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Stephen chats with Andrew Cartwright and Ben Carr who are the Co-Directors of the North East Coaching Company. They discuss the importance of children being engaged and enjoying physical activity as well as why teaching PE in primary schools can cause anxiety.
Liberal MPs andLiberal MPs and ministers speak with reporters on Parliament Hill as a two-day meeting of the party's national caucus gets underway. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and ministers David McGuinty (public safety), Anita Anand (transport and internal trade), Melanie Joly (foreign affairs), François-Philippe Champagne (innovation), and Soraya Martinez Ferrada (tourism) comment on the federal government's response to U.S. President Donald Trump's tariff threats. Chrystia Freeland (former finance minister and deputy prime minister) and Karina Gould (former government House leader) discuss their bids to replace Justin Trudeau as Liberal Party leader. Ministers Arif Virani (justice) and Jean-Yves Duclos (public services and procurement) give their thoughts on the Supreme Court of Canada's recent announcement that it will hear a legal challenge of Quebec's secularism law. Ministers Steve MacKinnon (employment), Mark Holland (health), and Steven Guilbeault (environment), and Liberal MPs Randy Boissonnault, Rob Oliphant, Fayçal El-Khoury, Ben Carr, Yvan Baker, and Joël Lightbound discuss who they think is the best candidate for the leadership of the Liberal Party. ministers speak with reporters on Parliament Hill as a two-day meeting of the party's national caucus gets underway. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and ministers David McGuinty (public safety), Anita Anand (transport and internal trade), Melanie Joly (foreign affairs), François-Philippe Champagne (innovation), and Soraya Martinez Ferrada (tourism) comment on the federal government's response to U.S. President Donald Trump's tariff threats. Chrystia Freeland (former finance minister and deputy prime minister) and Karina Gould (former government House leader) discuss their bids to replace Justin Trudeau as Liberal Party leader. Ministers Arif Virani (justice) and Jean-Yves Duclos (public services and procurement) give their thoughts on the Supreme Court of Canada's recent announcement that it will hear a legal challenge of Quebec's secularism law. Ministers Steve MacKinnon (employment), Mark Holland (health), and Steven Guilbeault (environment), and Liberal MPs Randy Boissonnault, Rob Oliphant, Fayçal El-Khoury, Ben Carr, Yvan Baker, and Joël Lightbound discuss who they think is the best candidate for the leadership of the Liberal Party.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/policy-and-rights--3339563/support.
Ministers and Liberal MPs speak with reporters ahead of a caucus meeting on Parliament Hill. This is the Liberals' first caucus meeting since Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced his intention to step down as prime minister and Liberal leader once his party has chosen a new leader. Minister Dominic LeBlanc (finance, intergovernmental affairs) discusses his decision to not run for Liberal party leader, while Mélanie Joly (foreign affairs) and Jonathan Wilkinson (natural resources) reveal that they both continue to mull over the possibility of running for leadership of the party. LeBlanc and Joly also comment on the government's approach to dealing U.S. President-elect Donald Trump's repeated threats to impose a 25 per cent import tariff on all products from Canada. Ministers Marc Miller (immigration), Jean-Yves Duclos (public services), Mark Holland (health), Steven Guilbeault (environment), Mary Ng (trade) and David McGuinty (public safety) as well as MPs Rob Oliphant, Kevin Lamoureux, Judy Sgro, Ken McDonald, Chris Bittle, Kody Blois, Patrick Weiler, Ben Carr, James Maloney and Sameer Zuberi face questions on the process for selecting the next party leader and on Trump's ongoing tariff threats.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/policy-and-rights--3339563/support.
MPs speak with reporters on Parliament Hill as they convene for the daily question period in the House of Commons. Ministers Steven Guilbeault (environment), Marci Ien (women and gender equality) and Sean Fraser (housing) as well as Liberal MPs Rob Oliphant, Ben Carr, Adam van Koeverden, Salma Zahid, Sean Casey, Chris Bittle and Yvan Baker comment on the election of Donald Trump as the 47th president of the United States and the impact it may have on Canada-U.S. relationsBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/policy-and-rights--3339563/support.
Josh Frank, creator of Silents Synced • Pordenone Festival Report 2024, with Lokke Heiss • Thomas Waksh on pioneering art director Ben Carré (93:32)
Violence against Women and Girls - Press conference by Special rapporteurSpecial Rapporteur on violence against women and girls Reem Alsalem said, “Violence against women and girls in sport is a serious, systemic and systematic human rights issue that demands immediate attention at all levels.”Addressing reporters today (8 Oct) on Violence against Women and Girls in sport, Alsalem explored the forms, causes and consequences of violence against women and girls in sports, including sexual violence, coercion, gender pay gap, gender stereotypes, patriarchal structures, abusive coaches, and the general absence of robust policies and mechanisms to address abuses and protect victims.She said, “Women and girls in sport face multiple forms of violence - and I outlined them in the report - economic forms of violence, physical, psychological, coercive control, online violence and also for children, girls, they face neglect, particularly in some sports such as gymnastics.”She also said, “The report also describes the most common perpetrators of violence and their accomplices, which include state and non-state actors. So, I speak about coaches, professional colleagues, family members, managers, spectators, policy makers. And I assert within that conversation that states can also be considered complicit when they fail to prevent, prosecute and sanction acts of violence against women and girls in sport.”She continued, “Their ability to play sports in condition of safety, dignity and fairness has been further eroded by the intrusion of males who identify as female in female only sports categories and spaces.”She concluded, “Impunity fosters the culture of silence and injustice, and that is brought about in part by the autonomous regulatory frameworks of sports organizations that we have, which non sufficiently incorporated human rights lens or framework in the work, and they tend to prioritize reputation and winning over justice and accountability to victims.”The Special Rapporteurs of the Human Rights Council are independent human rights experts with mandates to report and advise on human rights from a thematic or country-specific perspective.Liberals on Poilievre's stance on Iran, Conservative privilege motionMinisters and Liberal MPs speak with reporters on Parliament Hill as the federal party holds its weekly caucus meeting. Ministers Mélanie Joly (foreign affairs), Rob Oliphant (parliamentary secretary to foreign affairs minister) as well as MPs Fayçal El-Khoury and Ben Carr comment on Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre's support for a pre-emptive Israeli strike against Iran's nuclear facilities.Joly, Oliphant and El-Khoury also face questions on the federal government's efforts to evacuate Canadian citizens from Lebanon. Additionally, Joly urges Canadians in Florida to follow the evacuation orders of U.S. authorities as Hurricane Milton approaches the state's coast.Karina Gould (government House leader), François-Philippe Champagne (innovation), Jean-Yves Duclos (public services) and El-Khoury comment on negotiations with the Bloc Québécois to reach an agreement to ensure the survival of the minority Liberal government.Gould, Champagne, Duclos and Francis Drouin also discuss the Conservative privilege motion on obtaining government documents pertaining to Sustainable Development Technology Canada.Champagne, Duclos also comment on the Senate's study of Bill C-282, the Bloc Québécois private member's bill on supply management. The Bloc has made support of the government contingent upon the passage of this bill.Pascale St-Onge (heritage), Randy Boissonnault (employment), Marc Miller (immigration), Steven Guilbeault (environment), Sean Casey, Yvan Baker, Anthony Housefather and Carr also respond to questions on topics ranging from changes to the CBC's mandate, the government's response to Jasper wildfire recovery effort and the rise in antisemitism.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/policy-and-rights--3339563/support.
In episode four of The Aguilar Podcast, we got a chance to sit down with Bassist and Producer Ben Carr aka Carrtoons! Ben goes deep on his approach to bass playing, beat making, collaboration, and so much more!
Mental health is sometimes a taboo topic in the Church. Ben Carr, LMFT, joins Jordan and Melissa to continue the conversation on mental health in the church and the difference between an imperfect church and an unhealthy church when it comes to this topic.
Don't be scared by the title! In light of the controversies surrounding Bosstones singer Dicky, Rob makes an impassioned plea to reconsider the scene contributions of the bands legacy. First, Rob and Engineer Joey pick it up with a conversation about he carnival and IMAX movies before doing a shallow dive on the Coles Notes history of MMB from their heavy metal early days to the coining of the term Skacore to their blockbuster success. All the while, Rob plays clips, shares some historical context and champions the real stars of the band from Joe Gittleman to Johnny Vegas to Ben Carr. Let's call it: IDOMMB!Hosts: Rob and JoeyEngineer: JoeyEditor: JoeySkassociate Producer: Chris Reeves of Ska Punk InternationalMerch: www.checkeredpast.ca/merchPatreon: www.patreon.com/checkeredpast
We go On Background with Ben Carr, Member of Parliament for Winnipeg South Centre, who is coming up on his first year in the House of Commons following a by-election victory last June. Ben shares insights from his first year as an MP, what it's like being a prairie Liberal, and flips the script on Fred to discuss the state of the Conservative Party. Ben also talks about honouring the legacy of public service of his late father, the Honourable Jim Carr.
Late Monday night, March 18, 2024, Canada's lawmakers voted to keep a key part of the country's foreign policy on Israel-Palestine the same as it's been for decades. The controversial opposition-led motion, originally put forward to the House of Commons by the NDP's foreign affairs critic and a longtime Palestinian advocate, Heather McPherson, called for Canada to immediately recognize Palestine as a state. She and others donned keffiyehs and watermelon pins during the House vote. But a last-minute deal with the Liberal government saw the NDP agree to remove that seemingly critical demand. In the end, the motion simply restated Canada's longstanding view that a Palestinian state must be contingent on a two-state solution, and should come only as part of a negotiated peace between Israel and Palestinians. The motion, which is non-binding and purely symbolic, nonetheless passed 204-117, leading to celebrations from the NDP, Green Party and Bloc Québécois—while Jewish communal organizations swiftly expressed outrage over the motion's call for an immediate ceasefire, continued funding for UNRWA and a ban on weapons sales to Israel. (The motion also calls for the immediate release of Israeli hostages and blames Hamas for the murders and kidnappings of Israelis.) On today's episode of The CJN Daily, we bring you highlights from the fiery debate, including words from Jewish MPs who voted against the motion—including Anthony Housefather, Melissa Lantsman and Marty Morantz—as well as Jewish MPs who voted in favour, such as Liberal Julie Dabrusin and the NDP's Leah Gazan. (Karina Gould and Ya'ara Saks also voted in favour, while Ben Carr voted no.)
Meet the 2023 Wyoming Secondary Principal of the Year, Ben Carr. Ben is a lifelong educator who has been the HS Principal at Mountain View HS in Wyoming for 15 years. We'll talk leadership, longevity, fitness, turning 50, and of course, fly-fishing on the podcast. Join me LIVE on the #ELB podcast with Ben, Tuesday, March 12th, at 4:20 EST. Keep surviving & thriving.This podcast is sponsored by IXL Personalized Learning. IXL is used by more than 1 million teachers each day. It is also the most widely used online learning and teaching platform for K-12. Learn more here: ixl.com/elb
2:10 Men's & Women's Basketball coming to Enmarket Arena December 193:27 Volleyball's Reagan Barth named 1st team all-Sun Belt, Eagles drop Arkansas St/fall to South Alabama, await postseason opportunity6:03 Terren Ward named Sun Belt Women's Basketball Player of the Week, Eagles host GATA Turkey Throwdown this weekend6:47 Men's Basketball drops contests to Kennesaw St/ECU @ TowneBank Holiday Classic, continue v Northeastern Tuesday7:31 Men's Golf alum Ben Carr does Eagle Nation proud in his professional debut9:00 Football loses 20-17 to ODU on Senior Night w/post-game comments from Brian Miller (10:59), Marques Watson-Trent (12:12) & head coach Clay Helton (13:21)16:09 Terry Harvin offers his perspective on Georgia Southern v App St 'Deeper Than Hate'38:14 App St preview w/Mountaineer head coach Shawn ClarkSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
In this episode, we are joined by Tony Ruggiero. Tony (@dewsweepergolf) is a golf instructor (Golf Digest Top 50) and host of the “Tour Coach” podcast. Current and past students include Andy Ogletree, Ben Carr, Lucas Glover, and Smylie Kaufman among other players from the PGA Tour and below. Tony attributes his students' successes to the development of a team approach with mental coaches, fitness and performance trainers, biomechanic experts, and other coaches.---Follow us: Twitter - @TournamentCode Instagram - @thetournamentcode YouTube - The Tournament Code Hosted by: Cooper Collins (@coopercollins99) and Daniel Hamrin (@DanielHamrin)---(02:37) - becoming a golf coach(04:26) - influential golf professionals(08:30) - coaching and developing young golfers(10:18) - getting fired in the business(15:12) - evolution of swing coaching(19:26) - ball position and balance(21:06) - monitoring details for improvement(25:59) - coaching at the highest level(29:29) - watching players grow and develop(32:32) - special relationships with golfers(34:55) - playing in golf tournaments(38:58) - using Bushnell to improve(42:14) - managing expectations(44:55) - mental health in young athletes(49:45) - balancing personal and professional life(52:38) - success and finding your place
Ben Carr, the owner of Innovative Fitness North Vancouver, didn't begin his career with aspirations of becoming a fitness industry leader. In an unexpected turn of events, he found himself engrossed in conversation at the Innovative Fitness booth during a career fair but the idea of being perceived as a mere "glorified pool boy in the gym" left him apprehensive.However, as conversation unfolded, Ben's perspective shifted as he realized that his impact could extend far beyond demonstrating how to lift weights. His capacity to assist individuals in reaching their goals outside the gym became evident, particularly in the Sea to Sky corridor, where such support is highly valued.Advancing a few years, a remarkable evolution occurred. Ben, alongside the Innovative Fitness team, plays an instrumental role in nurturing a vibrant and cohesive community. This community not only empowers individuals to achieve their goals but also provides a nurturing environment for mentorship and growth.If you would like to get in contact with Ben hit him up at ben@innovativefitness.com, and to find out about Bikes 'n' Beers head to www.bikesnbeers.ca/Thank you for listening Get in touch with us via Steed Cycles or via our Instagram Hosted by Jarrad Connolly Produced by Sam James Listen to other episodes here.
2:07 Former GS Football long snapper Ryan Langan named All-USFL w/the Birmingham Stallions3:03 Men's & Women's Basketball to face Eastern Michigan in the 1st part of the MAC-SBC Challenge on November 114:28 Men's Golf sees standout performances on three separate pro tours, including Ben Carr's debut on PGA Tour Canada @ the Elk Ridge Saskatchewan Open (comments @ 5:26 & 6:52) & Wilson Andress finishing tied for 4th in the same event (comments @ 7:43)9:22 National college football Chris Vannini of The Athletic previews the 2023 college football season for the Eagles/Sun Belt & how NIL, the transfer portal & recruiting have changed the game for the Group of FiveSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Torontonians will elect a new mayor, the city's 66th, on Monday, June 26, in a byelection made necessary by the surprise resignation of John Tory in February. With 102 names on the ballot—including a pet dog—the choice for voters can be confusing, but The CJN Daily‘s political panel is here to break down the issues and evaluate the frontrunners. In the days leading up to the vote, it's Olivia Chow's election to lose. The former NDP MP and city councillor has previously run unsuccessfully for mayor before, but she holds a significant lead over the man polling second in most polls, Mark Saunders, a former Toronto police chief who has run unsuccessfully for the Ontario Conservatives. Trailing those two in third-place: Anthony Furey, a former newspaper columnist; Anna Bailaõ, a former city councillor and ally of ex-mayor Tory; and Josh Matlow, a sitting councillor and member of the Jewish community. On today's episode, we're joined by Stephen Adler, senior director of public affairs at National Public Relations; Sophia Hershfield, The CJN's “Critical Kvetching” columnist; and Josh Lieblein, The CJN's “Doorstep Postings” columnist. Read more Read Lieblein's “Doorstep Postings” columns on some of the candidates running for mayor in Toronto in The CJN, including Josh Matlow, Mark Saunders, Anna Bailaõ, Brad Bradford, Anthony Furey and Rob Davis Read more about Ben Carr, who won Monday's federal byelection in his late dad Jim Carr's riding of Winnipeg South Centre, in The CJN How to vote in the Toronto mayor byelection June 26, 2023 Credits The CJN Daily is written and hosted by Ellin Bessner (@ebessner on Twitter). Zachary Kauffman is the producer. Michael Fraiman is the executive producer. Our theme music is by Dov Beck-Levine. Our title sponsor is Metropia. We're a member of The CJN Podcast Network. To subscribe to this podcast, please watch this video. Donate to The CJN and receive a charitable tax receipt by clicking here. This podcast is powered by Pinecast.Read transcript
2:40 Ben Carr makes the cut @ the 123rd U.S. Open3:48 GS President Dr. Kyle Marrero to serve as Sun Belt Vice President 5:00 Men's Basketball associate head coach Chris Shumate talks about his time in Orlando @ the TopConnect Symposium9:49 Eight Eagles named to Phil Steele's Preseason All-Sun Belt Teams10:49 Football assistant head coach Kevin Whitley discusses his Bill Walsh Diversity Coaching Fellowship w/the Atlanta Falcons16:03 The Georgia Southern Sports Network's own Russ Brown says goodbye to #EagleNation, as he starts his new job as the Director of Operations & Production for the Nebraska Cornhuskers Radio NetworkSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Mark Baldwin and Ryan French discuss the U.S. Open and are joined by Nick Hardy, who enters the weekend in the top 20. Willy Wilcox is caddying for amateur star, Ben Carr, and drops in to share his experience. The duo made the cut on the number and will play the weekend.
Alex, Steve and CP are joined by U.S. Amateur runner-up Ben Carr and his caddie Willy Wilcox ahead of this week's U.S. Open, in which Carr is making his debut. Fresh off a Monday practice round, Carr and Wilcox give us an inside-the-ropes look at LACC, which is expected to shine this week. The boys also discuss their best bets and break down the insane moment when Adam Hadwin got tackled by a security guard at the RBC Canadian Open.
Four federal by-elections scheduled for June 19. One in Ontario, one in Quebec and two in Manitoba. The by-election the country will be watching most closely is Portage-Lisgar in MB where former CPC interim leader Candice Bergen retired. Conservative Party candidate now Candice Bergen's former campaign manager Brandon Leslie. Running against the CPC is People's Party of Canada leader Maxime Bernier. Does Bernier have a hope of winning the riding? Meanwhile in Winnipeg South, where Liberal MP Jim Carr died last December, some 48 candidates are running with Jim Carr's son Ben Carr carrying the Liberal banner. Guest: Richard Cloutier. Corus radio 680 CJOB, Winnipeg and Global News Winnipeg. Richard joins us from Portage-Lisgar riding. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Today's podcast: Bank of Canada raises the key interest rate to his highest level in 22 years (4.75%) What are the implications and possibilities? Guest: Professor Eric Kam. Macroeconomics, Toronto Metropolitan University. Child killers are released from prison in Canada. Harold Smeltzer abducted, sexually assaulted, murdered and disposed of five year old Kimberley Thompson of Calgary in a garbage bag. Smeltzer had assaulted more than 40 women and girls. Today, still assessed a moderate to high risk to reoffend, Smeltzer is living in a halfway house and has been granted overnights away from the halfway house by the National Parole Board. Guest: Tina. Kimberley Thompson's sister. Shares with us the impact of her sister's murder and her killer's approved absences from prison. The current Stanley Cup final may end in a few nights time in Las Vegas. The last time a Canadian NHL team hoisted the Stanley Cup was 1993, when the Montreal Canadiens accomplished the feat. What will it take for another Canadian team to win the Cup? During this playoff run Canadians pinned their hopes on the Maple Leafs and Oilers. Guest: Kelly Hrudey. Fmr NHL goaltender, including with the Los Angeles Kings in the '92-'93 Stanley Cup finals against the Montreal Canadiens. Now longtime Hockey Night in Canada commentator/analyst. Also dealt with mental health issues as a player and later as a broadcaster. Four federal by-elections scheduled for June 19. One in Ontario, one in Quebec and two in Manitoba. The by-election the country will be watching most closely is Portage-Lisgar in MB where former CPC interim leader Candice Bergen retired. Conservative Party candidate now Candice Bergen's former campaign manager Brandon Leslie. Running against the CPC is People's Party of Canada leader Maxime Bernier. Does Bernier have a hope of winning the riding? Meanwhile in Winnipeg South, where Liberal MP Jim Carr died last December, some 48 candidates are running with Jim Carr's son Ben Carr carrying the Liberal banner. Guest: Richard Cloutier. Corus radio 680 CJOB, Winnipeg and Global News Winnipeg. Richard joins us from Portage-Lisgar --------------------------------------------- Host/Content Producer – Roy Green Technical/Podcast Producer – Tom Craig & Tom McKay Podcast Co-Producer – Matt Taylor If you enjoyed the podcast, tell a friend! For more of the Roy Green Show, subscribe to the podcast! https://globalnews.ca/roygreen/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Tony sits down with Ben Carr, Erica Shepherd Williams, and Jackson Koert to talk about what they've learned at college, and how they are prepared for the next level and stage of their journey.
2:41 Softball takes 2nd straight Sun Belt series, wins 2/3 @ Georgia St - hosts Mercer for Wednesday DH, South Alabama this weekend3:19 Ben Carr named SwingU Division 1 National Men's Golfer of the Month3:49 Men's Basketball adds two new assistant coaches4:43 Women's Tennis defeats JMU, falls to ODU - finishes regular season Saturday v Georgia St5:20 Men's Tennis handles Southern Miss, drops Senior Day match to Louisiana - #5 seed v #4 seed Troy in Sun Belt Championship Quarterfinals on Thursday5:58 Baseball rallies back to beat Jacksonville w/head coach Rodney Hennon post-game (6:28), opens YellaWood Deck/Pojo's Patio v App St & wins series w/DH sweep Saturday w/Rodney Hennon post-game (10:07)13:53 Part 1 of conversation w/former baseball HC Ron Polk on his tenure ('72-75) including memories from the 1973 College World Series team35:01 Football Spring Game preview w/new defensive coordinator Brandon Bailey See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Late episode this week, but it's worth the wait...we think. Travis Jaudon hosts and Mike Anthony joins on HGP episode 155. ~TOPICS/MINUTES ~ Grading the 2023 Masters. Hot takes on Jon Rahm/Brooks Koepka/Tiger Woods/Jim Nantz/LIV Tour impact/Low Am Sam Bennett and yeah..Some thoughts from Travis on his mortal enemy (and really bad person) Phil Mickelson (:50). …. Ben Carr (5-over par) had a steady performance in first ever Masters. The Georgia Southern star finished second lowest amateur (14:30). ….. Travis and Mike's ridiculous NBA random guys T4 Draft begins at 21:00. RATE/FOLLOW Hot Grits anywhere you find podcasts. * Programming note — BONUS Hot Grits episode coming drops Sunday morning. It's an interview by Travis with a first time HGP guest who is really famous and really fascinating. * --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/hotgrits/support
1:35 Ben Carr recaps his week representing Georgia Southern Men's Golf @ the 2023 Masters8:43 Registration for True Blue BBQ competition presented by Dolan's BBQ now open for April 22 @ the GS Football Spring Game9:18 Women's Golf's Abby Newton wins 1st career event @ Mimosa Hills Intercollegiate 9:52 Softball sweeps App St, preps for UGA/Georgia St10:51 Track & Field shows out @ Torrin Lawrence Invitational in Athens11:14 Women's Tennis sweeps ULM/Arkansas St improving to 15-4 (6-2) play last 3 matches @ Wallis Tennis Center 11:57 Men's Tennis hosts Southern Miss/Louisiana12:17 Baseball loses Tuesday @ Ga Tech, takes 7-5 win over #17 Coastal Carolina in game one of Friday DH with post-game from head coach Rodney Hennon (13:56) - @ Jacksonville Tuesday, hosts App St this weekend17:25 Memories of the 1973 College World Series baseball team with ace pitcher Ernie VenetSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Before the week started, I caught up with Ben Carr and Sam Bennett to talk about the start of their special Masters experience! The Story Within - The 2022 U.S. Amateur Documentary - Available Now on Youtube! The Back of the Range Collection at Imperial SportsCOUPON CODE: BOTR15 for 15% your entire purchase!Subscribe to The Back of the Range Subscribe in Apple Podcasts and SPOTIFY!Also Subscribe in YouTube, Google Play , Overcast, Stitcher Follow on Social Media! Email us: ben@thebackoftherange.comWebsite: www.thebackoftherange.com Voice Work by Mitch Phillips
It's Masters Week and we are kicking things off with a very special episode with the 1987 Masters Champion, Larry Mize! The Story Within - The 2022 U.S. Amateur Documentary - Available Now on Youtube! The Back of the Range Collection at Imperial SportsCOUPON CODE: BOTR15 for 15% your entire purchase!Subscribe to The Back of the Range Subscribe in Apple Podcasts and SPOTIFY!Also Subscribe in YouTube, Google Play , Overcast, Stitcher Follow on Social Media! Email us: ben@thebackoftherange.comWebsite: www.thebackoftherange.com Voice Work by Mitch Phillips
Tony and Jackson Koert talk practice round prep with Ben Carr at the 2023 Masters, and discuss being a first-time Patron with Golf fans Tom Lee and Wade Hamilton.
2:55 Whitney Haworth's 1-on-1 w/Ben Carr as he prepares for the 2023 Masters this weekend9:14 Sitdown w/new Men's Basketball head coach Charlie Henry11:54 Kamari Brown talks about winning the 2023 King's Hawaiian Slam Dunk Championship @ the Final Four in Houston19:36 Baseball hammers Georgia & Old Dominion w/post-game from head coach Rodney Hennon (20:22 & 23:20), Eagles head to Georgia Tech Tuesday night, @ Coastal Carolina Thursday-Saturday28:04 GS Athletics Hall of Fame shortstop Jim Morrison talks about his memories of the 1973 College World Series TeamSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
The Augusta National Women's Amateur is underway and competition is heating up despite the chilly weather conditions there in Augusta. Beth Ann Nichols joins to delve deeper into the first round of the women's amateur event. After an emotional win at the Club Car Championship, three-time Korn Ferry Tour winner, David Skinns joins to further discuss what made this win so special. With one eye on this week's competition and another eye on next week's competition at the Masters, we hear from Corey Conners and Ryan Fox. Georgia Southern's very own, Ben Carr joins George Savaricas and Eamon Lynch to discuss his hopes for the 2023 Masters. Major champion, Lucas Glover will make his 500th start this week in Texas. Glover joins to unpack what this large milestone means to him. David Skinns (15:04) Ben Carr (21:43) Lucas Glover (47:33)
Julian Waits of Devo and Ben Carr of Qualys join Mitch Ashley, Mat Newfield and Alan Shimel to discuss the CISO responsibility to disclose breach data.
Julian Waits of Devo, Ben Carr of Qualys and Wendi Whitmore of IBM, join Mitchell Ashley, Mat Newfield and Alan Shimel to discuss ransomware in healthcare.
Ben Carr joins Tony Ruggiero to talk about his past year; the mistakes and lessons that led to finishing as runner-up at the U.S. Amateur Championship. They share what they did to get him back on track, such as blocking out external pressures, getting back to fundamentals, understanding his swing, and what are the next steps in leveling up his game.
Ben Carr and Tony talk about his past year; the mistakes and lessons that led to finishing as runner-up at the U.S. Amateur Championship. They share what they did to get him back on track, such as blocking out external pressures, getting back to fundamentals, understanding his swing, and what are the next steps in leveling up his game.
The Bible tells us not to be anxious about anything. So is having anxiety a sin? And how do you tell the difference between being anxious versus having anxiety, or being depressed versus having depression? Ka'eo and Brynn ask your questions about mental health with licensed counselor Ben Carr, LMFT.
My guest on this episode is Ben Carr, the 2022 U.S. Amateur Runner-Up. As many of you know, Ben made an incredible run at the U.S. Amateur this summer, before falling short in the final against Sam Bennett. But I said the same thing to Ben that I said to Ollie Osborne and Austin Greaser, when they lost in their U.S. Amateur finals. If ever this is a time to be OK with getting second place, this is the time. Ben will play in next year's Masters Tournament and U.S. Open...but not before he completes one final season with his teammates at Georgia Southern. The Back of the Range Collection at Imperial Sports COUPON CODE - BOTR15Subscribe to The Back of the Range Subscribe in Apple Podcasts and SPOTIFY!Also Subscribe in YouTube, Google Play , Overcast, Stitcher Follow on Social Media! Email us: ben@thebackoftherange.comWebsite: www.thebackoftherange.com Voice Work by Mitch Phillips
In this week's Under the Strap podcast, The Caddie Network host/analyst John Rathouz riffs with Will Wilcox, professional golfer turned caddie for last month's U.S. Amateur finalist Ben Carr. Wilcox has turned his life around in a big way in the last half-year, quite publicly, and he details the positive effects he's realized. They break down in detail his U.S. Am experience that resulted in a 2023 Masters invite and bounce around stories from Willy's playing days and his current gig podcasting.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Every now and then, we like to bring on a guest who's either a pro golfer or one that is a helluva lot better than us two. Today's guest accomplishes just that. We welcome Ben Carr on today's episode of Chasin' Birdies. The Georgia Southern 5th-year senior battled hard in the U.S. Amateur Championship, where he ended up losing 1-down to Sam Bennett. We open up the episode and talk to Ben a little about his background, how he got into golf, and what propelled him to be where he is today. It's no wonder he has a strong grip considering he thought baseball would be his ‘sport.' After a couple minutes of talk and a shout-out to Mason Williams, we can't help but dive into the 2022 U.S. Amateur talk. Ben wasn't sure he was going to even qualify for the event, but after a few good rounds, he found himself advancing past the first set of matches with a 7 and 5 victory. Ben found himself 5 down after 22 holes but managed to rally with back-to-back birdies before taking this match all the way to the 36th hole. The emotional roller coaster was real, and hear it firsthand in this interview with the 2022 U.S. Am runner-up. We transition over to our tap-in segment, where Ben is asked 4 questions that demand his quick-witted response. We promise you, a few of these questions have never been asked before. Tune in, share, and let us know how you like this drop. Good luck to the 2022 GASO Men's Golf Team…keep chasin'.Key Links:Visit hbgolf.com for great golf apparel now repped by Chasin' Birdies. -----Follow Chasin' Birdies on Instagram @chasin_birdies.Chasin' Birdies is hosted by Ryan Bashour and Jonathan Pepe and is proudly recorded in West Virginia. Produced by Simpler Media.
Patrick Cantlay gets it done again at the BMW... Sam Bennet and Ben Carr squared off in one of the best final matches in US am history... Dusty has a new job... And it is official that the Sticks Crew hates the Tour Championship Format... Hope you all enjoy and we will see you next week!
DJ and Ryan talk about Ben Carr getting after their asses and nearly taking down top-three amateur Sam Bennett in the US Amateur final. The guys also discuss Patty Ice successfully defending his BMW Championship title before previewing the season-ending TOUR Championship.
Travis Fulton takes a deep dive into the two US Amateur finalists golf swings Ben Carr and Sam Bennett!
MLB – Major League Baseball Yesterday Detroit Tigers 4, Los Angeles Angels 0 Chicago White Sox at Cleveland Guardians, PPD Milwaukee Brewers 5, Chicago Cubs 2 Tigers 4, Angels 0 – Rodriguez returns, helps Tigers to 4-0 win over Angels Eduardo Rodriguez pitched five shutout innings in his return to the Tigers, helping Detroit to a 4-0 win over the Los Angeles Angels. The Tigers’ Riley Greene had a 448-foot homer on the first pitch he saw from Angels starter Shohei Ohtani. It was the longest home run Ohtani has allowed in the majors. Ohtani left the game with a stomach virus after four innings. Rodriguez hadn’t pitched in the majors since suffering a rib-cage injury on May 18. White Sox at Guardians, PPD – White Sox-Guardians rained out, makeup game on Sept. 15 The AL Central-leading Cleveland Guardians and Chicago White Sox had their game postponed due to unplayable field conditions caused by early morning rain. No precipitation fell for more than three hours before the game was called following a delay of 2 hours, 56 minutes. Play never began as the groundskeepers kept the tarp on the infield from Saturday night. The game has been rescheduled for Sept. 15, a mutual off-day, at Progressive Field. It was the Guardians’ 12th postponement this season, 10 of them at home. Cleveland has played an MLB-high 10 doubleheaders. Four of Chicago’s five postponements in 2022 have been against Cleveland. Brewers 5, Cubs 2 – Keston Hiura homers twice as Brewers beat Cubs 5-2 Keston Hiura homered twice and drove in three runs, and the Milwaukee Brewers beat the Chicago Cubs 5-2 to salvage the finale of their weekend series. Rowdy Tellez also connected and Willy Adames hit a tiebreaking sacrifice fly for Milwaukee, which had dropped three of four. The Brewers blew three one-run leads during a 6-5 loss to the Cubs in 11 innings on Saturday. Chicago wasted a stellar performance by Justin Steele, who struck out nine in six scoreless innings. Ian Happ and Seiya Suzuki homered, but the Cubs finished with just five hits. Chicago had won five in a row and nine of 12 overall. Today Chicago White Sox (Kopech 4-9) at Kansas City (Lynch 4-8), 2:10 p.m. St. Louis (Montgomery 6-3) at Chicago Cubs (Smyly 5-6), 8:05 p.m. Tigers are off MLB – Plate discipline: MLB umps crack down on blocking home A few close plays at the plate over the past couple weeks have infuriated MLB catchers. Cleveland’s Austin Hedges and San Diego’s Austin Nola tagged out runners at the plate, only to have the calls reversed after video review when umpires decided both catchers blocked the plate. It’s a difficult play for catchers, who aren’t allowed to block the plate without possession of the ball. It’s also a difficult play for umpires, who have to make a judgment call that’s got plenty of grey area. NFL – National Football League – Preseason Week 2 Thursday Chicago Bears 27, Seattle Seahawks 11 Saturday Detroit Lions 27, Indianapolis Colts 26 Lions 27, Colts 26 – Igwebuike’s late TD, 2-point stop lead Lions past Indy 27-26 Godwin Igwebuike’s tiebreaking 2-yard run with 4:03 left led the Detroit Lions to a 27-26 victory at Indianapolis. The Colts could have won it with a 2-point conversion but Jack Coan’s pass fell incomplete with 38 seconds left. Detroit quarterbacks David Blough and Tim Boyle split the snaps as Jared Goff took the day off following two joint practices against the Colts earlier this week. Blough and Boyle each threw a TD pass. Coan, an undrafted rookie, closed it out with the 26-yard scoring pass to Samson Nacua but couldn’t convert on Indy’s final play. Tonight Atlanta Falcons at New York Jets, 8:00 p.m. Golf – PGA – Patrick Cantlay wins another thriller at BMW Championship Patrick Cantlay is a winner again at the BMW Championship in another thriller. The only difference this year is he won’t be going to the Tour Championship as the No. 1 seed with a two-shot head start. No matter. Cantlay took advantage of a great break on the 17th hole when his tee shot bounced over a bunker and into the fairway. That set up a short birdie and a one-shot lead. He made par on the last for a one-shot win over Scott Stallings. Masters champion Scottie Scheffler tied for third and moves back to the No. 1 seed. Golf – Tom Weiskopf, major champion and golf course architect, dies Major champion and golf course architect Tom Weiskopf has died of pancreatic cancer. His wife says Weiskopf died Saturday at their home in Big Sky, Montana. Weiskopf’s contributions to golf go far beyond his 16 PGA Tour wins and his British Open title at Troon in 1973. He was blunt and accurate when he worked as a TV analyst. And he was equally successful as a golf course architect. Weiskopf was diagnosed with cancer in December 2020. Laurie Weiskopf says he was still working on design projects in the week leading to his death. Tom Weiskopf was 79. Golf – US Am – Bennett holds on and beats Carr to capture US Amateur Texas A&M senior Sam Bennett won the U.S. Amateur on Sunday, building a 5-up lead over Ben Carr and holding on for a 1-up victory at Ridgewood Country Club. Bennett is No. 3 in the world amateur ranking and had to get past three straight players ranked in the top 10 to reach the championship match. Bennett was 3 up after the first 18 holes and won two more holes early in the afternoon to seize control. Needing to win the 18th to extend the match, Carr missed the fairway to the right and came up short. He chipped to 8 feet. Bennett was on the green and had two putts from 12 feet to win. He lagged it within inches. NASCAR – Larson wins rain-delayed NASCAR Cup race at Watkins Glen Kyle Larson beat Hendrick Motorsports teammate Chase Elliott on a restart with five laps to go and won the weather-delayed NASCAR Cup race at Watkins Glen International on Sunday. Elliott had control of the race late, but a caution gave Larson a chance and he took advantage, moving Elliott to the left coming out of the first turn and pulling away for a weekend Xfinity-Cup sweep. AJ Allmendinger was second, Joey Logano third. Elliott fourth and Daniel Suárez fifth. LLWS – Dad of injured Utah Little Leaguer hopeful of full recovery The father of a Little League World Series player from Utah who seriously injured his head when he fell out of his top bunk in the dorms says there is a chance his son can make a full recovery. Jace Oliverson told The Associated Press on Sunday night that his 12-year-old-son, Easton, was expected to fly back Tuesday to Utah and will remain in a hospital closer to home. Easton Oliverson, a pitcher and outfielder for the Snow Canyon team out of Santa Clara, Utah, suffered the injury Monday. Jace Oliverson says he’s grateful that his son is still alive. Oliverson says doctors told him at one point there was no chance his son would survive. FIFA – Qatar detains workers protesting late pay before World Cup An advocacy group says Qatar arrested at least 60 foreign workers who protested going months without their pay and deported some of them. The incident comes just three months before Doha hosts the 2022 FIFA World Cup. The move comes as Qatar faces intense international scrutiny over its labor practices ahead of the tournament. Qatar, like other Gulf Arab nations, heavily relies on foreign labor. Qatar’s government acknowledged that “a number of protesters were detained for breaching public safety laws.” However, it declined to offer any information about the arrests or any deportations. It said it was investigating the firm involved and planned to settle workers’ salaries. MILB – Midwest League Baseball Last Night Lake County Captains 7, West Michigan Whitecaps 4 – Completion of Saturday’s game Lake County Captains 6, West Michigan Whitecaps 3 South Bend Cubs 4, Beloit Sky Carp 3 Lansing Lugnuts 11, Great Lakes Loons 7 Tonight No games tonight MHSAA – High School Sports Today Boys Soccer Edwardsburg at Bangor, 6:00 p.m. Watervliet at Schoolcraft, 5:00 p.m. Allegan at Coloma, 6:00 p.m. Saugatuck at Bridgman, 5:00 p.m. Niles at Hartford, 5:00 p.m. Berrien Springs at Howardsville Christian, 5:00 p.m. South Haven at Constantine, 5:30 p.m. Three Rivers at Cassopolis, 5:00 p.m. Lawton at Delton-Kellogg, 6:00 p.m. Plainwell at Dowagiac, 6:00 p.m. Kalamazoo Hackett at Kalamazoo Christian, 5:00 p.m. Otsego at Gull Lake, 6:30 p.m. Battle Creek Pennfield at Vicksburg, 6:30 p.m. Battle Creek Central at Harper Creek, 6:00 p.m. Volleyball Gobles at Allegan, 6:00 p.m. Buchanan at Cassopolis, 7:00 p.m. Vicksburg Invitational, 4:00 p.m. St. Joseph, Lakeshore, Dowagiac, Martin, Lawton, Niles, Brandywine, Vicksburg Boys Tennis North Muskegon at Allegan, 4:00 p.m. Girls Golf SMAC West at Mattawan, 2:30 p.m. (Lake Cora Hills GC, Paw Paw) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
MLB – Major League Baseball Yesterday Detroit Tigers 4, Los Angeles Angels 0 Chicago White Sox at Cleveland Guardians, PPD Milwaukee Brewers 5, Chicago Cubs 2 Tigers 4, Angels 0 – Rodriguez returns, helps Tigers to 4-0 win over Angels Eduardo Rodriguez pitched five shutout innings in his return to the Tigers, helping Detroit to a 4-0 win over the Los Angeles Angels. The Tigers’ Riley Greene had a 448-foot homer on the first pitch he saw from Angels starter Shohei Ohtani. It was the longest home run Ohtani has allowed in the majors. Ohtani left the game with a stomach virus after four innings. Rodriguez hadn’t pitched in the majors since suffering a rib-cage injury on May 18. White Sox at Guardians, PPD – White Sox-Guardians rained out, makeup game on Sept. 15 The AL Central-leading Cleveland Guardians and Chicago White Sox had their game postponed due to unplayable field conditions caused by early morning rain. No precipitation fell for more than three hours before the game was called following a delay of 2 hours, 56 minutes. Play never began as the groundskeepers kept the tarp on the infield from Saturday night. The game has been rescheduled for Sept. 15, a mutual off-day, at Progressive Field. It was the Guardians’ 12th postponement this season, 10 of them at home. Cleveland has played an MLB-high 10 doubleheaders. Four of Chicago’s five postponements in 2022 have been against Cleveland. Brewers 5, Cubs 2 – Keston Hiura homers twice as Brewers beat Cubs 5-2 Keston Hiura homered twice and drove in three runs, and the Milwaukee Brewers beat the Chicago Cubs 5-2 to salvage the finale of their weekend series. Rowdy Tellez also connected and Willy Adames hit a tiebreaking sacrifice fly for Milwaukee, which had dropped three of four. The Brewers blew three one-run leads during a 6-5 loss to the Cubs in 11 innings on Saturday. Chicago wasted a stellar performance by Justin Steele, who struck out nine in six scoreless innings. Ian Happ and Seiya Suzuki homered, but the Cubs finished with just five hits. Chicago had won five in a row and nine of 12 overall. Today Chicago White Sox (Kopech 4-9) at Kansas City (Lynch 4-8), 2:10 p.m. St. Louis (Montgomery 6-3) at Chicago Cubs (Smyly 5-6), 8:05 p.m. Tigers are off MLB – Plate discipline: MLB umps crack down on blocking home A few close plays at the plate over the past couple weeks have infuriated MLB catchers. Cleveland’s Austin Hedges and San Diego’s Austin Nola tagged out runners at the plate, only to have the calls reversed after video review when umpires decided both catchers blocked the plate. It’s a difficult play for catchers, who aren’t allowed to block the plate without possession of the ball. It’s also a difficult play for umpires, who have to make a judgment call that’s got plenty of grey area. NFL – National Football League – Preseason Week 2 Thursday Chicago Bears 27, Seattle Seahawks 11 Saturday Detroit Lions 27, Indianapolis Colts 26 Lions 27, Colts 26 – Igwebuike’s late TD, 2-point stop lead Lions past Indy 27-26 Godwin Igwebuike’s tiebreaking 2-yard run with 4:03 left led the Detroit Lions to a 27-26 victory at Indianapolis. The Colts could have won it with a 2-point conversion but Jack Coan’s pass fell incomplete with 38 seconds left. Detroit quarterbacks David Blough and Tim Boyle split the snaps as Jared Goff took the day off following two joint practices against the Colts earlier this week. Blough and Boyle each threw a TD pass. Coan, an undrafted rookie, closed it out with the 26-yard scoring pass to Samson Nacua but couldn’t convert on Indy’s final play. Tonight Atlanta Falcons at New York Jets, 8:00 p.m. Golf – PGA – Patrick Cantlay wins another thriller at BMW Championship Patrick Cantlay is a winner again at the BMW Championship in another thriller. The only difference this year is he won’t be going to the Tour Championship as the No. 1 seed with a two-shot head start. No matter. Cantlay took advantage of a great break on the 17th hole when his tee shot bounced over a bunker and into the fairway. That set up a short birdie and a one-shot lead. He made par on the last for a one-shot win over Scott Stallings. Masters champion Scottie Scheffler tied for third and moves back to the No. 1 seed. Golf – Tom Weiskopf, major champion and golf course architect, dies Major champion and golf course architect Tom Weiskopf has died of pancreatic cancer. His wife says Weiskopf died Saturday at their home in Big Sky, Montana. Weiskopf’s contributions to golf go far beyond his 16 PGA Tour wins and his British Open title at Troon in 1973. He was blunt and accurate when he worked as a TV analyst. And he was equally successful as a golf course architect. Weiskopf was diagnosed with cancer in December 2020. Laurie Weiskopf says he was still working on design projects in the week leading to his death. Tom Weiskopf was 79. Golf – US Am – Bennett holds on and beats Carr to capture US Amateur Texas A&M senior Sam Bennett won the U.S. Amateur on Sunday, building a 5-up lead over Ben Carr and holding on for a 1-up victory at Ridgewood Country Club. Bennett is No. 3 in the world amateur ranking and had to get past three straight players ranked in the top 10 to reach the championship match. Bennett was 3 up after the first 18 holes and won two more holes early in the afternoon to seize control. Needing to win the 18th to extend the match, Carr missed the fairway to the right and came up short. He chipped to 8 feet. Bennett was on the green and had two putts from 12 feet to win. He lagged it within inches. NASCAR – Larson wins rain-delayed NASCAR Cup race at Watkins Glen Kyle Larson beat Hendrick Motorsports teammate Chase Elliott on a restart with five laps to go and won the weather-delayed NASCAR Cup race at Watkins Glen International on Sunday. Elliott had control of the race late, but a caution gave Larson a chance and he took advantage, moving Elliott to the left coming out of the first turn and pulling away for a weekend Xfinity-Cup sweep. AJ Allmendinger was second, Joey Logano third. Elliott fourth and Daniel Suárez fifth. LLWS – Dad of injured Utah Little Leaguer hopeful of full recovery The father of a Little League World Series player from Utah who seriously injured his head when he fell out of his top bunk in the dorms says there is a chance his son can make a full recovery. Jace Oliverson told The Associated Press on Sunday night that his 12-year-old-son, Easton, was expected to fly back Tuesday to Utah and will remain in a hospital closer to home. Easton Oliverson, a pitcher and outfielder for the Snow Canyon team out of Santa Clara, Utah, suffered the injury Monday. Jace Oliverson says he’s grateful that his son is still alive. Oliverson says doctors told him at one point there was no chance his son would survive. FIFA – Qatar detains workers protesting late pay before World Cup An advocacy group says Qatar arrested at least 60 foreign workers who protested going months without their pay and deported some of them. The incident comes just three months before Doha hosts the 2022 FIFA World Cup. The move comes as Qatar faces intense international scrutiny over its labor practices ahead of the tournament. Qatar, like other Gulf Arab nations, heavily relies on foreign labor. Qatar’s government acknowledged that “a number of protesters were detained for breaching public safety laws.” However, it declined to offer any information about the arrests or any deportations. It said it was investigating the firm involved and planned to settle workers’ salaries. MILB – Midwest League Baseball Last Night Lake County Captains 7, West Michigan Whitecaps 4 – Completion of Saturday’s game Lake County Captains 6, West Michigan Whitecaps 3 South Bend Cubs 4, Beloit Sky Carp 3 Lansing Lugnuts 11, Great Lakes Loons 7 Tonight No games tonight MHSAA – High School Sports Today Boys Soccer Edwardsburg at Bangor, 6:00 p.m. Watervliet at Schoolcraft, 5:00 p.m. Allegan at Coloma, 6:00 p.m. Saugatuck at Bridgman, 5:00 p.m. Niles at Hartford, 5:00 p.m. Berrien Springs at Howardsville Christian, 5:00 p.m. South Haven at Constantine, 5:30 p.m. Three Rivers at Cassopolis, 5:00 p.m. Lawton at Delton-Kellogg, 6:00 p.m. Plainwell at Dowagiac, 6:00 p.m. Kalamazoo Hackett at Kalamazoo Christian, 5:00 p.m. Otsego at Gull Lake, 6:30 p.m. Battle Creek Pennfield at Vicksburg, 6:30 p.m. Battle Creek Central at Harper Creek, 6:00 p.m. Volleyball Gobles at Allegan, 6:00 p.m. Buchanan at Cassopolis, 7:00 p.m. Vicksburg Invitational, 4:00 p.m. St. Joseph, Lakeshore, Dowagiac, Martin, Lawton, Niles, Brandywine, Vicksburg Boys Tennis North Muskegon at Allegan, 4:00 p.m. Girls Golf SMAC West at Mattawan, 2:30 p.m. (Lake Cora Hills GC, Paw Paw) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
MLB – Major League Baseball Yesterday Detroit Tigers 4, Los Angeles Angels 0 Chicago White Sox at Cleveland Guardians, PPD Milwaukee Brewers 5, Chicago Cubs 2 Tigers 4, Angels 0 – Rodriguez returns, helps Tigers to 4-0 win over Angels Eduardo Rodriguez pitched five shutout innings in his return to the Tigers, helping Detroit to a 4-0 win over the Los Angeles Angels. The Tigers’ Riley Greene had a 448-foot homer on the first pitch he saw from Angels starter Shohei Ohtani. It was the longest home run Ohtani has allowed in the majors. Ohtani left the game with a stomach virus after four innings. Rodriguez hadn’t pitched in the majors since suffering a rib-cage injury on May 18. White Sox at Guardians, PPD – White Sox-Guardians rained out, makeup game on Sept. 15 The AL Central-leading Cleveland Guardians and Chicago White Sox had their game postponed due to unplayable field conditions caused by early morning rain. No precipitation fell for more than three hours before the game was called following a delay of 2 hours, 56 minutes. Play never began as the groundskeepers kept the tarp on the infield from Saturday night. The game has been rescheduled for Sept. 15, a mutual off-day, at Progressive Field. It was the Guardians’ 12th postponement this season, 10 of them at home. Cleveland has played an MLB-high 10 doubleheaders. Four of Chicago’s five postponements in 2022 have been against Cleveland. Brewers 5, Cubs 2 – Keston Hiura homers twice as Brewers beat Cubs 5-2 Keston Hiura homered twice and drove in three runs, and the Milwaukee Brewers beat the Chicago Cubs 5-2 to salvage the finale of their weekend series. Rowdy Tellez also connected and Willy Adames hit a tiebreaking sacrifice fly for Milwaukee, which had dropped three of four. The Brewers blew three one-run leads during a 6-5 loss to the Cubs in 11 innings on Saturday. Chicago wasted a stellar performance by Justin Steele, who struck out nine in six scoreless innings. Ian Happ and Seiya Suzuki homered, but the Cubs finished with just five hits. Chicago had won five in a row and nine of 12 overall. Today Chicago White Sox (Kopech 4-9) at Kansas City (Lynch 4-8), 2:10 p.m. St. Louis (Montgomery 6-3) at Chicago Cubs (Smyly 5-6), 8:05 p.m. Tigers are off MLB – Plate discipline: MLB umps crack down on blocking home A few close plays at the plate over the past couple weeks have infuriated MLB catchers. Cleveland’s Austin Hedges and San Diego’s Austin Nola tagged out runners at the plate, only to have the calls reversed after video review when umpires decided both catchers blocked the plate. It’s a difficult play for catchers, who aren’t allowed to block the plate without possession of the ball. It’s also a difficult play for umpires, who have to make a judgment call that’s got plenty of grey area. NFL – National Football League – Preseason Week 2 Thursday Chicago Bears 27, Seattle Seahawks 11 Saturday Detroit Lions 27, Indianapolis Colts 26 Lions 27, Colts 26 – Igwebuike’s late TD, 2-point stop lead Lions past Indy 27-26 Godwin Igwebuike’s tiebreaking 2-yard run with 4:03 left led the Detroit Lions to a 27-26 victory at Indianapolis. The Colts could have won it with a 2-point conversion but Jack Coan’s pass fell incomplete with 38 seconds left. Detroit quarterbacks David Blough and Tim Boyle split the snaps as Jared Goff took the day off following two joint practices against the Colts earlier this week. Blough and Boyle each threw a TD pass. Coan, an undrafted rookie, closed it out with the 26-yard scoring pass to Samson Nacua but couldn’t convert on Indy’s final play. Tonight Atlanta Falcons at New York Jets, 8:00 p.m. Golf – PGA – Patrick Cantlay wins another thriller at BMW Championship Patrick Cantlay is a winner again at the BMW Championship in another thriller. The only difference this year is he won’t be going to the Tour Championship as the No. 1 seed with a two-shot head start. No matter. Cantlay took advantage of a great break on the 17th hole when his tee shot bounced over a bunker and into the fairway. That set up a short birdie and a one-shot lead. He made par on the last for a one-shot win over Scott Stallings. Masters champion Scottie Scheffler tied for third and moves back to the No. 1 seed. Golf – Tom Weiskopf, major champion and golf course architect, dies Major champion and golf course architect Tom Weiskopf has died of pancreatic cancer. His wife says Weiskopf died Saturday at their home in Big Sky, Montana. Weiskopf’s contributions to golf go far beyond his 16 PGA Tour wins and his British Open title at Troon in 1973. He was blunt and accurate when he worked as a TV analyst. And he was equally successful as a golf course architect. Weiskopf was diagnosed with cancer in December 2020. Laurie Weiskopf says he was still working on design projects in the week leading to his death. Tom Weiskopf was 79. Golf – US Am – Bennett holds on and beats Carr to capture US Amateur Texas A&M senior Sam Bennett won the U.S. Amateur on Sunday, building a 5-up lead over Ben Carr and holding on for a 1-up victory at Ridgewood Country Club. Bennett is No. 3 in the world amateur ranking and had to get past three straight players ranked in the top 10 to reach the championship match. Bennett was 3 up after the first 18 holes and won two more holes early in the afternoon to seize control. Needing to win the 18th to extend the match, Carr missed the fairway to the right and came up short. He chipped to 8 feet. Bennett was on the green and had two putts from 12 feet to win. He lagged it within inches. NASCAR – Larson wins rain-delayed NASCAR Cup race at Watkins Glen Kyle Larson beat Hendrick Motorsports teammate Chase Elliott on a restart with five laps to go and won the weather-delayed NASCAR Cup race at Watkins Glen International on Sunday. Elliott had control of the race late, but a caution gave Larson a chance and he took advantage, moving Elliott to the left coming out of the first turn and pulling away for a weekend Xfinity-Cup sweep. AJ Allmendinger was second, Joey Logano third. Elliott fourth and Daniel Suárez fifth. LLWS – Dad of injured Utah Little Leaguer hopeful of full recovery The father of a Little League World Series player from Utah who seriously injured his head when he fell out of his top bunk in the dorms says there is a chance his son can make a full recovery. Jace Oliverson told The Associated Press on Sunday night that his 12-year-old-son, Easton, was expected to fly back Tuesday to Utah and will remain in a hospital closer to home. Easton Oliverson, a pitcher and outfielder for the Snow Canyon team out of Santa Clara, Utah, suffered the injury Monday. Jace Oliverson says he’s grateful that his son is still alive. Oliverson says doctors told him at one point there was no chance his son would survive. FIFA – Qatar detains workers protesting late pay before World Cup An advocacy group says Qatar arrested at least 60 foreign workers who protested going months without their pay and deported some of them. The incident comes just three months before Doha hosts the 2022 FIFA World Cup. The move comes as Qatar faces intense international scrutiny over its labor practices ahead of the tournament. Qatar, like other Gulf Arab nations, heavily relies on foreign labor. Qatar’s government acknowledged that “a number of protesters were detained for breaching public safety laws.” However, it declined to offer any information about the arrests or any deportations. It said it was investigating the firm involved and planned to settle workers’ salaries. MILB – Midwest League Baseball Last Night Lake County Captains 7, West Michigan Whitecaps 4 – Completion of Saturday’s game Lake County Captains 6, West Michigan Whitecaps 3 South Bend Cubs 4, Beloit Sky Carp 3 Lansing Lugnuts 11, Great Lakes Loons 7 Tonight No games tonight MHSAA – High School Sports Today Boys Soccer Edwardsburg at Bangor, 6:00 p.m. Watervliet at Schoolcraft, 5:00 p.m. Allegan at Coloma, 6:00 p.m. Saugatuck at Bridgman, 5:00 p.m. Niles at Hartford, 5:00 p.m. Berrien Springs at Howardsville Christian, 5:00 p.m. South Haven at Constantine, 5:30 p.m. Three Rivers at Cassopolis, 5:00 p.m. Lawton at Delton-Kellogg, 6:00 p.m. Plainwell at Dowagiac, 6:00 p.m. Kalamazoo Hackett at Kalamazoo Christian, 5:00 p.m. Otsego at Gull Lake, 6:30 p.m. Battle Creek Pennfield at Vicksburg, 6:30 p.m. Battle Creek Central at Harper Creek, 6:00 p.m. Volleyball Gobles at Allegan, 6:00 p.m. Buchanan at Cassopolis, 7:00 p.m. Vicksburg Invitational, 4:00 p.m. St. Joseph, Lakeshore, Dowagiac, Martin, Lawton, Niles, Brandywine, Vicksburg Boys Tennis North Muskegon at Allegan, 4:00 p.m. Girls Golf SMAC West at Mattawan, 2:30 p.m. (Lake Cora Hills GC, Paw Paw) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
MLB – Major League Baseball Yesterday Detroit Tigers 4, Los Angeles Angels 0 Chicago White Sox at Cleveland Guardians, PPD Milwaukee Brewers 5, Chicago Cubs 2 Tigers 4, Angels 0 – Rodriguez returns, helps Tigers to 4-0 win over Angels Eduardo Rodriguez pitched five shutout innings in his return to the Tigers, helping Detroit to a 4-0 win over the Los Angeles Angels. The Tigers’ Riley Greene had a 448-foot homer on the first pitch he saw from Angels starter Shohei Ohtani. It was the longest home run Ohtani has allowed in the majors. Ohtani left the game with a stomach virus after four innings. Rodriguez hadn’t pitched in the majors since suffering a rib-cage injury on May 18. White Sox at Guardians, PPD – White Sox-Guardians rained out, makeup game on Sept. 15 The AL Central-leading Cleveland Guardians and Chicago White Sox had their game postponed due to unplayable field conditions caused by early morning rain. No precipitation fell for more than three hours before the game was called following a delay of 2 hours, 56 minutes. Play never began as the groundskeepers kept the tarp on the infield from Saturday night. The game has been rescheduled for Sept. 15, a mutual off-day, at Progressive Field. It was the Guardians’ 12th postponement this season, 10 of them at home. Cleveland has played an MLB-high 10 doubleheaders. Four of Chicago’s five postponements in 2022 have been against Cleveland. Brewers 5, Cubs 2 – Keston Hiura homers twice as Brewers beat Cubs 5-2 Keston Hiura homered twice and drove in three runs, and the Milwaukee Brewers beat the Chicago Cubs 5-2 to salvage the finale of their weekend series. Rowdy Tellez also connected and Willy Adames hit a tiebreaking sacrifice fly for Milwaukee, which had dropped three of four. The Brewers blew three one-run leads during a 6-5 loss to the Cubs in 11 innings on Saturday. Chicago wasted a stellar performance by Justin Steele, who struck out nine in six scoreless innings. Ian Happ and Seiya Suzuki homered, but the Cubs finished with just five hits. Chicago had won five in a row and nine of 12 overall. Today Chicago White Sox (Kopech 4-9) at Kansas City (Lynch 4-8), 2:10 p.m. St. Louis (Montgomery 6-3) at Chicago Cubs (Smyly 5-6), 8:05 p.m. Tigers are off MLB – Plate discipline: MLB umps crack down on blocking home A few close plays at the plate over the past couple weeks have infuriated MLB catchers. Cleveland’s Austin Hedges and San Diego’s Austin Nola tagged out runners at the plate, only to have the calls reversed after video review when umpires decided both catchers blocked the plate. It’s a difficult play for catchers, who aren’t allowed to block the plate without possession of the ball. It’s also a difficult play for umpires, who have to make a judgment call that’s got plenty of grey area. NFL – National Football League – Preseason Week 2 Thursday Chicago Bears 27, Seattle Seahawks 11 Saturday Detroit Lions 27, Indianapolis Colts 26 Lions 27, Colts 26 – Igwebuike’s late TD, 2-point stop lead Lions past Indy 27-26 Godwin Igwebuike’s tiebreaking 2-yard run with 4:03 left led the Detroit Lions to a 27-26 victory at Indianapolis. The Colts could have won it with a 2-point conversion but Jack Coan’s pass fell incomplete with 38 seconds left. Detroit quarterbacks David Blough and Tim Boyle split the snaps as Jared Goff took the day off following two joint practices against the Colts earlier this week. Blough and Boyle each threw a TD pass. Coan, an undrafted rookie, closed it out with the 26-yard scoring pass to Samson Nacua but couldn’t convert on Indy’s final play. Tonight Atlanta Falcons at New York Jets, 8:00 p.m. Golf – PGA – Patrick Cantlay wins another thriller at BMW Championship Patrick Cantlay is a winner again at the BMW Championship in another thriller. The only difference this year is he won’t be going to the Tour Championship as the No. 1 seed with a two-shot head start. No matter. Cantlay took advantage of a great break on the 17th hole when his tee shot bounced over a bunker and into the fairway. That set up a short birdie and a one-shot lead. He made par on the last for a one-shot win over Scott Stallings. Masters champion Scottie Scheffler tied for third and moves back to the No. 1 seed. Golf – Tom Weiskopf, major champion and golf course architect, dies Major champion and golf course architect Tom Weiskopf has died of pancreatic cancer. His wife says Weiskopf died Saturday at their home in Big Sky, Montana. Weiskopf’s contributions to golf go far beyond his 16 PGA Tour wins and his British Open title at Troon in 1973. He was blunt and accurate when he worked as a TV analyst. And he was equally successful as a golf course architect. Weiskopf was diagnosed with cancer in December 2020. Laurie Weiskopf says he was still working on design projects in the week leading to his death. Tom Weiskopf was 79. Golf – US Am – Bennett holds on and beats Carr to capture US Amateur Texas A&M senior Sam Bennett won the U.S. Amateur on Sunday, building a 5-up lead over Ben Carr and holding on for a 1-up victory at Ridgewood Country Club. Bennett is No. 3 in the world amateur ranking and had to get past three straight players ranked in the top 10 to reach the championship match. Bennett was 3 up after the first 18 holes and won two more holes early in the afternoon to seize control. Needing to win the 18th to extend the match, Carr missed the fairway to the right and came up short. He chipped to 8 feet. Bennett was on the green and had two putts from 12 feet to win. He lagged it within inches. NASCAR – Larson wins rain-delayed NASCAR Cup race at Watkins Glen Kyle Larson beat Hendrick Motorsports teammate Chase Elliott on a restart with five laps to go and won the weather-delayed NASCAR Cup race at Watkins Glen International on Sunday. Elliott had control of the race late, but a caution gave Larson a chance and he took advantage, moving Elliott to the left coming out of the first turn and pulling away for a weekend Xfinity-Cup sweep. AJ Allmendinger was second, Joey Logano third. Elliott fourth and Daniel Suárez fifth. LLWS – Dad of injured Utah Little Leaguer hopeful of full recovery The father of a Little League World Series player from Utah who seriously injured his head when he fell out of his top bunk in the dorms says there is a chance his son can make a full recovery. Jace Oliverson told The Associated Press on Sunday night that his 12-year-old-son, Easton, was expected to fly back Tuesday to Utah and will remain in a hospital closer to home. Easton Oliverson, a pitcher and outfielder for the Snow Canyon team out of Santa Clara, Utah, suffered the injury Monday. Jace Oliverson says he’s grateful that his son is still alive. Oliverson says doctors told him at one point there was no chance his son would survive. FIFA – Qatar detains workers protesting late pay before World Cup An advocacy group says Qatar arrested at least 60 foreign workers who protested going months without their pay and deported some of them. The incident comes just three months before Doha hosts the 2022 FIFA World Cup. The move comes as Qatar faces intense international scrutiny over its labor practices ahead of the tournament. Qatar, like other Gulf Arab nations, heavily relies on foreign labor. Qatar’s government acknowledged that “a number of protesters were detained for breaching public safety laws.” However, it declined to offer any information about the arrests or any deportations. It said it was investigating the firm involved and planned to settle workers’ salaries. MILB – Midwest League Baseball Last Night Lake County Captains 7, West Michigan Whitecaps 4 – Completion of Saturday’s game Lake County Captains 6, West Michigan Whitecaps 3 South Bend Cubs 4, Beloit Sky Carp 3 Lansing Lugnuts 11, Great Lakes Loons 7 Tonight No games tonight MHSAA – High School Sports Today Boys Soccer Edwardsburg at Bangor, 6:00 p.m. Watervliet at Schoolcraft, 5:00 p.m. Allegan at Coloma, 6:00 p.m. Saugatuck at Bridgman, 5:00 p.m. Niles at Hartford, 5:00 p.m. Berrien Springs at Howardsville Christian, 5:00 p.m. South Haven at Constantine, 5:30 p.m. Three Rivers at Cassopolis, 5:00 p.m. Lawton at Delton-Kellogg, 6:00 p.m. Plainwell at Dowagiac, 6:00 p.m. Kalamazoo Hackett at Kalamazoo Christian, 5:00 p.m. Otsego at Gull Lake, 6:30 p.m. Battle Creek Pennfield at Vicksburg, 6:30 p.m. Battle Creek Central at Harper Creek, 6:00 p.m. Volleyball Gobles at Allegan, 6:00 p.m. Buchanan at Cassopolis, 7:00 p.m. Vicksburg Invitational, 4:00 p.m. St. Joseph, Lakeshore, Dowagiac, Martin, Lawton, Niles, Brandywine, Vicksburg Boys Tennis North Muskegon at Allegan, 4:00 p.m. Girls Golf SMAC West at Mattawan, 2:30 p.m. (Lake Cora Hills GC, Paw Paw) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
CARRTOONS - "Lighta (feat. Rae Khalil)" from the 2022 album Homegrown on Wichita Recordings. Producer/multi-instrumentalist CARRTOONS (real name: Ben Carr) teams up for a second time with Grammy Award-winning artist Rae Khalil, a track from his latest album, Homegrown. Carr provides a soulful groove for Khalil to drop her breezy, speedy rhymes, playing on the song title as both a noun and a feeling: "I feel a lil lighta / where is my lighta."Support the show: https://www.kexp.org/donateSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Evangelical worship in the House of Representatives … and more on today's CrossPolitic Daily News Brief. This is Toby Sumpter. Today is Friday, January 7, 2022. Yesterday, Nancy Pelosi led the House of Representatives in a worship service: 6:19-6:33, There was a prayer to some unnamed deity: 8:23-8:29 A homily: 9:14-9:33 Concluding with a moment of silence: 13:49-13:55 And at some point there was a praise song: 3:08-3:45 So pretty much it was exactly like most evangelical worship services in this country. You are the light of the world, and what the church does, the world follows suit. We've been worshiping idols, and so our nation worships idols. We say Lord, Lord, Lord, Lord, Lord, and we don't know who the Hell we're talking about. And so, neither do our leaders. We sing stupid songs to our idols in our church services, and so Nancy Pelosi leads the House Democrats in singing stupid songs to their idols. Supreme Court to Hear Case for Federal VAX Mandate https://www.wsj.com/articles/supreme-court-to-weigh-vaccine-requirements-for-the-workplace-11641481822?mod=hp_lead_pos5 From the WSJ: The Supreme Court will hold a special session today to consider whether the Biden administration can enforce vaccine-and-testing rules for large private employers and a vaccine mandate for most healthcare workers. The issues come to the court on an emergency basis during a record increase in U.S. Covid-19 infections. In a departure from its usual procedures, the court is hearing arguments on cases that haven't been fully aired in lower courts. Technically, the justices—all of whom, according to a court spokeswoman, are fully vaccinated and have received booster shots—don't have to issue a definitive decision on whether the administration's vaccine rules are lawful. Instead, they are considering whether President Biden's team can implement them now while more detailed litigation continues. The cases, however, will require the justices to assess whether the White House has credible claims that it stayed within legal boundaries as it has sought to use longstanding laws to implement aggressive rules in the name of public health. The answer is likely to decide the fate of the administration's current approach to a virus that has killed more than 800,000 Americans and infected more than 50 million. Moreover, the court's decisions could reset the public-health playbook for years to come. The Supreme Court's conservative majority is skeptical of broad claims of federal power and has been considering arguments for reining it in, said Michael Greenberger, a law professor and director of the Center for Health and Homeland Security at the University of Maryland. But with the vaccine cases, the justices “are walking into the jaws of the pandemic,” he said. “And there may be enough justices who would worry that pulling back [the mandates] in the middle of the pandemic is a dangerous thing to do.” Mr. Biden in September introduced several interrelated mandates on vaccination against Covid-19. The private-employer and healthcare rules, both formally issued in November, are coming before the justices while other requirements, including vaccination mandates for federal workers and contractors who do business with the federal government, remain in lower courts. The regulations for large employers, issued by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, require businesses with 100 or more employees to ensure that their workers are vaccinated or tested each week for Covid-19. The policy covers some 84 million workers. The administration intended the rules to go into effect in early January, but because of legal uncertainties, OSHA recently said it would give employers until Feb. 9 before fully enforcing them. One federal appeals court blocked the rules nationwide in November, but another court reinstated the requirements last month. The vaccination mandate for healthcare workers comes from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which said facilities that accept money from those programs must comply. The mandate covers more than 10 million healthcare workers. Lower courts have blocked that mandate in half of the states, but the agency is preparing to begin implementing it this month in states where it is allowed to do so. A Little History Lesson Long ago, the Supreme Court upheld the power of state governments to mandate vaccinations. In the 1905 case, Jacobson v. Massachusetts, the justices upheld the state's authority to require that individuals vaccinate against smallpox. “The liberty secured by the Constitution…does not import an absolute right in each person to be, at all times and in all circumstances, wholly freed from restraint,” Justice John Marshall Harlan wrote for the court. In 1922, the court upheld the city of San Antonio's power to require proof of vaccination to enroll in public school. During the coronavirus pandemic, the justices already have turned down several challenges to orders from state officials requiring that healthcare workers and returning college students obtain vaccines. The current legal challenges to the Biden administration's vaccine rules covering employers and healthcare facilities are based less on their substance than their source: the executive branch of the federal government. The challengers argue that Congress never granted the power for such mandates to the secretaries of labor and of health and human services. For support, they look to the Supreme Court's decisions last year that terminated a moratorium on evictions ordered by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, on the grounds that the ban exceeded the agency's authority. The Supreme Court is considering emergency requests by 26 business groups and 27 states to block the vaccine-and-testing rules for private employers. The business litigants, including trade associations representing retailers, wholesalers and transportation and energy companies, said Covid-19 vaccines “are undeniable marvels of modern medicine” that companies have promoted to their workforces. “But the reality is that tens of millions of Americans remain unpersuaded,” they said in court papers. Companies, they said, will either have to absorb testing costs and pass them along to consumers, or make unvaccinated workers responsible, “who will quit en masse rather than suffer additional testing costs each week.” A Kaiser Family Foundation survey in November found that 49% of employees in relevant workplaces in November opposed the federal vaccine-or-testing mandate and 49% supported it. A far higher proportion of Democrats and vaccinated employees backed the measure. The business groups and the states, nearly all led by Republican attorneys general, argue that Congress never clearly gave OSHA the power to conscript businesses into implementing a vaccine-and-testing mandate. They also say the agency unlawfully adopted the mandate without first formally seeking input from the public. The states separately argue that if OSHA's mandate is permissible under federal workplace-safety law, then the regulations raise constitutional problems, because public health-and-safety initiatives are powers reserved for the states, not the federal government. In response, the Justice Department, representing the administration, said OSHA has a clear grant of authority from Congress to ensure that all workers have safe and healthy working conditions. And the vaccine-and-testing rules raise no constitutional problems, the department said, because the federal government has the power to regulate businesses that participate in interstate commerce. Blocking the OSHA rules “would cost many worker lives and result in thousands of worker hospitalizations—all the more so as the pandemic's most recent surge drives case counts to new highs,” U.S. Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar wrote in court papers. It was the Biden administration that filed the emergency appeals to the Supreme Court in the healthcare cases after it lost some lower-court rulings to state attorneys general who sued to challenge that mandate. There, the administration argues that it has the power to ensure that Medicare and Medicaid providers meet the needed health and safety standards to protect patients. And it said the government has clear authority to impose conditions—including vaccine requirements—on facilities that accept federal healthcare funds. The states challenging the policy say it will exacerbate an already critical shortage of healthcare workers, particularly in rural communities. There is no set timetable for the Supreme Court to issue its decisions, but given the time-sensitive nature of the disputes, rulings are likely in a matter of weeks, if not days. While you're waiting for that decision, have you subscribed to the Fight Laugh Magazine. I'm holding the brand new Christmas Issue in my hands. Fight Laugh Feast Magazine DNB Our Fight Laugh Feast Magazine is a quarterly issue that packs a punch like a 21 year Balvenie, no ice. We don't water down our theology, why would we water down our scotch? Order a yearly subscription for yourself and then send a couple yearly subscriptions to your friends who have been drinking luke-warm evangelical cool-aid. Every quarter we promise quality food for the soul, wine for the heart, and some Red Bull for turning over tables. Our magazine will include cultural commentary, a Psalm of the quarter, recipes for feasting, laughter sprinkled through out the glossy pages, and more. Seattle-Area Prosecutor Slammed for Mocking Rehabilitation Legislation https://www.foxnews.com/us/seattle-area-prosecutor-juvenile-restorative-justice-program-guns-school A Seattle-area prosecutor was slammed over a recent presentation to law enforcement officials in which he insisted police should "get used to" the district attorney's office allowing juvenile suspects – even those accused of bringing a gun to school – to avoid jail time. Ben Carr, senior deputy prosecuting attorney for King County, made a recent Zoom presentation on "considerations for juvenile suspects." "Even for serious offenses the primary focus will be on rehabilitation," Carr wrote, adding in parentheses, "get used to this concept." The prosecutor presented a scenario where "young Timmy brings a pistol to school, brandishes it during a confrontation and causes panic," before debating whether a crime was committed, whether the juvenile court has jurisdiction in this case and what will happen to the kid "in Juvie." That slide in particular drew ire from officials in the Seattle suburb of Federal Way, which has seen at least six instances over the past year of guns confiscated at schools in its district. According to the presentation, if a student enters juvenile court, the case will result in "most likely, no time in custody and no ultimate conviction." Carr then presented on a "new concept of diversion," after King County Council recently approved a "restorative community pathways" program for juveniles. Juveniles or adults charged with a first-time "non-violent felony offense" may be offered an opportunity to skirt appearing before a judge and instead face a "non-profit community panel" to decide how they "can be held accountable for their crime." Carr was forced to explain to his boss why the slideshow featured a popular meme of a dog sipping coffee in a burning building. "This is fine," the dog says ironically, surrounded by flames. KTTH said those groups that submitted the program proposal are run by liberal activists, many of whom have advocated for either abolishing or defunding the Seattle Police Department. According to Carr's presentation, juveniles accused of assault, burglary, criminal trespassing, felony harassment, obstructing a law enforcement officer or second-degree unlawful possession of a firearm can still be referred to the restorative justice program and avoid appearing before a judge. Now as best as I can tell, this is a great example of Right and Left feeding right into one another's narratives and ruts. Like an old argumentative couple, the Left and Right in this narrative actually need each other and feed off one another's hypocrisies. It's a little convoluted, but it looks like a Righty mocked a Lefty proposal for Rehabilitation for juvenile delinquents. Rightys think Leftys go soft on crime. And that's because they do. And they do because they have rejected Original Sin, and they think people do bad things because they didn't have enough chocolate milk when they were little or maybe they had too much chocolate milk, I can't remember. But the Rightys have their own problems. They want to be tough on crime, but that isn't the same thing as being biblical about crime. The Leftys right that incarceration doesn't solve problems. In fact, there's virtually no place for imprisonment in biblical law. Basically, you have two options for crimes: restitution or the death penalty. If it can be paid back or restored in some fashion, then pay back what you stole, what you damaged, plus double or more depending on how egregious the crime was. And if you took a life, then your life is forfeit. No mass incarceration. And so when it comes to non-violent juvenile delinquents, I'm in the odd position of agreeing with the Leftys while not trusting them to do any good with their rehabilitation classes and maybe even making the delinquents more violent. Because man, what makes a person more frustrated that having to listen to liberals preach about morals they know nothing about. And remember there are a bunch of kids were talking about here whose fathers have abandoned them. Men and churches need to step and step in. So what we need is a Psalm. Psalm of the Day: 10 0:00-0:55 You are the helper of the fatherless. Amen. Remember you can always find the links to our news stories and these psalms at crosspolitic dot com – just click on the daily news brief and follow the links. This is Toby Sumpter with Crosspolitic News. A reminder: Support Rowdy Christian media, and share this show or become a Fight Laugh Feast Club Member. Remember if you didn't make it to the Fight Laugh Feast Conferences, club members have access to all the talks from Douglas Wilson, Joe Boot, Jeff Durbin, Glenn Sunshine, Nate Wilson, David Bahnsen, Voddie Baucham, Ben Merkle, and many more. Join today and have a great day.
Evangelical worship in the House of Representatives … and more on today's CrossPolitic Daily News Brief. This is Toby Sumpter. Today is Friday, January 7, 2022. Yesterday, Nancy Pelosi led the House of Representatives in a worship service: 6:19-6:33, There was a prayer to some unnamed deity: 8:23-8:29 A homily: 9:14-9:33 Concluding with a moment of silence: 13:49-13:55 And at some point there was a praise song: 3:08-3:45 So pretty much it was exactly like most evangelical worship services in this country. You are the light of the world, and what the church does, the world follows suit. We've been worshiping idols, and so our nation worships idols. We say Lord, Lord, Lord, Lord, Lord, and we don't know who the Hell we're talking about. And so, neither do our leaders. We sing stupid songs to our idols in our church services, and so Nancy Pelosi leads the House Democrats in singing stupid songs to their idols. Supreme Court to Hear Case for Federal VAX Mandate https://www.wsj.com/articles/supreme-court-to-weigh-vaccine-requirements-for-the-workplace-11641481822?mod=hp_lead_pos5 From the WSJ: The Supreme Court will hold a special session today to consider whether the Biden administration can enforce vaccine-and-testing rules for large private employers and a vaccine mandate for most healthcare workers. The issues come to the court on an emergency basis during a record increase in U.S. Covid-19 infections. In a departure from its usual procedures, the court is hearing arguments on cases that haven't been fully aired in lower courts. Technically, the justices—all of whom, according to a court spokeswoman, are fully vaccinated and have received booster shots—don't have to issue a definitive decision on whether the administration's vaccine rules are lawful. Instead, they are considering whether President Biden's team can implement them now while more detailed litigation continues. The cases, however, will require the justices to assess whether the White House has credible claims that it stayed within legal boundaries as it has sought to use longstanding laws to implement aggressive rules in the name of public health. The answer is likely to decide the fate of the administration's current approach to a virus that has killed more than 800,000 Americans and infected more than 50 million. Moreover, the court's decisions could reset the public-health playbook for years to come. The Supreme Court's conservative majority is skeptical of broad claims of federal power and has been considering arguments for reining it in, said Michael Greenberger, a law professor and director of the Center for Health and Homeland Security at the University of Maryland. But with the vaccine cases, the justices “are walking into the jaws of the pandemic,” he said. “And there may be enough justices who would worry that pulling back [the mandates] in the middle of the pandemic is a dangerous thing to do.” Mr. Biden in September introduced several interrelated mandates on vaccination against Covid-19. The private-employer and healthcare rules, both formally issued in November, are coming before the justices while other requirements, including vaccination mandates for federal workers and contractors who do business with the federal government, remain in lower courts. The regulations for large employers, issued by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, require businesses with 100 or more employees to ensure that their workers are vaccinated or tested each week for Covid-19. The policy covers some 84 million workers. The administration intended the rules to go into effect in early January, but because of legal uncertainties, OSHA recently said it would give employers until Feb. 9 before fully enforcing them. One federal appeals court blocked the rules nationwide in November, but another court reinstated the requirements last month. The vaccination mandate for healthcare workers comes from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which said facilities that accept money from those programs must comply. The mandate covers more than 10 million healthcare workers. Lower courts have blocked that mandate in half of the states, but the agency is preparing to begin implementing it this month in states where it is allowed to do so. A Little History Lesson Long ago, the Supreme Court upheld the power of state governments to mandate vaccinations. In the 1905 case, Jacobson v. Massachusetts, the justices upheld the state's authority to require that individuals vaccinate against smallpox. “The liberty secured by the Constitution…does not import an absolute right in each person to be, at all times and in all circumstances, wholly freed from restraint,” Justice John Marshall Harlan wrote for the court. In 1922, the court upheld the city of San Antonio's power to require proof of vaccination to enroll in public school. During the coronavirus pandemic, the justices already have turned down several challenges to orders from state officials requiring that healthcare workers and returning college students obtain vaccines. The current legal challenges to the Biden administration's vaccine rules covering employers and healthcare facilities are based less on their substance than their source: the executive branch of the federal government. The challengers argue that Congress never granted the power for such mandates to the secretaries of labor and of health and human services. For support, they look to the Supreme Court's decisions last year that terminated a moratorium on evictions ordered by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, on the grounds that the ban exceeded the agency's authority. The Supreme Court is considering emergency requests by 26 business groups and 27 states to block the vaccine-and-testing rules for private employers. The business litigants, including trade associations representing retailers, wholesalers and transportation and energy companies, said Covid-19 vaccines “are undeniable marvels of modern medicine” that companies have promoted to their workforces. “But the reality is that tens of millions of Americans remain unpersuaded,” they said in court papers. Companies, they said, will either have to absorb testing costs and pass them along to consumers, or make unvaccinated workers responsible, “who will quit en masse rather than suffer additional testing costs each week.” A Kaiser Family Foundation survey in November found that 49% of employees in relevant workplaces in November opposed the federal vaccine-or-testing mandate and 49% supported it. A far higher proportion of Democrats and vaccinated employees backed the measure. The business groups and the states, nearly all led by Republican attorneys general, argue that Congress never clearly gave OSHA the power to conscript businesses into implementing a vaccine-and-testing mandate. They also say the agency unlawfully adopted the mandate without first formally seeking input from the public. The states separately argue that if OSHA's mandate is permissible under federal workplace-safety law, then the regulations raise constitutional problems, because public health-and-safety initiatives are powers reserved for the states, not the federal government. In response, the Justice Department, representing the administration, said OSHA has a clear grant of authority from Congress to ensure that all workers have safe and healthy working conditions. And the vaccine-and-testing rules raise no constitutional problems, the department said, because the federal government has the power to regulate businesses that participate in interstate commerce. Blocking the OSHA rules “would cost many worker lives and result in thousands of worker hospitalizations—all the more so as the pandemic's most recent surge drives case counts to new highs,” U.S. Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar wrote in court papers. It was the Biden administration that filed the emergency appeals to the Supreme Court in the healthcare cases after it lost some lower-court rulings to state attorneys general who sued to challenge that mandate. There, the administration argues that it has the power to ensure that Medicare and Medicaid providers meet the needed health and safety standards to protect patients. And it said the government has clear authority to impose conditions—including vaccine requirements—on facilities that accept federal healthcare funds. The states challenging the policy say it will exacerbate an already critical shortage of healthcare workers, particularly in rural communities. There is no set timetable for the Supreme Court to issue its decisions, but given the time-sensitive nature of the disputes, rulings are likely in a matter of weeks, if not days. While you're waiting for that decision, have you subscribed to the Fight Laugh Magazine. I'm holding the brand new Christmas Issue in my hands. Fight Laugh Feast Magazine DNB Our Fight Laugh Feast Magazine is a quarterly issue that packs a punch like a 21 year Balvenie, no ice. We don't water down our theology, why would we water down our scotch? Order a yearly subscription for yourself and then send a couple yearly subscriptions to your friends who have been drinking luke-warm evangelical cool-aid. Every quarter we promise quality food for the soul, wine for the heart, and some Red Bull for turning over tables. Our magazine will include cultural commentary, a Psalm of the quarter, recipes for feasting, laughter sprinkled through out the glossy pages, and more. Seattle-Area Prosecutor Slammed for Mocking Rehabilitation Legislation https://www.foxnews.com/us/seattle-area-prosecutor-juvenile-restorative-justice-program-guns-school A Seattle-area prosecutor was slammed over a recent presentation to law enforcement officials in which he insisted police should "get used to" the district attorney's office allowing juvenile suspects – even those accused of bringing a gun to school – to avoid jail time. Ben Carr, senior deputy prosecuting attorney for King County, made a recent Zoom presentation on "considerations for juvenile suspects." "Even for serious offenses the primary focus will be on rehabilitation," Carr wrote, adding in parentheses, "get used to this concept." The prosecutor presented a scenario where "young Timmy brings a pistol to school, brandishes it during a confrontation and causes panic," before debating whether a crime was committed, whether the juvenile court has jurisdiction in this case and what will happen to the kid "in Juvie." That slide in particular drew ire from officials in the Seattle suburb of Federal Way, which has seen at least six instances over the past year of guns confiscated at schools in its district. According to the presentation, if a student enters juvenile court, the case will result in "most likely, no time in custody and no ultimate conviction." Carr then presented on a "new concept of diversion," after King County Council recently approved a "restorative community pathways" program for juveniles. Juveniles or adults charged with a first-time "non-violent felony offense" may be offered an opportunity to skirt appearing before a judge and instead face a "non-profit community panel" to decide how they "can be held accountable for their crime." Carr was forced to explain to his boss why the slideshow featured a popular meme of a dog sipping coffee in a burning building. "This is fine," the dog says ironically, surrounded by flames. KTTH said those groups that submitted the program proposal are run by liberal activists, many of whom have advocated for either abolishing or defunding the Seattle Police Department. According to Carr's presentation, juveniles accused of assault, burglary, criminal trespassing, felony harassment, obstructing a law enforcement officer or second-degree unlawful possession of a firearm can still be referred to the restorative justice program and avoid appearing before a judge. Now as best as I can tell, this is a great example of Right and Left feeding right into one another's narratives and ruts. Like an old argumentative couple, the Left and Right in this narrative actually need each other and feed off one another's hypocrisies. It's a little convoluted, but it looks like a Righty mocked a Lefty proposal for Rehabilitation for juvenile delinquents. Rightys think Leftys go soft on crime. And that's because they do. And they do because they have rejected Original Sin, and they think people do bad things because they didn't have enough chocolate milk when they were little or maybe they had too much chocolate milk, I can't remember. But the Rightys have their own problems. They want to be tough on crime, but that isn't the same thing as being biblical about crime. The Leftys right that incarceration doesn't solve problems. In fact, there's virtually no place for imprisonment in biblical law. Basically, you have two options for crimes: restitution or the death penalty. If it can be paid back or restored in some fashion, then pay back what you stole, what you damaged, plus double or more depending on how egregious the crime was. And if you took a life, then your life is forfeit. No mass incarceration. And so when it comes to non-violent juvenile delinquents, I'm in the odd position of agreeing with the Leftys while not trusting them to do any good with their rehabilitation classes and maybe even making the delinquents more violent. Because man, what makes a person more frustrated that having to listen to liberals preach about morals they know nothing about. And remember there are a bunch of kids were talking about here whose fathers have abandoned them. Men and churches need to step and step in. So what we need is a Psalm. Psalm of the Day: 10 0:00-0:55 You are the helper of the fatherless. Amen. Remember you can always find the links to our news stories and these psalms at crosspolitic dot com – just click on the daily news brief and follow the links. This is Toby Sumpter with Crosspolitic News. A reminder: Support Rowdy Christian media, and share this show or become a Fight Laugh Feast Club Member. Remember if you didn't make it to the Fight Laugh Feast Conferences, club members have access to all the talks from Douglas Wilson, Joe Boot, Jeff Durbin, Glenn Sunshine, Nate Wilson, David Bahnsen, Voddie Baucham, Ben Merkle, and many more. Join today and have a great day.
Ben Carr will lead us in a discussion about the origins of the role of CISO, roles/responsibilities, and what it's like to be a CISO. We'll touch on qualifications, organizational structure, its place in security and compliance, what it's like to be hero or scapegoat. All this and more! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/scw98 Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/scw for all the latest episodes! Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/securityweekly Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/secweekly
Ben Carr will lead us in a discussion about the origins of the role of CISO, roles/responsibilities, and what it's like to be a CISO. We'll touch on qualifications, organizational structure, its place in security and compliance, what it's like to be hero or scapegoat. All this and more! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/scw98 Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/scw for all the latest episodes! Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/securityweekly Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/secweekly
Ben Carr will lead us in a discussion about the origins of the role of CISO, roles/responsibilities, and what it's like to be a CISO. We'll touch on qualifications, organizational structure, its place in security and compliance, what it's like to be hero or scapegoat. All this and more! Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/scw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/scw98
Ben Carr will lead us in a discussion about the origins of the role of CISO, roles/responsibilities, and what it's like to be a CISO. We'll touch on qualifications, organizational structure, its place in security and compliance, what it's like to be hero or scapegoat. All this and more! Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/scw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/scw98
Chapter 10 is here, Jason and Brent can't believe that Will didn't tell them about him knowing Chipper Jones. Will tells Bermuda stories from this past weekend and a ton more! also, Georgia Southern stripe show Ben Carr joins the show to talk his golf career and what's next for him! Shoutout to our sponsors:
Another fun podcast straight from Illinois deer camp in late October. Jorden sits down with Tom Petry and past film the hunt student (now field producer) Ben Carr as we discuss our hunt, Tom's super wide 8pt and a few tips learned the hard way from Ben as he has “one of those days” as a cameraman. Great information, many laughs and a few beers in Illinois deer camp. If you would like a chance to win a FREE http://www.filmthehunt.com/ (Film The Hunt) hat. Please leave a rating and review for your chance to win. We would greatly appreciate it. Also, save some of those hard earned dollars on camera gear or accessories at https://www.bedfords.com/ (bedfords.com) and enter FILMTHEHUNT at check out. Bedford Camera & Video: Austin Pittman – (501)920-5060 Luke Brasswell – (479)871-6385 Grab some FREE TIPS from the pro's right here: httphttp://www.filmthehunt.com/courses/from-the-field (://www.filmthehunt.com/courses/from-the-field) FILM THE HUNT FB COMMUNITY: https://www.facebook.com/groups/307037476417637/ FILM THE HUNT FB PAGE: https://www.facebook.com/filmthehunteducation/ (https://www.facebook.com/filmthehunteducation/) FILM THE HUNT INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/film_the_hunt/ (https://www.instagram.com/film_the_hunt/) FILM THE HUNT ONLINE SCHOOL: http://www.filmthehunt.com/courses/online-courses (http://www.filmthehunt.com/courses/online-courses) SAVE 25% BY USING "FTHPODCAST" AT CHECK OUT FOR ONLINE SCHOOL.
Today, we had the pleasure of interviewing one of the nation's best college golfers, Mr. Ben Carr. Ben recently won the Bank of Tennessee Intercollegiate and he currently ranks 38th in the PGA TOUR University list. We thank him very much for his time. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/phil-jones33/support
Ben Carr, Qualys CISO, joins Business Security Weekly to share his views on the evolving role of the CISO. He'll dive into the ever changing risks and how CISOs need to understand those risks to be truly aligned to the business. He will also discuss the different types of CISOs and how to align your direction and focus with that of a company's needs. This segment is sponsored by Qualys. Visit https://securityweekly.com/qualys to learn more about them! Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/bsw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/bsw229
This week, Ben Carr, CISO at Qualys, joins Business Security Weekly to share his views on the evolving role of the CISO. He'll dive into the ever changing risks and how CISOs need to understand those risks to be truly aligned to the business. He will also discuss the different types of CISOs and how to align your direction and focus with that of a company's needs. In the Leadership and Communications section:10 years later, software really did eat the world, CISOs' 15 top strategic priorities for 2021, 7 steps to protect against ransomware-related lawsuits, and more! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/bsw229 Visit https://securityweekly.com/qualys to learn more about them! Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/bsw for all the latest episodes! Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/securityweekly Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/secweekly
This week, Ben Carr, CISO at Qualys, joins Business Security Weekly to share his views on the evolving role of the CISO. He'll dive into the ever changing risks and how CISOs need to understand those risks to be truly aligned to the business. He will also discuss the different types of CISOs and how to align your direction and focus with that of a company's needs. In the Leadership and Communications section:10 years later, software really did eat the world, CISOs' 15 top strategic priorities for 2021, 7 steps to protect against ransomware-related lawsuits, and more! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/bsw229 Visit https://securityweekly.com/qualys to learn more about them! Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/bsw for all the latest episodes! Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/securityweekly Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/secweekly
Ben Carr, Qualys CISO, joins Business Security Weekly to share his views on the evolving role of the CISO. He'll dive into the ever changing risks and how CISOs need to understand those risks to be truly aligned to the business. He will also discuss the different types of CISOs and how to align your direction and focus with that of a company's needs. This segment is sponsored by Qualys. Visit https://securityweekly.com/qualys to learn more about them! Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/bsw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/bsw229
A chat with good friend and top top coach Ben Carr. Ben is the Foundation Phase Lead at Sunderland AFC and is the coach who really triggered my love for coaching! An expert at building relationships with players and a special coach to work with. Enjoy!
Ben Carr, Global Chief Information Security Officer at Qualys, steps in last minute to talk about his transition from Aristocrat to Qualys and the evolution of the CISO role. Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/bsw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/bsw205
This week, we welcome back Ben Carr, Global Chief Information Security Officer at Qualys! Ben steps in last minute to talk about his transition from Aristocrat to Qualys and the evolution of the CISO role! In the leadership and communications section, 9 Steps for Effective Cybersecurity Risk Management, The Big 8: How to heighten cybersecurity governance, 7 Super Bowl rings for Tom Brady, and more! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/bsw205 Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/bsw for all the latest episodes! Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/securityweekly Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/secweekly
This week, we welcome back Ben Carr, Global Chief Information Security Officer at Qualys! Ben steps in last minute to talk about his transition from Aristocrat to Qualys and the evolution of the CISO role! In the leadership and communications section, 9 Steps for Effective Cybersecurity Risk Management, The Big 8: How to heighten cybersecurity governance, 7 Super Bowl rings for Tom Brady, and more! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/bsw205 Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/bsw for all the latest episodes! Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/securityweekly Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/secweekly
Ben Carr, Global Chief Information Security Officer at Qualys, steps in last minute to talk about his transition from Aristocrat to Qualys and the evolution of the CISO role. Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/bsw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/bsw205
Ben Carr (ASIJ 2007) Owner - Innovative Fitness North Vancouver Ben Carr graduated ASIJ in 2007. Originally from the US, was raised on the international school circuit. Born in Northampton MA, lived in Tanzania, North Carolina, Brazil, and Costa Rica before moving to Tokyo in 2003 when his dad, Tim Carr became the Headmaster, a position he held until moving to Jakarta in 2010 to take over the headship at Jakarta Intercultural School. Ben went on to study Kinesiology at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada. While at university he worked for Red Bull, led the UBC Surf Club and worked as a student athletic trainer for the UBC Rugby Team and met his to-be wife Laura. After graduation he moved to Atlanta and worked at the Atlanta International School before moving back to Vancouver and starting work with Innovative Fitness as a professional training coach. In the 6 years at IF he moved up the ranks from coach to events manager, to sales manager to corporate sales to studio manager before opening his own franchise in Jan 2018. He now has 12 staff and about 120 clients. Ben is passionate about leadership, empowerment, equality and positively impacting the lives of his community. Episode Summary Timestamps 1:05 - Introduction 2:38 - Being a TCK (raised in Tanzania, Costa Rica, Brazil, Japan, and North Carolina), where is home? 8:54 - Early interests in athletics and fitness (ASIJ, UBC) 11:38 - Why a fitness gym and not other athletics-related occupations (such a PE teacher, physical therapist, Crossfit coach, etc) 14:43 - The challenges of teaching adults vs children, and what is more challenging for a client who is a novice to the world of fitness or is a veteran? 17:41 - Countering the image of the "before and after picture" 19:59 - The 5 AM club, getting up early for workouts *(4 AM for some) 23:33 - Daily habits one could change to be fit 26:00 - How to balance "rigor" - I am overworking or not working hard enough? 28:33 - "Abs are made in the kitchen" - an urban myth or some truth or something else? 32:00 - Leaders that influence Ben (Founders of Innovative Fitness, Tim Carr) - Empowerment through adversity and experiment and gaining buy-in from clients. 35:16 - Running a fitness gym during times of COVID-19 42:33 - Where is home? 45:54 - What is to come
Today we’re bringing you a bonus episode! This is an interview with Ben Carr, who performs under the name Carrtoons. Ben is a bassist and producer, and he just released an album called Saturday Morning. His use of beats and samples, combined with his unique bass playing, makes his records particularly appealing. After the interview, you’ll hear Ben perform Give It Up (featuring Joanna Teters), That Thing, and Ben On The Run. Videos of these and all Past, Present, Future, Live! performances are on our show page and the Osiris Media Youtube Channel. If you like what you hear, please give us a review on Apple Podcasts. Past, Present, Future, Live! is brought to you by Osiris Media. Hosted and Produced by RJ Bee. Executive Producers are Adam Caplan and Kirsten Cluthe. Production, Editing, Mixing, and original theme music by Brad Stratton. Show logo by Liz Bee Art & Design. To discover more podcasts that help you connect more deeply to the music you love, check out osirispod.com. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Every year around this time, tech and cybersecurity media take a look back at the year that is winding down, and experts and pundits make predictions about the year ahead. It is a holiday tradition. From a cybersecurity perspective, it generally feels like the holiday we are celebrating is Ground Hog’s Day, though. You could [...] The post Ben Carr Chats about 2021 and the Evolving Role of the CISO appeared first on TechSpective.
Calling all Rude Boy's!! Calling all Sk8er Boi's!! We are amid a crisp SKA'TOBER, and The Boys (Aaron Haag & John Brian) at The Pod Punk Show have a treat this episode... Behold! Join us on an adventure as we celebrate The Mighty Mighty Bosstones' own life and achievement: Ben Carr. Easily one of the most influential skankers' to ever hit the scene! And, let's be honest, because we are in the festive mood... we've decided to create a list of the most interesting Ska Cover Songs of all time! Check it out. Pick it up! Pick it up!! Let's do this, Pop Punkers!! @podpunkshow podpunkshow@gmail.com
AI is on the tip of everyone's tongue when they talk about the future of work … or the future of anything, really. But AI is such a vague term. It means different things to different people, and its meaning evolves over time. Machine learning experts understand AI, but what about the rest of us. Is there an Introduction to AI course for normal people? On this episode of Generation Digital Workforce, Ben Carr and Rusen Aktas, both research engineers at Blue Prism's AI Labs, join us to answer basic questions: What is AI? What are people doing with it today? What’s possible in the future? Here's what we talked with Ben and Rusen about: * What AI, machine learning, and deep learning really are...and aren't * The problem of bias in AI * The hype versus the reality of AI * What companies could be doing with AI in 1, 3, 5, and 10 years * Recommended resources for learning more about AI Resources mentioned: * Video: 3Blue1Brown - But what is a Neural Network? | Deep learning, chapter 1 * Artificial intelligence: The next digital frontier? - McKinsey * www.coursera.com * www.udemy.com * www.udacity.com To ensure that you never miss an episode of Generation Digital Workforce, be sure to subscribe!
The Back Alley Ballyhoo Psychedelic Music & Arts Festival took place in Indianapolis on September 5th with Indy Propaganda live streaming from the event! We got to sit down with Ben Carr, the Psychedelic Pied Piper of Fort Wayne band, Heaven's Gateway Drugs, to talk about square dancing with bikers, driving through rainbows, time travel, and entertaining the humanoids. Tune in and watch for more clips with the performers coming soon!
This week, we welcome Ben Carr, Chief Information Security Officer at Aristocrat! Prior to Aristocrat, we was VP of Strategy for Cyberbit and North America's Technical Director for Tenable! In the Leadership and Communications segment, how to make sure your board sets a good example for your company, cybersecurity is putting customer trust at the center of competition, 6 reasons your home office is better than your company office, and more! Full Show Notes: https://wiki.securityweekly.com/BSWEpisode120 Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/bsw for all the latest episodes! Visit our website: https://www.securityweekly.com Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/securityweekly Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/secweekly
This week, we welcome Ben Carr, Chief Information Security Officer at Aristocrat! Prior to Aristocrat, we was VP of Strategy for Cyberbit and North America's Technical Director for Tenable! In the Leadership and Communications segment, how to make sure your board sets a good example for your company, cybersecurity is putting customer trust at the center of competition, 6 reasons your home office is better than your company office, and more! Full Show Notes: https://wiki.securityweekly.com/BSWEpisode120 Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/bsw for all the latest episodes! Visit our website: https://www.securityweekly.com Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/securityweekly Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/secweekly
Ben Carr is the Chief Information Security Officer at Aristocrat. Prior to Aristocrat, we was VP of Strategy for Cyberbit and North America's Technical Director for Tenable. Prior to Tenable, he was Senior Director, Global Information Security at Visa and Head of Global Corporate IT Security at Nokia. Full Show Notes: https://wiki.securityweekly.com/BSWEpisode120
Ben Carr is the Chief Information Security Officer at Aristocrat. Prior to Aristocrat, we was VP of Strategy for Cyberbit and North America's Technical Director for Tenable. Prior to Tenable, he was Senior Director, Global Information Security at Visa and Head of Global Corporate IT Security at Nokia. Full Show Notes: https://wiki.securityweekly.com/BSWEpisode120
Sat 1/26/19 Carrtoons x Natalie Oliveri Show #216 Repping all the way from New York City, we welcome our dude, Ben Carr aka Carrtoons along with soulstress Natalie Oliveri with keysman Lionmilk (Paxico Records) for show 216! All came on and did their thing as they displayed an amazing showcase. You will definitely be enjoying this one. Trust! Get in the Circle. Feel the Soul. Plus featuring new music from: Benny Sings, Mecca:83, The Expansions, James Vickery, Gravity Movement & many more! 1st Segment - DJ Mza 01 Buli - Deeper Into The Void 02 James Vickery - Complexion 03 Sunni Colón - Baby I Don't Mind 04 Rosemary Minkler - How You Make Me Feel (feat. Yoh) 05 Shuko F. of Audiotreats - Taijay 06 Natalie O. - MoreThanWords (Blvck Vmish) 2nd Segment - Carrtoons Live Performance + Interview 07 Mecca:83 - Quiet Orbit 08 The Expansions - Transcoso 09 falcxne - Ilsan 10 Benny Sings - Not Enough 11 Funkommunity - The Light 3rd Segment - Natalie Oliveri x Lionmilk Live Performance + Interview 12 DJ Mitsu The Beats - b.o.t.m.sp.02 13 Mecca:83, Buscrates & J Vibes - Moon Glow 14 Gravity Movement - 5IVE 15 ford. - Slack (feat. Knapsack) 16 ideism - Float Hosted by: DJ Mza & Crew www.soulcircleradio.com Every Sat 12-2p PST Past shows: @soulcircleradio Follow us on Instagram : instagram.com/soulcircelradio Design by @dj-mza This show is FOR PROMOTIONAL USE ONLY. We do not own or claim to own the rights to these tracks. "Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use."
Ever want to make cider at home? Tune in to this week’s episode of Fuhmentaboudit!, as hosts Chris Cuzme and Mary Izett are joined by two cider homebrewers, Chris Prout and Ben Carr. Find out how to make hard cider from apples, and what the pressing process entails. From bushel to bottle – get the inside scoop on how you can turn delicious apples into even more delicious cider. Learn why what you get out of the fermentation process changes based on the season, and how brewers deal with the time sensitive nature of cider. Discover why brown spots aren’t always bad and how back sweetening can help with acidity issues. This program was sponsored by The Brooklyn Kitchen. “You have to make a party of it. If you only have two people to get through 8 bushels of apples – it’s not gonna happen!” 10:00 –Chris Prout on Fuhmentaboutit!