue’s Nate Limmex in the quarters. Purdue’s Kendall Coleman probably had the biggest breakout performance of the tournament, winning the title at 157 pounds. Among Coleman’s wins were Eric Barone of Illinois, Will Lewan of Michigan, Zac Carson of Ohio and Anthony Artalona of Penn - All known commodities in college wrestling. At 197, Ohio State’s Kollin Moore edged Oklahoma’s Jake Woodley 6-4 in sudden victory, while Michigan’s Mason Parris topped Central Michigan’s Matt Stencel 9-2 in the finals at 285. •Cowboy Open: Probably the most notable result came at 133 pounds where true freshman Theorius Robison of Northern Colorado beat Wyoming All-American Montorie Bridges 3-2. Now, the craziest thing to me is what I’m about to tell you. Ben VomBaur wrestled collegiately at Boise State, where he was a two-time All-American. He won the Cowboy Open, according to his Facebook page in 2001 and 2002. He finished tied for third - due to the match limit rule - at 133 pounds doing the old man entering the tournament thing. Only, he wasn’t. Ben entered the tournament with Will VomBaur, who attends the Air Force’s Prep School and Vance VomBaur, a high school junior out of Windsor, Colorado. Will didn’t place in the Amateur Division at 125, but Vance won it at 133 in the same age bracket, which is typically for college freshmen and sophomores. Yeah, those are Ben’s kids! He wrestled in a college open with his kids. Holy crap, that’s cool. I met Ben a long time ago at the U.S. World Team Trials in 2005 in Ames. Late Friday: •The Battle on the Midway did conclude after the first Short Time Shots of the season was released. Army West Point beat Fresno State 29-9 to conclude the kickoff of the season out in San Diego. In Arkansas, Williams Baptist blanked Central Baptist 48-6. What's on the docket:•We’ve got open tournaments at Princeton, Clarion, near Virginia Tech in Roanoke at the Southeast Open and the first Battle at The Citadel, appropriately, at The Citadel. Menlo hosts the Menlo Open, Lycoming’s hosting an invitational, CSU Bakersfield closes out its upper midwest run as Manny Rivera stops at North Dakota State, a spot he used to coach. Down south, Emmanuel faces Reinhardt, which started the year ranked No. 2 in the NAIA. What up Jeff Bedard!Placing Top Six (From The Newsletter):•Tim Hands over at FivePointMove.com has all the Greco-Roman coverage you can handle, but if you’re a fan of Greco, you might not be able to stomach some of the stuff coming from Budapest, as it was yet another disappointing day for Greco as the U.S. got shut out of medal contention. Timmy has all the breakdowns, as well as a story on the U15 trip out to Europe as well. •Clay Cunningham of the Bakersfield Californian pens a pretty solid story on CSU Bakersfield 133-pounder Chance Rich heading into the Runners’ dual on Sunday against North Dakota State. •From my buddy Mike Catullo out in Pennsylvania, who tipped me off to one of his wrestlers needing a heart transplant. The York Daily Record did a story on the launch of the GoFundMe. You can read about it in the newsletter. Mike was a former assistant at Franklin & Marshall, Millersville and Maryland before moving back to PA to coach and teach at Red Lion High School. This is the same school that hosted Lock Haven vs. Arizona State last year. •When you think wrestling news, you think the Morrison County Record in Minnesota. Well, if you’re a Pierz wrestling fan, yes, that’s spelled P-I-E-R-Z, then you know that’s the most trusted name in news. In all seriousness, I love stories from local media promoting longtime coaches, so that’s why we have included the story of Mark Jensen’s upcoming induction into the National Wrestling Hall of Fame’s Minnesota chapter. •From Eric Knopsnyder of the Tribune-Democrat in Johnstown, Pennsylvania - yup, one of the guys from PA Power Wrestling: Bo Bassett, who I recently saw win the Preseason Nationals in Iowa, is a finalist for Sports Illustrated Kids SportsKid of the Year. He’s a seventh grader at Forest Hills Middle School in Sidman, which is just outside Johnstown.•I’m pretty sure that VomBaur story is going to get some traction nationally once people hear about it. You can get to read those stories and more from Mat Talk Online’s daily wrestling newsletter. Sign up for free at mattalkonline.com/news and get the day’s top stories from around the world in wrestling delivered to your inbox for free. The Mat Talk Online Daily Newsletter is sponsored by Resilite. Short Time Shots is sponsorless. Interested? Give me a shout ORIf you'd like to SUPPORT THE SHOW and all the on-demand audio offerings, free newsletters and historical research AND you want to get some of that cool Compound gear, you can support this program by making a small monthly contribution to the network by following this link..The Short Time Time Wrestling Podcast is proudly outfitted by Compound Sportswear.SUBSCRIBE TO THE SHORT TIME WRESTLING PODCAST
Apple Podcasts | Stitcher | Spreaker | iHeartRadio | TuneInGoogle Podcasts | Spotify | iOS App | Android App | RSS(Editor's note: This is always a rough draft of the script of the show, there may be minor errors sprinkled throughout and no, it's not in APA style or anything that resembles a journalistic published work. Some shows will also be devoid of show notes, as they're done on the road from a mobile device).

Short Time Wrestling Podcast
Short Time Shots - November 2, 2019

Short Time Wrestling Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2019 10:38


It’s Short Time Shots for November 2, 2019. In Duals: Fueled by victories from B.C. LaPrade at 157 pounds and Hunter Bolen at 184 pounds, No. 16 Virginia Tech picked up its first win in school history over Missouri, beating the No. 9 Tigers 29-10 in Blacksburg. The Hokies won the last four matches of the dual, which included a forfeit at 133 and a 26-second fall by Mitch Moore at 141 pounds to close out the win. 24 Virginia went 2-0, beating Maryland 34-6 and Division III Southern Virginia 50-3. Maryland picked up the first win of the Alex Clemsen era with a win over Southern Virginia 42-6. Of note for people back home, Patrick McCormick from Poquoson, Virginia - that’s my hometown - registered a forfeit W at 125 against Southern Virginia. It’s my show, I’ll mention irrelevant forfeit wins by kids from my hometown if I want. Rutgers opened up the season with three wins, picking up a win over newly branded Division I LIU 43-3, the top-ranked team in Division II, Pitt-Johnstown, 22-9 and Division III Centenary 38-6. Edinboro opened up year two of the Matt Hill era with three wins, two over non-Division I foes Mercyhurst North East and Ashland and its first MAC win over new conference mate Kent State. In the 29-6 win over Kent State, the top win there was Jacob Oliver’s pin over Andrew McNally at 174 pounds. As SID Bob Shreve wrote, Edinboro eclipsed last year’s win total in one day. While listed as an exhibition, it’s a notable that the revived wrestling program at Division II Fairmont State in West Virginia picked up a win over Garrett Community College of Maryland 30-22 on Saturday. It’s the second win in as many days for a new or reinstated program in the state. On Friday, Davis & Elkins opened with a win. In Division III, Messiah won its Messiah Invitational with four champions - Josiah Gehr at 133, Garrett Cornell at 141, Nick Barnhardt at 149 and Stephen Maloney at 157 pounds. Messiah outdistanced second-place Ursinus5 to 81. Up in Ithaca, Johnson & Wales took home top honors as three Wildcats won titles - Hayden Brown at 133, Gabriel McDaniel at 141 and Da’mani Burns at 149. Baldwin Wallace was second and picked up a pair of champions - Stanley Bleich at 157 and Zeckary Lehman at 197. Host Ithaca was third and also had three champs. Keeping it Division III, Millikin’s Big Blue beat Elmhurst 29-18 Mixing things up, we have LeRoy Gardner’s University of the Ozarks of Division III picking up a 41-10 win over NAIA Lyon College in a battle of Arkansas schools. Out West, North Idaho of the NJCAA beat NAIA’s Eastern Oregon 26-19. Keeping with the NAIA, Oklahoma City, coached by Olympian Sam Hazewinkel, blanked Oklahoma Wesleyan 55-0. In Tournaments: Michigan State Open: Ohio State’s Sammy Sasso make his official college debut one to remember as he trounced the field in East Lansing. Sasso had three falls and two technical falls - including a tech over Michigan’s Kanen Storr in the finals. Sasso also decked Purdue’s Nate Limmex in the quarters. Purdue’s Kendall Coleman probably had the biggest breakout performance of the tournament, winning the title at 157 pounds. Among Coleman’s wins were Eric Barone of Illinois, Will Lewan of Michigan, Zac Carson of Ohio and Anthony Artalona of Penn - All known commodities in college wrestling. At 197, Ohio State’s Kollin Moore edged Oklahoma’s Jake Woodley 6-4 in sudden victory, while Michigan’s Mason Parris topped Central Michigan’s Matt Stencel 9-2 in the finals at 285. Cowboy Open: Probably the most notable result came at 133 pounds where true freshman Theorius Robison of Northern Colorado beat Wyoming All-American Montorie Bridges 3-2. Now, the craziest thing to me is what I’m about to tell you. Ben VomBaur wrestled collegiately at Boise State, where he was a two-time All-American. He won the Cowboy Open, according to his Facebook page in 2001 and 2002. He finished tied for third - due to the match limit rule - at 133 pounds doing the old man entering the tournament thing. Only, he wasn’t. Ben entered the tournament with Will VomBaur, who attends the Air Force’s Prep School and Vance VomBaur, a high school junior out of Windsor, Colorado. Will didn’t place in the Amateur Division at 125, but Vance won it at 133 in the same age bracket, which is typically for college freshmen and sophomores. Yeah, those are Ben’s kids! He wrestled in a college open with his kids. Holy crap, that’s cool. I met Ben a long time ago at the U.S. World Team Trials in 2005 in Ames. Late Friday: The Battle on the Midway did conclude after the first Short Time Shots of the season was released. Army West Point beat Fresno State 29-9 to conclude the kickoff of the season out in San Diego. In Arkansas, Williams Baptist blanked Central Baptist 48-6. What's on the docket: We’ve got open tournaments at Princeton, Clarion, near Virginia Tech in Roanoke at the Southeast Open and the first Battle at The Citadel, appropriately, at The Citadel. Menlo hosts the Menlo Open, Lycoming’s hosting an invitational, CSU Bakersfield closes out its upper midwest run as Manny Rivera stops at North Dakota State, a spot he used to coach. Down south, Emmanuel faces Reinhardt, which started the year ranked No. 2 in the NAIA. What up Jeff Bedard! Placing Top Six (From The Newsletter): Tim Hands over at FivePointMove.com has all the Greco-Roman coverage you can handle, but if you’re a fan of Greco, you might not be able to stomach some of the stuff coming from Budapest, as it was yet another disappointing day for Greco as the U.S. got shut out of medal contention. Timmy has all the breakdowns, as well as a story on the U15 trip out to Europe as well. Clay Cunningham of the Bakersfield Californian pens a pretty solid story on CSU Bakersfield 133-pounder Chance Rich heading into the Runners’ dual on Sunday against North Dakota State. From my buddy Mike Catullo out in Pennsylvania, who tipped me off to one of his wrestlers needing a heart transplant. The York Daily Record did a story on the launch of the GoFundMe. You can read about it in the newsletter. Mike was a former assistant at Franklin & Marshall, Millersville and Maryland before moving back to PA to coach and teach at Red Lion High School. This is the same school that hosted Lock Haven vs. Arizona State last year. When you think wrestling news, you think the Morrison County Record in Minnesota. Well, if you’re a Pierz wrestling fan, yes, that’s spelled P-I-E-R-Z, then you know that’s the most trusted name in news. In all seriousness, I love stories from local media promoting longtime coaches, so that’s why we have included the story of Mark Jensen’s upcoming induction into the National Wrestling Hall of Fame’s Minnesota chapter. From Eric Knopsnyder of the Tribune-Democrat in Johnstown, Pennsylvania - yup, one of the guys from PA Power Wrestling: Bo Bassett, who I recently saw win the Preseason Nationals in Iowa, is a finalist for Sports Illustrated Kids SportsKid of the Year. He’s a seventh grader at Forest Hills Middle School in Sidman, which is just outside Johnstown. I’m pretty sure that VomBaur story is going to get some traction nationally once people hear about it. You can get to read those stories and more from Mat Talk Online’s daily wrestling newsletter. Sign up for free at mattalkonline.com/news and get the day’s top stories from around the world in wrestling delivered to your inbox for free. The Mat Talk Online Daily Newsletter is sponsored by Resilite. Short Time Shots is sponsorless. Interested? Give me a shout OR If you'd like to SUPPORT THE SHOW and all the on-demand audio offerings, free newsletters and historical research AND you want to get some of that cool Compound gear, you can support this program by making a small monthly contribution to the network by following this link.. The Short Time Time Wrestling Podcast is proudly outfitted by Compound Sportswear. SUBSCRIBE TO THE SHORT TIME WRESTLING PODCAST Apple Podcasts | Stitcher | Spreaker | iHeartRadio | TuneIn Google Podcasts | Spotify | iOS App | Android App | RSS (Editor's note: This is always a rough draft of the script of the show, there may be minor errors sprinkled throughout and no, it's not in APA style or anything that resembles a journalistic published work. Some shows will also be devoid of show notes, as they're done on the road from a mobile device).

Marvel Star Wars Explorers
Annual 2 - Shadeshine! (with Andrew McNally)

Marvel Star Wars Explorers

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2019 102:11


As Luke and Lando learn about the heroic deeds of a young Han Solo on the planet Ventooine, Sam and Brian welcome Andrew McNally back to the podcast to weigh in on the confusing plan of the tyrannical Satab, to struggle to determine when exactly this episode of the podcast releases and to ponder the very nature of the Force.

force han solo lando andrew mcnally
What Were We Watching?
Episode 140 - The Matrix Revolutions

What Were We Watching?

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2019 96:27


Everything that has a beginning, has an end in THE MATRIX REVOLUTIONS, the Wagnerian grand finale of Matrix March featuring guests Andrew McNally and Gensho Tasaka. For Zion!

What Were We Watching?
Episode 139 - The Animatrix

What Were We Watching?

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2019 106:15


Matrix March keeps on scrolling with THE ANIMATRIX! Andrew McNally returns as we delve into the Zion archives and consider the questions posed by this ambitious extension of the big-screen franchise.

animatrix andrew mcnally
What Were We Watching?
Episode 138 - The Matrix Reloaded

What Were We Watching?

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2019 77:44


Matrix March is upon us! Ergo, we begin our journey with the polarizing sequel, THE MATRIX RELOADED. Concordantly, we recruit Andrew McNally to help us parse the rest of this groundbreaking sci-fi franchise.

ergo matrix reloaded andrew mcnally
Extra Special Brews
Common Bond Brewers

Extra Special Brews

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2018 58:52


Episode 6 with Common Bond Brewers in Montgomery, AL Hosted by Steven Spears and Wil Cushman, it's episode six. We head to the state capital to reminisce with Andrew McNally, co-founder of Common Bond Brewers. We talk about Andrew's previous career with Major League Baseball, legendary beer runs in college, the pros/cons of being the first production brewery in Montgomery, and more. Intro and Outro music is "Birmingham" by Ryan Sobb, grab his music here -> www.ryansobb.com Find us online at extraspecialbrews.com and on social media @extraspecialbrews

Beer Guys Radio Craft Beer Podcast
Common Bond Brewers is Montgomery's first production brewery

Beer Guys Radio Craft Beer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2018 44:18


Common Bond Brewers is helping revitalize Downtown Montgomery, Alabama Many homebrewers have a dream to open their own brewery.  For Common Bond Brewers co-founder Andrew McNally the dream grabbed him in 2014 after participating in a homebrew competition with Good People Brewing in Birmingham, AL.  As he drove home her pondered life, liberty, and starting his own brewery.   He decided then that he was going to make it happen.  Andrew partnered with his friend Tim Doles and the two set out to build a brewery.  With the help of friends investments and putting their own financial tails on the line they opened in April 2018, the first production brewery in town in Montgomery. McNally and Doles admit that Montgomery isn't a craft beer town, yet.  However, there was overwhelming excitement from the community leading up to the brewery opening and fantastic support since they've opened.  Their core beers (a Blonde, Pale Ale. IPA, and a Rye Amber) offer familiar flavors and a little something different.  Through their Hop Workshop series, they'll explore a variety of styles with a focus on the hop profile. Common Bond is also helping to revitalize the downtown area, a location that just a few years ago, "was not somewhere you wanted to be," according to McNally.  Their building has been around for decades and is shared with Bibb Street Pizza.  Elements from the original building were used in the decor of their taproom. In the news this week Brian shares info on changes to the brewery-to-brewery transfer laws, the first beer brewed from marijuana plants, and the upcoming IPA Day and Mead Day. Our beers this week included Common Bond's Blonde, Ramber (Rye Amber), and Hop Workshop 001 brewed with Denali hops.  We also cracked open a Pontoon Kill the Pain, Creature Comforts Arcadiana, Hutton & Smith Wheatwine, and Ironmonger's Billett, a blood orange Pilsner.

Marvel Star Wars Explorers
017 - Crucible! (with Andrew McNally)

Marvel Star Wars Explorers

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2018 95:25


As a bored Luke's mind wanders back to his Tatooine years, special guest Andrew McNally wanders onto the podcast for a meandering discussion with Brian and Sam about Tusken Raider culture, an alternate, forgotten take on Anakin Skywalker and the evolution of alien races throughout the Star Wars galaxy.

Text Before Calling
TBC-239 - Speak For Me Honey

Text Before Calling

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2017 31:42


- Speak For Me Honey - With guests: Andrew McNally, Ariel Quist Sprawls, & Daren Sprawls Quist Eric Wheeler & Sean Fau. Music By; Daren Sprawls,: Ghostislandproductions.net

speak andrew mcnally
Text Before Calling
TBC-238 - Things Do Not Get Better

Text Before Calling

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2017 24:29


- Things Do Not Get Better - With guests: Andrew McNally, Ariel Quist Sprawls, & Daren Sprawls Quist Eric Wheeler & Sean Fau. Music By; Daren Sprawls,: Ghostislandproductions.net

get better andrew mcnally
Text Before Calling
TBC-237 - Block Me Amadeus

Text Before Calling

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2017 11:58


- The Shame Game - With guests: Andrew McNally, Ariel Quist Sprawls, & Daren Sprawls Quist Eric Wheeler & Sean Fau. Music By; Daren Sprawls,: Ghostislandproductions.net

amadeus andrew mcnally
Text Before Calling
TBC-236 - Stevie Wonders Drums

Text Before Calling

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2017 15:24


- Stevie Wonders Drums - With guests: Andrew McNally, Ariel Quist Sprawls, & Daren Sprawls Quist Eric Wheeler & Sean Fau. Music By; Daren Sprawls,:

wonders drums andrew mcnally