Podcasts about At bat

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Best podcasts about At bat

Latest podcast episodes about At bat

The Ben Joravsky Show
Miles Porter and Saul Rodriguez—Sad Sack Sox

The Ben Joravsky Show

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2024 61:01


As the baseball season heads into its final month, Miles and Saul have all the news you need to know about the Sox and Cubs. First the bad—really badnews about the Sox, who are poised to set a record for most losses in the season. Then the sorta good news. The Cubs, mediocre, as they've been have a feeble chance of making the playoffs. Also, a few words about the rise and fall of Javy Baez. Miles snd Saul co-host the At Bat podcast. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Everybody Pulls The Tarp
Brandon Guyer: Building Your Major League Mindset

Everybody Pulls The Tarp

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2024 44:14


This week Andrew talks with former MLB outfielder Brandon Guyer. Brandon is the founder of Major League Mindset where he helps baseball players of all ages develop winning mindsets to reach their full potential on & off the field. In this conversation, Brandon shares actionable ideas on creating effective routines, succeeding under pressure, overcoming fears, & so much more. You'll also hear Brandon's step-by-step process for taking at-bats in the big leagues. This episode is filled with powerful frameworks all of us can use to strengthen our mindset & become the best version of ourselves in anything. Show Highlights:0:00 - Intro3:20 - Defining mental toughness4:55 - Strong vs weak mindset5:22 - Player 1 vs Player 2 framework8:20 - Target thinking9:58 - Macro vs micro targets11:20 - Wildly Important Targets17:02 - Daily progress20:11 - At Bat “behind the scenes”27:09 - Signal lights28:34 - Big league breath30:01 - Segmenting the game32:25 - Hit by pitch record39:01 - Discipline** Follow Andrew On Social **Twitter/X: @andrewhmosesInstagram: @AndrewMoses123Sign up for e-mails to keep up with Andrew's podcast at everybodypullsthetarp.com/newsletter

Classic Baseball Broadcasts
July 24 1983 - Phil Rizzuto calls George Brett pine tar game - Vintage Baseball Reflections

Classic Baseball Broadcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2024 6:12


July 24, 1983 - Phil Rizzuto calls the At Bat when Goose Gossage faces George Brett with Two outs in the 9th Classic Broadcasts are old-time broadcasts that have been put together from various sources. Many are found on the Internet Archives in a raw form. If you wish to take a deeper dive, that includes:Scorecards, Rosters, Newspaper Clippings. All members can jump over to : www.vintagebaseballreflections.com and join the membership platform

This Day in Baseball - The Daily Rewind
July 24 1983 - Phil Rizzuto calls George Brett pine tar game - Vintage Baseball Reflections

This Day in Baseball - The Daily Rewind

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2024 6:12


July 24, 1983 - Phil Rizzuto calls the At Bat when Goose Gossage faces George Brett with Two outs in the 9th Classic Broadcasts are old-time broadcasts that have been put together from various sources. Many are found on the Internet Archives in a raw form. If you wish to take a deeper dive, that includes:Scorecards, Rosters, Newspaper Clippings. All members can jump over to : www.vintagebaseballreflections.com and join the membership platform

Vintage Baseball Reflections
July 24 1983 - Phil Rizzuto calls George Brett pine tar game

Vintage Baseball Reflections

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2024 6:12


July 24, 1983 - Phil Rizzuto calls the At Bat when Goose Gossage faces George Brett with Two outs in the 9th Classic Broadcasts are old-time broadcasts that have been put together from various sources. Many are found on the Internet Archives in a raw form. If you wish to take a deeper dive, that includes:Scorecards, Rosters, Newspaper Clippings. All members can jump over to : www.vintagebaseballreflections.com and join the membership platform

Patrick Jones Baseball
6 Ways To Help Hitters Hit Slow Pitching

Patrick Jones Baseball

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2024 20:46


Episode 351: Patrick Jones (https://twitter.com/pjonesbaseball) explains 6 different ways to help hitters hit slow pitching.Timestamps:[00:51] Managing Expectations[04:17] Shrinking the Zone[08:15] Overcoming the Challenge of Slow Pitching[09:48] Balancing Aggression, Exaggerating Approach, and Staying Relaxed[12:57] Be Specific[14:11] Sacrificing an At-Bat[18:47] Practice Being LateHit with us in Cincinnati, Ohio: https://www.patrickjonesbaseball.com/contactThe Hitting Chronicle Newsletter: https://www.patrickjonesbaseball.com/...Website: https://patrickjonesbaseball.comListen to the Patrick Jones Baseball PodcastiTunes: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/patrick-jones-baseball/id1282221540Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/7lHQfrNNuqleXaMzgqr1kS?si=34f7ef6c4147456bFollow us on Social MediaInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/pjonesbaseballTwitter: https://twitter.com/pjonesbaseballFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/pjonesbaseballLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/patrick-jones-b388a484/ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Classic Baseball Radio
Wally Moon and Bill Virdon's Rookie-Rookie Double, Cardinals at Cubs, April 12, 1955

Classic Baseball Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2024 176:11


It's the opening day of the 1955 season, and leading off for the Cardinals is Wally Moon, who won "Rookie Of The Year" in 1954, memorably hitting a home run during his first At Bat in the Majors. Second in the line-up is Bill Virdon, who would go on to win "Rookie Of The Year" for 1955, giving the Cardinals back-to-back Rookies. Both would go on to pick up Gold Gloves and World Series Rings, although Moon would eclipse Virdon with three All-Star appearances and three rings, compared to Virdon's two rings. Virdon would head down the managers' route after retiring in 1968, finishing with a winning record of .519. Today's broadcast goes back to the start, with the 54 Rookie and 55 Rookie leading off against the Chicago Cubs. Gene Elston, Jack Quinlan, and Bert Wilson call the game. You can find the boxscore here: https://www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/CHN/CHN195504120.shtml This game was played on April 12, 1955. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/classicbaseballradio/message

Have Faith Let it begin
WS1986 Spring is in the Air with Dr E and Angel

Have Faith Let it begin

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2024 10:12


As I continue to Heal I wanted to bring spring into the conversation and I wanted to share with you a great moment as a young mets fan that takes place in 1986. Special thanks to for the use of the audio from:1,679,925 views Sep 22, 201610/25/86: Listen to Vin Scully's call of Mookie Wilson's epic at-bat during the ending of Game 6 of the World Series Check out http://m.mlb.com/video for our full archive of videos, and subscribe on YouTube for the best, exclusive MLB content: / mlb About MLB.com: Commissioner Allan H. (Bud) Selig announced on January 19, 2000, that the 30 Major League club owners voted unanimously to centralize all of Baseball's internet operations into an independent technology company. Major League Baseball Advanced Media (MLBAM) was formed and charged with developing, building and managing the most comprehensive baseball experience available on the internet. In August 2002, MLB.com streamed the first-ever live, full length MLB game when the Texas Rangers and New York Yankees faced off at Yankee Stadium. Since that time, millions of baseball fans around the world have subscribed to MLB.TV, the live video streaming product that airs every game in HD to nearly 400 different devices. MLB.com also provides an array of mobile apps for fans to choose from, including At Bat, the highest-grossing iOS sports app of all-time. MLB.com features a stable of club beat reporters and award-winning national columnists, the largest contingent of baseball reporters under one roof, who deliver over 100 original articles every day. MLB.com also offers extensive historical information and footage, online ticket sales, official baseball merchandise, authenticated memorabilia and collectibles and fantasy games. Major League Baseball consists of 30 teams split between the American and National Leagues. The American League, originally founded in 1901, consists of the following teams: Baltimore Orioles; Boston Red Sox; Chicago White Sox; Cleveland Indians; Detroit Tigers; Houston Astros; Kansas City Royals; Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim; Minnesota Twins; New York Yankees; Oakland Athletics; Seattle Mariners; Tampa Bay Rays; Texas Rangers; and Toronto Blue Jays. The National League, originally founded in 1876, consists of the following teams: Arizona Diamondbacks; Atlanta Braves; Chicago Cubs; Cincinnati Reds; Colorado Rockies; Los Angeles Dodgers; Miami Marlins; Milwaukee Brewers; New York Mets; Philadelphia Phillies; Pittsburgh Pirates; San Diego Padres; San Francisco Giants; St. Louis Cardinals; and Washington Nationals. Visit MLB.com: http://mlb.mlb.com Subscribe to MLB.TV: mlb.tv Download MLB.com At Bat: http://mlb.mlb.com/mobile/atbat Download MLB.com Ballpark: http://mlb.mlb.com/mobile/ballpark Get tickets: http://mlb.mlb.com/tickets Official MLB Merchandise: http://mlb.mlb.com/shop Join the conversation! Twitter: / mlb Facebook: / mlb Instagram: / mlb Google+: https://plus.google.com/+MLB Tumblr: http://drawntomlb.com/ Pinterest: / mlbam Website: https://havefaithletitbegin.co...YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channe... /> Twitter: https://twitter.com/HaveFaithl... /> Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/HFLIB... /> The CROC Podcast: Podcasts | CROC (crocvip.com)Mailing address P.O.Box 147 Walden NY 12586Spotify @IHeartRadio @Spreaker @Soundcloud @Tumblr @Youtube @facebook, @tiktok#mondaythoughts, #mondaywisdom, #mondaymotivation #tuesdaythoughts, #tuesdaymotivation, #TuesdayWisdom, #wednesdaymotivation, #wednesdaywisdom, #wednesdaythoughts #tbt #thursdaythoughts #thursdaymotivation #ThursdayWisdom #tgif, #fridaythoughts, #fridaymotivation, #FridayWisdom, @Spotify @IHeartRadio @Spreaker @Soundcloud @Tumblr @Youtube @facebook, @tiktok, #podcast, #Podcasting, #Podcasts

HDTV and Home Theater Podcast
Podcast #1122: Matter Supports New Devices and are you a Quiet quitter?

HDTV and Home Theater Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2023 39:58


On this week's show we look at the new devices supported by Matter 1.2 and we ask you if you are a Quiet Quitter of your pay TV service. We also read your emails and take a look at the week's news. News: Netflix Adds Nearly 9 Million Subscribers in Q3; Streamer Says Ad-Supported Plans Up  Nearly 70% From Q2 Hulu, Max and Peacock are introducing a 'pause ads' feature DIRECTV Stream Finally Rolls Out Unlimited DVR to Legacy Subscribers Google Fiber Set To Roll Out Lightning Fast 20 Gig Internet by the End of the Year NextGen TV Devices to Top 10M by Year's End Other: Fix your remote buttons with ButtonWorx Find on-line content with reelgood.com. Matter 1.2 The new device types supported in Matter 1.2 include: Refrigerators – Beyond basic temperature control and monitoring, this device type is also applicable to other related devices like deep freezers and even wine and kimchi fridges. Room Air Conditioners – While HVAC and thermostats were already part of Matter 1.0, stand alone Room Air Conditioners with temperature and fan mode control are now supported. Dishwashers – Basic functionality is included, like remote start and progress notifications. Dishwasher alarms are also supported, covering operational errors such as water supply and drain, temperature, and door lock errors. Laundry Washers – Progress notifications, such as cycle completion, can be sent via Matter. Dryers will be supported in a future Matter release. Robotic Vacuums – Beyond the basic features like remote start and progress notifications, there is support for key features like cleaning modes (dry vacuum vs wet mopping) and additional status details (brush status, error reporting, charging status). Smoke & Carbon Monoxide Alarms – These alarms will support notifications and audio and visual alarm signaling. Additionally, there is support for alerts about battery status and end-of-life notifications. These alarms also support self-testing. Carbon monoxide alarms support concentration sensing, as an additional data point. Air Quality Sensors –  Supported sensors can capture and report on: PM1, PM 2.5, PM 10, CO2, NO2, VOC, CO, Ozone, Radon, and Formaldehyde. Furthermore, the addition of the Air Quality Cluster enables Matter devices to provide AQI information based on the device's location. Air Purifiers – Purifiers utilize the Air Quality Sensor device type to provide sensing information and also include functionality from other device types like Fans (required) and Thermostats (optional). Air purifiers also include consumable resource monitoring, enabling notifications on filter status (both HEPA and activated carbon filters are supported in 1.2). Fans –Matter 1.2 includes support for fans as a separate, certifiable device type. Fans now support movements like rock/oscillation and new modes like natural wind and sleep wind. Additional enhancements include the ability to change the airflow direction (forward and reverse) and step commands to change the speed of airflow.  Are you a quiet Quitter? We received an email from long time listener Mike LaBorde with a link to an article at TV Tech titled The `Quiet Quitters' of Pay TV Continue to Grow. Mike suggests that he is one and as I thought about my situation I decided I am one as well. So what is a Quiet Quitter and are you one of us? A Quiet Quitter is someone who has largely stopped viewing pay TV programming but hasn't dropped their pay TV subscription or “cut-the-cord.”  According to Inscape's recent Q2 2023 TV Market Trends report, about 5% of U.S. cable/satellite households have outright quit viewing content via their satellite and cable TV options in the second quarter of the year. Inscape found that 9% reduced their cable/satellite viewing by 75% or more from Q2 2022 to Q2 2023 (to account for viewing seasonality), but didn't fully quit. Additionally, 8.4% of U.S. cable/satellite households had a drop of 50-75% in cable/satellite viewing time in Q2 2023 from Q2 2022. I did some analysis on my own viewing habits and here are the numbers. Back in 2000 I spent one hour in the morning watching TV, mostly news, and four hours in the evening from 6:00 - 10:00 Monday through Friday. That is a total of five hours a day. I now listen to podcasts as I get ready in the morning which by itself reduces my pay TV usage by 20%. In the evening I watch Youtube for about 30 minutes and then I may turn to linear television for about 30 minutes to an hour while I wait for the family to assemble and watch TV. At this point I've already cut 1 ½ hours of my normal viewing. Once we've settled in to watch TV for the evening it's not from the live TV or the DVR but rather from Hulu, Peacock, Paramount, Max, or Netflix. On a non-sports evening I have cut my linear TV by as much as 90%. So why do I keep my subscription? It's those pesky sports teams that I follow. It's no fun watching delayed. You have to watch them live. The Dodgers, Kings, Notre Dame Fighting Irish, and to a lesser degree Tennessee Volunteers keep me paying for DirecTV Stream. We also will record Hallmark Christmas movies and watch them during the holiday season. I count DVR's programming a pay TV. You really have to ask yourself, is it worth it to pay $90 a month just to watch 25% of what you used to on a pay TV service. Unfortunately being a big sports fan has it's costs! According to Inscape data, while streaming commands 56.5% of overall TV viewing time, that falls to 23.1% for sports and 14.7% for news. Cable/satellite/antenna, meanwhile, accounts for 43.5% of overall TV viewing time, but dominates in sports (76.9%) and news (85.3%). Alternatively I can find a way to get my sporting fix through add-on services like “At Bat” for baseball and “Sunday Ticket” for Football but when you add everything up it more or less costs the same amount as having a pay TV service. So you may as well just pay for pay TV on the odd chance you have nothing to watch and all you have is Nick at Nite or TV Land!  

Ducks Unlimited Podcast
Ep. 500 – Curveball: Former Pro Baseball Player Zack Shannon finds new calling on the Texas Coast

Ducks Unlimited Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 29, 2023 47:08


WARR on Anchor
Nuggets Got Next; Hawks on the Clock; Debuting Guests | 2nd City Sports on SportZone Chicago

WARR on Anchor

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2023 115:09


Lakeena and Sid got you on all the hottest topics in sports as we break into the weekend. First, a slew of Games 6 and potential Games 7 set off the NBA Playoffs -- who's about to join Denver in the Conference Finals? Plus, two big debut guests come on the show as CHGO's Greg Boysen comes by to talk Blackhawks, Connor Bedard and the latest in the Stanley Cup Playoffs, and WARR Media's Saul Rodriguez gives his opinions on the Cubs, Sox and the MLB as he does on the At-Bat podcast. Also, the NFL's 2023 schedule release, NBA coaching rumors and more! 4:06 - NBA Playoffs: Nuggets advance; Who'll win Game 7 between the Sixers and Celtics?; Can the Knicks and Warriors force deciding games? What's next for KD? 24:29 - We do that hockey as we talk with CHGO's Greg Boysen 55:53 - WARR Media's Saul Rodriguez jumps on the show 1:29:14 - The NFL releases its 2023 schedule; We breakdown the Bears' schedule and top primetime games, holiday games and more including the Lions/Chiefs season opener, a Super Bowl rematch between the Eagles/Chiefs and Dolphins/Jets for Black Friday 1:49:01 - ESPN analyst JJ Redick interviews for the Toronto Raptors head coaching job; Tom Brady planning to acquire a minority stake with the Las Vegas Raiders Subscribe to WARR Media Podcasts and follow WARR ⁠⁠on YouTube⁠⁠ for all the latest on our movement and stay tuned for upcoming episodes and specials from your guys. WARR Media provides the best independent coverage of sports and culture -- feel free to share our content and rate us well here or wherever else you find our podcasts. Thanks for listening. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/warrmedia/message

Big League Dreaming The Podcast
Japan Wins World Baseball Classic 2023 | Full Recap

Big League Dreaming The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2023 14:26


John and the boys breakdown and recap the entire World Baseball Classic! They also breakdown the final At Bat and the epic battle between Mike Trout and Shohei Ohtani!

Unstoppable Mindset
Episode 111 – Unstoppable Suffragist with Paula F. Casey

Unstoppable Mindset

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2023 68:27


Meet Paula F. Casey who for more than thirty years has worked to educate the public about the role that the state of Tennessee played in securing the passage of the nineteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. In the title of this episode, I referred to Paula as an “unstoppable suffragist”, not an “unstoppable suffragette”. Paula will explain the difference and the importance of these two words. I find this episode extremely fascinating and well worth the listen for everyone as what Paula says puts many things and ideas into historical perspective. I hope you find Paula Casey's comments as stimulating and informative as I. About the Guest: Paula F. Casey of Memphis has dedicated more than 30 years to educating the public about Tennessee's pivotal role in the 19th Amendment's ratification with a video, book, e-book, audiobook, and public art. She is also an engaging speaker on the 19th Amendment and voting rights. She was just named Chair of the National Votes for Women Trail (https://ncwhs.org/votes-for-women-trail/), which is dedicated to diversity and inclusion of all the women who participated in the 72-year struggle for American women to win the right to vote. She is also the state coordinator for Tennessee. Paula produced "Generations: American Women Win the Vote," in 1989 and the book, The Perfect 36: Tennessee Delivers Woman Suffrage, in 1998. She helped place these monuments - bas relief plaque inside the State Capitol (1998); Tennessee Woman Suffrage Monument (Nashville's Centennial Park 2016); Sue Shelton White statue (Jackson City Hall 2017). The Memphis Suffrage Monument "Equality Trailblazers" was installed at the University of Memphis law school after 5 years of work. The dedication ceremony was held on March 27, 2022, and is on YouTube: https://youtu.be/YTNND5F1aBw She co-founded the Tennessee Woman Suffrage Heritage Trail (www.tnwomansuffrageheritagetrail.com) that highlights the monuments, markers, gravesites and suffrage-related sites. How to Connect with Paula: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/paula-casey-736110b/ Twitter: @pfcasey1953 Websites: paulacasey.com, theperfect36.com, tnwomansuffrageheritagetrail.com, memphissuffragemonument.com About the Host: Michael Hingson is a New York Times best-selling author, international lecturer, and Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe. Michael, blind since birth, survived the 9/11 attacks with the help of his guide dog Roselle. This story is the subject of his best-selling book, Thunder Dog. Michael gives over 100 presentations around the world each year speaking to influential groups such as Exxon Mobile, AT&T, Federal Express, Scripps College, Rutgers University, Children's Hospital, and the American Red Cross just to name a few. He is Ambassador for the National Braille Literacy Campaign for the National Federation of the Blind and also serves as Ambassador for the American Humane Association's 2012 Hero Dog Awards. https://michaelhingson.com https://www.facebook.com/michael.hingson.author.speaker/ https://twitter.com/mhingson https://www.youtube.com/user/mhingson https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelhingson/ accessiBe Links https://accessibe.com/ https://www.youtube.com/c/accessiBe https://www.linkedin.com/company/accessibe/mycompany/ https://www.facebook.com/accessibe/ Thanks for listening! Thanks so much for listening to our podcast! If you enjoyed this episode and think that others could benefit from listening, please share it using the social media buttons on this page. Do you have some feedback or questions about this episode? Leave a comment in the section below! Subscribe to the podcast If you would like to get automatic updates of new podcast episodes, you can subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts or Stitcher. You can also subscribe in your favorite podcast app. Leave us an Apple Podcasts review Ratings and reviews from our listeners are extremely valuable to us and greatly appreciated. They help our podcast rank higher on Apple Podcasts, which exposes our show to more awesome listeners like you. If you have a minute, please leave an honest review on Apple Podcasts. Transcription Notes Michael Hingson  00:00   Access Cast and accessiBe Initiative presents Unstoppable Mindset. The podcast where inclusion, diversity and the unexpected meet. Hi, I'm Michael Hingson, Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe and the author of the number one New York Times bestselling book, Thunder dog, the story of a blind man, his guide dog and the triumph of trust. Thanks for joining me on my podcast as we explore our own blinding fears of inclusion unacceptance and our resistance to change. We will discover the idea that no matter the situation, or the people we encounter, our own fears, and prejudices often are our strongest barriers to moving forward. The unstoppable mindset podcast is sponsored by accessiBe, that's a c c e s s i  capital B e. Visit www.accessibe.com to learn how you can make your website accessible for persons with disabilities. And to help make the internet fully inclusive by the year 2025. Glad you dropped by we're happy to meet you and to have you here with us.   Michael Hingson  01:20 Well and a gracious hello to you wherever you happen to be today. This is your host Mike Hingson on unstoppable mindset. And today we get to interview a lady I met just a few weeks ago at one of the Podapalooza events. And if you remember me talking at all about Podapalooza, it is an event for podcasters would be podcasters. And people who want to be interviewed by podcasters, and anybody else who wants to come along. And we've had four of them now altogether, and I've had the opportunity and the joy of being involved with all of them. And Paula Casey is one of the people who I met at the last podapalooza endeavor. Paula is in Memphis, Tennessee, and among other things, has spent the last 30 years of her life being very much involved in dealing with studying and promoting the history of women's suffrage in the United States, especially where Tennessee has been involved. And we're going to get to that we're going to talk about it. We're going to try not to get too political, but you know, we'll do what we got to do and will survive. So Paula, no matter what, welcome to unstoppable mindset, how are you?   Paula Casey  02:29 I'm great. Thank you so much for having me. It's always a joy to talk with you.   Michael Hingson  02:34 Well, I feel the same way. And we're glad to do it. So let's start, as I like to do at the beginning as it were. So tell us a little bit about you growing up and all that and you you obviously did stuff. You didn't get born dealing with women's suffrage. So let's go back and learn about the early Paula.   Paula Casey  02:53 Okay, I grew up in Nashville, Tennessee, which is the capital of the great State of Tennessee. But you know, I was 21 years old before I knew that it was Tennessee, the last state that could possibly ratify the 19th amendment. And it's just mind boggling to me when I look back and think, Well, how did we learn about this? I said, basically, it was because the textbooks only had one or two sentences. And they usually said, a napkin women were given the right to vote in 1920 as though it were bestowed by some benevolent entity. And it wasn't until after college, and I met my dear friend, the light gray, Carol, when Yellen that I learned how significant the women's suffrage movement was, and how it is even more surprising that my state Tennessee became the last state that could read it back.   Michael Hingson  03:50 Well, so when you were growing up in high school and all that, what were you kind of mostly interested in? Because you didn't just suddenly develop an interest in history.   Paula Casey  04:00 I have good history teachers. And I'm very fortunate that I didn't have football coaches. I have real history teachers. And I was involved in Student Council. I was an active girl scout. My parents were very good about making sure that my sister and I had lots of extracurricular activities. And I was a good kid. I didn't do anything wrong. I was a teacher pleaser. I wanted to do well. I wanted to go to college because our parents brought us up girls are going to college. And we've my sister and I both knew that we were going to the University of Tennessee and mark small go big orange and go lady balls and just for the people who care about football, Tennessee right now is number one and the college football rankings. So we're happy about that. But I have always been a staunch supporter of University of Tennessee because that was where I really learned about how important history was. And I was journalism, major journalism and speech. So that helped me on my path to public speaking, and learning more about this nonviolent revolution really became my passion and helping to get women elected to office.   Michael Hingson  05:11 Well, let's deal with what you just said. I think it's an extremely important thing. I'll come at it in a little bit of a roundabout way, the Declaration of Independence talks about us having life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. And it talks about all men are created equal. And all that spine, although I think if you ask most people, when we talk about being created equal, they interpreted as meaning everybody is supposed to be equal. But you pointed out that usually what people say is that women were granted the right to vote. Tell me more about that.   Paula Casey  05:51 Rights are crafted by the Constitution. And in the case of voting rights, the constitution provides for initially man with property white men of property. Then in 1870, the 15th Amendment provided for black man, the newly freed black male slaves. The 14th amendment is the first time the word male m a l. E appears in the Constitution. And the suffragists back then and let me just clarify this in the United States. It was suffragist, the British for the suffragettes and they were considered so radical that the Americans wanted to distinguish themselves. So people in the United States who advocated for women to have the right to vote or suffragist. So the constitution grants the right to vote and our Constitution has been expanded to provide for more groups to participate in the franchise, however, and I want to emphasize this set up by people understand us, what the 19th Amendment did was remove the barrier of gender, it does not guarantee a right to vote. Our United States Constitution does not guarantee the right to vote, it will grant the rights for removing particular barriers in our lighter Native Americans and Asians and all that. Well, at the end, I was around in the early 70s, when I was at University of Tennessee in Knoxville, when the 26th Amendment was ratified, which extended the right to vote to 18 year olds, and I got to vote in my first election when I was 19. And I have never missed an election. I just think it's so important that we vote because that's part of what democracy is all about. And the suffragists did not believe that democracy is a spectator sport. They believed in self government, and they wanted to participate in their government. That's why they fought for 72 years to win that right, and to be able to participate by voting and running for office.   Michael Hingson  08:13 So going back to when the Constitution was formed. So what you're saying is essentially, that the original Constitution truly was only dealing with men and not women being created equal, white man with property. Yeah. And what do you think about people today, who say that our constitution shouldn't be any evolving and evolutionary kind of thing, that we should go strictly by what the Constitution says,   Paula Casey  08:52 I have two words for you.   Michael Hingson  08:55 Why nice to be nice, be nice,   Paula Casey  08:58 white supremacy. That's what that means. When you talk about this originally, originalist stuff. It's silly. It represents white supremacy. Yeah.   Michael Hingson  09:09 And that's, that's really the issue. I don't know of any governing document that is so strict, that it shouldn't be an evolutionary kind of a thing. We grow our attitudes change, we learn things. And we realize that we've disenfranchise from time to time, which is kind of some of the what you've been talking about in history trope.   Paula Casey  09:42 And people who say that, yeah, I don't know if they really believe it. Yeah, you see these surveys or polls where they say, Oh, the average American didn't understand the Bill of Rights and the Bill of Rights wouldn't pass today. Well, thank goodness it did pass. And I want to say MIT to you that I don't think the 19th amendment would have been ratified in this country, had it not been for the First Amendment. And as a former newspaper journalist, I'm a big believer and the First Amendment, I've been a member of the National Federation of press women since 1977. And the First Amendment is absolutely our guiding star. And it is so important for people to understand the significance of the First Amendment, the Bill of Rights and all of the additional amendments, the founding fathers, and if there were some women in there, too, even though they don't get recognized, like Abigail Adams, who believed that the Constitution should evolve a non violent revolution is what it was about the passage of the Constitution. And when I speak every year, generally on Constitution Day, which is September 17, I always point out that Benjamin Franklin said, when he was asked in 1787, Dr. Franklin, what have you created? And he said, a republic, if you can keep it, and we need to heat those words. Tell us more. Why. I think that those individuals who were involved in the creation of the Constitution, and it was not an easy task. And there were very, very strong disagreements, but they did agree on democracy. And you know, Mike, that's what this is all about. Whenever we talk about the suffrage movement, whenever I'm involved in markers, or monuments, highlighting the suffrage movement, I always point out this is about democracy and the rule of law. The suffragists believed in democracy, and that is why they fought a non violent revolution, 72 years from 1848 to 1920. But I believe that they proved the Constitution works. That's what it's about. And   Michael Hingson  12:11 you say that because of the fact that that women's suffrage passed, or what, what makes you really say the Constitution works   Paula Casey  12:20 because they persevered. They utilized every tool available to them and a non violent way, particularly the First Amendment. And when you think about what is in the First Amendment, freedom of press, freedom to peaceably assemble the freedom to petition your government for redress of grievances, their ability to communicate, and to persevere for a cause in which they deeply believed. I mean, these women were not fly by night. They play the long game. And I think that's what we can learn from down the first generation of women. And this goes back to Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Lucretia Mott and Megan bloomer. All the people who were at Seneca Falls in 1848. It was July 19, of 20 of the bait Team 48. They believed in democracy, they believed in self government and rule of law. They persevered within the parameters of what was available to them to peaceably assemble to petition their government. And I've got to tell you, I got to go to the National Archives, back in the early 90s. And I saw the handwritten letter from Susan B. Anthony, addressing her concerns her grievances with the United States government. And all of these women who were out there fighting, I mean, literally doing everything they could to make sure this issue was not diminished. As many people tried to do, that it wasn't swept aside, they overcame enormous obstacles, but they believed in something greater than themselves. And that was democracy and the rule of law.   Michael Hingson  14:08 What is the lesson that we should learn today about the importance of women's suffrage? I mean, you've been dealing with this now for over 30 years. Well, a long time, actually. And so what is the real significance of it?   Paula Casey  14:23 Why is so significant about studying the suffrage movement is that these women were prepared for the long game. They knew that it was not going to happen overnight, or possibly within their lifetimes. They fought the long fought for the long game. And when you look at persistence, perseverance, everything that they embodied there were poignant. out they were absolutely brilliant and we need to understand what they did and how they worked. To secure a right that we all take for granted today. And that's why when I hear these silly things about, oh, the worst thing that ever happened, this crash was women getting the right vote, you know, and all that garbage. I just feel like we need to study what they did. And what was so significant, because it was peaceful, nonviolent, they adhere to the rule of law. They certainly enacted every part of First Amendment. And then those went and made it possible for us to have the rights we enjoy today. And you have to remember that everything that we enjoy today, these rights came because other people were willing to fight or dock for them. And that's the whole thing about the right to vote. I mean, I'm the widow of a Vietnam veteran, and my husband served in Vietnam. I know, we still have a lot of questions about that war. But my daddy, who just died this year, he was a world war two veteran as well as a Korean War veteran. My father in law was an Army veteran who was throughout World War Two. So I take this right to vote seriously. And when I think about what our having grown up in Nashville, and Tennessee, and I've been in Memphis, where Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was killed in 1968, fighting for equal rights. And I've been in Memphis since January 1981. So I'm very passionate about women's rights, civil rights, the right to vote, we need to know our history. And we need to understand that a lot of people fought died for us to have these rights, particularly the right to vote.   Michael Hingson  16:42 Well, without getting overly political about the process, we certainly seem to be having some challenges today, because there is a what appears to be a growing number of people who would retract a lot of the things that have been brought about and some of the rights that have been expanded and made available. And it's it's scary, I know that we who, for example, have happened to be persons with disabilities are worried about some of the voting issues. Because if they, if the wrong, people decide to take complaint and get complete control, they could pull back the Help America Vote Act, and the whole issue about having voting machines that are accessible and taking away accessible ballots and so on. And there's so many other things going on? How do we get people to truly understand what happened with women's suffrage and similar sorts of things? And how do we get people to recognize the dangers that we face today?   Paula Casey  17:47 That is such a great question. And I've got to tell you, Mike, I think about this just about every day. Here's what you got to remember, ever since the beginning of this country, we have had people who consider themselves superior, and who do not want everyone to vote, it took me a long time to understand that. Because, you know, growing up in Nashville, and I mean, I had a great upper middle class life. And, you know, I'm educated, I've traveled I mean, I think I'm a fairly nice person. And I want everybody to vote. And I just couldn't understand that there were people who would not want every American citizen to exercise the franchise, and that has become more and more apparent. And I have to tell you, I think that the election of Barack Obama had a lot to do with that with the backlash. And the idea that there are folks in this country who do not believe that everyone should have the right to vote. And so therefore, they consider themselves justified in putting up barriers to the voting process, which makes it incumbent upon people like us who want everyone to have access to the ballot, to try to figure out how to overcome the obstacles that they place in our path. At Bat, again, takes us back to the women's suffrage movement. Those women endured all kinds of ridicule. I mean, it just it's amazing when you look back and see the newspapers, and things that were written and said letters and things that are in archives, people who were dismissive both men and women, dismissive of the right to vote, because that was something that many people from the beginning of this country onward, felt like it should be limited, any access. So those of us who have been fighting for expanded access, are going to have to keep on fighting. We can't give up and that's what the suffrage just taught us cannot give up Have   Michael Hingson  20:01 you talked about the concept? And the fact that this was a nonviolent movement? Did those early suffragists experienced much violence from people?   Paula Casey  20:14 Yeah. Oh, yeah. Especially when they marched the 1913 suffrage parade in Washington, DC, and in New York City and night content, the I mean, Thurber police and looked the other way, a geonet. Something that's happening today, too. But the idea that not everyone celebrated having universal suffrage. And that's what I believe in universal suffrage, no matter what you believe. And you still should have access to the ballot, and we need to make it as accessible as we can. But we've just got to keep fighting because we've got to overcome the people that don't want everyone to have access to the ballot.   Michael Hingson  21:01 You studied this a lot. What do you think the Founding Fathers view would be today? When founding mothers for that matter?   Paula Casey  21:09 Better? Such a great question, because everybody likes to think that they know what they would think. And I have to tell you, I have been on a run of reading David McCullough's books. I am just really into BS, I'm researching 76 right now. And I've had John Adams forever. I've never finished it. So I'm going to finish that. Then I've got to do Teddy Roosevelt. And then I'm going to do Harry Truman. But the thing about John Adams, when Abigail wrote him to remember the ladies, he was dismissive. And he thought it was silly. And these man, okay, yes, they were products of their time. But there were very few real feminist among them. That's what made Frederick Douglass stand out because he was so willing to stand up for women's suffrage. But she looked back at those men. And I mean, honestly, my they didn't know any differently. You think about what they were through. And the idea that women should be equal participants in a democracy was certainly a foreign thought to them. But there were so many people. And there were also areas that didn't allow women to vote. But you know, New Jersey actually extended the franchise and then took it away. And then when people started moving westward, to develop the West, there were the men were adamant that because women were helping homestead and settled all of that land out there that they should be voting, if there were states that were not going to come into the Union if their women couldn't vote. So this is not that unusual of an idea. But it took particularly enlightened man and women who pushed for it to happen. And I've got to point this out. I do not bash man because it took the man and those 36 state legislatures to ratify a Ninth Amendment, they voted to willingly expand power, and that needs to be acknowledged. Weird, we're   Michael Hingson  23:20 we're dealing with this, this whole issue of suffrage and rights and so on. Were any of the early founders of the United States, right from the outset? Supportive or more supportive? Do you think? Or do you know,   Paula Casey  23:35 trying to think, abolition and suffrage became closely linked? Yeah. So for those who advocated the abolition of slavery, they were probably more amenable. But again, what this really is about is the whole idea of who is a citizen? And I think that's where and the founding of this country, clearly black people and Native Americans were not considered citizens. The question about women. I can't think right offhand of any, quote, founding father who advocated for women to bow, they may have come up, you know, some of them may have come around, but you look back and think, who are the guys that we think about as founding fathers? I don't think any of them was particularly feminist, or encouraging of women being thought of as citizens with full voting rights. And then you got into the issue of taxation without representation. You know, nothing's new. That's what you learned studying the women's suffrage movement is it's all been said or done for who is a citizen who should have the right to vote?   Michael Hingson  24:58 Well, I'm I'm think I mentioned to you When we chatted before, and you just brought up abolitionists, and I always remember the story of William Lloyd Garrison, who was trying to gain more people into the abolitionist movement. And he directed some of his people to contact the Grimm case sisters who were very staunch suffragists, right? And see, I got the word, right. And they said, No, we can't do that. That's not what their priority is. Their priority is all about women's separatists that's going to detract from what we're all about. And in Henry Mayer's book all on fire in telling the story, he says that Garrison said, it's all the same thing. And that's absolutely right. Whether it's the right to vote, whether it's the right to attend public school, whether it's the right of persons with so called disabilities to have equal access, which doesn't necessarily mean we do things the same way, but equal access to things in the United States. It's all the same thing. Right. And I think that's the most important message that we all want to take away. Or at least that's part of the important message that we should take away. I don't know how we change people's minds today, though, we're getting such a polarized world? And how do we get people to understand why being more open to everyone having equal opportunities, whether it be the right to vote or whatever? How do we get people to deal with that?   Paula Casey  26:45 I think we have to learn from what the separatists stat, we have to persevere. We have to be creative, and innovative. We just can't give up. This is the long game we are in for the fight of our labs. And it won't get better if people give up. That's why we've got the hang in there. And truly, it is about democracy, you either believe in democracy or don't. And that, to me is the bottom line. And when he talks about polarization, I think we also have to factor in disinformation, foreign governments being involved in our political processes. And frankly, as a former newspaper journalist, and someone with a journalism degree, I have to tell you, I think the media have failed us. They are not reporting on things that are happening. And I've got to tell you this mike, in the 1970s, my husband and I were in the newspaper business back then he was a great journalist, great editor. And we started watching the corporatization of news in the mid to late 70s. And now it's like what, six or seven corporations, on all the major media, this is not good for our country. We work for a family owned newspaper business in Tennessee, that was bought out. And then now you have these giant firms and hedge funds, evil, I think they're evil, and they're buying up all of the media, this is not good for our country. And this means it is difficult to get the message out to people. And I really thought that social media would help and if anything, is probably been more of a hindrance. Sadly,   Michael Hingson  28:35 when you don't have any kind of governing governors on what you do, like what we saw for several years recently, then, yeah, it certainly doesn't help does it? Not. So well fight disinformation, as well as apathy. Yeah, and apathy is certainly a part of it. And you talked about the importance of voting, and we I've talked to a number of people who have never voted, oh, I'm not going to do that it won't make a difference and so on. And they, and they continue to feel that way. And they just don't vote and they're not young people. But I've also found young people who do that, but I know some people who are in their 40s and 50s. And they've never voted in an election. And they're fine with   Paula Casey  29:28 that. Yeah, that's that's what's so sad because you've got to have parents or teachers, someone who inculcate in a young person, that it's important to better and I will tell you, my sister and I grew up in a home where my parents were two newspapers voted in every election. My sister and I knew that it was important, we registered to vote. I mean, I I got to vote first time and I was 19. But I registered as soon as I could, after the 26th Amendment was ratified. And I've just think People have got to understand that democracy doesn't work. If you don't participate, democracy is not a spectator sport. And here again, this is something else that this brings up. When did they stop teaching civics in the schools? I love civics. I love teaching civics talking about civics. That's part of the problem right there.   Michael Hingson  30:24 There are a lot of challenges. I think I know the answer to this one, since Tennessee was the 36th state to ratify the 19th Amendment. But why is it called the perfect 36?   Paula Casey  30:36 The editorial cartoonists of the day, the Tennessee the perfect 36 Because they did not know where that last state was going to come from. So think about here, let me set stage 3435 states have ratified. Three states absolutely refused to consider it because their governors were opposed. Connecticut, Vermont, Florida, nine states had outright rejected it. And berries were primarily in the south lawn with Maryland, a couple of years. Non states were checked it. It fell to Tennessee. And because Tennessee had a well organized group of suffragists across the state in all 95 of our counties, and we have wonderful man who supported this effort, including our United States senator Kenneth McKellar, who was from Memphis. So the stage was set. When Carrie Chapman Catt came to Nashville to stay at the Hermitage Hotel, which is fabulous. And I want your listeners to go to the heart teach hotel if they're ever in Nashville, because it's so significant in the suffrage battle. Both the Pro and anti suffrage forces stayed at the Hermitage and Carrie Chapman Catt stayed there. Along with Representative Joseph pan over from Memphis, who was the floor later, Carrie Chapman cat asked him to be the suffrage fight. So because of the editorial cartoonist and because we were the last state that could ratify, that's where the name of the perfect 36 came from.   Michael Hingson  32:20 Well, for you personally, what really got you interested in becoming so deeply involved in studying the suffrage movement because it's clearly become very personal for you.   Paula Casey  32:34 My husband, dad and July 1988. And Carolyn Yellin, spent a lot of time with me. We had actually been at the National Women's Conference in November of 1977. That was an exciting time I was one of the youngest delegates there. And Carol Lam talked to me about the research that she had done and and I want people to know about this because this is really important. After back McCain was killed in Memphis in 1968. Carolyn Yellin her husband, David Yellin, who was a broadcaster and several other folks put together a group called the search for meaning committee. And they compiled everything they could about what was happening in Memphis. And every book that has been written since then about Dr. King, and what happened in Memphis, has utilized their research. Well, while Carolyn was doing this research, she came across this Tennessee story and she was working with from Oklahoma. She didn't even come here from New York City. He ran the broadcasting department, a inaugurated at what was then known as Memphis State University. And Carolyn said, you know, this is kind of important. Yeah, that may, Tennessee was last, I think the ratify. So she started doing research. And she found descendants. And she also talked with two of the man who were still living. Harry Byrne died in 1977. Joseph Hanover did not got until 1984 and I met him in 1983. He was the for later, who Mrs. Cat had asked, Can the pro surfers votes together, had it not been for Joe Hannover. I'm telling you tonight, the amendment would not have been ratified in Tennessee. He Carolyn always said to me, he was the real hero. So we started working on a book because she had said she wanted to do this book. So I'm thinking I have a lot of graduated from UT Knoxville and the University of Tennessee press will want to do this book, because we have all this original research. So we're calling you to press. And the woman said to me, and we've already dealt with on women's suffrage, and was very dismissive. And I was just really stunned and I said Okay, thank you. So I started thinking about it later and I wished I'd had the presence of mind to say she nobody ever says that about the Civil War. You know, all they do is write books about the damn civil war. I mean, I grew up in Nashville, believe me, I had been, I was indoctrinated with Lost Cause mythology. So I start looking. And finally we get somebody who's willing to publish it. And you gotta remember this. We published it originally in 1998. I've done a re plan, and I've done the e book and the audio book, and Dr. Dre and Sherman came to Memphis in 1994. We started working on the book in 1996. We got the first edition published in May of 1998. And I was able to put it in Carolyn's hands, her breast cancer had returned, and she got in March of 99. So I was just so grateful that her research resulted in that book. And then Dr. Sherman, who had her PhD from Wright first wrote about the long journey from the Revolutionary War up to what happened in Nashville in 1920. So we're really proud of the book, and I continue to sell it to libraries and individuals because you know, that history is it's very well recorded in our book. And so I'm really proud of it and I've got a hold of a copy. The perfect body six, Tennessee delivers women's suffrage and the cover is Downtown Memphis Main Street, 1916. It was called The Great monster suffrage point.   Michael Hingson  36:29 Do you know if the book has been put into audio format today?   Paula Casey  36:33 Yes, Dr. Sherman read the audio books. I have an audio book and the ebook and awkward formats.   Michael Hingson  36:39 So is it on   Paula Casey  36:39 Audible? Yes. Oh, it's on lots of ebook platforms and an audio book platforms.   Michael Hingson  36:47 Well, great. Then I'm gonna go hunted down. I think that will be fun to read.   Paula Casey  36:54 Music terrible. I forgot period music. We had a great producer David Wolf out Albuquerque did the audio. But   Michael Hingson  37:02 here's a question totally off the wall. totally subjective. But do you think Abraham Lincoln would have supported this women's suffragists movement?   Paula Casey  37:15 I do. And let me tell you why. It's so interesting. You should ask that. Have you heard about Jon Meacham? snoo book?   Michael Hingson  37:22 No, I have not. Okay.   Paula Casey  37:23 Jon Meacham is a Tennessee boy. We were at the Chattanooga you know, he lives in Nashville May. I was in New York City for years and years. And he and his wife are in Nashville because he is a professor at Vanderbilt University. And he was on Lawrence O'Donnell, I think last night on Well, whenever it was on MSNBC, talking about his new book about Abraham Lincoln. And then there was like, Abraham Lincoln. I mean, it he has fast to think of keep up with Cain. He believed in abolishing slavery, but he traded people with dignity. And I think that he could have been persuaded that, you know, the union wasn't gonna provide as a women's voting union was gonna define over whether it was okay to enslave other human beings. And when you think about the idea that it was okay to own other human beings that's just repulsive just today, but back then, Lincoln had his work cut out for him. But I do think because he believed and he he studied them. She's such a thoughtful man. And I'm looking forward to reading John's book, because I think all of his books are terrific. But I really want to read this one, because I think Abraham Lincoln was enlightened in his own way, and he probably would have come around to support it. Yeah,   Michael Hingson  38:53 he just had other issues that were as important, if not more important, like keeping the country together if he could. Right. So it was, it was certainly a big challenge. And,   Paula Casey  39:07 you know, 1848, by Seneca Falls happened, but then the surfer just recognized that the Civil War was going to take priority over everything. And so they were essentially derailed, but it was after the Civil War. And the 14th and 15th amendments came up or 13th amendment, you know, to abolish slavery, but the 15th Amendment, extended the franchise to the newly freed black male slaves, and I want to point something out here. There's a lot of misinformation about who could vote and the aftermath of the Civil War and then later and they you heard this and I heard this a lot in 2020, during the centennial celebration, and let me point out that separatist endured a pandemic just like we have, and they persevered and they want to spike the pandemic. And there is a school We'll start, which I happen to agree with that the 1965 Voting Rights Act would not have applied to black women. Had the 19th Amendment not been ratified the 15th Amendment and the 19th Amendment event, the Voting Rights Act was about the enforcement of those two amendments. And when people say, Oh, we're black women are unable to vote. No, that is not true. The 19th Amendment did not say white women. It says equality of suffrage shall not be denied. I can't have sex. That's all it says I can't have sex. And so it removes the gender barrier to voting and had nothing to do with race. What did have to do with race was the states. The constitution grants the right to states set the policies and procedures for voting. And it was in the States where you have Jim Crow laws, and Paul taxes and literacy tests and all that garbage that was designed to keep people from voting. The states did it, not the Ninth Amendment. And we have documentation of black women voting in Nashville, Clarksville, Tennessee, about Tachyon and Memphis,   Michael Hingson  41:15 you have been involved in placing various suffragist related art around Tennessee. Can you tell us or would you tell us about that?   Paula Casey  41:25 Yes, I am very excited about this. When you go to a city, wherever you go in this country, you notice if you're working about the public art, and who is depicted in statuary, and for too long, we have not acknowledged the contributions of women and public art. So back in 1997, Van state senator Steve Cullen from Memphis, who is now my ninth district, Congressman Steve is great. Steve is the one who said we have got to have something inside state capitol. So put me on this committee. And he said you're going to serve on this committee. And there's going to be a blind competition that the Tennessee Arts Commission will sponsor and we're going to select somebody to design something to go inside state capitol because think about this, Tennessee ratified August 18 1920. And up until February of 1998. There was nothing inside the Tennessee State Capitol building that depicted Tennessee's pivotal role. Oh, American women's vote today, thanks to Tennessee. So Steve puts me on this committee. We have a blind competition. Owl on the far west Wednesday. And on the back of our perfect 36 book, I have a picture of the bar leaf that is hanging between the House and Senate chambers, and the Tennessee State Capitol building. Okay, fast forward to 2009. Former Vermont Governor Madeleine Kunin came to Nashville to give a speech at the Economic Summit for women and she was picked up by Tierra backroads and she said to the women who picked her up, take me to see your monument to the suffragist. I know that Kelsey was the state that made it Wow. And they said, Oh, Governor, we're so sorry, the state capitol building is closed. And this is where that bodily is hanging inside State Capitol. And she said to them, you Tennessee women should be ashamed. You should have something that is readily accessible. So that started our efforts to put together the Tennessee women's suffrage monument. And we commissioned our look bar and 2011 We got really serious in 2012. I was asked to be the president in May of 2013, which mount where you raise the money and I raise 600,000 for this $900,000 monument that is now in Centennial Park. Nashville. Centennial Park is gorgeous. It's historic. Susan B. Anthony was actually in that park in 1897. And she inspired and Dallas Dudley of Nashville to get involved Suffrage Movement. And Anne was beautiful and wealthy. And she became a great suffrage leader on the state level and the national level. So we got together at our McQuire studio in Nashville. He's at West Nashville. And they asked me who should we put on this minute but and because Carolyn Yellin had been my mentor and my friend, I said, we need to have an Dallas deadly from Nashville. Frankie Parris from Nashville who was a major black separatist, who registered over 2500 Black women to vote in Nashville in 1998. We had Sue Shaun White and Jackson who was the only Tennessee woman put in jail fighting for suffrage. And Abby Crawford Milton from Chattanooga, there wasn't really anybody that I was going to push for from Memphis at that moment because I knew that we were eventually going to do a Memphis separate monument. But I said, Karen Chapman Catt, who was originally from Iowa, and you know, okay, so yeah, New York, Carolyn Yellen said that Carrie Chapman Catt should have been the first woman to become a United States Senator from New York. But she was so spent after the savage battle and she had a serious heart condition. So I said when he put Carrie Chapman Catt on there because she wanted to pick it in statuary. She was brilliant. And so we had the spot women heroic scale. They're nine feet tall. They're in the Nashville Centennial Park. So that's the Tennessee one separate monument. Allen was commissioned to do to get our Knoxville I worked on the advising the Tennessee triumph and Clarksville, Tennessee. And it's fabulous. It's got a woman putting her ballot in the ballot box. And beyond Ben Jackson, I helped raise the money and that was only 32,000 to do a burst of soup shot right in front of Jackson City Hall and bed, Memphis, my hometown. We have the Memphis suffrage monument equality trailblazers, that monument cost $790,190 average every penny of it because I have wonderful friends, and a city council on a county commission that gave major money so that we could preserve the legacies of these important people. And so in the Memphis monument, which is at the law school, for the University of Memphis, facing the Mississippi River, I live right down by the river. You can see that monument in the daytime or at night. And what's so great about this, Mike is that people see it and they just rave about it. And school children go there and they read about these remarkable people. And I point this out to everyone when I'm doing chores, or when I gave speeches. The reason we do these markers and monuments is because these people deserve to be remembered. And when we're all gone, that was mine knits and markers will be there telling the story and I'm just grateful that I had been able to have this experience to preserve the wiper sees of these remarkable Oregon people.   Michael Hingson  47:35 Now as I recall the monument at the University of Memphis the ceremony dedicating it is on YouTube, yes. Do you know how people can easily find it? Do you know a link or   Paula Casey  47:50 I think if you go on YouTube, you can type in Downtown Memphis Commission because the Downtown Memphis Commission produced it. It's on their YouTube channel and I actually have it on my YouTube channel, Paula FKC. And I believe it's easy to find it was March 27 2022, the dedication ceremony for the Memphis suffrage monument, but you can actually see it and I've got to tell you this, I'm so excited. My friend, Michelle duster, who is the great granddaughter about to be Wales and I'm going to hold up her book out to be the queen Michelle gave me her family's blessing. And she and her brothers wanted to write the bio that's lasered on the class for ATAPI wills. And Alan had sculpted a bust of atopy Wales along with five others. And she was so excited about it. And we had so much fun when she came to Memphis. And it was just such a great experience for us to celebrate the wives of atopy wills and Mary Church, Terrell, and all of the people from Memphis, Shelby County, who fought to get that night keep that amendment ratified. And then those women whose careers were made possible in politics, because of the suffragists victory, said, Michelle has been a great ally and champion of our monument.   Michael Hingson  49:14 So I think we've talked around a lot of this, but ultimately, what can we learn from the Chuffer suffragists movement? What lessons can we take forward? And I guess even before that, do you think that those who led and were the basis of the separatist movement would be surprised at what we're experiencing today? Now?   Paula Casey  49:40 I think they would just take it in stride, and they would expect it because they've dealt with backlash, and obstacles, ridicule, sarcasm, obstructionism, they saw it all. That's why I keep telling people when you study history, you learned that nothing is new. And it is so important for us to recognize the people who help move history forward, they help make sure that our society goes forward and that we are on the right side of history, when it comes to the expansion of rights, and inclusion, diversity, inclusion, all of this should just be something that we do, because it's the right thing to do. And because we understand how important it is for everyone, to participate in our government, in our society, why don't we want to be close, I don't want to live on Wi Fi. But I want to celebrate people who have done great things. I want to be able to tell young people that they can be aspirational, that they can vote to the example set by these people who accomplish something right over enormous opposition.   Michael Hingson  50:58 Clearly, these women, and anyone who is committed to this process, to use my term would be unstoppable, which is, which is a great thing. And clearly you are helping to promote that. And I think that is extremely important. And it does go beyond suffrage, women's suffrage, it goes to anyone who has been disenfranchised by whatever the system might be. And we do have to fight the fights, we can't step back, we have to stand for what we believe in. And I think that it is important that we do it in a non violent way. I suspect that if he had lived back in the time of women's suffrage, Gandhi would be a very great supporter, don't you think?   Paula Casey  51:51 Yeah, he would have come around. Yeah, he was kind of sexist.   Michael Hingson  51:55 Well, you know, it's the environment. But non violence was certainly his   Paula Casey  51:59 right. As Susan B. Anthony was entered non violence long before Gandhi and dark cane and she never gets recognized for it. Yeah.   Michael Hingson  52:09 Yeah, it did not start in the 1900s. But it is something that we all ought to take to heart. Now. Let's let's be clear, non violence, as opposed to civil disobedience.   Paula Casey  52:25 Right, right. Yeah. I mean, Susan Bay was all for civil disobedience. And you know, like when she tried to vote, and Elizabeth every Merriweather from Memphis was so inspired by Susan B. Anthony's example, that she went to go vote in Memphis in 1873. And she said they gave her a ballot, probably because she was considered an aristocracy. But she said she wasn't sure if her vote was counted. Yeah. And so that's the whole thing about, you know, who can vote who's citizen who has access to the ballot. And another thing that we have to think about is who's going to count the votes? We're never used to have to worry about that so much.   Michael Hingson  53:07 And it's unfortunate that we have to worry about it today. I think for the longest time, we assumed that the system worked. And mostly I think it did. And it does. But now, there is so much fear and so much distrust because of what some are doing that we have to be concerned about. Who's counting the votes? I watched a news report last night about how ballots are handled in San Bernardino County. And the process is absolutely amazing. When the ballots come in, the first thing that's checked is is the signature and the comparison is made as to whether it's a legal signature that's done by a group of people. And then the ballot is opened. And the ballot is just checked for anything damaged or anything that looks irregular. And then it goes to a different group of people now a third group that counts the ballots, and one of the points that they made, and I actually hadn't thought of it, although I should have. But until they mentioned it is and none of the machines and none of the technologies and none of the process involved in counting the ballots in San Bernardino County and I suspect in a lot most places, nothing is connected to the internet. Right? Oh, nothing can go off and destroy or warp the ballot, the process. That's good to know. Yep, I think it should be that way. I've seen some companies who are concerned enough about the internet and what people can do that their accounting systems are never attached to the internet and it makes perfect sense given everything that's going on today. So other computers can be compromised. But the accounting and monetary parts of the companies are not connected to the internet at all. They're not on the network, right? Even the local network.   Paula Casey  55:14 So what can I mention the three man who were so essential in Tennessee? Sure. This is such a great story. And I have to tell you, my friend, Bill Haltom, of Netflix is a great author and retired attorney. He did this book, because I asked him to on representative Joseph Hanover rock, Kent mother vote. Joseph Hanover, was an immigrant from Poland. His family was Orthodox Jewish, and they fled, because the Tsar took their property. And so many Jewish immigrants were coming into this country, because they had to flee oppression. And he came to this country along with his mother and two brothers, his father came first and ended up in Memphis, and saved the money for them to flee Poland. Now, let me tell you, my key talk about unstoppable mindset. Those people who were searching for freedom, and they had crossed a frozen lake and come across in the bowels of a steamship. And Joe was five years old, and he went upstairs and start bands and people were throwing money at it. When they got to this country, they came through Ellis Island, and band came through via St. Louis down to Memphis, some in Memphis. And he was so taken with this country and the country's founding documents, because his parents kept telling their boys they had three and then they had two more. And they told them, you're living in the greatest country. You have rights in this country that we did not have public. You've got study the Constitution, and the Bill of Rights and the Declaration of Independence. And of course, the Declaration of Sentiments in 1848, at Seneca Falls was patterned after the declaration of independence. So Mr. Joe decides that he's going to run for the legislature, and he went to law school and studied by all Lampe in his family's home in being Hampton, which is a part of Memphis back then it was north of Memphis. I am so excited because the national votes for women trail, I've been the Tennessee coordinator, and I really pushed to get one of the poverty foundation markers for Mr. Joe. We got it last week, it has been put up on the side of the Hanover family home. And I encourage people who are listening or watching this podcast to look up the national votes for women trail and see all of the people across the 48 states because remember, Alaska and Hawaii weren't states back. We have got Mr. Joe hit with his marker. Then we've also got the sculpture that Allah required date of Harry burn. Now Mr. Joe knew the morning of August 18th 1920, that he was two boats short of ratification in the House, the Senate in Tennessee had passed it 25 Four, but the house was very close to being deadlocked. And because of the opposition and the money, here's what you've got to remember. People who are opposed to right are always going to have more money. That's just a given. So you have to be smarter, and work harder and be more innovative. Mr. Joe did everything he could to keep those pro surfers votes together and it came down to two votes. And he didn't know where they're going to come from. That this is anecdote that Bill Haltom and I've done some research. We think this is true. There was a state representative from West Tennessee north of Jackson and Gibson county named banks Turner. He was a farmer, a Vanderbilt educated lawyer and he had been antiseptic. Now banks Turner ended up sitting and Governor Roberts office on the morning of August the 18th. That vote was gonna take place in the house. And Governor Roberts, who had actually he came around but he supported it. So he's talking to governor of Ohio governor Cox Governor Cox was besieging Governor Roberts of Tennessee to please get Tennessee to pass because remember, both political parties thought that women would vote for them in the 1920 presidential election. The best flip the push was to make it possible for American women to vote in the presidential election. Now Tennessee had as did other states, something called limited suffrage or municipal suffrage where women can only vote in school board or presidential electors, but not universal suffrage, which meant they could vote now elections. So Tennessee women worked and I think would have had a chance to vote. But the political parties wanted Tennessee to ratify so that women and all the 48 states would have the opportunity to vote in the 1920 presidential election. So banks Charter, the Vanderbilt educated lawyer and farmer from Gibson County, Tennessee who had been an Attock is sitting there listening to Governor Roberts and the conversation. And Governor Roberts pointed at banks Turner and said something to the effect of I'm sitting here looking at the man who can make this happen. So banks charter didn't tell anybody that he had met with Senator Roberts and he goes to the floor of the house. And there were attempts made to table the notion which meant to kill it, because they didn't want to have to go on record, and a special session of 1920 if they could delay it until the regular session in January of 1921, and then effectively kill it for all time. Well, Johanna never knew that he was to vote short. Though Joe Hanover and banks Turner voted to table the voted against tabling the motion Harry Berg voted twice to table the motion. However, banks Turner kept it alive because it deadlocked 4848, which meant the amendment was alive and proceeded to the farm vote for ratification. The Speaker of the House was Seth Walker from Lebanon, Tennessee and he was a very wildlife lawyer had initially been four separate Jiminy ends up being an atta. And he thought that because it had deadlocked on the motion to table 4848 that the same thing was gonna happen with the actual vote of ratification, which would have killed it, that he did not know that Harry Barr, who was a state representative from now to candidacy outside of Chattanooga, and was received a letter from his mother and widow who own property, and she wanted to be able to vote in our elections. So she says in this letter, dear son, her rod vote for suffrage. I had been reading the paper with you see where you stood and haven't been able to say anything. Please help Mrs. Cat put the rat and ratification from his mother. So Harry, what the roll call was taken, voted for it voted ah. And it caught the anti separatists by surprise. But the processor just realized that it was going to pass 49 to 47. And so SEC Walker, being a parliamentary maneuver specialist, changed his vote from May to ah, so that he would be able to prevail anxiety to bring it up for reconsideration. But what that did was it gave it a constitutional majority 50 to 46. So that it would pass constitutional muster, and they had attempts to be railing and all kinds of shenanigans. But Tennessee, became the last state to ratify the perfect 36 on August 18 1920. And we celebrate that accomplishment and everything with those men did. And I have been very pleased that we got a Tennessee Historical Commission marker in Gibson County for thanks, Turner. We've got the Harry burn statue, and there's a marker in his home place and Nauta and then I have got the Palmer foundation mark of Joe Hanover. And Adam afar, Scott did his best on the Memphis suffrage monument. So what these men did, because they believed in democracy and rule of law, it will be there for future generations to know   Michael Hingson  1:04:25 what a great story and there's no better way to end our episode today then with that and what it really means if people want to learn more about all of this and maybe contact you and learn about your book and so on. How can they do that?   1:04:45 thperfect36.com theperfect36.com or Paulacasey.com And I would love to hear from folks you know the books are available the audio book, the ebook and the DVD generations American women when the This is all about celebrating democracy and the rule of law and the right to vote. And thank you so much.   1:05:08 Well, Paula, thank you and I really appreciate you coming on. I love history I have not read enough David McCullough books and have to work on that some but and we will, but I have Red Team of Rivals. So that's not David McCollum. But still, history is an important thing for us. And we learned so much that whatever we think is new really isn't same concepts coming up in a different way. Right. But thank you all for listening. I'd love to hear from you. Please. Wherever you are, just shoot me an email. Let me know what you thought of today's podcast. Please give us a five star review. This is an informative episode and one that I think people really need to hear. So I hope you will pass on about this. Give us a five star rating. Email me at Michaelhi M I C H A E L H I at accessibe.com or visit our podcast page. www dot Michael hingson H i n g s o n.com/podcast. And definitely let us know your thoughts. And once more Paula Casey, we really appreciate you coming on and educating us and telling us all about this subject which is I think so important and teaches us so many lessons we need to take to heart.   Paula Casey  1:06:25 Thank you.   1:06:29 You have been listening to the Unstoppable Mindset podcast. Thanks for dropping by. I hope that you'll join us again next week, and in future weeks for upcoming episodes. To subscribe to our podcast and to learn about upcoming episodes, please visit www dot Michael hingson.com slash podcast. Michael Hingson is spelled m i c h a e l h i n g s o n. While you're on the site., please use the form there to recommend people who we ought to interview in upcoming editions of the show. And also, we ask you and urge you to invite your friends to join us in the future. If you know of any one or any organization needing a speaker for an event, please email me at speaker at Michael hingson.com. I appreciate it very much. To learn more about the concept of blinded by fear, please visit www dot Michael hingson.com forward slash blinded by fear and while you're there, feel free to pick up a copy of my free eBook entitled blinded by fear. The unstoppable mindset podcast is provided by access cast an initiative of accessiBe and is sponsored by accessiBe. Please visit www.accessibe.com. accessiBe is spelled a c c e s s i b e. There you can learn all about how you can make your website inclusive for all persons with disabilities and how you can help make the internet fully inclusive by 2025. Thanks again for listening. Please come back and visit us again next week.

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Song of the Day
Aby Wolf - At Bat

Song of the Day

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2023 2:48


Today's Song of the Day is "At Bat" from Aby Wolf's EP, Dream Fruit, out now.Aby Wolf will be performing at Red Eye Theater on Saturday, March 25th.

song at bat aby wolf
The Ben Joravsky Show
Saul Rodriguez--Sox `n Cubs

The Ben Joravsky Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2022 29:46


Co-host of the At Bat podcast, Saul Rodriguez makes his debut to talk Chicago baseball. Or to talk Ben off the ledge. Lousy starts by the White Sox & Cubs have convinced Ben that it will be another year of futility. Not so, says Saul. The future is better than it seems. And so begins another...Great Debate! See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Bleacher Boys Podcast
Turn 2 with Ivan Melendez

Bleacher Boys Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2021 18:28


The Bleacher Boys Podcast welcomes fellow El Pasoan, Ivan Melendez, to the show. This past season, Ivan had the eyes of the baseball world focus on him due to his stellar play with the Texas Longhorns. In fact, just two weeks ago, the Miami Marlins selected him in the 2021 MLB Draft. Ivan is an alum of Coronado High School, he had two great years with Odessa Junior College, then transferred to UT Austin to play baseball with the Longhorns. Ivan talks with us about growing up in El Paso, his love for the game, and we go thru the pitch sequence of that amazing AT BAT against the Mississippi State Bulldogs in the College World Series. By August 1st, Ivan will make a decision on whether he returns to UT Austin or if he will be “TAKING HIS TALENTS TO SOUTH BEACH…” like another famous athlete once did 11 years ago. Does Ivan hint at a decision on the Podcast? There's only one way to find out… Thank you for the continued support, plus don't forget to hit up and follow The Bleacher Boys Podcast on the all the Socials! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/bleacherboys/message

Just Baseball
Just Baseball S09E10

Just Baseball

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2021 70:08


Der zweite No Hitter in dieser Saison verzeichnet Carlos Rodon von den Chicago White Sox für sich. Erneut verhindert ein Hit By Pitch ein perfect game, aber den 20. No Hitter in der Geschichte der White Sox schreibt er in die Bücher. Danach schauen wir auf das Triple Play von Joey Votto. Es war fast unassisted, was dann wirklich sehr selten wäre. Von kuriosen Spielernamen kommen wir zu einem kuriosem Spieler aus der Vergangenheit: Bill Waddell. Ronald Acuna Jr. wird von uns lobend erwähnt, die Yankees schauen wir uns ebenfalls genauer an, weil es da gerade so gar nicht läuft. Wir präsentieren die Serien, die wir in dieser Woche ein besonderes Augenmerk werfen. Dabei sind diese Woche Dodgers vs. Padres, Nationals vs. Mets, Angels vs. Houston und Seattle vs. Boston. Herzzerreissend wird es rund um Sean Kazmir Jr. der nach 13 Jahren in der Minor League endlich wir ein At Bat in der MLB bekommen hat. Dazu unsere Buchempfehlung: John Feinstein – Where Nobody Knows Your Name: Life In the Minor Leagues of Baseball oder als eBook. Die Twins haben COVID19 Probleme, leider hält uns das Virus weiterhin im Griff.

Culture Baseball
Culture Baseball At-Bat #1 - Alexandre Bertin in the box : Le Stratège, Calico Joe & Graig Kreindler

Culture Baseball

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2020 54:09


Premier numéro de Culture Baseball At-Bat, format interactif où nous explorerons la culture et l'histoire du baseball à travers la passion des fans. Pour chaque épisode, un invité qui choisit un film, un livre et une œuvre culturelle de son choix. Et pour finir, un quizz de 5 questions pour tester ses connaissances et les vôtres. Pour ce premier At-Bat, j'accueille Alexandre Bertin, un des passionnés de baseball les plus actifs de Twitter, fan des Yankees, des stats et de littérature, mais également un rookie des terrains qui évolue aux Panthères de Pessac. Avec lui, nous irons redécouvrir le film Le Stratège, ou Moneyball en VO, le roman de John Grisham, Calico Joe, et les peintures de l'artiste Graig Kreindler, particulièrement son tableau du Murderers' row de 1927. Pour finir, un quizz de 5 questions sur les New York Yankees. Bonne écoute. Intro musicale : Take Me Out To The BallGame par Harry Caray, alors speaker des Chicago Cubs *2min00 Présentation d'Alexandre Bertin et de sa passion pour le baseball *9min00 Le Stratège (Moneyball) *23min45 Calico Joe (John Grisham) *37min15 Graig Kreindler et le Murderers' row *45min30 Quizz New York Yankees

ReWatchable, Agent Carter: A TV Re-Watch Podcast
Episode #337: ‘Pitch’ 1×09 – Mike-O-Mania

ReWatchable, Agent Carter: A TV Re-Watch Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2020 119:10


ReWatchable steps up to the plate for the penultimate episode of the season discussing Pitch season 1, episode 9, “Scratched.” Superfans: Danielle and Ariana Newbies: Kendra, Natalie and Brittany Fun Facts: Ariana has a fun, fun fact — HER FIRST TV EPISODE IS GOING TO BE ON!! Watch Roswell, New Mexico on the CW! And she has an IMDB page! While on Hulu, Natalie realized that Pitch is the first show we’ve done on here that she is very sad that there is no more! We feel so unfulfilled, but in the mean time there is fan fiction and Avatar: The Last Airbender chats! Brittany is flying through a rewatch of the series. Kendra is excited that her drive-in movie theater is opening and will safely enjoy films from her car with her dog! Danielle has been ordering in food and she is ordering a full brunch spread AND a full rib dinner for 2 (to eat over multiple days). Hey Pitch is on Hulu now! Pitch season 1, episode 9, “Scratched” – Blip is not pleased about the restaurant business dealings over dinner, but he wants to please everyone – Evelyn calls in backup when she realizes that things are not adding up – Natalie consults the Wikipage to get a sense of who Ginny’s brother is… it’s not wrong… – He is Mr. Confident, has the paperwork, but his actions move too fast – Did he buy the kitchen equipment? – He’s the Zuckerberg of Mo-Cap – We know nothing else about this man. He’s rich. – Romance is happening elsewhere! With Al’s daughter! – Oscar tells her to stay, but she never does what the men in her life want. You go girl. – Natalie is on her way to work internationally, but would she have stuck around if the show went on? – She and our Natalie both have a nose ring and are cool – Mike-O-Mania time, that’s why you are all here right? – Let’s break down why Mike is agreeing to a trade – Mike gets his ovation at home – What does it mean that this was taken out of his hands and wasn’t his decision? – How did we think the interaction with Mike and Livan played out in the locker room? – Forget Livan, how do you say goodbye to Ginny? – Start by nailing her cleats to her locker – And then text her to come to the bar – Hug her on the street – And then find you’re staying – Did they bring in this romance too soon? – We have conflicting feelings about this. Romance wins out. – Next week: Pitch the Cats musical! So many players may or may not be coming! – It’s the FINALE! – Favorite Scenes – Favorite Lines Make sure to join the ReWatchable ReWinders group on Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/groups/ReWatchablePodcast/) and chat with us about all sorts of fun ReWatchable-related things! Oh and hey! ReWatchable is on Spotify now! (https://open.spotify.com/show/4M0l8atDanep6DEzd0JV3m) Listener Feedback: – Kevin’s Korner hits a bit of a rough patch as we enter Tech versus At Bat! – Brittany runs another highly scientific show Kendra’s Kontemplations, Fisher’s Forecasts and Brittany’s Brainstorms: –Pitch season 1, episode 10, “Don’t Say It” Contact us! Email: rewatchable.podcast@gmail.com Twitter: @Re_Watchable (https://www.twitter.com/Re_Watchable) Tumblr: ReWatchablePodcast.Tumblr.com (http://rewatchablepodcast.tumblr.com/) Please rate and review us on iTunes!

8311Cast
FORMULA ONE (THOUSAND)

8311Cast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2019 53:21


Catch the 8311Cast Crew chatting about some Basketball (CBB and NBA!), La Tortuga "Baseball's Savior", the MLB, and Formula One. Music: www.purple-planet.com Special Guest: Josh Lang.

Tiflo Audio
Tiflo Audio 125 – At Bat, disfrutando de la temporada de béisbol de las Grandes Ligas desde el iPhone o Android

Tiflo Audio

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2019 26:46


En éste episodio, Manolo hace una demostración de AT Bat, la app oficial de MLB, la liga de béisbol de las Grandes Ligas. La nueva temporada de béisbol de las mayores, acaba de comenzar esta semana, y At Bat permite acceder a su información desde el celular de forma accesible para las personas ciegas. Manolo … Seguir leyendo Tiflo Audio 125 – At Bat, disfrutando de la temporada de béisbol de las Grandes Ligas desde el iPhone o Android →

COACH HP SHOW
Episode 3 The 4 steps to a Successful At Bat

COACH HP SHOW

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2018 8:58


Whats up guys Its your coach!! In this episode I break down the 4 steps to a successful AT Bat hope you enjoy!Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/a-catch-of-positivity-with-coach-hp. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

at bat
Presence: Experiencing God Each And Every Day
#108 - Presence in Streaming Baseball on the Internet

Presence: Experiencing God Each And Every Day

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2018 7:20


I wash dishes and listen via the At Bat app to baseball played in Oakland, CA and remember fondly many games I've watched there. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/presence/support

The Why And The Buy
46 Steve Nudelberg is on fire for sales and life

The Why And The Buy

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2017 42:54


This week's guest is Steve Nudelberg, author of Confessions of a Serial Salesman: 27 rules for influencers and leaders that will change your life and business. Steve Nudelberg's attitude has kept him at the top of his game in sales and life. It's evident in his writing, speaking and sales training. Today we discuss how he achieved that attitude, how the world of sales is changing and what he thinks you should be doing right now to take advantage and beat your competition. Check out Steve's website nudelberg.com and follow him on twitter @Nudelberg 1:49 - How Steve manages to stay on fire and how that's propelled all of his success. 5:50 - Why did Steve decide on 27 rules? 14:30 - "If you spend all your time trying to sell something, that feels like a very shallow existence." 18:30 - Steve's "At-Bat" principle of sales 33:30 - Steve's killer reading recommendations

sales confessions steve nudelberg at bat serial salesman
DevCoaches's Podcast
Episode 26 - Augmented Reality - Microsoft Facebook and Blue Whales - Flippy

DevCoaches's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2017 29:10


On Today's Show: Dave Balzer, Pat Toner, Sarah Dutkiewicz, Amanda Gragg, Randall Clapper and Matt LoPiccolo Topics of the Day: Up first we discuss Apple and Major League Baseball’s At Bat app that is adding augmented reality so fans can watch a game within the game. We also talk about how this might apply to fantasy sports. https://www.cnet.com/news/baseball-ap... Microsoft and Facebook have built their own Trans-Atlantic internet cable and we talk about joining the Facebook navy. https://www.pcmag.com/news/356384/mic... We talk about a new hamburger flipping robot which is now being implemented by a chain of restaurants in California. https://techcrunch.com/2017/09/19/fli... You can also check out the video version of this episode on our YouTube channel here.

What's Next? Podcast
S.1 Ep. 9: The Art of Perseverance with Adam Greenberg pt.1

What's Next? Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2017 46:59


Guest: Adam Greenberg, Former- Major League Baseball Player and Current CEO of Lurong Living and author of the just-released book "Get Up | The Art of Perseverance". Lurong Living: https://www.lurongliving.com/ Art of Perseverance: https://www.lurongliving.com/shop/buy-get-up-the-art-of-perseverance Show Notes/Important Points: 0:05: Intro to Adam 3:15: Kevin's Mom sales pitch for why Adam needs be on the podcast 4:14: Adam introduces himself, tells his story.  Playing at University of North Carolina. Getting Drafted and rising through the Minor Leagues. What You'll Learn: How Setting A Goal early on makes things real! 8:15: Controlling his Mindset and how it lead to an incredible opportunity to get promoted. What You'll Learn: the importance of positive outlook on opportunities. How they can turn into something great. "Because I was prepared the opportunity presented itself." 11:45: Getting "The Call" to the Pros. "You are going to the major leagues." *gives me the chills to type it* 14:55: The At Bat​​ 18:15: The Power of a Positive Outlook What You'll Learn: How to Build Perseverance  It's a trained condition, If you keep your mind in the right place and condition it positively, that's where it will stay. 22:45: Treating your mindset like a skill Ant: "We often look at things like playing a piano as a skill. And we invest all this money and have patience with it. But when we look at mental skills like being attentive, resilient, or perseverant there isn't nearly nearly the same investment." 26:05: Having the right mindset around Opportunities and why Adam is grateful for every opportunity, good or bad. What You'll Learn: You have no control over the result. So there for the real "result" is the journey, the people you meet along the way, and the mindset you control. 32:00: Finding the Inner Belief.  What You'll Learn: How to get to a point where you can trust your gut. 35:55: How to find a mentor, what to look for in a mentor. What are you doing? Where are you in life? Who are you putting yourself around?  41:05: How Chasing a Passion (Baseball) has led to other passions (starting a career). Note: You cant "choose" a passion. Chase the things you care about and the practice of being "passionate" becomes contagious.

RGBA
44: Vintage Device

RGBA

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2017 60:49


This week we cover the new Apple releases, April Fools and the Samsung face hack. Follow-up iPad - Apple (https://hipsterpixel.co/r/as/ipad) iPhone 7 - Apple (https://hipsterpixel.co/r/as/iphone-7) iPhone 7 Plus - Apple (https://hipsterpixel.co/r/as/iphone-7-plus) iPad mini 4 - Apple (https://hipsterpixel.co/r/as/ipad-mini-4) John Gruber on Twitter: "Got to play with Clips yesterday. Love it. It’s like iMovie and Keynote had a baby and the kid got all the best genes." (https://twitter.com/gruber/status/845090252440190976) News Want a BLACK screen on your RED iPhone 7? - YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nAzfZ0lQJO0&feature=youtu.be) Black Screen & Buttons on RED iPhone 7 Plus! Perfect Setup - YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ezqL9bod2I) Tap Your Apple Logo To Make It Glow! How To on iPhone 7 - YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EdlR7xcNOZ0) Vintage and obsolete products - Apple Support (https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT201624) Comparing Night Shift and f.lux – 512 Pixels (https://512pixels.net/2017/03/comparing-night-shift-and-f-lux/) LG UltraFine 5K Display - Apple (https://hipsterpixel.co/r/as/lg-5k-display) LG UltraFine 4K Display - Apple (https://hipsterpixel.co/r/as/lg-4k-display) USB-C to USB Adapter - Apple (https://hipsterpixel.co/r/as/usb-c-to-usb-adapter) Thunberbolt 3 to Thunderbolt 2 Adapter - Apple (https://hipsterpixel.co/r/as/thunderbolt-3-to-thunderbolt-2) USB-C to Lightning Cable - Apple (https://hipsterpixel.co/r/as/usb-c-to-lightning) All Three 2017 iPhones Said to Feature True Tone Displays - Mac Rumors (https://www.macrumors.com/2017/03/31/iphone-7s-7s-plus-8-true-tone-displays-rumor/) April Fools OnLeaks on Twitter: "#iPhone8 https://t.co/Lhefx7Bn28" (https://twitter.com/OnLeaks/status/847976561152323584) Google Gnome - YouTube (https://youtu.be/4C-Fpa4Pg94) Sticker Mule Now - YouTube (https://youtu.be/Hk7otn9Lkgs) ThinkGeek (http://www.thinkgeek.com) Berenstain Bears - Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berenstain_Bears#Name_confusion) MLB․com At Bat app gains personalized team Home screen icons with iOS 10.3 – 9to5Mac (https://9to5mac.com/2017/03/28/mlb%E2%80%A4com-at-bat-app-personalized-team-home-screen-icons/) Apple Acquires Workflow – MacStories (https://www.macstories.net/news/apple-acquires-workflow/) The Future of Workflow – MacStories (https://www.macstories.net/stories/the-future-of-workflow/) The DECK – Shuts Down (http://decknetwork.net/) Daring Fireball: The Deck, Adieu (http://daringfireball.net/2017/03/the_deck_adieu) Galaxy S8 Facial recognition can be bypassed With a Photo - YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uS1NmvJvHNk) -- Awesome theme song by Jim Kulakowski (http://jimkulakowski.com) | Photo by Nirzar Pangarkar (https://unsplash.com/photos/HbbHfXvb6Xw) Feedback, comments very welcomed! http://rgba.fm/contact.

Life After Blindness
LABCast #5: News with Derek Daniel, Review of MLB.com At Bat and Rodeo Animals with my daughter

Life After Blindness

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2017 54:59


Welcome to episode #5 of the Life After Blindness Podcast! My guests this week are Derek Daniel and my four-year-old daughter, Alyssa. Derek and I… The post LABCast #5: News with Derek Daniel, Review of MLB.com At Bat and Rodeo Animals with my daughter appeared first on Life After Blindness.

news mlb daughter animals rodeo at bat labcast derek daniel
BP Wrigleycast - Chicago Cubs News
Episode 31: The gang talks to Mark Grote, NLDS matchups discussion, and more!

BP Wrigleycast - Chicago Cubs News

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2016 61:11


With another pinch-hitter needed for the transient Carlos, Mark Grote from 670 The Score and Chicago Cubs pre- and post-game joins the rest of the team. Among the topics discussed, the differences between this Cubs front office and those of the past, Miguel Montero's spot on the postseason roster, and the playoff rotation. Mark even does his exceptional Pat Hughes impersonation!Later, Ryan, Joel, and Isaac dive further into who they'd prefer to see the Cubs play in the NLDS. 60 Seconds with a Former Cub harkens us back to an experience Joel once had with Mark Grace, and the guys debate who might play members of the organization in a movie about the 2016 Cubs. Isaac finishes things off with his At-Bat of the Week and by declaring his love for Aaron Rodgers. 

BP Wrigleycast - Chicago Cubs News
Episode 28: The Gang Chats with Matt Spiegel, plus more!

BP Wrigleycast - Chicago Cubs News

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2016 67:19


With Carlos missing in action yet again, the gang turns to a veteran radio voice to pick up the slack: Matt Spiegel, of The Spiegel & Goff Show on 670 The Score. Isaac, Joel, and Ryan talk to Matt about Joe Maddon, the clubhouse vibes, Theo Epstein, and Matt's prediction for how this season will end.Then, the guys beat the 'pitch usage' horse to death, they talk about what Jorge Soler can show down the stretch, and how the playoff roster might shake out. Joel harkens us back to the days of Ryan Theriot and Isaac gives us the At-Bat(s) of the week.

BP Wrigleycast - Chicago Cubs News
Episode 25: What Would Joel Freak Out About, CJ Edwards as Starter, Trade Value

BP Wrigleycast - Chicago Cubs News

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2016 64:33


Joel is out today, but we've channeled our inner Joels to see what we're all freaking out about these days. Should CJ Edwards give it a shot out of the rotation next year? We take a look at the possibility. More on the trade deadline and the value the Cubs could've gotten for Gleyber Torres.The Question of the Week is about how Cub greats Mark Grace and Ron Santo compare to current players Anthony Rizzo and Kris Bryant.Isaac takes us through his At Bat of the Week...which doesn't involve David Ross.

BP Wrigleycast - Chicago Cubs News
Episode 24: The Aroldis Chapman Trade and Everything that Comes With It

BP Wrigleycast - Chicago Cubs News

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2016 63:51


It finally happened: the Cubs traded away their top prospect (and more) for a top pitcher. Did they get enough? Was this a good move? The guys weigh in, with Isaac and Ryan taking a pretty clear stance on the whole thing.This move also comes with a ton of baggage, and the guys talk about the domestic violence issues surrounding Chapman and the role that plays in assessing this trade.Joel's 60 Seconds with a Former Cub revisits with another closer: Joe Borowski.Ryan's Question of the Week is a poll about the Chapman trade that shows a pretty split fan base.Isaac takes on the At Bat of the Week and Anthony Rizzo locks that down...again.

BP Wrigleycast - Chicago Cubs News
Episode 22: Cubs Limp into Break, How Good is Contreras?, and Injuries

BP Wrigleycast - Chicago Cubs News

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2016 70:16


Is it time to panic as the Cubs struggle to win games, or could there be a silver lining to confronting some adversity at this point in the season? Then the guys discuss Willson Contreras and whether he's your starting catcher come playoff time. The BP Midseason Top 50 is out and three Cubs made the list...the guys talk about them and the state of the system. Every team faces injuries, but how have the Cubs fared so far this year in coping with theirs?Joel's 60 Seconds with a Former Cub features Andre Dawson.The Question of the Week is about the spike in homeruns allowed and what, if anything, can be done about it.Then Isaac takes us to the At Bat of the Week with a guy who very well might be an MVP candidate.

BP Wrigleycast - Chicago Cubs News
BP Wrigleycast Episode 14: Domination, Zobrist Coming Alive, a AAA Review

BP Wrigleycast - Chicago Cubs News

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2016 74:20


The Cubs are absolutely dominating right now, and the guys remind listeners to enjoy it while they can—it's something special that you don't see every day. Ben Zobrist has been heating up lately, and the guys take a closer look at his recent run. A week ago Isaac complained that the bullpen wasn't being used per the plan, and over the past week Maddon flipped the switch and began following the plan, so, you're welcome. Also, some AAA players you may not be familiar with.60 Seconds with a Former Cub: Joel drops another instant classic with Pete LaCock. Get your giggle machine ready...Question of the Week: Ryan takes a question on Jason Heyward. Is there reason to panic yet?At Bat of the Week: It isn't Addison Russell, but Ryan Kalish with a well-deserved mention here. The guys close with some baseball memories in honor of Mother's Day. 

BP Wrigleycast - Chicago Cubs News
BP Wrigleycast Episode 13: Hail Szczur, Almora Interview, Deviating from Plan

BP Wrigleycast - Chicago Cubs News

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2016 69:21


The Cubs keep winning despite some of the team's big offensive names coming up short. But Tommy LaStella and Matt Szczur had a nice week. We touch on Jorge Soler again and the perpetual mystery of whether or not he'll be a big leaguer. Miguel Montero gets hurt and Willson Contreras doesn't come up, which makes sense. We also talk about Adam Warren, John Lackey, and the plan to pull pitchers early. Whatever happened with that? Oh and was Dusty Baker really that bad? Judging from the analogies we all draw...yes. But we still like him.Isaac talked to Albert Almora about confidence and the role it plays in the game, which was fascinating.Then Joel goes into 60 Seconds with a Former Cub and breaks out his thesaurus to describe the zaftig Hector Villanueva. Ryan's got the Question of the Week on who the Cubs's best player has been so far.Isaac breaks down a great at bat by his idol Addison Russell in At Bat of the Week.

BP Wrigleycast - Chicago Cubs News
BP Wrigleycast Episode 12: Sarah Spain on Cubs' Start, Maddon, and More

BP Wrigleycast - Chicago Cubs News

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2016 67:51


Our special guest this week is Sarah Spain, and we discuss the importance of a good start for a team with such high expectations, as well as Joe Maddon, Jake Arrieta, Kris Bryant, and much more. Jake Arrieta threw another no-hitter and no one is that surprised...talk about high expectations.Ryan has our question of the week on Rizzo hitting homeruns, Joel can't quite match last week's 60 Seconds with a Former Cub, but he gives it a shot with Bill Madlock, and Isaac has our At Bat of the Week with a Jason Hammel at bat.

BP Wrigleycast - Chicago Cubs News
BP Wrigleycast Episode 10: Rian Watt, Schwarber's Injury, Initial Impressions

BP Wrigleycast - Chicago Cubs News

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2016 64:59


Special guest and Editor in Chief of Baseball Prospectus Wrigleyville joins the team to break down the Kyle Schwarber injury and whether or not the front office needs to adjust so early in the season. The Cubs are 5-1 so far and the offense is clicking, the bullpen is solid, and things are looking good. Also, Rian shares something that surprised him when entering a big-league clubhouse for the first time.For the 60 Seconds with a Former Cub segment, Joel stalks Steve Trout and almost gets him to open up. Ryan takes a question from a listener about other positions Kris Bryant might play, and Isaac debuts the At Bat of the Week with an Anthony Rizzo number.

BP Wrigleycast - Chicago Cubs News
BP Wrigleycast Episode 9: Opening Day is Here, Watching Live, Cubs Predictions

BP Wrigleycast - Chicago Cubs News

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2016 65:36


The guys talk about their most important questions of the season as game one wraps up WHILE THEY RECORD. Can the bullpen really keep it together this season? Will the Cubs win the NL Central? Will they have to trade away any prospects to reinforce the team? Will all the young players improve or is that asking too much. Lots of questions but we have answers!Joel brings Nomar back for 60 Seconds with a former Cub and his horrifying groin injury. Ryan's got the Question of the Week and it's about a six-man rotation. And Isaac hits up the final Stat of the Week segment to make way for At Bat of the Week.Then everyone gives their predictions for the NL Central. After that, the Cubs wrap up the win as the guys wrap up episode 9 and all is well in the world. Cubs win.

Mac OS Ken
Mac OS Ken: 06.25.2014

Mac OS Ken

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2014 18:12


RBC Capital Analyst Sees Larger Screen iPhone 6 Drawing Many Switchers   JP Morgan Ups Apple Target on New Products in General - Bigger iPhone in Particular   Needham and Co Ups Apple Target on iPhone Strength and Swift Introduction   Munster: 14-Percent of Rich Watch Wearers Would Buy a 350-Dollar iWatch   New iMac Sees Significant Price Cuts at Third-Party Resellers   Apple TV Gets Four New Sources of Content in the States   CarPlay to Put MLB.com At Bat at the Wheel   Samsung and Its Outside Law Firm Ordered to Pat Apple and Nokia 2-Million-Dollars   : Learn Apple software, plus business and creative skills, from easy-to-follow video tutorials at .  

Provena Health: Healthy Living
2010-06-23 - cancer fundraising

Provena Health: Healthy Living

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2010 4:49


Angie Lazzell, PUSMC Foundation, discusses upcoming fundraising events to benefit the Cancer Center, including At Bat for the Cure, and the McDonald's Ribbon Campaign.