Podcasts about Arvo

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Best podcasts about Arvo

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Latest podcast episodes about Arvo

New Retina Radio by Eyetube
ARVO '25: Real-World Next-Gen Anti-VEGF Dosing and TKIs in the Pipeline

New Retina Radio by Eyetube

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2025 22:47


Next-generation anti-VEGF agents are designed for durability. But does that actually change the rate at which they're administered? David Miller, MD, joins us to review a pair of ARVO 2025 presentations that examined his clinic's real-world administration patterns for bevacizumab (Avastin, Genentech), faricimab (Vabysmo, Genentech/Roche), and high-dose aflibercept (Eylea HD, Regeneron). What were the differences—and did they really matter?  Also, Robert Wang, MD, helped us understand the state of play in the TKI pipeline as he shared data from the phase 2b ODYSSEY study. What are the latest data on CLX-AX (Clearside Biomedcial)? And where does it stack up against the other TKIs in the pipeline? Stick with us to find out. 

Vikerhommiku intervjuud
Arvo Smiltinš: raudtee rekonstrueerimine käib helge tuleviku hüvanguks

Vikerhommiku intervjuud

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2025 15:09


Foundation Fighting Blindness
ARVO 2025 Highlight: PYC Reports Encouraging Phase 1/2 Clinical Trial Results for its RNA Therapy Targeting RP (PRPF31 Mutations)

Foundation Fighting Blindness

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2025 4:53


The company is planning a Phase 2/3 clinical trial for therapy in late 2025.

Foundation Fighting Blindness
ARVO 2025 Highlight: Atsena's XLRS Gene Therapy Provides Vision and Structural Improvements in Phase 1/2 Clinical Trial

Foundation Fighting Blindness

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2025 4:15


Part B of the trial will enroll nine adult patients as well as three pediatric patients.

Foundation Fighting Blindness
ARVO 2025 Highlight: Beacon Reports Encouraging Results for Second Eyes Dosed in Clinical Trial for XLRP Gene Therapy

Foundation Fighting Blindness

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2025 3:07


The company is currently enrolling patients in its Phase 2/3 VISTA Clinical Trial.

En pistes, contemporains !
Tabula Rasa : Arvo Pärt

En pistes, contemporains !

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2025 28:17


durée : 00:28:17 - Tabula Rasa - Arvo Pärt - En 1984, ECM a introduit un nouveau son dans le monde musical avec la sortie de Tabula rasa d'Arvo Pärt, le premier album du label New Series.

Le disque contemporain de la semaine
Tabula Rasa : Arvo Pärt

Le disque contemporain de la semaine

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2025 28:17


durée : 00:28:17 - Tabula Rasa - Arvo Pärt - En 1984, ECM a introduit un nouveau son dans le monde musical avec la sortie de Tabula rasa d'Arvo Pärt, le premier album du label New Series.

Carrefour de la création
Tabula Rasa : Arvo Pärt

Carrefour de la création

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2025 28:17


durée : 00:28:17 - Tabula Rasa - Arvo Pärt - En 1984, ECM a introduit un nouveau son dans le monde musical avec la sortie de Tabula rasa d'Arvo Pärt, le premier album du label New Series.

Vikerhommiku intervjuud
Arvo Viltrop: suvel on karta sigade Aafrika katku uut lainet

Vikerhommiku intervjuud

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2025 14:21


Sharyn and Jayden Catchup Podcast - The Edge Podcast
FULL POD #48: its the match of Arvo Poll O's

Sharyn and Jayden Catchup Podcast - The Edge Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2025 51:50


It's FriYAY! This is what happened on the show today x Poll Recap of the week: Sean Steph and Harrison go head to head Listener 5 Star fact Auto Tune Rant Is the Goon Saloon Still There? Check in Top 3 What flew away from you Steph's Impressions Which one of us is ai and the imposter Who's the worst flirt out of us… we flirt with a listener New Worlds Wonderful Caller of the week Love ya! Sean, Steph & Harrison x Follow our new insta @edgearvo

Expat of The Day
A Saturday Arvo in Sydney

Expat of The Day

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2025 52:23


Neil, Ronnie & Skip discuss the latest news. They talk Championship and how the gap is widening with the Premier League. They also discuss Kevin Thelwell's departure from Everton and Moyes' growing influence. Can Spurs beat Bournemouth at home?

Maailmanpolitiikan arkipäivää
Tasa-arvo pakittaa naisten oikeuksien juhlavuotena

Maailmanpolitiikan arkipäivää

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2025 24:27


Tasa-arvo ja naisten oikeudet ottavat maailmassa nyt takapakkia, naisten syrjinnän vastaisen Pekingin julistuksen 30-vuotisjuhlavuonna. YK:n mukaan viime vuosikymmeninä saavutettu edistys naistenoikeuksissa on jo paikoin uhattuna. Britanniassa poliisi luonnehtii naisiin kohdistuvaa väkivaltaa jo kansalliseksi hätätilaksi. Ohjelmassa kuullaan, miten ruuhkautunut lontoolainen raiskauskriisikeskus on. Keskuksen johtajan mukaan nuorimmat uhrit ovat 5-vuotiaita. Naisiin kohdistuvan vihan, väkivallan ja alistamisen kasvualusta on ajassamme entistä useammin sosiaalinen media. Siellä leviää avoimen naisvihamielisen materiaalin ohella myös hienovaraisempaa sisältöä, jossa korostetaan perinteistä naisroolia. Ohjelmassa haastateltavien tutkijoiden mukaan niiden taustalla on myös poliittista ideologiaa. Lisäksi kuullaan, miten naisasia on joutunut vastatuuleen myös YK:ssa sekä jäänyt pandemian, sotien ja kriisien keskellä myös poliittisen päätöksenteon taka-alalle. Maailmanpolitiikan arkipäivää -ohjelman ovat toimittaneet Kirsi Crowley, Satu Helin ja Paula Vilén. Äänitarkkailijana on Katri Koivula. Tunnusmusiikki: Petri Alanko, kuva: Tuuli Laukkanen/Yle.

Radio Antro
Antropodi: Tasa-arvo ei synny tyhjiössä - keskustelua tasa-arvosta naistenpäivän innoittamana

Radio Antro

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2025 34:58


Virallista YK:n kansainvälistä naistenpäivää juhlitaan 8. maaliskuuta. Ihanaa naistenpäivää kaikille!  Jaksossa keskustellaan tämän vuoden naistenpäivän teemasta inspiroituneina tasa-arvosta: mitä tasa-arvo oikeastaan tarkoittaa ja miten sitä voi edistää yliopistomaailmassa? Jaksossa vieraana kulttuuriantropologi ja tasa-arvo- ja yhdenvertaisuusasiantuntija Taina Cooke. Taina kertoo, miksi tasa-arvotyön parissa työskenteleviä ihmisiä oikeastaan tarvitaan, mitä tasa-arvon eteen Oulun yliopistossa on jo tehty ja mitkä asiat vielä vaativat korjaamista.

Pa ceļam ar Klasiku
Kaspars Putniņš: Attiecības ar Arvo Perta mūziku ir senas un man personīgi ļoti svarīgas

Pa ceļam ar Klasiku

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2025 11:48


2025. gads visā pasaulē iezīmēsies kā Arvo Perta deviņdesmitās jubilejas gads. Un arī Latvijas klausītāji varēs piedalīties Arvo Perta jubilejas gada ieskaņas koncertā, baudot vispasaules slavu iemantojušā igauņu komponista mūziku – mūziku, kura personiski uzrunā visu paaudžu klausītājus ar tās pārpasaulīgumu un vienlaikus cilvēcību, ar savu mieru un reizē dramatismu. Sestdien, 8. februārī, Rīgā, Lutera (Torņkalna) baznīcā skanēs Arvo Perta "Te Deum" un Georga Fridriha Hendeļa "Dixit Dominus", ko izpildīs Latvijas Radio koris un kamerorķestris "Sinfonietta Rīga". Pie diriģenta pults – Kaspars Putniņš, ar kuru tiekamies arī uz sarunu "Klasikas" viļņos. "Ar Perta mūziku jūtu visnotaļ ciešu un ilgstošu saikni. Tas varētu būt 1986. gada ziemā, kad es Mūzikas akadēmijas basketbola komandas sastāvā biju Tallinā," stāsta diriģents. "Tā kā sākās pārmaiņu laiki Padomju savienībā, tad tieši 86./87. gada ziemā bija pirmais Arvo Perta autorkoncerts Padomju Igaunijā pēc viņa emigrēšanas uz rietumiem. Viņš pats šajā pasākumā nepiedalījās, bet Estonijas koncertzāle bija stāvgrūdām pilna, un kādā dīvainā, nesaprotamā kārtā, neskatoties uz to, ka tur bija vispārēja sajūsma, kāpnes bija pilnas ar cilvēkiem (mūsdienās to neviens nepieļautu ugunsdrošības noteikumu neievērošanas dēļ!), bet mūsu draugi mūs tur iedabūja iekšā. Es nekad tādu mūziku savā dzīvē agrāk nebiju dzirdējis, un tas bija pilnīgs kultūršoks. Turklāt vēl biju tikko atnācis no armijas, biju ilgāku laiku nodzīvojis tādā informācijas un mūzikas vakuumā. Tūlīt pēc tam sāku intensīvi meklēt iespējas šo mūziku iepazīt tuvāk un ar to nodarboties, un Sigvarda [Kļavas] organizētajā festivālā "Satikšanās mūzikā" Universitātes aulā, tas varēja būt astoņdesmito gadu beigās, iespējams, ka mēs ar Rīgas vokālo grupu toreiz ka tik nebijām pirmie, kas Arvo Perta mūziku pēc viņa emigrācijas, došanās trimdā atskaņoja Rīgā. Kamēr viņš bija Igaunijā, Perta mūzika šad un tad tika atskaņota arī pie mums. Tā ka attiecības ir senas un man personīgi ļoti, ļoti svarīgas."

CanadianSME Small Business Podcast
The Future of AI and Small Business: A Conversation with Arvo AI's Founder

CanadianSME Small Business Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2025 30:08


In this episode of the CanadianSME Small Business Podcast, we delve into the transformative power of Artificial Intelligence (AI) for small businesses. Our guest, Noah Casarotto, founder of Arvo AI and a student at McGill University, shares his expertise on how AI is reshaping industries, optimizing processes, and driving sustainable growth for Canadian SMBs.Noah brings a unique blend of academic rigor and entrepreneurial innovation, drawing on his experiences in Physics, Chemical Engineering, and Machine Learning. With Arvo AI, he has developed high-impact solutions for sectors like healthcare, pharmaceuticals, and logistics.Key Highlights:AI Demand for SMBs: Insights into what drives small businesses to adopt AI and common misconceptions they face.Energy Challenges of AI: Understanding the computational and energy demands of AI adoption and how to address them sustainably.Applications Across Industries: Discover the industries poised for transformation through AI and where Canadian businesses should focus.Arvo AI's Approach: Learn how Arvo AI makes cutting-edge technology accessible and impactful for small businesses.Future of AI: Noah's vision for AI integration in SMBs and advice for entrepreneurs exploring AI-driven growth.Special Thanks to Our Partners:RBC: https://www.rbcroyalbank.com/dms/business/accounts/beyond-banking/index.htmlUPS: https://solutions.ups.com/ca-beunstoppable.html?WT.mc_id=BUSMEWAConstant Contact: https://www.constantcontact.com/landing1/new-marketer?utm_campaign=canadiansme&utm_medium=sponsorlogo&utm_source=brandIHG Hotels and Resorts: https://businessedge.ihg.com/s/registration?language=en_US&CanSMEGoogle: https://www.google.ca/For more expert insights, visit www.canadiansme.ca and subscribe to the CanadianSME Small Business Magazine. Stay innovative, stay informed, and thrive in the digital age! Disclaimer: The information shared in this podcast is for general informational purposes only and should not be considered as direct financial or business advice. Always consult with a qualified professional for advice specific to your situation.

Kulttuuriykkönen
Naiset, rock ja tasa-arvo

Kulttuuriykkönen

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2025 52:24


Onko musiikkiala yhä vain miesten oma hyvävelikerho, vai onko muillakin, esimerkiksi naisilla tasaveroinen mahdollisuus luoda musiikkiuraa Suomessa? Tutkimusten mukaan naiset joutuvat musiikkialalla kohtaamaan vähättelyä, henkistä väkivaltaa ja nöyryyttämistä. Osittain siitä syystä vain 21% Suomen säveltäjistä ja sanoittajista on naisia. Studiossa on kolme pitkän linjan muusikkoa, joilla on kanttia puhua: Aija Puurtinen, Liisa Akimof ja Maritta Kuula ovat työskennelleet musiikkialalla säveltäjinä ja sanoittajina jo 40 vuotta. He kertovat kohtaamistaan vaikeuksista ja siitä, mikä alalla on muuttunut. Arvon leidit laativat myös raikkaan mimmisoittolistan kuulijoiden iloksi. Lähetyksen toimittaa Harto Hänninen. Soittolista: Maritta Kuulan valinnat: Rebekka Holi: Kukkaan Rosita Luu: Äiti Iiro Haarla Electric Ensemble: Deep in the Eye of The Whale Aija Puurtisen valinnat: Joni Mitchell: Both sides now (sekä 1969 että 2000 versiot) Vilma Jää: Saatanan saalistaja Josefina Vannesluoma: Mortal Lease -LP, esim The Moment came Liisa Akimofin valinnat: Rosita Luu: Rottanainen Litku Klemetti: Jos olisin koira Lyyti: Olen matkalla kaatamaan patsaita Harto Hännisen valinnat: Maritta Kuula: Mä putoon jaloilleni Liisa Akimof: Apteekin edessä Aija Puurtinen: Koko ajan tuulee

Black Op Radio
#1233 – Max Arvo

Black Op Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2025 92:44


  Jack Ruby: A Review and Reassessment - Part 1 Jack Ruby: A Review and Reassessment - Part 2 Jack Ruby: A Review and Reassessment - Part 3 Chaos: Charles Manson, the CIA, and the Secret History of the Sixties: O'Neill, Tom, Piepenbring, Dan: Order Here Mind Games: The Assassination of John Lennon: Whelan, David: Order Here Len shows his appreciation to Max & other researchers who put out good work. Reading Chaos by Tom O'Neill became inspiration for Max's deep dig into the Jack Ruby case. Max found it highly suspect that the MK ULTRA psychiatrist Louis Jolyon "Jolly" West was involved. When West died, he left thousands of papers that were donated & archived at UCLA. O'Neill was able to view West's documents before they were picked through by UCLA archivists. O'Neill raises the question of MK ULTRA being implemented on Jack Ruby. Was Jack tortured? On a road trip, Max stopped in L.A., spending a day at the UCLA archives to view West's files. Jolly West was performing experiments in the Haight Ashbury during the 'Summer of Love'. Taking 2000+ photos of the documents, Max has been reviewing them over the past couple of years. Jack Ruby has a psychotic break at the same time of West's involvement. Coincidence? Max discovered that West was actually involved in Ruby's case by November 29th, not March 1964! Realizing how significant it was that Jolly West was involved with Ruby, Max pressed on. Len & Max discuss the history & different aspects of MK ULTRA. Len notes that the experiments & participating universities or clinics were funded by Dept. Of Defence. Psychiatrist Bernard Diamond performed experiments on Sirhan Sirhan, hypnotizing him. How could Sirhan Sirhan not remember the events surrounding his involvement in RFK's shooting? Mark David Chapman sat down on the ground & started reading a book after shooting Lennon? Notice how the same doctors are involved in these sensationalist cases, over & over? During WWII the OSS & various armies were experimenting with truth drugs & mind control. Operation Bluebird & Operation Artichoke were the predecessors to MK ULTRA. The mind control programs have not stopped. Note the connections to military You can't count on any governmental agency to do an honest investigation? Governments participate in the planning of these events, the cover ups & neglect to investigate. Oswald's murder was the first televised murder in history. Melvin Belli didn't mention how soon he was involved in Ruby's case! Mere days! Max's intuition & research has lead him to believe Oswald's murder was premeditated. West worked fast from Oklahoma to organize a group of psychiatrists to work on Ruby. Jack hadn't been insane before the shooting of Oswald, or after. He was being manipulated. Tom Howard, Ruby's 1st lawyer was involved in Ruby's case within an hour of Oswald’s shooting. Howard was the first person to public ally state that Ruby wasn't in his right mind.  

The Melt Podcast
Ireneo De Leon | Growing Up in the Philippines

The Melt Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2024 111:25


Hunter & I were fortunate enough to be able to sit down and have a conversation with the Waldorf teacher that taught my youngest son, Arvo, and was his mentor for several years when he was attending our local Waldorf School. Arvo would always come home recounting stories that his teacher, Mr. Ireneo De Leon, would tell him about growing up in his home country, the Philippines. There they seemed to have a much more tangible connection to the unseen world that Hunter and I found fascinating so we decided to ask him to come on The Melt and share these experiences and stories with us. We all met in the recording studio of our local library and recorded the conversation that you are about to hear.   To get access to exclusive episodes, our backlog of extended episodes, and to our MELT Meet-ups consider supporting us on Patreon at https://www.patreon.com/themeltpodcast or Locals at https://themeltpodcast.locals.com where you can subscribe for a mere $5 per month.    Find The Melt on… Rumble: https://rumble.com/c/c-2365404 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@TheMeltPodcast Check out our merch at: https://the-melt.creator-spring.com/   Music by The Godawful Joy: https://thegodawfuljoy.bandcamp.com/releases and Matt Presti: https://www.mattpresti.com/music.html

Canary Cast
Transações precisas e economia imediata: como a Arvo garante integridade de pagamentos no setor de saúde

Canary Cast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2024 51:42


Neste episódio de retorno do Canary Cast, Bel Gallera, sócia do Canary, conversa com Fabricio Valadão, co-fundador e CEO da Arvo.A Arvo é uma health tech que está transformando a infraestrutura do mercado de saúde brasileiro ao levar tecnologia e dados para que as operadoras de saúde tenham maior precisão e eficiência em suas transações. O episódio aborda a trajetória pessoal e profissional do Fabricio antes de iniciar sua jornada com a Arvo, destacando sua paixão pela área da saúde, a decisão de empreender e os desafios enfrentados até aqui. O episódio aprofunda no ecossistema da saúde privada no Brasil, explorando os maiores problemas e as maiores dores enfrentadas pelas operadoras de saúde no país. A partir desse cenário, Fabricio explica como a Arvo utiliza inteligência de dados para evitar fraudes, erros e desperdícios dentro das operadoras, tornando as transações de saúde mais assertivas, eficientes e acessíveis.Em uma conversa informal, Fabricio compartilhou insights sobre sua jornada empreendedora, seu processo de investigação do problema e da solução encontrada, o impacto da tecnologia na saúde e sua visão para o futuro da Arvo.Convidado: Fabricio Valadão, co-fundador e CEO da Arvo Saúde.Antes de fundar a Arvo, Fabricio teve uma jornada como consultor na Bain por 8 anos, onde participou de diversos projetos que o aproximaram do mercado de saúde e o fizeram descobrir muitos dos problemas que viria a solucionar com a Arvo. Depois dessa experiência, teve uma passagem pela seguradora global Aon como Diretor de Estratégia e Performance das Soluções de Saúde no mercado LatAm, o que o fez se aprofundar ainda mais no segmento. A Arvo Saúde foi fundada em 2022 por Fabricio junto com Rafael Tinoco, que também teve passagens por companhias do setor, como Amil, Gympass e Alice.Destaques do episódio: Introdução e Boas-vindas (00:00:40 - 00:01:13)Trajetória profissional antes da Arvo (00:01:15 - 00:03:50)Transição da vida corporativa para jornada empreendedora (00:03:51 - 00:06:28)Conexão com o problema e desafios do setor de saúde (00:06:35 - 00:10:00)Proposta de valor e crescimento inicial (00:11:37 - 00:18:25)Como o produto da Arvo atua dentro do ecossistema de transações saúde (00:18:25 - 00:27:02)Como a Arvo inclui dados clínicos nas análises de pertinência das transações (00:27:03 - 00:30:04)Como a Arvo mensura a assertividade dos apontamentos levantados (00:30:05 - 00:34:01) Impacto da Arvo em números (00:34:02 - 00:37:43)O futuro da Arvo (00:37:45 - 00:42:47)O que tira o sono (00:42:47 - 00:45:19)O que faria diferente no início da jornada (00:45:20 -  00:48:18)O que o traz mais paz de espírito (00:48:18 - 00:50:31)Conclusão (00:50:35 - 00:51:42)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

ReachMD CME
ARVO Recap: What's New in TED

ReachMD CME

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2024


CME credits: 1.00 Valid until: 30-09-2025 Claim your CME credit at https://reachmd.com/programs/cme/arvo-recap-whats-new-in-ted/26964/ Thyroid eye disease (TED) is a relatively rare disease that is challenging to diagnose and has limited treatment options. TED may be overlooked by clinicians due to the wide range of clinical manifestations, ranging from dry eye disease to diplopia, proptosis, eyelid retraction, and sight-threatening optic neuropathy. Although TED is often associated with thyroid disorders such as Graves' disease, cases without typical clinical signs or hyperthyroidism are particularly difficult to identify. Additionally, TED is associated with a significant disease burden for patients due to its debilitating symptoms, disfiguring nature, and the inconvenience and adverse effects associated with available treatments. Tune in to this educational series where expert faculty provide multidisciplinary perspectives on best practices for the diagnosis and treatment of TED.

Mid-Valley Mutations
Stereogram #9: Scarlet Begonias (w/ Arvo Zylo)

Mid-Valley Mutations

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2024


Stereogram #9: Scarlet Begonias (w/ Arvo Zylo) Arvo Zylo returns to the show. Playlist & Live WFMU Chat. Enjoy! https://midvalleymutations.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/mutation373.mp3      

Austin's Annual Halloween Spook-tacular!
Stereogram #9: Scarlet Begonias (w/ Arvo Zylo)

Austin's Annual Halloween Spook-tacular!

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2024


Stereogram #9: Scarlet Begonias (w/ Arvo Zylo) Arvo Zylo returns to the show. Playlist & Live WFMU Chat. Enjoy! https://midvalleymutations.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/mutation373.mp3      

3AW is Football
FOOTY PREVIEW PART 2: Saturday Arvo Footy on 3AW! (September 7, 2024)

3AW is Football

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2024 50:27


Listen back to the footy preview part two with Matt Granland, Shane McInnes and Tony Shaw. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

3AW is Football
FOOTY PREVIEW PART 1: Saturday Arvo Footy on 3AW! (September 7, 2024)

3AW is Football

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2024 77:32


Listen to the first part of the footy preview with Tim Lane, Leigh Matthews and Caroline Wilson. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Dash Arts Podcast
Estonia's Singing Lands

Dash Arts Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 4, 2024 61:21


“I've long nurtured a dream to get out and finally explore what it was about the forests and seas of Laulasmaa, ‘the land of song', in Estonia that inspired Arvo Pärt and so many musicians.”Join Dash's Artistic Director, Josephine Burton as she travels to the Arvo Pärt Centre in Laulasmaa, Estonia to investigate the mystical musical relationship between nature and the people of EstoniaFrom the Arvo Pärt Centre Josephine wanders the forest, swims in the sea and explores Helikula, ‘the village of sound', where musicians from the Union of Composers were given summer houses during Soviet Times.We started collaborating in October 2020 during the pandemic with a widely celebrated online event with the Arvo Pärt Centre combining a pre-recorded concert and a conversation with musicians Andres Kaljuste, Sophia Rahman and Arvo's son Michael Pärt. You can hear this previous episode here.For more on the trip you can read Josephine's blog and see more photographs of the incredible Estonian landscape on the Dash Arts website.In the podcast, we hear from:Josephine Burton - Artistic Director, Dash Arts Michael Pärt - Composer and Chairman of the Arvo Pärt CentreSophia Rahman - PianistAndres Kaljuste - ViolinistRein Lang - Former Minister of Culture of EstoniaLiisa Hirsch - Composer Kristina Norman - ArtistTitle music by Fakiiritanssi by Marouf MajidiCompositions by Arvo Pärt played by Sophia Rahman and Andres Kaljuste:Fratres Für AlinaSpiegel im SpiegelWith thanks to the Estonian Ministry of Culture and Estonian Cultural Counsellor in London for enabling Josephine's trip. Artwork: A PHOTO JOSEPHINE'S TRIPReference to the previous episode (Jan 2021) - https://open.spotify.com/episode/7pN6oLyNmgxVEqjNjZW8Dg?si=34666bcd1c984ba6 Blog link - https://www.dasharts.org.uk/blog/arvo-prts-inspiration-discovering-the-magic-of-estonias-forests-and-sounds Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

PODCAST - SURF MASTERY
101 Matt Grainger - Choosing Boards and Breaking Surfing Rules (Copy)

PODCAST - SURF MASTERY

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2024


In this episode, Michael Frampton catches up with renowned surfer and coach Matt Grainger to talk about the highs and lows of surfing, the challenges of big waves, and the innovations in the sport. Matt shares his experiences with heavy waves, gnarly wipeouts, and the current state of surfing on the Sydney Northern Beaches. The discussion dives into the recent swells, the changing conditions, and how they impact surfers of all levels.Matt also discusses his latest project, the "Surfer's Compass" app, a comprehensive guide for surfers to improve their techniques, mindset, and fitness. He shares the inspiration behind the app, the process of its development, and the exciting features that it will offer. Episode Highlights:Matt's Recent Surf Trip to Indonesia: Matt shares the story of his recent trip to Indonesia, where he suffered a significant head injury after a day of surfing at Macaronis. He details the moment the injury occurred, the aftermath, and the crucial steps taken to avoid infection.The Importance of Surf Safety: Despite years of experience, Matt explains how ego and overconfidence led to a dangerous situation. He emphasizes the importance of wearing a helmet in heavy conditions and the risks of surfing over shallow reefs.Injury Management and Recovery: Matt provides valuable insights into managing injuries in remote locations, including the use of bottled water, antibiotics, and proper wound care to prevent infections from coral cuts.Mobility and Strength Training for Surfers: As a coach, Matt discusses the significance of maintaining mobility and strength as surfers age. He highlights the role of a balanced training program in injury prevention and long-term surfing performance.Mindset and Longevity in Surfing: Matt touches on the importance of a positive mindset, quoting Bruce Lee on the power of words and how they influence our physical and mental well-being. He encourages surfers to stay active, eat well, and maintain a youthful outlook to continue enjoying the sport well into their later years..Surf Culture Evolution: The changes in surfing culture, including the influx of new surfers and the impact on traditional breaks."Surfer's Compass" App: Insight into Matt's development of this app, aimed at improving surfing techniques, fitness, and mental strategies.For more insights and tips from Matt Grainger:Follow Matt Grainger:Instagram: mattgraingersurf.Linkedin:: Matt GraingeFollow Michael John Frampton:Instagram: @surfmasteryWebsite: https://surfmastery.com/.Full Show Transcript:[00:00:00] Matt Grainger: I think so. You look at all the surfers now. It's all legs. Hardly any upper body. Only back and legs. You don't want any chest, and you don't want to overload the shoulders as well in your rotator cuff. Exercises are really good. So light weights on the shoulders, nothing heavy. So you can still get that mobility in your padel. And you've got the power for your back for your paddle. So a lot of the strength training is like just Olympic rings, pull ups, maybe some skin. The cat. Um, um, dumbbell pull ups as well off the bench, all that kind of stuff. And then a lot of, a lot of, um, obviously squats with the. [00:00:40] Michael Frampton: Back to the Surf Mastery podcast. I am your host, Michael Frampton, and the ethos of this show is education and inspiration for better surfing and a better surfing life. And Matt Grainger, today's guest, not only was a huge part in the inspiration for the birth of this show, but he epitomizes that ethos as well. He is in his mid 50s now, and he's still out there surfing a ton and stays fit and healthy for surfing, and also teaches others to be better surfers and better people through better surfing mindset, health and fitness, etc. Matt is just a pure inspiration in the surfing world and just an absolute frother and a rips. He rips. He's an incredible surfer and stoked to get him back on the show. And like I said, he first appeared back in episode number one. He's. This will be his fourth appearance. Uh, he also appeared in episode 30 and episode 55 as well. And, uh, without further ado, I shall fade in my conversation. My fourth conversation on this podcast with Matt Grainger from Manly Surf School. How did it happen? Was it just a freak random thing, or was it a lapse in concentration or what? [00:02:07] Matt Grainger: Yeah, it was a bit of the ego took over and ego took over. Um, we'd had. Every day was the best day ever. We had this the first swell in June. And, um, this one day just got bigger and bigger, and it had a lot of south in it. There was two swells. It was like a south swell and a bit of south west as well. So you could get a chip in, you could chip in from behind, behind the tower, and you could backdoor where you'd usually take off. So you'd get like more barrel time. And I was riding this magic six zero Psi Pro, one that I've had for about a year. Felt unreal under my feet. Been riding it for days straight. And then, um, this guy Sean came out from South Africa. He rocked up on a boat. Him and I started paddling up the reef and just trading wave after wave and making him. So just making these unbelievable tubes and no one came up there because, you know, it was pretty gnarly. So if you fell, it was like two foot deep and it was like an eight foot swell. So when Max, probably 8 to 10, you probably saw footage of Nathan Florence. I don't know if you saw some of the footage of him and he's it was like 10 to 12 foot hits that day, whereas Max doesn't get bigger, it just gets thicker. So it's probably 6 to 8 foot, but really thick, like a chokes kind of way. You get this, you can make this really nice drop and then come in with speed. [00:03:28] Matt Grainger: And just if you made it, you're fine. But if you didn't make it, that's what happened. So after five hours, I actually wasn't even tired. I was after like five hours, I was just just getting cocky and I probably should have gone in. It was more like one more, one more. And Shaun and I were trying to outdo each other, and he he actually snapped his board, his board on his last wave, and I snapped my head, but I took off, made. It made. The drop. Drop was on the foam ball. As I was pumping on the foam ball, the wave turned the corner. So kind of that south west angle of the way though, turned a massive corner. So I've just got catapulted on the foam ball and I got thrown out head first, and that's as soon as my head landed, the lip hit the back of my neck and just drove me straight into the reef, like, instantly. It was only like two foot deep. It was low tide and I just it was just like, bang. I was like, no, I got a bit on here. And then I went into worry, went into warrior mode. You know, when you when I'd said us the way, way my eyes. Okay. It's actually got a cut there as well. So I've got to cut. I got cut either side. I got cuts either side of the nose down here on the bottom of the nose as well on this eye. [00:04:43] Matt Grainger: And obviously here I have about 25 stitches here, five stitches here. And I just went I knew the session was over and I just paddled back. Everyone was like, we'll get a boat. Everyone's screaming, get a boat, get a boat! That's it. I'm like, I'm good, I'm good. Getting myself back almost on my own. You know, like one guy got scared. Good on ya. Um, this guy Hans from America. He goes, good on you, tough guy. I'm like, nah, I've got this, I got this. Anyway. So I went back and got on the pontoon and just started pouring bottled water over my head. And then I got the boat back to Max and then looked for Shaz, and she was already stitching up my brother. He had a little cut on his back. So. And then someone said,, Matt's looking for you. Cut his head and neck. And she thought,, if he's asking for something, he's in a bad way. So then she saw my head and she thought I'd cracked. I'd actually, like, fractured my skull, but it was actually bits of coral coming out of my head. .Far out. So she pulled that, pulled the bits of coral out. He got some local, which was good. We'll just put it in the carts and then pulling bits of coral out the tweezers, and then got a toothbrush for an hour and just scrubbing it. That was the gnarly part. I just had to. [00:06:01] Michael Frampton: Scrubbing and all this peroxide or iodine or something. Yeah. [00:06:04] Matt Grainger: With, um. Yeah. Just with, um. Yeah. Like light alcohol. Yeah. Just. And just so you don't kill the flesh too much. Like, not too gnarly. Um, but just getting it all out, and that's. I reckon that saved me for sure. And then obviously took about two hours to stitch up, which was gnarly. And I was just doing I've been doing a lot of breath training like coaching, apnea training. And I saw resonance breathing, which is like a second inhale six second exhale. . So just going into that just and that helped big time. That was like a three hour ordeal which could have been a long time. Felt like a long time. But it wasn't as long as I thought. And then she put like a face mask over it so I couldn't see. And then, um, yeah, The rest is history. And then I surfed the next day., you did not. Yeah I know. He taped it up. I just said, I'll get two. I'll get one. Wait, I'll get one wave. And I did some tests, like I was jumping on one leg to see if I had concussion and then, no, I'm not well in the head anyway, uh, and then I came. I wore a helmet, of course, and then I didn't surf for after that day. I didn't surf for three and a half days. And then after that I was good to go because I was on. [00:07:21] Matt Grainger: I was having, uh, four courses of antibiotics. I four, four tablets of antibiotics every day, washing it with, um, fresh water. And we're getting she was breaking up antibiotics and putting it inside the cup as well. Yeah. And she and she left a little bit of one of the gnarly cuts. Didn't do it too tight. So bits of coral would still come out if it did. There's still little bits popping out, far out. But yeah. So I'm wearing a helmet from now on when it's gnarly like that. So I went to G-land. After that we had another swell at Max and Surf Greenbush, but I had one of those soft shell helmets that Tommy Scott wears. Yeah. By, um, DMC. It's like a rugby helmet. Yeah, yeah, but they're nice and light, but they're, um. Yeah. So that that felt good. And then I wore it in g-land every surf even because I didn't want to get hit and break the cuts open anymore. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I got the stitches out after six days and they healed well. Yeah. So wow. But from now on I'm going to. If it's gnarly and low tide and heavy, I'll be wearing a helmet. Yeah. No. Fair enough. But I was lucky I didn't get concussion and brain damage or lose an eye or nose or whatever. Yeah., yeah. [00:08:32] Michael Frampton: And I mean, and any sort of coral cut infection is such a huge risk, right? [00:08:38] Matt Grainger: I reckon like, even there was a girl, it was actually a girl out in the water. She. Her name's Kat. She does immense heavy new for about six months with a with harm. So her partner and they they had a long boat with um with a solar panel on top and just go around the islands and she, she had a cut on her foot. She went to seek a cut and just had a shower. So that got that sort of told. And she told me this story like a week before. And then she got this, this flesh eating, um, microbe in her foot. And she basically went delirious and had to go to she went to Padang and their hospital was too dirty and gnarly. So the hands got her out of there, carried her onto the fast ferry, then went to Jakarta and she had like three skin grafts and then back to LA. Yeah, just from that. So that straight away I was like, I'm not getting my head touching any, any, um, any shower water. So I was just it sounds very first world, but I was just every time I wash my head, I was just with bottled water. Yeah. Yeah. So that's a good tip for people out there. yeah. Yeah. Look after your carts. Yeah. Always look after my carts. Even feet. You know, I went to Chofu. First time I went to Chofu in 2000. A tiny little cuts on my feet. And it was the last day. And I was like, last day, who cares? And then I got home and I got stacked. I couldn't walk. I went to my. I went to my glands. And straight away I was on antibiotics and prednisone and it went away. But that was nasty. So it taught me a good lesson. Yeah. So get on, get on to your rep cards quickly people when you go to the tropics. [00:10:17] Michael Frampton: Yeah. You got to clean them eh. I remember I touched the reef in Arugam Bay in Sri Lanka once. Like just got this tiny little graze. Thought nothing of it. Just put like a little bit of iodine cream on it. That's all I did. And then two days later, it's just like 50 cent welt that's throbbing. [00:10:33] Matt Grainger: And I had to hit. [00:10:35] Michael Frampton: Yeah. Had to get some antibiotics. So should have just scrubbed it out with a toothbrush and done the right thing at the time. But it was such a small cut, you thought nothing of it. But they must have just been little bits of coral in there or something. [00:10:47] Matt Grainger: Yeah, yeah, that was one of the ones where the feeder chirps. Tiny little, like little nicks. Yeah. So, yeah, to get that tape. Yeah. So the tip from Shaz. Doctor. Shaz, my partner. Get. Take her. I always have, like, a spare toothbrush. That's clean. You can't even get it from that. If you get it from the hotel. But you never brush your teeth with it, so it's totally clean. And just scrub it. Scrub it. Um, use the little wipes. The the iodine alcohol wipes. So you do one offs and not nothing else dirty. And then just keep checking it. Yeah. And there's that. There's that tayo gin. That's pretty good from Indo. You know that Chinese, that red bottle. That's always cool. That Chinese. It's called tayo gin or the ayam. They don't use cream. She said use because it just festers in the tropics. Use the powder. The powder? Yeah. The powders of the guy. Yeah. Okay. So that's a go and then cover them up. Yeah. If you do your feet too. I always wear shoes. People give me heaps of crap in Indo because I'm always wearing. If I've got cuts, I'll put shoes on because you're walking around. You get dirt in the cuts. Yeah. So it's important if we always forget especially. Yeah. You're like, oh nah, I'll be right. Or, you know, you see so many guys just get smashed and don't even do anything. Yeah. [00:12:03] Michael Frampton:yeah. It's not worth the risk. I used to you're still out charging, catching heaps of waves. [00:12:07] Matt Grainger: Yeah, still surfing a lot. Um, pretty much surf every day. Sometimes twice. Um, got the gym. Surfer's gym. Which is good. That keeps me fit and healthy. They working on the mobility that you taught me years ago, and. Yeah, just building on that. I think that's a big key is mobility. As we get older and even the younger athletes that we coach too. I've got some pros that train at our gym and and we've got them on a mobility program. Whereas strength training and I found lately like in the last few years, like having the ability and also the strength training is huge just for reducing, reducing injury, keeping strong. Like I'm 55 this month. I don't even talk about your age too. It's really important what you say out of your mouth. You know there's a, there's a quote by Bruce Lee is like be careful what you say with your words because that's why it's called spells and spelling. Like you're saying, you hear heaps of guys walk around and go, I'm done. I'm old, I'm an old man and all this. And you're like, hey, mate. Like, no, it's all relative. Like it's it's you know what? It's time. Really anyway. You know, like just this thing we've made up, but, you know, there's biological age. And if you keep yourself fit and healthy and moving and eat well, sleep well. You can keep keep rocking till you're in your 80s, I reckon. [00:13:29] Michael Frampton: Yeah, man, I was just reading. Listening to a book, actually, about all of that. And this Harvard professor did an experiment where she got a bunch of 80 year old men, and she put them in a house where everything in the house was as if it was 30 years ago, and they were only allowed. So the TV programs, the books, the furniture, and they were only allowed to talk, talk about things as if it was 30 years ago in the present. And within a few days, their eyesight improved. Health, like blood pressure, improved everything just by just like placebo. Like extreme placebo effect. Wow. [00:14:11] Matt Grainger: That's awesome. Yeah, it's rare to get that book. [00:14:14] Michael Frampton: It's a rare book. I'll. I'll forward it to you and I'll put it in the show notes for listeners, too. I think it's called the mind body Connection or something. I'll put it in the show notes and I'll send it to you. [00:14:23] Matt Grainger: And even when I was at, um, not trying to name drop here, but when I was at Nazaré, I came in, I totally led back to the harbor because he broke down. It's quite funny. Like it was a big day. Like 60 foot. Perfect. Nazaré. And I was with Lucas Pereira, who's from Mavericks, who trains with me. He was towing with me on that. We were just shifting partners all day. And then I said, you lead like I don't even know lead any way from then. And I said, you make leads out to sea doing nothing. We should go check on him. And he's like, yeah, right. So we hammered out the lead and he goes, yeah, I ran out of fuel, guys. And you're like, why? He goes, I was having too much fun. You know, every time the beeper light came on the warning signal that was low on fuel, I just turned it off. And because it was a really good day and it was a really good Nazaré, like, clean 60 foot faces and whatnot. Anyway, so I, we hooked up my ski to his ski and towed him back to the harbor. And we got back to the, um, got back to the wharf, and I was just chatting to him about how we've got a gym and I've been following what he does working XPT programs, and I do a lot of breathwork, but I really like breathwork. [00:15:36] Matt Grainger: And and I said, yeah, yeah, we don't we don't talk about age, you know, in our gym because what you said the word, don't you ever say that word in front of me again. And he got really gnarly. And I was like, okay, man, settle down. And um, so it's there's a lot of truth to it. Hey, I see, like, Chaz is, um, she's my wife. She's over 60, and she's getting better because she only started 20 years. And there's guys at the beaches that used to rip when they were 20, and they've given up at 50, or probably given up at 50 because it's in their mindset., my knees and stuff and my back stuff. And you're like, well, what do you do about it? Do you um, do you do any mobility or you know, what are you eating? What are you how are you sleeping? Or you know, I don't know. They're like, I don't know, you just like, okay. So yeah, it's funny isn't it? And I think I think we were lucky our age like we've, we've been introduced to a lot of stuff. And if you're curious about it, which you are and I am, there's so much stuff you can learn going down that rabbit holes. [00:16:41] Michael Frampton: yeah. It's never ending. Kind of. [00:16:42] Matt Grainger: Ten. The crew ten years before us, probably a lot of them missed out on that eating poor food, poor movement. Um, yeah, I think it's good. I've got the hoop. I've had the hoop for, like, uh, probably five years now. I find that's really good because I'm. I'm really diligent about my sleep. It can be gnarly some days, and it gives you a bad sleep score. You've got to kind of let that go, and not even your day is ruined. Because I know some athletes who will like that, and they're like, I had to get rid of it because it said I had a bad sleep score and I'd have a bad day. I'm like, no, no, you got to get past that. But sleep is huge. Hey, like and probably read that book by Matthew Walker that was, you know, everyone knew how important sleep was. You know, we cure cancer and all sorts of ailments. Balance. Yeah. So yeah, they'll always I try to have a little nap in the Arvo if I get time. Yeah. Try to have a nap every Arvo. And I think it's good to have a nap if I have the luxury, because you're just not talking. You're not thinking. You're just having a little break from the world and then back into it. Have a training session at the gym with the crew and then dinner in bed again. So that's my little routine. Yeah. And not being and not used to have to always wake up super early or to plan that I ought to be up early and out there for stuff. But if now if the waves aren't that good, I'm not going to get up early just to punish myself for the early just for the sake of being the first guy out there. So now, because I've found on the sleep on your sleep scores, when you do actually sleep that extra hour in the morning. Yeah. You get a lot of benefits. It's crazy. And if you do go to bed early. Yeah. Mm. [00:18:18] Michael Frampton: Does does is surfing the main motivator for you to stay fit and healthy? [00:18:23] Matt Grainger: Yeah. For sure. Yeah, definitely. Yeah. Like I couldn't give a stuff like what I look like. I just want to actually be able to catch waves and still be able to surf. My brother and I just went to Macaronis together and we were both chatting that we probably surf better now than we were in our mid 20s, just because the boards are better. We've got more knowledge and we've kept our bodies good. Yeah. Yeah. So we've had no we've had no serious accidents though which is lucky. you know obviously head knocks and all that kind of stuff but nothing like haven't broken any major bones like bony broken hands and a few things like that, but not, you know, haven't broken a femur or anything, you know. So some guys obviously are disadvantaged if they have a major injury but haven't had any major injuries. And then now I've realized I used to always think when I was have had a niggle like a, like a niggling hip or, you know, you had to go to the chiropractor and you had to do this, you had to do and now you can kind of push through it and move through it. [00:19:24] Matt Grainger: I found that like. And if it's really serious, obviously go and see a physician, which is good. and you can get a really good massage or just to break that tissue down. But I found now you can move through pain and throughout the whole day like not, you know, everyone thinks, I've got to train for an hour and that's it. So I don't do it. You know, you can do little snacks like ten minutes here, you know, ten minutes in the morning, another ten minutes at lunchtime, another two minutes here, and then another two minutes and eventually kind of work through it. I remember when we were working together, you were pretty onto that early in the early days. Good diets. I love I like got into my fasting, which is good pretty much two meals a day. Love the bone broth. I'm doing a coffee, obviously. Black coffee, a little bit of coconut oil. So, yeah, that's just all these little hacks that we're learning. Just helping along the way, I reckon. [00:20:21] Michael Frampton: Yeah, but you've got that motivation. You want to keep surfing, you want to keep going to Indo and that's what. Yeah. That's what get you. Okay. No I'm not going to have that donut. I'm going to and I'm going to go to bed early because I want to I want to go and get barreled at Indo like. [00:20:36] Matt Grainger: no, it's such a good motivator. Yeah. And and it's, it keeps you young. Yeah. It keeps you young and young in the head too. And looking at boards that, you know, I'm still riding shore boards and my short boards like a five, five, nine. And I've got A53 Bobby quad that I ride in the wave pool. Yeah. So I can still ride short boards. yeah. And just having that and and the boards have gotten so good. Now, you know, just the rockers and the things all the shapers. And I remember Mike, Michael Ho was talking with his son Mason. I saw in an interview that he said, oh, dad, why do you think you're ripping so much now? And he goes to the boards and Michael's like, doesn't care. You know, he just he doesn't have Instagram or Facebook. He's just surfing and I've I've seen Coco out in the water when she's in Indo or here and she said, yeah pops. Just he just the proper. So he's, he's, he's not thinking about how he's 60 and he's charging you know. Yeah he's right. He's got, he's got new blades and getting tubed out back door and ripping on the backside at Alma-Ata and things like that. But yeah, that's the motivation is surfing. Yeah. And it's, it's such a fun sport. And I just always say to people, it's a puzzle. [00:21:51] Matt Grainger: You know, you every time you go for a surf, you're trying to work out that puzzle. It doesn't matter if it's one foot onshore or it's 20 foot bommies or it's crazy tubes in Indo, you're still trying to figure out how you're going to paddle in. How are you going to get to your feet? How are you going to generate speed? Is it a straight down drop? Is it a knifing drop? Am I going to get in my front foot early? All these little things that just come into play from all those years of experience, and you're trying to work out that puzzle, and then it's one foot. You just want to go out and do one big turn on a one footer and you're happy. So that's what keeps me motivated. Some days, even if it's crap, I'll still go out for like three waves and just I'll get my three waves and go to work and train. And I've got the training to, I've got rid of the cardio. So I'm sort of not really doing the cardio so much now. It's just strength and movement because if you do a good movement flow, you can get good cardio from that anyway. Yeah, I forgot my heart rate monitor and you're actually getting flexi, whereas you don't want to get stiff and then just doing the right strength training. [00:22:53] Matt Grainger: So you look at all the surfers now it's all legs, hardly any upper body, only back and legs. You don't want any chest and you don't want to overload the shoulders as well in your you know, the rotator cuff exercises are really good. So light weights on the shoulders, nothing heavy. So you can still get that mobility in your paddle. And you've got the power through your back for your paddle. So a lot of the strength training is like just Olympic rings, pull ups, maybe some skin. The cat. yeah. dumbbell pull ups as well, off the bench, all that kind of stuff. And then a lot of, a lot of,, obviously squats with the barbell, goblet squats, front squats, split squats, all that kind of stuff. It's super important, I reckon. So getting that mobility and doing the weights and getting that connection and feeling when you're doing the weight, not just doing it for the sake of it, like doing those reps and really thinking about that rep and just getting your body in those positions that you could do in the water on land. So when you go out there like a martial artist, you're you're ready to go. You've drilled it so many times it becomes second nature. Yeah. [00:24:01] Michael Frampton: No, strength training is so good. It's also for like strength training gives you it increases your body awareness actually, and just increases your maintains your bone density. And it's just it's so helpful. And if you're doing it do upper body. Lower body. It's it's about as doesn't get any more hard of a cardio workout than doing like a strength training circuit if you want to, you know, get the heart rate up. [00:24:26] Matt Grainger: What sort of work? What sort of stuff are you doing these days, like in your regime? [00:24:30] Michael Frampton:. Mine's so I had I've got,, I had ACL surgery in my early 20s and it's now almost, you know, bone on bone, basically. So a lot of my, a lot of my training is just keeping on top of that. so like, slow moving, heavy stuff with,, you know, have you seen the knees over toes guy? [00:24:55] Matt Grainger: Yeah, yeah. He's awesome. [00:24:56] Michael Frampton: Hey, backwards walking on the treadmill and just. Yeah, following some of his stuff. Uh, and just to keep the legs strong. Because it's interesting. Because they say it's bone on bone, right? And it can get like that, but your cartilage is gone. Your cartilage doesn't really come back. But there is scar tissue forms where the cartilage was. As long as that scar tissue is there, you're fine. If you do too much stuff and that scar tissue wears away. So if you do too much volume and you don't allow that scar tissue to to heal and reform and the fluids to come back, then it can be bone on bone, you get a real sore joint. But so now, as long as I keep the volume of what I'm doing on the knee, it's fine. You can actually you can actually go. [00:25:39] Matt Grainger: How many reps? [00:25:41] Michael Frampton: Actually, I would just sort of more like six reps. Only a couple of sets. But you know, because I've got a history of strength training. I know the form. I'm strong, I know what to do. But a backwards walking on the treadmill and some and lots of balance work as well, because it's actually those small little twitching movements in the joint that do the most damage. So if your balance is on point and your joint is nice and stable, then it's one of the big things as well. So keeping the balance, like standing on one leg with your eyes closed. Little things like that. Yeah I do. [00:26:16] Matt Grainger: I love the pendulum jumps with the, you know, the pendulum jump. So it's a one legged jump. Yeah. and we'll do that. More eyes closed as well. Yeah. When I coach a lot of the athletes as well, like before, they were competing, like, I'd say, like they'll do five jumps, eyes open, and then the last five closed. And it helps for that body awareness, you know, for late drops and. yeah, no big drops out of the lip and being aware of where their body is. Yeah. Yeah. And I even did it when I crack my head to check if I had concussion, I was like, yes, I'm fine. You know. Yeah. Yeah. I'm not a doctor. I'm not a doctor. But if you can jump one legged with your eyes closed, you pretty much. And you're fine. You don't have concussion. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. [00:27:03] Michael Frampton: No, I do a bit of sprinting. Sprinting as well. Sprinting is really good for you. So I do a bit of that and I still do like the bodyweight gymnastics style strength training as well. Still doing that. Following a guy called, uh, Nardi. Oh, man, I can't even pronounce his name. Nardi Orejuela or I can't remember how to pronounce it, but it's functional performance training. He's doing a lot of really unique stuff. He's worth a follow. He's pretty out there with some of what he says, but he's also got some really interesting tips. A lot of, you know, not necessarily heavy weights, but functional, functional stuff. Just he's worth a follow. [00:27:39] Matt Grainger: Cool. yeah. [00:27:40] Michael Frampton: And just keeping on top of the diet, diet and sleep, man, that's like you mentioned, man. Just keeping a clean diet, getting enough sleep and giving a good balance of rest and stress. [00:27:49] Matt Grainger: Because, yeah, life can get stressful, but it's only what you make it really like. But yeah, if you if you sleep well, if you have a good sleep, you can conquer anything. Really. Hey, I'll find two. The shoulders are important. Like the rotator cuff muscles. Important to keep that on top of that. Just like maintenance work like prehab, like lightweights, like 10% of your body weight, just getting in all those different angles because you do you can, you know, when you're, you know, those days when you're paddling super hard trying to make that wave where it's hollow, you're going to put a lot of stress on the shoulder joint. And I've had seen so many mates like you look at you got to look at your mates who had surgeries, you know what I mean? Like, it's always so, shoulders, knees and hips if you look after those. And spine pretty much ahead of the game. Yeah. Yeah. [00:28:40] Michael Frampton: Hanging dude. Hanging for your shoulders. Really good. [00:28:45] Matt Grainger: Just hanging. Awesome. [00:28:46] Michael Frampton: Active and passive. Hanging. And, I mean, I'm lucky. When I was living in the US, I did. I did three different DNS courses., yeah. [00:28:55] Matt Grainger: Yeah, yeah, yeah, I remember you doing that. Yeah. [00:28:57] Michael Frampton: And so I do a lot of that sort of rehab style training still. And that's really good for shoulders and and core that helps keep my shoulders in check. [00:29:07] Matt Grainger: I remember, I remember you got injured and I did the Ido portal course. Yes, I remember you did. Yeah, I think you did your hamstring right. Yeah. That's right. Yeah. And I was a day before and he said, Matti, can you do this? And I went, yeah. And did a whole week with it. [00:29:22] Michael Frampton: Yeah. That's right. [00:29:23] Matt Grainger: Yeah. He was massive. It was massive on hanging. Yeah. And you know, the ring and the rings too. Yeah. And I find the rings or rings are better for a surfer too. Like doing chin ups, pull ups on a ring because you get that nice. Like you get that movement in the shoulder joint where it's just a straight bar. You don't really get that movement because we actually reach out and rotate our shoulder as we paddle. Yeah. So yeah. Yeah, yeah. You know, it was it was pretty. It was an interesting guy. Cool guy. Full on. Yeah. He is. Yeah. But yeah, I learned a lot. Yeah. [00:29:59] Michael Frampton: cool. Are you still doing ice baths? [00:30:01] Matt Grainger: Still doing that. [00:30:02] Michael Frampton: Yeah. [00:30:03] Matt Grainger: And our boss. And so on. Got an ice bath in the backyard and a sauna, which is lucky. And we got two at the gym now. We got two saunas and two ice baths. Wow. So. Yeah. Yeah. It's good. Everyone loves them. Yeah. Everyone's created a little community there. Yeah, yeah. It's awesome. [00:30:21] Michael Frampton: What about LA? Have you looked into Light Health? [00:30:24] Matt Grainger: I have seen it. I haven't really done it personally. And it just looks it looks pretty interesting. It's just a matter of time and money. Yeah. In our in our sauna. I do have some infrared, but, like, not, some lighting, but, you know, it's not huge. Have you been looking into it? Well, it's it's just really interesting. [00:30:42] Michael Frampton: There's this guy, Jack cruise, who's been on about it for years, but now that there's sort of like 20 years, but now there's all these scientific studies coming out proving his theories right about how important, sunlight exposure is for health and how it turns on certain genes like the Pomc gene and and how if you're exposing yourself to too much blue light after the sun's gone down, how that affects blood sugar and circadian rhythms. And but if I mean, if you're getting up and going, surfing every day and getting to bed on time, it's funny, that's all. [00:31:14] Matt Grainger: Like Huberman and all that, like, yeah, they say go out and play, you know, go get the sun. Yeah. And, I, we live on the East Coast here, so every early surf, you're like, looking into the sun exactly in the morning. You know, you're blinking, going oh. And, you know, different on the West Coast. Yeah. If you go to bed at the right time. And I try not to look at my phone before I go to bed. So, Yeah, I just try to banish that, put it away because. Yeah, that's a bad habit, isn't it? Just before looking at the screen, try to look at computers as well. So onto that in that way. Yeah. Yeah. You can just go. Yeah. Just basic stuff. Yeah. Keeping those circadian rhythms. Yeah. Haven't done the glasses or anything like that. Like the. [00:31:58] Michael Frampton: The blue blocking glasses. Yeah. [00:32:01] Matt Grainger: Dave Asprey and whatnot. [00:32:02] Michael Frampton: Yeah. Yeah, they get into it a lot. They go hardcore on everything. [00:32:06] Matt Grainger: They go hardcore. I'm like, no. How am I? It's none of them. Don't you think there's a fine line between how much time you got in the day and. [00:32:15] Michael Frampton: exactly. But I mean, David Beckham and his mates, they're spending a lot of money on, like, days. Dave Asprey has a goal to live to 120. I think he might have even said 100, 150. But like and be healthy and functional at that age. So he's making sure that, you know, every day he's doing as much as he can. So those guys are going. I don't know. [00:32:38] Matt Grainger: I don't know if I want to live that long. Yeah. It's damn sad. You know what I mean? Like, you kind of want to just die normally. You know, like. [00:32:45] Michael Frampton: With dignity. Yeah. [00:32:47] Matt Grainger: Dignity? Yeah. Like you don't have to go. Yeah. Yeah. [00:32:50] Michael Frampton: Because if you're the only, you're the only one doing it. And like, you're you're still alive and healthy. Yeah. Friends are dead. You're like. [00:32:58] Matt Grainger: What was that? I mean, let's talk about that all the time. Yeah. They just overboard and and almost bring a lot of anxiety, I think, to like trying to keep on point. Like you're not actually like they want to get to this goal of being this age, but they're not actually having fun in the present. Like it's like I've still got to live your life. Hey, you got to still have fun with your friends, with your friends. And, you know, like, I'm not like, a total. I'm. There's no way I'm a total monk. Like, I'm. I still eat really well, but if I, you know, if I'm with with friends and family, I'm not going to go. I'm not eating that because I'm this, you know, like, yeah, I'll still want to be part of the group, you know what I mean? Yeah, yeah. It's not going to kill me. Yeah. I don't want to have a good time with with my friends. I'm not going to be that guy that's like, oh, no, I don't do that. Because, I want to live to 150. [00:33:46] Michael Frampton: Exactly. Yeah. I'm going to go to bed at 8:00 on Christmas Day because you want to live to 150? [00:33:55] Matt Grainger: You know, it's kind of like. Yeah, it's counterintuitive. Really? [00:33:59] Michael Frampton: Yeah. [00:34:00] Matt Grainger: What about if you get to whatever, you get hit by a car? Exactly. You know. Exactly. I don't mean that in a bad way.. You got it. Still? Yeah. And it's funny, like, all this grounding, you know, we we hardly wear shoes in was, you know, you hardly wear shoes when I, when I hang out with you. Yeah, but hardly shoes. Oh, Maddy, you're wearing shoes today. That's weird. I'm like, oh, well, I had to go to remaining shoes. [00:34:27] Michael Frampton: I hate. [00:34:28] Matt Grainger: It. Yeah, yeah, yeah. [00:34:30] Michael Frampton: No, but that's the thing. All the stuff that's coming out in the latest health stuff, all these guys, it's what we do anyway. Especially as surfers. We get early morning sun. We're getting lots of grounding work because we're surfing in the ocean. That's the best way to get your. Your grounding done is in the ocean or walking on the sand in bare feet. We're getting it done anyway. But it's just interesting, all these studies coming out and and proving that. [00:34:55] Matt Grainger: You can you can buy a grounding mat and walk outside. Put your feet on the on the cold grass, you know, like, the cold sand. Like I'll be surfing the wave pool a lot lately and it's super fun. But you still don't get that, feeling of the energy or the ocean. Like, you know, it doesn't matter if your body surf, surf, body board, whatever. If you dive in the ocean for a swim, you always come out feeling amazing, don't you? Yeah. Just from it's from the negative ions though, isn't it. [00:35:24] Michael Frampton: Yeah. That's part of it. Yeah. [00:35:25] Matt Grainger: Yeah, yeah part of it. Yeah. And just maybe the salt, the energy of the waves just being in nature and. Yeah, it's funny, you can go on the wave pool and you have a good time. You don't get that buzz of that feeling on your whole body from the natural waves. Yeah. And the salt and all that. Yeah. [00:35:46] Michael Frampton: How much time have you spent in the wave pools? [00:35:49] Matt Grainger:there's a new one in Sydney now. Sydney and I. Every Thursday I teach a fitness class to the staff. I've been doing that for the past six weeks. So I go out every Thursday and I make sure I serve from 4 to 5, and then I run the class at 530 to 630. So that's pretty cool. Like, I'll ride my little five three Bobby quad and, get about 20 waves. And then we ran our we ran a pretty cool course the other week. We did a get ready for your master class. It was like an endo masterclass clinic. So we taught people how to ride left tubes. So we had the expert mode, which is just a barrel. It's pretty cool. You take off, you can do a Rio or just a set up turn and get this nice tube. That's a pretty cool tube. Like the barrel is wider than it is high. Yeah, you got to get quite low in the tube. And then it kind of turned the corner a bit like macaronis. So we did um, we did about 30 minutes. I broke down all the best surfers in the world getting tubed on the TV screen have had eight participants, and so we broke that down for placement, for backhand front side, you know, getting and then we did movement patterns like mobility patterns to open up people's hips and, and ankles, because that's pretty much what you need when getting low in tubes and most tube riding. [00:37:08] Matt Grainger: So we did that, we went and surfed for an hour. Everyone got about 12 waves. And then we there's a I it's crazy. They film this. I called Flow State on the left and the right, but we're only on the left. You come in and it's got all the clips of you. So I got a coaches password. So I went through everyone's clips and broke down what they were doing. Right. What they're doing wrong. Yeah, it was rad. And then we had had lunch and then we did apnea training. So then we went into the leisure pool, which is heated because the wave pool is only about 11 degrees at the moment. So yeah, it's quite it's quite cold. Yeah. So they just pulled 28. So we, we taught them the science of breath holding. Then we went and did it in the water. And then she did a chat on our endo. What's it like in your first aid kit? And, you know, rough cuts? Yeah, it was awesome. That was a that was a full day. It was fun. [00:38:00] Michael Frampton: All right. So I did. [00:38:01] Matt Grainger: That., had some fun days with the Surface Gym crew. We'll book out the pool for two hours. And so two different modes, one the tube, the expert modes and tube. And they've got advanced, which is half turns, half tube. Yeah. It's pretty cool. Good fun. And then Isabella Nichols two. She'll fly down and we'll I'll coach her for two days before an event. So before Huntington, we tested out two of the boards. See what you actually got. Two brand new boards of the HD and then obviously had more, but she had these two boards that she thought were going to be the ones. And they were so pretty cool to work that out. Yeah, we did some also some work before Bolido. So it's not a it's a good coaching tool. Yeah., because you got you guaranteed getting one left and right, so I'll book it. We'll book a session on the right and the left, and you're right there that she can come in and break it down each wave and go through some foot placement and hand placement stuff where you place the board on the wave and back out there. Yeah. So it's pretty cool. And you got all the footage on film as well and also got the flow state. [00:39:04] Michael Frampton: All right. It's like the driving range for surfers. [00:39:07] Matt Grainger: Yeah it is. It's the full driving range. So it keeps you fit too. Like it's actually it's a full leg workout because the way you get weaker, you've got to stay right in the pocket and push real hard with your feet and your hips. Yeah a lot of. Yeah. It's pretty interesting. Yeah. It's good. Good fun. You feel like especially in the tube major. Every time I'm just on the tube I feel like a 15 year old kid again. Like you're guaranteed a barrel. You know, you're guaranteed 15 to 20 barrels that up and. Yeah. Pretty amazing. [00:39:34] Michael Frampton: Oh, that's so good. you're still doing good. Did you. Are you still taking people to macarons as well? [00:39:40] Matt Grainger: Yeah, we've got one coming up, yeah. Next February, March 2025. We're doing. Chaz is doing the movement, and I'm doing the surfing right. Yeah, we've got two and I got a goose and Ari, who helped us as well as coaching. They're awesome guys and good coaches. Yeah. Yeah. It's rad. Yeah. So we basically surf from 6 a.m. till 1130 and there's two filmers there. So they the filmers get all the footage and then we, we break down the footage at 1:00 for about an hour, and then we'll go surfing again. And then sometimes if the waves are small, we'll do apnea training in the pool. So that's like a week, seven day classes or seven day clinics. So and then some people do two weeks. Yeah. Wow. But yeah it's super fun. And you know, we go to the Thunders as well because, uh, McKenzie's small. It's always two foot bigger up there. So yeah, it's good fun. Yeah. It's an awesome, awesome clinic because it's such a mechanical wave that goes from 1ft to 6 foot. Such a rippable wave. You know, just in the pocket. You can work on people's techniques and you see people improve real quick because they've got a running wall. It's not like a, you know, sitting right here, but sometimes you can just get close down. If it's the south swell you just got, you know, the people can only do one turn if that. Obviously if it's perfect, no swells here. Great. You know, all the all the, all the beaches are lining up. Machias is unbelievable. You can do four turns so you can really work on people's, you know how they you know how they sort of start the wave speed generation where they do their bottom turn, their top turn and good place for an upper body rotation. Yeah. It's cool. Yeah. It's good fun. Yeah. All right. That's it. [00:41:29] Michael Frampton: They all filled up. Clean up? [00:41:31] Matt Grainger: Uh. Not yet. No, I think there's still some spots left. Yeah. So they're filling macaroni, doing the marketing right now for next year, but yeah, they get. Yeah. We got some good numbers this year. I think next year is going to be even better. Yeah. So it's a good gig? Yeah. It's good fun. Yeah. And, you know, good, good bonding with people. Everyone's there to learn and have a good time. [00:41:51] Michael Frampton: I'll put a link to to details about that. Show notes. [00:41:55] Matt Grainger: Awesome. Yeah. Awesome. [00:41:57] Michael Frampton: You guys had a big swell there a few days. Yeah. We had. [00:42:01] Matt Grainger: Yeah. Last week. Uh, last. Yeah, we had a massive swell. Monday. Tuesday. Wednesday. Thursday. Friday. Only bummer had really strong southerly winds. So we, being the captain, towed the car and naughty bomb in the mornings when it was southwest. And then the wind just came up and blew it out. The dead man's was on. Yeah. We got to surf that on our own. Dead man's pumping. Have a look at that. [00:42:27] Michael Frampton: I saw the footage. Yeah, some of it, but it was. [00:42:30] Matt Grainger: It wasn't many people making them. Hey, it looked pretty gnarly. How cool is it? If you have a look at, uh, this is living by Carl how often he flew. He flew all the way over for it. [00:42:41] Matt Grainger: He does that. does that blog and, Yeah, he did. He didn't even make a way. Like a proper big one. He didn't make one way. He broke in the board, got smashed. He was coming this way. Gnarly. Cuz it's kind of like the heavy cake. Then it's got a step. Yeah. And if it doesn't open up, it just collapses on you. Yeah. And you don't know when you're paddling in. You're going to be a good one or not. there's one guy called Sam Jones. Got a cracker like he made. He actually made a really good one. But the rest of the crew. Yeah. Pretty much got smashed. There was a lot of carnage. Choo choo. Kelleher did a big airdrop. Dislocated his elbow joint., he got that? no. He just airdropped and then went back over the fall. Popping the elbow. Yeah, I'm kind of done with that wave. I know it's pretty gnarly backside. You just be looking for an injury and it's crowded now. Like I have to surf it on my own with, like, you know, 4 or 5 people. And now it's everyone's out there trying to get their photo taken or their clip, which is cool. You know, they're all younger and there'll be 30, 40 people out on a semi-closed reef that's 10 to 12 foot. [00:43:52] Matt Grainger: So we can get the jet skiing off the off the car and step on it. Right? Yeah. Yeah. And then we can check out Makaha, you know, go. Makaha. German banks, North Bay cruise around being the captain. It's fun. Yeah. Yeah. You got to be ready to go for dead man's like I've. I've snapped boards out there. I've had 30 sea urchins at my 40 out there once. I just went over the falls and landed feet first. And that was pretty gnarly. Injury. Went to hospital. Like, I, I couldn't walk, so I had to paddle back to North Steyne, back to the school, and drove up to the hospital. And they couldn't even get they left about four in there. And then three stayed. Three stayed in there for about three months. And and I Right when I popped out about that big, like three months later when I went snowboarding. gnarly. I remember Barton Barton Lynch actually got. He had to go to surgery with sea urchins out there. Scotty Romaine broke his back about four years ago. Out there, captains broke ins, MCL, PCL. Just copy breaking your ribs. Yeah, that's a good way to get injured. But it's if you're young, young buck and you want to charge, go for it. [00:45:03] Michael Frampton: Well you gotta you gotta pay to play sometimes. [00:45:06] Matt Grainger: Yeah. Yeah yeah. The, the the risk out there that have outweigh the rewards. But yeah there's some really there's some good surfing going on. Some of the young guys the young guys in pressure like so grueling. Lex O'Connor, some of the young dudes are like 18 year olds just charging it and making barrels, too. So. But this last world was pretty wonky. But we had a real good swell a week before that. Like a beast or a swell like Narromine was off its face, mouth narrower. We had like nor'west winds and eight foot barrels and that was that was pretty fun. So yeah, that was a more user friendly. And it was pumping north out or the whole East Coast. Yeah. On the Sydney Northern Beaches was going off. So yeah that went that went for three days. So we've had a really good year. Last year was about like a pretty bad winter. Yeah. To be here for Sydney and the sandbanks are good because we had that big swell. But yeah, pretty pretty stoked. What about yourself? Any waves your way? [00:46:05] Michael Frampton: Some. Not. Not too many. We've had a shit winter, actually. We've had heaps of. Usually you get the southerly swells here where I'm staying at the moment, but,, I've just been heaps of northerly nor east swells of low period for some reason. Almost like summer had weird weather patterns here. The south swells that come through have heaps of west in them, so they just go straight past. I don't know. [00:46:27] Matt Grainger: And the baits are good. [00:46:28] Michael Frampton: There's there's points and river bars around here. So we just need a decent high, long period swell and it turns on, but it still goes surfing but. And get waves and had a great summer. Great summer with the kids. Yeah. [00:46:42] Matt Grainger: Awesome. [00:46:43] Michael Frampton: But the winters. Yeah. Average winter here. And it's pretty. [00:46:47] Matt Grainger: Crazy. We've actually got,, the water's cold, like, it's, 14 degrees. Yeah. So sometimes it'll be. It'll be 20 in winter usually. But this year it's cold. Yeah, but the good. Yeah. So every morning pretty much offshore. So that's kind of cool. Yeah. With this with this cold water being lucky. Yeah. Random. [00:47:06] Michael Frampton: The water here, the water here is warmer than usual. I can still go surfing in A23 at the moment. No way. Yeah. The water's so warm here. It's just all these east and northeast flow. It's keeping the water warm. [00:47:19] Matt Grainger: That's pretty cool. Yeah, we. The wave pools. The wave pool. Actually, the concrete holds the cold. yeah, I bet I pulled about about 1111. [00:47:29] Michael Frampton: That's 43 bodies business. [00:47:31] Matt Grainger: Yeah, yeah, I just I don't wear booties, but I the guy's wearing gloves and hoods and just make sure you paddle out real quick and keep yourself warm. But yeah, last year we were last year we went to, Mexico and I. Yeah. So that was cool., but this year I'm just going to hang back. I've been building this app called The Surfer's Compass, so I want to get that out by the 1st of September. Hopefully I'll be doing that for a year. So just breaking down all the best surfers in the world. Women and men take offs, paddling, bottom turn, top turns, cuttings, airs, tubes and then throwing in movement patterns that will help those maneuvers and then breathwork and mindset. Yeah. So that's been a fun little project. [00:48:15] Michael Frampton: All right. [00:48:16] Matt Grainger: So yeah be working on that. I was helping with the graphics and Joe Barker with all the edits. But yeah, that's keeping me busy. It's like a, you know like you've done a lot of projects and you just want to get it done? Yeah. I mean, I'd want to do it right, but we were told we probably could have had it done in May, but I want to do it perfect. So yeah, hopefully we get it out by. Yeah. So I got like Ethan Ewing, Mick Fanning and Kelly Slater, Jeff Gilmore, Aaron Brooks, Isabella Nichols. [00:48:42] Michael Frampton: Parker cool. Look forward to seeing it. [00:48:44] Matt Grainger: Yeah. So that's what's keeping me busy. Yeah, yeah. And all the other stuff. The surf school and and the surf gym. [00:48:51] Michael Frampton: And all the barrels. [00:48:53] Matt Grainger: All the barrels. [00:48:54] Michael Frampton: Oh, sweet. You have to let let us, let us know when it's when it's released. And I'll spread the word. [00:48:58] Matt Grainger: Sure. That'll be awesome. Yeah. But yeah, you can't beat a barrel, can you? I always say to people, once you get it, why don't you get tubed? You're done. You won't be able to hold a relationship or a job and. [00:49:09] Michael Frampton: Yeah, it's addictive. Yeah. Healthy addiction though. It's on my list. I'll probably sit down with the boys this evening and we'll watch the replays and stuff. Yeah, one. [00:49:18] Matt Grainger: Of the local boys did really well, so yeah, it's pretty, pretty good result. You got to check it out. Yeah, it's actually awesome spectacle. How was,. Did you see the the big day? Yeah. [00:49:29] Michael Frampton: Yeah. No, I watched that with. [00:49:31] Matt Grainger: Joe and Ramsey. Booker. Joe, do you reckon they were charging harder than the WSL because there was more on the line, like, you know, medals and, like, they always charge in the WAFL that they go hard as. But some of them are not the nailing. Some of the Wipeouts were heavy weren't they. But yeah. [00:49:47] Michael Frampton: And also. [00:49:48] Matt Grainger: Connor O'Leary. [00:49:49] Michael Frampton: Though also like they had different camera angles too to the. So I don't know if they had even more expensive cameras to it just. Yeah different like just a higher level production as well. I think that helped. but certainly in the Medina it was just always everything Medina does just looks effortless, doesn't it? [00:50:06] Matt Grainger: It's that good, isn't it? Yeah. Yeah. He's amazing. Yeah. He's. He's,. Yeah. There. Ethan Ewing. Yeah. They're solid as those guys. But it was good seeing the other guy from Peru. Yeah, it was Cabrera, wasn't it? Yeah. Like,. Yeah. Just seeing the other countries. That's pretty good, isn't it, about the Olympics, like, cared a lot more diversity. Yeah. I mean, I love the WAFL, but especially when they do the cup after the cup is just too much familiar., everyone's too familiar. You know, you go,, I've seen this heat before, even though it's in a different location. But it's good when you get wild cards and that variety and you just think,, I've seen another angle of surfing, you know, like, wow, this guy's insane. [00:50:48] Michael Frampton: All right. Matt. Hey, it's just gone 3:00. I better go in there. I got to do school pickup now, but thanks for thanks for doing the show again. Really appreciate it. [00:50:57] Matt Grainger: Awesome, mate. Awesome, brother. Take it easy. [00:51:00] Michael Frampton: Good to catch up. [00:51:01] Matt Grainger: Good one. Hopefully. See you when you come to Sydney. [00:51:03] Michael Frampton: That'd be great. Yeah. For sure. We'll be over there at some point., yeah. Keep me in. Keep me in the loop. Yeah, yeah. Keep me in the loop with the app. So. Yeah. Excellent. [00:51:13] Matt Grainger: That'd be cool. Awesome. Awesome, mate. [00:51:15] Michael Frampton: Thank you for tuning in to the Surf Mastery podcast. If you enjoyed this episode, please share it with a friend. Also, the best way that you can help support and grow the show is to subscribe, rate and review on whatever app you're using, be it Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and of course, we are now on YouTube, so you can watch the video version of this podcast on YouTube. Be sure to check that out. Also, go to Surf mastery.com for more surfing tips via the blog. You can also book in a personal online surf coaching session with me, also at Surf mastery.com. There are two free downloadable PDFs, one with the five best tips from this show, and one the five best exercises to improve your surfing. So go to Surf mastery.com on the home page there. You'll see them. Until next time, keep surfing. Matt Grainger on the Surf Mastery Podcast

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FOOTY PREVIEW PART 2: Saturday Arvo Footy on 3AW! (August 10, 2024)

3AW is Football

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2024 78:05


Listen to the footy preview part two with Tony Leonard, Jimmy Bartel, Tony Shaw and Rohan Connolly. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

3AW is Football
FULL PRE-GAME: Saturday Arvo Footy on 3AW! (August 3, 2024)

3AW is Football

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2024 67:55


Listen back to the full pre-game with Tim Lane, Leigh Matthews, Jimmy Bartel and Rohan Connolly before the North Melbourne and Richmond game at Marvel Stadium!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Retail War Games
Mastering the Social Media Game | Brandon Doyle from Wallaroo/Arvo Ep. 21

Retail War Games

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2024 46:32


Brandon Doyle, founder of Wallaroo Media and Arvo, shares his entrepreneurial experiences, from starting a digital marketing venture while still a student to managing two successful agencies today. He discusses the evolution of digital marketing, the strategic use of various advertising platforms, and the importance of staying ahead of trends. Highlighting practical examples, he explains how platforms like Meta, Snapchat, and Reddit can be leveraged for effective marketing, tailored to different target audiences and business needs.

3AW is Football
FOOTY PREVIEW PART 2: Saturday Arvo Footy on 3AW! (July 27, 2024)

3AW is Football

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2024 83:08


Listen back to the second part of our footy preview with Tony Leonard, Jimmy Bartel and Rohan Connolly before the Saints and Bombers go head-to-head under the Marvel Stadium roof. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

3AW is Football
FOOTY PREVIEW PART 1: Saturday Arvo Footy on 3AW! (July 27, 2024)

3AW is Football

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2024 83:08


Listen back to the first part of our footy preview with Matt Granland, Leigh Matthews and Rohan Connolly. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Nutrition Couch
Combating the Late Arvo Munchies. The Impact of a Japanese Style Diet on Brain Health. Reviewing the Strong Roots Proper Chips. How Healthy are 100% Choc Nut Spreads?

The Nutrition Couch

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2024 34:16


From Susie and Leanne on The Nutrition Couch this episode: We take a look at habits during the late afternoon eating period and the easy ways you can take control; We review the latest research about how a Japanese style diet can promote brain health; We road test the Strong Roots Proper Chips; We our listener question is about 100% choc nut spreads, how healthy are they? So sit back, relax and enjoy this week's episode!  New TNC Webinars Here is all the info about our new TNC webinars. Both webinars are now on our website and are able to be purchases and watched any time. Eating For Best Self Breaking The Diet Cycle Don't Miss an Episode   Don't forget to subscribe to the podcast so you never miss an episode and follow us on social media @the_nutrition_couch_podcast to ask us questions & see our food product reviews.  It would mean the world to us if you could leave us a 5 star review in the purple Apple podcast app (scroll to the bottom of the app to find the ratings and reviews) as this really helps push up higher in the charts to expose our podcast to more ears.  Please follow Susie on her Instagram & Facebook and Leanne on her Instagram, TikTok and the Leanne Ward Nutrition Podcast.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

New Retina Radio by Eyetube
ARVO 2024 Coverage: UWF Leakage in Protocol AA, Machine Learning, and GA's Link to Anxiety/Depression

New Retina Radio by Eyetube

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2024 22:55


Protocol AA might be complete—but analysis of its data is far from over. What did that study's data tell us about the relationship between leakage and DR severity? Justis Ehlers, MD, breaks down what he and his team uncovered when examining ultra-widefield images from Protocol AA, and helps us understand how machine learning might be used in future retina clinics. And Lisa Faia, MD, explains what her claims database analysis uncovered about the overlap between GA diagnoses and rates of depression and anxiety. What new info do we have that can contextualize the value of GA care?

Foundation Fighting Blindness
ARVO 2024 Highlight: InGel's Cell Therapy Shows Promise for Preserving Vision

Foundation Fighting Blindness

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2024 3:13


The emerging treatment is designed to work for people with RP and other conditions regardless of the gene mutation causing disease

New Retina Radio by Eyetube
ARVO 2024 Coverage: ≥20-week Dosing in PULSAR and TENAYA/LUCERNE

New Retina Radio by Eyetube

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2024 16:00


Could next-generation anti-VEGF agents such as faricimab (Vabysmo, Genentech/Roche) and high-dose aflibercept (Eylea HD, Regeneron) be dosed as infrequently as every 20 weeks without sacrificing efficacy? And even if there are data that suggest that finding, would anyone actually adopt an interval that long in wet AMD patients? Philip Storey, MD, fills us in on TENAYA and LUCERNE data that explored, in part, how many patients could theoretically reach a 20-week dosing interval with faricimab, and which baseline factors predicted whether patients were conducive to such a strategy. And Prof. Sobha Sivaprasad joins us to review findings from PULSAR. In particular, she focuses on data examining whether wet AMD patients could be dosed as long as every 24 weeks on high-dose aflibercept. This is part 1 of 2 of NRR's ARVO 2024 coverage. 

Foundation Fighting Blindness
ARVO 2024 Highlight: PYC Reports Initial Clinical Trial Results for its RNA Therapy Targeting RP

Foundation Fighting Blindness

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2024 3:08


No serious adverse events were reported. One patient had encouraging improvement in retinal sensitivity.

Foundation Fighting Blindness
ARVO 2024 Highlight: New Gene Linked to RP in People with African Ancestry

Foundation Fighting Blindness

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2024 4:18


The discovery will help geneticists diagnose more RP patients with African descent.

SuperFooty Podcast
It's official - Saturday arvo is the new graveyard for footy teams

SuperFooty Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2024 19:52


Host Andy Bellairs is joined by Glenn McFarlane to discuss all the winners and losers out of the just released fixture for rounds 16-23. And Chris Cavanagh is in to chat Kevin Sheahan's top 75 Draft prospects ahead of the AFL Under 18 National Championships.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Foundation Fighting Blindness
ARVO 2024 Highlight: Positive Two-Year Results for PDE6B Gene Therapy

Foundation Fighting Blindness

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2024 3:10


Mutations in PDE6B are a leading cause of retinitis pigmentosa.

Mid-Valley Mutations
Stereogram #7: Methods of Execution (w/ Arvo Zylo)

Mid-Valley Mutations

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2024


Stereogram #7: Methods of Execution (w/ Arvo Zylo) Arvo Zylo returns to the show. Playlist & Live WFMU Chat. Enjoy! https://ia600301.us.archive.org/31/items/mutation-349/Mutation349.mp3    

RSN Racing Pulse
Meet the man who will sell Winx's filly this arvo!

RSN Racing Pulse

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2024 11:35


Jonathan D'Arcy will sell more than 250 horses today but there is one horse who has attracted A LOT more attention than the others... See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Feminine Founder
50: Embracing AI to Grow & Scale Your Business with Alane Boyd

Feminine Founder

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2024 13:00


Have you ever wondered exactly how to utilize AI to help grow your business? We've all heard the good and the bad about AI and everyone seems to have an opinion on it. In today's episode, I sit down with AI and Automation Expert Alane Boyd to talk through exactly how she's embraced AI to grow and scale multiple companies. We discuss:How to use AI to increase connectionThe Power of Authenticity Practicing Gratitude for Yourself Alane Boyd is the Co-Founder of BGBO Co., an operations and growth strategy agency utilizing AI and automation to improve efficiency for their clients. In 2022 her company launched Arvo, an AI-powered visual documentation software for creating standard operating procedures, training documents, and company knowledge. Alane has been written and featured in Entrepreneur, HuffPost, South by Southwest (SXSW), PBS, FemFounder, and many more.You can connect with Alane on LinkedIn HERE Support the showWays to connect outside of the podcast: Join 1K+ women receiving my weekly newsletter where I drop helpful tips and tricks to move the needle in your business through utilizing LinkedIn. Register HEREConnect with me on LinkedIn HERE and follow the podcast page HERE so that you don't miss out on upcoming episodes and guests!Connect with me on Instagram @cpennington55 Subscribe HERE for exclusive access and weekly bonus episodes!Thanks for listening! I'm so excited you are here!

Social Capital
386: Putting Yourself Out There- with Alane Boyd

Social Capital

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2024 15:26 Transcription Available


Meet Alane BoydAlane Boyd is the Co-Founder of BGBO Co., an operations and growth strategy agency utilizing AI and automation to improve efficiency for their clients. In 2022, her company launched Arvo, an AI-powered visual documentation software for creating standard operating procedures, training documents, and company knowledge. Alane has been written and featured in Entrepreneur, HuffPost, South by Southwest (SXSW), PBS, FemFounder, and many more.How do you start positioning yourself as an expert or a credible resource in your industry? I really struggled with this for a long time because I was looking at the work we were doing. We are doing such amazing things and our customers love us. I finally realized we weren't telling anybody about it. Even when we would do these big case studies, we weren't sending them out in a bite sized piece.No one's gonna know that you're an expert unless you're telling them, and you're not gonna be credible just because you say you know how to do something. You have to tell stories and do them short, where people's attention span can still follow along with it.And also very clear. You can do that so easily now with social media. And I have found that has really turned a 180 for me. I was just going, Hey, I'm an expert. I'm over here. People are coming to me because they see me as an expert.I would love to hear more about your AI software. We launched that for companies to create internal process stocks, SOPs, training manuals for their team, and it's all digital.We were looking at it from a perspective of stuff out there, a lot of platforms, they look like glorified text documents. We just thought nobody wants to learn like that. Everything is meant to suck you in longer and also for short attention span.So that's why we built Arvo, to be really digitally appealing. And then we added AI earlier this year and we've got a couple of new AI features coming out too. We thought, what a great use of AI to help write processes. If you could have AI write 90% of a process for you, and then you tweak it for your business, that could be saving you hours of work. We've got some things coming down the line that I'm really excited about with AI too.Connect with Alane!LinkedInReach out on LinkedIn for a free 30-minute callX